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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Braves hike
division lead
with 7-5 win

Pick 3:
519
Pick 4:
8504
Buckeye 5:
2·8·19-24-30

Page4

Vol. 43, No. 71

SEE YOUR DOCTOR
Are patients with asthm~
using their inhalers co~etly?

·-

Ohio utility.profits are
excessive, Spratley says

AUGUST, 1991

PAGE TWELVE

People with asthma rna~ think
they're using their traditional
pocket-size inhalers correctly but
their doctors don't necessarily
agree, according to nndings from
a Gallup Poll.
Physicians cstimaLCd that, on
avcrugc, only about half of their
patients correctly usc their
inhalers every time. The same
doctors think that an average ol
79 percent of their patients who
use inhalers believe they arc
using the correct technique every
time. The risk for patients with
incorrect technique believing !hat
!hey arc using inhalers correctly
is that they arc not likely to seek
instruction in proper usage from
their doctors.
Overall, the doctors told
Gallup, eight out of Len patients
(83 percent) with "reversible
obstructive airway disease" such
as asthma and chronic bronchitis
use the traditional m~-dose
inhalers (MDls). MDis are pocket-size devices that deliver puffs
o[ medication, which !he patient
must inhale at the proper
moment. The primary difficulty
patients have with traditional
inhalers is coordinating the actuation ol the inhaler with inhaling.
The survey, sJ)OIIsored by 3M
Pharmaceuticals, a pioneer in
developing metered-dose inhaler
leehnology, was conducted wilh
351 office-based physicians (152

allergists and 199 pulmonologists) who used MDis to treat 81
least some of their patients with
reversible obstructive airway discase.

by Carolyn Shear and Elliot
Shear:
However many medical bills
you may have, it will be easier 10
identify an underpayment if you
keep an up-llHiate claims diary.
Here's how:
len

• Record all 'bills in your
claims diary and relain them in
date order in an "Open Claims"
me folder.
• Record all explanations of
benefits in your claims diary.
• For each Explanation of Bcncnts slatement, use your claims
diary to compare the reimbursement with the provider's bill to
make sure this is whal you arc
It helps simplify claims and supposed to receive.
bills, shortens the time between
• Examine your Explanation of
your claim and collection and
Benefits
slatements to identify
helps you recover underpaid
where
benefits
were denied or
claims. The kit, cillled The Health
claims
underpaid.
Insurance Claims Kit, was writ-

· If yoil have any questions, call
your claims ropreseruative at your
insurance company's claims

dCpanmcnl.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley says Ohio's utilities are
raking in excess profits and !hat the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio should be doing something
about it
He told a news conferenc~ Tuesday !hat figures published recently
by Business Week listed Ohio's
telephone industry with a 1991
return on equity of 15.6 percent,
compared with a natiooal average
of 9.6 percent
Ohio's gas and elecaic companies earned an average 10.2 percent, while the national average
was 9 percent, be said.
SpraUey criticized !he PUCO for
what he said was the lack of periodic reviews to prevent excessive
profits.
He said eight of the slate's

Carolyn Shear has been processing insurance claims for individuals for more than two
decades. Her successful health
insurance system has collected
millions of dollars in insurance
benents from hundreds of insurance cO'mpariies and Medica""
Elliot Shear has been a marketing, advcrlising and communications practitioner for more than
20 years.
The kit is available at bookstores across the nation or by ·
calling Dcarbum Financial Pulllishin$, Inc., 1-800-322-8621. In
lllin01s, call 312836-4400 ext.
650.

Two-thirds of physicians (64
pcn:cnt) say they rely on conlinuous retraining to help patients
overcome difficulties they have
using traditional metered-dose
inhalers. However, for !he 50 pcrcenl of patienls who require
rolraining, one out o[ live are still
unable to usc correct administration technique after retraining,
accoming to lhc poll.

...

-Home Oxygen

565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

446·2206
"Stlflat Ut Arta Ftr O.tr IS Yun"

•

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• •

t~

Discount ~a~:ds_ availa.ble
for shoppers.in area

"Yes, Mrs. Hansen, we gi~e 10% off Senior Citizen
prescriptions. On Wednudav of each week, we give an additional
10% off e~ervthing in our store except ule items. But here's
the best part: Hockenberty Leader Pharmacy actually PAYS YOU
FOR SHOPPING HEREI Ask me about our Customer
Appreciation Bonus Card when vou come in next time......... OK?
Thanks lor calling 'THE CARING PHARMACY'."

Dee Dillon, R.N.
Certified Fmer, Owner
Mark Dillon,
Sales Manager

'11be !Medical S~Pipe 111M:.•

'

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To n:ccivc "Facts About Asthma," a Iroc brochure thai answers
common questions about breathing dimcuhics and inhalers, call
1-800.3M-ANSWERS.

•Insurance Claims
Processed
.Compensation, Medicare
and Medicaid accepted
•FrH Delivery

major telephone companies have
not had their ·rates reviewed for
more !han five·yean.
"Ohio telephone companies are
the least reviewed and the most
profitable," Spratley said.
PUCO spokeswoman Stacie
Gilg said !he commission reviews
the annual reports of all utilities
and orders hearings "if we see any•
thing !hat looks excessive." She
suid !his was done wilh !he latest
n·ports and nothing was found.
"We never know what numbers
h&lt;l (Spratley) is using," she said.
She said the commission is
empowered to look only at earni~gs generated within the slate, not
out-of-slate income.
Spratley said he used the total
noturn of each company, but the
uLilities' reports d1d not give a
breakdown. He said the PUCO cail-

I

the olrmap of Melp County to visiton and will
·provide them·with lnformatiooal brochures during the state fair. The structure will be disassembled and transported to Columbus for tile opening orthe fair on Friday.

READY FOR STATE FAIR· The Meigs
County Belle, a structure developed by Roger
Gilmore for the Meigs County Park and
Tourism District to be displayed at the Ohio
State Fair in Columbus, is undergoing its finishing toucbes. Tbe boat-like creatio!l highliehts

By BRIAN J. REED

•Wbaelchaln
•Canes and Crutches
•Walkers
•Hospital Beds
•Commode Chairs
•Attends, Chux and
Incontinent Supplies
•Bath Safety Aids
•Urinary and Ostomy
Supplies .
•Mastectomy Products

2 Secllonl, 14 Pagaa 25 cont.
A lluldmodla Inc. - o a -

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Wednesday, August 5. 1992

Coprrlghlocf 1992

(

PHARMACY
"THE CARING PHARIIIACY''

ACROSS FROM THE HOSPITAL EXIT
IN
PT. PLEASANT

675·2113

Low tonight In mld-SOs.
Thursday, high In mid-80s.

Sentinel News Stair
Discount cards now available
from the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce will offer discounts
to local shoppers and increase busi·
ness traffic for those stores and
res1aurants featured.
The credit card-sized discount
cards are now available from an
array of Meigs County businesses
at a cost of $5. That initial cost per
card will be quickly returned when
redeemed at the businesses offering
discounts. Two cards are available,
with different businesses offered on
each card, so !hose purchasing the
cards may select the one featuring
more of !heir favorite businesses.
Those businesses panicipating
are: Clark's Jewelry Store; Keebaugh 's of Chester and Keebaugh 's

Shake Shoppe; Clonch TV/VCR
Repair; Shear Illusions; Fabric
Shop; Big Bend Heal.th and Fitness; Office Service &amp; Supply;
Rutland Furniture; Pleaser's; C&amp;D
Pennzoil; Prescription Shop; Middleport Department Store; Dairy
Queen Brazier; Sonya's Kountry
Kitchen; Anderson's; ' Hawk's 76
Station; Locker 2l9; Cardinal
Drycleaners; Fruth Pharmacy;
Adolph's Dairy Valley; Pomeroy
Flower Shop; Meigs County Golf
Course; and Gilmore's.
Perhaps the best feature of the
discount cards is !hat they are good
for one year, and the discounts
offered on the cards may be used
time and lime again. Therefore, !he
$5 investment can be returned time
and time again in savings on local
goods and services.

The cards may be purchased at
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce office, Oark's Jewelry
Store and Office Service &amp; Supply
in Pomeroy; The Prescription Shop
and Dairy Queen Brazier in Middleport; Sonya's Country Kitchen
in Racine and C&amp;D Pennzoil at
Five Points.
Proceeds from sales of the caro
wiU benefit !he chamber's missioo
and activities.
"These cards will increase business for those shops featured, and
can save a lot of·money for !hose
who buy the card," Chamber Director Paula Thacker said. "The cards
wiU also help the chamber achieve
some of its goals toward community and economic development"
"It's a win-win situation,"
Thacker said.

District court upholds ~oung's conviction
The Fourth District Court of
Appeals bas upheld the 1990 conviction of John Lewis Young on a
charge of kidnapping, an aggravated felony of the first degree.
According 1\1 Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story, Young was ·
convicted on the charge of kidnapping and transporting his niece
from Middleport to Mason County,
W.Va. in August of 1990. Thereafter, Story said, Young held the
girl in his automobile, threatening
her and raping her several times.
Young was sentenced by Judge

Fred W. ·erow ill to !he maxlmurn
sentence of not less than 15 years,
to no more than 25 years on a
charge of lriclnaPPing. The senlellce
was enhanced five additional years
by virtue of a previous conviction
for the murder of Mary Berry of

MasOn.

In addition to the kidnapping
conviction, ihere are now approximately 12 additional felony charges
against the defendant in Mason
County Circuit Coun. set for trial
this month.
"I am pleased with this convic-

tion," Siory said on Tuesday.
"Young has no regard for anyone.
His entire adult life has been one of
preying on his fellow human
beings. He received the maximum
from the court and it's just unfortunate that we do not have greater
penalties to impose on him."
"Luckily," Story said, "West
Virginia bas a repeat offender's
slatUte, and if he is convicted there
of any of these felonie~ he could
receive a life sentence m addlUon
to !he 15-20 years !hat (Crow) has
imposed."

-

CARDS AVAILABLE • Two cards, o"erln11 discouuts on local
goods and servic:es, are now available through the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce. Here, Malcolm Parks of' National Gas ud
Oil in Racine becomes one of lbe fint "cardholders", IS be purchases one of lbe cards from Cbamber Secrttary Terry Hayman.
Also pictured is Chamber Director !'aula Thacker.

Showcase is planned
third week in October
The third weekend in October
bas tenlatively been set as the date
for a showcase of Meigs County.
Mary Powell, tourism director
for Meigs County, conducted an
infonnational meeting last night lit
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Office wilh a number of
people from across the county to
discuss the "showcase" idea for the
county. Cindy Oliveri, County
Extension Agent, OffiCe Chairman
Home Economics/CNRD Agent
with The Ohio State University
Cooperative Extension Service is
assisting in the development of this
showcase.
According to Mrs. Powell, !his _
showcase idea has been handed
down from the Slate Department of
Tourism in an effort to create an
.awareness of the Appalachian
counties in the state as well as create and generate tourism . Mrs.
Powell stated !he development of
tourism would create a stepping
stone for economic development.
She stated every $1 spent by a
tourist · impacts six t1mes that

amount in the area where it is
srent
During the showcase, all unique
aspects of the county would be featured in a display type situation at a
designated locauon . Assislance
with the development of this showcase would also come from the
State Department of Tourism,
a::c.ording to Mrs. Powell.
To successfully develop the idea
there should be a representative
from each festival and event in the
county, as well as from each
municipality and township, to wort
on the showcase. At the showcase
diC opporrunity would be given for
doe promotion of each event
It is the hope of Mrs. Powell
drat by developing this showcase it
would draw people within a 500naile radius to the county to see
what is offered here pertaining to
doe tourism industry.
Another meeting to further
d:velop the idea will be held Sept
8 at 5:30p.m. at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commen:e Office.

not differentiate either, unless il
calls hearings.
Patrick Collins, vice president
of the Ohio Telephone Association,
also took issue with Spratley's
claims. He said return on equity is
based in part on internal savings
that can come from modernization
and staff reductions not reflected in
SpraUey's numbers.
Collins said telephone users in
Ohio have not had an increase in
basic rates for years and the number of access lines has stayed
almost the same. He said the companies have received more revenues from interslate tolls.
"You have to look at where !he
new revenue is coming from,"
Collins said. He also said the telephone industry had years when it
earned less !han the rate allowed by
thePUCO.
Spratley reported 1991 returns
on equity for !he slate's 13 major
utilities as 'follows : Cincinnati Bell,
13.1 pereent, compared with 15.4
percent in 1990; General Telephone, 13.1 percent (8 percent);
Ohio Bell, 15.3 percent (15.8 percent) and United Telephone, 18.4
percent (18.3 percent).
Columbia Gas, 9 percent (3.5
percent); East Ohio Gas, 12.3 percent (12.1 percent); ancinnali Gas
&amp; Elecaic, 12.1 percent (15.9 percent); Oeve~d Elecaic Illuminating, 11.1 percent (11.1 percent);
Columbus &amp; Soulhem Power, 8.5
percent (14.4 percent); Dayton
Power &amp; Light, ll.8 percent (15.9
percent); Ohio Edison, 9.4 percent
(9.9 percent); Ohio Power, 12.2
percent (13.5 percent), and Toledo
Edison, 2.8 percent (6.3 percent).

Voters OK 34
percent of
school issues
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Voters approved 15 of 44 school
money issues in special elections
around the state, according to
results compiled by the Ohio
Department of Education.
Tuesday's passage rate of 34.1
percent was the highest of the last
lhree years for August elections.
Gallipolis City School Disaict
voters rejected a 6-mill operating
levy, 1,797 to 1,013.
Voters approved 27.6 percent of
tax levies and bond issues in
August 1991, and 32.2 percent in
1990.
Roger Howard, assislant director of the Division of School
Finance, said the passage rate was
good compared wilh past years.
"First of all, school elections
don't do very well in August They
do beuer in the general, the bigger
elections," Howard said. "They
don't have a large turnout I'm not
sure r,:'U could put any one reason
on it '
Twelve of 36 real estate tax
levies to provide money for school
operating expenses were approved.
Three of eight school construction
measures were OK'd by voters.

...-----Local briefs-__, Wilmington attracting national politicians
Woman cited in wreck
A Long Bononi woman was cited after a two-car wreck on Ohio
681 in Olive Township Tuesday around 8:30 p.m.
'
According to a re~ from the .Gallia -M~iks Post Qf the State
Highway Patrol, Jaruce L. Fetty, 39, 34416 S'R 7, Pomeroy, was
westbound on Ohio 681 and stopped for a flagman 81 a construction
site. A following westbound vehicle, driven by Cristy A. Riggs, 22,
61530 SR 124, Long Bottom, failed to stop and struck the rear of
Fetty's car.
No injuries were reported.
Damage to Fetty's 1991 Pontiac LeMans was listed IS light.
Damage ro Ri~s' 1988 ChevroiCI Corsica was listed as moderate.
Riggs was c1ted by the patrol for failure to maintain assured clear
dislance.

MRIDD board honors class
At their recent meeting, the Meigs County Boaro of Mental'
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities adopted a reaolution,
expressing thanks to the Loyal Berean Class of !he Middlepon
Church of Christ for their monthly contribution 10 the MR gift fund.
''Carleton School and Meigs lndustires greatly appretiates the
· Continued·on page 3

v,

i.

WH.MINGTON, Ohio (AP) Ohio Democrats and Republicans
are disagree about why Vice President Dan Quayle plans to visit !his
soulhwest Ohio city.
Eugene Branstool, chairman of
the Ohio Democratic Party, said he
thinks Quayle will visit Wilmington Thursday because Republicans
noticed !hat Democratic presidential nominee Bill Clinton drew
about S,OOO ~le in the heavily
R~lican City July 20.
'It would worry them that a
Republican community was that
enthusiMtic and shoWed !hat much
applause. I imaslne that they
tltOughtlhey belt« counter it somehow," said BI'IIISUiol, who hosted
Clinton on July let 81 Branstool's
Utica flllll in cenual Ohio.
Rex Elsass, executive director of

the Ohio Republican Party, said the sudden lltention to his commuTuesday that Quayle's visit tS typi- nity or 11,000.
"I think we've got a lot of great
cal of !he rural campaigning the
vice president did in 1988 when he things going here, and I think a lot
visited McConnelsville, Napoleon ol the country would like to see
how we're doing i~" he said Tuesand Ottawa.
The GOP thinks rural areas day.
. h'IS
Eveland, 43, I Repub1ican Ill
exemplify llllditional family values,
Elsass said. The J181tY also wants to third four-~ tam as mayor, said
BSSUJC a strong turoout in southwest Wilrning1011 and sunounding ClinOhio because it has traditionally ton County are enjoying economic
been a Republican strongbold, he growlh and have low tax and crime
rates. The county's liiClllployment
said.
"We've always looked for rate is S.4 ~t;lboutlliO perplaces 10 reach out where we think centage pomts below the national
our message is beard "- and average.
Airborne Express, the overnight
lived," Elsus said. "Obviously,
southwest Ohio is very important to ~ackage delivery service that
us in e;nsuring that the president Q111yle plans to rour, is among several companies that are expanding
takesObio."
.
· Wilmington Mayor Nick Ev~­ their wort forces, Eveland said.
Reseatth Service and Technololand Jr. says he's 1101 surprised by
•

1

gy, a Japanese-owned aluminum
die casting company, moved in two
years ago. It employs about 120
people.
Local government has used state
and federal grants to improve water
and sewer lines to support indusDies moving into Airborne Commerce Park. Two shopping centers
have been built in the city in the
last siJ. years.
Eveland slid Wilmington also
offers candidales television exposure in the Cincinnati, Dayton and
Columbus markets, and can give
Cllndidates a feel for the concerns
of people in the Midwest.
"Remember the old ~hrase
about, if it nlays in I'«&lt;N. it II play
anywhere7r.·he said. "They loot at
us as a barometer, IS what's going
on in Middle America.''

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Wedneada~Auguat5.1992

)

,.~Commentary
.
_
~r::

·'~':t·~-.;,_.---:-------------,r----------------------.._

::~ :. The Daily Sentinel

By Jack Anderson
and
MichaelBinstein

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~----------.,;.....,._...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~k Ohio easy on drunk drivers
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Berry's World

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" Don't tell me -

let me guess. WE

BROUGHT THE UNITED STATES TO ITS
KNEES AGAIN?"

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 5, the 218th day of 1992. There arc 148
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Thirty years ago, on Aug. 5, 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe was found
dead in the bedroom of her Los Angeles home. Her death was ruled a
"probable suicide" caused by an overdose of sleeping pills. Monroe was
36.
On this date:
In 1861 , the federal government levied an income taJI for lhe first time.
In 1864, lluring the Civil War, Union Adm . David G. Farragut is said
10 have given his fa111ous order, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead! "
as he led his neet against Mobile Bay, Ala.
In !884.1he cornerstone for the Statue of liberty was laid on Bedloc's
Island in New York Harbor.
In 1914, the first electric traffic lights were installed, in Cleveland .
In 1924, the comic strip " Lillie Orphan Annie ," by Harold Gra y
made its dcbuL
'
In 1953, Opcralion Big Switch was under way as prisoners taken during the Korean ConOict were exchanged at Panmunjom.
In 1954, 24 boxers became the fii'St inductees into the Boxing Hall of
Fame, including Henry Armstrong, Gentleman Jim Corbett , Jack
DCmpscy, Jack Johnson, Joe Louis and John L. Sullivan.
In 1957, "American Bandstand," hos!Cd by Dick Clark, made its netI'•'WorkdebutonABC.
·
,
In 1969, lhe U.S. space P.robo Mariner Seven new by Mars, sending
-~ 1,bOck photographs and sc ienufic daLa.
, ~ " In 1980, Hurricane Allen baUcn:d the southern peninsula of Haiti , lcav: ' ing more than 200 dead.
In 1981, the federal government began firing air traffic controllers who
•• had gone out on strike. .
.
In 1984, actor Richard Bunon died at a hospital in Geneva at age 58.

!

.:.1f..·:

L

One of my favorite TV commercials is the one where the linle old
man takes his teensy bag of recyclables to the recycling center on
his bicycle while one of the prettiest vibratos in the universe sings
"America." As lhe sweet old fel·
low leaves the recycling center, he
flings his feet from the pedals in a
fit of joy. It's a precious moment,
one we'd all like to believe in.
It's one of many ads !hat sing
the pmises of recycling, alternately
praising, preaching and prodding
us to do what's right. A friend of
mine in the waste business calls
recycling the " hair shin" we wear
in penance for the sin of making
waste. "Bad, bad Americans to
make so much kaka. See Dick and
Jane buy the bad plas tic bottles.
See Dick and Jane take the bad bottles to the recycling center. Good
Dick and Jane!"
One reason I'd like to see recycling work is that it's a royal pain
in the can, and I don't mean tin. If
life is fair. there should be some
great payoff for going to all the
trouble of converting_one wing of

the house into a recycling center 10
separate the trash and do all that
rinsing, stomping your trash and
leaving early for work 10 take itlO

tbCm. Seattle can't sell its "moun- up on spending money on munici-

tain of glass," Hayes found, and
New York and Philadelphia bolh
cut back. on !heir recycling programs when !hey learned the costs
of the programs would be much
more than they expected.
Why is the market down? Well,
fltSt,
of course, lhe recession. But
the recycling center.
second,
industries have been slow
Unfortunately (and I know I
to
invest
in techniques to process
don't have to tell you Ibis). life is
recylables
into reusable material
rarely fair. Recycling isn't doing so
because
those
methods cost more
well, and I'm afraid it's because
we've spent more time making cute !han other production melhods and
commercials and bumper stickers consumers dpn't buy products that
for recycling than we have devel- cost more than others. We're selfoping and supporting markets for ish bums who don't sing "Ameri·
ca" as we do the right !bing, and
it
In Webster Groves, Mo., just we want the most for our money.
Third. all those cities now recyoutside St. Louis, city officials are
cling
- almost 4,000 nationwide
closing the recycling center
because of the poor market. St. since 1988 - started answering the
Louis trash hauler Pat Grundmeyer altar call to do good before the
told CBS reporter Erin Hayes that markets to buy what they collected
haulers don't want to offer curbside could handle it all.
What do we do ahoul it? Well,
recycling lest they create "abovefor
starters, we can stop putting the
ground landfills in buildings."
cart
before lhe .horse and getting
Boston officials can't even give
everyone
to recycle before ·there
their newspapers away and are payare
markets
in place to do anything
ing a hauler $21 a ton 10 dispose of
with recycled trash. We can hold

Sarah Overstreet

pal "mixed waste com posting"
plants that try to be alllhmgs to all
wastes, gathering a city's worlh of
trash all mixed up in a heap and
creating odor and contamination
problems. Facilities in Portland,
Ore., and Des Moines, Iowa, were
so problematic lhey were closed.
We can get senoliS about deciding whelher lhe government should
be involved in forcing manufacturers 10 buy recycled goods and tam·
pering with the balance of private
enterprise. Will recycling ever be
economically feasible? Are landfllls lined w1th new materials !hat
won' 1decompose and will prevent
waste from seeping through a better solution? Some waste expens
say -!hey are, but I'm not an expen.
Whatever we do, I hope 10 heck we
get to it.
Rinsing my mille hollies only to
have them land back at the landfdl
isn't exactly what I'd call "quality
time."
Sarah Overs_treet Is a syndicated wriler for Newspaper
Enteprise Association.

Slimeslinging.could backfire on GOP
Gramm, R-Texas. Newt is the one
with lhe hair. He loves lhe "val·
ues" issue, not for any great moral
reason b.ut because "it resonates
with the core beliefs of most Americans." Phil's slimeball speciality
is economics; he says Clinton 's
plans are "very menacing."
Newt and Phil don't ta1lc about
lhe draft because they managed 10
words - did ''what any normal skip lhe Vietnam experience wilh
person at that age would do - call academic deferments. As Newt
home. You call home to mother once put ii: "Given everything I
and father and say I'd like to get believe in, a large pan of me thinks
into the National Guard. ... Is there I should have gone over. Part of the
anything wrong with asking your question I had to ask myself was
mother and father's friends for what difference I would have
made." Phil ~xplained that he was
advice? "
in
a "very competitive field/' and
Well, Dan now sars, " lhe di_f.
"I
just didn't feel it made sense for
ference is, I served.' He was on
me
to go in lhe military."
active duty for six months in the
Sen. Jake .Garri, R-Utah, has
city where he was born and he has
lhe cheek 10 say, "I served.'' I fear also been sliming Clinton about
he is far too much of a fool to be an evading the draft. As a former
Navy man, he's on safe ground, but
effective slimer.
Much better are the next two notice he doesn't ralt much about
players in the lineup, Rep. Newt economic issues. That's because hC
Gingrich , R-Ga., and Sen. Phil · is as responsible as any other person on the planet for lhe $500 bilTen year~ ago: The U.S. House of Rcprescntalivcs narrowly rejected a lion savings and loan debacle. As
call for a superpower nuclear weapons freeze, approving instead an alter- Senate Banking Committee chairman in 1982, he co-aulhored lhe
nati ve arms-reduction rcsolulion favored by President Ronald Rca~an . ·
bill !hat deregulated the industry,
Five years ago: President Reag~n announced his administnmon had
which
has demonstrated its' apprereached a "general agreement" with leaders or Congress on a new Cenciation
through lhe ·years with gentral America peace plan. Nic~guan President Daniel Ortega offered to
erous conuibutions.
discuss the U.S. proposal.
.,
A veteran slimer we haven' t

It's Slimeball season again, and
this is your favorite analyst, the
guy who call s them as he sees
them, the old Curmudgeon, with an
answer to the pressing question :
Arc we going to see some prime
slime this year?
The short answer is, yes and no.
I thinlc we might see some quality
Slimeball early on, but I don't
think it can last. The Republican
lineup is teeming wilh handicapped
players who could end up on the
disabled list before we really get
started.
Take Vice Pres ident Dan
Quayle. He has an annoying habit
of stinging slime on issues that he
has problems with himself. Lately,
the rich boy who never had 10 work
for anylhing and squeaked into law
school on a program for disadvan·
taged students has beeil urging less
fortunate folks to pull themselves
uo by !heir bootstraps and get some
•rvalues."
.
He has also blasted Bill Clinton
for dodging the draft when every-

body kliows he did the same !bing.
With the draft board after him and
a tour of Vietnam looming on the
horizon , Quayle - in his own

Joseph Spear

heard much from lalely stepped up
lhe other day and launched a nice
wad . The Rev. Pat Robertson
allowed that Bill Clinton had been
close to blasphemy when he quoted
scripture in his acceptance speecti
at the Democmtic convention. "If
it isn' t blasphemous, it certainly
borders on it. ... Don 't come up
with pseudo·Christianity to mask
what you're doing." Wonder how
he explains away his claim in 1988
that God had urged him 10 run for
the White House, and his flat declaration: "I assure you !hat I am
going to be lhe next president of
the United States."
George Bush, the old flap-andpledges slimer from 1988, tsn 't in
top shape yet, but he took some
practice tosses when he attacked
Clinton's economic ~roposals as
"smoke and mirrors' and added,
"what I see is a program thai doea
not address itself to lhe deficit."
Will he be able 10 get away with
this· schlock, considering lhe faci
that he has piled up more than $800
billion in debt dunng his own presidency and -will see the ftgure top a
trillion dollars if projections for
1993 are correct?
I fear lhe 1992 S1imeball season
could turn into a flop.
Joseph Spear Ia a syndk•ted
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

By The Associated Press
Skies will remain mostly clear
through Thursday and temperatures
and humidities will be at pleasant
levels. Highs will be in lhe mid 70s
to low 80s. Lows will be in the
low-to-mid-50s.
The mild forecast will be the
result of a high pressure system
th.at went from the Rocky moun·
tams 10 the Eas~Coast This system
ts expected to slowly move east
and by late Thursday, should be
from the ~ssissippi valley 10 the
west Atlanuc. .
. The reconl·high temperaturefor
_th1s dale at the Columbus weather
station was 103 degrees in 1918
while the record low was 46 in
1951. Sunset tonight will be at8:41
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:35

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

are used by 120 million adult
Americans on a regular basis.
Even in these budget-strapped
days, library advocates charge !hat
there are billiohs of wasted doUars
!hat can be squeezed out of olher
areas. For example, the General
Accounting Office has identified
$28 billion in excess aircmft spare
parts that the Pentagon can 'I use
for the foreseeable future.
The $28 billion from excess
spare pans could have run the public library system for seven years.
From anolher perspective, lhe $4
billion is the equivalent of 10 Anny
Apache helicopters, of which lhe
PenLagon now possesses· more than
500.
Even spare change from these
programs could rescue libraries !hat
are at lhe fmancial brink in seveml
pans of the country. Until recently,
budget cuts forced 46 of the 58
public library branches in Owens'
Brooklyn, N.Y ., district to stay
closed up to 5 days a week.
In Massachusetts, 20 library
branches have closed their doors
during the past two years . And
budget cuts have forced the tbicago Public Library System 10 shave
hours at 80 of its branches and lay
off 100 workers.
Not all libraries, however, are
getting starved. U.S. taxpayers are
funding tibmries abroad to lhe tune
of $42 million per year. ThG U.S.
Information Agency is spending
$42 million of taxpayer money Ibis
year to fund !56 libraries around
the world. Some $4 million has
been doled out to eight USIA
lillraries and reading rooms in Germany, $2.8 million for six in Japan
and $974,000 for four in Australia.
Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., wants
to shut down USIA-funded
lillraries in Western Europe, Japan,
Australia and New Zealand, a
move that he says would realize
$15 million in savings.
For his part, Owens plans to
inlroduce a bill early next year creating the Emergency Book Fund a $10 per American allocation to
purchase library books.
That's an idea that might enjoy
more popularity in lhe East Wing
than in lhe West Wing of the White
House.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are syndicated writers
ror United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

Recycling effort has a long way to go

.

Thursday, Au&amp;. 6

Barbara Bush: first lady of the library

WASHINGTON - From the
President Bush's proposed -bud· the celebration that followed the
111 Coart Street
East Wing of the White House, get for fiscal year 1993 s1ashed fed- 1988 election. The money has got:'': .
·
Poaltnlf, Oll!o
ten distributed 10 small and mediBarbara Bush has seized lhe bully
, •. ' : DI:VOTZD TO TD JliiTUE8Ta or 111E DIGS-IUSON AR1tA
um -size libraries in amounts of
pulpit of first lady to crusade for
- :·~~..:
$5,000
each, making Mrs. Bush a
reading and family literacy.
_._,,:
hero to scores of small communiFrom the West Wing of the
ties- while back in Washington
While House, George Bush ·~ ·
her husband gets hammered.
" the education president" - has
.. .,. ,, .
.....
"It's ridiculous for the educapresided over a wave of library cloROBERT
L
WINGETT
sures
and
cutbacks
that's
tion
president 10 ta11c about forward
\•
.
I ·. ',
Publisher
unmatched
even
during
the
Oreal
improvement
of education when
\' ~~'
~ ~.
we're
neglecting
and destroying
Depression.
. eral library ~rograms by 76 per; · ,•I,.
.~ · )· ·
PATWHrrEIIEAD
Sometimes it has appeared that cent, accordmg to the American our libraries," Rep. Major Owens,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the
West Wing doesn't know what Library Association . During a D-N. Y., told our associate Ed
r·. "' ' Assistant PubUsber/Contruller
Genenl Moager
the
East
Wing is doing.
photo-op last year at the White Henry. "Libraries are the most
•.. ' .... .
'
Public library systems around House Conference on Libraries, economic way to provide aid to
f:
LI!TIERS OF OPINION aro weloomc. They should be less !han 300
the nation are reeling from massive Bush said: "Our libraries serve as education, ·but they get overlooked
wol)ls. Alllellers are subject to editing and must be sisoed wilh nome,
budget cuts, forced branch clos- the schoolrooms for lifetime learn· repeatedly because libraries aren't
1, • , · • · address and telephone number. No unsisne&lt;I !etten will be publlibed. Letten
ings,
layoffs, slashed operating ing and the launching pads for our Jlamorous and don't have lobby·
~:
should be 10 sood taste. ad&lt;bessillg issues, not pmonalities.
.J hours and deep reductions in the future."
ISts."
·!~-~ .&gt;
level of new book and serial acquiUn~er the president's budget, no
Owens, the only member of
sitions. In the meantime, American funds would be provided for ser- Congress who can claim to be a
taxpayers are shelling out $42 mil· vices 10 children, seniors or persons librarian, believes that taxpayers
lion a year for over 100 libraries with disabilities. Nor would then: are getting plenty of bang 'for the
•
and reading rooms around the be anr funds for new technologies library book buck.
t &lt;·.
By ROBERT E. MILLER
world.
that libraries say they require to
Elementary and secondary edu, . .;- ·
Associated Press Writer
Mrs. Bush, honorary chairper- maintain public access to informa- cation nationwide, which services
;·;': · COLUMBUS -Ohio is known for tough drunken driving laws but in son of the Barbara Bush Founda- tion.
40 million young people, costs
•,:".•' liome·pans of the world, !hey would be seen as a mere slap on the wrist
tion for Family Literacy, eloquent·
Funds may be drying up from $213 billion. Another $141 billion
In El .~alvador, for instance, the Ohio Department of Highway Safety ly explains tha~ " home is a child's the federal government, but Mrs. goes for lhe higher education of
·• : . ·repons, your first offense IS your last - execution by firing squad.''
first school, the parent is the child's Bush has shaken loose spare about 13 million students. By com;, .
Bulgaria is slightly more lenient, Execution comes wilh a second first teacher, and reading is the change from lhe Presidential Inau- ~son, $4 billion suppons public ·
' C' offense.
child's first subject"
gural Committee, which directed library services nationally, which
: : ·: Poland's laws take an interesting twist Driving under lhe influence of
ETTA €)1§91. fOitrWCIItlii~~RAV
~- -·~ alcohol brings a fme and jail term but doesn' t stop there.
HUt.ME
18
Those convicted in Poland must also endure what some might call
cruel and unusual punishment: Attending potiticallectures.
The deparunent puts out a monthly publication called Hot Sheet News.
which features _information on Ohio's Dtn enforcement programs, and the
, ,~ · August edition contrasts Ohio's laws with those of more than a dozen for. ~ : eign counuies.
·
David Cooke, depaitment spokesman, said lhe idea was to point out 10
those who may feel Ohio's laws are overly slringent that in many areas of
,,,• : me world, drunken driving is taken far more seriously.
.- - · For the record, the department didn't advocate ~ira! punishment or
·any of the other drastic measures described in the publieations.
• . _, Othen included:
&gt;~ _ - Australia: Names of drivers are published in newspapers under the
·, • heading: " He's drunk and in jail."
-~ ~-..
- Malaya: If the &lt;!river is jailed, the spouse is jailed, too.
: · - Norway: Three weeks of hanllabor,license suspended for a year.
.
- Turkey: Drivers are taken 20 miles from town and forced 10 walk
.•. back.
,' ..
- Finland and Sweden: One year at hard labor.
-Costa Rica: Police remove the ticense plate from the car.
; ,.:_ - Russia: License revoked for life.
, ,
- England: One year in jail, $250 fine. license suspended for a year.
: ·; _. - France: One year in jail, three-year license suspension, SI ,000 rme.
Ohio's laws have been regarded as tough for many years because of a
.. . mandatory lhree-day jail term for a fii'St-time convicuon (coons may sub·:.: stitute an alcohol intervention prog!alll).
• • Over the y~s! lhe l:e&amp;islature has increased .!he fine 10 a possible
_, . $1,000 - the mmunum IS $200- and a 90-day license suspension with
&lt;· : rio occupational driving privileges for at least 15 days. A license can be
.: :. suspended for 30 days for refusing 10 take a drunken driver test
"My family values can whip your family values."
·: . The fines and,sentences increase wilh each subsequent conviction until
;: the fourth offense when lhe fme reaches a maximum S10,000. The jail
. •... term becomes 60 days to a year and lhe license can be suspended from
.: " three years to life.
~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Skies expected to remain cfear through Thursday :

OHIO Weather

Page-2- TheDallySentlnel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

_____...:,W;,:e;::d.:.:;ne::,:s:::d::a~~·.::A::u~gu::•::.t.::.5·:.;1:.::.9::92:_

~~··

~.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(

IMansfield 179" I•
IND.

~

~
•I columbus! so• I

a.m.
Around the nation
.
. Fau to panly cloudy skies
prevatl~ over most of the United
States th1s mof!l~g. Fog hung over
some Eas~ aues early Ioday.
Sunny skies and unusually cool
weather were forecast for the
Northeast tod~y. Thunderstorms
were ~ed form the Soulheast.
Rain and thunderstorms ex ten~ed Tuesday mght over the Atlannc
coastal Sf!ites, New England, the
~~h1ans, the eastern Gl!lf _of
. e~tco regton, the lower Misstsstppl V~y. Texas, Iowa, pans of
the Roc);jes and the Southwest.
Thunderstorms pounded central
Nebraska, causing substantial crop
damage, the National Weather Service said. Golf ball-size hail was

reported.
Lightning in Grand Island, Neb.,
struck near a group of golfers,
knocking four of them to the
ground. One was slightly injured. A
racetrack buililing was blown down
by 70-mph wind.
Storms that might have been tornadoes touched down Tuesday
night around Washington, D.C. .
Nearly 3 inches of rain fell in
the stx-hour period ending early
Tuesday evening at Rumford,

Maine.
Temperatures today were ron:castm lhe 70s for New England,
upstate New York, lhe Midwest
·

and the northeast Plains. Ratdi
in lhe 80s were expected in ~:!
mid· Atlantic coastal statei
Appalachians central Mississippi
Valley central Plains and ROrlhern
Rockie's.
.
Highs in lhe 90s wen: forecast
for lhe Soutbeast, Texas lhe south
em Plains and most of the Wes;
Readings in the 100s were forecasi
for Northern and central California
and southern Arizona, with tern •
atures around 110 in Southern~fornia.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 113 degrees at
Death Valley Calif
'
·

State officials are still
watching groundwater
In&lt;:.

Weather
Fair on Friday with lows in midSouth-Central Ohio
50s
to mid-60s and highs in lhe
Tonight, clear. Low in lhe mid80s.
A chance of showers and lhun50s. Thursday, mostly sunny. High
derstorms
Saturday and Sunday
in the mid-80s.
with lows in lhe 60s and highs in
Extended forecast:
the
upper 70s and low 80s.
Friday through Sunday:

Area deaths
Doroth1 Brewer

Carl (Babe) Adkins

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va~­
Carl T. "Babe" Adkins, 71, of Point
Pleasant, died Monday, · Aug. 3,
1992, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born November 13,
1920, in Letart, a iiDII of the late
John T. and Ina Mae (Fry) Adkins.
He was a n:tiRd hCad foreman at
the former Foote Mineral Plant in
New Haven, as well as a member
of the Point Pleasanl Presbyterian
Chun:h. A fOOiball coach at Middleoort High School from 19501952, he was a 1940 graduaie of
Point Pleasant High School and a
1950 araduaie of Purdue University. He also was a United StaleS
Navy World War n veteran and an
avid athletic and sport fan.
In addition to his )llllatts, he was
preceded in death by two brothers.
Clan:nce and Wtlliam "Boone" Ad·
Ieins.
Survivors include his wife, Polly
A. (Filson) Adkins; one daughier,
Unda Oalea of Point Pleaaan~ two

\l

Dorothy Violet Brewer, Portland, died, Wednesday, Aug. 5,
1992 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

Claremont Buchanan

Claremont "Whitey" Buchanan,
69, 7237 Emerson Avenue, Parkersburg, W.Va., died at his residence Tuesday. Aug. 4, 1992 following an extended illness.
Born April 30, 1923 at Eden
Ridge in Meigs County, he was a
son of the late Anhur Buchanan
and Bertha Sovel Buchanan Milhoan. He was a member of the
Boaz Baptist Church and was a
retired carpenier employed by Carpenters Local 899. He was also a
Navy Vetenlll of World Warn.
He is survived by his wife,
Juanita Owens Buchanan; three
sons, Arthur Buchanan, Cairo,
w.va..
Thomas Buchanan, Minemt
sons, Master SgL Gregory S. AdWells,
W.Va., and Ronald
kins, stationed with lhe United
Buchanan,
Parkersburg, W.Va.;
States Anny in Gennany, and
one
daughter,
Shirley Hefner,
Bruce Adlcins of Cross Lanes.
Waverly,
W.Va.;
five grandchilW.Va.; one sisler, V'uginia HoUand
dren;
four
sisters,
Farie Cole.
of Point Pleasant; t1we brothers, .
Pomeroy,
Naomi
King,
Middleport,
V'lfgil Adkins of Lelan, George ll1d
Delores Bailey, Middlepon, and
Robert G. Adkins, both of Point Eloise
Pickett, Pomeroy.
Pleasant; and four grandchildren.
Besides
his parents he was preFunml services will be condue- ceded in dealh
by one son.
ted Friday, II a.m., at the CrowServices will be Friday at 1 p.m.
HusseU l'uneral Home in Point at Ogdin Funeral Home in ParkersPkaant, with the Rev. Oleryl burg, W.Va., with Rev. Norris TenBurke officiating. Burial wiD fol- nant officiating. Burial will be in
low in Kirkland Memorial Gardens Mt. Olivet Cemetery in Parkersnear Point Pleasant.
burg, W.Va.
Friends may call the funeral
Friends may call at lhe funeral
home Thunday from 6 to 9 p.m.
home today (Wednesday) from 7-9
In lieu of ftowers the family re- p.m. and Thursday 2-4 and 7-9
quests that donatims be made Ill p.m. .
the Poinl Pleallnl Presbyterian
tbun:h Memorial Fund
The Big Bend Youth Football
League will hold signups on SaturCLEVELAND (AP)- Here are day from 9 a.m. to noon at the Big
Tuesday night' s Ohio Lottery Bend Health and Fitness Center,
selectioos:
Mechanic Sueet, Pomeroy (the
Pick 3 Numbers
Locomotion Teen Oub) for all fifth
5-1-9
and sixlh grade boys. Boys cannot
(five, one, nine)
be 13 before Sept. I to participule
Pick 4 Numbers
in lhe program.
8-5-0-4
Girls wishing to be cheerleaders
(eight, five, zero, four)
can signup at lhe same time. Ques·
Buckeye 5
tions concerning the program
2·8-19-24-30
should be directed to Lisa Roush
(two , eight, nineteen, twenty- after 4:30p.m. at 992-3486.
four, thirty)
The Super Lotto jackpot is $10
miltion.

Lottery numbers

(UIPSJl._l
Pllbliohe4 1'101')' oRemoon, Mondoy
t.h......
Ill Coart
""""''""·
Ohio
byPrill&amp;)';
lbe Ohio
Volley812
roabliohln1
CompanyiMaltimtclia ln.:., PomeroJ,

Ohio 45769, Pli. 11112·21116. Second .....

poollp pold ol l'llmotOjl, Oltlo.

M......,,. A-dolod - . , Alld t.he
Oble New.,.per Auudation, NadeftJl
MY.u.t., Re..-ea&amp;a.U.e, Branham
N•W!PIPI! Salta, 733 Third Annve,
New Tart, New \llllt t00t7.

POS'l'MA8TER:-- ""'-lo

The DIIIJ lloallael, Ill Coun St.,
Porne!O)'; OHio 415'NII.

811111CIIPTION liATI8
Ono Wook.
.....................
......................
., Curlor
... · · · l.60
One Month ...... ,_..............- ................ts.&amp;&amp;
Onu Yar......... .................... _,_ .....MUO
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.
PRICI
Oally......... ....................................U Ctoto

dooiri.,lo .-y 1111 -.!·

er may remit in adn"nce direct to The

be,._-ta

Daily Sentinel • • t.hne, IIi&amp; or

....u. ....... Crolil wiD

...hw.k.

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No ouboaiptiCIIo by ftilll ponniu.d Ia
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--Local briefs...-......,
Continued rrom page 1
support of our Meigs County tnends," admmtstrator Steve Beha
Satd.

EMS units respond to nine calls
Units of lhe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to nine calli for assistance Tuesday and early Wednesday morning.
. Three of Tuesday's calls were to the Meigs Mines with the Rutland squad responding. They were at 10:35 a.m. for William Crabtree who was taken to lhe Holzer Medical Center, at 7: 18 p.m. for
Joel Green, transponed to O'Bieness, and 11:43 p.m. for Lloyd
King, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2:50 p.m. the Rutland squad transported Justin George from
Station 4 to lhe Holzer Medical Center. The Pomeroy unit respond·
ed 10 a call to.Welch town Hill at 3:52 p.m. and took Jessie Kline
from her home there to Veterans Memorial Hospiral. At 4:28 p.m.
the Pomeroy unit took Ronnie Eakins from Condor Street to Veter-

ans.
Wednesday morning at 12 a.m. the Middlepon unit went to
Overbrook for Eva Schreiber who was transported to Veterans, at
1:01 the Pomeroy squad transported Glenna Soulsby to Veterans
from the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, and at 8:10
a.m. Dorolhy Hanenbach was transported by the Mid4lepon unit
from Overbrook 10 Veterans.

Middleport Court news

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................33 3/8
Ashland Oil........... .............26 7/8
AT&amp;T .............................. ..43 3/4
Bank One.......................... .44 5/8
Bob Evans ......................... 19 3/4
Charming Shop ................. JI 1/4
City Holding ......... ....... .... .. 19 7/8
Federal Mogul ...... ............. 16 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................66
Key Centurion ...................20 1/4
Lands End ......................... .32 1/4
Umi!Cd Inc ....................... 20 5/8
Multimedia Inc. .................26 3/4
Rax ResLauranL .. ...... ...... ...9/16
Reliance Elcctric................ l7 7/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 3/4
~honey's lnc. .... .................22 1/4
Star Bank ......... .................. 29 718
Wendy Int'l.. ...................... ll 7/8
Worthington Ind................ 23 5/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by lllunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Meigs announcements
Willford reunion
The annual Willford family
reunion will be held Sunday at Star
Mill Park in Racine with potluck
diMer at noon.
B·oard of Public Arfairs to
meet
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
at council chambers at Star Mill
Park.
Hydrants to be nushed
The Racine Fire Department
will be nushing hydrants in Racine
on Sunday. Residents be informed
they may experience cloudy water
at this time. ·
Preaching
There will be preaching at the
Old Dexter Church on Aug. 16 at
9:45 a.m. with David Garbutt,
Columbus. Public invited.
Country music night
Country music night at the Lot·
uidge Community Center will be

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Martha Moore, Syracuse; Ruth
Morris, Rutland; and John Green·
away, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES ·
Maybelle !hie.

Eight were fmed and two others
forfeited bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Fined were Walter F. Becker,
West Columbia, W. Va., $10 and
costs, running a red light; Raena L.
Eblin, Pomeroy, $10 fine only on
assured clear distance; John H.
Actions for divorce have been
Day, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, filed in Meigs County Common
expired registration: Jerry L. Jacks. Pleas Court by Diane Louise
Jr. , Pomeroy, $10 and costs, Smith, Middleport, against Gary
expired registration; Donald W. Michael Smith, Middlepon; and by
Price, Rutland, $10 and costs, Benjamin F. Upton, ~eedsville,
expired registration; Coy B. against Brenda L. Upton, Coolville.
SLarcher, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
expired registration: John W.
Casto, POmeroy, $10 and costs, fic titious tags; and Kim Lee, Middle·
port, $25 and costs, criminal mischief.
Forfeiting bonds were Chester
Kinzel, Letart, W. Va., $6 , travel·
ing lhe wron11 way on a one way
street; and W1lliam Tillis, Racine,
$52, speeding.

held Saturday with band beginning
at 7 p.m. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone welcome. .
Meeting scheduled
The Lollridge Community Cen· ·
ter wiU meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome .

We have a
1
(0l
complete
stock of
Horse shoes.
and Horse ·- ~ '
shoe nails. ~

~

.

.,

'

Divorces filed

is pleased to bring you the wortd•s
first commercial-free Olympics!

Livestock
report

The Daily SellliDel '

Suboaiben 001

Signups Saturday

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) tion !lfficer for lhe Ohio EmergenThe National Wealher Service says cy Management Agency, said lhe
lhe drought is over, but stale offi- governor's Drought Assessment
cials are watching the groundwater Committee still i_s waiting to see
to· determine whether there is whether groundwater supplies will
enough moisture to last through the be sufficient
dry winter monlhs.
The commillee, formed during
Rains that set records and lhe drought of 1988 and reactivated
caused flooding in much of the last summer, decided during its
state last month have saturated July 23 meeting not to schedule
farmers· fields and replenished another·meeting because drought
reservoirs.
conditions were improving.
The weather service on Tuesday
But the committee still has work
said drought conditions around the to do. It will continue i;s twicestate had ended after more !han a monlhly report on lhe status of the
year.
drou~ht !n Ohio until it!' certain
But Gene Kinn, public informa- lhe s1tuauon has ended, Kinn Satd.

.110

.40

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Dilect livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Wednesday by the Ohio Department of
Agriculture:
Barrows and gills: steady to
·
mostly .50 lower; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230~260 lbs .. country
points, 41.50-42.50, a few 43.00;
plants 42.50-43.50, a few 44.25• .
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
points, 40.00-41.50.
U.S. 1·3, 230·260 lbs., country
points, 40.00-42.00.
Receipts Tuesday 7,400. Estimated receipts Wednesday 7,500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 67.0076.50; select60.00-69.50.
Slaughter heifers: choice 68.0075.00; select 64.00-69.50.
Cows: uneven; all cows 53.25
and down.
Bulls: uneven; all bulls 66.00
and down.
Veal calves: uneven; choice
110.00 and down.
Sheep 111d lambs: lower; choice
wools 40.00-48. 75; choice clips
40.10-48.75; feeder lambs 62.00
_ and down; old sheep 29.00 and

ll's the Su mmer Olympi " Tri plcCasiThree ca ble channels, l c l cc ltsl l n~ srmul taneo usly, co verin g the
most popular event\ ;md crnphasizmg American Teams.

July 26 • August 9
15 glorious days of Olympic coverage
with no commercial interuptions!

A real Stihl. Rupgcd I huJ!J(,•'

Long-lasllng. Yel ligl.l woigillauJ
easy to handle.
Features Incl ude·
• Ufeume warranty on electro nic
lgnlllon
• Dual-line cutti ng head with auto

Cablevision is making The Summer Olympics
TripleCast available to you , FREE OF CHARGE, at
Village Pizza Inn. Just stop by' any time between
1I a.m. and 11 p.m. and check out all the Olympic
action: Basketball, Baseball, Track and Field, Diving,
Gymnastics ... it's all then: for you. Come on out and
watch the USA go for the Gold! For more infonnation,
call Cablevision at 1-800-344-3331.

marie "bump" lin e advance

• Powerful l0.1 &lt;&lt;e ngine thai runs cool
• Flow-th rough p rime~ for easy starts.
All the qualuy thJI has ma~ e Suhl th• most
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._

$J 2r" 95

The Olympics TripleCast is in addition to NBC's regular
Olympic coverage. Sponsored by Cablevision .

STIHC.

WCATION:
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PO.ROY, OH.

992·5500

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~ports
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The Daily Sentinel
Wednaada~Auguat5.1992

By LARRY McSHANE
.
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Get out the Olympic almanac .
Some research is needed after Day
II of the Games.
- It was 1956-when the Americans last won just three medals in
boxing. It's happened again.
- It was 1976 when the U.S.
men last lost the gold in an
Olympic diving event. It's happened here. American women were
never shut out of a springboard
medal. They were here.
- It was 1980 when the Cubans
last joined in Olympic fun. They're
back with a ven$eance. .
Cubans dommated baseball and
boxing on Tuesday, ending U.S.
gold medal hopes on the diamond
while guaranteeing themselves nine
medals in the ring. lhe Chinese
ended the American hammerlock in
diving, collecting three of the four
Barcelona golds with a young,
improving team.
''I was real aware of how dominant the U.S : has been," said Scou
Donie, the silver medalist behind
16-year-old Stin Shuwei of China.

~.

Atlanta ~~mes back to post 7-5 victory over Cincinnati

By The Asoclaled l'nls
Terry Pendleton didn't expect to bat in the bottom
of ihe ninth inning. What he expected was an intentipna1 walk.
Pendleton hit a two.nm homer with two outs in
tile ninth inning to ~ve lhe Atlanta Braves a 7-S victQry against the vis1ting Cincinnati Reds oo Tuesday
night and a I 1/2-game lead in the National League
'Nest.
;, Otis Nixon walked with two outs in the ninth off
R~ relief ace Norm Charlton (3-J) and srole secoiid, Everyone in the park, including Pendleton, then
e! pected manager Lou Piniella to caD for an intentiona! walk. After all, on-deck bauer Ron Gant was
hitting only .162 ovei his previous 12 games.
, "To a certain extent I was surprised," said
PeJidleton, who is bitting .390 over the last nine
g• . "I personally wouldn't have wanted to pitch
to inc.
:. ''I'm not trying to be arrogant or cocky. I've just
~n swinging the bat weD lltely."
Piniella didn't answer the question.
,. "You saw what happened. Just write it," he said.
·',What the hell am I gomg to teD you guys?"
• Pendleton hit a home run deep CJYer the lefi-f~eld
f~ce, his 15th, to selld the sold-out crowd into a
frenzy.
· "Wilen I get two strikes on somebody, I have got

to be able to put him away," Charlton said.
Marvin Freeman (4-4) picked up the victory by
pitching a sc«cless ninth inning as the Braves rallied
for their fOII'th straight victory.
Atlanta tied it at S-Ill in the ei&amp;hth, scoring three
runs off Reds ace Charlton, keyed by 1 throwing
error by third baseman Chris Sabo and capped by
Greg Olson's sacrif'ICC fly.
Elsewhere in the NL it was CbicaJIO 8, Monlreal
6; Pittsburgh 3, New York 2 in 12 innmgs; SL Louis
9, Philadelphia S; San Francisco 7, San Diego I; and
Los Angeles 7, Houston 2.
Pirates 3, Mets l - At Three Riven Stadium,
Alex Cole grounded a single through a drawn-in
infield with one out in the 12th ~- .
. ~ob Walk, (S-4) worked Ol!t of JIIDS m all .three
mnmgs he pitched for the VICtory as five Pirates
pitchers combined to limit the Mets to twO runs and
eight hits.
Tom Filer (0-1) allowed Don Slaught's leadoff
single to swt the 12th. Slaught then stole his fust
base ol the season.
.
.
Cubs 8, Expos 6 -At OlympiC Stadium, Mark
Grace hit a twG-run single 10 snap an eighth-inning

6-6 tie.
Chuck McElroy (4-6) pitcbed I '1/3 innings for the
win, allowing three hits and one run. Paul Assenmacher got the "last three outs for his sixth save.

Cuba rul~s in ring, at ballpark;
.

Page-4

Sammy Sosa's three-run homer highlighted a sixrun fourth as the Cubs oven:ame a 5-0 deficit
(Sft NL OD Page 5)

He's now aware that dominance most rf it by Greg Louganis - is
over.
Things were very one-sided in
baseball, where the Cubans ran
their record against the United
States to 33-12 over the past six
years with a 6-1 vic lOry Tuesday.
The Cubans face Taiwan today for
the first-ever gold medal in baseball.
"I thought I'd never say it, but
.those guys are better than we are,"
losing pitcher Rick Helling said.
"They're unbelievable. I was close
to perfect all night. ... I throw an
about-perfect game and give up
four runs. Unbelievable."
The Cubans did almost as well
In boxin~ , moving ni~e of their 12
fighters mto the semifinals. Only
three Americans made it that far,
the worst medal showing in 36
years.
There was some better news for
other U.S. teams . The women's
volleyball bunch advanced to the
semifinals against Cuba; the
women's liasketballers plar, the
Unified Team in their semifinal

ue.

Grace, who doubled home a run earlier in the
game, hit a 3-2 pitch from Bill Sampen (0-4) with
two outs and runners on secCIId and third to brellt a

s.-, CNaNIIATI, "
6:

NATIONAL LEAGUE

aua..DIYW.
W L tid.
Pltuhurah .............!1 41 .l41
Moolnil .............. .l6 ll .l23
• Olio.l&amp;~·-··········- · ·ll l4 .416
Now Yodl ..........•..ll l4 .416
J SLLou.ii ............... ..SO 56 .47l
Pllilo4clphia .•.........ol6 6~ .•30

. T...

2.!
~l

6.5
I

12.!

W...... DI_

Atlanto ...................62 •2 .l96
l.l
7
12.!
16
17

Tuesday's...,....
OUo.taoa.-.6

l'A.-.?,
llll.....,CINCINNATI
3. 11cw v.a 2. 12ioainp
l
SL LoWa 9, Philadelphia l
San .......... 1. San Ililloo I

Loa

a1

Sl.

~

Ntw Yolk (Scllowct 3.-f) tt Pittt·
, boqh(Smilhl-ll,J~i:·
, CINCINNATI
9-9) u Allanu
•(A.., 1-1), 7:40p.m.
• San FnndleO (Ollveru 0.0) u Sea
'!Moo (llant 11-6), I ~CIS p.m.
. a.u... (11...,. 3-7) • Loa Aaplea

: (Ojada 3-l~ 10:35 p.m.

Tblll'lllllY'I pm.
MonlnOI (IIW 12·l) 11 Phllo4olphia
(Sd!Wlnalo.6~ 1l3l p.m.
CINCINNAti (Sm.loiiiO..) at At·

tanto (Smoltt 13-6), 7"" p.m.
Now Yoa ~ 1-6) at Cbi&lt;aao
(MHd••l3-9),1.a! p.m.
Pitubut&amp;h (Drabek 9--1) 11 St. l..ou.il
(Oli•- 6-7), 1:3! pm.
H..- (Williomo H ) at San Diqo
(llaMo 1·10),10:0!1 p. m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eu~tr~DI•..._

r-

WLN.CI

T.....................63 .,

.~

Bal'"-···-·········61 ol6 S!O
Mil................... .l6 .., .l3!
s -........... ......so ss .476
Now Yodl .••......•...'9 57 .&lt;161
DoomiL ...................'9 l9 .oll4
ClllVI!LANIL• ..46 61 .430

2.!
6.5
12.!
14
ll
17J

o.tland ........... ......63

Cbi&lt;al•-·· ..............l3
r ..11 .. .................. .ls
Calitomla ...•.....•....41
Konaaa Clty .......... .'17
Soettle....................4l

43
43
Sl
5&gt;1
l9
l9
66

.594
.~

.liO
.lOS
.4'9
.4'3
.319

9
9.l
15J
16
22

Tuesdoy'• ocoru

Calitoatia S,lanw G!J I, Ia pme
K.lneu CitJ "· Cllifomil1 ' 2M ptl'le
Now Yoa 4, CIJlVEIAND 3
801101'1 P, TCIQDto 4
Daldmono 6, Doomit 3
Milwaukee ~. SCIUM! l
10 19. """-11
Oakland 9, Tc.w 0

au..

Today'acames

Torvnlo (Swul.nyn 6-7) at Bwton
(llanrin l·S), loO.l pm.
CLEVELAND (Cook 3· 5) •t New
Yotlt (llillosu 1-l), 7:30p.m.
Dotroil (Ool\ortJ 2· %) 1t B•ltimore
(Mw.rin• 10-4), 7:31p.m.
Scmlo (Johnlon 7-J 1) 11 Mihnukoc
(W..,.an 9-1), 1:01 p.m.
Minfte.ou (T•peni 12·6) ac Chie•ao
(Hou&amp;h 4-1), 1:01 p.at.
Oakland (Duliitt 9·1) 11Tau (WLu

9-1), 1,35 pm.
CWI'omil (VIlln S-1) It
(Rood 2..). us p.m.

x.w.. Cily

Tbunday's cames
Bo1 ton (Vlola 9-7) at NeW' York

(1'aed· 1 0~ I ~m.

Minamo\a (Smilay l i-S) •t OUcaao

(McCukill1·1~

I :3:1pm.

Se•ulo (On nl 1· 2) at Mi1waukoe
(N'rmro 11-1), 2:3! p. m.
c.Jifomia &lt;FinJey + 9) 11 Kwu City
(Piohotdo S..). 2:35p.m.
To~n to (Mom• 13-4) at Detroit

(Tanana 9-6), 7:35pm.

OU:land (Dowtio ~3) at T01a (Ryan

l · 3), 1:3S p.m.

Major league leaders

...... 1).6, .614,157.
STiolltliO\TI'S - C..., Now Yod,
s-., Adanla, i'9; s. ..--.
Mew Yom, 140; 0 . IIII.Wua. Caicroao,
12:1; DnboL -1:z:z; B - San

1,.,

M)ON,

s.. Di-.11; Mild&gt; Williamo,

PN111 'phil, ».11. . . Plalllu:rJh,l4.

1\obJ
---·--·-··-.2
Doaooall
.....................l

IAITINO- B. IIUiiaa, S..lllc,
.33S ; hak.U. MiaatKICI, .335; Mack ,
M'
I
.323; Thollal, CIOc:qo, .320;
J:lafl*, "in M1 0 .J16; MoiJar, MiJ..
wauw, .316; · - · CLIIVIILAND,
.313; I."*-· T - .311
l.liNI - PIIUU,., Douolt, 77 :

Sbeii'OI]4. S..
.3:16, Otice, ou...
ao, .311 ; Buder, Lot Anfelet, .316:
DeShJeld•, Nonlted, . 31 ; C•minili,
· nou-, .314.
llUNS - D.Shleldo , Monlnal, 10;
HoWnl, Pltlla4ololtla, 66; Biato, Jlooo.
tan, 6l; ltNit, I'UHel~a, M; Clwynn,
s~ Diop. 65;
1.oo Anpt.., 65:
OriAom. Montreal. 64; llcwuk, Pilllbwah.
M.
RBI - Dl.ullm, JIN.Ia6etphl•, 71; MoOrilt, S1a _DiiJO, 69i Shetria1d, Su

a•.

Dloao. 67; - . A1I1.oto. Ill; Murny,liow Y.a, 6$; Bando, Plllll&gt;tqh. 62;

LWallter, - . 6 1 .
HITS - Pw4lttoa, AtltBUI, 130:
O.D' 'f .......a.121: W
J11t
Jlloto, 177; V..Siyb,-. 126;
Ow,-, le !Mop, 125: Wltf..., SL
LaD, 122: Onoi, Oticop, 121; ltntk,
l'bli*V [. 121.

Pllllol~

w. :

»; Lanktlll'4. 11.. LDIU. 21:
llo Pn
21; VIOISIJb. .......
17; Otiof!ot,lh• ~ :15":-. fin
•

. . . , :IS; 0noo. Oioop, 25: M-r.

. . Yolk, :IS.

. 11DUI - D. - · Alllla, 13;
....,.-.n ; -.IAa~
' ' V..SIJ(to, -bolp. I; I'Whill4o,
Mot~u.tl , 7: AU..•, St. 1Ai1, 7;

a.

I

I

0
0
1
I
I
0

N.lhKJ.. ..................l
Bdpn . ......................o
Yul&lt;ailm ....................0
BnziL.. ......................... .l
lillalio •......................•. .l
Piallnd .........................0

•

I

1

2

1
I

......................1
JIOIIlca.........................o
X.,. .........................O
......................0
Pen ...........................O
. ...................... 0

0
0
1
I
I
I
0

1
0
0

2
2
2
2
1
1

0
0
0
I

I
I
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I

l!lllioPa--·····-·······0

0

I

1

a..... ..........................l

o

o

o

llalo,.U.-·······-·········0 0
I
......... ......................0 0 1
-·- .. "···-·········0 0 I

Transactions

.

.1

Alltrta•....._.

OAitLAND ATHLETICS - Sooo
Lanoe Blank~ inllalcla:, .. T......
of l1lo Pooifio Coli&lt; Loap ... I medi&lt;oJ
rdllbillwiGIM'i-

RANGERS -

Pia... T...,
Malhowl, pildler. ""1he IS..y diAI&gt;Iol
lilt, u•n.:d,. IGiuiJ 29. a-Dol Brian
llalwlao, ...... Otll • CicJ of
tile A.mel1~:an A.uociatioa. Seal hct
llau......y, OUI!ielder, 10 '»labnma Cily
011 • medicalftlbltilillbm lllipDcll.

\

•••

..
.. :.,.

Baltimore, 6; Molilar, Milwaukee_ 6; .S

uelied wi&amp;b !5.

HOME IIINS - M.O..u., Ooltlan4,
33; Juan Oonu.la, To1u, 26: Pitldcr,

T..-.
23; Cuter, Toronlo, 22; BdJe,
n:

Ddtolt,
CUM!U:ND, 2G.
STOU!N BASES - LGIIan, CllVJl.

LAND, 36; Andenon, Baltimore, 36:
Poi.CiliJ., California, 36; liltlch, MiJ.WI\1•
llee, 3:1; RU..., COotao, :12; R. 111o4,..
aon, o.u.d, 31 ; L.J.,_, CV.caao.

21.
PITCIDNO (12 clccilion1) - Jaaan
Ouanan, T...,.10, 12-3, .100, 135; Janie

- . r ....... tl-4, .76!, 4.36; Appior,
~

Cltf, 12.4, .750,1:10; McDowell,
Otloqu, 15·l , .750, 3.S7; ~. ­
oao~a, 9-3, ,,iO, 3.67; Muuina. Balli·
...... 1(1.4, .71 • • 159; Fl..U.,. Seattle,
Il-l, .'1011, 3.20.
STRliCEOI!J'S - o.m.... a......
1'3; Ponz, Now Yorlt, 141 ; J... Otlz.
man, Toronto. 137; it Jobneon, Scaale,
111; K. Brown, Tc111, 117 ; AfPier,
Kanam Cil,., 116; M'ctlowUJ, OUceao,
110.
SAVES - Ed:mley, Oaltland, 34;
Apilen, Minn•ota, 29; OI IM, Betti·

...., 26; WI lluaell, TuM, :Ill; ·
1omery, ·Kaa1u Cily, ~ ; R•1rdon,
- . :ZZ, llauy, Milwo.U..11 .

Olympic medals table
C...tr,
G
Unitilld'f..a .... .......... 33
UNrl'ED fiA11lS ••.•lO
Oamaay .....................J 6

Olirttt ... ...................... ll
.•.....•.•......•.•....•....1
Allltlall1 ........................ 6

SIL lin. All
21 20 11

26
13
19
4

22 61
22 51
" 41
13 )4

I

9 23

HW~pry ...................... .IO

4

I 21

7

2 19

ltaly .. .............................l
lapan..•..... - .................. .3

l
7
l
I

7
7
7
6

17
17
16
ll

3

6

13

2

7 13
6 13
0 II

Soulh ~ ...................9

ltomanil ........................

c.n.da...........................6
Bri\ein...... _................. ~.4

Cuba ..............................

Pola1d............................ l

4

Spain ..................•......... IO
Nolhl:rtandJ ...................2
Now Loaland ................ .1

I

Cuthaal...n. ............2
ln4onooia ......................1
Mcwway.........- ..........."..2

,.....

"'" .

OFF THE MARK - Cincinnati first base·
man Darnell .Coles linda shortstop Barry
Larkin's throw to bila off the mark aad beyoad
his reac:b, as Atlanta's Mark Lemke sprints Into

Bukotball

·........-

FoolbaU

NOIIooal Poo&lt;bolll.aopo
A'J'l..t.NI'A PALCONS - Sipo1
bert Shelley, c:omort.c:k, to a anc-yar

me

_........

j'

•

~:

•
• .,.

.

..•
NO HARD FEELINGS - American baseball player Pbil Nevin
and Cuba's Lazaro Alvarez embrace after Cuba beat the USA 6-1
Tuesday at the Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. Cuba will play for tbe
gold against TaipeL (AP)

-

..

(ContinuedfromPage4)

The Phillies led 4-1 after Wes
Chamberlain's three-run homer in
the sixth, but couldn't hold it. SL
Louis won consecutive games for
the fliSI time since July 23-24 and
denied starter Greg Mathews his
flfSt victory in almost four seasons .
·Bob McClure (2-2) worked a
scoreless eighth for the victory an,d
Cris Carpenter fmished.
Giants 7, Padres 1
At Jack Murphy Stadium, San
Francisco's John Burkett gave up
the longest home run in the NL this
season, a 468-foot shot by Gary
Sheffield, but otherwise shut down
San Diego.
Sheffield connected for his 20th
homer of the season in the first
inning when he sent the fliSI pill:h
six rows deep iniD the second deck
in left-center fteld with two outs.
Dave Righetti got the final four
outs in relier of Burkett (8-6), who
aDowed eight hits.

10 12-7.
.
Dodgen 7, Astros 2
.
At Dodger ,lltadium, Ramon ·
Martinez won consecutive starts for :
the rust time all season, and dou• :
blcs by Henry Rodriguez and Jose ·
Offerman keyed a five-run second :
inning.
,
Martinez (7-8) pitched seYen •
innings and gave up two runs and :
five hits. Jim Gott fmished.
The Dodgers parlayed four hits, :
two Houston errors, a walk, a :
stolen base and a wild pitch by ·
rookie Shane Reynolds (0-2) into :
their five-run second
·

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUICE
111 Secallll St., P•eroy .
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGSCOUin
SliCE 1161

Clean out your closet,
basement or garage••• and turn
your unused or unwanted .
articles into CASH with a

:

APR Fixed
60 Months

CLEVEU.ND BROWNS - sr.
· o4
John loll, tlefen1i¥e eztd, •nd ut
Welll, nOM tackle. Waind Mik• Will.
.w...i¥e end, lad Kei&amp;hm Mcelnt, . . .

"""'*·
GIIEEN BAY PAClti!RS -

LAUGHING MATTER- Tbe USA's Magic Johnson (right)
laughs at the joke teammate Michael Jordan tells him during Tuesday's Olympic basketbaD game against Puerto Rico in Barcelona,
Spain, wbicb the Americans won 115-77. (AP)

warm-ups to their medal ceremony.
A compromise between the men's
tesm and the U.S. Olympic Commiuee will allow Michael Jordan &amp;
Co. 10 keep the sneaker company's
logo obscured by not zipping the
tops.
This saves Bartley, a Nike diehard, from suffering the final indi,nity: wearing another company s
clothing.
The United States got its first
double medalist in tennis - Mary
Joe Fernandez, who will collect at
least a bronze in both singles and
doubl.es. She tesmed Tuesday wit!\
the unrelated Gigi Fernandez to·
move into the semifmals, defeating .
South Africans Mariaan de Swardt
and Elna Reinach, 6-2, 64.
In singles, she has it tough ...:.
lOp-seeded Stefft Graf is her semi- .
final opponent
Things were REALLY tough for
diver Matt Scoggin. Not only did
he help in ending the gold medal ·
run, Scoggin fell like a piano..
tossed from a. fifth-story wmdo\\' .
on a boo:hed dive, and hit the water
back-fust
"I was just trying to figure out
where the water was and trying tO
land on my head," said Scoggin, of
Austin, Texas. The farst pan was :
easy; the second proved impossk
ble.

first base $81ely In tile fourth Inning of Tuesday
nlgbt's National Leape game Ia Atlanta, whk:b
the Brans won 7-5. (AP)

CNCINNA'1'1 BENGALS - Sipod
C.-rl Pi.c:keu, wido r.coi¥er, Ut 1 W..

5

A.....

10 terma: with Mal. D'Ortafdo, liDc6ec:kao, • • dtroo-l_CIII' CU'Itact.

MINESOTA VIKINGS - Sipu
Todd ltaliJ, oll'wintuut
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Finotlloc Mondat, m pnoldaa f« play·

HONDA ACCORD

Ofo

._.-.

NEW YORK OJANTS - Wd•M

APR Fixed

0... ......... fullbaclt.

I'IEW YORK JETS - Wai... Vin·
cmt Brown!-. wide*'"-·
PHOENIX CARDINALS - Sipe4
Jim Wlhklr, nGM. I.ICkle.
PITTSBU.OH m!lilliRS - lipcl

Rich Schonowolr, de(UIIiYe Unanaa,
RJ.chanl Shehan, dofoali•• blc:k 1nd
JUIIin Stnllri...... Unemln.

This Ia your Invitation to Hll any Item f01 $100 011811 and advertise It FREE. Simply clip this
coupon (photo copies not accepted), fiJI In your ad and mall It to ua 01 droP Hoff a1 our
offlct. Your ad will run for 1 week.

Months

~II WO.IIt!Of.WIIII)'IIflllll llylo "'ftll,.,200 IL 1 cilies

IAN FRANciSCO 49en - Placed
Dotridt llaoae, ......... initnd .....
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS C...., mubotclt.

/o

REDSIJNS Si..... lohn Blllllloy, lilttthoclt•. ......
DOo Thomu, cornerb•ck, an• Boone
POwdl. lineblcter, an lbe wai'ftld·injYftld
liiL

_,
-

frl'as lew as$218* lfrrlu;l

0

,_..Cui
"WASHINOTON

the falL With Bank One, ycu can get a low roundtrip
price to any place Northwest Airlines flies in the continen Ull U S And travel anytime. up to December 15, 1992.
All you do is come to Bank One and open a qualify·
ing accoont shown in the box at right You'll recetve certificates that can be used to purchase roondtrip tickets on
Northwest Airlines for just $218 or $258, depending on
wt.:n you clxJose 10 tnM:l.
So come to Bank One and open an account today.
1hen take your time planning awell-&lt;leserved vocation or
a visit to a long -lo&amp; friend or relative. You don\ have to
rush just because you might miss the deadline of someboc!y else!; special offer We give you time to prepareand a renific k7.v fare in the brugain

Nat.._. HO&lt;by J.qpe

........

BOSTON BRlJINS - Sipod ScrJei

MINNI!$01'A NORTil STARS A.cQuitall Collin s.... clalmeMwl, ftm:l
lhe l:d.non10n Oilerl ror l'ulllre ~-

I

NEW YORII: RANGERS - Sianed

3

6

II

•

9

2

I
1

JmEman, ldl.n,..
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING Named Dattny Oano tolo'liaioa brottdout·
ar, nwtcmn.a...a..m. in ..- &amp;p and

l
l
4

.........

licbt ••• end ·~Hmaa ror Su.t.
L4JOninl.
I JOUlh hodtey
.

lite-

.

(Note: 15 Word Limit and Your Selling Prtc1 Mult Be In Your FREE Ad)
(Sorry, thla doll not apply to Ya!'d Saln)

RASCALS TALENT' SEARCH

Name::_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

RASCALS TALENT DIRECTORY, with maJor New
York City Alflllatlont In t~e chll~ mo~ellnt aad
aotlllt l11dutry will review chll~rtn In thll area
••••· We have suuusflllly ha~ children uen
an.Ver placed .fer adt, '"'"· catalot•• vi~HI,
. and TV etllllltrelalt: and prttramt ftt ollents
such 11: TOYS 'R' US, HUOOIES, MACY'S,
BLOOMUIODALES, etc. htervlewlat tooa locally.

Phone t: - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - -

ages J mot. to 16 years

412-856-8055

Register to win round-trip American Airlines tickets for two to anywhere
in the continental U.S. (Get delails al participaling dealers. )

Get Clippers tickets, too! .
While you're at Athens Honda Cars, be
sure to pick up Columbus Clippers tickets for New Car Dealers Night
in September. No charge, of course. It's just our way of saying
" thanks" for stopping by.

Mail To:

•

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New Car Dept. 594·8555 .

«wiit
Deposil $500cr more ina rew o:rount

,...,...,.s.na·
,......

...

Open art'W Eqwry Money Sm.ice cr EMS II ~ br&lt; ri
cn:dit cr a single sum loon o( $10,00) cr morc

Open a new loan

I

L

WW
Open a new v.sa• cr VISa cal
·-~

Cfua~ to tOOMdual~ooly

loons sut¥a 10 &lt;Min itpp1ML

..

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)

Used Car Dept. 594·2114

.

'•

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~

,

,

L!!.f
i
Pltl1l, i

I

810 E. State St. • Athens, Ohio

(ofllr expi!Mif311112)

......,....
__
_
,.......

•Tickcl price is S218 for travtlingon Tuesday..Wednesdayor Thursday bctwttn ~ptcmber l and Dw:mbt:r 15, 1992. Tkkt t price is S258 for tn~vclingalt
olhtrrlmrsuntU Dm:mber 15, 1992 . They arnot valrd for tnV!Ion Novt"mber 20-25129-30. 1992. Conditions: Travtlctnlfk:lteswillbt mailed within two wet~
Tr~vcl DiscoumCcniOatnaR R'quittdto purchase tickttut thesuptcill farts. FaR' based on roundtrip tnvcl on NonhWHt Airlines. Trawl must btcompkted by
Occcmbcr 15, 1992. Umit 6travth:enificates per cU&amp;tomn. $4 pcrctn lficlltt non-J1fundablt: handling charge. Travtl musr bt to or from one of t.he5e ortgiNtiflS Obtodties: AkroWC.rnon,Cincinnati, Clevtland,Colaambaas, Dayton, 'l'Oilngstown and Luington,Ktmucky. Stt Tr~vel Ctni llclttsordtrfotm for full details.
..
CertlfiCM.envailable whilf supplin Wt. ras.senge: rraci.litycbargu mayapply lor all passengers at variousU .S.1irpons ChtrgtS willvary from Slto $) pu~
airpondependlngonthe routing. AmuimumofS I2 roundtrip can be charged. Alrpon saarthargesbttween S2-S5 may•ppl yat ttrtalnalrporu. Boslon
($2.:x&gt;),CtdcagoO'Hirt:($5),andFlorida($2) alrportsurchargtSapply. Other rtstri~ioru; apply. Stopby or call your local Bank Ortt for all th~details.

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

~~~~~

NORTHWEST AIRLINES t'M!
Some ,.,.}ult"-HIIw1'&gt;~- \.:::J

ATHENS IU•nl•!1 CARS

The Daily Sentinel

Dec•• ~ 1992.

There are a·lot of travel promotions in the air these
days. But while most air fare specials are t- 1DCiaj( ~
IOlllOl1'0Yo: !hereS one !hatS guaranteed to last on through

Horkey

4
l
4
2
2
2

3
1
1
0

.

-~-

_

.··,

.

•

-.·- -·
• - - : - - - - - - - ---.··;
-.
Former Giant Craig Lefferts fen· :
Cardinals 9, PhiUies S

NL acti'on

(34).

1

Nedoaal IMII:etblll AeeodiU.
ORLANDO M'A.OIC - Acq~lt-.1
~.a~a c...... auanl. r- 1he Mil-·
koe Bucb for Sam VIDCCit, pard. ud a
I!I'J'.......J•.,..ddraftclwllco.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS Sianed Mario Eli•, auard, to lUI offer

Eliminated with Griffin were
super heavyweight Larry Donald of
Cincinnati, whipped by. Cuban
Roberto Balado, and 1S6·pound
Raul Marquez of Houston, who
cried after his loss to Orban
Delibas of the Netherlands.
The Dream Team scored the
fliSI 17 points in rolling past Puerto
Rico. Chris Mullin led with 21
points, and Charles Barkley picked
up his third technical of the Games
for slamming the ball down while
disputing a call.
" As long as you have officials
like that, he can foul your whole
team out. You can ' t take any
chances with the officiating.
They're going to be this bad every
~ame, " said Barkley, who did
mdeed foul out himself.
While the Americans play
Lithuania, the olher semifinal pits
Croatia against the ·Unified Team
for the right to be embarrassed into
a silver medal. The Unified Team
beat Germany 83-76 and Croatia
crushed Australia 98-65.
"We have another game and we
have 10 win that, but I would like a
second chance at the United
States," Croatian star Toni Kukoc
said.
The big basketball news: The
Dream Team will wear Reebok

At Busch Stadium, Andres
Galarraga hit a twD-run, tic-breaking double and Bernard Gilkey had
a three-run homer in a six-run
eighth inning to lead St. Louis past
Philadelphia and Mitch Williams

Buebllll

iJifs -

L lolutooa, Oticaao. 1; Lialodt, Mllw,..
t-, 6&lt; I. Alonw, T-.10, 6&lt; An«Bon,

~

1
1
1

.....

l•ail Oooul•a, T•u•, 70; Thoma•,
Olk.l ~·
Puckou. Minnao\1, 142;
~ a.EVELAND, 133; Moclr, Mia- · 131 ; E. Manlou, Seaulo, 130;
P,...., Dot.oi~ 1:13; lloliu&gt;o, Milwou·
..... 1:13; · ~ 1:22, let·
lwioo, ""'- CitJ, I:tl.
DOUBLES - E. M.onioez, Seaulo,
31 ; lOJHt, ICaa&amp;u Ci1y, 30; Hall, Nn
Yolk, 30; WI- LNu CUy, 29; Mat·
tin&amp;l.l· Now Yolk, 21: Y-. Milnttlteo,
77 ;lb&lt;mu, a.icaao, 26; OOJ!ey, Sattle,
26: R.._, Tea.u.."26; sa. Teua, 26.
11UPLI!S - Danna.., Ballimon, 9;

'i

1

Mact, IF
: • : MtOw!n. Oolland.
61; A
I.Bt - IWM,Ilolrolt, 92; ~
OUiand, 12; 0 . Bal. Olicqo, 77; - ·
IU, MbMMI 14~ Caw, "'0....0, 71~
·-·· ·

•' •

4
3
3
3
2
2

1-.HTl; ....... Mia·
n11ota, 7$: B. Martina. Sattle, 11 ;
I

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4

3
2
2
2
0
I

I
I
2

.............................0
!Ana ..........................0
Aultzia ................. ~........o
lllowoia ........................o

'

They didn't stop Griffin eiiher.
The angry Chicagoan stormed out
of tlie ring immediately after the
decision was announced, refusing
to shake hands or speak with anyone in either comer.

•

TEXAI

AlllerbiiiAque

s. -.........................o

BAliiNO - l.n1k, Pbil1dolphta
. 341 : V•aSI~Oro Pitttbllrah, .333;

I

Mwlnal, 12-l , .706, 192; Block, San
Fraocitco, ,.._., .692, 191; Smakl, AI·

Bulprio ..........•.............. l

NotlonaiiAape

DOUIIW ~ o-.

4

o.o.;,, 2&gt;4• O.., llattt&gt;il.

w...... Dt.won

~ ..............63

. 19;
L WIIUt,-. II; Kanoa,
Ao·
111111, 16; ,_dlllal!., A~ , IS; O.w..,., Cbicaao.ll .
STOU!ll BASBS--, M..,.
a.l,l4; I'W'W+,-. ~Lank·
lcml, Sl. Louil, 33; R - CINCIN·
NAD, 30; -·Loa,.._~ P',..
loy,""-. 21; 0. lmilll,lL Looia, :11.
PnCHIHO (12 - ) - a.m.,
Allaall, 16-3, .142, 1 ..; Coae. New
Yodl, 13-4, .765, 1 69; Teftlbory, St.
Looi..l , 11 4, .733, 1.92; lwildell,
CINCINNATI, 10.., .m, 2.61; L llill.

11 MG~W~e~l

Oticqo (ltobinaoa 2-0)

: (Bameo 2-3), 7:35p.m.

•

23; Slleffiel4, Su ~··
20; Boa41a;

l'illoiNrP. 20;-

Weu•land, Moatr.1l, 24; Chulton ,

PloilaololpiUa ()lulhallall4 11·1)
• Lou~~ (llaLOon :1-7), I :35 p.m.

•

I .•• 6; - . I.oo """'"'·

CINCINNAD, 2&gt;4; D. Jon., """- 22;

TodaJ'sc•-

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divers collect ·gold ·

three golds.
Four U.S. boxers went in the
ring Tuesday with thoughts ol winning; three are now thinking about
flights home. Only 112-pounder
Tim Austin of Cincmnati moved on
to a medallighl.
The most bitter loss was suffered by 178-pound Montell Griffin, who opened a bloody cut on
world champion Torsten May of
Germany and appeared 10 have the
fight won.
He did - until the referee
stepped in, penalizing Grilfm three
points for ducking his head in the
third round. With the sudden
bonus, May - who would have
lost 4-3 - moved on with a 6-4
victory.
" I landed a jab on top of his
head and saw the blood come out
of his eye," Griffin said. "I said,
'Yeah, they're goirig to stop it' I
couldn't believe they didn' t stop

•

Di-. 115; Rijo, ClNt!NNAn, liS.
SAVES - Loa Smilh, St. l.oala, 2:1;

Aoploa 7 . - 1

•

I

HOME1UINS -

CB

CINaNNA1L .....61 .U .lll
San 1Jioto ............. .l1 l l .l21
·' San""""- ·· ·····.ll l6 .1(11
.. """'""' .................., l9 ..Ul
. LoaAaploa ...........-16 60 .~

lllonatliai,

s...;.., (Jiiaao.MoOOif,
~
llo Dio&amp;o.

Ploil

C~inese

today, with the Cubans their likely
opponents for the gold.
That match-up would give the
Ameri.cans a shot at payback. Their
42-game international winning
streak was snapped by the Cubans,
86-81, in the semifinals of the Pan
American Games last summer.
One more thing - the Dream
Team sleepwalked through its fust
medal•round game and still pounded Puerto Rico, 115-77. Next victim: Lithuania in the semifinalzzzzz.
"I think we have no chance,"
Lilhu!lllia pd Rimas Kurtinaitis
said. "We're ready to play for third
place. It will only be a practice, ·
maybe not even a strong practice.''
As the Games head into the
homestretch, the medal chart
remains unchanged. The Unified
Team leads with 81 medals (33
gold, 28 silver and 20 bronze), followed br. the United States with 68
medals (20, 26,22) and Germany's
51 medals (16,13; 22).
The Chinese, who won just 28
medals in Seoul, are moving in on
Germany. They have 48 medals
(15, 19, 14), and won five of the 12
total diving medals - including

St·o a·choa a·d
··In tbe majors...

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. WedneSday, August 5.1992.

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�Wednesday, August 5.

Ohio

EASTMAN-'S · ·
.

·

·

Wednnday, Auguet 5. 1182

·.

New York edges Cleveland
4-3
n.om.s

ALL EASTMAN'S -FOOOLANDS JOIN IN THE CELEBRATION!
. ._...,
•

B7 VJNCIHJ' (.liNISOMO
NEW YORK (AP) ~ Sinte die
All-SW pne, die New York Yu•tees havUiniJSied to colftbiile
·aood Sla!dnl Jllldll!la, limely ~t:ling IIICf solid ~lief. For at leut
one pme, !bey Be« Ill diJee.
· Curt YOIIIJ IICIItCied eipat hill
·in 6 '113 illnlnp ~ Jemaa with
:an injury and Roberto Kelly hit a
· tie-brellltiDg, two-run honier as die
YIIIIbes ended a fcu·pme lollns
~ with a 4-3 vic:rory over die
9eveland Indians on Tuesday
. ntghl .
. .
· Youns (4·2) won his llili'd pme
without a to,s for New Yale Iince
beinl released by Kansas City on
June 10.
In the seventh innina, Cleve·
land's IC'enny Lolton, tied for die
. AL lead in stolen buea, bunted
toward first bale with two outJ.
Young, racing to cover the bag,
was bealtD llld fell doWn.
Young left immedilldy with a
strained left hamslrina. Tiiii Burke
gave up a run in the;f.hth, and
Steve FliT pitched a
ec:t ninth
for his 14duave.
"I felt it halfway to first,"
Young said. "I had a similiar
injury last year, and I knew it right
away. It didn't help that I was
.

,••.
VlE
!/.;!f·-~- -: : ·~~~
-~ ~
~;,::VELVET
,~,-

SUPER DIP

· -- _: -~~ Ice

·

•.J

.

·

$

"-----_ ) Cream..............~!!~....

By 'ne Aaoelatcd Prea
The Atlanta Falcons don't
expect Deion Sanders in camp
today. They'd like 10 know if !bey
can expect him at aU
The Falcons stili aren 'I sure If
• their AJI.Pro c:omerb1Ck, who a11o
plays outfield for the Atlanta
Braves, plans to show up for tiiC
1992 NFL 8C81011.
Sanders met with Falcona offi·
cials Tuesday, but no agreement
was reached. .
"We've llllde it clear we want
Deion heR, but we have 10 be able
to get on with our plannint.:
move ahead. Pan of that il
on what Deion's plans are," said
Falcons president Taylor Smith,
son of team owner Rankin Slftith
Sr.
Sanders decided Friday to indef·
initely extend his bue'-11 cucer.

FOODLAND

White

16 oz.

LVS

ead..............
• SELF-RISING

Hudson Cream
Flour..................!~~
5 LB ..
...
GRADE 'A' MEDIUM

Foodland

Egg -··········~·····..•·········•
DOZEN

(

roun
LB.

(

BJ lF.RRY XJNNEY
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP') -'Tho Cincillllii 8e9lt Me findina
wide receiver c.l PlcbnllrimiiiCI:
and filler than IIIey had ~ for.
Pickens, the Aenpla ~·
· rouad draft pic:t froll Te-~ee,
sisncd a contract and joined the
. ICalll • pnclicle Tuelday.
"It's good 10 1ee Carl siped
. and in ca11p," said head cO.Ch
·.Dave Shula. "He c:ame lit under
: the weight we aated him 111 come
·. in at, and he mado it tluouP tiiC
:- aassc:n ox. So it loob Ute lie's
. beeR conditioning himself, waleh·
·. ing his weight and NN!ilg.''
:. Shula said Pic:teas is doina so

BONE-IN

ROUND
STEAK

LB.
'

Mt. Brand
Bologna....................

The flrsves' outftelder wu suppoled ID have joined die Fak:ons on
Saturday. ·
.
Some twO dozen~ ~teel llbont Ill hour 1'aelday event111

'before the Braves' g1111e qainst
. Cincinnati, ICekina ~JIICI!II'roln
Slllden on the meeuns wtdl tiiC
F~'-'-fl ......_
~· came out .. .., y .....,
die lrlining room, but when a ~
vislot cameraman tlll1led on his
c1mera, ~anden got anf'Y and
went bact mwithout Sf!C.wne.
Shonstop Rafael ~Uiard (IOS!ed
a note on S~nden ~oc:ker wtth
answers to nme qaealiOIIS. It Jelld:
1-No. 2-Yes. 3-No. 4-No. 5-No. 6Yea; 7-Thant You. 8-Maybe, and
9-It II be up ID my daughlet.
I ' "RandalEII...
T' "
. .
t s
tme agun m

(

STICK

well, he Ill)' play in the Bea&amp;als'
~ 'W apalllr apinll tho New
od: GiMita Slblay.
"I'm p1e1ty IIIliCh il shlpe, for
the moat part." Pkkcnlsaid. "I
..... killd ill rusty • fint becMIIC I
haven't beell ia pme-type situationl. But. luckily, I got some reps
ift IOda ."

s~ aid 11o didn't• PicbltJ
in OIIMIH1IIC drilll but planned to
w111:h t1te vidcocapo lllu. He did
watch Pickens wort out with
recebers
coac•
Richard
WUU..m.
"In the drills I saw Richard
throw kim the ball, he seemed 10
cau:h it JftUY well," Shula said.

·Browns waive Wise, McCant
to make room for Bosa, Wells
-

WHOLE

.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) ~ The
Cleveland Brown&amp; have waived
two playen 10 mate RJOIII for former l.filtni rust-round pick John
Bola llld f~ wa "'111 silltii-

LB.

IOIIICI pick Kt.llt Welb.
Defensive end Mlti Wise and

12th-round draft pick Keithen
McCant, a quarterbac:t from
Nebrub, were the two players
waived Tueadly.
Bosa, a defeasive end froll
BOIIoa CoiJeF, - to.th 1111 dte
Dolphins in tackles Ia· his rookie
·year, 1917, and lllriod die fint llix
pmea of 1988 before • i1jarcd
;left knee ended hiiiCIMII• .
. . He played in 14
ii 1989
:then missed 1990 ~jUM,IIIi
:riaht knee and lllldcqolii1 - ,llnlclive IUIJCIY durin~ die preeel·
.1011. Tho New YOlk Jets~ 1in1
;on Plail B ia 1991 but -ved him

BOB EVANS

SLAW~

Lofton drew a four-pitch leadoff

Pickens signs with Bengals,
reports to camp tit &amp; trim

SUPERIOR'S

COLE

sprindJIIID calclt Lofton.''
.
Yoo•ns, Mlo- on die di!!!!hlc!d
list luiNUQII with die 11ine pubICID; wiU be re-evalaated today.
Hc'sschedaled to start Suaday
apinsl Bosun
"He Said lie heard a 'pop' •..
and had to come out," Yan'tees
manaaer Buct Showalter said.
"He's questionlb1e. 11 belt, for his
next 11a1t. The way ho'1 been pilehIna. we'd like 10 hive llilll11 a ~
of ilar roo•kM• now."
lndianllftiiiiiU Mite HaJp-oYe
said the 32-year-old Yount~;
what lle'i·at
s done belt,
ing bauers :U.batuc:e with o speed sblff.
· ·
"We swang at a lot of first
piu:hos. You set a guy like Curt
Young, who's not a pows- piiCher,
he's a conlrOI pitdle.r llld yoo ga a
bit ovenuious," Har'grove said
Nine of the 28 bauers Youns
faced IWllllg 11 die tint pitch llld
just two oflhelll got hill.
"U it wales, lite it dilhfor pya
like AI Oliver and PiiiJbur&amp;h in die
1970s, they say you're beins
agressive," Harpove aid. "U it
doesn't WIXk, they say you need 10
bemorepibenL" .
Tbe Yankees, 7-13 since the
break, fell behind in the rirst u

POTATO

SALAD' MA'ARONI

2~~~28 Oz. Ctn............. $229

CHICKEN or

~~~~. ~~~~................ $279

·IRlareAuplt.

ss99

.,.:'9~ 1 HARTZ MT.
BLO&lt;KADE .................

.

He was tiiC 16th player Iaten

:oVaaD in d!e 1987 drift.

Wells, a lose tackle from

The Dally Sentlnet--Page-7

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10 lhlnl and

HowW singled him
Carlos Baersa bit a
IIIICrifice fly. .
Mat Lewis doubled with two
oull in tlie second and ~eared on
Lcitoo'alili&amp;IC for a 2~ lead.
Tho Jadiw, who had won 10 of
lbeir last IS, played without Albert
ieue, who lcad.l die lellll with 2D
honle tunS. Belle began ~ a
lhrce-pmc saspcmsion for clllrJing
ICansu City piu:her Neal Heaton
earliet this-.
New Yott tied die
apinst
Dave QUo (4·8) in
u
Mel Hill and Robato Kelly led off
widllinaJes. Don MattinsJy's fly
out moved Hall 10 third, and Jim
Leyrltzllld Randy Velarde hit nm-

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1

·.

tC"fourth

scormaslqles.
XeDy liote the 2-2 tie In the
sillth when be folloMd Hill's lcld·
oft. doable widl his'.w.h homer of
the 11111011, a drive into the leftHeld 110111.
.
FliT had piu:be4 twO inninp in
Monday nisht's 8-6, 12-inning
loa, and Showalttr Wllltcd ID give
him die night off. But three outs
~:om a victory the Yankees
he callcd on his ace.
· "I was a little sere, but I'm sore
when I wale up," Fur said. "I just
want 10 au 0111 there and win."

'Will he stay or will he go?'
·Falcons want answer on Sanders

5QT.

'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

~Cunningham will Jetum

action for tbe ftrst time since
tenlg up his left knee in die 1991
season opener when the Eagles
meet die Sreeters in PittsbutRh on
Satunlly.
'
"I'm anxious," Cunningham
said. "I want to gel out oo the field
and plly. But I've been feeling so
~in practice IMt I feel as ifl'm
mdie pme." ;_;,Head _coach Rich Xotite said
Curuingham will start and play one
or twO series.
B!!C'tiiiiHn
Third-year defensive end Keith
Mceanll may play in Tampa Bay's
preseason opener at Denver.
McCants, who missed more than a
week of practice with an injured
knee, worked out Tuesday. Head
coach Sam Wyc;he said McCants
may play some Saturday but that
he's not sure how much.
Backup quarterbac:t Steve
DeBerg will miu the conteu
because of a bntin finpr 011 his
llnowina hand With Dell«g sidelincil, Vimy T~vade will share
playins time with rootiel Crail
Erickson and Mite P:rtvlawski.
to

....

Head coach Clluct ICnox says
be won't be looking bid when die
Rams-&amp;'.:~ir rtrst exhibition
poe
illS nle
Turnin&amp; IIOUnd die bls, 8-24
die put twO yean, is mucb IICil'C
imponant than 1¥llliiig tille dlilltins about die 1e1111 that rued him
. aile{ aiae
said
Xnox wu hired by the Rams
last Ja.y, sbortly afl5 being let
ao by die Seahawb.
·

-.Knox
Clllraen

Safety Anthoay Shelton may
miss die entire after 111hro1Copic shoulder IUIJery for caniJate dllnage. SheiiOII, a third-year
po out o f T - Stile, SWied
tluee pmea ,at strong safety and
01e •

me safety 1a1t atOll:

He was placed oa injured
rete~Ve
Nov. 30 after suffering a
Nebasta,- releued by die Red·
&amp;tin&amp; in preseason or 1990. He IIJIIOH IIi.. sUdctr injury. Tho
siplod with die New YOlk Gianll iljury didn't lully beat, enssi••nd played ia six 11111es before ing die saraery Monday.
Ollen
beiiiJ waived laae thal yar.
A
16·hoar
return flisht from
"We're kind o{ i• a~~ ..,ot
Totyo
still
hasn't
worn off the
with the defensive li"c, • head
Jblslon
Oilers.
COICII Bill Bellchict said, refiiTinJ
"Roaghl" Jerry Gray said.
to Injuries that are hamj)erin1
"With
die trip and tbe jet lag to
Michael Dean Perr; (klee) and
rookie . Bill .Jollnsoa (ankle). deal with, it - hot llld rough out
"We're Ju• Ilion there, -bm- there today...
Tho ICalll reunod 10 die United
wile.
Swes
01 Sullday, lOOt Monday
"Johllft!l Kt.llt both ha~~e expeoff,
aad
lluailhly teCIIrlled to die
rieAce in the Jeaaue. We're 101111
field
in
Ill
alimoOn practite 'fue5.
ID be allle 10 aJve t* 80MC playday.
lei lime and~ ia die (11'!111
pmel. It 1 a goOd ;:a:tanity
for diCIIIIO show their
ty, and
it aivea at a chance to evaluate
lhcrn. ,,
Boll's blees were eunlined •
the Cleveland Oink:, tnd he was
. c~ 16 pliy, Be~ said
Neither Boa nor Wells played

By JIM LITKE
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ~
A sampling of people wau:hing die
goings-on at the Palau d'Esports on
TV sets back in America revealed
that neartr two of every five feel
like they ve seen enough of the
Dream Team. ,
No surprise there. One hundred
percent of lhe people with courtlevel seats here will tell you tbe
same thing.
Ew:n die ones at the end of the
Team USA bereh.
"I wish we could just play two
tomorrow night," Owlcs Bartley
said, " so I could ga my black ass
back to Alabatna. ••
It has been only six weeks now
since this high-flying cast of NBA
stars first came together and
already we're into renma.
Tuesday night's llS-77 win
over Puerto Rico nwked the opening of medal-round play in the
Olympic basketball tournarncnt and
111e lint time the Dream Team had
humiliated die same lide twice. Not
, _, __, ..... tally, .... ~
. of VICtO.
ry wu the same~ 38 poinll ~as
it hacr been when tbe two teams
met in JWJe 11 the Tournament of
the Americas.
Remember how proud die van·
quished were to get hammered the
first time around? How they
musged endlessly for pictures,
begged to exchange jerseys and
houndt4 Magic. ~ &amp; Co, to
autograph everytbms smaDer than
a a?! Well, the novelty seems to
be wearing off. Fast.
Puerto Rican forward Jerome
Mincy grew up in Manphis, Tenn.,
played his rollege baR at AlablmaBinningham and has warched andor adlftired the Dream Teamers
since he got serious about the
game. But he had to rub his chin,
then search long and hard to fmd
some redeemin$ value in having
them do this to him twice.
" The rust time, r&lt;!U 'n: kind of
in shock and yat think, 'WeD, it's
something to tell my tids and
grandkids abouL' The secood time,
you're a little more relaxed, but
you know it won't mate much difference.
"Those guys could aU have the
flu and half of tbem could have
diarrhea," Mincy continued. with a
nod toward the end of die interview
room where each Dreat11 Teamer
had his own coterie of rcporten.
"And tbey •d still beat everybody
by 20 points. Every time.
"I could see whiR that would
get boring ~ for the fans and for
those guys, too...
U that SlatCIIlent were ah!olurely
true, the same would not have
stanect as seamlessir as it did
Patriclc Ewing upped die opening jump to Magic Johnson, who
caught it and in one motion,
whipped the ball a 9uaner of the
way up die court. Mtehael Jordan,
who caught it, then whipped it the

wu..........

last quarter of the coun to Karl
Malone who, .in turn, caught the
baD in midair, swirched it to his left
hand and lcissed a reverse layup in
off the glass.
It was indeed a dream-like play
that took all of rive seconds to
complele. And die crowd, much of
it drawn from Badalona, which is
to Spanish lwn"lball what Indiana
is to die game in the Uniltd States,
promptly went nuts.
But JUSt a few minutes later,
after die Dleamcrs had put out several early fires, they lapsed into
something of a dream-like state
themselves. The offense became a
series of one-on-one challenges,

HARTZ MT.
2 in 1

99
2
$299

·Special of the .Week!

.RID FLEA

·~-

SHAMPOO....................

me

A
football clinic for all students in the Southern Local School District entering grades 3-8 this fall wiD he held Thursday and Friday from 9
a.m. to noon.

Helmet fitting dates set
All seventh- and eighth-grade football playm as well as freshman
P!ayen in die _Meigs~ School District will have a helmet-fitting sesSIOil at the Mei~ Juruor_ High School stadiwn ~ursday at 2 p.m.
.
A helmet-fiwng sesst011 for die Eastern VUSity and junior high football ·
team will be held on Monday, Aug. 10 at 3:30p.m. at Eastern High
School.

Softball tourney Saturday
There will be a Class E SWCsqualified men's softbaU tournament at
Easrt.m High School on Slllllday, Aug. 8 and Sunday, Aug. 9.
The cost iB $80 and the team's own balls.
Call 667-3521 or 378-6325 for funher infonnation.

Sports medicine clinic Monday
There will be a spons medicine clinic 81 Meiss High School on Mooday at6p.m.

Unity S&amp;L to sponsor cycling tour
Unity SavinJ!S &amp;: Loan will spoosor the rust "Unity Savinp &amp; Loan
Tour of S-E Oluo." which will be hold 011 Saturday, Aug. 29 and Sunday
Aug. 30 in the hills of Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton COIDities
'
Sign-in for the rour, hosltd by TeamCOLUMBUS will open ~ Au
29 at 7 a.m. at the Wilkesville town square's shelte~.
g.
Tho rust day of the tour wiD stan with an eight·mile time lrial in the
morni~S· The faslest performer'?" the eight course wiD be the tour leader.
Then m die ~· racers will compere 011 a 38-mile course covering
Vmton and Mei8S Counues. The second day of the tour wiU have the raeCIS ~ling on a 55-mile course running through Gallia, Meigs and Vinton
Counties.
Tho lllp 10 IliCcrS in each Slage will receive points for the overall tour
championship.
In addition ~ the speed race, there will be a Rmatiooal tour fa- those
who want 10 CIIJOY the scenery along the way. The recreational tour will
cover most of the same roads as die racers.
Proceeds will benefit the Wilkesville Community Cenler.

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL

~~!;:~~. . . . . . . . . .s2

a

'I

FLEA•TICK
$299
AEROSOL.....................

POIIIOY, -

Free Unllttd Dellwry on Prn crfptlonl or
Any Purchlll ~ $5.00.

•

PRESCRIPTION ·SHOP

Pl. "I•ISM

25JI.-

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I.

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•uDES: lhlclergart•• • Six

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7.. Ytlr I• O,.ntlt• ·

...........

'

VAllEY
"At . . . . . . . . . . ,,.._.,,.. . ... .

ADOLPH'S D411Y

~........, ...... . . ..

'tiUPOIT
. · H2o666t

,,,_..:lll""..... ~--..:cro ..·~---, --

~..

·~-.... --------~ ...- -

MIDDLEPORT, 01.

· NOW ACCEPTING
1992·93.REGISTRATION

POREIY 25% OFF -

~~~;~~~....................$279

500 I. SICOID ST.

IOIIIIItl'm.onOII OF IOSIVIW

'1.64

There were a few otber high· '
lights, 10 be sure: David Robinson
sending a blocked shot into die second row. Tomahawk dunks by
Scottie Pippen. Barkley entering
the game to whistles and uu:alls.
Barkley gettins a technical by
slamtning the baD 10 the floor after :
being called for a foul, geuing a·
warning lode from one of the referees, then promptly slamming it
down a second time.

Football clinic Thursday

30%_0FF

PIZZA IUIOEI

halftime.

~ will be vohmtary practic:e for all students interested in playing·
football at Southall High School tluough Friday of this week from 7-9·
p.m. AU players are encouraged to auend:

ALL SILl FLOWERS

$
COLLARS.......................

the defense c:Onsistcd of standing
around afler missed shots and letting Magic Johnson backpedaliO
fend off three-on-one breaks by
himself. Even so. it was 67-40 by

1 Area sports briefs
Voluntary practice continues

llltseuon.

I• Rebate At Store

night's Amencaa
game in New York,
Xelly gets the ball to
to complete tbe twin .
kWiaJ. The Yankees we11t OD to win 4-3. (AP)

America fed up with Dream Team

Pits look far B1y Ou, Get O.e
Free Man

Lea.f::

IN SPITE of tilt roll block br Clevelaad's
Mark Whiten In an attempt to break up tile
double play started br New York seeond base·
maa Pat Xelly Ia the sillth innlnr of Tnesday

,.....,, ot

o•ao

........................nl.
..

F•_,..,.........1 IHI

..•-

Cal1992·6249

.•

..
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""'!""

....-

-

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

_ _ ., _ _ _ _ _ _ _

-

�'

Paga 8

1'he Dally Sentinel

VVedneada~August5.1992

Pomeroy--lotlddlePort, Ohio

Ohio

People in
the news

SEVIERVU.LE, Tenn. (AP) Dolly Parton has donated $500,000
to improve Pl!blic education and
keleJI kids in school in her native
SeYJer COlD!I}'.
"This is JUst great," said Jack
Parton; Sevier County Schools
superintendent and a diS~t rela·
tive of the performer. It w1ll
unlock some doors for our
schoolchildren."
The contribution, announced
Monday, came through the enter·
tainer's Dollywood Foundauon,
which raises money from annual
spring conce~ at ~ Dollywood
theme park m Ptgeon Forge.
Sevierville is ;1 few miles nonh of
Pigeon Forge in eastern Tennessee.
Parton's first donation to the
schools was in 1988 for a "bilddy
program" in .which pairs Of seventh and eighth graders were ocganized to help each other get
through high school. If botb in each
pair gradnakd, they got $1,000.
In May, the payout to the fu~t
buddies totaled $237,000. Th1s
year, Ms. Parton pledged $250,000
for the program.
The additional half-million dol·
1ar grant will go toward a special
schQOI for students 11 risk of dropping out; high school computer
labs; and scholarships among other
programs.

.- _

... ..

"A Year_to_Celebrate" is the
theine for the flower shows of
I'
I 29th annual Meigs County Fair.
The first show will take place
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Monday,
Aug. 17, and the second
· Associate Professor
will be held Thursday, Aug. 20.
of Family .Medicine
Show chairmen are Alice Thomp·
... ___ so son and Peggy Crane. Entries may
. Question: My 83-year-old
be made between 10 a.m. and 4
In p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 12 and
••
brother has just been diagndsed during the remainder
:··•&lt;-- with proswe cancer. He had some men whose cancer is confined to Thursday, Aug. 13.
:.::~ :kind ofa blood test that,detects thiS the gland, 91 percent survive 10
Numerous classes including
.~I'"" cancer and the doctor said hts years. That would make your
specimens,
artistic arrangements,
;~ . • results were 27, with 2 to 4 being brother 93 years old. With your potted plants and educational are
!:::::
:: the normal
range. What does this brother's history.of heart disease, it mcluded in the two shows.
' ~'
?
•,'~..... mean ·
. is much more likely that he will die
At each of the shows several
: :::1 :' Answer: The test your brother from another heart attack than from special awards will be given fol·
:~1~· .had is called Prostatic Specific his prostate cancer.
lowing the oral judgin$ by an
Treatment of prostate cancer accreditedd'udge or the Oh1o Asso·
:~ .: ~ Antigen (PSA). This is a test done
·on the blood and its results can requires surgical removal of the ciation of arden Clubs. All entries
~:-;! give us a good indication ~hether .diseased gland, and regardless of must be In place by noon on each
·- · · or not cancer is presenL Different the particular surgical approach of the show days with the judging
:-- ~ studies have produced stightly dif. used, it is a serious ~urgery. ! 81_11 to begin at I p.m.
: · • ferent numbers reflecting the aceu- sure that your brother s urologtst ts
Best of show, reserve best of
• :· racy of this test, but somewhere concerned about the risk this surgi- show, horticulture sweepstake and
: ,:- between 60 to SO percent of men cal procedure poses for him. The nature art and industry awards will
·· with prostate cancer also have a ·surgical procedure and recovery be $iven in the senior division with
afterwards place considerable
. . positive PSA tesL
special awards to .include a
strain
on the heart, and you already jumor
; ~~
Your brother's value of 27 puts
best
of
show, reserve best of show
:-: him in the group with very high know that his is weak. This is and horticulture sweepstakes.
another reason that the doctor felt
•. •. probability of having cancer.
Ribbons and premiums will be
~- :
Question: A specialist he was the "cost" of cancer treatment was. awarded in all classes of both
referred to said that he would rec· greater than its "benefit" for your shows with the exception of the
•• •....~ ommend
not doing anything. He brother.
It always makes sense to seek a non-competitive educational class·
: ~· said with my brother's previous
es.
• ;:-. heart problems (several heart second opinion when considering
All classes of the shows are
~ ~
k
A&amp;ftth
•&gt;:.
llttac,.,
and even a near""""
e&gt;:.pe· such serious issues. Ask your open to all residents of Meigs
~&lt;·. rience) that it was very unlikely brother to see another urologist. He County and to all members of a
will ~ly need additional tests Meigs County Garden &lt;;lub. The
':.:: : That ~e would die of this can.cer.
::._,·
Smce my brother 1s sttll very to try and identify the size of !he purchase of a membership ticket is
~' :" active and has been doing well for cancer and to determine if ir has required to enter. Junior classes are.
;;.: · .the last couple of years, this seems spread beyond the prostate gland open to anyone under the age of 19.
~£:;: •quite cynical to me. I thought can· itself. We1gh the two opinionsThose participating may enter as
ask Jots of questions - and choose many classes as desired but only
~:""-· cer was always supposed to be
i;...:': !reared promptly. Why is prostate the best one.
one entry is permiUed in the artistic
. "Family Medicine" is a weekly section.
~:~-' cancer different?
The exhibitor may make
;.::::;. Answer: Treatments for most column. To submit questions, write up to six entries in each horticul·
to John C. Wolf, D.O ., 250 ture class as long as each entry is a
::~: - cancers are physically and finanGrosvenor
Hall, College of Osteo- different variety or type.
~.;-- cially difficult to tolerate, and it is
pathic
Medicine,
Ohio University,
;. - ~. these considerations for the "cost"
Educational displays, "Feed the
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
,:.;.: to you brother that made his speBirds" and "Bird Care" will be pro:.:_: .. cialist recommend against treat·
vided by Can Do Maintenance
;::;:. mentforprostatecancer.
Company. The educational classes
··-Prostate cancer ~rows very
are not for competition but are
: - ·.• ~lowly in men over 70. If the canThe Bedford Township Trustees assigned to specific clubs as dis·
:r:. cer today is small and has not wiU meet Monday at the town hall plays.
Members of the flower show
.•:'•. spread beyond the prostate glltnd at 1 p.m .

,. .

,~-~, ~M;~~~
~
·;,~~ll

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

I/ ;

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

.-

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.

committee and their responsibilities
are: Rutland and Star Garden
Clubs, show signs; Shade Valley
Club, class signs; Wildwood Garden Club, clerks, fust show; Middlepon Amateur Club, clerks, S!X=·
ond show; Peggy Crane, photography; Chester Garden Club, placement, rust show, and juniors. second show; Friends and Flowers,
placement, second show, and
juniors, first show; Middleport
Garden Club, ribbon placement,
fust show; Fernwood Club, ribbon
placement, second show, and
cleanup for first show Thursday
morning; Alice Thompson, Peggy
Crane, Addalou Lewis and Rutland
Friendly, set up on Au~ . 13. All
clubs are responsible for clean-up
on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Classes to be offered include:
In the adult division for the fust
show.- New Year's Day, reflective
deSign; Valentine's Day, featuring
red· St. Patrick's Day, featunng
gr~n; Easter, mo~bana with. wa~r
showing; Mother s Day, sull hfe
(special class); Father's Day,
wood; Independence Day, abstract;
Labor Day, depicting an industry;
Memorial Day, mass arrangemen~
Halloween, modern including
black; Thanksgiving, vegetables
and fruit; Christmas, Christmas

Madonna.
In the junior division • Grand·
parents Day, your favorite.arrangement; Birthday, mcludmg toy;
Groundhog Day, featuring wood.
In the adult division for the second show · Golden Anniversary,
featuring yellow; Belling, vibratile
(special class); New Baby (twins),
two containets; Quilting Bee, mass;
TGIF, creative mass; Sternwheel
Festival, featuring drift wood or
weathered wood; April Fools Day,
pop ar~ Graduation, line arrangement; Retirement party, including a
candle; Family reunton, arrangement suitable for picnic; Church
Home Coming, rehgious; Heritage
Weekend, including an antique.
In the junior division • Country
Fair, fruit and vegetable; Sunday
School picnic, in a basket; World
Series, favorite design.
. .
In the senior horticulture division the same show schedule will
be used for Monday and Thursday ·
Roses, hybrid tea, floribunda, grandiflora , full bloom; Gladiolas,
white, green cream; yellow, buff,
orange, salmon; pink, rose, red,
dark red ; lavender, purple, violet;
any other color (multi -color);
·Qahlias, large decorative, cac!us
type, ball type, porn poms; Zmn ias, Dahlia flower, cactus flower,

IAAGAIN MATINIU SAT. A SUN.
IAJIGAIN NIGN1'1UUOAY

BUFF¥ THI URMPIRI ILI¥1R
7:10,9 :10 DAlLY. SAT/SUN MAT.l : LO ,J :lO (PG •U)

DEATH BICOMIS · HIR

7:00,9 :n o-.!l Y. 5.\l/SUN ~T .) :00,3 :15 (PG-ll)

HDNIY , I BlEW UP THE KID
1:00,9:00 0.\lll. SAT/SUN

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R UR&amp;UI OJ THEIR OWN
7:10,9:30 OAILY . So\T/SIJ!rj IIAT.l : l0,3 :l 0 (Pii)

UNLRWJUL INTRY
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7:20 9:20 Oo\ILY . SAT/SUfl P¥.1 . 1:20,] :20 PG)

COOL WORLD

7: 00 19t 111\I LY . SAT/SIJIII MTIWEES 1: 00 P'G-Jl

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&amp; CLINT L\Sl\OJO lft "~[ IJIF'ORGIYEN"

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5).69 41b.

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Tyson Holly Far•s Fresh Spilt

Chicken

UJ. #1 All Purpose, New Crop

Sweet ~Juicy

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BAG

VISIT CAMPUS • Several students from
Eastern Hlgb School visited Denance CoUeae
recently for a tour of the campus and a prtsen·
tatlon by the College's Ollke ol Admluion. The
students are participaats ot Upward Boand, a
college preparatory program coordinated by

....
.-.. . ......
~~~Davis reunion set
........ ...l
••
•• ~ Descendants of Orlando -"d

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~---······························-------···········-·
·~~~~~~!.~![~!~.-• 98( i

Ohio University. Giving ibe studeats a tour or
the campus Is DC student Carl Easley, left. Participating students included, in no particular
order, Deborab Gray, Nancy Nally, Aaita
Thomas and Michelle Maynard.

GAL

,

Addltlon1l pun:h-: $2.08 g~l. Lim~ 1 coupon per culltomer.

1

~
~

12 Pack· 12 oz. Cans

Clu•

Kellogg•s

Peanut

~~··~!Catherine Sheline Davis will hold

""'their annual family reunion Sunday
the American Legion Eli Deni·
Post No. 467 in Rutland with

Froot Loops

I~~r::~~at~noon;.AD
.

Gamesrelatives
will be

and prizes awarded.

Luncheon planned
Rev. Dr. Roy Meyers, rector of
Grace Episcopal Church, will be
leaving the community Aug.. IS.
He and his wife, Bennetta, are
moving to Bishop, Calif., where he
will assume the position of rector
of St. TiliiOlhy's Episcopal Church.
The congregation of Grace
Church will be hosting a farewell
luncheon in honor of Fr. Meyers on
Sunday following the II a.m. service. The public is invited.

SYLVANIA
.1001'10110

or R.C . Cola, ·
MW Root Beer,
Sunkist Orange
LIMIT 1 With $10.00 Additional Purchase

SyiYIIIIa Ofy..k Sale
Our e1tlre stock of Sylmlo Televisions Is reduced.
Here are two af tile great values:

lln.IOI

1

lordei11S

Ice

25"' Dia. Re110t1 C.st~le

Crea•

~1!!!!!!!!!!.

lerldine's JteW Hide Away rediner features a storage/tjle
5YSfet!1 that's buill inlo rhe 11111 of rhe recliner. How IOIIYIIIienll
Your favorite 110,1azite and 1V remole control an s10red in lhe
arm of the chair. Plus, rhe lift-up snock lray makes rhis rhe
ultimall recline!: for 1V viewi"l
,
Durilg our Ju~ Berk-. Sale, lhe price for
new rediten

TRADITIONAL
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
AVAILABLE
THROUGH

!!!!!!I

Limit 4 W'ilh
Additional Purchase

• Sllptlltt• 2-in-1 SllptRimote•171tolaldionMI capaili~Jy • Dark lilt
100 pidu11 tube • Chawl l1llilld.r displgy • Sleep fi11111• CDS1ors
YOUR

startsatanlr.

992-3148

LAYAWAY NOW FOR

., BESTSELECTION.
~-·--

··-·· ..

_.

(

.

'""''..

-·

.

.. ,---..

---~~

'

PG

RACINE, OHIO

.... .
.-·
... "'' ..
••
.-.
-..

~T.I :OO,J:OO

UNIUIRSBL SOLDIER

PEARL STREET

.. .-

A

- ---

- 'WAID CROSS'
~
SONS

Trustees to meet

~

(over eight inches),
(under eight inches); Marigolds,
orange, large yellow, small
one spray; Celosias, crest~d.
plumed. Houseplants and haag,
ing baskets, FoUage plauts and
flowering plants, foUage plants,
potkd, hanging; Rowerin1 plants,
poued, hanging; African violets;ferns, not asparagus, asparagus;
succulents, large, small (three-inch
pot); container.
In the junior horticulture division • Zinnias, dahlia flowered,
cactus; Marigolds, yellow, orange,
small spray; Sun flowers, large,
small (under eight inches); Class
four, roadside materal-f!'esh, roadside material-dried, and Gourd bas·
ket (three specimens).

"'··-.

-(

-

•"
'

BRANSON1 Mo. (AP) Sinpr Jollnny l'a)'Cbcck. try1ng to
make a comeback &lt;1iDce he got out
of priJOn, llid Tuelday be's leidy
to ~ettle down ia the burgeoning
coanuy music mec:ea of Branson
and will like over a thealer here.
Harting to hil heyday with the
1978 bit "Tab This Job IJ,Id Shove
11," Payc!lect said, "I can practlce
my cllft llld spend timt ,wilh my

--

I

'
•

,u.s.

l'amlly."

i

:&lt;r

EOOARTOWN, Mass. (AP)-

LONDON (AP) - Queen
Mother Elizabeth got her usual
royal birthday treaunent when she
turned 92 on Tuesday: loving
greetings and best wishes from
children and adults, pipers and an
Irish wollbound.
The annual festivities at her
home at Clarence House in central
London began when the gates
swung ~nat 11:15 am.
Some of her fans camped out all
night in St. James's Park for a
glimpse and to offer gifts of flowers, photographs, books and cards.
the baiKI of the Irish Guards led
by Malachy, the regiment's canine
mascot, marched p.ast pla¥ing
"Happy Birthday.' ~he sm1ling
Queen Mother, !Rssed m turqoo1se
and gold, spent some midutes chatting to the throng.
The ~ Mum, as she is bet·
ter known, is mother of Queen
Elizabeth 11 and widow of George
VI, who reigned from 1937 to .
19S2.
.
Laura Skrzynska, 27, an expab'l·
ate from Washington, D.C .. now
living in Enjland, pve Elizabeth a
bottle of gin.
"She seemed pleased. I have
heard that she enjoys a gin and
tonic," Ms. Skrzynllca said.

.

. •

An invitation to appear as an e&gt;:tra
in a film with Michael J. Fox

brought $2,300. A sailboat ride
with Walter Cronkite fetched
$4 000. Golf and lunch with exBoston Celtic great Jolul Havlicek
raised $1,400.
The occasion was the 14th
annual Possible Dreatns Auction
fund-raiser for Martha's Vineyard
Commllllity Services, a consortium
of social agencies that serve the
island's year-round residents.
The auction Monday night
raised a record $80,000.
Many of the Vineyard's celebrity summer visitors traditionally
contribute or bid on the items and
services.
Columnist An Buchwald auctioned off the bowler hat he was
wearing, which he said was a gift
from former British Prime Minister
Margaret 'l'batcha.
Other premiums offered: a
behind-the-scenes visit to the set of
"Sesame Street," including an
audience with 8~~; a private
discussion of the
Weinberger indictment wit Arthur L.
Liman, chief COI!nsel of the
Senate's Iran-Contta Committee;
and dinner with journalist Mike
Wallace and novelist William Sty·
ron.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Actor George Lindsey fi~ures
the image of him with a bean!e cap
on his head and a rag m h1s h1p
pocket will outlive him.
"I guess they'll bury me in that
Goober costume," said Lindsey,
who played the part on the 1960s
TV show "MayberryRFD."
"It's been a combination curse
and blessing for people to always
think of me as Goober," Lindsey
told the Charleston Daily Mail in
an interview published Tuesday.
"It's enabled me to do a lot of
things, and I'm pleased to be a pan
of American culture. But on the
other ~and, some casting people
can't Ret beyond that Goober
1mage;
.
Lindsey, who has refused to dis·
close his age to interviewers, now
stars in the cable televiSion vanety
show, "Hce Haw," produced in
Nashville, where he lives.
He also has a club act as well as
other television projects.

Family
Medicine

-

..........~

: SUD

'A Year to Celebrate' theme of
1992 flower shows at Meigs fair

Ohio University
&lt;;:allege of Osteopathic Medicine

. ·-

•

. .. ~ ·~ "&lt;r!"' -1.--~:....-------·""'!'-~-~---·;;..-~-.'

. . ____. _.., .__•'---·----·. .
-~

.,

l•

'

.

. . _.., ,. _,_. .,_ _ ·-

-·- ~---· ---·--·----..--

'~ , ,. .

_...

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I

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,.,. 111-The ~~Y s.n11ne1

Community calendar
Coaaulty Caleadar Items for all students in the.Southern

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

.,,... two daJI before 111 mat
• ud die daj ot tllat event. Items
~ • • be nc:elved weB illldvauee
to·-re publleatloa ill tbe cal·
ndar.
WEDNESDAY .
Run.AND • A family crusade
1
at tile Rutland Church of God will
• be conducled bv Rev. John Smith.
, llao known as ''GI'andpa Cn11chet"
' "-&amp;h Wedneaday 81 7 p.m. Publlc inviled. To prc·rcgistc2' call the
church 11 742-6020.

Local School Disuicl entering
grades 3-8 this fall will be held
Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m. to

..

The

Business Services.

ADII&amp;I6&amp;1 11111 IWJt'f-&amp;ch al - - ileml It NQIIirld 10 be
reodiv ovolloblo tor . . in .,n K._ SI&lt;H1I, IXCIIPI-:=Ciftclllynotld in
thil ..tlfMdo run ovtofenllh•doed hem, wowl
~ yourcholco
of a Cllmpllllllo item, . . -. leltac:ttng 1ho ..vlnuo or 1 l'!lin·
checl&lt; wllich Wit emilie you to pu-lhe - * d IMm It 1ho ldvtniHd
price within 30 dll\'1. ·0r11r one ...idor- wl be ICCtP*f I* kem

.,..,_

RED HILL FARMS

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • There will
be preacbipg and singin$ at the
Faith Full Gospel Church m Long
Bouom on Friday 81 7:30p.m. Pas·
tor Steve Reed mvircs ihe public.
Fellowship will follow.

Fertilizing, 'WI f ..
IIIICIS 11 4J.
Shrub.ud :rTrimmh\g • A.mul
.can
d l
FrNEtttmrtn

To place an ad

""• OlaCIIY
Accept Your
,__ ··--- .• Federal Food

Call 992-2156

scamps

MoN. thru Fat.
POLICIES

KROGER'S
109TH
..
ANNIVERSARY SALE!

• Ad1 eutaMie the county your ad run• mUll be prepaid
• Receiva dYcout for acl1 paid in. adnnee.
• Free Ad.: Cinaway and Found ad. under 15 word• will be
run 3 daya at no charge.
• Pr~ of ad (or all c:apltallellen it douhle price ol ad cot t
• 7 point line type only uted
• Sentinel it not rapon~ible for enon .r~.er fant day (chock
for error• fir1t day ad runa in pt.pcr). Call before 2:00p.m.
day dter puhlieatioft to 111.ake correction
• Ada that mUll M p,~id ln advance are:

C.rtl of Thanlu
Happy Ado
In Memoraa•
Yard SalM
• A clauif»ed ad .. erlilemenl placed in lhe Callipolil Daily
Tribune (excepl Clauitoed Dioplay, B.. U.eu C.rtlor l..epl
Nolic:et) will alto appear in lhe Point P1euant Repter and
the Daily Sentiad, rea.chift8 o•er 18,000 home~

RACINE • A free foolball clinic

(

·,_

J

~ ·
-

./

·I

NEW YORK (AP) - Bryant
Gumbel broke his wrist while in
punuk or a hippo iD Africa, NBC

·~·1be "Today" bosl bas been in
Aftlca Iince last week, taping 8C4•

meallto uo wbell the show orip-

.

I.

--,

lb.

SLICED
FREE

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, GRAIN FED BEEF "UNTRIMMED
WHOLESALE CUT" l11·14·LB. AVG.J CAP·ON

Whole Sirloin Tips

~~
I

I
I OF

L

UIIIT 1 GAL. WITH COUPON &amp;
$10.00 ADDITIONAl. PURCHASE
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER
COfiiiOff COCIID SUIW. AUG. Z·U r. AOO. B, 111n

1111111 dlcR for

No¥. 13.

six .day1, beginning
f

992- Mlddloporli

675-PL. Pleeunt

367-Chethire

Pomeroy

388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande

985- Choooor
843-Portlond
247-l..etart FaD•
949-Racine
742- Rudond
66 7:.Cool.!Uo

458-Leon
57l&gt;-Apple Grove

256-Gu)'an Dilt.
643-Anbio Oiot.
379- Walnul

BISSELL &amp;
COIISTIUCI'IOI

937- Bufl'olo

~
2221

FaEElmaD

-:z I ....

1

915·4413

$ .20

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

22-

Money to IAan

23- Profeuioaal Senket

32- Mobile Homu for Sole .6

q P
162- Wanted lo Buy

33- Farm• for Sale

34- BuiiHIII Buildinp
35- Lou &amp; Aerup
3f&gt;.- Real Eolale Wonlod

lll"'il \I

~

63- u ......k
64- Hay &amp; Gral11
65- Seed &amp; FcrUiitor

I ii \\ , 1'111!1'11111\
AulOI for Sale
Truck• for Saie
&amp; 4 WD'o

41- HoWM~ for Aen&amp;

v...

4Z- Mobile Ho•e~ for Rent
43- Farm• for Rent
44- Aputme:nt for Renl
45- Fumilhed RooM•
46- Spate lor Rent
47- Wanted to Renl

II- Help Wonlod
12- Sltualiou Wan.aed
13-- ln1uranu
14-- Buineat Traini"'

15- School• &amp; I Nltruclion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
11- MiKellaneow
18- Wooled To Do

7- Lo.tand Found
8- Publi&lt; Sale &amp;
AYe lion

9-Wanl&lt;d lb8uy

Mot.orcrcle.
BoaLI &amp; Mo~n for Sale
Aulo Pork &amp; Aooouori'"'l
Auto Repair
Campiftl Equi.-ent

48- Equipmenl for Rent

Sl- Houecbold Goodo
S2- Sportin« Goodo
53-- Antique.
54- Mite. Merchandile
55- Building Supplie.

po
PluMbiftl &amp;: Healiftl
Eu avatinjl

&amp; co.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
.
lew Garages • Replacement Windows
Roo11 A.Witioas • Roofing

"Tale IN IWI 011 01 f'll.illi!lrl
-"" U1 De II Ftr ftf•

COMMI:RCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
I'BEI: I'.STIMATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

nEE UTIIIllU

(lo Sunday Calls)

NAVE IEFII£JKES
Btlort6p&amp;'-t. !1
Altar 6 p.a. 61t_,.5-41.

2/12192

FOR SllE
Agriculture
liMe
VALLEY
Rt. 2
Mlllwoo4,W.V..

......

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

s,..,
-~
..--...
iiES
flEE IS,

CALL {614) 446-9971 {Kelly)
KBNNY'S AUTO CENTER

Ull.

... _
,.....

a.idYCIIE,_

Iz:t.liiPW

J

SEIVICE
992··5335or
915·3561

11115 &amp; Z lll

........

""''',_
217LI.-IIL

•W I z s

1111.10,, ...

yoo?

fa 61'4-992-5591

t 2·5·tfn

DUiE ESTIMATES

992·3138

In Memory

RUlE I 7 G

lire CIIUsifitJ Stclion!

ofieldllners
• ConVII'Iible Taps
• CUstom c.rpets
• Cilslom Slat
Q uars • Also Boats

d

a u E•

Dorothy Mo
Robinson
~lymleHdby

GnlndchildNR •
Grelt•gninclchlldNR.

wilh 6 oil and gal wello. Hao bams, garago, collar, shed.

and chickan houu. Atl&lt;ing $125,000.

In Loving l!t1emory of

MAUDIE ETHEL WOOD,
5 years ago, August 3,1987.
IN AEIIEI&amp;WICE OF MOTHER

In _ . _ o t IIIOfher, The~ ol my hla1.

To my 111011Mr,l

.

DQfitDS

Tortilla Chips· ··
9.5-oz.

.

Jualopen my Bible

And 111m thru ... ,.... ol 1111111
• - my woolhlr'ellng..,...,.. on 1111 1111111 of 1111111.

ASSOitrED VARIETIES

.

Alldld_,...._....,

funllt ... ;...""In ... Bible,

"",....""Ill

my ......
Illy . . . . -le fiOM.
To ... lilltoau•• ·
Will ........ 011 hlgiL

NEW UIIA RD. - Rai\Ch otylt home with 3 bedroomo,
1112 b1th1,-htal pumr -Ita! air, garage, carpon, oul·
b&lt;rilclngo, lppniX. e.Crn. Owner nolooaltd - IRJdOUIID
ulll Come .....,m.... Ill otter.
REDUCED - Porlllllcl- Older 1 ftoor lrwne home with
2.81 acre• will tm11 thed. Home hu been reducod lo
$7,500.

'
OUT OF ITOCKI IF YOU'VE EVER WANTED

ro

lEU.. NOW II Ttl! TIE 10 IJIJ WITH Ul, OUR

..

SERVICE

3WI&gt;........
PI

BUNKER Hlll·lf r ou .want a lllrpillrml....,"""'""'. -

it is. A173aae1arrnv.flh. . , ..hrll'**lt.-...n....tr.
Wllh appro•. « ! - ha""V.,."'-.1111111•....,. Z•
3 11ream• big reif lborn. - ·=. , ., ..,....,:.,..
building•. 'riMi homelhai:Jibi
,..,.._..... _

"ow.

~

3 Announcements
A Wondertul Family Experience.

Scandln~vlan ,
~lrican ,

European. Scuh

Japan... ~h
Sc:hool Exchange Sludtnlt lor-

riving In Augull. Baeomt A Hot~
.lnltrcufturll
Stud1nt E~:change . C.. Kathie
21HSO·!Ni1i Or f-800 SIU 'I·
Anyone going to c:-d Col·

ADS ATTRACT ATIENTIDN AND OUR IALEI
ITAFF II llXPERIENCED

NEEOII CALL:

TO IERVE YOUR

--3a41.

•
lhol
·coM
- rlda ... - ...,.
pltiH

Froo Adult Talk Una.
1-714-251·2101
Uve, One On One.

WILLS HILl ROAD.l 2 M wi1111 allqt .....
owl1ookin~ the 5lh !hold d 11M.,.-· ...ai
electric avlillrbte. ~ - ·
ST.RT. 7•AI!tlrox .

16 ..,..dl--1- .4 ~.

larmhou•.' l ...ltd-._5
WuPO,OOO

••Sdlalll
.. m

WILLS HILL ROAD .-alblillttsllt ••blillor,._
walar and olec:lric is-illitileand.,.lllrnlll¥_..,.i&amp;
panty cleared or al dNNcl.
suae--

oome ruR,.,':ls--..

__ _

BRENDA JEFF
-·~-----·-·- N"'S
DARUNESTEWARf-·--·- · NS&amp;
SANDY IIUTCHER--·- ·- - - - ---..
SHERYLWALTai,Q 1h.
· - -.. - -l&amp;ril
JERRY SPRADIIIIC - ·P.f' -~-

-·•an

Tho "Big Gomt" II Thai Special
Dolly Plck 81 Faaturtd Ho,_
dlc:apporo Who Collactlvoly
Plckld 7no · WI-. Lui

-

SoaiiOR. 'Wonh no Wtlahl "'
Gold.. " Call 1·100-4 Mont?. CaU

Charvn 110. Flat Foo Per eau.
24 lltiuro. Minora Nood l'tlnll4al

4

....

Giveaway

1 liZ yr old """"- Collo,

gNOI wtlh llklo, 304 112 :1011

m pl. fuol oil tank 304~12-3045 .

G·r ra
c;.,.... C:ll1nlng
Dawnspouts

Plinlillf

IIII ISTIIIATES

49;-2,168
712r12111n.

.

•

4 lrH pupploo: mt•od llrood,
pa~ Dorman Shlllhtrd. Make

nlct pelt. 114-441o:IIH.

wilh. May nde·tor·slnillerlbDmo.

$ll.al

IUBIIEU II 10000 CIOOD....WE'RE RUNIINQ

hotllll on high,
....... will gold
go It Mil her,

_.L

!IIDDLEPOAT - Ownor onxioualo Ml thiat loor !ramo
home 1\flh 2 bedroom1, otorago Mclng. Asking $8,000.
Makinganofttri
.

COIIIriERCIAL BUILDING- W. llaln, Pomlroy - 1800
eq. ft. 4 bedroom ipt. up~Wlrt. Good tocam - ILMviiY
travNd ..... Aatrlng $33,000.

....... 'IINitr-'11*11 ......

•-...otgold

WICK'S

NEW USllNQ - CHESTER - One floor frame home
with 2 bedroom a, encloted rear por&lt;h, lhed, new vinyl
aiding, natural gao Lennox FA heat, TPC water, E•••m
School District. Alklng $20,000.

In Memory

Announcements

SAVE $2,0001 MUST SUL·
Ro111 Ook RHO&lt;t Me-rolllp:
114-461-5581 •Her 5 p.m.

NEW USllNQ - FAA II: 208.61 + acres localtd on a.tl
Run Rd. Older fnun• home, 4 bedn&gt;omt, LCD wooter,
eomt tillable 111&lt;1 ltnced acres,moat timber. FREE GAS

hulbltnd, Glen (8111)
Roblneon; ChlidNR,

2

I -.

REDUCE; Bum Off Fat While
You SIMp, Take OPAL Available
At : Fruth Pharmacy.

August4, 11188.

Members of the crew were chiS·
ing a hippopotamus al Kenya's
Masai Mara game reserve when the
vehicle carrying Gumbel wenl into
a ditch, NBC spokeswoman Lynn
Appelbaum said Tuesday.
He was treated and continued on
to Egypt, she said.

L----.:.71.:1::1.

Ill

997-·7759 .
608 EAST MAIN .
POMUOY. OHIO!

who paned fiiiiY

HeaCis

16141 915·3594 or
915·35 §

Famll)'fAnwiican

of

coca cola Classic

IUa:NSm'ancl BONilED

lRMER.SilES,
utea.EAIW4G.
uucau INSTALLED

in

SPRITE, DiET COKE,. CAFFEINE-FREE DIETCOKE OR

UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
fiDME SITES
KlllliNG: Umestone,
Dirt. Gn!Yeland Coal

IIDIIE SI1ES _.

Lillie lhings
11re Worlh Alol

In Loving Memory

Approved Townehlp
Road (blacktop), 114
mile from Rt. 7,
located between
Chesler and Tuppe"
Pllllna.
Each lot r. ptlrllally
wooded with excellent
drainage. Sarvlca by:
T.P.C. Water Co.;
Columbue &amp; Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM 53,500
and up
Owner Financed

lAND ct.EARING
WIJER &amp; SEWER

DCAVADNG

992-2156
2

2-Ltr.

PONDS
SEPJIC SYSTEMS

AVNII•81E
5&amp; I&amp; SYSlEIIS.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

COUNTlY LOTS
FOR SALE
1·5 ACRES

IIIIDOZING

taSU!lNE- TRUCIONG

·lbs.

FREE

264\1\JPPER RIVER ROAD

• • OO?FR.,.BACKHOE
lllll lRACIOIOE WORK

ClAIIIFID ADC
SLICED

'I9e9S A DAY AND UP

I&amp;( UCAVATING

IEN'S~

can help

r

ISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

lrl'\1.......

WH00-0-0

I .

I

AUIIIIU

85-- ~eral Haulins
86- Mobile Ho•e Repair
87- Uphoblc.y

~.. ,,OW.

CGI (6141 446-9416 or 1-8110-872·5967

MICROWAVIOI

M- Eleclricol &amp; Rcfr·~«en•Lio~

HERE! ACAlf
"fORfYOU

Bettmetts Mobile Home
lltUalftrd SciLoal Rd. ~.

3-16-.

•

\lEI\( II\ \IJI :-1-.

•

low Water Heaten.

304·273·5555 61,1H6Mt

" I·: H\ I &lt;:I- S

49-- For 1..-ae

I

.. CoacitiDI!fS, Heat
l'lllps. hnaces &amp;

INTERIOR &amp;muiOI

1'\ll\1 :-ili'I'I.IE:-i
S. I I \ ~.:-i TO &lt;. "-

'

Q dlt Hi Efficie•cy

Quality
Stone Co.

St.lt. 7
Cheshire,

59- For Sale or Trade

lOCATED COlliER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY BY·PASS
992·5114

667·6179

6637

1

:•

'

Call 61 4-992·

'

""

c.rl ...-

SIZED UMESJOIE

56- Peb for Sale
57- Muakallnttn&amp;Menll
21- 8Uain., Opporlunity ' S8- Frui~o &amp; Vesclahleo

FI\\\U\1

$1.50 doz.

_
,
,._

773-M-•

882-New llaven
895- Lelorl

Now

Of Sweet Com, String Beans,
To11atoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

..........

.c•._,-...

FRESH SWEET CORN

ROAil &amp; WHOlESALE SAlES

nsuu•

•NtwH.-s
•Gar....

•..

J7J.5114•

IN THE

DANVll..LE • Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ
will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
will be ihe spealcer. Public invited.

(

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

2-la Melflory
3- An.nouDCemen\1
4--Ci•eawar
5- Hoppy Ado
6- I.Ait utd Found

-·

-----------------

15
15
15
15
15

GET RESUI..TS • FAST!

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

2% LowFat Milk

I
I

I

Over 15 Words

Rate

- - ----=---=--::-::== =-=--- ---'

I
I

SPRINGDALE

Words

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

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·Gallon

Days
3
6
10
Monthly

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP • The Sci·
pio Volunteer Township Depart·
menl will have a tractor Jlllll Satur·
day with weigh-in at 5 p.m. and
pulls al 6 p.m. Kids classes 800,
and aduiiS, 900, 1,000 and 1,100.
Fifty percent payback.

There ore 85 ll&amp;sardolia wute .a!tea
In PeDlllylvllli.l, I8COIICI Gilly to New
Jersey's lot.
·

446-Gallipolit

RATES

-

~\
I

MIDDLEPORT • Facemyer
Lumber and Ball Logging will
sponsor a softball tournament Sat·
urday and Sunday in Middleport.
Cost is $75 plus two balls. Call
992-5358 or 992-5654 for information.

MIJ':lNEAPOLIS (AP) - Axl
Rose overdid it at a concert a week
ago and had 10 cancel tonight's
Guns N' Roses show rather than
risk permanent damage to his
voice, his record company says.
The rock group's lead singer
hun his vocal cools during a 2 1!2hour concert at Giants Stadium in
New Jersey, Geffen Records said
Tuesday.
A doctor advised Rose to give
his vocal cords at least a week to
heal, Geffen said.
The concert at the Metrodome
has been re,scheduled for SepL 15.

Gallia County Meige County Muon Co., WY
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

-

IIHIII

Stop&amp;Co....

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Names in the news
PITTSBURGH (AP) - A
groundhog bit Bill Murray's fingers twice during the filmin~ of lhe
comedy "Groundhog Day,' direc·
tor Hlrold Ramis says.
The'injuries weren't serious and
the actor continued working.
"To be bitten twice means he
stuck around after being billen
once," Ramis said in the Septem·
ber isJUe of Premiere magaine.
"He's very game."
The todellt bit the actor during a
scene in which he lets it drive a
truck, Ramis said.
.
Mumy playa a weather foreCIIter who u sent 10 Punx sutawney, borne of Punxsutawney
Phil, ., cover the Oroundhog Day
fellivillca.
.

Clouified pages c011er the
following telephone e:rchanges ...

...

•

- PRODUCE

a

FOR SAlE

.

MIDDLEPORT • AU seventh,
eighlh and freshman football playen on the Meigs Local School Dislric:t will have hebnet filling 11 lhe
Meigs Junior High School Sladium
Thursday at2 p.m.

Su.8-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

..

POMEROY · The Meigs Athlet·
ic Boosters wiD meet al the high
school Thursday at7:1 5 p.m.

8A.M.- 5P.M. •

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
100 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedllesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedllesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fo day Paper
Sunday Papet

5

--&amp;IL- -11oolioiL

R.....,.... a

~

POMEROY • The Meigs County PERI group will meet Thursday
at I p.m. at the senior citizens center in Pomeroy. All members urged
toaucnd.

,._,..A
n 1 • ,
•
SF
. _PI

949·2UI•
I•IONI7·1461
lawn-.uil a.

noon.

RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Liberty
Mountaineers wiii perform 81
MIDDLEPORT • "Voyage to Slcall:land in Ripley. W.Va. on Fri·
' the Deep" is ihc ihcme for Vaca- day.
lillll Bib'le School at Victory B~
: tilt Cbun:h in Middleport through
SATURDAY
Saturday from 6:15-8:45 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tupnighlly. Rev. James Kccscc in\lircs pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
•· children ages four and up. Call Ladies Auxiliary will bold a bake
sale Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
-. 992-6302 for 111U1Sp01181ion.
across
from Farmers Bank in Tup'
pers
Plains.
All members bring
Run.AND • Rutland Church of
lhe NIIZIRIIC will condlict Vacalion baked goods.
; Bible School through Friday from
. REEDSVll.LE • There will be a
•· 9· 11 :30 a.m. "Set Sail with the
•• Savior" is the theme. Singing. soup supper at the home of Marvin
::. scripture memorization, bible sto- and Dolly Reed, Reedsville, on
ries and crafts will be featured each Saturday at 4 p.m. In addition to
.• day. The children will sing for ihe dinner and desserts there will be
gospel music provided. All pro• maniag worship service Sunday.
ceeds from the supper wiii go 10
REEDSVILLE • "Set Sail with the Faith Full Gospel Church in
• lhe Savior" will be the theme for Long Bottom.
Vacation Bible School at the Fel·
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA . · The
·· Iowship ChUith of the Nazarene,
·· Route 124, across from Forked Liberty Mountaineers will perform
Run, through Friday from 6-8:30 Saturday al the Jackson County
p.m. ni~~~~· Classes for nursing Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
lllrough
L
POMEROY • The Big Bend
REEDSVILLE • The Olive Youth Football League will hold
: Township Trustees will meet sign up Saturday and Aug. IS from
· Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the 9 a.m. to noon at the Big Bend
Shade River Slate Forcsuy Build· Heallh and Fitness Center in
ing.
Pomeroy. Bring a birth c~cate
copy. Call 992-3486 after 4.30 p.m.
RUTLAND · The Rutland for further informllion.
. Township Trustees will meet
· Wednesday at6:30 p.m. at lhe Rut·
DARWIN • The 25th annual
:. land Fue Sration. Public invited.
reunion or the descendants of the
late Samuel Allen Eblin will be
· POMEROY • Pomeroy Lod~e held Saturday at 3 p.m. at the road·
: No. 164 F and AM will hold 11s side park on Route 33. Polluck din·
regular meeting Wednesday II 7:30 ner. Bring your own table service.
p.m.
DARWIN· Modem Woodmen
. RACINE • There will be volun- of America Camp 7230 will hold a
: tary practice for all students inter· get-together Sawrday 81 6:30 p.m.
: esled in playing football at Souih· atlhe southbound park on Route 33
em High School through Friday of near Dilwin. Melon will be served.
this week from 7-9 p.m. All players DocX prize awarded. Everyone wei·
are encouraged to allend. The fli'SI come.
mandalory practice: will be Monday
. at7 p.m.
RACINE • The Meigs Soil and
Wiler Conservation District Board
· PORTLAND • Kerry Drennan, of Supervisors will meet in special
: Elizabeth, W.Va. will be 1be guest session Sawrday at 7 p.m. at Star
· speaker lit the Stiversville Church Mill Park in Racine.
in Ponland Wednesday and Thurs·
- day at 7:30p.m. Pastor David Dai·
REEDSVll.LE • Men's softbl!ll
: ley inviiCS the public.
Class E state qualifier roumament
Saturday and Sunday at Eastern
THURSDAY
High School. Cost is $80. Hit your
_ MIDDLEPORT · Family and own balls. Call 667-3526 or 378· friends of residents 81 Overbrook 6325 for informllion.
: Center are invited 10 meet lhe new
: administrator, Linda Brig~Ie. on
CHESHIRE • Old Kyger Free
- Thursday 81 7 p.m. EnterWnment Will Baptist Church in Cheshire
: will be provided by While's Hill will host Rev. Chatles Hardy, Oak
· Band.
Hill, on .Saturday at 7 p.m. Rev.
Bob Thompson. pastor, invites the
POMEROY • Revival at Faith public.
: Tabernacle Church on Bailey Run
: Road will be held Thursday
RUTLAND • There will be a
: through Sunday at 7. p.m. ni~tly . dance at the Rutland American
. Brother Noah Callicoat w1ll be Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
: evangelist. Pastor Emmell Rawson p.m. 10 midnighL Music by White's
invited the public.
Hill Band. Public invited.
RACINE • Racine American
Legion Post 602 wiU meet Thursday at 6:30p.m. at ihe post home.

- -·--·-- - - . --- -.. ---------·- · · -·---·- ·- - -- +---- .,.---

,-- ~.....,..,....-- -- ---- ~-

¥Jedne~a~Auguat5.1992

Pomeroy-Middlepcift, Ohio
COPYRIGHT 11182 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOO SUNDAY, AUG . 2, THROUGH
SATURDAY, AUG. 8, t982,1N POMEROY••

-·-··

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Pllll · 12-The Dally Sentinel
7

SNAFU® by Bruce Battle

Yard Salt

32

44

Mobile Homel

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•
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50l' 112 Stcond Sl, Now Hoven,

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2 - - . cant~ii ·-At;,
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=:-.=

54

Miscellaneous
· Merchandise

'*""''

79

..
Autos lor Sale
dHionor, t20CJ; Anllquo Rockor, 1107 Clmoro convl&lt;llblo, wllh
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Whlrtpocl -dlclo 11,100; aood lot roolotollon, 14,200. or
Whlrlooal DlglloiSiova 1450; Air :liool
:::.ollo:;=':::
· 304
::.;,-112::=.-33=23=·-,-Condk-. 1225; In canon 1171Cimoro, .Y,.,oulo,alr,now
Pl•olol Sink. $225; In Clrlon
I I ••soo ·~ ~s-20lll
Whlrlpocl lolh TIJb 1350j JC fll n '"' · ~·
·
Ponnoy Wlckor FumHwo, ol50il· 1171 Joop CJ·7, good cond. 114Solo, Chair, I.Dungor1 En Sll'-0317.
Tabln Cclloo Toblo, Olo Rock· ____,,_,..-,-.,--::-:.,..,;::-lng Choir, MO. 114488o-.
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CASH
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lllloo 011 A - 7 On lloull Ml,
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lrood Noodl, 45/IIOI Pull, 21"'

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ca~n Twrlor pupplll. 3DW75SISI
'
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maloo.t. ~.!'."- old, 121»· ooch.

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4414144 Aftw 7:00p.m.
p,j:&amp;;o.
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10 all. IIIII tonk --"'0. dol Floh ·Tanio, 241S JocNon Avo.
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32 Mobile HOmes
Air Condlllonlna. UI,OOO mllll • - . CIMina HAPPY JACK CEDARCIOE: All
lor Sale
g;~"':l Pwklng, ~
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1AI&lt;oWIIhl2dl--. --1
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.,_ pnwnaloa hilling and holr
· ..- · - or
121M PO&lt;Ch, A...,ng, l ~. dopooll roqulrod, IM.eta·23111 1111- • Up.l14 4410411.
g - l o onr IMngo, ._ opll
N • · - 1, ~•
- ... ·- -.. · - iNowJ - · ll4488o "''"
A i r - - ttoo. tloot""
14
Bullntll
2bdrm. Ifill., ''"II -ric, .,.. fiS. IMool-1.
-··r&amp;s --~
Ma'll, S - - WIIIIFI pllonclo lurnlshool, foundry
••~
_,,~·-·
Tnllnlng
room, lor~ bock - 1 hnl -- 1o All S lodroooo Rot Tomw Pupploo, 111, 114pi&lt;Ch, oppl- 111f nclud- 1o 1 -. ~lono - - luflo, llociM 0raon- 24MHl
Rllrolo
-~-- 1rog wood olovo l ...Ofld, 1 01: VlfloaO ~QiiOii Aolo. ... ot IM 2411014.
'
1 -~.
VoN~ · ocro, vwy nlcl - · liN, llfii1Ua-mt EOH.
.... .o,
:-:-= ,-:h:-:,::
w Whot'o 11 ill1flroiW 1110111 1he
1111:-=
Plou ..Coli Todii.f, I
l:ll7
IM.IOO. pnoe roducod lor :.:,:,.
roor
.;_m::II,-:COI
~rpll~::od,
:;-:o-=-;ldlcl:;:::;:'loi::-o, all. COI'ilonll IOOL :ID4o ...... Jock loX lloo _ , I ·
Rog.-121111.
Umhodllrno onlr, :1114om.m3. Upll. ., jorlvllo . 1111....., ltf44M .. :104.f1M112.
::-.:or:-~ 1"'!:~
18 Wanted tO Do
11' WIDE CLOSE-ouT • dow:hao:, ::llllloo lblkl, ·oobfo, llocldll- lot
IIOIJTHE
ITATEI, :IOol.f?llo
1111 Sk;c,':' 111'11, 2br. a loth. olopOIII, olloiw111, ;MI4.t?llo1111. blockboiiiH. WI p1ok 1nom lor 2110.

· ,_ta41U.
AVON I AI -~ I lllfrlor

· -·

-._ e-..

RatiC"·

And

Mlatrokll,

Sold:
Nov...

Com : Thocphll~,_ loa 721,
Dollltllflo, Chill 4i1Ni, 114-441'7282
Otd marblee, toys, comic boo«1,
""'""'• piclurN, Iron IWMitl,
lnd lo.rnlluro, OobJ llartln, 114-

112·1114l

Wonlod To Bur: Jri Aorlcw
Wlh Dr WI- llolono. Coli
Lwry Uvolr. 114-IM nn.

1-

Top Polol: All Old U.l.
Colno,- . . _
Colno,
Dolol Coliio. II.T.i. Colo lliop,
111-"-0olllpollo. '

Employmenl Servtces
11

Help Wantld .

lpnro, .....,._,..,
Clilll """ lot I -

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iiU,- Coli Trodn)

l - 1 1117.

C.. lw - . , .lodr ~~
olololwwloC.O::.,C::,:Ior,jllllll a 1 M.- lie o1111o,
""'
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114- N j.10
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-~ 111 411 .U.IOH.
PwliiiiMI 1 IR: 11 o.•rk,

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V. , _ , Clulil• 1 - , Do iiR lfiEI IIIIYICI.

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1 a ...... filii... .._,, don'
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fir; - - •
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te- OINIOiool
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Polol, OUT wllwbod, ....,., '""· '" ,,.. , . _ , 011....... _ , .
pllanooo, lhiO dock, h4,000.
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111111-. :IOW?IIo7110 Of
184.
............. IIIDIII!II' ' In , _,

IJI.I;;A""··--i"";iiiiii;i~·~;,

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- - :I04o

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to L1rniro .........

l~
rou
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onlrgOiic, ..-,. n• '"'""' "" ,.,
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o1o1· blodo llfth
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lifo, \14-lll2- Ilk lw Clllr-

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110
Go~ Hot 'M..Wlh
01 Chi_

MuiiCII .
In II rument ••

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=

PUU1J1 ..... ~

.,.. ,.._ .....

9~DtGIT

ZIP C.ODt !

Frultl

&amp;

,.,..

.. . . ._. . _. . . . . ..

_____.__.;____.,._...,.._,...l"'-'-'- - . --·~~~

.

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41110wWN-

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47lllouund

MORTY MEEKLE
~T

·'

-k-?

52LitM ..

161Wullt

w.-10 PM I'? 'N'HY AM
! HE'I&lt;e11-0W DID I

.........
ltCI

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17 'IIIIIJl'-)

HEOI&lt;E'il

18 Altlnt lnfv
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3 Alltcll

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4 Acct.
511111tll

101w1111Rrall
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• llecllllld
7 Jacoll'l twill

'!£!1

ND MA'AM If'
I JE~T GOT ME A
TERRIIlf lAP
TDDTHACHE It

11oul:aMI
1111ID'IIII

l'M PLIIMI TICICLEP
TD HEAR THAT I!

27~~~~~~

21

H

32

31
~~~~+-+-+-;-~M
~HHH31

40

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Upliolll~

·~··

..

,.

GrJII)h Matc:hmlllctr can ftelp you under· cauee yoii cOmpticallont.
etllld - t l o do to make t111 relatiOn· AQUARIUS (M . . , . 1S) The peo.
1Np ~. Mllll S2 plul a long, 1111· pte who promlle you 11111¥10111od.y art
addrlllld. lltamped ~ to · likely to be the onet who do t1111eut.
Matehmalttr, c/o IIIII new1paper, P.O. . Be prepared to operate on your own In
Box 81428, a.v.tand, OH 44101-3428.: CUI 1111 IUpporl you txpK1 lln't
vtiiQO (Aile- II IIIII II) Thtre'1 I · · avalflblo.
poulbllll)' you mlghl maltu promllt or . PIICEI (FM. 20oM1¥oii:IO) Raaponllcomrnftmenl today out ol ~ · blllllel cannol be i'lllonallztd away tothai you know you _.., be able lo day. lnlllad o1 _,cling lime on alebokeep, Tlllt II not a wiN COIJrM to ·. rate ucu-, bile t111 bullet and do
~.
whal i'tMdt doing.
LtiiiA (hpl. lloOct. Ill Your kind ': Alllll (,.,.,.. 11-Aprl 11) Subdue
geatiQI COUld ptocluoe reperiiUIIIont ~ ~ tendenCy to be overfr p CI I I IM
today, eepecillly Wyou ·do toiMIIIIng .. of t111 one you Chlrith today. ~
, III)IIIIMo lor I frtond who II unable IO can't. blottom property In I -

.: '==•COot.
14-Mot. II) Wllllhlr •: r:::."i'A!irtt....., 10) In hopenf
you like Hor not, you'lattracla!Wnlton ; appmlng aon1101oe you lcM, t!IIN't a

Alii-" 1•

.
Financlal ptoepecll fordlldl1ll~
~
loOk tM'I till)'
,,.
yea~. H -. you - ' be 111tt1J111Y
'CINful aiiOUI ~~ tpllldlng
end taklngqn tong.ttrmOb~
LIO (.ltllr II-AIII-III ff ':..':
tom&amp;PIK• today _ .
~
chanCt you mlghl Nl1 iniO 1011 I " I
you'd Hkt to
tlmel

IoeWy ••• you go.
mlnd,IIO that you'll

a

manner

111a1

you mlghl rnalie unCOIICIIIIonl today that w i l l -

10

Image.

•

":":1.

lmpi-IPfiiC!!'!!!

... .._.......--..,-.,~·- •., · -

. ... -:;; .

~

- .-

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.IDODZ

ADD

""'"1-~ ~ ":':'7'~"'-'J::"'

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.

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HIVYa .·

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IITIIII

....,.

UTZIA

AC:.IFCZ.IDV

XIYPDA

...
..

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IIWD.I

YYa

UDH

Ill CRY
HWD ·

DKXDPHDY

HWD

poealbiiHy

··'·
.

:10) Vtrbal ptOIUIIACIITTAIIUI (lift, II DIG. I1) In or-r, ._ may
count
rnucllloctay. ff
dlriOdlll-.ctfvllyWithollitrllodlly,,. '•IIIJOIII II periOinll:lg-'&lt; or ...tot
llliCIIIIY II - * 1. " you hOpe lo i ror=h-lhlm tplll.,ertlfllntl out
IGIIII.. yaur almt lhrOuiJII ftalttry, In
,
You',. blrlclng up 1111 wrong ......
.
(...... 11.,1utr II) ~
CAPIIICGNI(Deo.IWiit.11) Buxtra ' gtn~ 1mpu1111 COUld be rat11tr joro.
prtPPingtntWI)'you~.:..z."t~~ ~. I;IN!uiiOdaytlllltyoudoti'tbtcomtfn. . 'nounotd today, tO be Clltfu!; Oun'l
It ~ - In thll holt. •,... 0 ,........ · vo1wc1 1!1 romantic lnlrlgul. OM alolcll: tpllld on your1141 or ot111ra than
' Ul) I brOklll romance? .The Allto:. berth to one who It ofl.flnllla and COUld • ~ budget eM handle.

~
J.:::.. -,--_....!..__w.J.,•
.,. .......,.. .... _ _ _ _ _., ~...--_;~4- .... ~"'ll "~~~

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VI

ZIUDZA.
PAEVIOU8 80LU110H: "AI 1 1111 - • peaplt'o :nMt CloM up.
T11ay . . on Ill I II ill 1111." - Wlllm Lyone l'lllflll.

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ill

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Vulnenble: Both
Dealer: Soutb

37P. . oll

,,:'"c-.:·

_

.

Tbe World AJmenec•crouword Puzzle

-....

..

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11

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rouoo

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-ililfllnll.

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• AH

The other side
of the coin
By ftlltlp AWer

1·

Home
Improvements

= . . "'--

~g

11

t751
.AKIU

P;tj~ltOROOIIIo

·.~-Goo ...po",:.~"

!(!

c·

sz.
. ·-- - 37Wm AnJtliroo.
, '..
1811 Z·21 1150 outo, mull - ·
Vegetables
112,100. 1111 • - Rolollll 1., 87
Upholltary
· '
will molnlolnod, fi,4H.II04.fJI.
!1IM"'t
- - ..Oltdoinot.
· -· l 1114.
.
........
·
-~==
lriM ::.::::.~-:-::-:---:::::-:=-:!nllri-IIF112T- Tho
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IIIIo Ill. .,.112
7. IIWU.
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10+f71.4111, lior lnl ...
58

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1111 AMC llplrll 4 ....... A00&lt;n Addllono, Garo1111, bo
Rotoulll Englno 011 4 c,.llrdor: • - a lnl~or Polnlfng, E•· : •:
IUO. I14-311J.mt.
............. lno,.od l.ocllld Loo
1112 Oldo Iloilo u Roylll, 4dr. Clllf.ll 4 141 1111•
ohowroorn con&lt;l .. ovwr
BASEMENT
now llnoo, S07 v.t,
WATERPAOOFINO
, 14-IU.f711.
~~to;:'~
lllllnc!:"tu~=
·~•
1112 V.W. Robllll FOf Solo, ,,. ntlmll-. Clll oolllcl 1·
Dlooll, Auno Good, 114488o 114-m.olll, dly ot nlghl.
1150.
Rogora ' -\ Ill Wolorpr11
1111 Iuick ,....,, .,.
clrivorw oldo, ,..., po~o. Curtll Homo ~ro,....
onglno hill 15,000-. PM' I, Y11no Eap~&lt;IIMo On Olclor I
- . 1104.fiiW420.
- · Hoinoo. Room AddHiono,
-~
cav-~.
,.... 6 F-.lion Wortc. Rooti!!IJ,
1._
KMchMo And lolho. Froo E0o
laob aood, Flllrooll .,.., ...., tlrnet11! RtfertncM, No JQ
171-21'11.
Too Big Ot ~II14-3II'I'OI1I.
IIU T'"""a Clllcl 1~1, lop...
JET
ood -ond,
..Hion 1••• 11•
I
c
' ~ • ~.
Aorolion llaiOfl, ropolrod. Now
1m Torolo Clllcl ST, lop., olr,
,'l'"'CKoSONroIn 11 cck.
roor clologgtr, aood -ion,
~. •~
' 011 • 1whllo, :104'112.81l .
::":;;'1-1127.::1_
. ==:::;::::-=::·• - - -""' ~. 11
•
~-IllS Iuick Lollatlwo UmMod,
-nfllponng, 4dr, oodan, bolulllullomllf car, .....111 And A-111111.
oil gr.lono,
5.0 'U, loW mlloo, 'Froo
Elllmoloa
•IM--.f11t
'EI~oncod
... ,
·
'Ouolllr Work
1111
Ol•mabllo
114-441-7711.
~""'"" bl.oodtd, ::Ron
-:-,,-:T::cY:-c:-:-,-,-p-u711~1~""::,n.,
AU Ill"\ 7s OciO llfiM 11.100 In ZonMh aloo llltVIcfna
---•• ~-- ·,,.....: alho&lt; bronolo. Houoo Clllto, alao
~: -~·.,
IOfnl oppllonco ropolro. WY
42211.
S04-41N:IIII Ohio IM-441.
2454
liM
OldAovolo Sopllc Tonk
:
• ....,..., V.f, AC,_ f!t PI, JIW,
.
loalo, AMIP• llo- Cc. RON EVANII
AP ISES, · .
c 1111111 . •-~
-·"~1 -... ,,...,' Jaclolon, ON 1-IOO.fl7o1521. •. ·
lii,OOO Mllu. 15181. Clll Pll . Dovla
Sew·Voc Sorvlco, : • ;
loyor 114-10171, 114oo14e. Goorgoo Cnook Rei. Pl~o. oupo
4223.
r~ pickup, ........,...,, .... - 1811 Pontloc Fl-ol, Y.f, T·
214.
Topo., Air,lluol0tor,l14oo141· WIPbulldpolio•- docka,
1461.
-·--.
,_
YW
Ooll
Concllllon,
.,."":'.
Uflng
vln
'VI
1 · 1~ •• •
1245-1152.
~
11,000 . Mlloo, I lpood, Air "":".;.;;.7:-:--~----..,.
12.NO.a....-7UII.
82 PlUmbing &amp;
,..., Dodao amnt N.. .,.., A,.o ·
H
11,200 ltrl Chi!'Oior How ~r
Ht 1ng
ucol. Conclll:,' ~ " " ' - --=~~=-±:~-11,100 1111
CortO&lt;'I fllumblng
w..... ·aood codMionh , IIIIIOn
A,ZOO
Fourlh ond Plno
114-"lU-1211 ,
Galllpollo, Ohio
1111 OTA Trono All (Loodool)
~wtll
Ere. Cond. Low mllol, Tlin,Eic. if,500.114oo141·ml B4
Electrical &amp;
1117 Panlloc lunblrd, 4 doOf,
Relrlge111tlon
;::;:.::•·
..J... _._ M - • ,_,_101 .; , -~~~
,..-: ·
·
·!!frlna. - oorv1oo or ropo~no,
tiM - 11,100;
OT ,-~!00~~117·
Clvollor
_
oc -R""'*- Unn11d
Elollrlcll, -ilolon.
WVOOOIOI,
-.fl.aoo.-,om.
:IOW'II-1711. .

=:.

ns

Yesterday's deal coalliDed tbe
P~a
same Nortb and Eut bauds u todly'a.
But West bad oaly the K-Q doubletoa
OpeoiD&amp; lead: +K
of spades. 1'11 defeat lour bearll, East .
bad to overtake tbe spade q - at
trick two and pve his pamw 1 spade
;
However, If you IIIOu&amp;bt that wu · :-;:-f- - "-J T"'- 1 ,._
&gt;
Iobvl0111, loot at today'a deal.
JAC• rom ..- · ""' pp.... un
""' .•
After an identical auctiGtl, Nortb two booors are doubleton, wileD ~ •
1ma~klng a limit raile and South collll lead the top honor. So in yelterdly 1 . .
10 pme, West leads tbe spade kiDI· deal West would lead the spade kiDI· ·:;
to defeat the coatrac~ West Wilen be follows wllh the
Eut must continue wllh the spade queen kmws the 11cinon are doub
. Here :,
~DII/Jo/d 11M! tricJ:, Then West plays a West 1eadl the spade q -. Wilen be .:
third spade to East's ace. FlnaUy, 1 continues wltb the ttnc. Eul kaoWI •
fourth
of spades from East pro- his partner has at least - JI1()R ·:
motes West's heart queen u the set· spa~ has
ma'- dra ~- ..... · ~
tlng trick.
one ,..
w_,, . :
How is East suppcad to know wbea West leadl from ~ double- :;;
which def-10 adopt' He doaa't: be loa. Suppoae West leadl the q~eea ...
has a c-. It isn't
clear that be from doableton Q.J or Q-1. TbJnkJng .:
should lead a fourtil roud of llplldet. partaer bu the K-Q, Eut ml&amp;ht make _;
However there is me solutim: ftu. a fatal dack of the ICe. For WI rea· ..,
sinow leatb. In Ruslnow, you lead tbe 1011, I doa't Rllllaow leads. But .~
lower of toucbin&amp; boaon· the kiDI: they bave thelJ' 1110111e11t11a the 111111.
•
fromA·K,tbeq-fromK-Qandtbe

~
e5 G Intra I H IU II ng
• 11 t..v.
11
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Yoro~o ,.....
_ ,_--:.mlll11101. ~:No J• T•
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e'='" ,Y~,paww.
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T l.lnlo •
....
1 wo;:••=MK=~

1111 Iundy . - . nclflonl c-.

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-

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YOU,

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DidoPI,CUII,
PW,

lotio tlonl12eo, ~-1-2001,

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lvorr:lor _..,.

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Pull ~
111oo1 : : : : : :.... , . . .

..
..
.

Servtces

lEv'!"~

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SOUTH

"";,u;;-ii;;;;'l;;;p;;;;;;;;;;
........,

'

ro
o go. - · ~ - ·
MC
......~rod
Oomoon
53
Antlq"al
·...- 2
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. ::-::::-=::..,.::.:..~::':::' Shophor~, ll2 ftOOIIIha
•- -•..-1.
•~o..- old, 11415.
Bur • olll. Rlvw1124 E. lloln 11-1. on AI. 12.:; MC llcotlllh Torrlor, I wloo. old,

~~:r~~;!!.~;00

tiA·HA ! Slt.LY M~ ! THAT
lfN'T wtiAT YOU
-- Ow~. TtiAT'$

Campara&amp;
Motor Homes

~ .......n

.•

.QI7!

.·

-n.i
=:'

5818

Aoclliooro IM:-a:.IJunll~ ::----~
. :-.,.--::---:~
IN~,~
_ENh 4 - 0
room
,
o
nd.
Sho,..PII
••••· :
If 0 rooming. ~11 biM 1, IIJIII.

Cbuvtl
___..
52 ..,.... • ng 0 ........,

..

• • Oood - - $100..
114-211.fl01.
Wlnnll~ llolor Honw, 21ft.
Oood COnd.lon, 11,500 WMh
- Cor DoUr. 114488oatS.

· oocll. Jll4:

J

'

I!AST

FRANK AND ERNEST

Mull Sill: Apacho loidl~ comP"'· Sink, II0¥1, 1 -1 ICi box,

81

.., .

tAil !

ALDER

- goo-·
.. .,,,
lon
l n l d llloclr
- . po~
,....
" - ~~' tto. , D I A Auto,

Wtddlng_~lnga, .,~,~~;

::

NOiml
tJIOI

PHILLIP

17-. .

Of

'

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!'f!h.

*'· :104-3T.I·31SS

I IAI I I I I

+AJ

'tt"'

Alollf,

r

I' 1•
I I

I

THESE SQUARES

.J10 7 U

-·,:'!'"

IOiJ.tiW515.

,-I e

BRIDGE

saoo.

I
., "2• "''
-.- 71

..~

SCIAMUTS ANSWIIS
Junlc11t • Quail · Joust • TOfllUII - OUEST/ON
I had commented to .a friend that a certain politician was
very Charming. My friend obearV8d that charm was a way of
getting someone to say yes without aslling a clear OUES·
TION.

1e

HHor~-~or~o.~l~14~4~41~011~11~:-;;;;;;:

.

• ~~F:~~!~~ LETTERS TQ I

'"""r.

Wolor Noolorlolo a, 40, :10 oa~
ion -ric ond 40 Oolllon
Transportalion
Nllurol goo. Y- cholco.
fl5t .H WomoldarH • Thomoa · - - - - - - - -

.

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN II

9

Farm Equipment
llcvlnc:
Aolrlaorolor,
fl50; Toolo, Clolhlng. Hilndl 4 410 lnlomollonal TIWIIor, Shorp,
W_,
250 fl~,;_
Com ""
~--11,450;
cuHivolor
Hondo
Eaclllonl
a..glum Ov1r,
tl,UUU,s-;n~
8
1 p -' '1000
.....J 1NI
Condit~,
1'100.XA'IIIO
114-t4N231.
lilt.
SuboSollof,
Fora
·
~,r~r; 2130 JD 15,150. 1111 KX12~ oxc cond, tuoo.
Mowora!22"llurroy, hi whoollr,
104-4'1Htll or 1'11-IS?t
4hp,8
1, $121, Raclnl Uow•r, 1,.••....,.,. con ........ IM-14"
114-JI..
---.
w '
'
IS Suzufllllodwo 12aocc block
1211.
• _ _.,,7110 ., ••• • ·
PIIICic And lloclal Cu- linch Choln .,. cholno bur - all lor o1 oquol voluo. 17
Thru 10 Inch In Slock. Ron ono . ~- d,.lng lho Oollfo Clvollo Z·24 Rod, Y1 Sop, Air,
Evono, Jock-, Ohio. l.aoo. Ccunlr I Mllon Ccunlf FoliO. ""'""" ·-~o. a,ooo mlloo.
a7-1121.
.
All .... ' cholno dlac....,lod. IS,UO Noa. 114·2411-1421 bolor
Pop.oorn rnochlno "fl-10", w ""'~r•nl, - - · 2:oo1Mooi(..I2471Rw4:oo
high II" - · oolorM _,. WV.
21.
1111 K..allkl KX 125. 11,100.
ohond
~~~.::.':\':.
~
Naw
IS'
11ock
11400;
b
... lo,. -ion. - ·
120
·~·
~ alllllnln..,.. 142,
hiiV)'12'.
form
II'· ..aK.m
s M' · ~-·;;.::;,_..,.=-,..-=::-=--=:-'-"'
13 ; Porllond,
.
1111 IIIII, Uu - · 1111 21" 244 5
4 Whoolor 250 . Eloclrlc
high 1 II" - · Sm. Hal Polnl • ....;.·- - - - - - - Slort, II,:'J.arowno:::r. Soiglum
~=. ~::·,::.n~: ~63,:..,...,..-L_Iv..,e_s_tock
_ __,.._ ~ I
r, II, ' l14'4111,.,._,.,,
:1044'11-2IU. 41 Inch ..... ponr; ....... "--8--&amp;
- M_ _ __
·A-ll Dllch . Wllch 1ronchor horoo ooddlo; 13 Inch youlh 75 oats
otors
wlbockhoo, Dull1 diHIIonglno, oaddll. 114oo141-75f1 ot 441lor Sale
will con1ide tredl, tM.fM-7842 2222.
Oft··-~----- - Uftflbo""-booo•-- •••p
~
·
~~
lor ••
b"cho&lt;lng. INdy - · llercury
~
·r
rnocor• 304-175-INII.
S.ara Electric Start I HP Akllng
., · -11·
·
Mowor, 1200. 114-251-M34.
R I I od •
como 3 buill 17' OUichHI Cl- I Pl-1•
~ng•
•
• $250.114 4111111 lftw s p.m.
~~~,:;,.~,:;2.rts\~
upon
1111 Chockmolo lift. 231 HP
S.ovo, ticici; Rolrigoralor, 1171;
Evlnrudo Oulbolld lllr., Eac.
1
~C:."2"':: 1 .., !:,11Mwoi~':: !."\'!!"!:'':~~=·~ Cond..:L.Low HouiW, $1,500 . ....
........z
fl50; Colllellblo moplo acnoor 011111, IM.fol,·6253.
W
120; 114-182·
31t10fll4eu;:Mn.
64 Hay&amp;Graln
76 Auto Parts &amp;
.
~
'"· =.,...,_,.,.:,....,=~=-:-Tortor Wll""'~•·
• - Dol
•tt 1a Roll .,,.....,
Accessor.l es
WOod Flood No1 """ Fu•
ry ~ 11
•
· Hoolo YO\Ir Enllfe HO.M ;a~J:."!"n.,.~l.'n'o F..., · lludGII T r o - - Uood I
robulll, lll~lng 11 •It· lronl
And-lcHoiWollrFromA - - - d~.., 11onlng 111 ~11.00
Wood Flro Oullldo Your ~· Foil groin llorogo IVIMiblo, ··
114-241o5177, 114-m.:ua.
1-5-2211.
llorpi1 Form, 104..

I"'"·

.

GLUONE

Motorcyc S
1111 Yomoho 1100 lpoclll Full
11.850 114Drooood, """" 111111. • ·
11
"'" ' ·
1114 VI I Sobnt 7 ml'o
E1collonl
Condllion
A400.001Moo141-lll71

61

.

1-lr-ili-ls..,li--TI ..

118 ........ 11 xLT. loldod,
11.100. e14-441.om.

74

Nu11Hion Produelo
loolurlng Amino Acid Body
Bulldlna. wllahl ll1d Ill
burnw ·~onour-. Avolllblo oxduolvotr 11 Allo Aiel ""'""'cr.
Tho 1110 way 1o dill.

.

The cutie stormed ·out of
the cafe, leaving her date
stranded. The date sighed to
the waiter, ' Her favorite
means of transportation is
lleaving - a ....,-

6
·1~
Complete lloe chuckle quolod
•
•
•
•
•
by fillin; in the milling words
..........................._.._...__, rou develop front step No. 3 below.

:::23:;.JV:;.·. ,..--::-=;-::::;:::;

o.no.ta

Building
Supplies
Wo- And Dr)ior fi7.U W•lo, B._. br'"" plpoo, winBunk lod ~o, 11.21 llni;'i, 11c. Claude Win·
Wllk, 4 0 - CMot . P .l2 lira, Alo Orondo, OH Clll 114Wllk, ~ocll- 15.24 Woolo, :14WI2l

p011!~ !~ =~

monlh, 1 ..,....... ~
qulppod k~chon, dining 100111, 1117.
2-1 bodroomollomllr ,_.,, :-.
=.:::.,-;.,_;;.=-::.-:-;;;;;;
001
~
2
~ •
-~- • n {;"'• boo-:~::.·.;;i Dopolll, No Plla, 114-S79-2511.
..,.hborhoocl, 1-'tmr.·
•-.
Nlcl2br Troll&lt;, Oul SI .AI. 211, I
"""" llalillllllnco, Cl- LIFQO 111111, Oopooll a Rot-nco ROo
K~chon, s Bodroomo,
~lrod. IM-2514251.
Nloo Yord, S
TOIII -lrlc, 2 BR, I27S por
1,.._1311.
monlh. lruh polcl. 1150.
Rodonon Socllonol-. 1'101h DIFIIfl I ,.,.,.,..
...... No pOlo Appllo.,..
~!!.o..slldiBad
""'to :IOW'II-3ooo 'UIIIpm.

:l:t

C8t130WJI..MIO.

·
'
R. ll. ...........
tklun.
HM llhllll

.

=lla,::,';:;";:,l.::c'·:-::--:;:=;-;;;:;-;;;;;
..
:104-1121112 FOfd Van• •••soo.

Vagatablas
Biockbomlo :10use.saa.

I

I ~~ I I I

'H No1 -

- - - · -ormonlh.
11or11na11-. 1111111 11o1o1.
111 41J •1o.
__ _ .
wlh __...._
~
·-··
-...
Aloo 1
~. AI hook._
Coli olw 1:00 p.M., _.,_
1111, ..._ WY.

I I

,

1 ~, llull
~-========::;:::::::::'':'":':'':':":"'=1 1571
Nlcl-~~~
Polnl.
a..
To
" ·"""·
114-211Plooll Lllvo
&amp;

I'

F 0 NET

1·1

1m Toyoll
13111 8odV
roo, Porto,
uno
lion&amp;~":;

Fruits

lz I

I
.1111'.

0ooc1

58

LUFTIF

T H A C W ·1

.::;:;:;:;:;.;.;;_-:":':':::-"73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I
Tl
A

~'

Rooma

51

l'

"'·&gt;:
··;·

=c.:,:'·
~=-~-=
104.f12-3711.

~"a;· - ·

te loa CLA 21\, e1e ~
DollY
r . - asllolnl-, 2
Oallllpalll.&lt;il4-.

".:...,..rw
~.
=::
1/r
c:f.:'
, n1c1 hcmo In
1~~~~~ For 1111 by _
T k ~ •llnlnalo Only I .s,-. opiH toror, Mlf "

Public Sale

vwr
''~~-1 '"· · I nlco, no pole,

1----------

-orrII

~
4S Fuml8111d

:.C:·

l

••

c;-;;=

~

O Rearrange

lotNn 11 tho
lour ~&lt;n~mblod -.!1 ·t r.
. low lo lono lour Jimplo -.Is.
.

72 Truckl lor Sale
• •
.::c·::-::=-=::-"::
'
:::-::::--:u.
'
1m ChoY i/4 tan, 414. 1111 :.'
Chow 112 lin, NC, IUio, :10,000
· S04.f7lol332.
•
IIIIFonl TNOII Clult Cob, 1100
CIIIIM Ill atl._ _
._
. -··-:"
1.U"I.~1
;·4 1, 4 ~~:
·-·
conol, !Ill
27M or
117l
-121
1111 OIIC ohofl bod. d
·

[
-

lid 111111 lor .....
rpp"tollll,
roqulrod7H
_ , S I oftor
•ro 1 •

=r

~:~~ ~

A•-•

8

·

Pll. .

-loft, -

0no bod100111 lurnilhod

1 .. 4at0.
.u

IIJIPoolloo oron11 P~1. Au1o,i•:•
..... ootMIIIon. IIOIIII'd ll!'r•.•
gino. 1100. 410 Cypr- Cl,

,
t;l)i~ """''
no;;•o- 1W
~1"i o~;M.ENT.
,..._ r-

"""'hod.

~ Aoulo:· i:..
= .,cc.w;;;,::-:111 Lo-vfllo. Yo. 42.17 ...... 1 100- J4 ·
·
Tho Noitoo1 llochl- llaklng A mlloo - - of Lrtiftn.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
N1c1 IlNdy Coo11 lncomo. 1·
milo N. ol m . :I04o C0111111111 homo
IOO.fN-0314.
_ , ........,, w. 1
..........
p,-~·
lor "' Oolllo osaa,
·s mllll out ,._lllo Rd. .
.... _,. - . Now ~~
~ '
FrooDollvorr
-- ..llnlla
From CouniJ. I - · lllodod,
'
IIH.OO. Llmpo, I.AIIIono, Acic":.lo.=:,
Ook
:"':
-o.llonlhly '-"''"""" clllonl- ..o,l,.:.liiN411.
_...._ o, - • •-. 1~-~~~C:.-~
~~~~~
:::::::"iic.l1lt4=1. - ....,.
22 Money to Loan
PICICIENI PURNITUIII
NowNood
.
llonoy -~~~: fii,OOO -rod
Hou- -[lint. 112 mi.
by auolllr roll 111111. A = 41 HoUIII lor Rent
..
Ad. ·Pl. I l l - , WY,

floc.;::

......

$ .....

!9

11

kllchon, UIIIMr o1oc1r1c, 13001mo
1200
fovol, -rod 1_1_•;..F•_ol-',-l-..z21
_ _ _l_._..__
RECREATION
PROOIIAII pOlio lo boclo, prlvocr llnco, 1.
COORDIHATOA: Poohion Pion- 1'"11"· . - , by _ , _ , 42 Moblll Homes
l'lldoy """ lllurdor. 30111 ning And "",.,.._,.,.. A v11 r onlf!IOW711-1231.
for. Rant
-·
Rood,
lllddllport. -Around -...ion.P,ogrom In
011111 ~ 81::2.,u,-. =~·t~~!':\~o~\"1 ::,1·,ji2a:ieo0i2'ili;1,j;;...
Clllhoo,- ' " " ;.;;,.lrod:;o;o,;;p;;;oo;M•]w;;;d
:"_!!&gt;u=P "-~~~~~ldollo' Sll
No Plio.
11!!!! Pflco: Ill. .DO. Uv111a flo am, R o t - Aoqu
;;;:_ CollogoD.;- 1o
S loci-. Fomllf "-n/:.1 loll7, Ylnlon Ohio..
1
lion I P,...m "'""""" Or ~-112
, 1 }!~IFh--W'IIIt
mo1o11o homo, 2 lA, fullv
iqufvolinl.
RotiiJmo'
-,.-~ lurnlshod. H.U.D. oppr.......
,..,. In log And Mollcllion To 0.0. Sldftl.
S04.f71-42l4.
rou
1111o
Counlr lrro
Pirt1 Dlllrlol, 0o111o c - r
""'· ....... u , otrollor, Court-,
0
11 Lacull llrllf, ~~:,Uk.=! ~ ~A~ 2 bodroom rnobllt hcmo llllon,
Jlllypoo, nfrl.noa, clolhlng,
,....., and Mull, rumllln,
!!dNp
Ohio,
41131. IIIIo II. Ill. ""~' w. Yo.
304-m.524a.
Doodllno: Augull M, tta.
Compioloty - •: z Full 2 ltclroono Troller, lllnlnoum
RmFV-~ 11w lllho. I ~ lodi-, Wolor, Truhji Polcl, Oopooll I
Vonl Sofo. Thuroclor I Frlcloy, •
4pm, llaln II., Rulllnd.
linn. Ooocf -ortol ofllllo no- HYAC, Clrpol. Avll- RoforlfiCM oqulrod, No POlo.
..~ ~• cflc•~·-llllllildloiiJ. 114 441 2201.
i1~4 ~1 ~11;1;171
~.~;;-;;;;;"Ak;
YAADIAU
q -.
- -,
proo~eetna, t c. Wile lo1 C40, ly OWntr: Cheatlln ANI, Nlnl 2 bedroom lraU., ,.., · M.m
Aualllf '"'· 1:30- 5pno. 10
Ralrold Sl .• Mllflfllpcrl, OH. Cli'o II POint P-IW :,alolor, Roomo, IIIII, .._ Fill Lol. fllonL ..,.,.1 llr, prlvoll, no
2i»lllln II. Polnl Ploooo ,WV. 111 411 llli:J:i"• lvonlnos A~
Jll4.475.1221 IRtr 1:00
.
Monr"'""'holdMorna.
21150.
A••• ·...1 •_
1
own 1o
-.I

othl&lt; -·""""

=.

,....ood
A·l ohopo,

l
1111 Fonl ToUNL llroo · . •
boltorr, 12,000 mllll. ••• ~1 .: •
14.1100.104.f?S.mt.
, •·.• +

I ~ It's NoT

111- ....,.ioMj_ IUuwHc
Aloft_,.io IIIII""""'"". !""'"
tfN. CIIII-:M .EOH.

=I•* :':-e:.•,,. :':.Tau. Lorvo

drr010. 11.000. - - . . ..
11M
OICollflll,
FOf
A
35 Loti &amp; Acreage
1 .._._. PMpan"' o: Fundi,
...
Ae
IMibll for llofM
P.O. lol 162, CWipolit, Ohio ...':!!..~- D......... Ad
411:11.
· - - •• ~.-..
•
rNIOnlbte rlllrict-., Wllw,
·YENOtNO ROUTE: Gee Ak:h k'ltonullon mailed on NqUIIIt,
Quick? No W-1 lui WI Hove A 104.fl'W2111.

:

lll'l""'-·

c':l

::011
.:::::!:-::
. .;;:h
11:-::-:::--:,.
111:::..:::1:-:::;

.

1o
~
1-4. ·1\lpplf'l
- · PI
~71~ Ill".,
• f tuon,
,.J.,.~mllo,
w;J..,. eom': 31 ·. HomnlorSalt
Pou I• ~
Culling, .-. · Hoo•'-·"
... .. . .h .. ~iii llfllil ind

......

*'

o~..,.,.. 11v1ng. 1 11111 a ·--~- · 11 Wloao

.._bun-·
a""'
:::..m::; ":1:\= !'= :1.\:J:
='•:".=.:...,,._,
'=
:C::.
: -

::..";:'1::' ,:_r,.:~

lho.........,
--...

11::;
".?.~~"':~
"""""'.,_7.~ ~-~-.
11"c-on._
t,'1": ' T:!'..t"",
;:,::'f.-•r
Tliill
~

&amp; VIcinity

. _ _ . , _ 111 ttl

---------I

rw' Pit.-.. 'Ps:•wl ,._.
.... ,..~lduiMd ......

Middleport

lw,

''1"

Colli--·

S lontiiJ """" ulo. Frloloy
AugUII 7. :1111 71h Sl. Haven. N.
•

s FoiiiiiJ

=•1:

"*"""

&amp; VIcinity

'""""""" Efll!lincy AI UllPoll!, ...... lllh Ill llooond

co-

od lo
lho •r bolooel"'
10 Nn.
~ odillon • 2:00 p.m.
-~ odillon • 2!00
p.M. .
r.
AuaUOI 1111, '1111. •h. ., It
oaitloid
- · Oolllpctllo,
1
Ohlo.
Cflllro.
Q
Couchoo,
lid R
UIIW,

nloo--.

77,CIOOml..

, . M•'ll 0onv11o Aodmon a !!1~11. IC. - · - ·
111111. .Hool Pump, IM-44HN I'M Dor · - · .,...... Ontr
P!lood To 11o1t
·
. att. COld,_, INI-1111, 1no
Pool '-life
.CCTY, I ·
Aodmorl, S bod-, 2 -~-I don.
bolho, -1 dlytlr, 1111 Coli ~=•lor 1 100 ttl 1111.
lllllod ,....,.
pO&lt;Ch,
104.f?Win
N. Tflllil lllddllpl~. Olllo, 1
b I 1 II IIi lurNIMd .,., dip ~
Sooulllul 1110 Donvlllo M1l2, ,.~_._-.
·
CA; woohor, thor, DW, llfllna
-•"• .
lano, cliO, llllilortfllnlng. 1~ - · Clnlonl'l'! · 2 A.
, . _ lftot I p.m.
Wiler, I I - m.
No
1240 P"' .-lh. 1....-

..

-

.,

I'IIJIMill
Pilllit

Television

AutOI IQr Sale

Codi'"'
B...,g~ IS500,

for Rant

GaUipoll8
&amp; Vlc:lnHy

.
1 0 - - a lflrl clolhll.

'71

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartmem

lor Sa•..

5.1892

Wedneaday, Auau•t 5. 1892,:

f

�VAN. CAMP
PORK&amp;
BEANS

STORE HOURS

16 OZ. CANS

Mo11day~ Sunday

s

8 AM-10' PM

2.98 SECON 0 ST.
. POMEROY. OH.
TIE RIGII TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
SUN., .
2 TIRU AUGUST 8, 1992

WE
PRICES

Qhio Lottery·

1

Indians beat
Yankees by
4-3 count

Pick 3:
847
Piek 4:
6571
Super Lolto:
3·10·29·33·36·46
Kicker: ,
075270

PageS

PINK
SALMON

•

T

WHITNEY
Vol. 43, No. 72

2 Sections, 12 Pogeo 25 oonto
A Mulllmtdla Inc. IMwoDO-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 11ihursday, August 6, 1992

Copyrtghll!l1882

Low lonl~hl around 60.
Friday, high in mld ·HOs.

'

14.75 OZ.CAN

'A Pork Lo

SUNSHINE

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast. . . . . . .LB.

·USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Rump Roast............La.

$449

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ribeye Steak. . . . . . . . . La.
USDA CHOICE BEEF

Round Steak. . . . . . La.

·

$149 DOG
20 U.IAG

·s

$ 159

99

CARNATION
EVAP. MILK

FLAVORITE

Wieners...............................La.

TALL 12 OL CAN

s

$189

CHICKEN

MARTHA WHm

Leg Quarters.................La.

CORN

MELLO CRISP

MUFFIN MIX

Bacon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LB.

7JOL

s

RC
PR

Celery. _. . . . ._. srALK

24 PAK 12 Oz. C.s

GRADE A

Large Eggs...........ooz.
DEW FRESH

Margarine. . . . . . . . 3LBs.

BORDEN S QUART PAIL .

Ice Cream. . . . . . . . . . ..

99·(
$299

rr;;a·----·-..·---·-3
CHARMIN
$299

wrnt

TOILET

TIDE DOERGENT
'

1210ll

$699

PACK

Good~:J At Powtll'• Super Valu
Olfer
AUg. 2 thru Aug. 8, 1992
Limit 1 hr Cuflolllll'

BlEACH ONLY

III

llr

1360L

Good~~~ Aug.
At Powtll'l Super Yllu
Offer
2 thruAug. I, 1112
IJinlt 1 P., Cueeill1•

MAXWEU HOUSE
MASTER ·BLEND COFFEE

$
.
29934JOZ.

KOOL·AID

10/99(
~o!J At Powtll'• Super Valu

on.,

Aug. 2 thru Aug. 8, 1982
Llmll10 hr eu.tomer

GROUND
BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

s

GRAND CHAMPIONS • Taking grand
champion awards for their sport clothing pro·
jeds and presented rosettes at Wednesday
night's style show held on the hillside stage at
the Rock Sprinas Fairgrounds were from the

lert Erin Smith, Sarah Lodwick, Kelley Grueser
with her "Sewing for Others" project model ,.
Whi.tne,r Karr, Jennifer Mora, Cynthia Cotter..
iU, Jess~ca Barringer, and BIUee Pooler.

Bush continues to criticize Clinton
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - The elusive Bill Clinton
has finally surfaced in President
Bush's re-election campaign.
After months of referring to the
Arkansas governor by different,
slightly derisive code words - "a
certain Southern ~overnor," "a
rookie quarterback' and "the other
side" - Bush on Wednesday

finally uttered the name of the man
who stands between him and a sec·
ond term.
.
•'The Clinton·Gore ticket has
two weeks of leave, and lhen after
that coavention, I'm going to go
after them," the president said o~ a
day of cross-country camp111gnrng
from New York 10 Nev.ada to Col·
orado.

"We're going to set the reco·rd
straight," said Bush, y;hose for·
tunes continue to ebb in the polls.
"We're going to take it to the pc:ople," he added, in a fight o~ er

'' Ameriapl ·\1)u.es"~,
.. , L
Bush has begun stepping' up the
intensity of his criticism of Clinton

in recent days as the Aitansas gov·
emor's poll numbers have risen IIJld

Meigs Commissioners grant Issue 2 paving bid!
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel Ne'ii'S Stall
The Shelly Company of
Thornville was awarded a bid for
paving or several county roads
when lhc Meigs County Commis·
sioners held their regular meeting
on Wednesday.
Issue 2 funding totaling
$261,622.60 will be spent to pave
portions of six roads in the county.
The funding breaks down as fol·
lows: Wolf Pen Road, $45,922.80;
Royal Oak Road, $21,868; He~·
lock Grove Road, $84,847 .84; Pine
Grove Road, $59,480.96; Flat·
woods Road, $16.401; Sumner
Road, $32,802.
The Shelly Company was the

·Sole bidder on the paving projects,
which were approved for funding
during Round Four of the Issue 2
prognun.
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
announced that new ·pre·application
fonns for Round Six.of the Issue 2
program arc now available from
the commissioners' office. Those
pre-applications must be received
at Buckeye Hills/Hoc~ing Valley
Regional Development District, in
duplicate, by September 15.
In a new procedure this year, the
pre·applications will be reviewed
and ranked. district-wide. Those
pre-application projects that are
deemed appropriate will then be
sent standard application fonns,
and will be subject to the standard

Ex-replacement·workers
are.planning to sue RAC

application and funding pro•ce·
dures. (See related story, 1his
page.)
County Engineer Phil Roberts
and Highway Superintendent Ted
Warner reported that the dep.artment was now involved in mowing
and grader patching across the
county. They also discussed cor~tin·
ued difficulties with repairs on the
department's Massey Fergu.son
tractor, and stated that litigation
was now being considered to
resolve the problem.
The commissioners also:
• Appropriated a $932.65 certifi·
cation into the "other expenses"
account of the Meigs County Parks
Disuict The funds were gen~1.'8ted
from sale of the Meigs County
video.
• Approved a $50 interdepart·
mental transfer request fron·1 the
Meigs County Court:
.
- Agreed to advertise the p•ubhc
sale of the sheriff's depart&gt;ment
snow plow, with a minimum price
of $850 being required for sal!'.
·Approved application for 1993
Litter Control grant monies, and
pledged matching funds in the
amount of $12,000.
Present at the meeting, in addi·
tion to Roberts, Warner and I ones,
were Commissioners Manning K.
Roush and David Koblentz:; and
Commission Clerk Mary Hobstet·

A growin~= of about 3SO allege misrepresentation by the
former rep
t workers at company. He added the company
Ravenswood Aluminum Ccx:p. are misrepresented itself when it hired
planning to sue the alwmoum· the replacements as · permanent
maker and may 1101 SIOp.there. ac· employees and promised the
cooling to an auomey wbo spote 10 strikers would never rettDll.
Carleton Raines, a former
The Parkosbi/Tg News Tuesday.
The News sialed Cecil Daven· replacement worker from Cot·
port, a Louisville, Ky. attorney, said Lageville, was quoted in the story as
he has been ask~:J' a group of saying plainl\ffJ are trying to ex·
Wolkers who rep
striking Lo- pand the suit to include the West ter. cal 5668 Steelworkers at RAC to Virginia SWt Police, Jackson
·
represent them in a class action suit County Sheriff's Department, two
against the plant, and examine the
role of law cnfOICelllCnt agencies
that ftiiled lo pevent violence that
The attorney added consideration
occurred during the strike.
is
being given to the injuries SUS·
Davenport said the suit will be
2 (Round Six) applications
tained
by the replacement workers areIssue
filed in federal court in PtutmbUJg
available from Buc:keye
Continued on page 3
by the end or the month, and will
Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
\
Development District thr:ough
September 15. Disuict 18 in•:ludes
Alhens . Belmont, Hoelting, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Muski!tgum,.
Noble, Perry and Washrngton
A ~utland man was arrested by the Gallia·~igs Po'st of the .
,Counties.
State HiJl)iway Pattol after he attempted to flee a trooper on Kemper
The State Issue 2 program was
flollow Road in GalliaoCounty Wednesday around 10:05 p.m.
born out of a November 1987
Brian B. Durham, 21, of 36330 Smilh Rd., Rutland, was east·
amendment to the Ohio Constitu·
bound on Kemper Hollow Road, fleeing the aoope_r, and entered a
tlon, whereby Section 2K of Ani~le
right curve at excessive speed, the p&amp;D'Ol reported. His car went off
vm now allows lhe state to use tiS
the lefi side of the road and over an embankment He then came
general revenues toward prQividing
back onto the road and fled for one-half mile before stopping.
financial 8$SiStance ID local ,subdi·
Durham indicated to the trooper be had been drinking and fled. in
visions for their capital improve·
an ~{'llfl avoid a citation for dri_ving under the lnflue'?.
ment infrasuucture projects.
No mJunCS were reponed.
Specifically, the state can 11.c:e gcn·
Damage to the right·front, right·rear and bottom of Durham's
eral revenues as debt s~p~n f~r
1986 Ford Mustang GT was listed as moderate and disabling.
issuing up to $120 mtllion tn
· Durham ~as placed i~ the Gallia County Jail ~charges of fleebonds each year, theff'OCe\eds of
ing and eluding, DUI. failure to control and speeding.
which are to be use to project
financing purposes. The IOU~ bond
Coutiolltd on page 3
issuance aulhority provided,fc)r-this

~~r:rt::~te~!t~

10 LB. PACKAGE

$

90

Rutland man wrecks fleeing officer

'

~ '

. ....

his own have dropped. The latest
sounding, a Washington Post-ABC
News survey, gave Bush an
approval rating of 33 percent, his
lowest yet. The survey had a mar·
gin of ett9r of plus or minus 3,5
percentage points.
·
The poll was only .the latest
manifestation of Bush's political
difficulty. Others include a sluggish
economy, Republican members of
Congress expressin~ nervousness
about their own political fortunes,
and at least four newspaper editori·
a1s calling him to abandon his reelection drive. .
Against this backdrop, cam ·
paign spokeswoman Torie Clarke
promised a "very direct compan·
son between our economic policy
and program and Bill Clinton_'s"
when Bush addresses the Amencan
Legislative Exchange Council
today. '
"We will make a very convinc·
ing case that when it comes to Bill
Clinton's so-called economic plan,
he's all show and no pony," said
Clarke, whose own comments
about Clinton have consistently
been more pmgent than Bush's.
Clinton routinely criticizes
Bush's economic policy, and has
oulli1ted a plan for massive invest·
ment in public facilities and new
technologies. He also wants large
tax increases on the wealthy and
corporations to help reduce the
defiCit by OJ!C·half over four years.
The president vinually ignored
economic policy on Wednesday,
focusing instead on abortion and
other 'social issues in a speech to
the Knights of Columbus in New
York, and defense and foreign poll·
cy when he addressed the Disabled
Americail Veterans in Nevada.
To the veterans, Bush presented
himself as the steady steward of
American foreign·policy.

ons wearing the award·winniog garments they
created are Denise Shenefield, Emily Asbeck,
Elizabeth Downie, Debra Frost, Bobbie White,
Mary Grueser, Tara Grueser and Jessica John·
son. In front in ber louogewear is Crystal
Vaughan.

Grand, reserve clothing
champions announced
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
as follows:
Sentinel Ne'ii'S Staff
Adventures in Clothing: Jessica
Grande and reserve chAmpions Johnson, grand champion; Suzy
in clothing .projepl Jlldll~ll.&amp; • iWer.e '·"'Milhoan, reserve.champion; and
announced Wednesday night at the Rebekah Karr, Kristin Brown,
1992 4-H Style Show held on the Christa Circle, Sara Grueser, and
hillside stage of the Rock Springs Laraine Lawson, honorable men.
Fairgrounds.
lion.
"American Classics" was the
Topping Your Outfit: Billee
theme of the show in which 70 4·H Pooler, grand champion; Jamie
club members modeled garments Drake, reserve champion; and
they constructed as part of their Pamela Neece, honorable mention.
summer project work. Included
Fun wilh Clothes: Jessica Barwere sportswear, dress·up daywear, ringer, grand champion; Kristina
coats and jackets, loungewear, and Kennedy, reserve champion; Brid·
evening attire.
get Vaughan, Stephanie Kopec, and
Cindy Oliveri, Chip Haggerty Kim Ritterbeck, honorable menand Hal Kneen of the Meigs Coun· lions.
ty Extension Office coordinated the · Joyful Jum11er: Tara Grueser
revue. Assisting in describing lhc grand champwn; Patty Nally'
garments modeled during the reserve champion; Becky Snow:
evening were the 1992 Meigs den, Melissa Francis, Brandy Call
County Fashion Board members, and Amanda Musser, honorable
Anita Calaway, Elizabeth Downie, mentions.
Christy Drake, Debra Frost, Kelley
Clothes for Middle School: ·
Grueser, Michele Laughery Jen· Cynthia Cotterill, grand champion;
nifer Mora, and Heather Well.
Melissa Dempsey, reserve cham)ii·
After the grand and reserve on.
rosettes were presented and those
Clothes for High School and
receiving honorable mentions were Beyond: Demse Shenefield, grand
recognized, Oliveri announced the champion; and Kelly Alkire,
names of 16 girls who will be rak· reserve champ1on.
ing their garments into the Ohoo
Loungmg Clothes; Crys~al
State Fair competition later this Vaughan, grand champiOn; Antta
month.
Calaway, reserve champion; and
They are Kelley Grueser, Jessica Christy Drake, honorable mention.
Barringer, Erin Smith, Bobbie
Scwmg for Oth~rs: Kelley
White, Emily Asbeck, Jessica Grucser, grand champiOn; Mochelle
Johnson, Billee Pooler, Tara Laughery, reserve champ10n; ~nd
Grueser, Denise Shenefield, Crys· Sarah Lodwtck and Amy Smtth,
tal Vaughan, Heather Well, Jen· honorable menuons. .
.
nifer Mora, Mary Grueser, Eliza·
Tome Out for Clot~tng II: &amp;in
beth Downie, Debra Frost, and Sm!lh, grand cham~;~10n; Crystal
Anna Wolf. Named as alternates Smtth, reserve champton.
were Michelle Laughery, Kristina
. Tune Out for Clothi~g III: BobKennedy, Pat!)' Nally, Cynthia Cot· boe ~tte, grand cham.pton.
. Acuve Sportswear. Sarah Lod:
terill, and Jamte Drake.
Clothing projects were judged wtck, grand champoon; and Krisu
prior to the style revue and the Warner, reserve champton.
results announced last night were
Continued on page 3

Issue 2 applications are available

Local briefs---.

GROUND
CHUCK

ROSETTE WINNERS • These girls took
grand champions awards oo their 4-H sewing
projects and were recognized before a crowd or
several hundred at Wednesday night's 4·H style
show held on the hillside stage at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds. Len to right the champi·

'

program is $1.2 billion. Eligible
mfrastructure acuvtues mclude
'improvements of roads, bridges,
drmking water systems, waste
water facilities, ,storm water sys·
terns and solid waste handling
facilities.
.
The Local Transportation
Improvement Prognun (LTIP} was
created as a direct result of the
July, 1989 increase in the stnte 's
gasoline tall, whereby one penny. of
lhe 3.2 cent increase was set asule
10 help local subdivision fund !Ofld
and bridge improvements. Gtven
expected revenues of some $57
million, its primary objective is to
buttress the efforts being made by
the stale lhrough the Issue 2 pro·
gram. Consequently, the LTIP is
delivered in a manner that very
much parall~ls and compliments ·
Issue 2.
·
In the legislature's desigl) of

these programs, it is important to for formal funding approval.
note that they are predicated on
Any local subdivision that
establishing a practice of long·tenn requires financial assistance to be
capital improvement plll!lning and able to move its needed infrasuucbudgeting at lhe local level, as well ture projects forward, can voluntar-·
as putting in place a system of ily p~rsue such funding under·
decentralized decision·rnaking rela· OPWC programs through its Public
tivc to selecting th·e specific pro· Works, District There is no consid·
jects to be funded . In this latter etation in the implementing starutes
regard, the Ohio General Assembly or adminisaative code toward aDo·
created 19 Public Works Districts eating the funds to subdivisions on·
to which program appropriations a p~r·capita .or revenue sharing.
are alloca1ed each year. District bastS. No pat1!Cular community has
Public Works Integrating Commit· an entitlement to the funds.
tees, consisting of local goverri·
A preapplicatioo form for fund·
!Jlent, assemble infrastructure data ing through Issue 2 program is
bases for theit district geographic available. from Donna Russell or.
·areas and exercise project selection Boyer S1mcox at BH/HVRDD,
authority in terms of applying (614) 374·9436. The deadline for
sJT)tegic use and financial needs submission of preapplication forms
evaluation criteria to the.DPI&gt;Iica· is September 15.
. .
lions Iiley receive from consutuent .
Those forms are also available
subdivisions. Selected projects are from the office of the Meigs Coon·
'then recommended to the OPWC ty C()mmissi~.

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