<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10574" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10574?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-08T13:32:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="21018">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f5f1cbabe69ddac2b6fa9c980143235a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>291f0a1df9fc22c3310ada36ebdf2ad9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33705">
                  <text>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~.

�'

~~-~.:Commentary.
··... . .::.. ._. . . ,. .,;;______
-~

~

~

111 Cout 8tnet

'

PallleiOJ', Oblo

·

DBVOTBD TO TD IN'I'Zim8'l'l or 1D JB108-JINJOI'I AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publllber
PAT WIIITEIIEAD
Assistallt Pu&amp;Usber/Conlroller

.•r:,.

:: ~

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Mu~~ger

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le11 Ibm 300

words. All letters an subject 10 editing and musl be signed wilh name.
address md ~elepbone number. No Wlli&amp;ned letter. will be published. Lettm
sbould be in good tasle, addressing il11101, not personalities.

:,
• .•
:.-:

·&lt;·-~~;.:;____;_-;,._~---___.

.

'

•

~~~~~~:~~~~:'

.

i, ·

Ttiursday, Auguat &amp;, 1992

1992

.ll'rlday, Aug. 7

·

.. ~~r-~-------~~--------. I

•

" Clinton, Gore g~t back on
bus to continue campaign

Baker WOilld be on his way back r0
the White House to create order out
of growing chaos. Howe.vcr, when
the two men emerged from the

WASHINGTON (NEA) - l f
ever a maJJ bu been caug ~t
between the proverbial roo!l; and ~
hard place, it is Secretary' of State
James Baker.
Baker is loyal to a fault, and h~
owes his career to his friend of 2!'1
years, George Bush. Loralt:y
demands that Baker leave his job ait
Stale to take over the·faltering pres.
idential campaign. However, Baker '
is also passiOnately determined to
be re~bered ~. ~ othCir
than a skilled political ~ve.
His chief opponumty for thai:
seems to lie in getting the Middle: ,
East ~ace talk~ back on track,
somelhing now VIewed as possible
given the shift in Israeli governments. But it is widely believed
that if Baker moves to ·the White
House, the peace effort will stall
until a new secretary of state is
i~talled, be ,it Jim Baker or a Bill
Clinton appomtee.
When ~aker and Bo;;h recen~y
went fi.shmg at Baker. s ranch m
Wyommg, top While House
sources confidently prcdicled that

By WALTER. R. MEARS
AP Spedll Correspondent
wASHINGTON - In a Iauer-day adaptation of the old whistlestop
campaign, Bill Clinton is getting back on the bus to spend three days
along a ro01e presidential candidates usually covu in an hour on a char. . lered jet. .
.
. .
By campaign 1radition, preside~tialll!'d vice presidential n~minees
" infrequently travel together, ~ therr effons 10 broaden therr reach.
· - Not this ticket - Sen. AI Gore, Clinton's running mare, joins bim on
Wednesday for the second bus campaign tour, St. Louis to Minneapolis.
The dog days of Au~t usually have been a s~k season in the ~­
. paign cycle, a.tleast while lh~ other ~ ~as n~mmatmg the olher ticket
. at its convenuon. That doesn t apply this nme, CJ!her. The Democrats·are
~ .. : expected to keep campaigning while the ~blicans arc in Houston for
the convention that opens Aug. 17to renommate Pres1dent Bash.
..
So far, those breaks with campaign custom seem to be working well
· : for ClintoD against a stumbling Bush operation.
.
Clinton's campaigners lhink the full-ticket 1reatmen1 is an effective
way to get across !heir message of change~ a new genc:ration. So Clinton
':· : and Gore will be campa1grnng together at mtervals until the Nov. 3 elec·
·: •. ~ lion. It's a foursome this week; Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore are on
:: ::. :!he bus campaign, too. And that helps offset the family values issue Bush
•• ·-: and Vice President Dan Quayle have raised against the Democrats.
: • • In addition, dual campaigning makes Gore more visible than he would
.• _ _be wilh a more traditional vice presidential campaign. The Democrats soe
:: : lbat as an advantage in their effort to make an issue of 1he vice presidency
;:: : and use it against Quayle.
.
.
,. .
Clinton and Gore bused out of New York from theu convenbon on
~ : ~ July 17 on their first joint tour. five days and 1,000 miles in eight states,
:. : drawing crowds and coverage that built on the boost they'd just had at the
,.. . Democratic convention. So the bus tour gets a quick sequel, and there
:: ·- -probably wiU be more, 10 cover other regions, as long as the format seems
: .;., .,to be worlcing.
~ ~ - Four years ago, after a post-convention break, Democratic nominee
:~ _.,. :Michael Dukakis spent two weeks in August campai~ing, curiously, at
.0: &lt; home in Massachusetts. The idea was to focus on h1s achievements as
; ; : governor, but his own managers acknowledged that the result was to yield .
~ . · the stage to the Republicans.
.
,. ·. . ClintoD has only paused briefly, and periodically, since his nomination.
;:: . While he said !he bus tour, with small-town stops and personal campaign~: ~- :ing, reminded him of running in Arkansas, he hasn't spent much time at
:"" .- ;'home.
~ :· · Tbis week's bus trip begins in St. Louis, where the fl!SI one ended, and
The news from the Summer
'. ·: · heads north up the Mississippi River, with stops in Illinois, Missouri,
Games
is aiJ about how Bill Clin~ ; · Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota.
ton
has
already captured the gold
: ·
During the fltSt tour, ClintoD and Gore saw voten at town halls and
with
a
record
poll vault.
·: - :truck stops, rural crossroads and highway rest areas. In the old days of the
Indeed,
the
Great Democratic
:. ~~- · whistlestop campaign by rail, die candidate spoke from the platform at !he
Hope
from
Hope,
A,rk., soared so
; .. ·rear of his train, to crowds at depots and coun1ry crossings. But many of
far,
so
fast
from
a distant third
!he stations are shuttered or gone now. The people are at the malls, or
in
a
lhree-man
race
to
a whopping
:: : ~ downtown, or on_the road .themselyes. The Democratic campai$00rs drew
:. : ~ !hem, in surpnsmg numbers. Th1s tour w1ll test lhe durab1hty of that 2-to·l lead against the incumbent
- !hat President Bush has plunged
•; · drawing power.
:- :
Crowd counts are not a reliable gauge of a canilidate's strength -a into remittent denial. First, Bush
:: . big 111mout can auest to the diligence ofa campaign advance crew, and had to deny he's about to dump
;. rallies don 't draw enough people to chanJe outcomes. But continuing Dan Quayle. Then, he had to deny
r . 1umouts can be a clue, especially now that 1t's eas~ to stay at home and he's about to dump himself.
Now, lhe twin nerve centers of
;" 1une in for a later look at the candidate on television.
1600
Pennsylvania Avenue and
.Harry S. Truman waged the classic whistlestop campaign in 1948, on
::
the way to his upset victory. He delivered 76 speeches, coast to coast, Busll/Quayle '92 have plunged into
•
from !he platform of !he customized, armored railroad car he had inherit- a new phase. It's the "panic
' base of presidenliaf poli·
"
ed. along with the presidency. from Franklin D. Roosevelt. The pons and attack'J
tics.
A
it's come unconscionably
:: 1he experts said Truman couldn't win, but the crowds kept coming.
:'
early in this still-young cam!ll!ign.
r -·
The other day, Bush and his
r
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
campaign
staff soemed to be racing
::: nisi for The Associated Press, bas reported on Wasblngtoa .and
to see who can set to lhe lowest
;
national politics ror more than 25 years.
road firSt. It was a dead heat:
(!)Bush transformed !he healthcare
reform issue into a mindless
misstatement that mixed fear and
·...,.-,. ...
smear. "Understand what's at
~----~--------------~ stake here," Bush told an Illinois
rally. "If the governor of Arkansas
is elected with a Democratic
Congress ... wilhin a year, the gov-

Robert J, Ulagman
HI
.
_ .
woods, Baker merely srud that he
served as secretary of state at the
pleasure of the president, and Bush
would only. say that. Baker wou!d
not be making any JOb change m
the near term - a tim_e fram.e
widely viewed as meam~g unul
after the GOP convenuon 111 Hous·
ton.
Baker immediately left for a
tour of Middle Eastern cap1tal~,
where he was told in no uncenam
tams by many of die potential par·
ticipants that, fa- the talks to work,
he .would have to be !here twisting
arms every step o~th~ way. .
Actually, th1s 1s som.ethmg
Baker alreadY. knew. That IS why.
say State De~arunent sources, he
resisted entreaties by Bush during

the fishing Dip that he take over !he
C8rll!ll!iP· The.sources say the two
men agreed that Baker would
immediately become more
involved in overall campaign
strategizing, but the two men
would wljit to reassess the siwation
after .the convention before deciding·if Baker should move back to
the White House.
· These sources say pressure on
Baker has been intense. He owes
his public career to George Bush.
He was only a local lawyer in
Houston when he volunteered one
day to help the congressional campaign of young oil man George
BUSh. That was more 1han 20 years
ago, and in the interim Baker and
Bush became a team wilh Baker
widely credited as ihe political
brains behind George Bush.
However it 'has been clear for
many yeari.itw Baker wants to be
credited with more than being a
~litical pro. Four years ago, on an
Identical fishing trip during the
Democratic convention Baker
agreed to leave his job as Treasury
·

.

forecast for

.Berry's World

•

Secre~ry to take. over t!'e _1988
camp&amp;gn. He was Just begmrung to
make his mark at Treasury. and
thOse close. to Baker say he thinks
that he made a mistake in abandon·
ing that job. In retrospect, Baker
believes Bush would have beaten
Michael Dukakis with almost anyone running his campaign, and that
in leaving Treasury he only reinforced his image as a super pol
who just happens to do other lhings
between campaigns:
.
Th1s would agam be b'Ue 1f he
now leaves State. He wo~ld reinforce ~ view that his mam focus
IS pobucs. But 1f he can get the
stalled peace talks restarted •.the~
would likely be a Nobel Prize m
his future, and a subsllintive place
in the history books.
Complicating Baker's ~ision
is the knowledge that, 1f Bush
loses, he v.:m ~- on his w_ay back~
Texas. It IS w1dely beheved B1ll
Clinton would name ~s .Ans~les
lawyer and Carter admm1strauon
Deputy Secretary of State Wm:ren
Chris~her as SCCJ"e!lfY· But,·if ~
can nght the camp111gn and lead 11
to victory, he will have four more
years. at least, to try to bring peace
to the Middle East.
A further complication. is that
Baker's leaving State now would
become a campaign ~ssue . The
Democrats have made it clear that
if Baker leaves State, they will
charge that George Bush cares
more about saving his political
neck 1han about world ~· This
prospect worries many m the Bush
camp.
•
Apparently before Baker left on
the latest round of Middle East
lalks, he harbored some idea that
he might be able to do both jobs run the campaign while stl11 leading the peace process. But the latest
meeting convinced both him and
his top aides !hat such a dual role is
impossible. If the talks are to have
any chance of moving forward
beginning wilh the next session in
Washin$ton in late August, Jim
Baker wtll have to be there giving
them his fun aaention.
Those close to him • State say
he will stay. Those running the
Bush-Quayle campaign say they
can't wait fa- him to take over. An
agonizing decision lies ahead for
Jim Baker.
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
eel writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise ~iation.

""·
IND.

W. VA.

.-.,.,"'r

Sunny . Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
C18V2Accu·Weather, Inc.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clear. Low around 60.
Friday, partly cloudy. High 80-85.
Chance of ram 20 percent.
Exte11ded forecast:

-..•-... .
...-··
-:.-....
.-.-,.-.-.
1•:4
-~·

•

'

'"'

·~·
~"'

:...:
"'"'t. . '
'••
'

.
.-.
-.--.
·.:

.......
••
·"'.....•••.. .
•
•

·:....• •

...
~

~

I'll.·
-~ •

~.,tk•~s
Cn!KI2 by

•·
NEA. Inc:. 7
I

Dorothy Brewer
Dorothy Violet Brewer, 71, of
31010 Stiversville Road in Poriland, died on Wednesday, August
5,1992 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born on November 7, 1919 in
Portland, she was the daughter or
the late Carl and Naomi Keys
Autherson. She performed in-home
heallh care services for 20 years.
She is survived by three daughten: Mrs. Eugene (Viola) Long and
Mrs. Robrlt (Donna) Fitch, bolh of
Long Bottom, and Freda Bays of
Ponland; three sons: Billy Brewer
of Portland, Terry Brewer of
Columbus and Roger (Nancy)
Brewer, Okeechobee, Fla.; three
brothers: James Autherson of
Racine, Pat Autherson of Newark

"When did you begin to think you were
human?"

··~·
-~
• ---~--------------------------------~

contaued from page 1

Squads respond to 7 calls
Meigs Emergency Services units answered seven calls for assistance on Wednesday and early Thursday.
.
On Wednesday at 7:27 p.m., Middleport squad went to Page
Slrcet and took Dewey Lyons to Veterans Memorial Hospital. AI
8:09 p.m., Rutland squad responded to Loop Road for DeMis Searles. He was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 9:43 p.m., Middlepan squad took Jeffrey Werry from Second Street to Veterans.
On Thursday at 2:48 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to the Flood
Road and toOk Walter Bentz to Veterans. At 7:41 a.m., Middlepon
squad went to Page Street for Dorothy Hartenbach, who was taken
to Veterans. At 8:55 am., Rutland squad went to New Lima Road.
James Spangler was taken to Veterans. At 9:03 a.m., Middleport
squad toOk Dorothy RoUer from Sixth S1rcet to Veterans.

I

•

The Daily Sentinel

who advocate still stron¥er liberal media. And that, of course,
medicine. Never mind dumpmg is exactly 1he opposite of the audi,
Quayle, they declare- dump a1 least as far as conservatives are
Bush!
concerned: We criticize him preIt is not quite enough to say, in cisely for not bauling the
response, that that isn't going to Democrats hard enough.
happen. Of course, it isn't. Mr.
If the Republican Party were to
Bush wants the nomination and, as dump Mr •. Bush in a panicky
the incumbent president, he is in a aaempt to put some more auractive
position to compel bis party to give choice before 1he voters, 1he voters
u to .him. So was Jimmy Carter, would be justified in saying to it, in
when 1he redoubtable Ted Kennedy effect, "Why don't you juS! so
challenged him in 1980; so was away somewhere and lie down
Gerald Ford, when 1he oven more until you get your act together?"
No, the only possible solution
formidable Ronald Reagan took
him on in 1976, But, wheiher Busb for the GOP is to Slide with Bush,
and for him to r'edefme hiinself as
will step down or,not, should be?
The idea that the Republican the president he can yet be, if the
Party could improve its chances by Ainqicall people will get over this
changing horses in midstteam not madness of divided government
only challenges the conventional and give him a ' Republican
wisdom about the advisability of Conlrcas that will wort wilh bim.
W!Uiam Rlllber II 1 IIJIIdkat·
doinil ~; it coul~ 't be done with·
out giving the impression that 1he ed writer for Newspaper Eater•
party concurred in the aiticisms of prile Alloclaliotl.
Mr. Bush by the Democrats aNI the

(VIPII1~

'I

Pabllshod ... an.rn-. Monday
..._. l'rida!l 11 Coori8L , _ , ,
Ohio bJ 111• Ohio Valloy Publlohinr

~ny/Mulllmedio ln•e/~"""'1·
01lio 411118, Ph. 11112-21118.
d cluo
....... pold all'wwr.,, Oldo.
·

llotDbar:,. - - ......... u..
Olrio N•-s.:=lll•llon, Nallonol

.W.IIIUioc
Nowlpopor
Haw '11ft,

lllln. Branhom

:!"&lt; 183 Third Awn..,

N"'""" 10017.

P08'1'11A8'1'BR: Sed ..w... ...._ "'
Tho DoUy l!onllaat, Ill Coarl 81.,
- I l l 0Hlo411118.

IVIIIC:IUPI'ION L\:1'11

1r Caft*orllolor IMio

Ooa W..t.. ....... ................................ .$1.60
Ooa lloelb...........................................9(1
CJDe Yllr......................." '''''''''""'"'"'ll3.20

IINOLICOPY
PJUCII

'

Don,..,...................................... _ a!J Ctnto
...., libltl""' doolril!f"'
or..,.
ntll!lln .,.......,
!!::l.. ._llnal
• a lbroa,

--

(Ill'

u.. --

-~ to Tho

ol1 or II
- · Cndll wtD bo ..... -

.-,u...

No
bJ Nil pmolltl4 io
anu wheft Mme Nnitr Hni• II
aYIIIIablo.

·'

·

--.

llleiM•Dit=

E.at

Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying poiniS Thunday
by the Ohio Deparunent of Agri •
culture:
Barrows and gilts: .25 to .50
higher; demand modcnte.
.
u.s. t-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 42.00-43.00, a few 43.50;
plants 42.75-43.75, a few 44.50.
U.S. 1·2, 210-230 lbs.: country
points, 40.50-42.00.
. U.S. h3, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 41.()().42.50.
Receipts Wednesday 8,200.
Estimated receipts Thuraday 8,000.
Prices from The Producen Live·
stock Amciation:
Sheep and lambs: steady; choice
wools 50.00·54.00; choice clips
50.00·54.50; feeder lambs 55.00
and down; old sheep 37.00 and
down.

Hospital news

Vetel'llll MeiiiOI'III
WEDNBSDAY ADMISSIONS
aw..............................,...............
· Ethel Grueaer, Rutland; Katherine
O.loldatwpeo....q.
·
11 w.............................................W.40 Mees. Pomeroy; and Bennie Lyoni,
• w........_........;."....................... .150 Middle
aw.............................................. .40
. WEI:isDAY DISCHARGES
-Thurston Stone, Jr.

11 w............................................
11 w.....- ........................ -............

"

01\ Aug. 6~ 1945, the Uolted States dropped an atomic bomb on
Hiroshima, Japan, killing an estimated 140,000 people in the f11st use of a
nuclear weapon in warl"arc.
·
·

II

'

RESERVE CHAMPIONS • Taking reserve
champion awards in their respective 4-H sewing
project categories were these club members.
Judging results were announced at Wednesday
night's style show beld at the Rock Sprinp Fair·

"' have serious questions as to
whether .it's a legal contract or not,"
Davenport said to the Parkersburg
newspaper.
Davenport said he questions the
leRIIIity of the contract because it
By Tbe Associated Press
olfcrs the workers nothing. He said
Ohio
skies will start clouding
the insurance really adds up to one
ovu
and
more humid air will stan
monlh of bospitaliution coverage
moving
into
the stare on Friday in
and he said the hiring list is incadvance of a low pressure system
onsequential.
'"They're· (the
replacement that win bring rain on !he weekend,
w&lt;llkers) not soing to be n:called. forecasten said.
But tonight, sides will remain
They have a run complement down
clear
and temperatures again will
there and they are not going to
n:call anyone," Davenport was be ra~er chilly. Last night, readmgs dipped to record levels in lhe
quoted as saying.
40s
in some areas.
Meanwhile,
The
United
Highs
on Friday will be 80-85.
Steelw&lt;llkers of America win be
The
record-high
temperature for
staging a rally Saturday, Aug. 8, at
this
date
at
the
Columbus
weather
the Jackson County Fairgrounds
IIC31 Ripley, to celebrate the 20- sta~on was 102 degrees in 1918
. month sauggle by USWA Local wh1le the record low was 48 in
1948. Sunset toniaht will be at 8:40
S668 to win a contract wilh RAC.
Jim Bowen, director of USWA
Disb'ict 23, said 1he "One Day
Longer" celebration will salute the
members of Local 5668, their
friends, families and supporters
from the Ravenswood area and
Helmet ntclng
representatives of the labor moveFinal helmet fitting for SOuthern
ment that forced the Ravenswood Junior High School players will be
Aluminum Corp. back to 1he bar- Monday at 2 p.m. at the high
gaining table to negotiate an end to school. Those unable to attend, call
1he lockouL
949-2443.
Bowen win serve as master of
ceremonies. Guest speakers include
New congregation ·
West V'uginia Gov. Gaston Caper·
The Church of Christ in Tuppers
ton; Lynn WiUiams, Inrentational Plains, formerly !he Success Road
President of 1he USWA; George congregation. has announced the
Becker, International vice-president opening of a new congregation,
of the USWA who headed the Hickory Hills Church of Christ on
union's coordinated campaign in Route 7 East of Tuppers Plains on
the dispute; and Dan Stidham, Hickory Hills Road. Bible sllldy is
.President of USWA Local 5668.
9 a.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. WednesAmong other participants are day wilh worship services 10 a.m.
Cecil Roberts, vice-president of the and 6:30p.m. Sunday.
United Mine Workers; Joe Powell,
president of the West Virginia AFLCIO; Harry Lester, din:c:tor of
USW,A Disb'icl 29, Detroi~ and
Frank Vickers, Director of USWA
30, Indianapolis.
Am Elc Power .................. .3 3 l/4
The ·Speakers rally will run from
Ashland Oil.. ......................26
AT&amp;T....................... ,........43 5/8
I to 4 p.m. Food, beverages and ice
cream will be served by the Bank Onc ............... .. .. ...... .. 44 518
Ravenswood and Ripley band
Bob Evans ..................... .... 20
booslers beginning at noon, wilh
Charming Shop................. JI 3/4
music and other activities until 4
City Holding ...................... l9 7tH
p.m.
Federal Mogul... ................ 16 5!8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................66 3/4
Key CenLUrion .......... .. .......20 1/4
Lands End ...... ................... .32 1/4
Limi!Cd Inc ....................... 20 1/4
Multimedia Inc ..................26 l{l
Continued from page 1
Rax
Rcstaurunt... ................. 9/16
Spectator Sportswear: Jennifer
Reliance
Elccltic ................ l7 718
Mora. grand champion; and Kelley
Robbins&amp;Mycrs
................ 173/4
Grueser and Heather Well, tie for
Shoney's
Inc
......................
22 5/8
reserve champion.
Siar
Bank
........................
..
.30
1/4
Dress up Outfit, Daywear: Mary
Wendy lnt'l. ....................... ll 3/4
Grueser, grand champion; Susie
Wormington Ind ............. ...24 .
Francis, reserve champ1011.
Stock
reports are the 10:30
Drcss·u~ Outfit, Formal: Eliza·
a.m.
quotes
provided by lllunt,
belh Down!C and Bobbie White, tie
Ellis
and
Loewi
or Gallipolis•
for grand champion.
.
Coats and Jackets: Debra Frost,
grand cham~ion: Anna Wolf,
reserve champ1on.
Clothing Complements: Emily
Asbeck, grand champion; Rebekah
Karr, reserve champion; Melissa
Houser, and Michelle Miner. bon·
arable mentions.
Others modeling in the style ·
show were Ashley Hamihon, Jessica Hamilton, Sarah Houser, Julie
McGuire, Michelle O'Nail, Rusty
Robinson, Rebekah Smith, Jamie
Williamson, Andrea Neutzlin~,
Taryn Doidge, Dorothy Leilbe11,
Ginger Holcomb, Crystal Smith,
Beth Clark, Julie Nakao, and
NoeUe Pickens.

'·

.'

.18
.78

grounds. In the wlnnin&amp; croup were from the
left, Kelly Grueser, Krlstl Warner, Melissa
Dempsey, Jamie Drake, Anna Wolf, Rebecca
Karr, Suzy Milboaa, and Kristina Kennedy.

•
Warm front expected to bring rain

Meigs County
announcements

Stocks

p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:36

a.m.

Around tbe nation
Slcies were fair to panty cloudy
over most of 1he nation early today.
Sunny skies were forecast in !he
Norlheast and scattered showus in
!he Southeast.
High pressure in Idaho was
expected to draw more hot air into
the interior Northwest, ravaged by
wildfues over the past week.
On Wednesday night, rain and
lhunderstorms extended over the
southern Atlantic coastal sta)eS, !he
easten\ Gulf of Mexico region, !he
Tennessee Valley, the lower Mis-

Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Wednesday's
Super Lolto drawing so Saturday's
Jackpot will be $14 million, the
Ohio Lotrery said.
Pick 3 Numbers
8-4-7

(eight, four, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
6-5-7-1
(six, five, seven, one)
Super Lotto
3-10-29-33-36-46
(three, ren , twenty-nine, thirtythree, thiny-six, forty-six)
Kicker
0-7-5-2-7-0
(zero, seven, five, 1wo, seven,
zero)

Marriage license issued
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Richard Lee Grady, 20,
Long Bottom, and Tina Marie
Romine, 23, Rutland.

Fll~

, COLO'\ ·
•

/lu

ul1 ,

TOIIIIIT
MEtiYAN .
Ill

.PRELUDE TO AKISS

.... __.
=.-.

a~

Mllltl-r~

Ulllllll SUt
4fiiiD

'
•

SAt. SUN.

EDDIE MIIPHY
IN

Grand...

l

•

and Thomas Autnerson ot Beverly;
two sisters, Lucille Allen of Panland and Lill Roush of Gallipolis;
II grandchildren, eight great·
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Ralph Brewer; a sister, Elva Dailey; and a grandson, Greg Middleswart.
She attended the Stiversville
Church.
Funeral services win be held on
Saturday at II a.m . at Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with
David Dailey officiating. Burial
wiU be in Stiversville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday from 6to 9 p.m.

r---Local briefs... - -

Sch•am

Today in history

Saturday tbrough Moaday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday.
Fair on Monday. Lows in the 60s.
Highs 80-85.

Area death

wilh die KGB.
B/Q '92, they 1ry to comfon themThe president's fear-mongering selves these days by telling tales of
about health care deserves closer yesteryear: how, in 1976, chalinspection - any hard-working lenger Jimmy Carter came GallupAmerican can lose a life's savings . ing out of his convention with a
to catastrophic illness if they've nearly 2-to-11ead, yet almost lost ·
11artin
..Lr.fl
I
lost their job and heaJih benefits.
to the never-elected incumbent
- · - - - - - - - - - - . Remember: Bush really intend- Gerald Ford; also, how Michael
passion of the KGB." (KGB! This ed to do nothing about health care, Dukakis left his 1988 convention
pan jic!l;y president really said that.) • because then-chief of staff, John wilh a double-digit bounce - but
(2) Bush/Quayle '92 issued a Sununu, argued it was 100 contro- was trounoed.
But they know deep down at
slas:hingly worded personal attack versial, with no quick p(llitical
upside.
But
when
lhe
issue
cost
the
Bush/Quayle
'92, that Ibis year is
on Clinton, an 01 yin pic gutrerball
GOP
a
nice,
safe
Senate
seat
in
like none of the above. Their own
of a press release about evcrylhing
from Clinton's married life to his Pennsyl.vania, Bush rushed out polls show recession-embittered
sUU;1:gle against weight-gain on the with half-a-plan: It would give tax Americans are probably 111grier at
camjpaign trail. It came not long credits and deductions for lower- Bush 1han they've been at any presaftel' Bush's promise to avoid what income individuals to purchase ident. They've watched his lips,
he ttlrmed "sleaze." The news heallh insurance but would give lit- waited for his leadership, weaned
relense asked: "Which campaign tle help to middle-class Americans. of his excuses.
Clinton has proposed coverage
had ,to spend lhousands of taxpayer
All of this is to say that this
for
aiJ Americans thmn.m a system month's Republican National Condollars on private investigators to
fend off 'bimbo eruptions'?" (fax- known as "play Or-Payr;; employ- vention is unlikely to be the Grand
payer dollars? It's just B/Q '92' s ers would either provide health Trampoline of public opinion capamislt~ading reference to the fact insurance for workers or pay into a
ble of catapulung this president as
that post-convention campaigns are fund that would provide insurance far as he needs to be carried. So
to those uncovered.
financed by federal funds.)
he 'II have to do it on bis own: And
This is a complex issue and this beleaguered incumbent is
A:1 condemnation mounted, BIQ
'92 s toad by its nco-sleaze but later Americans deserve to hear it beginning to look Too-Bushed-toapol(•gized under White House explained and debated rationally, Bounce.
orden;. But Bush dido 't apologize not through the political panic
Martin Sc:bram Is a syadlcated
auacks of fear and smear. Ovu at wriler for Newspaper Enterprise
for luis old·time commie-baiting linlcing the DemocraiS' health plan 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue and Association.

UT.'/l.uzm A. Rusher

~

'"lbere wm a number of people
who wen: · injured and there is
evidence that the proper securitt
measlftl were 1101 maintained,
Davenport told TM Plll'kusburg
Jkws.
Raines said he has counted more
than 6,000 acts of violence commit·
ted by union members and supporten m the 19-month dispute. He
claimed his own life and his wife's
had been lhreatened, and that his
wife had ~n shot at, although be
didn't say if clwges were filed in
connection witb.the incidents.
RAC spokesman Pat Gallagher
told the newspaper Tuesday that the
company had just learned about the
sail and had no commell yeL
Davenport said the company's
offer of two months' medical in·
surance and a preferential hiring
list · in exchange for a guarantee
against lawsuits may not be a legal
CODII'1ICL

Should GOP dump Quayle? or· Bush?
.•
••

conditions and

IToledo ls1• I

emment.wiU run heallh care in. this .,
country, and our health-care system
w~ ~l combine the efficiency of the
House Post Office with lhe com·
-·

By now, most observers agree simpl ~y isn't .aue. If the voten can
that George Bush's re•election be pe.-suaded that Mr. Bush ought
prospects are in free-fall. The vot- to be re-elected, the identity of his
ers want a change in Washington, vice·l•residenliaf running-mate will
and the presidency is the most con- _ _ , . . . - - - - - - - - venient target. The Cold War is
over. so the relative youth and. "J
inexperience of Clinton and Gore - - - - - - - - in the fields of foreign policy and be virtually irrelevant- as it was
defense don't matter so much.
in 1988, when the media's feeding
The only question is what, if frenzy ov~ Mr. Quayle was at least
anything, Mr. Bush can do to as great as IllS now. .
reverse the current dislstrous trend
Mo.reover, replacmg Quayle at
and win in November. Most people ' this pc•int would be interpreted by
agree that the best remaining shot the mlldia (not to mention the
in his iocker and maybe the only DemO&lt;;:rats) as mere evidence of
one, is die SPeech 'he will give to panic ill the Bush camp, and !'ailed
the convention in HOuston, acupt· as lhe. ~-too-belated correcbon of
ing his party's re1101ilination•.l have a prcVI~us •..&amp;!legedly &amp;has~Y· error.
already-submiued in this sp11ce a
In 11ddmon, recruumg Jack
draft of what such a speec:~ might Kemp for the vice-presidential slot
say.
w~u)d be a ,misuse of that.hardSome commentator&amp;, however, drivmg man s great talents. Kemp
have called for even more draltic is desperately needed at the Treatcmedies. There is, for example, a sury Dc:llarunent· as a replacement
respectable body of RepUblican and for the ilisaslrous Nicholas Brady.
even conservative opinion that
Finally, no possible replacement
wants Mr. Bush 10 replace Vice nomlncie for vJCC president, Kemp
President .Quayle with someone included, could avoid coming
like Jack Kemp.
under ldlaCk by his own inevitable
But that preaupposes thai Mr. cri~ t'p.: his own inevitable flaws,
Bush's troubles are, in sorno IICP· or~llaws. · · ,
•
ous way, related 10 the prmnce of · Ther:c are, however, RepubhMr. Quayle on ·lhe ticket, and that cans, 811!1 conservative ones at that,

Continued from page 1
as one of the areas the suit win explore. He declined to give the
~wspaper specific

MICH .

Bush camp~aign hits the panic button

-: &lt;

Ex...

OHIO Weather

Bush's slJde puts Bak~r in quandary

The Daily Sentinel

......,. .

.....

..---~

.~ ,..

\

.

BOOMERANG
- -

R
AND - -- -i
WHOOP! GOlDBERG
IN

SISTER ACT

....,...

PG

sissippi Valley. !he western Plains
and the Rockies.

The main street of Henryetta
Okla, was under 4 feet of wate;
Wednesday after heavy rain pushed
a creek over its banks; forcing
about200 people from their homes.
Th~nder~torms dumped solf
ball·stze had and produced wind
gusts that toppled trees at Antioch,
N.C., and near Lancaster, S.C.
Thunderstorms produced small
!Jail. heavy rain and siJ'eet flooding
mEiy,Nev.
·
Temperatures were forecast
today in the 70s in much of New
England.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

lAMMI.,
.......

llfQ, · -·

...,~,

7

�Thuradiy, August'&amp;, 1992

•"'

-·

Th~

tsports
•'("

Sentin~l

Daily

Thursday, August 6, 1992
Page--4.

..

•

.

'

1.:.¥- \.tlanta records 5-l win ·over Cincinnati
•..: By Tbe Associated Press
;- · The Cincinnati Reds lost their
•:(:enter fJC:Ider and another game in
:lie standings to the Atlanta Braves
:11uhe same time.
.:, Dave Justice's first-inning triple
: tiot only gave the Braves a 2-0 lead
: ih a game they would win 5-l, it
: also sent Red.s center fielder Bip
·:Jtpbens to the hospital.
:,. • Rohens crashed face-first into
:lliC padded fence in left-center at

Fulton County Stadium trying to
catch Justice's shot. He was carried
off the field and hospitalized with a
sprained neck and a mild concusSIOn.
"It's difficult emotionally to see
a teammate carted off in the frrst
inning," Reds statler T'llll Belcher
said, "especially when the starting
pitcher IS getting peppered. It
makes for a long night."
Especially when you're not

Plao-.

New Yodl, 140; 0. t.&amp;ddu1, Okaao,
12S; Dnbok,
122: »-, S..
Di... l1l; Rijo, CINtiNNATI. Ill.
SAYES - Loo Snulh, Sl Looil, 26;
Wetteland, .Montreal, 25; Cbuhon,
C!NC!NNA11. 24; D.
23;
M~ Son Di..., 22; Milch Williamo.
~ 20; llctindo, Plluboi!Jb,l4.

J..,.,-

Amerku Leque
•
WesttmiMvW.
AW.u ...................63 42 .600
CINCINNA1L ....61 4.l
o;.,o ..............ll ll .sn
Fnncioco, ....... .S I S7 .-172
l9 .+19
61 .430

.:m

co..,..

Z.S
7
13.S
·16
II

~6.~~·2·
San J&gt;ieao 4, San Franc:ilco l

1.......,7, LooADpo6

Tonight's games

PhiWiolphio

(Sdlillin&amp;l~). 7:3S p.m.

CNCINNAn (SWindell J&lt;M) at AtIonia (Smolll 13-6). 7:41) p.m.
- Now y oft ('Miliob- 1-6) " Cliooa•
(Maddu.ll-9),1:01 p.m.
• Piuob"''h (DAbok 9·1) at St t..ou
(Oliv.... 6-)), l :ll p.m.
• Houlton (William~ 3-l) 11 S.n Diq:o
.
I-I 0), I 0:01 p.m.

Chicaao

9-4) u CINC!N-

S..

J'IAD (RlJo 1-1), : p.m.
: - . J (Mobbolz 7·7) It Pbilldcl·
pllio (Ri.... 0.2), 7:3S ~m.
• LooAnp!oo(Xm.O...l· 10)atAl·
lonu (Loil:nndll-4). 7:4&lt;l~m.
Plttlbuf&amp;h (fomlin 10-7} at Sl 1..clliJ
(Conni&lt;w 3-1), 1:3S p.m.
(lluiUsch 4-1) " Soo ·1M&amp;•

(DemUeo 1·2), 10:3S p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eultn!DIY-

T-

WLra.CI

T -.................64 43 .l91
Blltimcn ...............62 &lt;16 .S74
lolllwoubo .............l) ., .531

a.........................so

S6 .-112

NewYodt .............. 49 ll .4SI
Do&lt;ro!t .................. A9 60 .4SO
CtEVELAN!L.. ..47 61 .43S

U
6J
13J
ll
16
17J

Wdltrft DI•Won
Olklond ...............64
t.tiMolw .............. 63
..l4
To• ....................5l
' - Cily ...........41
Colifomio .............41
S..ll!e.-....- ........42

43 .591
44 .ll9

C....o...............

Phillip1, Detroil, 17;

Mm-.
Thomu. au..aa.

nuou., 7S; E. Mutinot, Semle, 73:
Mode,
70; M.c..U.. Olkllnd.

HITS - Puckett, MinnCUJtl, 143;
Bo..... ClJIVEL.O.ND, 136; Mod&lt;, MU!·
MIOll, 114; E. Mtrtinet, Seattle, 132;
J.m.n... Kwu Chy, I lAS;
M;J.
woul.ee,l2l; FIJOIIn,llotnJi' 124.

Moll""·

DOUBLES - E. Martinez, Setnlo,
31 ; Jcyntll', X..-:uu City, 30; Htll, New
YOlk, 30; lclftziCII, Ku.u Cny, 29; M.ltlinaiY. New Yoot, 211; R.W.., TCUl, 27;
You.nt, Mil••ubo. 21.
TRIPLI!S - llevOIOIU~ Blltimcn, 9;
L Jclwoa, OU..,.. 7; U..d&gt;, MllwouU.. 6: R. Alauar, T"""'"'- 6; Andonon,
Blltimoto, 6; While. T"""'"'· 6: Molil&lt;U,
Milwaukee.. 6.
HOME RUNS - Mc&lt;lwiN, OUJ.nd,
33; Ju~n Gonzalez, Tout, 26; Fielder,
o....m. 24; o.c.. lletroil. 23; T..u...,,
Dcuoi.t, 23; Ctrter, Toronto, 22; Belle,
ClJM!L.\ND, 20
STOLEN BASES - Lilucb, MilwtuU.. 39; ldlon, CLEVELAND, 36; AD·
dC:noa, Ballimorc. 36; Polcni•, California, 36: ~Wnoo, cu.. ao. 34: R. llalcJco.
101'1., Oakland, 31 ; L. Jotwcn, Chicaao,
21.
PrrCfDNO (12 d"i•iont) - Juan
!lumw!. Tonn"'- 12·3, .aoo. 23S; Jomie
- . T......,, 13-4, .76S, • -36: App;..,
!Wou Cl1r. IH .7SO, 230; Mdlowell,
euc.,.. ll-5, .7l0, 3J7; KN.p. MinftiiiCIIA, 9-3, .750, 3.67; Muuin1, Balti·
....., 114, .m. 244; A..,;,._ S..ule,
12-l, .706. 3.20
STJUKEOllfS - Clement, B01ton,
1•3: Pera, New Yorir:, loll ; Ju.an Guz.
man., Toroalo, 137; R. Jobnton, Seanlo.
130: K. Brown, Tcu1, 117; App icr,
Xulu City, 116; McDowell, Chic:aao,

un

SAVES - Eacnley, Oakland, 35;

Ap.ilcr•, Minncaotll , 29; Obon, Bl\ti·
nxn. 36; M111l&amp;crncry, Karu.u City, 26;
'"' R....U. T""· 26: ReuOOn. ~~oown.
22: Homy, Milwoul.ee, 2L

I

ll

.l14

9

Sl
S9
60
fil

.lOO
.449
.....
.31l

IO.l
16
16J
23

WediMiday's scores
T.....,l,._4
o.ttimoro~DoaoitO

MU•autee I, S•ule I
au..aa
'· MiMtoou
a..EVElAND
4, Newl Yock 3, II in·

......

Kanlu City ~. ~omi.fl 2
OUJand 4, T... 3

Olympic medals table
~,.eam

.......

8

3~ ~

UNlTEll STATES ......21

o..m.ny ...................... l&amp;

aw. .......................... 16
Fnnce ...........................l

Today'seam..

MiMcaota {Smiley 11·.5) at Ch.icaao
l:ll pm.
.
Scan.lo (Han~on 1-14) 1\ Milwaukeo
(Navarro 11 ·7), 2:3:5 p.m.
California (fWey 3-9) at K.anlu City
(McCoU.ill7· 1~

(Pielwdo l-4~ 2:3l pm.

Toronlo (Mom• 13· 4) al De1roit

cr...,.. 9-6). 7:ll p.m.

Oilland (Down~ 2·3) at Teua (Ryan
54), 1:3l p.m.

Friday's eames

.i?.'i~!:6-~..:} at New York

,;'ii_"?:!l;;.:•' BIIU·,
. (Mi&lt;k·

29

':i24 1!:,.

16
20

23 S7
14 so

1

Belplm ......................... 0
Y~S&amp;Oilni• ....................0

4 13 2l
8 9 23
4 9 22
7 2 19
7 9 19
l
7 17
3 I 16
l
7 16
3 6 14
4 7 14
I
6 13
I
0 11
3 6 II
6 3 10
4
4 9
4
3 1
2 I S
l
I l
I
2 l
o 3 l
2 0 4
2 1 4
0 3 •
I
2 l
I
l
3

Bra:DJ ............................. I
l'.otDnia .............. ............ l
IWond ..........................0

I
0
I

Aulualia .......-...............6

Soulb Ko... ...................9
lbJoey ......................IO
11.................................3
lilly ............................. J
O.bo ........................... ~

Bolton (Viola 9·-.,) u Mow York
(Pmm9-JO),I p.m.

lmol........- ........:........0
Lltvio ..................... ...0

Allltlia ............ ....... ........o
s~owmo

Romonlo .........................
Brillia ............................S
I\:Und ...........................3
Conodo ...........................6
Spoin............................ IO
- . .................. .2
Jlulprio ........................l

New 2.ca1a.M .................1

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

c..cbool.,oti.o ............ .2
.lndon&lt;oio ...................... .2
Twkey ......: ....................2
NonhX.... .................. .2
Nonway ...... -..................2
IC.enya ............................ 1
................ .......... .. .1

I
1
2

........................o o

0... .......................... .1
Ulbuonio ...................... .!
M..-. ....................... 1
1............................... .0 ·
NIIDibio .........................O
Fen. ............. ................. .0
Taiwan.. .........................o
.......................0
C..!U......................0
l!llliopio . ........... ...........o
Malo1'1&amp; .......................0
MonloJio ....................... 0
Surinom ................... .....o

0
0
0
I
I
1

I
I

o

2
0
0
0
0
0
0

2
2
2
2
I
1
1
I
I
I

1

o

0

I

I

0

I
1

I
1

0
0

I
I

I
I

1

1

o
o

1

Transactions

67.

T....,70.

M..,....l,OU..aol

1t

RUNS -

""*"""'- ~. 76; Pudua, lofin·

RBI-Iieldtt, Dolroi~ 9~ M&lt;:GwUe.
OUJand. 12: o.11e11. au..aa. 19; Pucl:·
ett, Minneaot~, 76; Caner, Toronto, 73;
Thoma1, ChictJO, 70: Jum Gcnulel,

Allanu l, CINCINNATI 1

Mow

.316.

1~

Wednesday's scores

Montm1 (Hill 12-l) at

BA'ITINO- B. )hrtiaez, Seattle,
.333; P\lctett, MinDOIOtt, .332; ~bet ,
Minn-.., -~ 11umu,
.:122;
Huper, Mi_ru1caota, .319; Bu:aa.
C1JNELAJ'iD. .316; R. Alunlr, Toronto,

scorin'g - and the Reds were
unable to solve Steve Avery until it
was too late.
Justice's triple and Lonnie
Smith's sacrifice fly gave the
Braves a 3-0 lead. Sid Bream and
Damon Berryhill added consecutive homers in the fouhh off Belcher (9-10) as Atlanta won its fifth
straight game and moved 2 1/2
games ahead of the Reds in the NL
West.

BuebaU

BAL11MO"=~-A&lt;1ivolod

Tim llulc, inficldor,lrom !be 1S·doy dis·
obled &amp;. s... Jodi VaiJitt, lnllelder, 10
Roell..- of tbl In~emttUm!LNpc.
UMSAS CITY ROYALS - &amp;cod
Kcvift McR.eyn.ol4k, cut6rldcr, oa. thp IS·
day diHblod liol. c..tlod up Jolf c.run.,
ontflold•fim .buanan; from am.ba of
the Amcwlcm Auocia.W...
MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Re-

collod s..,.llullia, ....-. r..m Domw
ol the American Altoc:iati~n Stat AlGI.
Diu, aul&amp;ider, 10 O.vcr. Nanod SteVe

E"';"I!A~ - Pun:hued

the eoulftct ol Shawn Bll'lon, pitcher,
~..,. ollho l'ldllc c.... Loo...
Dolip1Cd Juan AaoRo, pitdtcr, for u •i.pnent.
TI!XAS RAMOERS - Placod Donny
~ pildlR, ca doc IS-day diAblod Jill.
PurchUed tbe eclnb"ICt ol Matt Whi1eJi4c.
~·hom Oklohomo City altho Am«1Cift A.ociadcm.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS- Plocod
JUIII l)umun. pildler, 011 the 15-dly dis·

ablod lial, NUOactivo 10 Aut: 4. Re11 Syra·
called Pat Hentaen, pitcher,
CillO of tho Internati«W Leapo.

NollonllLtapo
CHICAGO CUBS ...i.i. Fired Diet

BalGenaa, vice J!l'llldflll. frr sata~tina and.
pll,..- ............, uut Bm lluf&lt;ml, di·
rector ol minor leap opotationa. An·
nOODOOd. dill Scoa. Nebon, -.iaant director oliDGIIIinlo would unme inlollim reoponoibillty fou~•in110d pt.,..- .-.e~.

-

C!NCINMAD REDS - Ploced Hoi
Moail, lint - . . , "" tho ll-diJ dis·
ablod lilt. Rocallod Cellt llemaDdca., ouv
fiolder, hom Chatunooa• ollho Soulhom
Ltar;uo.
LOS ANOELES DODOERS Pllcod Eric Davil, ootfieldcr, oo the 15·
day dilablod lilt. R.cCilled Torn Goodwin.
cMficldct, fnlll Albuq\ll:lq\IC ri tho Ptcif.
icCout Lea
SAM PfA"NCJSCO GIANTS Pllcod Cnia Coiba\, """"'• ..,tho ISday cfiublodlict. Actintcd Kin Manllt'V·
ina. eateha', from tho 15-day clillblod 1.i1L

'

Avery (9· 7) allowed one run on
eight hits in 7 213 innings despite
not having his best stuff.
"I really didn't have a curveball, so I threw mostly fastballs,"
Avery said. "They were moving
pretty good, and for the most pan
they didn't hit it hard.' •
Elsewhere, it was Pittsbur~h 6,
New York 2; Montreal 5, Chicago
3; San Diego 4, San Francisco 1;
St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 4; and
Houston 7, Los Angeles 6.
Pirates 6, Mets 2
Rookie knuckleballer Tim
Wakefield won his second straight
major league stan as the Pirates
used a pair of double steals to beat
theMets.
Wakefield (2-0) allowed the
first Jwo earned runs of his bigleague career during his eight·
inning stint. But the Pirates gave
him plenty of support, parlaying
double steals in the first and third
to a pair of three-run innings
against Pete Schourek (3-S).
Expos 5, Cubs 3
Spike Owen and Delino
DeShields each drove in two runs
as Montreal beat Chicago at
Olympic Stadium.
Brian Barnes (3-3) gave UJ? six
hits and two runs in 6 1!3 inrungs,
striking two and walking four. John
Wetteland got the last three outs for
his 25th save.
Moises Alou's sacrifice fly off
reliever Ken Patterson (1·2) in the
sixth broke a 2-2 tie and the Expos
added two runs in the seventh on
Owen's RBI single and a basesloaded walk to DeShields.
Padres 4, Glaats 1
Gary Sheffield drove in the goahead run in the eighth and and ·
Darrin Jackson added a two-run
double as the Padres handed visit·
ing San Francisco its fifth loss in
six games.
Sheffreld's single off Jeff Brant·
ley (3-5) broke a 1·1 tie, and one
oullater Jackson doubled home
two more runs.
Tim Scott (4·1) pitched I 1/3
innings for the win and Randy
Myers got the last two outs for his
22nd save.
Cardinak 5, PhiUies 4
Ozzie Smith had three hits and
Luis Alicea tripled ~orne the winning run in the sixth inning as SL
Louis beat Philadelphia to complete a three-game sweep at Busch
Stadium.
With the score tied at 3-3, Craig
Wilson singled off Bob Ayrault (02), Alicea followed with his eighth
triple of the season and scored on a
(See NL OD Page 5)

The Meigs County Bikers
Association would like to thank
the following individuals and
business for their support of
our Hog Roast benefiting Meigs
County Senior Citizens.
POMEROY
Meigs County Public
Ubrary
Meadows Shoe and
Leather Repair
Kelly's Corner
Five Points Express

ALBANY
Whaley's Grocery
Zenis Blankenship
Marshall's
Excavating
RUTLAND
Fryes
Cycle Parts
'

ATHENS •
WEST VIRGiliA
The Dog T-Shirt Shop
Meigs Co. Senior Citizens The Hartford Bar
Center
COLUMBUS
The Scooter Stop
The Scooter Stop Bar
The Big Bike Shop
The Whiskey Still
O'Harley's Bar
The Stop By the Shop

Our next Scheduled event is a
Poker Run on Sept. 5th and 6th.
As always, the proceeds will
benefit charity.

NadonaiiMkeiltd Allotlalloa

MINNESOO'A 11MBERWO~VES ­
Sipod BobM&lt;Com, f..,.ud.

FootbaU
Natkmal Football Leapa
C!NC!NMATI BENGALS - SiJnod
Carl Pidum, wicle naiv•, W a Lhrw·
year oootnct.. Waived Ou:il BurDI, defmli'Ye end: Troy Faunce, punter; Iuon
PllwnbU, q......,..., IIIII Moot Bauan
Uld l.ury Piu., wido .Uvm.

a.EVELAND BROWNS - Woivod

'"'"""'
llill, COWBOYS
ccmert&gt;odt - Sipod y,.
DALUS
•on Smith, lincblet.-, 1o 1 throo-yeu con-

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

Sianed
Muir. D'Onofrio, linebtc:ka, Ia a thzw.
yeu contract. and O.adol WU.on, wide:
receiver, to a_t~_1CI! connct.
LQS ANGI!Ll!S RAIDERS - Sipod
Dam! Hopper, comuback. Relcucd

Mike Reddick, wMie 180C!iver.

Hockey

Natk&gt;ftal Hockey Leaaut
BOSTON BRUlNS - Sianed One

2
2

Pwlin, .......

I

2

lbcl&lt;&lt;U, pltaldct.

SAN JOSE SI!AIWI - Sianod JdT

Milw.ubo
11

Calltomla

This Is your Invitation to sen any Hem for $100 or less and advertise It FREE. Simply clip this
coupon (photo copies not accepted), fill In your·ad and mall It to us or dfop It off at our
office. Your ad will run for 1 week.

Kinoll
(Wekh 9 ·l) , 10:lli_~"!!;
Tuu (Brown
at S.nlc (FJcm»alM), I0:3l p.m.

Major league leaders
National Leap
- X:Nk, Plillad•lp:hi•,
Phllblll'ak. :335;

.327: DeSbields,
Cbico.., .311;
.311: CansiDiti,

--CMl Hae·
CALL BY NOON TOD'AYANPGETCABLETV INSTALLED BY

E!
AUGUST 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
FREE SAME-DAY INSTAllATION (REG. 539,95)
PLUS-FIRST MONTH'S SERVICF ONLY '9.95. A'49.90 SAYINGS
. .
-;. .
. .. "
"
-··

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - The way
Glenallen Hill' sees i~ teams lcnow
by now that the Cleveland Indians
don't.¢nk anymore.
"I think teams are starting to
realize that they can't take Cleveland lightly," he said Wednesday
night after singling in the go-ahead
run in a 4c3, I 1-inning victory over
the New YOIIt Yankees:
Cleveland is 33-31 following a
14-30 stan. Hill is playing better,
too. He hit .297 in July and is batting .265 overall. StiU, he dOCSil't
lilce Yankee Stadium or the Yan·
tees. He was 1 for 20 against New
York this season before his key hit
"I wouldn't know it from the
way l swing the bat in New Yorlc,"
he said of his hot streak. "I can't
hit the Yanlcees."
With the score tied at 3-3. Carlos Baerga led off the 11th with a
double off Tim .Burl:e (2-2). Paul

(Note: 15 Word Limit 1nd Your Selling Prlc:t Mult Be In Your FREE Ad)
(Sorry, this does not 1pply to Y1rcl Slln)

Sorrento, who hit a tWo-run homer
in the first for a 3-0 lead, advanced
Baerga with a groundout and Mark
Whiten was intentionally walked.
That brought up Hill, who singled
up the middle through an infield at
double-play depth.
"He had Sb'Uck me out the time
before and I looked bad," Hill said.
"I toll! myself I was going to get
jammell, but I got jammed in the
n'gh t.spot."
New York, which had tied the
game on a pair of solo homers by
Charlie Hayes - his first multihome~ game- and Jim Leyritz's
RBI single, had a chance to come
back again in the bottom of the
11th. Kevin Maas popped to Baerga in short right with one out, but
the second baseman dropped the
baU. However, Maas tried for second and Baerga recovered in time
10 throw him OUL

"I wa8 going as hard as I could Cleveland won for the eighth time
out of the box,'·' Maas said. "If I in 13.
had to do it over again, I probably
•'We hit a lot of baUs on the
wouldn'~ go. Today was a situation button," Showalter said, "but
where the ball was PfObably too that's the way it goes.''
shallow to go to second. It's a situDerek LiUiquist (5-2) pitched
ation where you probably can't two hitless innings for the victory .
afford to run 100 percent because Dennis Coole got a no-decision for
you get caught in between."
the fifth time in his last seven starts
Cleveland manager Mike Har• to go along with two wins. He gave
grove said, however, Maas failed to up two runs and four hits in 6 2/3
. hustle.
innings.
· "He just got caught that time
"He just ran out of gas," Har·
not running very hard," Hargrove grove saJd.
said. "That's cau$ht 99 times. You
Yankees starter Shawn HiUegas
look bad the one ume it's not." , allowed t11ree runs and seven hits in
Yankees manager Buclc Showal- seven innings against the team that
ter saw it differently and said he released him on March 31. He
dido 't have any problem with matched his career high with seven
Maas' move.
strikeouts and walked one.
"He got caught out there in no"Shawn is a good pitcher,"
man's land where he couldn't get Hargrove said. "He just dido 't fit
back," Showalter said.
for what we ane trying to do here,
No matter, New York lost for and so we had to let him go.' •
the fifth time in six games and

Oakland tops Texas 4-3 to take first in AL Wes~
By The Associated Press
The Oaldand Athletics ane looking good because Dennis Eckersley
has never looked better.
With their star relief pitcher
extending his record strealc to 39
saves, the Athletics beat the Texas
Rangers 4-3 Wednesday night and
took over first place in the AL
West.
"My favorite word in baseball
is relentless," said Oakland manager Tony La Russa. "When we
won the three pennants, we were
relentless. We're starting to show
those qualities."
.
Eck!lrsley, who earlier broke
Tom Henke's consecutive save
record of 25, recorded the final
four outs for his 35th straight save
this season. With their lOth victory
in 12 games, Oakland (64-43)
moved a game ahead of Minnesota,
a 9-5 Iosee to Chicago.
Eckersley preserved Ron Darling's lOth victory, pitching out of
trouble in the ninth when the
Rangers put a man on third with
IWOOUL

Geno Petralli singled off Eckersley to lead off the ninth and had
moved to third on a sacrince and a
groundout when Ruben Sierra
pinch-hiL Eckersley went to 2-0,
then threw two strilces across the
outside edge of the plate before
Sierra flied ow IIi end ihe game.
"I got behind 2-0 to Sierra and I
wasn't going to ~ive in to him,"
Eckersley said. • I didn't want to
walk him. I was afraid he'd steal
second and then they'd be in position to win the game.
"This was a tough-save situa·
lion, but it would have been a more
hatrowing effort if the runner was
on third with one out instead of
Darling (10-8) scattered six hits
over seven innings berore Jeff Par-

"'"-GREEN BAY PACICERS -

0
I

Indians edge Yanks 4-3 in 11 frames ·

two.''

Basketball

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rett relieved bini to start the eill_hth.
Texas star.ter Bobby Witt (9·9)
stru~led to find the strilce zone in
his stx·inning performance, walking seven.
Jerry Browne lcnocked in two
runs for the Athletics.
Elsewhere, it was Toronto 5,
Boston 4; Baltimore 4, Detroit 0;
Milwaukee 8, Seattle I; and Kansas
City S, California 2.
While SOli 9, Twins 5
Charlie Hough finally won his
200th career game - in his sixth
try.
The 44-year-old Hough (5-7)
pitched 7 2/3 innings, gave up eight
hits, walked two and struck out
four at home.
In 794 games - including 376
stans- Hough's career record is
200-186.
Robin Ventura had three hits,
including a three-run homer, to
pace Chicago's 17-hitalt.ack.
Blue Jajs 5, Red Sox 4
Pinch-hitter John Olerud singled
home two runs off Jeff Reardon in
the eighth inning.
Blue Jays mantger Cite Gaston,
starting pitcher Todd Stottlemyre
and second baseman Roberto Alomar _were ejected for arguing with
umprres.
With Boston leading 4-3,
Toronto loaded the bases in the
eiglith off Daryl Irvine (2·1) on
Alfredo Griffin's double, Dave
Winfield's walk and Pat Tabler's
single.
.
Mark Eichhorn (4-S) pitched
two innings of one-hit, shuto-ut
relief and T_om Henke got three
outs for his 20th save.
· Orioles 4, Titers o
Mike Mussina pitched a five·
hitter and Mike Devere&amp;WI capped
a four-rull seventh with a two-run
single.

Mussina (11-4) struck out nine
and walked one.
John Kiely (3·1) was the loser.
Brewers 8, Mariners 1
Bill Wegman allowed four hits
over seven innings ror his lOth victory and the Brewers parlayed the
wildness of Seattle left-bander
Randy Johnson into an easy victory.
Wegman (1Q-8) was in control
and Johnson (7-12) wasn't. Wegmao gave up four singles, walked
none and struck out three during
his seven innings.
·
Johnson allowed six wallcs, run·
ning his major league-leading total
to 97. He also hit batter - his

tttermal
50 lb. bag IIJ050BO ............... .

297
-----~
..•~

Clllrll mMI
••
ll'llllflllil ...........................

Phone I: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ___

=IBIIIIIIII

...

U.LL~TOPAY

PHONE 1·800·344·3331'
H UR RY OFFEn ENDS SOON'

IF YOU
ALWPYHAVICAILE, CALL TOSIE HOWYOUCAN'lT AFREEMOHTII.
..........It ............ .................. o...w.. ............... ..
~

....... ~~~ .......... ~. _,........,.. ....... .,., ...............o.r ....... .....

....................... ,...,.....,._Ok ............

Man fo:

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(otrw tXpiiM 8131182)

LARGE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

I

Grid, Xeon,

Hot Geotron
•C903. •C904 .
tC906, IC907

... 97='.:-

7
$1

NLgames ...
(Continued from Page 4)
sirigle by pinch-hitler Gerald Perry.
Donovan Osborne (8-6) pitched
the seventh, allowing Lenny Dykstra's RBI single. Lee Smith got
the last three outs for his NL-lead•
ing 26th save.
·
Astros 7, Dod&amp;en '
The As1ros improved to 4-5 on
their mantthon road trip by rallying
for two ninth-inning runs.
Steve Finley had four hits and
three RBis and Jeff Bagwell's SCC·
ond.run-scoring single put Houston
ahead to stay against Roger
McDowell (4·8). Rob Murphy (3·
1) goi the win and Doug Jones
worked the ninth lor his 23rd fllve.
Carlos Hernandez hit a two-run
homer and Brett Butler had a tworun single in a four-run .fifth inning
for L.A. after the Astros took a 4-0
lead.

2!~

-=·
II fllll'l

11

49 ~.~.

.... •s--~1

ENGINES

FOR 50,000 MILES
AND MORE! Super·
~~~ PTFE resins
reouce trk:llon during

Sllllri ·OJPS and Bkesset .

One lf811lmenl protect•
tcr mote lhM 50,000
mileS

8'-"
....
.......

19

.... 95

13sziR
...

SUFI~

,_1111 I liP

!o~~
...

FAIR SPECIAL!

The Daily Sentinel

T II

11040

\

'

9' .....
1'1
Ill

CMrl

the ftrlngs were done to ma1ce way
for new ownership, which will
instaU its own front-office person·
nel. ~tc~ said he was shocked by
the dismissals. _
.
.
Anderson said working Witho~t
' his longtime ~nd ~p!Jell "~
be the most dtsappomung thmg
that has ever happened in my
career."
Anderson's contract to manage
the Tigers is guaranteed for two
more years. That means he gets
paid whether or not ~e ~es the
team. Anderso~ S8ld he "':Ill s~y
after the club IS s.old - If he IS
wanted.

DOMINO'S PIZZI
anw............,
992•2124

Nlm.~·-----------------------------------------------------

TURNS DOUBLE PLAY- New York sbortstop RIDdy Velarde ;
looks to fire to firiit after retiring Cleveland's Carlos Baerga at sec· :
ond base to turn tbe double play in tbe tbird iDDinll or Wedllesday :
nigbt's Americaa League game in Polew York, wbltll tbe Iadians
won 4-3 in'll inaings. (AP)

against

Anderson's future secure
even after su"ounding ousters
DETROIT (AP) - There isn't
much security in the Detroit Tigers
organization these days. Even
Sparlcy Anderson admits a guaranteed ccntract might not be enough
to save his job.
But Anderson isn't worried
about his baseball future whether it's in Detroit or elsewhere.
"I win or I win," Anderson said
shortly after Tigers president Bo
Schembechler and chairman Jim
Campbell were fued Monday by
owner Tom Monaghan.
"I'm not in a position to be
hurt," Anderson SBid. "Jim Campbell was my best friend in this
game, the most honest man I've
ever me~ but he wasn't my security. I talce care of my own security:'
Monaghan, who also owns
Domino's Pizza Inc., is working on
a deal to seU the American League
East team to rival pizza Icing Mike
llitch, owner of the NHL D!ltroit
Red Wings and Litlle Ceasar's
Ertterprises Inc.
The sale price is believed to be
around $85 million.
The deal is awaiting the
appro~al of major league baseball's
other owners, expected by fall.
Monaghan ftred Schembechler
and Camptiell without explanation.
Schembechler got the word by
fax. Campbell was telephoned in
Cooperstown, N.Y., where he had
attended Hall of Fame inductions
Sunday.
·
Andrlson, hired by CampbeU as
manaaer in 1979, said he believes

major league-leading 16th - and
threw two wild pitches.
Royals S, Anetls 2
George Brett had four singles to
tie Frank Robinson on the all-time
hit list and move ahead of Rogers
Hornsby in total bases.
Brett's third four-hit game of the
season pumped his average to .277,
his highest since April 13, and
raised his hit total to 2,943, tying
him with Robinson for 21st alltime. His 4,715 total bases eclipsed
Hornsby for 17th all-time.
Gregg Jefferies also had four
hits as Tom Gordon (5-9) won.
Rookie Julio Valera (5-9) took the
loss.

,

-

••

..__.. ., •• s•
. . , _ LOW Prlct·•-•*""

EVOfl'IIY

niiiliill:

99
PICIUP
ONLY!

...
,
,.,-·
WMDPI

•
'•

I

I

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Stortllourt: 8:30 • .m. lo 8 p.m.llondoy llvo&lt;f9h Flldoy,
8:30 un. tO 7 p.rn. Saturct1y, and I 1.m. tO 5 p.m. Sundly

GAUIPOUS

2011 Upper River R011d
••• 3107
AupJIZ, Itn

•
•
•

·'

=-=
ill

•
•

'•
~

l

''

,,

..•..

�1992

Thursday, August'&amp;, 1992

l'omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 T1le Dally Sentinel

~·t Barcelona,

Wife diagnosed with MS doesn't Laudermilt First birthday
named
queen
want to deal with the illness alone

.

Tennis among few shining ·areas for U.S.
By STEVE WILSTEIN
BARCELONA, S~ain (AP) Carl Lewis has the c .ance tonight
to stamp the Olymp1cs with his
unique signature, as he did the
Summer Games of 1984 and 1988,
and as no one else has so far this
year.
Denied the opportunity to prove
he's still the world's fastest human,
Lewis can soar into history and
make these Games his own with
one mighty leap.
The 30-foot barrier in the long
jump - as imposing as the fourminute mile was 40 years ago world record and a third straight
gold in the jump all loom within
Lewis' rench.
As Day 13 of the Olympics
began today , dozens of athletes
have graced the Games with their
suength, speed, courage and skiDs.
But none has been so singularlY.
distinguished as Lewis would be 1f
he llies past30 feeL
History was made in other ways
on Wednesday, not all of it good
for U.S. teams.
One dynasty ended - the U.S.
women's basketball team lost 7973 in the semifinals 10 the Unified
Team - and another continued as
Cuba won the gold in baseball by
crushing Taiwan I 1-1. Japan beat
the U.S. baseball team 8-3 for the
.
.bronze.
The heavdy favored hoopsters,
so conf1dent o_f gold,
, have been
rcduced 10 b~ttli ng .or ~ronze after
losmg 79-73 m the semifinals.

a

plays Steffi Graf for the gold Friday. Graf beat American Mary Joe
Fernandez 6-4, 6-2.
The U.S. volleyball team stayed
on oourse for a medal, beating the
Unified Team in four SClS ro gain a
semifinal meeting with Brazil.
The Unified Team, meanwhile,
kept its lead in .medals with 84
total, 35 gold. The United States
had 74 m~s. 21 gold, and· Germany had 57 medals, 18 gold.
At the track,. there were many
unanswered questions and ine~pbcable resultS on a day when the
Olympic Stadium looked like a
five-ring ciltus.
It was hard to figure that Quincy
Watts, a newcomer in the 400
meters, could win in such spectacu·
lar time - 43.50 seconds, the secand-fastest in history. He broke the
Olympic record of 43.71 he set in
the semifinals; only Butch
Reynolds' world record of 43.29 is
quicker. .
It was suange 10 see Michael
Johnson, 1991 world champiop in
the 200. fail to qualify for the
finals, while lesser known teammate Milce Marsh won his semifinal heat in the 200 in 19.73, only
.01 seconds off the world record.
J o hnson, weakene d by a recent
virus, finished sixth in his heat.
"In the home stretch, I just
didn't feel like Michael Johnson. It
just wasn 't there," Johnson said.
1twas as hock 10 see decathlete
Dave Johnson nearly foul out of the

shot put, then watch him get an
extra throw from a kindly official
and stay in contention for the JIOid
with bis best~ ever. He's nmlh,
more than 350 points behind Geemanf s Paul Meier at 4,510, but
JOhnson's strength is in the second·
day of the 10-event competition
that defines the world's greatest
athlete.
Johnson clearly fouled on his
first two attempts, then his third try
was ruled a foul by one official and
fair by another.
" Fortu~ately, the bigger and
more powerful referee said it was a
fair throw," JOhnson said. "I have
never seen anything lite what happened there. I can't remember it
happening."
Lewis, meantime, glided on'
cruise conuol when he qualified for
the fmals on his fust and only jump
- 28 feeL 5 3/4 inches. That was
.exactly a foot and a half farther
than anyone else and nearly two
feet farther than hobbled world
reoordholderMikcPowell.
"My goal was my best qualifying mark ever, and 1 did that,"
Lewis said, showing he's recovered
completely from the virus that
eak ned h' 10
· the 01
· ""·'
w
e
un
yrnplc
in June and knocked him out ofuuus
the
·
sp~~~ so excited right now. A
world record is possible, but I'm
·
red'
th'
gomg
to try 1not
any mg.
I'm ready.
feeltoPreally•ctgood.
It's
good to be back tom self"
Y

Dear Ana Landera: My heart
is going to break if I don't tell
Slliii!'OIIC OOw I feel. The person who
needs 10 be tdd ia my husband. fil
I've Uied, but it doesn't help. Maybe
lle'U read this in your Column fil
understand.
_Last ~ber. I was~
With multiple sclerosis. So far, I've
been able to handle my anxiety
and despair. However, I recently
attended a seminar sponsored by
the local chapter of the National
Multiple Scltiosis Society anci after
seeing the unfortunate condition of
so many of the people there, I
became overwhelmed and broke
down. All I could think of was
gelling home so my husband could
comfort me until I was able 10 pull
myself together.
When I arrived home, I asked him
to hold me and I wept in his arms.
The whole time I was talking, he
had one eye on the TV. Apparellly,
I had come home with my emotional
neediness and interrupted a show he
was watching.
As his TV progmm continued, and
I kept talking quietly, he would
glance at me and then bl!ck at the
screen. I could tcll he wished I would
be quiet so he could give his full
attention 10 the show. He might just
as weD haw slapped me in the face.
Having MS is hard enough. Must
I also accept the fact that n1 be
dealing with ·it alone? •• C.H.,
BURLINGTON, N.C.
DEAR C.H.: Spouses who dQn't
undenltand the nature of an illness
often renct inappropriaiely out of

•

Life JIM
at Olympics one big commercial for Dave

'

·~·
·
... . . . ...
";"c;o.~

.,..
;.

TOUGHEST LOSS OF ALL - U.S. pitcher BJ. Wallace or
MonroeviUe, Ala., hangs bis bead after tbe American team lost 8·3
·to Japan Ia the Olympic bronze medal game Wednesday in
'Barcelona, Spain, as coacb Dave Snow or Long Beach, Calif., walks
,by. (AP)

Reynolds believes he'll
run in the next Games

\

The loS$ came at the expense of
a group considered to be the best
whomen's team ever assembled in
t e UnitedoStates, one that had a
three-time Olympian, five other
veterans of the 1988 Seoul Games
and six other players with vast
internatioital experience.
" I'm not shocked because any
time you step on the ooun any team
can lose ... " guard Teresa Edwards
said. " But we have a team with a
lot of talent, and it's hard to realize
all that talent couldn' t come
through in a game."
In baseball, the United States
ended a tournament full of disappointment with the biggest one of
all Wednesday - failing 10 win a
medal. The pitching unraveled
under pressure once again and the
offense went flat
.The Americans' failure stung so
deeply that several players said
they never would have gone out for
the team had they known it would
come'IO this.
"We have nothing to show for
this but fond memories," outfielder
Jeffrey Hammonds said.
Jennifer Capriati should have
some fond memories of her day.
She showed plenty of courage
and stam1'na 1'n beallll
' g Barcelona's
O\Yil Arantxa Sanchez Vicario 6-3,
3-6, 6-1 with Spanish King Juan
Carlos in the stands.
" It was tough out there, but I
blocked 1·1out pretty well , 1 th•'nk,"
said the 16-year-old Capriati, who

By RUSTY MILLER
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Butch Reynolds fervently believes
that be won't be watching the next
Olympics on television.
" Who's to say what's going 10
happen four years from now? If I
didn' t have faith, I wouldn't be
here today. Because this has been
too much for one individual to handle," the world-record holder in
the 400 meters said Tuesday. " I
believe I have another Olympics in
me. I definitely believe it'll be the
best Olympics of my life. With the
odds against me, I think it'll be a
fantastic lime for myself and for
my family ."
The International Amateur Ath·
letics Federation banned Reynolds
from competition after a positive
test for steroids two years ago .
Reynolds fou~ht the ban and, due
to questions tn the testing procedure, was cleared by The Athletics
Congress, the sanctioning body for
traek in the U.S.
In order to compete in the U.S.
Olympic uials in June, he sought
and received a Supreme Court
order. But a fifth-place finish in the
finals locked him out of Barcelona.
So. he was lert to watch it at
home on television.
"It's funny because my mother
and my wife both said, 'Why
you watching this? Don' t watch
this. You're only going to be upset
and have an attitude and we're
going to have to deal with it, not
them.' "
Reynolds, who will bj: 32 when
the Olympic flame burns in Atlanta
in four years, couldn't turn away
from the TV Monday night as
Quincy Watts nearly broke his
world record in a preliminary heaL
" I want to watch this because I
did not do anything to not be
there," he said. "In '84, I didn' t
make the team and it was hard for
me to watch the Olympics because
my ability just wasn't enough t&lt;i
make the team. This is a whole different scenario.
"I tell the people who support
me, 'Watch the Olympics. Don 't
show hatted because of what a few
people are doing to me. · Th e
Olympics are still great and these
guys are still representing the Unit·
ed States."
Still working out and lifting
weighu daily. he said he's tired of
fighting to clear his name and is
now focused on regaining his status
as the world' s premier quartermiler.
Reynolds' suspension ends Aug.
i2, although the JAAF has threat·
ened to extend the ban. Reynolds
said he doesn't see how an exten·
si.on could be justified, but that

nothing surprises him anymore.
"I didn't do anything to get the
two-year suspension that I have
and I proved that on the track and
in the courtroom. I can't do much
more to prove my innocence," he
said.
Reynolds said he hoped to
return to international competition
Aug. I4 in London and would then •
run again five days later in Zurich,
Switzerland, where he set the 400
standard of 43.86 seconds in 1988.
He said he wished the best for
the U.S. runners in the 400 in
Barcelona and would welcome a
head-to-head showdown with the
gold-medal winner in Europe.
Sounding tired of the legal bat·
ties, Reynolds said he would be
happy to look ahead again. And
that might mean mending fences
with the IAAF.
"Hopefully our relationship can
get better," he said. "I 'm really
praying that Butch Reynolds and
the federation can somehow come
to an agreement and put the past
behind and can look forwaro to the
future of uack and field . I've
always been a positive for the
sport . ... and I want to show the
positive side of it all again."
·

By
UTKE
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Even with Dan no longer at his
side, life still must seem like one
big commercial to Dave. Because
at the very moment he nearly was
lulled into the same trap that
devoured ~an. fate grabbed Dave
and ordered a second take.
Competing in the third event. of
first-day . competition in the
decathlon, Dave Johnson heaved
the shot three times. And each .
time, almost before it landed, up
popped a judge's red flag indicating Johnson bad fouled by stepping
across the toe barrier at the front of
the ciltle.
" I thought 1 was out, " Dave
said. "I was going to plead my
case, bull didn't think 1 had much

of a chance. 1 was wondering,
'What next?'"
Well, there is always the NBC
broadcast booth, which is where
DanO'BrienwasWednesdaywhen
all this took place.
You remember Dan. He was the
reigning decathlon world champion
and Dave's foil in the $25 miUion
Reebok ad campai~n ihat began
with a question - • Pan or Dave:
Who is the world's greatest athlete?"- and ended with the catch·
phrase: " To be settled in
Barcelona.''
Dan made it to Barcelona. all
right, but not in a position to settle
anything. During the U.S. Olympic
trials two months ago, O'Brien
passed the first height in the pole
vaull , missed three times at the

next and failed to qualify for the
U.S. team. .
. .
That daunung, ~aun.un~ mem~
ry was on Johnson s mmd 1rnrn~l·
a_tely after he saw redfor the _th1rd
ume. The~ he.stood m ~e cu'Cie,
hands on h1s h1ps, disbelief etched
across those Hollywood good
!oaks. He glared at the J_udge holdmg the flag that meant d•squal•ficauon, the_n stared downfi~ld where a
second Judge was runmng to measure the throw. .
Sudd~nly, as~~ on cue, a referee
wallced •.n10 the PICture and to~ard
the first Judge. Ther. be~an talking.
' ' l,t seemed hke '' took an
hour, ' Johnson sa1d. "B~ II v.;as
really only three or four mmutes. '
Dunng !hell' very m~ured con. vcrsauon, pave stood m the cucl_e
nymg II? discern somethmg m thell'
expression~ and stJugghng to rem
m hiS emouons..
~ew peo_pl~ m ~e ~rowd, meanwh1le , exh1blled Similar restramt.
Scattered wh!stles and catcalls
began cascadmg down from the
enhance performance," he said. stands, becommg a full -throated
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Jud Logan said he is devastated at _"Upon hearing that Clenbuterol jeer whc,m the officials; conference
broke up and Johnson entered the
becoming the first U.S. athlete in was to be put on the banned lis~ I circle
for one more take.
16 years to test positive for steroids immediately stopped its use."
at the Olympics.
He said he didn ' t know the
drugs he had taken were banned.
Logan, the Amc:rican recordholder from North Canton, Ohio,
was disqualified after finishing a
surprise fourth in the hammer
throw.
In a statement today, he said he
had taken Clenbuterol from Octo·
ber 1991 until February 1992
because it was recommended as •'a
safe alternative to steroids. " The
medication is listed by the International Olympic Committee as an
anabolic steroid to ueat asthma.
Two British weightlifters were sent
horne last week after testing posi·
live for the drug.
"As all athletes, (I) look for
safe, legal vitamins 111d minerals 10

Logan barred from Olympics
after positive test for steroids

'

BuebaU
NEW YORK (AP) - Brett Butler of Los Angeles. who hit .442
with 12 RBis and 18 stolen bases
in .July, was named National
League player of the month. Tom
Glavine of Atlanta, S-0 with a 1.42
ERA in 38 innings in July, was
named pitcher of the mOIIth.
r

Our
Clearance Sale
Continues

Ailn
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"DH, LooAD&amp;ola

n.aSJDdlcolellld
CruklnS,........'

fear and ignorance. Your husband
needs 10 be educated, and I hope
you will enlist the help of your
doctor 10 do just that.
Keep attending the meetings of
the local MS society. This alfdiation
can be enormously helpful in the
days ahead. And good luck to you,
dear. When you learn more about
MS, you will find reason 10 be
·optimistic arid less afraid.
Dear Ann Landera: My daughter, "Lisa," always dreamed ora big,
beautiful wedding. This would be
possible except for one factor -· her
father. "Lisa" does not want him to
give her away or even attend the
wedding. '
My ex-husband and I have been
divorted for. 12 years, and it was
a horrifying experience. ' John"
became hostile and punitive,
refusing to support his children
emotionally or financially. Now self-addressed, long, bllSiMss-size
he wants to take credit for their envtlope and a checlc or money
success and get in on all the good order for $3.65 (this includes
posltlge and luzndling) to: Teens,
stuff.
We are sliD tolerating bim and clo Ann Landers. P.O. Box //562,
his despicable behavior because of Chicago. Ill. 606ll-0562. (In
CllNlda, send $4.45.)

STEPQANIE LAWSON

Raf11e lllaelt siiir:~ !~
..

AMERICA'S
TEaiNDI.OGV STORE'"
.
.

l::Xcellent rlaiUe! Cllllllllete IDne PC System

SAVE'8B1

TANDY"
lndudes
Easy-to-Use
DeskMate"'
Software

~liD

IMIUCIH Prllllt r Piptf, Ctbte
and 3·PK- of Jv.• Dilkenn

IJETff II.L
REAllY 111M:
••1011111111
•l»foHAMIIItlr
e lilt ,.,. , .

P-RICES REDUCED ·EVEN
MORE!
On Fine Wearing
Apparel For
Men and Women

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

:£

• Tandy 1000 RLX PC • 2·button mouse
HYMN SING PLANNED • A hymn sing wiD
be held Friday at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy parkJng
lot stage spoasored by HIUslde Baptist Cburcb.
Pictured is the Redeemed Quartel wbo wiD per·

FURNITURE

*UUNDRY*

*UVIIG lOOM*

•Whllll W•tinghouH Full ll.zt Laundry S.t
Wu $711.15 tei. ..........................NOW $538.85 HI clc
olllglc Chll HMYy Duty 20 lb. Laundry Set
Wu SIC!a.l5 Ht......................_ .... NOW $788.00 HI
•YI?IIte W..linghouH Dllux• Laundry s.t
Wu S121.15..............- .................... NOW $&amp;1111.00 HI

· W• ...................- ...........,_,,........... fti)W $481.00
o2 pc. Early AIMrlcan Living Room Suite
Wa S711.15 ............,_ .................. ......... NOW $41111.00
o£nglllld/Coulr StctiOIIII w/2.rtcllnlta
W• S11tU5 ....... .. _ ___ , ___ ___ NOW 51011.00

*REFRIGEUTORS

•RECUIERS•

•14 CU. FL 2 Door Froal Fr•
Wa $51111.15...........- ........................NOW $441.15 clc
olllglc Chll Dtluu 21 CU. F~
wncelllllcer, Wa SI31.15...................... NOW $733.00
•White W..tinghouH 22 CU. Ft. Sldl-by·Sidl
Wu SI081.15 .......................................... NOW $888.00
olllglc Chii2A CU. F~ wile• I wat•ln lht door
Wu SI541.15 ........................................ NOW $111111.15

*APPLIANCES*
•White W..tinghouH Gu or Electric Aongo
WM S31111.15 ........................................... NOW $288.00
•Whllt W..tinghouHI,IncWcounltf DilhwMher
W~ 11421.15......................... - .............. NOW $2U.OO
•Whllt W..linghouN I CU. Ft. Chttt Fr- ·
Wu $3-it.IS .......- ................................. NOW szee.OO

•ELECTRONICS
WM $44t.l5 .......................................... NOW 1322.00
•Ztnhh 25" Dloot- c-ote Aemolt Sltfeo/TV
WM $779.15 ............... ........................ ... NOW fl22.00
•Aullallc VCR, cable rucly/Nmolt on .., _
W11 $271.85 ......................._ .................. NOW S23t.DO

I

o3 Pc. lola, Ch ..., lou IIIII, vinyl.

•lWo Potlllon, W• S1111.15.:.................... NOW $111.15
•Aclicn t... Aedl..... two ootora
W.. $4111.15 ... ........._ .. ....... - . ........... NOW $311.00

*IEDROOM*
o4 Pc. Badlo0111 8ullt, WM $541.00 .......... NOW S311.00

o5 Pc. YMighM IIMttll Btdroom Built
W.. S121111.00 ...........- ............................ NOW .....00
oFiwo Dr- Chttlt... . ........................ ~..... NOW $41.115
oCiot-1 On AI W-lledo

~'
,o ••···~··

,.....

NO MONI'f DOWN
LOW IIONTHL' MYIIIIHTI

Deborali Hauber, Long Bottom,
was recognized as a Sales VIP by
The Longaberger Company at its
national convention, attended by
more than 4,500 people recently.
Lopgaberger Associates are recognized as VJPs for selling more
than $30,000 in producu in a year
as pan of the company's independent conuac10r sales program. As a
VIP, Hauber appeared on stage at
the convention and received a specially-handcrafted award basket.
YIP's were also honored at a gala
luncheon at the home of the com- ·
~;~er and Cl!O Dave

o5 Pc. Mtltl Dlntllt, W• $24t.II ............. NOW S144.oo
o5 Pc. Wood Truotell, W.. SMt.I5-----NOW S24t.l5
o5 Pc. Wood Cllw Bate Dlntllt
W.. S4tt.OO- .... ....- - --NOW S411.00 lupMBuy

*liDDING*
*MISC.•
oQek CUrio, W• 5211.00...- ..................... NOW $111.00
.0., ltd, _,...., W• $241.00............NOW $151.00
oOvll Cohe • Box End T......
Wa Sl411.15 ....._ ..,......................... NOW IM.OO .._

I

INGELS

~ · (6~{
F~YOUA

Hauber recognized

"DINING ROOM*

All ·Scratch &amp;Dent, Closeouts, &amp;Odds &amp;End• Up lo 50" Off

THAnMwm pw
Al'PLY TODAY

' The 21st annual reunion .of the
Yeauger family was held Sunday at
Silver Run Baptist Church.
Attending were Alex. Terri and
Justin Halley, Chris Maynard, Bob
and Gerry Halley, Marvin and
LuciUe Yeauger, Sharon and Milce
Parker, Lawrence Yeauger, Sue,
Xantha, Brandy , Matthew and
Laura Smith, Bryan Betting, Kenneth and Rita Yeauger, Terry,
Nickolas and Autumn McLaughlin,
Jennifer Yeauger. Jerry Yeauger,
Debbie and Josiah Rawson, Eric,
Christi Smith, Ray, Tracey, Jacob
and Ashiee Smith, Tina and Barry
Johnson, Amy, Joshua and Raben
Hanin~. Lester Y~ger and Helen
Wachmger, Norman and Dorothy
Yeauger, Reva Beach, Paul and
Ethel Yeauger, Alfred and Hilda
Yeauger, Don and Marlene
Yeauger, Gene and Sanlea

olprtnv All Poature, W• SIII.OO...NOW SIIII.OO .._ pc.

•Z..Ith 20"' Diag. Aernatl Color TV

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 892-2635
TOLL FREE (BOO) 426-5581
I

Reg. Sep1r1te Items 1280 .28.

form along wltb Tbe CbUdrea of God, Joyful
Hearts, God's L.lttle Lambs, Linda Jones, The
Young Rejoicers and The Partakers.

125 ·145214044/26 ·13012881432 12866

.

Add a 40MB HD (#25-1048) for only $200 morel

Families gather for 21st reunion

MAJOR APPLIANCES

'

•

"!'felt like all of Spain was
against me .... I'd never been booed
before," he said. " But if I'd been
in their shoes, I might have dwle
the same thing."
··
Instead, Johnson tucked the shot
beneath his chin and began rocking
slowly back and forth at the far end
of the circle, trying to time his
move forward with the surge of his
muscles. Now coiling, now spinning and finally, exploding, Johnson let go of the metal ball and
watched with an intensity that even
his ever-present sunglasses could
not disguise.
As a teen-ager growing up in
Missoula, Mont., Johnson pnded
himself on being something of a
hell-raiser, pointed on a coUision
course ·with trouble. A dozen years
ago, after his family moved to CorvaUis, Ore., sports becaine the !lfi·
ority in his life. Through a h1gh
school football teammate, he came
to embrace fundamentalist Christianity.
•
As he traced the flight of the
shot across the midday sky Johnson thought about the path his own
life had foDowed.
·

Sharon Old~ r was the best
weeldy loser at Tuesday's meeting
of Oh10 TOPS Club No. 570. The
KOPS loser was Julia HyseU. Judy
Laudermilt was honored as July
queen.
Calista Searls conducted the
meeting that opened with TOPS
pledge and prayer . .Officers and
weight reports were given.
Sharon Mas;ters won the fruit
basket and the gadget gift was won
by Terri HiD.
A workshop will be held at the
Gallia County! Fairgrounds with
time to be anno,\mced.
A total of $.'100 was made from
the group's bal:e sale beld recently.
The group will begin showing a
series of Jenn)' Craig tapes on losing weighL
Secret pals were revealed and
new secret siSIIers drawn.
Virginia Dean and Calista Searls
presented brief programs.
.
It was ann.ounced that KOPS
will be honon:d this month with a
date to be announced.
Singing to the queen dismissed
the meeting.
'

otu love for his dear lllOiha'. She is
83, in good health and very much
involved in my children's lives.
I should teD you that John was
in a terrible f~ght over drugs 12
years ago and his face was sliced
up. He didn't have plastic Sllrl!erv 10
correct the scars and now has a
frightening appeannce.
My daughter is having nightmares
ahout her fathet's presence at the
wedding. Please, Ann, teD us what
to do about this awful dilemma. -WEST PALM BEACH; FLA.
DEAR W.P. BEACH: Since your
ex-husband has given your children
lleither emotional nor financial
support for the last 12 years, plus
the fact that Lisa doesn't want 10
have anything to do with him, I
see no reason 10 invite him to the
wedding.
If yotu 83-year~ld mother-in-law
is as wonderful as you say, she
will understand and respect her
granddaughte(s wishes.
Gem of the Day: Children are
getting more ~isticated Two kids
were overlleard playing and one said,
"Let's play doctor. You operate and
111sue."
Do you have qULstions about sex,
but nil OM to lillie to? Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex and till Teen-Ager, "
is friJIIIc and to till poillt. Send a

. r--....;--""'!!!!!

Stephanie Nicole Lawson,
daughter of Rob ert and Tracy
(Manley) Lawson, Middleport. celebrated her first birthclay recently
with a party held at the home of her
grandparenu, Bob and Nancy Manley. also of Middleport.
A Minnie Mouse theme was car·
ried out in the decorations. A cake,
ice cream , chip s and pop were
served to tho se mentioned and
great-grandparents Rev. and Mrs.
OdeD Manley, her aunt and cousin,
Crystal and Timothy Dexter, and
Chris Wolfe.
Others presenting gifts were
grandparents , John and Shirley
Dunlap, Williamstown, W.Va., and
a great-grandmother, Leona Eblin,
Darwin.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

are

Sports shorts

Ohio

••

Cntltlns
Lay awap

Masttnanl
VIsa

More than 12,000 Longaberger ·
Associates sell the company's ·
handcrafted hardwood maple baskeu, Ohio-made pottery and din·
nerware and deconting accessories
lhtough home shows nationwide.
Based in ·Dresden, the
Longabergers have. continued a
family tradition of handcrafting
hardwood maple baskets since the
tum of the century. Longaberger ~
recognized as one of tlie fastest·
gro~inl s':'!'~rs of the Direct
Selling
. 18Uon.
I

Yeauger, Kimberly and Rochelle Ruby and Dick Vaughan, Elizabeth
Jenkins , Pam and Les Mead , and Richard Well, John and Ruth
Tommy . Steve, Mike Yeauger ,. Ann Carsey.

~L IS h C .

LAWRENCE'S GROCERY IS NOW CLOSED

IAVE$6a
, ,. ,.,., 8tll'lfJ

NO TRESPASSING ALLOWED

Lt:n¥ Aa S15 Per Month •

"' Dual cassettes
1,1Subwooter

CHARGES WILL BE FILED AGAINST
ANYONE FOUND ON THE PREMISES
THE LAWRENCE FAMILY
LONGIOnOM

Reg . 179.95 Nl4·757

VCR· TV

~£AL IS h C.

CUT31%
IAVE$60
A,.,.,. 8ptlkm 28·Witt Cll' C..ttl
• Great tor use with a
portable CD player
Reg. 29.95 U0-1267

Repair Center

Reg . 1•9.95 ' ' 2·1946

Low At $15 Pe' Month •

• Get mes sa~es usmg
any Touch- one phone
Reg. 79.95 U 3-399

CUT Ill%
AM/Fif t:lll:t 1111111

87% OFF
!IFill·· Mll#UIItll'
Reg. 29.99 •22-211

e AM/FM rad io
• Auto· reverse

,_CUT26%

e~ ·

MICI:IIDNTA

'" Greal tor testing
both home and au1o
electronics

Low At 115 Per Month•

.,..,.

DUO F ONE ·

Low As 130 Per Month •

• Tandy 1800 HD
e MS· DOS" 5.0
Everyday l ow Price 125·3502

• Dual alarms • Snooze
• Battery backup

• 60 mm_
• 90 min

Reg . 1.49 •44·921
Reg . 1.99 u 4-922

Rtg . 3U5 012·1578

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar Funai
.Samsung Sp~phonic
Soundesign KTV
Zenith . Philco .

E11erson
Shin lOIII
MtAII Tech
ScoH

Sylvllllia
Magnavox
GE
'

•.

• Up to 50 data entries
Reg. 12.85 165·944

391 WEST MAIN STREET

li%0Ff

814ft IFF

• "Hangs up" on
any flat surface
Tonefpul!e dialing

Rill . IUS "3·500

HoME'ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
'

ARC I-IIER

,.., ,...

RCA

. WE REPAIR ILL MAKES
.

llllee.lllaek

ACI'I•• lalt
Converts one 3.m·nnn
oullet to three
Rtg . 2 ... 9 161·2705

MS-oos· lletnseo trom M ~troson Corp Mosl banery-powl!fed ~e ms
ucluOt ba"enc~ SWITCHABLE TOUCH·TON E/PULS£ pholll!s worll on
botlt tone aM pulse 11nes Tllereto re. in areas ha ving o~ pulse.
lrotary·dlal) l ~ es. ~ou can shit use 51Nices reQUifing tones FCC rei)S·
tererl Not tor COlli or pat'ly ttnes. We servJCe what we sell.
.

r
- - - -I
I Mo- -,......

'

POMEROY, OHIO

c!~-..-.w Credit
--.a elcomt .

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING SlORES
AND DEALERS
S1l1 Prlcal End 1/12192

•

~.n

•

�•

I

.. !Pa~~~~~a~n.~~oa~u~y~Se~m~t~n~at~--~----------~--------~r~om~~~~t·:t~At~dd~t~~~n~,o~h~~~--------------------------~Th~u~~~~~~A~u~g~ua~t!6,~1!~!!2

TUURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT· "Voyage to
the Deep" is the theme for Vaca·
. -tion Bible School at ViciOly Bap·
: , list Church in Middleport through
; . Saturday from 6: ~5-8:45 p.m.
~ r nightly. Rev. James Keesee invites
; · \. children ages four and up. Call
' · 992-6302 for transpOrtation. .
RUTLAND· Rutland Church Or
the Nazarene will conduct Vacation
: 'Bible School through Frtdar from
: .· ' '9·11 :30 a.m. "Set Sail wtth the
' Savior" is the theme. Singing,
scripture memorization, bible sto, ries and crafts will be featured each
• day. The children will sing for the
; r )lloming worship service Sunday.
- ·
·
: " ·· REEDSVILLE . "Set Sail with
the .Savior" will be the theme for,
Vacation Bible School at the Fel·
::; ,. Jowship Church of the Nazarene,
Route 124, across from Forked
-- Run, through Friday from 6-8:30
: p.m. nightly. Classes for nursing
: · ·~~trough adult.
•

RACINE . There will be volun• • tary practice for all students inter: ested in playing football at South·
: • em High School through Friday of
, :; this week from 7-9 p.m. All playus
· are encouraged to anend. Mandato, ry practice will begin Monday at 7
' ·•. p.m.
: :.
. . MIDDLEPORT · Family and
~ · friends of residents at Overbrook
Centu are invited 10 meet the new
. administrator, Linda Briggle,
: .. Thursday at 7 p.m. Entertainment
:. · provided by White's Hill Band.
POMEROY · Revival at Faith
· · · Tabernacle Church on Bailey Run
. Road will be Thursday through
: · Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Brother
Noah Callicoat, evangelist. Pastor
: Emmett Rawson invites the public.

..

RACINE · Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the post home.
POMEROY • The Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet at the high
school Thursday at 7:15 p.m.

!
RACINE · A free football clinic
. for all students in the Southern
: . · Local School District entering
grades 3-8 this fall will be held
~ . . Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m. to
•••,· noon.
'
RACINE · Special meeting,
• • Southern School Board, Thursday,
. . 7 p.m. at the high school.

.

FRlDAY
" . LONG BOTTOM · Preaching
and singing at Faith Full Gospel
· · Church, Long Bottom, Friday at
: ·.7:30p.m. Pas10r Steve Reed invites
: :· the public. Fellowship will follow.
... , RIPLEY, W.VA. • The Liberty
'· Mountaineers will perform at
.: ·, Slcateland.in Ripley, W.Va. on Fri·
·.. day.

soredby lfillsideBaplistChiD'Ch.

DANVILLE· Weekend services, Danville qurch of Christ
SATURDAY
will be Saturday,r,:30 p.m. and
TUPPERS PLAINS. The Tup- Sunday, 10:30 a. . and 6 p.m.
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Denvu Hill, Fosler W.Va., speak·
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a bake u. Public invited. \
sale Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
across.from Farmers Bank in TupLOTTRIDGE;iountry music
pers Plains. All members bring night at the Louri e Community
baked goods.
Center will be S
y with binds
beginning 7 p.m. ' efreshinents
REEDSvn.LE • Soup supp« at available. Everyone ""elcome.
the home of Marvin and Dolly
"
Reed, Reedsville, Saturday, 4 p.m.
SUND-1 Y
Gospel music provided. All proRACINE • The ll!flllual Willford
ceeds go to Faith Full Gospel family reunion will tie held Sunday
ChiD'Ch, Long Bottom.
at Star Mill Park irt Racine with
potluck dinner at JIO(t,n.
FAIRPLAIN, W. VA . • The
Liberty Mountaineers will perform
RACINE • The : Racine Fire
Saturday at the Jackson County Department will :. be flushing
Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
hydrants in Racine oti Sunday. Residents be informed tney may expePOMEROY • The Big Bend rience cloudy water at this lime.
Youth FootbaU League will hold
sign up Saturday and Aug. IS from
POINT PLEAS ::ANT • The
9 a.m. to noon at the Big Bend Aaron Fry reunion W]ill be Sunday
Health and Fitness Center in at Krodel Park Shelte;r House No.2
Pomemy. Bring a birth certificate with potluckdinnua~ I p.m.
copy. Call 992-3486 after 4:30p.m.
for further information.
REEDSVILLE - The annual
Wolfe reunion will be Sunday at
DARWIN • The 25th annual Forked Run Statu Park near
reunion for descendants of the late ReedsviUe.
Samuel Allen Eblin will be Satur·
day 8l 3 p.m. at the roadside padl:,
POINT ROCK • 1Green, Ogdin
Route 33. Potluck dinner. Bring and Caster reunit&gt;n, Sunday,
your own table service.
Columbia Templt: Christian
Church, Route 689 nepr Point Rock
DARWIN • Modern Woodmen mine. Basket dinner a~ noon. Relaof America Camp 7230 will hold a lives and friends wela?me.
get-together Saturday, 6:30p.m.,
I
southbound park, Route 33 near
RUTLAND • De:icendants of
Darwin. Melon served. Door prize Harry C. and Virg ~nia Powell
awarded. Evuyone welcome.
Gibbs and Lou Ver.ha Oldaker,
JCunion wiD be Sunda~ at the home
RACINE · 'The Meigs Soil and of Kathy Willis, Rutland, I p.m.
Watu Conservation District Board
POMEROY • John George and
of Supervisors will meet in special
session Saturday 7 p.m. at Star Mill Anna Thoma Wells descendants,
reunion Sunday, senior citizens
Park in Racine.
center, Pomeroy, 11 a.m. to 5:30
REEDSVll.l.E • Men's softball p.m. Potluck dinner at 00011. Bring
Class E state qualifier tournament a covered dish, beverau~. table suSaturday and Sunday at Eastern vice, photos and mem01flibilia.
,,
High School. Cost is $80. Hit your
The 68th annual H1i.yes-Young
own balls. Call 667-3526 or 378·
Holiday School Reunion will be
6325 for information.
Sunday at 12:30 p.m . at the old
CHESHIRE • Old Kyger Free school grounds.
Will Baptist Church in Cheshire
POMEROY • The mngregalion
will host Rev. Charles Hardy, oat
Hili, Saturday, 7 p.m. Rev. Bob of Grace Church will bo~: hosting a
Thompson, pastor, -invites the pub- farewell luncheon in holD of Rev.
Dr. Roy Meyers on Sun,(lay followlic.
·
ing the 11 a.m. service. The public
RUTLAND • There will be a is invited.
dance at the Rutland American
RUTLAND • Descc&gt;ndants of
Legion Hall on Saturday, 8 p.m. to
midnight. Music by White's Hill Orlando and Katherinoe Sheline
Davis, JCunion, Sunday .. noon, Eli
Band. Public invited.
Denison Post No. 467. Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT · Facemyer Basket dinner.
Lumber and Ball Logging will
POMEROY· Rev. Eddie Buff.
sponsor a softball tournament Sat·
ingtoil,
Galli~~Ciis, guest minister at
urday and Sunday in Middleport.
Naomi
Bapust Church, Pomeroy,
Cost is $75 plus two balls. Call
Sunday
at 10:45 a.m. Public invat·
992-5358 or 992-5654 for informa·
ed.
tion.

By SANDY SHORE
Associated Press Writer
DENVER- A teen-age baby
sitter promised a ride home by her
employers finds herself in a
qlllllldarY when they show up reek·
ing of alcohol.
· Should she accept the ride, or
call a taxi?
An award-winning pro~ram
called Alcohol, Drinking, Driving
and You helps teen-ager.~ wort out
the sOlution fot themselves.
Paid for in part by the Adolph
Coors Co., ADDY is an example of
how the nation's breweries are
involved in effctiS to prevent teeD·
age alcohol abuse.
"We are workin' in concert
with our competitors m this area,"
said Bart ·Alexander, manager of
alcohol issues at the Golden-based
Coors. "This is one area where we
don'tcompere with each other."
Jeffrey Hon, a spokesman for
the National Council on Alco·
holism and Drug Dependence, was
skeptical of the beer industry's
motives, saying sponsorship of
such programs is often a public
relations gesture.
But he said, "Drinking and.

1

----------

DO YOU

MIDDLEPORT· Racine, OES,
will present a SO-year membership
pin to Cora Webb, past district
deputy grand matron, at Overbrook
Center, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. All
members attend.

Garden club to meet
The Shade Valley Council Of
Floral Arts will meet Tuesday at
6:30p.m. at the home of Jackie
Frost Thue will be a picnic, officers will be elected and class signs
will be made for the fair flower
shows.

"

Anderson, best known for her
song "(I Never Promised You a)
Rose Garden," said she would
rather ~o 10 jail than "spend one
more dime on a court system which
seems unwilling to defend a mother
in these circumstances."
'

COITUCIIIG

c.,.try ' Electrk

.,.....

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI.

8A.M.-5P.M.-

SAT.8-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad1 ouLiide the covnty your ad run• mwt be prepaid
,
• Receive dbtount for ada paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Gi•e~way ud Found adl under 15 word• will be
run 3 day• at no charge.
• Pr~ of ad for aU eapilalletten ia douhk price: of ad eoat
• 1 poinlline type only ueed
• Sentinel il not r•pomible for error. after fint day (cheek
for erron firll day ad runa in paper). Call kfore 2:00p .m.
day after public:alioa to make correction
• Ad. that mUll be paKI in advance ue:

..

C...d ol Thonlu
Happy Adi
In Memoria•
Yard Salee
• A clu1itted ad•erti.ement placed in the Callipoli.l Daily
Tribune (except Cla11ifted Diaplay, 8Uiintu Card or Legal
Notice~) will abo appear 1n the Point Pkasanl Regiller and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching o•er 18,000 home.

Tbe Environmental P1:otectlon
Agency annOIIIICed ID 1990 that Ita
new top priority would be tho!' cleanup
of the Great Lakes, wblcb t&gt;onllnued
to be plagued With c:bemlea II and oil
cootamlnatloo, delplte S~i:ulfleant
Jmprovemeoll In the quality of mu·
nlc:lpal ancllnduatrlal sewag" .

Chic and Sunset Blue

20%oFF
JR., •ssES &amp; IIRLS
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY~ lUI. 7IH &amp; ITH
FALL •HAll lEI" lOW IN

290
(614) 992-3614

~o1Upo6o

367-Cheohi ••
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande

256-Guyn DUll.
643-Anbia Di1t.
379-'YJalnut

Days

Words

1
3
6

15
15
15

10

15
15

Over 15 Words

Rate

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

OF

Applications are being distributed for FmHA Rural Housing
Loa"s for the purchase of one of eight new homes to . be
built in the Village.of Middleport in the uaetsy Ross"
Housing Proiect. The program will provide eli.gible very
low /low income households with a housing lot grant,
down payme"t assistance, and FmHA interest subsidy on
mortgage 'payments~ Households that can show repaynieni
ability according to FmHA criteria, can be placed. on a
waiting list for the purchase of one of the homes when
constriCtion is complete. Applkations are being distributed
at the Housing Specialist Office at 237 Race Street,
Middleport, Ohio and appointments to ·receive the
applications can be made by calhng 992·6782 between
9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M., Monday thru Friday.

I

742-Ru~o.nd

13--ln•uranc:e
14-- BU~ineu Trainint
15- School• &amp; lut.ruction
1r.- Rodw, TV&amp;: CB Repair
17- MiKell.neor.u
IP- Wanted To Do

9- Wanoed lo Buy

157- MU1icallnllrumentl
'58- Fnoill &amp; Vqcoabla
59- For Sale or Trade

21- Bu1ia• Opportunity

22- Money lQ Loaa
23- Proleuional Servieea

! F \il\1 :o; [Pi'l iE~

8.
32- Mobile Honte~ for Sale
33- Farm• for SaM

1

30- Reol Eooatc Wanoed

BF\ T\ 1 .;

49-Forl.aae

6
q P
62- Wanwl to Buy

It11- Aut.OI.. for Salt:

41- Howa for Rent
42- Mobile Ho•ll!ll for Renl
43-- Farm1 for Real
44--- Aputmenl for Rent
4S- Furn11hod Room•
· 46-- Space ror Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48- ~quip~nent ror Rent

i i \ E~TOC "

63- Livatocll
64- Hay &amp; Crain
65- Seed &amp; Fertilioer

34-- Olflinetl ..ui1dinp
JS- Ull &amp; AerMge

II- Help WoniOd
)2- Silualiona Wanted

Auction

'56- Pelllor Sale
1

1-'i'i \\(I \1 .

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

2-ln M~lftory

3.- Announce~t~e nll
4-- Giveaway
5- Happy Ad,
6- Lo.l and round
1- Loat and Found
8- PubUc Sale &amp;

I

949-Radne

675-Pt. Pleuant
458-l.oon
57f&gt;..Apple G.., ..
773-Ma.oa
882-New Hnen
895-Letart
937-Bulrolo

New HomM, Roofing.
Room Adcltlona,
Kltchena, Pon:hee and

a.th•.

COMPLETE

REMODELING SERVICES
F- &amp;t.. 2D y,. Exp.

J73·5614o&amp;
992·5249

72- Trucka for Sale

173--- Vana &amp; 4 WD'•

17+-- Motorc:yde~
75-- &amp;all &amp; Moton for Sale
76- Auto Part. &amp; Ae&lt;&lt;•oori,.,)
77- Auto Repair
78-- Ca~~tpillfl EquipMenl
:
.
'

i

!

\l l.l ll II \\111 :-1:
51- Houtehold Goodt
52- Sportin1 Good.
53- Antiq-.
54- Mi~e. Merchlandi.e
5~ Buildirlfl Supplie~

8

' i i\\

tn .:-:

'

po e
II
Plu•bint &amp; He~.ti"ff
Excavatin&amp;

Ele&lt;lrieal &amp; R.r.;,on&lt;tio~
General Haulin«
Moh~e Home Repair

Uphol"ery

Bl'LLETI\ BO.\U I&gt;
BULUnl BOARD DEIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnOI
PRICE REDUCED!

...-tor"'
..,."' por·
'
*
'
"
homo co
4 BR, 3
2 - ""'oct 1

oonto buy vwy
Atclnt.

3\\ ..,.. In

bollia,

BR 1111. Property lnctudol4,800 114 ft . 1111111

bldg.

CII614-WN1041or

f'ubllc Notice
BUC NOTICE
PU
Tho followln~wora r•
celvodlpnpl!ed 1M Ohio
Envlronmon.. l ProtecUon
Agency (OEPA) 1111 week.
Effecdvt d1111 of fln1l
ocllono ""d luu_. detea
--~ _...,
--~ of
Of Propo- - ·0111 ....
droll adona, .,. tilted.
Final actlona moy be
oppMiod, In writing, within
30 deyo of tile del8 of lhle
no.,_, 10 Tho Environ-l·
11 Board ol Aovlew, Am. 300,
238 E. Town IL, Colunobut,
OH., 43215. Nolle• of any
__. lhall belltcl with tho
.....director within 3 dayo.
Propoaed aotlono will
become ftnlf un!Ma 11 writ·
Ion adl udl ol11 on hHr1ng
roquHtlo aubmltlod wl.,ln
30 " 1,. of the luullnoa
dal8; or the director revleMlwl.,dr... lht propoood
tcllon. Ally poraon ••Y
aubmlt comrnonla Mdlor 1
liNing rogonllng MY drift
llCitiOII wl..ln 30 c11ya of 1f1o
dell lndlclted. "Aotlon", •
uaod obove doea not
Include racelpl o1 1 verified
compllinL 11 olgnllloonl.....
llclnteroatoxflll 1 publo
a
be~ At
111 ~:1. noey
• to
011• lnoluclng Nlltlpt
any

='::c'evO::~:!'io.""J

further llCidont tnd edcfl..
donal Irftorm.J011 • Unt••
otherwlte provided In
Nolloee of partloullr
llCitlont II -rnunloa~ohel b. ..nt to·
Cleril, OI!PA, P. o. '11ox 1
Columllua, OH. .fUR.0141
Ph. (114) 144-llll. Conelrll
ORC ChiP. 1741 111c1 OAC
Ch11pa. 3741-47 lllld 374H

Htl:::

lor~tnll.

Final Joou1not of
..tlllc.ollon.
Southern Ohio Coal
Comp•¥ Mtlgl 111ne No. 2
Atlatnoi' Oh.
E. .IM o. ar/21112
fnduetrlll W- PoluUon
Control CMtlflolllon.
(I) e, llo

I.

Bldd111 are required to
comply with tho Minority
Bualnoaa Enterprl" (MBE)
requlremenll ttl fonh d n
SocUon 184.07 of tho Ohio
Rovlaed Code, 111d Rule 1tl41-32 of tho Ohio Admlnlttrt·
llvoCodo.lnpar~ lhlamnna
that ony bidder, to tht exlent
lhal II oubconlrocta work,
thtll IWird tUbcontroctt to
atalo -tilled Minority Buol·
n111 Enaorprl..a In an •a·
grogatodolltrvolueolnolou
lhan llvo percent (511.) of lho
prime contract. Bidder procurement actlvllln, to lho
oiCIOnl that tho contractor
purchooHa matorlolo and/or
oervlcea, thall r•ult In tho
tWird of procurement contracted to atato certlllod ~~~
norlty ButlnHt EnterpriHt
In an oggragale dollor voluo
ol nolloaa than - I*COnt
(2%J of lho prime contract.
All contractoro and tub-

Public Notice
eatato lo ldondllod In tho
racorda of lho llalga Counly
Auditor by Parcal No. 11101118.
Said real tttato Ia appriiMd at: $ 6500.00
Tarma'oltale: C.ah
Roo I0111to cannolbe aold
for 1011 than lwo·thlrda ol
tho apprtlsod value.
Jom01 M. Souloby Sheriff
ol Molga Counly, Ohio
(7) 23, 30; (8) 8; 3TC
Public Notice

_....;..=:.=..:..:.:.:.:.:..:__

NOnCE OF SALE
By vtrtuo ol on Order of
Solo luued out of lhe Com·
mon Ploll Court of Molga.
County, Ohio, In tho .... of
Tho Homo Notional &amp;.nk,
Plalnllff, agtlnll Ronald E.
Public Notice
Honaley, at al., Dtfendanta,
upon a judgment thorllin
LEGAL NOnCE
contractoro Involved with thla rendered, being C.H No. 82•
Sooted propoaala will be pro1eelI bwlll, to tho IXIont CV·ir In aald Court, I wilt
received It tho olfloo ollhe pr1ct c.o It UH Ohio Prod· offerforule,tlthofrontdoor
Mayor, Uunlcl.... Building ucta, materlall, ..rvlcet,tnd of tho Coun Houoo In PomThird Stroot, Syrocu.., Ohio, labor tn lho lmplomonlallon eroy, Ohio, on tho 26 dey of
until 4 p.m. 10011 limo on olthlt project. AddiUonally, Augua~ 1g92,alt0:30o'clock
Thurodey, Auguot 20, 1982, contractor compliance with A.M h f llo 1 1 d
I lu I hi
bor
tho Equal Employment o~
• . I o o wng an a,
or rn t ng tlllt , mot•
t 1
r
tenomonll and pononal
1
1
por un ty roqu romonll ol
1 ....,... Ohio
11111 1 nd eq~...""'~Admlnlatratlvo Code property, lo-w1I:
10
tary comp~te ·~ projocl Ch
h
REAL ESTATE:
known •• Bridgeman StrHI
I pier 123 • t • Governor' a
Situated In tho Townahlp
Culvert RtpiiCOIIIon~ and at Exocutlvo Order of 1872, tnd of Choalor, County of Molga
tald limo tnd pllce, publicly Governor'a Executive Ordtf and Slolo of Ohio: Bolng In
oponed and r•d oloud.
14-t tf\lln bt r.qull'od.
Section 4, Town 2 Norlh,
Tho ottlmotad project
Blddoremuatoomplywith R1,.... 13 Woat, of lho Ohio
t I •t• 01111
111e -allln• wa- rotea
....
cot • • .,.....
r·-· • .- on Compony'o
Purcha.., and
Contrtet tlocurntnlt, bid Public lmprovemtnlt In deacrlbod •• folowo: BoginahMII, plan and opoctflc.o.. Mllga eo...ty and tho VII logo 1 1
1 North 1 d
~onaA•n"-obllln~otuld ofSlyracuu,Ohlo,lldeter· nng • • pont
•
•
- I--~ b .,. Oh
gr-45'Et~laUfoa~and
offloo 011 Auguat I, 1982, ot m ,_ Y .
lo Dtlltrt- North g dagr- 10' Eaat 35
$25.00 per ..~ which monoy mont oflndullrlol R•uona. leal, ond North 81 d""•••
"'II •Tho Vhllgo of ""recu..
..,.
"'
"" r""·nd~
"'" .., to the unyr
15'W011411foot,andNorthl
auoooaalul blddera upon tho ,...,_, tht right to wolvolr- deg-48' Eatt201foatfrom
return of tho oomplolt "'In rogul1rld• tnd 10 reject any tho SouthNot oorner of tho
good condition no morolhan or oil bldo.
Allen E. Ball ancl Freda Ban
ltn (tO) dtya tfttr bid dele.
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE 57.73 acrotroct, uld poinl of
Checkt thall be mode payJanloo Uwton, beginning being mortled by a
oble to tho Vllloge of (7) 30, (a) e, 2CI«&lt;IT,;T!Hiur• locutt poll; lhonoo North t
8 yriOUtt, Ohio.
""
degr- 04' Ell1205 -10 a
Etch bldde• II required to
locual pool; lhenoe North 82
lurnlth with Itt pro£:ul, t
Public Notice
degr- 32' Wool 201'"'1o
B1d dGu oranty ond
ntraot
NOTICE OF SALE
a locutl poal; t h - South
8on 1n 1000rdence whh
10 degrooa 11' Woal 203 IHt
tlectl011 153.64 of tho Ohio
By virtue olin Ordtf ol oiOngtfoncehnoiOIIoclrtl
Aovlted Code. Bid aocurlty Sale laouod out of tho Com· poll; then"" 8Guth 11 d•
lurnlahod In Bond form, ohlll mon Ploaa Coun ol Uolgo 8, _ 51' Ett1210 fHI 10 lho
be laouod by a Surely Com· County, Ohio, In tht - .. of po'•t of "-Inning oontai~
pony orCorportllon IIcon Mei CJly loan Flnonctat ~. lng"o.t7 ~. 1110,:. or ...;,
In tho State ol Ohio to pro- 1no., Plaintiff, tllllnal BellY
Tho bMrlnga In lha above
vldt nld turoty.
llartln, at 11., Dorf-.•rlllllla, doac•lpllon are m~gn.Uc u
Tille pro)llCII It • Minority upon· 1 ~~ .,.,tin ol May 24, 11171. ·
Butln•a Entlfpri.. (IIBE) IWidored,
C.MNo.12·
Togttherwlththorlghtto
Sat·Aalde Project. Each blcf. . CV·1· In
Coun, I wll UIO In com111011 ond Jointly
dor muat aubmlt evldorioe ofttfloruleatthofront~ wtlhthogranlorahonln, thllir
thltlllo 1 Minority Bualn"' ol the Court llouM In Pom- helrt tnd aulgna, lllld aU
EnllfpriMU-'lllldbythe oroy, Ohio, on tho It dey of olh• plfiOIII who may be
Still Equ11 Employment ' AU(IlMt, 1112,at10:00o'cloclc grtnled 1 like rlaht by tho
Opportunity Coordinator. · A.M. 1M lollowtng .. ndt tnd graniOra, their hllira end
Eloch propoul muat oon- -1Mnl8, to-wit:
.
tlllgnt, t = I
of wey 011
tair!lhelullnameoflhepony
Shueteln the Vlllloe of andov•u ..ofground20
orportloatubmlttlnglhepro- Po-. County of Ilotgo, '"' wldt I
I to tht
poMI ond oil portont lntlfo and IIIII of Ohio, to-wit: .
Elot11119' aldo ol the above
ttted thoroln. Etch bldd•
lltlnri lot Num'* Fifty- lind, tnd tlltndlng In e
mutt oubmlt evldorioe of 111 Three (h) In Naylor• Run aouthtrly dlreotlon 11 the
••...,..._ 011 projtota ol Addition to tht City of Pom· • - width to a right or woy
almllar alu 1nd complexity. oroy, Ohio.
35 foal wldo llld tiOIIQ and
The owner lnltnda and ,.
DEED REFERENCE: Vol- ovlf uld H h. light ol wor
qulrOI thlt thli project be umt 117, Ptge 313, Uolgo 1e•..,•t,.lnd 1ng In 1 -terty d~
oomploted no liter then ()o. County Dtod A-u.
I' 100 to the County Road
Iober 1, 1982.
Tlletbovedeaorlbad !HI
28,tobeua~lncommon

FOR SALE

l•terior • bterior
Sproy - Rol- B11s•

St. Rt. 7
C~ts.irt, OH.

CALL

614·992·6949

PH. 614-992·5591

FOR SALE

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

Uo.I.L

VAllEY INC.
Rt. 2

Millwood, W. Va.

tyPAINTING
&amp; co.

Mumbing
........

:;;ji

Agriculture
lime

~LINDA'S

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

'7ra• li• PrH Our Of Plinflng

ftl.•

-port, voiO
WJI. DIVI._

.e
~
:r.

614-992·7144 :1:

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
.CONSTRUCTION

•&amp;.,..
••
•Co!nPlett

eNewHOIHS

Re1110deli1g
Stop &amp; Coftlptrt
flEE ESTIMA'rES

985·4473

667·6179

H·9:Z.tha

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINIEIAICE
949·2391 or

1-100..137-1460
~nMowing,

Ftnlllzlng, Weeding,

-Let Us Do It For r.. •

INTtRIOR &amp;EXTERIOR
JRI! ESTIMATES
HAVE RIJIRENCES
ltloro 6 p&amp; LtaYo Message
Altw 6 p.m. 614·985·4180

992·7013 or
992-5553

or lOll FREE

l·IOD-141-0070
DAIWIN, OHIO

7131f9tltfn

Rold (biiiCktop), 1/4
mill from Rt. 7,

locatad'*-

Chuter and Tuppers

Pllllna.
Ellc;h lot .. partially
wooded with u:eelleni
d!IIIJIIDL Senrlee by:

T.P,C. Water Co.;
Columbus &amp; Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
and up

OwnerR1111nced

(614) 915·3594 or

•SAND -GRAVEL • DIRT
•UMESTONE

12·5-tfn

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS lNSTAU.J:D
UMESTDNE-TRUC~G

FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 992-3470

992·3838

71101'92/lfn

Hawrl'd L Writesel

•Headliner•

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
71211'92/lfn.

• ConVIrtlble Tops
• Custom Carpets
• Custom Seat
Covers • Al10 Boats

AlB

CIIIJIUII ana
IPIIUftll
flEE ERIIIITES

TSWll·t~~A'

7/17/t mo. pd.

Yi••

1300
StrHI
Middleport, Oh.
Jot Custer ~
614-992·2213 ~
Jerrr Custer :..
614-992-3159 :1:

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

USED RAILROAD TIES

ApproVId Township

~

MICROWAVE OVEN
aad VCR REPAIR

Frwbllmlll•

FOR WE
1·5 ACRES

P-oy,OW.

SHRUB &amp; TRU
TRIM and
REMOVAL
BILL SLACK
992·2269

COUITRJ lOTS

36970 Ill R11 Raatl

WHALEY'S AUTO CUSTER'S
PARTS
STUCCO "&lt;t'JI:!I
Spedallrlng in Custom
&amp;
Frame Repair
NEW I. USED PARTS FOR
PLASTER
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

LICENSED lrd BONDED

71211!12/1 mo. pd.

61411211 mo. pd.

and Seeding.
Shrub•ndTrea
Trlnming &amp; Removal
6-25-'12~111

FREE ESTIMATES

1flltfn

3-16·1 mo pd

A..-lola con-r

Public Notice

PAINTING

304·273·5555

mo.

HOUSE

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Din, Gravel and Coal

Call 614·992·
6637

BUILDERS

ces

Quality
Stone Co.

free Estllllates • low

38c:.~

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

tO
.• • ftll

992-Middlepol'li
Pomeroy
985-Che.le•
843-Ponland
247-I..tan F.O.

667-Cooi..;Ue

::----~

I

.I

Gallia County Meigo County M11110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

charged for each day as separate ads.

The.Village of Middleport will conduct this application pro·
cess in accordance with the Equal Housing·Opportunity Ad
which provides that no person shall be
discriminated against on the basis of
race, color, national origin, marital sta·
tus, sex, or handicap.

PORCIIILI ·

Classified page1 cooer the
dollowing telephone exchanges...

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

TO MARRY • Pop
Sting appears with
loq 11111diDJ
girlfriend Trudie Styler. Stillg's publicist said Wednesday tllat the
musician and Styler will marry this month. The couple's three
chUdren wlU attend the simple register olflce cere•oay, wbkll wiD
probably be near their $3.1 mntion Ellzabetbal matllloa in Wiltshire. (AP)

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thw.day
I :00 p.m. Friday

RATES

Monthly

PUBLIC NOTICE
"BETSY ROSS" HOUSING
ODOD SPECIAL HOUSING SET·ASIDE PROGRAM

Jessica King, Robbie an,,d Brandi
Reeves, Dorothy Reeves,. paternal
grandmother, Paul, Linda, Jeff and
Missy Darnell, Jack and Carolyn
Elam, Bill and Heather Elam, Roy
and Mary Gillilan, matemal great·
grandparents, Bill, Joyc'~, Carrie
and Greg Gillilan, Linda and Lee
Gillilan and Russ and. Freda
Holsinger.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper
SWiday Paper

s

~JAYMAR PROFESSIONAL
SIZED LIMESTONE

. . . 1. . . .

To place an ad

8

Fl IIIII ..... II 1111
I.,.. Wbhws

Rates ftrSellan
No.JoUaos-1

IIIIOIIl1l may bo

Winners named

~

had ordered Anderson not 10 make
derogatory remarks about him and
his wife or call the children names.
The appeals court said the chil·
dren, then II and 12, testified their
mother violated the order during a
vacation witb them last summer.

NOITOII

The prlco hu-- · · $81,1100 and
llnanciiV al 14&gt; lo 80% al ..,.,._.

CALEE MARIE REEVES

· · The Meigs County Ladies Golf
· Association entertained the River. ~ide Golf Course, Mason, W.Va. ;
Hidden Valley, Point Pleasant,
: ·::- W.Va.; and Cliffside Golf Course,
· Gallipolis, recently with 64 players
·.. · in attendance.
·
Winners were: first place, Eva
:~ ·- Whitlatch, Nellie Smith, Delma
Arnold, Nelle Bahr; second place,
. .... Rita Slavin, Betty Cranie, Jean
Glow and Ada Nease; tied for sec.&gt;.:ond were Betty Willmoth, Becky
.r·,, 'l'riplett, Peg Gardner and Clarice
. • Kraut!er; longest drive was Peg
Gardner on No.8.
; · Closest. to the pin was Nellie
, ; Wright on No. 5.
: ·;: ~ Most accurate drive was Helen
;.. Fenderbach on No. 4.
.
·• · Winnerl on Tuesday wue Deb;; ,:bie Sayre, low gross; Julia Hysell,
::·.low net, and Velma Rue, low putts.
' •• • ·All members of the Meigs
- County Golf Club will have a
' .. championship play-off Aug. 18
• with sagn-up by Tuesday.
·
.: . The group plays every Tuesday
::·: at 9 a.m. and all ladies are wel:: ·. come.

The measure would require ads
for alcohol to include warnings
saying lhatalcoholcan be addictive
and hazardous when taken with
other drugs, and that it is against
the law to purchase alcohol for
people under 21.
Alexia Spaedt, 16, took pan in
the ADDY program at Highland
High School in the tiny town of
Ault. She said the lessons sbe
learned were 'bettu because they
didn't come from ''an authority
figure."
"When it comes from a teen's
perspective, it's what our age group
Would do " sbe said.
Her friend Hillary Hoover said
the program was good, but some
students who drink "made fun of
it."
The program also includes a discussion guide that helps parents
negotiate rules when their children
turn 16 and a school assembly
guide for administratorS.
Founded nearly a decade ago,
ADDY has been recognized by the
National Safety Council, said Bob
D'Alessandro, director of the Bout·
der-based Prevention Center, a
nonprofit corporation that special·
izes in substanCe--abuse prevention.

Names lfl
• the neWS-----

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Singer Lynn Anderson lost a bid 10
stay out of jail for violating a
judge's ordu againsU•d-mouthing
bet former husband, his new wife
or her own children.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals
ruled Wednesday that Anderson
must serve the two-day contemptof-court sentence imposed by a
judge a year ago.
the Judge had awarded custody
of tile couple's two children to
Anderson's former husband,
Harold "Spook" Stream m. and

··calee Reeves celebrates a birthday
Calee Marie Reeves, daughrer of
Bryan and Susan Reeves, celebrat·
ed bet farst birthday recently at the
home of her paternal grandparents,
Bob and Margie Reeves, Chestu.
A Disney Babies theme was car·
riedouL
Others attending were Charles
and Sandy King, maternal grandparents, Charlie King, Ed, Sue and

driving programs, no matter who
sponsors them, are good."
Breweries have donated more
than $200 million 10 alcohol abuse
prevention over the past decade,
supporting evetything from public
service announcements to in-depth
programs, said Jeff Becker of the
Beer lnstiture, a trade group based
in Washington.
The National Beer Wholesalers
Association is working with a for·
mer executive of Mothers Against
Drunk Driving to fight illegal wen
drinking, be·said. Annother program, called BABES - Beginning
Alcohol and Addictions Basic Edu·
cation Studies - helps children
understand alcoholism.
No ~tudi.es have been done to
determme 1f brewery-sponsored
pro$fams work, though National
Insbtute on Drug Abuse statistics
indicate teen drinking has dropped.
The figures show 40.3 percent of
the teens surveyed in 1991 had
used alcohol in the past year, com·
pared with 44.5 pucent in 1988.
Teen.age drinkers also are the
target of proposed legislation inlroduced by Sen. Strom Thurmond, R·
S.C., and Rep. Joseph Kennedy, D·
Mass.

BRUNSWICK, Maine (AP) Two 13-year-olds have landed act·
ing jobs that will put them along·
side Mel Gibson in his film "Man
Without a Face."
"It's going to be pretty cool,"
said Ian Paige, who along with
Zarren-Taj Whyte has acting expe·
rience with the Young People's
Theater in Brunswick, where the
two caught the eye of an intern
worldng on the movie.
The movie, now being falmed in
Maine, is about a teacher who is
disfigured in an auto accidenL Gibson is both the star and the director.
Ian's scene calls for him to
recite four lines from Shake·
speare's "Merchant of Venice"
while standing in a roomful of
rowdy students.
Zarren· Taj will be an extra.

1

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP • The Sci·
pio Volunteer Township Depart·
ment will have a tractor pull Satur·
day with weigh-in at S p.m . and
pulls at 6 p.m. Kids classes 800,

.Bus in

to counsel teens about drinking

f ..ap~~~:~n~~c~~o~~~!:~ Pomeroy
be~~?l;Z,h~~nf.nf,~!
~~a::::rl'~andl,IOO.
parlting Jot stage spon-

Tha Dally

Ohio

~==:===·===c=ot=n=m=u=n=it~ca=l~en=d=ar~l==~ Breweries active in pro grams

• · 1111d the day of tbat event. Items
• must be received weD in adYIDCe
: to assure publication in tbe eal·
• endar.

F'

AUMIIU
lrlllll II Or WI
Pick ui!-

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
811 894-Wt6or Alty
RAaNE, OHIO
(ftrMorly ~ RWp s.al

bful

PARTS &amp; SERYICl
Mowers e Chaiii Saws
• Weedeaters

614-949·2804
•

••
!,
••

- •
•

TrrM

Wellrer All•r

G•

..
........
•

• N-';

Announcements

4·H2·rha

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Yiayl Sidiag
New Gartgts • Replaceme•t Willlows
Room Additions • Roofi•g
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sundar Calls!

3 Announcements
8/5.!12, I Joooa/1 D. Sa-o
Will Not It tl•clble FOf'

Any Debts Olhlr
My Own
Thla Oar Fonoord. oloMph o
Slunderl.

.

AWondtrful Family Expwlenca
Scandinavian, Eui'OpMn, ScMh
Amtt"an, J•PIMIII
High
Sc~

Exchlng• Sl:udente Ar·

riving In Au"utt. Btcomt A Holt
FamUy1Amenctn lnlttcultur•l
Student Exch1ng1. Call K1thit
21&amp;-650·1111 Or r.-Sibling.

eo..

Anyone galng to Concord
ltgt thlt nM• ride on .,...,_
tndt .,-.eu CIIIJ04.812-32U.

21121112

Fraa AduU Talk Unt.
1·714-251-:!IOe
Uvt, Ont On One.
SAVE

$2,0Q0t MUST

SELL·

Royol Ook Ro""" llomborohlp
614-456-5561 i.h11 5 p.m.
·

Tho "Big Gomo" 1o That \Spoclol

Daily Pick By fMIUrtd Hlndlcoppora Who Colioctlvoly
Plckltd 78'!1. Wlnrtet"t Lilt
Season. "Worth hs Wlklht In
Gold.. " C.ll 1·100""'38-nft Ca ll

Public Notice

Chorgoo $10. Fill Foo Por Coli
24 Hours Minors NMd Pertnlal
Permlaalon .

'

�o-The
7

Sentinel

-

SNAFU® by Bruce Brnttir

·Yard Sale

Gallipolis
' &amp; VlclnHy

6,11192

Ohio
•

57 2... lliolnls
IIIISJiil

KJT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

tm Chov S/4 ton, ea1. Chov 112 l"'.!o. A:'l!ciiiiO. ID,OOO
1m F01d Trudl CtW Cell. 1100

month.· -·

noy,
- · Wolall ,..,
81
...- Ftldly llllh.

CoM ttWII ms.

1811 Dodgll Plck.U.

322 TNf&lt;l A_.., I To t . ''""
day, _ , -

h-

And · ~

N-

lomt Wed, 1271. 114\11 MN

~v SE.RVK£U

=":.!.!''·~

tle£llS NID /11¥£
l141S ,., emEII.

27t4 «IG'77.

111111 It Plid II!
Ad-. DlADLJIE: 2:10 p.111.
thodly llllolltholdlo t o , . . . . . . , - . 2:00 .......

ALL Ylld -

IDMTNCk
Ford16,000,
F-350 Or
Dull
-·
Ton
-OW..

........ 1111, 71h, .~~. .., "
Oailtlid A-uo. Goltlpollo,
Olllo.
Couchoo,
Cluolrl"
a.ittor,
Slllnglol,
Old
""-""·
F,..ur Sian. Fuel ell FUflo
n..., Clolhlng, Elc. N ::IOp.llt.
Auouot nil.
Route 7,
Poicat Rold, NMr AddiiOft,

Aoomo lor ront · - o r ...,.h.
Starting at 1120/m0. Gollla Helot.
111 1ei-WIO.

11

¥'

7

Slll9ing
- 1rallor
-z:OO p.m.,
·wHh
All hoott-upo.
-"lng.
Col
oft or .....,..
304·7'13••• ... -·
-·· aon "'·

EIDDD

r.=·:":":··=====:r=;~=:;===~ 7311179 'Toyota
Vans 23all
&amp; 4 WD'I
Tlroo, Rune
Merchandlse

~Under
• new
-Port, At.
33N.,
man1g11Mnt.
Loti, SU; holM ,.,...., 1235;

&amp;.r: _ ... ..

) fZ

1

e:=u:-'

~~
a Up CioN

'

101!.. -

·

63

twHk otd plgo, 130. ooch, :JOt.
171-4840.

pota,ll4-4tl-lll44.
Co\leh I 2 cholro, .. rpotlng,

11

Socro Eloctrtc Sll~ I HP Riding
Mowor,I2QO. 114-2M-143C.

Cllllo, II4-IC3 .. 2111

Shnrnona Hld•A·Btd Malin
Ouoon Sla Bid, Full Sla Bid

USED APPLIANCES
Woollorl, dryoro, rolrlgoroton,
ro-. S k - Applloncoo 71
Vlno St-. CiiiiMrMI·73N, 1·

:r!~~~oorr"f'o.ak ~9:0

,64..,--H,_a;,.;y:....:.&amp;...:G:.;r.:a...:ln;__

!:i".:'::J ~Sllt'.t"l:'"~

f,NIE'S T,YIN~ TO
/
rMINSTO,M,
,lJT l Tt-IINIC

fEfSION
TONI6t-IT

Hondo 4 WhMIIr 210 • lloctrto

Start, ti,IIGi lrvwnlna IIIIIUIIII '
Over I Unaer, SI,OOCf. 114-441-:
1111.

,..f'S JVfT

nacn. HNtl Your Entl,. Homt

17' Ouachtt•

Transportation

Water HNter Salt 52, 40, 30 Gal·

N,_ VWJ good.ll'IIC[ IICh. :JOt.

11!1-2127.

AKC Chocolate Ltbrador Puppitt, 4 Ftmall, 4 Mill, 114-446-

CloiHIII

I pHclea.

AICC
roglotorod
Gormon
Shophord ~".m':"· 2 tr.1 monlhJ
old, 6M·I7
.
Drogonwynd Ccttary: CFA Por·
sla111 &amp; Sl1m... Klnena. 81'-

CC8-3144 Aftor 7:00p.m.

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackaon A~t.
Polnl P... unt, 304-87&amp;-2013,
full llno Tropl..i lloh, blrdo,
tmlllanimalaand tuppl'-.

HAPPV JACK MANGE LOTION;
prarnatoo hoaNng and heir

growth to any manp, hot apol
or tungua on doal &amp; hor'llt

wKhouf Co~laonor SOUTHERN
STATES 30C-t7H780.
to gel. lllh tank complolo, doll Rot Torrllr Pupploo, $:15, OIC·
COIIOc:tlon, ._ I otd. 301-11!1- 2C5 .. 5tl
~==~~-------

3tH.

Whefa oo diHoronl obout tho
1f71 Dodat Sportam11n Van. Hoppy Jock 3-X tile callor? H
131,01111 mlloa • $800. Coming worftlltl Contalna NO IYnthetlc
)1,. quMI I hell gallon. 304· pyrethrolds, Jot doga I catall
SOUTHERN STATES, 301-175t • Tyao mini-homo good 2710.
cond law "'""· 1171 corvette. Vou, 111bbitt and chk:ktnt tor
12 ft good cond. In·
t...etd lnqul,.. only $illl at· 1110, M·1112o30CO tlk lor Chcr·
"" JonM. Everyday .......
tor 7:00 PII301-1JS.1t37.
Sunday.

. -.

tab'-. 1150. firm, lllC
cond. :.0... 75·1151.
I Ft. Bid lin« F01 Chovro!Ot
411 fl poot

57

Musical

Bundy lll.tal375. 304-175-4201.
Air conciHI..., $100, Ito« lan
115. IM 4111111.
Bundy lluto, oxcotllnt cond~
tlont $250,114-ICD-2001.
All Wood 3 Place Bldroom
SuHo, lloldwln Eloctrtc Orgon. Flute tor aale, one ow.,., ll4MNIIIt3.
114-:MI-5014.
lor 1111, h - II Kimball Oak Conoolo Pllno,
Qll,
conlonto cool, :SOC· With Bonch, E•collont Cond~
~~He• Of 301-el'Ht12.

lion!

1

Tr.nsf~n~ble

¥'11,. Otd,
1S Vear War111nty

112

lllcc:kborrllo lor ..... lacll On Soundboord. 11C·:Ml7-o1148.
blockbtrTioo. Wo pick thom for
c;'tSI por Sqt. golion, 114-1192· 58
Fruits &amp;

9 · Wanted to Buy
looko

aoo:r.

And

Vegetables

Dorm lilt retrtgerator, UMd 2
Said :

Old me.-, toyo, comic booko.

~""'• pN:turn, Iron lklllta,
ond furnHuro, Ooby llanln, 114112·11MI.

·
- · ........ ltoaonabll, 112..2111.
,Eioctrtc typowrltor, otd block

BllckborTiol :JII4.U5.31r10.
" • • ... r•-- Connlng tomot- 11 Buol1at.
B~ng your own
tabte, old bleek fflrne mirror, laughm111 Flll'ft'lt. 1-112 1. of
wMirDbl, tt,.t with caga, 114- Oallfpollo, Slato Rt. 7. 514-Ht-

112.a271.

--,--, ·c--=-~:-c

cont-.

1131.

-·-1217.

For Soli; 210 Gel. Hoi Tub With
ASupply 01 Chomlcclo. $2,000.

fVEIIH.L Tlr CRITTER!

79

(!) Slltlln

Top Cope New
York pollee ClpiUI'8 a rapist;
oops target • lwnCing
operatiOn. Stereo. C
Qll. The 1fpl 0.11 Sfrt
runa lor cllaa pn1a1&lt;1ent while
~ lallslh' love: (R)'Stareo.

lUI

l='i~=-1;1

8 PtL:wNeni;J
0 That'• MJ DOg
8;30 (I) •

(5) • Glowing Palnl
Ben 8taltl taking I klrlte
claaa in order to Improve his
ego. (RI D

~no

Uncondftionol Ulollmo guo,....
tDI3 TOYGia Coilcc ST, llop., olr, IN. Local rtfiNIID• furillllwd.
liar dlf-. condition, Froo "'lmal-. Col . - twhho, 304'112~111.
114-237-otlll, dly or righl.
tNt Buick Aogol LlmHid, Good Aogoro Baaomont WllarprCondhlon, lliny Extml IM· llng.
2C5-i137.
Curtla Home ~mtwo-••.erAe:
ElP«IInco On Otdor •
11115 Buick LoSobro Llmhld,
Cdr. aldan, bolutltul family ..r. Nowor Homoo. Room A4dttlono,
oil ot&gt;t~O v.e, tow mlllo, Foundotion Wook, ~.
KHchono And lttha. FNe Ei$2200, '
..71 ..
- - - llmctcol Rei•- No
,..
Oldomcbllo
Royolo Too Big Or-~~-~hem ~1100, E•o:atllnt
JET
CoOriclhlon ... Fully Loadld,
All Bilek, 'ls,Oc)O Millo, 15,100. Ae111tlan MGtorw, .......... New
ro-bulh - - In Mock, RON
Phono:
1-11171, · - &amp;
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1 4223.

In-ti;RE IS 1-QTHIN!'i
~WITH 'tt::VR
TE~VIe!CN

eET.

III'O(!)IIndJ=reo.
Ill
An ~
aCtor Ia
!he victim ol a aeries of
acticl~aa. (PI 1 of 2) E;1

illll.•

eAAINWISHED.

l'====il /

Stereo.
lfJ MOVI • Amulng S-.:

v....

The Movr. IV ~2:00)

a Nellllvlllliow
a Top Rink lollng

1

"*

t•
Oldomcblll
Royolo
Broughcm v... -0. PS. PI, PW,
Power laoto, AIIIFM Storoc
CollatiO. Loadldt All Bilek,
111,000 111111. ISDH. Coli Pot
·lloyw 1-11171, 114-4ti-

Ughlwelglll bout: Todd
FOliar (22·1 , 19 KOs) vs. Jeff
Mlywnther (23- H . 8 KO.),
tO rounds, 1r0m Miles City,
Mont (L)
8 Lany King U..l
lclniCrOW lnd Mro. King

BARNEY
LDWEEZY fl

527-11521.

l'M' A BRANDrNEW

Rtlloblo WaNpoporing,
morclal And R"'donllll.
'Froo Eotlmatoa
'Exporloncod

tSRANDNAW II

TELL ME

ALL AIDUT
IT II

~:':1W01k
.,
7718.

I WAS AWAKE

ALL NltiHT LDN6
DOCTORIN' MY PORE
OL' PLOWMULErz
SD--

I MIGHT NOD DFF
WHILE YO'RE
TALKIN'

8
·,10:00 (I)
1

.

tlf7 OTA Trona Am (Loadldl
be. Cond. Low mllll, Now
nr•, Eta. at,500. 114-441-ml

r"i

tlf7 Pontile Sunblrd, c - · Will build polio - ·
out-tic,
Alllfll.
AC, ~ertlnDd ,..,... ,ut ..,
11.-1., condition, aldlna or tr- oblrtiniprloo: 12500, l14-ii2·3DOI.
2C5-il52.

1 o..., 114-•'I.Oioc

tllt:l Gao llatro IFl, 7000ml.,

S.utb

Wes1

Norlb

Eul

One of the most fruslrating play
problems is having a two-way guess
for a queen. However, if you leave the
critical suit until las! , you might have
enough clues for il no longer to be a
guess. Perhaps you will learn that one
opponent started with more cards in
the suit than the other. Or maybe the
poinl-count will provide the answer
Which applies in today's deal'
North's two-no-trump response was
the Jacoby forcing raise. S&lt;luth's fourheart rebid showed a minimum open·
ing with no side-suit singleton or void.
West led the spade 10. East won
with the jack and continued with the
king and at&lt;!. Declarer ruffed the last
of lhese, drew trumps and took an un·
successful diamond finesse . East exit·
ed safely wilh his last diamond. Exhibiting good technique, S&lt;luth cashed his
two diamond tricks before trying to
guess the clubs.
What had S&lt;luth learned' That West
had besun witb five diamonds, one
heart and - probably - five spades.
(If East had a low spade. perhaps he

1•

Pass
Pass

2NT
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•

Opening lead: • 10

'-----------...1

82

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
eo~
..•• Plum111nt
Fo..thanollllna
CWIIpcllt4Ohio
1M 441 .. W

85 General Hauling
WI Do lto4!flnt AIJJIIoM,

takt 0\'tl' PIYJII:Inll, 114-1122101 anytime.
.
Anyploco, No Job T~.llif. Or
Unit.•• .......,.
It
Cldllllo
Flooi- 'foo
.1 Worfl, Mr Klntll I
Broug-, $2100, A·1 llllpo, -f71.2271
Anytime.
.
17,000ml.••~

Ctn"'':

·Ill· 7,:
TIM! year ·'head lookl bo1h lnteresunu.
and prom~t~ng far you. You may r-r· i
reel two *'dllvors thai pr~oully ran
out ot 111eam. Thla lime you re apt to be ·
much luckier.
.
,LIO (NJ IS-Aug. 22) Do not lake anyr
thing far granted In your flnandll deal·
1 !Odey, even In comrnerclll Involvemente with frlenda. If matlerw are
cortduc1ad 1~, problernl could r•
· tult. Get 8 jump on life b~ understand·

-a-

lng !he Influences go-.olng you In the lo sPeak up.
year ahead. Send lor Leo's All1rQr AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-flb. 11) An un·
Graph predictions toda~ by mailing proven lnvestmenl you rtK:en11y became
$1.25 plus a long, ... l·eddr8Med, lnleresled In should not be touted as a
slamped anvelope to Astra-Graph, c/o "l" 1hlng 10 lrlends toda~. II you do
lhl5 newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Clave- and II goes wrong, be prepared to run
land, OH 44101-3428. Be lUre to state fol co.....
your zodl.. sign.
PISCES (Fib. :ID-IIIarch 20) In order lo
VIRGO (A... ZS.Iept. 221 Instead ol athlevelmportant goals IOday, a conlolling others how thlnga should be CG(Ied effort will be required. There's a
done lexlay, be lho one wllo lltalhe ex· chance you might lnlllally fall. Bul if you
ample. II they - you are lndullrtous do; regroup and lry again.
and prOducllve, thoy'll try lo match your ARIES (lillrcii21-Apr1111) Jumping to
performance.
coriclualona could steer you on course
UIIIA (a.pt, 2J.Oct. 23) This lhould tOday. However, when you taketha time
be ~ ralhw pieulnt day far you, but lo ·1horough1y 'analyze alluallona. you
I'*-'• a chance you may do -hlnu · wert'! ap1 to make bad evaluations.
that cau- dllrupllono O(ltlch could be T~UIIUS (Aprll20 MQ 20) Condl11ona
· trip ovli yaur own teet. .ale 1 trifle peculiar loday: OevetopM-IIcw. 211 PrObeblll· · menla you thought would be a snap
llel
ponorlll ~n Iooft good today, fl)lghl fizZle, O(ltlte mailers you lett - o
provided you're not alrald of the hard bummlra could !urn ou11o be fruitful.
work and dediCation neceuary to gen· aa.a Iller 21""- 20) YOII'~ a reaerato tltwe retuma.
aonilbly good team player todoy. but
IAGITTAIIUI (llotr. :a Dec 211 In all· . thoM you'l 11ooc:lll1e wtlh mlghtn'f be.
uallona y6u petlonally _ , . tOday: A'lacl&lt; ·of cotlectlw hlrmony tubelan·
ll1rive to be very expliCit r~g~rdlng O(ltat ·. tlai!Y red.- your allanc:a lor 1\.'CCIII
you expect of otlterl. Fuzzy dlnoct'- CANCER(,_. 21-.lulr 22) In order to
could deprive you ot!llf«m.
. 1CC9111ptllh objeCt'- tOda~. you mlghl
CAJIIIIICORH (Ole. 22-.len. 11) 11 you hive to do thlngoln IIepa rather than In
hope to collect what ~~- you by an· a mlllive, lingle lffort. Secure your
other at !hit lime you're.gof"" lo have footlnu before mo¥1nu on.
·
lndivld
0o ;'• '-'d
lo remind thlt
ual. n t be au ..

WIVII

45 Vlolont
downpour
49 At a dlatance
50 can ..burlng
lrH
51 Nudlecut
52 Body
53 Eccentric
54 Behalf
55 Gllmp11
56 Fool
57 Runnertd
vehicle

4 - fly
5 Ovorlr
faalldlouo
6 Columnltl't
tnlry
7 Frtth
8 Lergt
arttrlot
9 Source ol

DOWN
I Flrtl·rllt

12 Wdt.)
2 Small brtnch
3 Actor - Aar

e:. raon

'

10:30(1). 0 XXV a -

=~~II;J
(!)~The.-..... _

Stereo.

• On .....
t0:351D MOVIE: Joe Kldd II'GI

........

a•

mNe•••W•
A• Altllllo IIIII Stereo.
I New . . ,.......
• Cnloll and aa lUI' I FTonfgttl

8 lportl Tonlgttl
11:30 Cll Dlllnll Miler

timber
tO Aclor B1te1
t 1 Veme llllro
18 Comporatlve
aufftx
20 CountiM1olt
22 Quer1ot
23 Cilalcontcloua

24 Cant coli.
25 Flahlng
aUCka
26 Food tlrrltr
27 Futnlturo
Wood
28 NIWII
29 EviiUIIo
31 Frlondly
n111on
34 Bever•ao•
37ltltltl
38 Term ol
lddrtn
38 Exit
41 Ger1ld 1nd
Harrison
42 Aolurn 1nv..
lopt tabbr.l
43 Ftylnv 11u- ·
Clrt {abbr.)
44 Runway
·
45 Ebb 1nd !Ioiii
46 And ollllrt .
(2 Wdl.)
..4-~1-+-~
47
Atomic
.,
WilPOn
48 Bound
..-+--+--!1--l 50 Vain peraon

=•

11:00(J) Cll• Ill•

@ ,_, ... III.&amp;Pt!R ElfTI....... A81N.

41 Cookll
lngradlonl
42 Rldae !he

PNM••

~· :55)

ent guess.

400dd

(!) To the Conlrlrr S1er10.
Amlrica l!lehlnd
Dooro (1 :00) Stereo.

~all

wouldn't have smoothly played tht
jack at trick one.) That meant West
starled with two clubs and East with
five. II you didn't have extra information from East's pass as dealer, this
would make the odds :i-tQr2 that East
held the club queen.
However, stop and count the poinls.
East has shown up with 11: the A·K·J
of spades and the diamond kinj. II be
had the club queen as well, he would
have opened the bidding as dealer.
Therefore, West must have the queen .
Count the high-card point.t doing
this will often help to avoid an appar·

plerer Mel 36 Fund•
mantally
38 Munlng

a'f.

114~hl'l

11.110· tN7
Covallor 11,100; 1111 ilo,;iloc
1000, I1,200. 114-4Ct~73t.
MHoubllhl Ecllpoo OS Rid
Eaaatllnl Condhion Low

s-tweo.

CD

+QJ4

PrinwTime LIYO

811111&lt; T-= Det:ger
INch The lrequlncy of
shark allldce at bnchea in
Floridlt, Callfomll, Japen,
Soulh Alticllnd Aullralll;
shark •tilde vlc:tlme. Host
Stacy Keach. (1 :00)
8Worldllewa
0 700 Club Wlllt Pit
Rabl'teon

tD87- Omnl Nw u,. Al.to
$1,210 lllfl Chryollr Now Vadlor
oJCol. CondKion Hlgll mll11,110 1tll Plymouth Blatlon
Wagon flOOd coclhlon . 12,200

ar

!:X

t K9

+AJ8
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

a•
Iii:*"

1. . VW Golf Qood CondHion,
11,000 llllol, 5 Spold, Air
$2,850. 114-441·7523.

tiH Pralll

81Nttlhorlel .

llreo.

Hill, 10:110
Brlnda bellevea at her age
sills~ be In love. tAl

&amp; Livestock

~

lhlnk 1bout his looii!S,

I THINI&lt;I'M
&amp;51Na

Farm Suppl1es

Com Planlor !-. CuttiY:!:I
8ufl.8otllr, 1..,450· 1000
Dlolol 1~450; :IISO JD· IUIO.
........ ?2
.
Auguol lpoolll .... . • Fonl
-PTO hp1120,
C WD
21
112,100.
- 1- - · Cl
hp 2 WD 114,100. NHL&gt;6H (CO
hpl akld IIO« tlt.IOO.
NH-S2t ....... ~~ ,,,.
bul $3,100. NH-401 Dlocblno II
11,110, NH-4t2 Horblno II ~~
,100. NH-130 Ad bollr 11001,
,200. NH..51 Ad btllr 111001,
1,100. KH ... Sortlco Contor,
St. At. 17, Pl. PIOIIII'II i Alploy
RD. :SOC lite 31111.

1:011(1)• (5)• Honwftonl Jan
II afraid whit Ginger wiN

_MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

· ~ 765 3

By Pblllip Alder

1Aal· - · 5 Flipper's kin
8 - - anglo
12 Nocturnal
blrdt
13 Shothontan
Indian
14 Htreldlc
border
15 Nttl ol
pllluanta
16 Slllch
17 P1ptr
q01nt1ty
18 V1nltr
20 OHice work.,
21 TrPt of lleh
22 Govl. houa·
lng org.
23 llort certain
26 Houaehold
appliance
30 Sgt.
31 - lily
32 Blrda-leothor
33 Aged
34 Winglike

Sllreo.

C1

hU ti,OOO MIN, PIIPB,
Barnett Home lmp-u
nta.
. 20WtHC20.
.
Room Addlllona, Ga.ro.goo, Ea·
tDI3 Cllov Covllllr, runo a torlor I lntorl« P......, Ea·
porloncld, lnalnd .._..,. f.D.
locka good, Ftatrock am, 11!1-21?1.
catly. 814 411 1111.
tDI3 TOfOio Clllcc s..,a, llop.,
BASEMENT
;GOd condhion, lt41t2·71111.
WATERPAOOI'ING

+,I

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
Anawor to,.,.... Puulo
35 BINball

llll. ~- LIWia When
boredom aels in, Parker
decides to go to a perty with
Mlker. Stereo. D
0 You Alkad fOr It, Again

lmprov11118nts

drlnra aida, IMnJ new par1t,

Who'• the

1111• 0

'.SMOKI~G Q!J.~.

.10 52 .

+1086 5 2

The clues
may conflict

~:s:~rg't~l~·~;,5'

TI-\E.R£5 A IJGW P£RFUI/f
'THAT JUST CAM£ M (ALL£D

.9

SOUTH
+7 2
.AJ713

for111c:ominu. Tony and

-EEKAND MEEK

EAST
+AKJ

+109813

ALDER

lou? With marriage

campers&amp;
Motor Hornet

WEST

PHILLIP

.

(I). (5).

CIO lntornctionol Trootor,lllcrp,

Employment Servtces

.K Q86

Cinclnnad Reds at AUanta
Brlv8s ~L)
1:00 (!) Major Lloogua BIHball
New York Mala at Chicago
Cubs ~L)

l'M GOING ON AIIEI\0
AN' ~E IF I 0\H

1-1-tl

·t A73
+ K 10 2

7:3&amp;(1) Major League 1 1 -

61 Farm Equipment
FULLER IRuiH pftlciuolo on
dloplly1 M,uon Countr folr, lor
--vory oali304-171-1010.
DalolWIIma-.

NORTH
+Q 6 5

BRIDGE

O'Fallon, Ill. ~L)

1111 Old :lObi.. CutiHa, SIO, 4
Barret, Bilek With 111.- Inter·
lor, IU50. 1-7112.

C223.

Instruments

t i l l - · Up. IMrMI-4418.

-c-k-

8·S

Witlt

a C!otollna

8582.
AICC Lho11 Apoo pupplol. AICC
Wlnnllbaflo llolor - · 27Fl.
Colrn Torrllr pupploo. 3114-675- 11112 Oldo Ollto II lloyalo. tdr. Qood COnclhlon, 11.110 Wllh
lldan, 'howroom oond., ftWY - Ccr DoRy. 114 • atl.
3838.
opt-il ,_ tlroo, 307 V-1,
At&lt;C Minaturl Plnachl,., 2 12300, 14-tl2..nt.
Serv1ces
mollo, 12 Wko otd, 1200. oach.
uw •·••• •-·
So
304 ..71-246C.
1112 •· . ~
II,
Dlloll, Auno Qood, 114-218AICC
roglat«&lt;CC
Cocker
Spaniol
. - - - - -puppl11, flrwt ahota &amp; wormed, =858=0::.
81
Home
tDU Buick Rogo~ wrockld
r~idr to ac. 304-671-7231.

Merchandise

IIIII III

Fitful • Watch • Often • Lounge · IN a HUFF

II lie a Slltr Stereo.
1D PIA Bowling From

$250.114-4ti-Mtl atlor I p.m.
11115 ChockmoiO 1111. 211 HI'
Evlnrudo OUtboard lllr., Eao.
Cond., Lew Houno, 11,500. 114-

tlllt AIIC Spirit 4 S - .
Aobulft Enalno, GM 4 Cytlncllr.
$150. ,,..,..,.72oll.

54 Miscellaneous

LETTERS TO

The culie slormed out of the cale , leaving her dale
stranded. The dale sighed to lhe wailer, "Her favorite means
of transportation is leaving IN a HUFF ."

.._rtlll'l Flmllf
IlliG Wheel 01 Forlulle 1;J
IIJ • F1mlly Fltld

-

- o y. Hauro: II .T.W. 10:00

~tareo ..'il

(I) •

Ook Furnlturo: China lon electric and 40 Gallion 71 AutoS'Ior Sale
441-ml
- a . - - · tabll I Natural gu. Voure choice. 1117 Camara conwartnM, with 76
Womatdarff &amp; Thomao
chin.
Auto Parts&amp;
clolk,olc.l':~:'l'·
311. l.mJnl $151.115
prolloolonally 1tbulll 250, 1. crt,
Hardwart. 114-441-01U
auto etec lop, nttem paint,
Accassorles
PICKENS FURNITURE
Wlddlng Ringo, 1125; Alt Con- gOOd lor mtorollon, 14,200. or
dltlonor, 1200; Antiquo Roekor,
ao ft. - trockor DL, - Hau- lurnithlng. 112 mi. $10; . Pldstol Wuhotond $150, 6111 oltor. 304-112-3:123.
1171 C.rn.tro, V_,, auto, air, new boot, IGhp Joh-, .... -·
Ad. Pt. P l - . wv. 114·311-111181.
~· of tr1rae, 304-matl
polnt, lt,IOO. 304-47!1-20111.
coli *!7'-1450
:,::.::·- -..,.-,-...,.
Tronomlollona UMt1 l
a.- ola lull won wator bod. 55
Building
1879 JMp CJ.7, good cond. 114- JurobuTH, otortlng ol fii1..1ron1
Yory 1210. 304-1171-2511.
317-0317.
whoot d~,. llortlng ol 1111.01
Supplies
5t4·2CI-1177,1f4.371.22U.
1879
Otdo
Dolll
18
Wogan,
Black, brick, _., olpoa,
Loalla &amp; Runo Good, 1650. lt4- Now goo tanko, body ....... - ·
dowa, lintels, ttc. Claude
C45·t77t.
ton truck whMio, roc~o~...,
tori, Rio Gronda, OH Coli &amp;14·
!loOt
245-5121.
1 ole. D I A Alao, ·
t879 VW Rablllt. good cond, Rlpllv,mot~
WY. :ta.W72.- « 1Nnt graot ...000 milol. 117&amp; 1100-2'13
..515.
.
Ford F..250 tNCk, aood cond,

'to·"'·
to e:oo .,.rn., su•r 1:00
I :DO p.M. IW..II2·212t.

IO

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(I) AndJ Clrllfttlt
(I). E..,._IM1ent Tonight

,MINPPIZ:Zt.IN6.

Dolry Allolla Rollo, datlvcry 75 Boats &amp; Motoll
At FIN Moll, Jackoon Avonuo, ovaltoblo, Morgon·o Farm, At.
lor Sale
Polnl PIHIInt, WV Lotn4.
35, 30f.l31'2018.
tc ft lllllrglall -1 ~ hp
Taylor WatemovM, OUIHta Fall grain atOtlgt •~alia~, Mercury
motor, 304-17'1-eNI.
Wood Flrod Hoi Wotor Fur. Morgan Farm, 304-i3740t8.

Complolo 11omo luml~~''a;· And DomMIIc Hat Watar From A
Hauro: lion-Sot, ..a. 1
Wood Fl,. OullkM Your Homt.
0322, I out Bullvllll Rd. 1-aoo.acl-:m3.
F,..Doollwry.

lluy « Hit. Rlvortno Antlquoo,
1124 E. Moln Stroot, on At. 12C,

I

a. o xxv su_,

B~AINSTO,MING

Hog lor butchering, rtldr now,
304-713-5871.

... 3Q4.175.1111.
Far Solo: 2 hooting ......, ,
~"'t l wood; t cool. 114-

53

e g~ic:~~~~ER

0 The Wlltont
7:05 (I) !!Ievert, llallllel
7:30 w
Olfmplc o-a Track end
field, men's lOng jump, 400m
hurdles, 200m; women's
200m, 100m hurdles, finals;
men's balk81ball, aemlftnala;
women's volleyball,
semifinals; baxlnu (T) I;J

FRANK AND ERNEST

2222.

2

Antiques

17•

IIJ~..9.

horoo Nddll; t3 Inch ya\Ah
llddto. 614-CCI-75117 ., -

So&gt;~na- On Au Vinyl • eo~
In Slack. 18.00 Up. ......,..

U.VNE'S FURNITURE

1

1;;:.;-

Livestock

41 Inch mart pony; weattm

tt16.

I00-411H411.

I;I

6

~~~-~rMnt
Tonlglll
Stereo.

7 plocollko-._.
· 1125.
ool: 11+441·
poddod
cholro,

0000

I

Comp lete tho chuckle qu oted
,
,
.
•
.
by f•ll•ng •n tf,e m tS!InQ words
l_...J.._JI-.J...-L_l-..J you devel~p fr om step No_3 below.

a:~E;I

Microwavo. l~·l:llll.

autte, ...,, tor

I

l~F~

LT . .

20,000 BTU Air CondHionor, 30
Inch Goo Aon~1 Largo

~1droom

I I I I

7:00~· @ W11H1 Of Fonune

2370.

I

"My paintings aren'l very
good," the woman sighed lo
her instructor. "You will im·
L-..JL-.l.-1.._..1-.J ~ prove," the instructor replied ,
r--------="';., "just remember that every ar1·
Z A Q RUT
isl was first an ·······."

8:3&amp; (I) Andy Glltflllt

Household
Goods

drlpel,

NUC L H

ONtwZanoi;J

Merchand ise
51

I' I I I

J--r:--,,....;...,.;:-..,_~
5

Jr

lfJ 8c aa~ r Doo

'-'~ ' c«¢ '(P&lt; ~--~

'1a

Good ....
~
Nlco ~oint,
abll.llual
Soo
To
App11clato 13,i00.
&amp;14-211&amp;579 " Not Lao.. ·
Bruohhogo, con dollvor, &amp;tc-M3- llo111ge.
5211.
1882 Ford Van, 11,500. - . .

·-·2117

l

1:30~L,~:fJI
~V:s~~ewa.c..
~ lquft One TV
t:;l

" AR~L

54 Miscellaneous

PYMET

Senior POA

Tour

"A21V'tfl

61 Fann EquIpment

• •

8 World Toelly
0 llltntln
1:05(1)1 Lov. Liley

12.510. 1-7112.

H

=·

ID ltllldl

1814 Ford
C now onglno anti joololl,
aluminum 11101 whoolo. 1111 tlnoo,
..... &amp;14-141..2177.
IIIU Chovf 1·10, Rid, U,
Elactoonio FUll lnloOtlort, 11,000
111111, Eaaatllnl ~ion.

Furnished
Rooms

(J).

1¥P ·

drive, S.W.B., Y-41 Nato apoad,

•11.

EVENING
(I). (I).
I!JIIewa

•

(I)Chntln~
llllqun
One TV

I

8- •

Ao-.

THUu AUG. 8

1:011

~:":;~::--- ;....::.=:.:::::.::.~tlO:UV£~ ~

--7. .

r.

•

.........:;JI fV££·fat (1.,

IDM l'ord 414 I"!_C_!IL.....AI:,&lt; II
~.•c ooncl. ....,. 104-

Frtllav. _ , ldhion • 2:10

p.m.......

EWTEAIIIMRII1fl1
MC.Tl&lt;ltllolmllll
S061ETY

....... iiOWJO......

Television
Viewing

,.WOW, UlOK ~T NJ.
TilE PIZZA !MioRS
1'HEII£ H!f;!

'
NV•V eat. 1'IW!I
8€QI.J5t 1I£V EX·

72 ·Trucka tor Salt

Conlanary: nlca 2 BA.
Nl. lurnlollod. No

lllilol Pool H.M.C. ltlolw llool-

1

11192

0 lalmln'

(!)Jilin
on One

Mct.L-···

·a
One

il!:t=~

!=~
:

Ulopll (1 :30)

:1r . .

11:311u:-I;IWilli
. 12:00

(J).

aJINewa

P S M W

N XC I

DIZUIMIVNKX,
DIZUIMlVNKX

G' Z

PYXO
VOL

VC

D ' Z

v

''

ZSCI

'

I XV Z

HKVTXM . '

FVOX
HVJKXT.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I never tllpected to lhe doy W111n girls
would get sunburned In the places lhoy do IOday." - WHI Roaora.
ll 1192 by NEA, Inc.

8

·..

�..

-

Page 12-nle Dally senune1

Pomeroy llddleport. Oh,lo

.·Sunday schedule for state fair announced
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)Noon- 8 p.m. {every lialf·hour)
Here is the Ohio Slate Fair sched- - Vince !llld Larry Crash Dumole of events for Sunday, Aug. 9, as mies; MultipllllOSC B~g.
provided by lite Ohio Expositions . 12:15 p.m. - Gomg Bo~ers
Commission:
Game Show: Madcap Producuons
8 a.m. - Hunters and Jumpers; Puppet Theater and Utter PrevenColiseUm.
tion; Ohio Deparlll!ent of Natural
8 am- 8 p.m. - Youth Resources Amphitheater.
Exhibi~· Wrute Castle Youth Edu12:30 p.m: - Health Craft
cation B~ilding.
Coo~ing Show; Multipurpose
8 a.m.- 9 p.m. - Family Ans &amp; Bwlding.
Crafts Display; DiSalle Center.
Professional Floral Design
Ohio Quill Show; DiSalle Cen- J_udging; Krog~ Agricultural Hor. ter Auditorium.
ucu!IW11 Building.
8:30 a.m . - Holy Mass;
I p.m. - Nawre's Fun for the
Rhodes Center Auditorium.
Young- Division of Parks and
9 a.m. - Wrestling Tourna- Recreation; Ohio Deparunent of
ment; lams Pet Food Arena.
Natural Resources Amphitheater.
Tam pax Baton Twirling Co~·
Wrestling Tournament; lams Pet
test, Corps Competition; Amen- Food Arena.
park area.
Most Unique Dessert Contest;
Motocross practice and qualify- DiSalle Center.
ing; East grandsland
Motocross Racing; East Grand·
Open and Commercial Rabbit sland.
Shows; E~bition Hall.
Veterans Day Program- Band of
9 a.m.- 6 e.m.- Senior Citizen Flight Concert Band, WPAFB;
ArtCraft Exhibit; Janis Center.
Pepsi Celeste Entertainment CenSenior Citizen Craft Sales; Janis ter.
·
Center.
Junior Barrow Show (Cross9 a.m.- 9 p.m. - Youth · breds): O'NeiU Swine Arena.
:Exhibits; Rhodes Center.
1:30 p.m. -:- Wyandot County
9:30 a.m. - All-Ohio Worship 4-H l,l.ecreauonal Dance Club ;
Services
Ohio Department of Natural
10 a.~. - Holy Mass; Rhodes Resources Amphitheater.
Center Auditorium.
Ohio's Heartland Cuisine Cook·
Governor's Horseshoe Tourna- ing Program; Kro~er Agricultural
ment; Horseshoe courts.
Horticultural Building.
Sheep to Shawl Contest; Brown
2 p.m. -Wrestling TournaExhibition Arena.
ment, Championship Finals; lams
: Vince &amp; Larry Crash Dummies; Pet Food Arena.
Multipurpose Building.
Commercial Caule Show;
10 a.m .- 4 p.m . - Craft Viaduct
Demonstrations· Janis Center.
Live Scarecrow Contest; Kroger
10 a.m.- 9 p.m. - Traditional Agricui1W11 Horticu!IW11 Building.
Craft Show; Herilage Hall.
The Columbus Cellos; Cox Fine
10 a.m.- 10 p.m. - Fine Arts Arts Building.
.
Exhibition· Cox Fine Ans Center.
Channel-10 WBNS: DenniS Lee
10:30 a.m. - Junior Breeding Musical Show; PaY\,Iion. .
Poultry Show; Exhibition Hall.
The .Fox Brothers; Pepst Celeste
Ohio Boaters: Know Before Entertamment Center.
You Go· Division of Watercraft,
2:30p.m. - Health Craft Cook·
Ohio Department of Natural ing Show; Multipurpose Building.
Resources Amphilhcater.
Going Bonkers Game Show:
Health Craft Cooking Show; Madcap Productions Puppet TheMultipurpose Building.
ater and Liller Prevention: Ohio
All-Ohio Slate Fair Band pre- Depanment of Natural Resources
sented by Donatos Pizza; Admmis- Amphith~ter.
.
lralion.Building Lawn.
. All-Ohto Slate Fau. Band p~Columbus Zoo Animals; Ohio sented by Donatos P1zza; Oh1o
Department of Natural Resources Depanment of Natural Resources ·
Amphitheater.
North PaiX Area.
All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir
Governor's Horseshoe Pitching
presented by lite Kroger Company; Contest; HOISCShoe courts.
Heri1age Hall Park.
3 p.m. - Carnpfli'C Queen ConGirl Scouts Flag Ceremony test; White Castle Youlh &amp; EducaContest: White Castle Youth &amp; tion Building {Lausche).
.Education Building {Lausche). .
Floats and Kids· Water Safety:
Fox Brothers; Pepsi Celeste Division of Watercraft; Ohio
· Enterlainment Center.
Depanment of Natural Resources
· 11: 15 a.m.- 2 p.m. - Cleo Amphitheater.
·Miller of lite Cleveland Browns Junior Poultry Showmanship;
Autographs; Multipurpose Build- Exhibition Hall
ing.
.
All-Ohio Slate Fair Youth Choir
11:30 a.m. - Hank Peters Lum- presenled by dle Kroger Company;
betjack Show: Ohio Department of Janis Center.
Narural Resources Arnphilhcater.
3:30p.m. - Hank Peters LornOhio's Heartland Cuisine Cook- berjack Show; Ohio Department of
ing Program; KroJer Agricultural Natural Resources Arnphilheater.
Horticultural Building.
Ohio's Heartland Cuisine CookNoon- 4-H Aquatic Science ing Program; Kro~er Agricultural
Day· White Castle Youth &amp; Educa- Horucultural Building.
tion 'Building {Lausche).
4 p.m . -Junior and Senior
Noon- 8 p.m.- Michael Salva- Shee~ _Shearmg Contest; Brown
tori and the Fourth Dimension Exh1b1Uon Arena.
.
Raps on DtUg Abuse; Multipurpose
Channel-10 WB~S: Denms Lee
Building.
Mus1cal Show; Pavilion.

-People in the newsASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP) The shuttered Stone Pony nightclub
where Bruce Springsteen rocked
and rolled in his younger days
could get another chance for glory
days.
The bankruptcy court has
accepted a $300.000 offer from
Steven Nasar of Ocean Township.
said bankruptcy overseer Roger
Timpson.
Nasar, 41, used to own a video
duplication business and now leases a Mobil service station in Long
Branch. He's never been in the bar
business, nor did he ever visit the
Stone Pony when it was open.
But when he walked inlo the
darkened club recently, the aunosphere overtook him, he said in an
interview published Wednesday.
"It was a very strange feeling of
· home and rock 'n' roll," he told
the Asbury Park Press.
Nasar said he hopes to re-open
the club in October, one year after
it was forced to close.
Other prospective buyers have
three weeks to match or better
Nasar's offer of $265,000 cash,
with the $35,000 balance due a

year after the sale, Timpson said.
NEW YORK (AP) - Garry
Trudeau isn't finished with Dan
Quayle yet.
The "Doonesbury" cartoonist
infuriated the vice president with a
series of comic strips in November
about a man who says he sold marijuana to Quayle in the 1970s.
Trudeau said he is planning to
rerum to the topic this fall .
In the original cartoons, fictional reporter Rick Redfern ~ets a
mysterious call from Brett Kimber·
lin, a real-life federal prisoner who
was placed in solilary confmement
after trying to speak to reporters
about his claim.
The strips did not focus on
whether Quayle actually bought
drugs. but on whether there w~ a
campaign to silence Kimberlin,
who is serving a 51-year term for
drug smuggling and bombing.
About 25 newspapers that carry
"Doonesbury" refused to run the
strips. Several criticized Trudeau
for making such serious allegations
in a cartoon.

GO WITH THE FLOW.
•

Thursday, Auguit 6, 1992.:.:

ANDERSON'S AUGUST

4:15 p.m.- Doss at Work:
Department of Highway SafetyOhio Sta!e Pa~_rDl drug-dogs

~Obio!lttf'=of

Natural Resources Ampllidl_.
4:30p.m.- Health Craft Cooking Show; MulliJupolc Buildin&amp;
Daily Pndc.
4:45 p.m.- Goins Bonkers
Game Show:
Puppet 1bea11:r IIIII
Plevention; Ohio Depannaeot of NIIUJal
Resources Amplti•W!"'.
.
S:IS p.m. - o•1o Carchnal
Qoggers; Ohio DepMimtDlofNilural RCSOUI!:CS Ampbid!rJa,
5:30 p.m.- Ohio's Heartland
Cuisine Cooking Program; ICJvp:r
Agricultural HOIIic:uJ!tnl !t~~6 p.m.- F'ISb QIUo: DMsion of
Wtldlife; Ohio Ilei4UW d. Nilural RCSOUI!:CS Ampliidn!cr.
6: IS p.m.:- A!{.()bio Stare Fair
Youth Cho1r "Presented by the
Kroger Compsll)'; Rhodes Cerur
lawn.
6:30 p.m. - Wyandot County
4-H Recreational Dance Club;
Ohio Departm_ent of Natural
ResourccsAmpbitbeala'.·
H~alth Craft: &lt;:_ooting Sllow;
MulllpW'JIOSC B11.tldi1J1
7 p.m. - Going Bmke"' Game
Show: ~ Pmd..ctions l'llPIICt

•

$18

----------~

· Low tonight In mid 6fk.
Saturday, high in mid-l!Os.

BERBER
CARPET

SCUlPTURED
CARPET

Veil. 43, No. 74
Coprrtgh*I1N2

$14~,.

SALE

llstll.lw/,..

....

Syracuse Council
signs contract for
street repair work

$12995t

Yt

PAnERNED BERBER CARPET

Theaterandl.iucr~O&amp;io

REG. $21.00

10 Y•r Warranty- 6 Colors-stain/Soli R•latant

SALE

Ohio=

$1999 s•.., •. l•st.aiH w/,..

.

InLAID FIRIIftRI'S

st_,,"

MISSIONARY FAMILY • Missloaary
Georec Pickens, seated, a Long Bottom 1111tlve,
has returned bome ror the summer to share bls
experiences. He Is pictured at the home or his

IlCEA YEll
1
&amp; ''"!,sc.ol1'"" ~\ost·OU1

mother, Delores Frank, with his sons, George
Mark and Joba MichaeL His wire, Debbie, was
away wben the photo was taken.

Long Bottom native returns home
from missionary work in·Kenya .

SALE

Overall, Pickens slid, the city is
crowded and polluted, and, as is
true for manr cities in developing
A Long Bottom native has ·countries, it IS poorly planned and
returned home from missionary administered.
work in Kenya with interesting
-one of the Pickens family's
stories· to tell and won1s of thanks favprite hatmts in Nairobi is a game
for local SIIJlPO!t of l!!s -w.~.
: '~&gt;~Tr"'"" in the ckity.
f he
· ' Geo~ Pickens, his wife Debbte· , . e game '~• 1s.one o "t
and the1r two sons are livii\RAn lhings .that -:ve enJOY the mOst, he
Athens while in lite states ancfare said. "But It's strange to see ·the
spending a great deal of .time trav· · animai.s ~d th~n le&lt;&gt;k up and see
eling to his supporting churches.
the Nairobt sk);lme:
.
While visiting those congregaGame hlll!un~ IS the mam ~ lions Pickens relates stories about son lhat tounsm 1s one of Kenya s
the ~pie he serves while teaching majoc ~ of ~come, but such
at two colleges in Nairobi, Kenya. hunung IS now stnctly controlled
He teaches a variety of subjects at through the maintained game
two religious colleges • Daystar parks. Gone are the days from Out
University College, a private Chris- of Africa, when lions, elephants
tian liberal arts college affiliated and other exotic creawres were the
with Messiah College in Pennsyl- victirhs of open season.
vania and Wheaton College in IlliAgriculture is Kenya's most
nois, and the Nairobi Great Cum- important income source, with tea
mission School, which offers a being its largest cash crop, fol"Christian leadership training pro- lowed by coffee and sissal {used to
gram" wilh 25 to 30 students.
make rope).
Daystar is an interdenominaThe average wage for the
tional college with about 621 stu- Kenyan day laborer is $1.26 per
dents, while the Nairobi Great day, and the poor in Kenya signifiCommission School is sponsored cantly outnumber the wealthy. But
by the Kenya Church of Christ, it is the growing middle .class in
which sends many of its students Kenya lhat Pickens' church works
on 10 careers in the ministry.
with in its missions work.
Pickens teaches courses in the
Prior to going to Kenya in 1989,
Bible and religious studies. as well the Pickens family lived in Ivory
as History of Western Civilization Coast from 1985 to 1989, where
and African History. When he George was a teacher in the Theareturns UJ,Nairobi later this month, logical Education by Extension
he will teach church history. These progrllll). Through his participation
courses are appropriate subjects for in that program, Pickens !aught
Pickens; he is a licensed minister in religious studies in churches.
the Church of Christ and bas a
Thanks churches
master's degree in African Studies
The Pickens family receives
from Ohio University.
suppon from 42 churches in nine
Nairobi is typical
states {Ohio, West Virginia, VirPickens describes his home base ginia, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabaof Nl!irobi as a ''typical" large city m~, JFentucky, ~ennsyl~ania, and
in a developing country.
Michigan), and Since thelf return to
"There are parts of Nairobi the country this summer, they have
which are very beautiful and mod· visited all of those states except for
em," Pickens said, "but there are Michigan.
also parts lhat are very dirty."
About 15 'percent of the PickBy BRIAN J, REED ·
Sentinel News Stall'

..

NOW IS
TIME TO SAVE BIG $$$
ON ALARGE ASSORTMENT OF BRAND NEW ITEMS
GIISOII19 CU. FT.

SIIHY·SIDE IERIGDATOI-----$699
a•PAll.CU.rL
IEFIIGEUJOI, .... $799----NOW $599

su.-Y w/d!ld, ._-..., p..l ...t

IAIIGI, ns. $699
NOW $399
GlENWOOD GAS lANGE, d!ld, ..... $599- NOW $399

,.....Dina. .... • • •., ,..

ElKIIK
$469-NOW $369
GilSON 14 CU. FliEJIIGEWOI
.
$449
Wl-STYlE QIIIIC lOP DIIITll SET-Y01r Ololct $699
CAIDWEll7 P&lt;. DIIITl1 SE1S, .... $920-NOW $449
CHROMKUFT SP&lt;. DllmE,"" $199- NOW $499
4 P&lt;.IRWFAST SR
w/tlrapleaf taMe, 1e1- $670'---NOW $339

FLEXSTEEL PRIN(ESS RECUNER
·w/1...._ s.,.rt, reg. $769---NOW $379
RIVERSIDE CHERRY
ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS---As l.tw As $275
RECUNERS .......... ,_
-Startill At $299 Colllflett
BUNK BEDS-......................... Striltllt $299 c...,lett
BUSS DAYIEDS
$99
NINTENDO VIDEO CHAIRS
$69
lEAN BAGS
$39
KIDDIE RECUNERS.
$69
COFFEE AND TWO END TABUS
Two Styles to Goose Fro11 ..................... d 3fer $299
SHEEWOOD STEREO RACK SYSTEMS-Sr.tfla At $569
ALL LAMPS.------ReRced IJ 30"
BEDROOM SUITES--------Stortilg At $511
S&amp;K ROOM DIVIDERS, 1ew &amp;II '• box ___;_$ 149

SAVE $$ HUNDREDS $$ ON USED ITEMS
G.l GREEN
BUSHLINE
ElKTIK WIG£ ..................... ,, ___,......... $135 DOUBLE RECLINING SOFA, Ike HW..-----$499
•DI'IL DOUILE OVEN, PI
--·-- $250 BROYHILL COFFEE TABLE------·----- $75

A-11.21 CU. R.
SD.JY·Se£ REFIIGEUIOI, .------· $150
AlfJIA 11CU.R.IEFIIGEUTOI, wllil•-·--$125
COI10UI ADJUSTAILE OIAJI ................--$299

NORWALK SWIVB. ROCKER, •• uw ....---· $199
ZENITH COLOR CONSOLE TV's-............_. $100 &amp;1p
GAS GRILl, .W.xew/cmr----·----$75
LANCER HIDE·A.JED, •• 1tw ..~......- ....--.. $475

IAYTAG DIYEIS, .. &amp; eleclik--As Low As $99 UNVENTED HEATER
IAIGE lEW
300,000 ~~~ LP
WAIDIOBEw/ ' , . . . .
---·--$149 UNVENTEDHEATER

$131

gas_. . --·-----· $199.95
300,00UIILP gas-·-----·---.. $249.95
UNVENTED HEATER
15,000 In LP gas ..----·--..---· $125.00

un

2 Secttona, 14 Pogea 25 conta
A Muhimodia Inc. Newaoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 7, 1992

REG. $15.00
SaltdlgriOiefii/Nylo•
.WeilL II coiDrs.

REG. $16.00
I Colan, lleat set yar~,
ClltilloiS ....It 1ylo1.

SALE

---------~

--Local briefs-----.

ens' support comes from four
churches: Middleport Church of
Christ, East Athens Church of
Christ, Mowrystown Church of
Christ in Highland County and the
Norwin (!)hristian Church near
Pittsburgh. Middlepon Church of
Christd·"'~ ~directbetllllO$ suppobrt,l
an • ....,....,}5 • y accounla e
to ~ cclngregall0!1· .
E1ght churches m Me1gs County
are sponsors of Pickens' missions
worlc. .
.
Before ret~rnmg to Kenya on
August 28, Pickens hopes that he
and his f!llllilY wi_Uvisit ~5 churches, descnbmg thelf expenences and
encouraging continued support of
their work.
Pickens described his work as
"direct-support missions», meaning
that.he.raises his own fmancial suppon.ln rum, those churches expect
personal reports and accounlability
from him.
.
.
.
"The personaltzed relat1onsh1p
• between me and these churches
benefits everyone ,» he said. "It
helps us, and the churches, both
individually and as a congregalion."
.
.
"It's bar~ work,» Pickens adm1t·
ted. "It reqwres a lot of travel, but I
enjoy that, and you couldn't do it if
you didn't~joy iL"
L1fe ill ~frlca
.
. The commo~ 1mage of a mls·
stonary, preachm.g to the nauves
from .a lhatch hut IS usually a myth
i~ th1s day and age, accordmg to
Pickens.
"Ther~ aren' ~ ma~y of th?se
huts left, he sa1d w1th a sm1le, .
"and the missions voc:at_ion ~as
changed a lot. Most m1SS10n~1es
are no longer on the front hnes,
because now almost every country
Continued on page 3

A contract with David V. Weber
ConsD'Uction of Reedsville for the
Bridgeman Street storm sewer and
street repair project was signed at
Thursday night's meeting of Syracuse Village Council.
The bid for the project funded
with Issue 2 monies was accepled
by Council at an earlier meeting.
Work on the project is expected to
get underway within two weeks.
Paula Thacker, executive direc·
tor of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce, ·met with Council to
ask for a contribution to the Chamber operations. Council last year
donated $250. No action was taken
on that or any other matter at last
night's meeting due to a lack of
quorom of Council.
Thacker volunteered assislance
to the village wilh projects or oilier
activities, and outlined current
activities of the Chamber including
a fall dance on the P. A. Denney
and the discount card program.
Also meetiog with Council we~

residents of the village about the
stop signs which have been erected
on Second Street Five of the seven
attending expressed opposition to
the signs. Mayor James Pape
advised that the wishes of the
majority of residents will rule on
whether the signs remain in place
or are removed
Kenneth Cundiff, one of those
attending to express opposition to
the signs. also complamed about a
private business using the dead end
Worchester Street. There are no
residents on the stree~ it was noted.
A,lso discussed was bicycles on
the streets and the dangers
involved. Chief of Police Jim Connolly asked that lite children exer·
cise caution and that motors slow
down. The speed limit on village
streets is 25 miles an hour.
Gordon Winebrenner, member
of the Board of Public Affairs, met
wilh council in regard to the water
board purchasing a new truck
through the slate purchasing program.

Council discussed water usage
and the possibility of installing
meters in the village.
Eber Pickens of the Syracuse
Fire Deparunent reported that the
siren needs repair. Fire Deparunent
members also noted that they are
organizing an Auxiliary and those
interested should contact Jan1ce
Lawson or Eber Pickens, Jr.
The mayor's report showed
receipts of $1,058. The London
Pool deficit of over $8,jX)O was discussed This, according to Shannon
. Slavin, pool manager, comes from
the lack of attendance and cost of
repairs.
The police report showed 12
miscellaneous calls, 25 traffic cita·
lions, and a litter problem handled.
The officer drove I ,475 miles and
was in service 132 hours.
Attending were Mayor Pape,
Clerk· Treasurer Janice Lawson,
and Council members, Kathryn
Crow, Kenneth Buckley. and Bill
Roush.

PUCO seeks input from phone customers
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio will hold a public
hearing in Marietta to solicit input
from telephone customers in Southeastern Ohio about proposed
changes in Ohio's telephone regulations 4!ccording to State Representative Mary Abel {D-Athens).
The hearing will be held at 6:30
p.m. August 10 in Thomas Hall at
Marietta College, at Putnam and
Fiflh Street in Marietta.
Abel said that the PUCO is currently considering changes (o the
way local phone service is ~rovid·
ed, including implemenlallon of

measured local rate service, which
assesses a charge to customers
based on lite number and length of
local calls they make.
"Involvement of rate payers at
these public hearings is vital in
order to make the PUCO aware of
our concerns," Abel said. "With the
economy of our area making it difficult for families to make ends
meet. rate increases can have a
drastic impact on their budget."
Other possible changes inc.lude
automatic rate increases tied to the
Consumer Price Indies and allowing phone companies to pass the

cost of installing commumcauon
technology, such as fiber optics, on
to the consumer.
Abel said that the Ohio Office
Consumer's Council, the state
agency charged with representing
customer's interests in matters
before the PUCO, has expressed
concern about several provisions
under consideration.
Abel said that phone customers
can obtain additional information
from the Office of Consumer's
Council in Columbus at I (800)
282-9448.

Vice president blames economic
woes on Congress, attacks Clinton
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Vice President Dan Quayle today
blamed Democrats in Congress for
most of the .nation's economic
problems.
He also shunned the economic
proposals of Democratic presiden·
tial candidate Bill Clinton in a
speech before about I 00 Ohio
members of Citizens for a Sound
Economy, a business research and
advocacy group.
Quayle spoke for about 15 minutes and held a brief news conference before departing for opening
ceremonies in Columbus for the
Ohio Slate Fair.

He is in Ohio on a two-day campaign that was to include a tour of
the fair with Gov. George
Voinovich and a stop litis afternoon
in Mansfield.
The vice president conceded
that the nauon's economy has
slowed.
··we must do better," he said.
He noted lhat economic growth
in the last fiscal quarter was 1.4
pen:ent and that unemployment in
July declined O.ol percent to 7.7
percent.
"We created 200,000 jobs in
July. but we need a stronger recovery. And we would have a stronger
recovery if the ·Democratic

Congress had passed the prcsideQt's capital gains tax cut and
growth package," Quayle said.
"The sad truth is, hundreds of
thousands of Americans to not
have jobs today because of the failures of this Democratic Congress
to enact dle president's a~enda, "
Quayle criticized Chnton programs that he said would increase
government spending by $220 billion and result in an increase in
payroll taxes of $50 billion a year.
Those actions would cost 710,000
Americans their jobs and wipe out
any benefits that could come from
Clinton's promised tax cut for the
middle class, he said.

Rt. 33 bypass at
Lancaster may get
feasibility study

A feasibility study for a Route
33 bypass at Lancaster in Fairfield
County would be given priority
A Long Bottom man was hospitalized after a one-vehicle wreck
under an amendment to the federal
on Ohio 124 in Olive Township Thursday around 7:50p.m.
transponation bill approved yester·
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
day by the U. S. House Public
Bert B. Metz, 68, Smilh Road, was southbound on Ohio 124, and
Works and Transporlation Comwent off the right side of the road and struck a log.
miuee.
His vehicle then SD'IICII: a rock wall twice, the patrol reported.
According to a story in Friday
Metz was transported by the Meigs Cotmty Emergency Medical
morninfs
Columbus Dispatch the
Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was admitled for
bypass 1s OllC of onlr two projects
observation.
Dalnage to Metz' 1976 Chevrolet .C-10 was listed as moderate . spccificlllly named tn the legislation which provides $48 million for
and dissbling.
feasibility
studies. Rep. David L.
Metz was cited by the patrol for failure to control, failure to wear
Hobson,
R-Springfield,
submitted
a safety belt and fictitious regisuation.
the project
Hobson said that the Depanment of Transportation must
On Thursday at 10:33 a.m.. Middleport squad went to Page
approve the study before money is
Street Margaret Slay was laken to Vctcnns Memorial Hospital.
. allocated but naming the bypass
At 1:52 p.m. , Middlepon squad weni to Page Stieet. Adda
project in the biU gives it priority.
Newell was transllOfled to Veterans. AI 5.:34 p.m., Rutland squad
According to the Dispatch artiwent to Meigs Mine 31 . Stephen Maynard was laken to Holzer
cle, he said he drafted the change
Medical Center. At 6:57 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Pase
after meeting with Ohio TransStreet Virgie Roberts was laken 10 Veterans. At8:02 p.m., TuuPcn
' portation Director JCII'): Wray and
Plains, Racine and Olive Township units went Ill Reedavl)le for ~
memben of the Route 33' Corridor
auto accident llcrt Metz was taken to Veterans. •
Committee, a citizens group promoting improvement of dle route.

Long Bottom man injured in wreck

Squads respond to jive calls

The lleeboll" (Gmfolt IUltra has a Dlnamil Cushion·
II II lOft
infsystellllhat- air bod ond forth bemtn me PLAY HIID
heel and ioltfaol with ead! Slip hi pmide ulnlordinary
•
axnlvrt.Nell Hme rou rake a walk, go with the low.
~C!C!bOk : ::

MIDDLEPORT

6584

TRACKLESS. CARPET

FIIGINIIE IDOWAVE

992-5627

305
Pick 4:

REG. $20.00
-DUPONT CERTIFIED STIINMAmR -15 COLORS
99
SALE
SQ. YD.IISTIWD WIPID

25• COlOI COIISOLE TV w/n.ll---.... $300

H. SECOND AVL

Pick 3:

12 DIFFERENT STYLES ON SALE

ZEMIH SYS11113

•

Braves ·sweep
Reds, hike
division lead
Page4

Madc't::-=tioas

Department of Nuural Rcsoun:es
Amphithea!rr.
HUIIIa'S andJuqJfltls; Cnliwm
q.annel-10 WB~: Dennis Lee
Musical Show: Pavilioll.
7:30 p.m. -~ l'l:las Lumbeljadt Show;
of
NaiW11 RCSOUI1lCS
•
Reba McEntire
's show. is
sold out); Pqlsi Cdeslc Enfatain.
ment Center.
8:30p.m.- Health Craft Cooking Show; Mullipatpose B"iklin&amp;.

•

., Ohio Lottery

m11

FUR
RICO.
.....,...,

lftLIIID, DIID ,

CAMPAIGN -STOP. Vice President Dan
Q11yle, rlaht, works the crowd during a cam·
palp stop In the ceatral Ohio town ot Minerva
,'fbursday. Quayle stopped his motorcade to
speak with rcsldealli ot tbe smaU Ohio town and

to coatlnue his emphasis ot family values. After
bis stop Ia Minerva, Quayle attended a private
luacheoa In Hanoverton, then flew to tbe
Columbus area.
·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="326">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9620">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33707">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33706">
              <text>August 6, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2919">
      <name>autherson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="426">
      <name>brewer</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
