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                  <text>PometCf lllddleport-Galllpolls, Ott Point Pleaeanl, wv

Plgt 08 Sunday Times San.tlnel

-Augu8123,1992

Wiseman·Agency senior partner
.agency with Grange lns~rance

;n,.OdJ.,_IIullo&gt;-w---- a.-.
T"'''!"'- SUS, Tli-Caay Moo~ Maabow
J\lluca. Pomexoy. Sl.lO, Jl a: 0 fM4; Chad
Wbeekt, 1\lpllm P!1ir11. $1 .30. W-..mO.._.
- aw, SolNIIz. ,.,.,..,, 11.45, F - 11w1

Bloct: Mik• Hoffman, Pun,.ar, $1 .~, O.W
A~~t· '1\!ppon l'lliat, Sl.&lt;IO,

v.r......... .

GALLIPOLIS • The Wiseman lion for life, auto, home and busi· I'IICd A++ (Superior) by the A.M.
ness in Ohio, Indiana, Keatudcy, Best Comp111y, the oldest insurAlf1N;y in G!lllipolis has earned the
detianalion of Senior Partner Tennessee and Georgia, and_i_s m;e nting agency in the world.
AI*Y with the Grange Insurance
COmDanies of Columbus.
. 'l'be Wiseman Agency has .
demonsualed outstanding profes.
sionllism b)' meeting a number of
specifk: gwdelines Bslablis~d by
the Gllllge Sales de~en~ As .a
result, the agency rece•ves add•·
tiana1 com(l&amp;nY l!Mefits lh!U allow
it to provide. the best JlOSSlble service to its insurance customers.
Grange President Thomas F.
Gagner 1IOied that "It's not easy to
fulfill the requirements to be
named Senior Par1ner, so those that
meet the guidelines certainly
deselved to be called ''The Best of
the Best'."
The Wiseman Agency is located
at -451 Second Avenue and has
been serving Gallia County for 64
years.
Grange Insurance offers proaecDISPLA )' AWARD • Pictu'Cd wiOI Sud;r PeJlW of the ·
Wiseman Acenc;rue,...... F. Gtlper,lrJl, pi eslbttuld COO
and Frederick Reid, dlainulil ud CI!O Ill Graqe MaiUI Casu·
ally Co., Gruge Life bal'Uft Co., Tnstprd 1-ra•ce Co.,
GM Premium Bucl&amp;et.lllc.

Sbeeu, Ioodnoillo. $1.4D, Gene Wh~~!,.~

PageS

lb.... Cooi.W.. II.&lt;.!, F....., Bonk;
. ''
Sdnlltz, ~. S1.45i Pum~:~~ ·Blllk; Lealie
Park•, Jt.uoy, SUO, Home Na~al Buk;
a.... Hoiii&gt;W, aa....,su~. Mam't Sa&gt;aopt·
bcldJilllp Jnd ; f r; ADc: PICIGIDft. Pomliuy,
11.45, ,;,., Bonk: AI.- P o - SUl,
Bank 'a CaattnlcUoft; Mib Hattmaa, Pem
,
11.35, Homo N•u,.u Bonk; rn.. ~.
- ..,.suo, F....... Ba: O..d
Raci.ae, $1.40 ~ Joe Portia: Sbawa Rollllla,
Roedl\rillo, $1.15, McDonald '•; cam. Sb111141,
lt.G04hYille, $1 .4!, Dr. Tom Sper~car; Sbeny
am~&lt;, • - SIJO, ~ auw. Mullen
Muller lnlun.IICO; Aadrew .RI!IlliM, R-.wWe,

......,.,j

TbOioab&lt;ll, - · · · 1.30; Sloolly c.m.,..y. Koy
Ibm• IAioJ Boaom.IJ.:JI, IIa'!k'• 76; Koy Looa
- · $1.! 5 , - Nolioool- ,...,
Haaor, CoolwW... $1.3.5, Fumen Ba.ak; LaNr
Parka, Pom~ZDy, $1.2!, lloma Natiaaal But;
Bobby KoWI, 11.ocino. SIJO. O'Dell .....ber; Cusidy Coffey, S1.60; ~irchflokt Puao:nl Home;
ctlril ~. ~ St.SO, PIIIIWI Ba..;
OW c..-, CooMllt, 11.50 Col&amp;'• BP; ~
Bmke, R-IIAO,IIawk'o 76;- B..U.
R...U.ut• 11.3S.
Bob !leE'"'!'
Ezn l'lloiNibao. Albmy.ll .:tl, v...... •1 Ho~itll; Alyua Hoffman. Pomeroy, Sl .3,,
· Avii finily. N'u:halaa Dllwiller, Jtomam,, $1'.60,
Fmncn Bank; MIDdi ShMu, Roednil1o. $1.70, '
Bank Oae; Travis Lodwtct, Pomeroy, $1.40,
Kroaer. M&amp;ndi Sboeu, Pomeroy, SUO, Cole'•
BP: l.cillo hltcr. ~cray. $1.30. Moi8l ~tr
Commiuioncr Rich Jon• ; Oill(•r Holcomb,
- · 11.:15, 0'."'" .....bot; Lon) Rildlle,

VoL 41, No. IS

ea,.rJot•lld11t2

~iated Press Writer
MIAMI, Fla. - Hurricane
A~dre_w, the nightmare storm
M1am1 long dreaded, smashed
ashon: soulb of this sprawling city
before dawn today, with walls of
water and the ~owhng terror of
160-mph-plus wmds. ~~ least two
people were n:ported ~ed.
~ 8 a.m., the b~ had left
Flor!da and was tn the Gulf of
Meuco, head~d for somewhere
between Mobde, Ala., and Port
Arthur, Texas•.the National Hurricane Center saul. That area would
lllCiude New Orleans.
HIDldreds of thousands of peopie in Florida had fled before the
mighty ~cane, Slreaming inland
and north m a bumper-to-bumper
exodus. But ma_ny thousands of
othm chose to ride out one of the
herc~t storms to hit the United
States m decades
Gov. Lawton Chiles said two
deaths were ~· ~ in Dade
County, where M1~1 1s loca~.
One person was hit by a falhng
tree, Chiles said; he didn't bave
detail on ~e other fatality. But
Chiles said 11 aweared that overall
damage and casualties would be
'"not as bad as it could have been."
The eye passed across Home~ .about 25 miles southwest of
Miami, at about S a.m. Heavy rain

•

.s.:

\

~....:.:....
~~ ..~.

•

.Jil!A

'·

I'

CHAMPION PET • Clnd;r Durst stauda wltb ller doc S!Wipy;
stiU costumed after the best dressed contest at F~iday•s r.lelp
County Fair Pet Sbow. Durst won most . .oted, 13 and over, best
dressed aod best overalL

.

NISDI.WLIIG ClltU

WINS AWARD • CliiCII: WllMti
-tile ftnt redpiot Ill
tbe Waid Speucer ~Award
hlp PGiat1 almd ia tilt
Draft Hol'lie Fua Sbow at tile m2 Melp C..tJ Fair. Pldared
with WbittiactOD Is Mar;r K. R-.. 'l1le , _..tioa Willi -.de
prior to the start Ill the 4-H Lil rt • • Sale Ill tile 119tll uaual
Meigs County Fair. Wbittlazg nctiftd a eaanwcl plaque ud
two baiters.

mph and at least 400,000 people
were without power- and could
be for weeks or months, authorities
said.
Virginia Sanchez spokeswoman
for Dade County E~ergency Services, said emergency workers
were not sent out right away
because of heavy winds and
downed power lines. Telephone
communications were also spotty.
Chiles, who had earlier declared
a state of emergency said storm
surges on the east coaSI reached 12
feet, instead of the 20 feet that had
been feared.
He said Dade County had
requested 200 nurses to volunteer
to help any injured.
A 650,000-gallon oil tank at
Twkey Point power plant sprung a
leak in Biscayne Bay south of
Miami, the governor said
A Florida West Boeing jet was
pushed to the northern fence at
Miami International Airpon, with
liS damaged tail pushed over the
street and resting against a power
line.
·
The metal frame supersuucture
on an Arrow aviation maintellance
building at the airport collapsed
and damaged aircralt inside. The
nearby six-story Hampton Inn
Hotel appealed to have lost its roof.
Miami Polic:e S~t. Bill Lang

instances'" of looting at damaged
businesses.
"Officers are out to make sure
that no rioting or looting takes
place," said Lang.
In Washington, President Bush
said he would declare Florida a dis·
aster area today, paving the way for
federal emergency aid.
Trees and store awnings were
blown down, and the wind ripped
boards off windows and roofs off
buildings. Roads were strewn with
debris, felled traffic lights obstruct·
ed intersections and large overhead
road signs blocked all lanes of at
least two intentates.
Blue sparks flew around the city
as transformen blew up and power
lines fell.
In Naples, one of the last Florida cities to feel Andrew's effects,
most businesses were closed today
and gusts of up to 60 mph baaered
the area as the storm passed the
stste's West Coast south of Naples.
There were no immediate signs of
damage.
The National Hurricane Center
in the Miami suburb of Coral
Gables. lost its radar and radio sys·
terns even before Andrew n:ached
shore, but forecasters continued to
receive satellite images via phone
lines.

(UNDEI NEW iiAIIAGE.NT)

Residents sift through fire-gutted
town; huge fire rages in Idaho

Call304·773·5300 or 614-992·7267
Startlag Suaday, lug. 23 - Opea Every llpt,
7 Days • W.!!k at 5 P.ll.
·
Ope• lowli•l •IMfue• - to• Jo,. Ull

Jl

By STEVE GEISSINGER
~iated Press Writer
ROUND MOUNTAIN, Calif.
- Firefighters today struggled to
proleCt·an old-growth forest from
an out-of-control wildfire. Residents of this town of 800 people
were allowed to return briefly to
their gutted homes.
In southwestern Idaho, more
than 1,000 fuelighters took advantage of a break in the weather today
to baule a 254,000..acre fire raging
· through brush and timber about 30
miles east of Boise.
Skies were relatively clear over
the Idaho fin: Sunday; smoke a day
earlier kept air tankers from dropping chemical retardant. The fire
was slowed during the weekend by
daytime temperatures that dropped
from near 100 into the 70s, along
with higher humidity and light rain.
"Things aren't looking as bad
as they did a few days ago," said
Ken Cabe, spokesman for Boise
National Fores~ where most of the

MEN'S, WOMEN'S, MIXED, YOUTH
WE WELCOME PARTIES I
No Uquor Served- Good Atmosphere

IUY THE BEST FROM THE BEST AND RECEM:

6.5%APR.
BANK FINANCING ON ALL NEW NISSAN &amp; CHRYSLER
&amp; TRUCKS

_,

.

o.•···

Ntw 1112 lladgt,

New 1!112 Dodge D2SO .
Cummins Dlllll

New 1992 Nltsan Ston111

:'l

c· .il'

••

,

. -.·
~·

•Air Condlllonlng
•Crutte Control

dressed, •ost lllleated, 13 •a over, ud best
ovenll; lfanDC.J ~-.best rodellt; Brio
Cow'clery, JDOit Clllellled, lltuld IUider; Alldftlt
Neotzlia&amp;. best cat, ud Brud;r Cal, best dol-

Pet show results are announced
ROCK SPRINGS · The following are 1he re sults of Friday's
Meigs County Fail Pet Show. Winners are listed in order of placement
Bes1 Cat: AndJea Neulzling,
Heather McClain.
Best Dog: Brandy Call, Kyle
Smiddie, Josh Kalinowski.
Best Rodent: Harmony Thoba·

New service
being offered
GA:U-~LIS • A new college

financial aid locaiOrs service which
offers guaranteed resulls is now
available in Gallipolis.
Scholarship Locating Services
offers computer assisted scholarJhlp help as the solution to offset
tho 'education money crisis 1hat
todly's IIUdeitts face.
The new service will match a
student with at least six soun:es of
oolle&amp;e finfi:ial aid, regardless of
hilh or low income, or it will
mum tlic il1dividual's money.
Sillce litUdcitll and financial aid
som:e1 are closely ma~hed by
c:c»lpal«, the guarantee goes fur·
Iller. If the IIIUdeat does not receive
at~ $200 by apt?lying to the
m ' , . IDUII:CIIJ'OY)ded from the
11m'• lllliona1 database, they will
a $200
Sav-

hen, Morgan Mathews, Alicia Rus·
sell.
Most Talented, 12 and Under.
Bryan Cowdery , Kyle Smiddie,
Amber Perkins.
Most Talented, 13 and Over:
Cindy Ours~ Jennifer KJllwsczyn,
Donn May.
Best Bird: Julie Spawn.
Most Unusual: Michelle Brown,
Joseph McCall, Ezra Tbolllben.
Best Dressed: Cindy Durst,
Sarah Clifford, Jennifer Dunn.
Bes1Overall: Cindy~
.

1.9 million more acres
accepted for program

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department bas itllll·
tively accepted 1.9 millioo mo.e
acres into the Conservation
Reserve Program, whidl W:ea Olll
of production land that is bi&amp;h!Y
erodible or enviroomCIIIally ICIISi·
live.
The acn:age was • .:Of ted from
bids submitted durins tbe CRP
signup conducted June lS-26, laid
Keith ·Bjerke, csCCIIIM vice !ftli·
den! of USDA's CommodityCnxlit
Corp. The land accepled will be
entered in the prog!lllll QQ. l, the
beginning of the 1993 fial yell'.
Under the program, producers
agree to retire eligible c:ropiiDd
from prod~n for 10 10 15 yws.
SilldeDtJ or parents wanting In return, the departmeat matea
dJe )110ilfonnation may wri~ Scbol· annual rental
. . . , locllina S«Yic:es, 11 Bel· ducen and ares willl dleiD tile
. - Drive la Gallipolis, or call . cost of establilhiQI u approved
vegetstive cover.
4*37CI.
.

r:;l!t.llildalt

_u.s.

.::-'1110

LIWI·BDY
LAWN

MOWER
L21ZPNC

10 In stock
As low As

•AMrFM Stereo cunt te

11520 VALUE

•NO CIIARGH

'9499 ~':.~

se~t .

17,681

1

$2440 VALUE

*NO CHARGh

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

2 Door, LX Mpdel, al•, AM/FM

$150

4X2, 5 apMd, AMIFM ltareo, JHr

I&amp;G Feed and
Supply Co.

,....,, ....

3HW. . .., .

........
---Lillo·--·

lllo _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ...

fair-goers packed into the pull area
to watch the action of the big
machines.
·
More than $2,000 in six classes
was awarded to the participants
who used their tracton and semi·
trucks to pull the lronMaiden (the

-----Local briefs

Kindergarten orientation slated

,1911DODGE
RAM SO
4 HP 1:-IIICIII
!Ill r.lt engine., .....,.
..... diet o21" cut.
......... whMI

exhibition pull at Saturday oi~bt's tractor aad
semi-truck pull at the ll9tb Me1gs CouniJ Fair.

~.t-owner.

Localtrldl. .

.I

Patrol investigates two wrecks

fm: was burning.
But full containment wasn't
expected Wltil Sept. 6.
Thineen lightning-sparked wildfli'CS have charred almost 320,000
acres of forest and range in Idaho.
In Round Mountain, about ISO
miles northeast of Sacramento, a
layer of thick smoke hung near the
tops of the blackened trees while
people picked through the ruins of
their homes.
A sign reading "Repon Forest
Fires Here" pointed to a blackened
foundation where a building Qnce
stood. The sign and a few homes
· were all that remained of the town,
which was swept by a fli'CStonn last
week that forced the evacuation of
7,500 Shasta County residents.
'The 63,000-acre Fountain fire
was ignited Thursday and remained
out of control today. More than
2, 700 firefighters battled it; bulldozer crews dug more than 70
miles of frre lines around the blaze
and contained 30 percent of it, frre

officials said.
Helicopters dumped as much as
I,000 gallons of water a run on the
leading edge of the blaze in an
effort to save the large trees where
logging companies and the endangered spotted owl normally compete for resources.
The Fountain fire, the largest to
hit California since 1987, destroyed
307 homes and 267 other structures, the California Department of
Forestry said.
Elsewhere, about 1,500 firefighters battled an 8,3()().acre fii'C
near Mammoth Lakes, east of
Yosemite National Park. About
1,000 campers were evacuated
from the area Thursday. Another
1,000 firefighters bauled a 6 4()().
acre fire near Hayfork, 40 ~iles
we.&lt;l nfR•.rMino
. Meanwhile, frrefightcn decllred
v•ctory over a 17 ,300-acre blaze
that ravaged a suing of Gold Rushera towns in Calaveras County
southeast of Saetamento, last week:

Two jailed on robbery, assault charges

transfer sled) from one end of the
uack to the other.
Winners were:.
The engines roared and the
6,200 Pound, Field Stock: Mike
Hively, Gallipolis, Ohio, fli'St; Jere.
smoh rolled.
It wa5 the Meigs County Fair's
my Slone, Dexter, second; Conard
annual traCtOr and semi-truck pull
Hudson, Gallipolis, third; Lester
Saturday night and hundreds of
Sinclair, Logan, fourth; Marlin
Evans, Racine, fifth.
9,000 Pound, Field Stock: Eryn
- - - - - t Barrett, Vincent, first; Chuck
Shafer, Glenford, second; John
Ohlinger, Letart, W.Va., third.
8,500 Pound, Pro Stock: Don
A tinderprteo oriematioo meeting for Eastern Local wiD be
Battrell, Albany, first; Kenny
beld Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. a Cbester ElementaJy. Parents of chil·
. Bryan, Jamestown, second; Paul
dmt wbo lR not ~regislered arc 10 do so at 9 a.m.
. Biehl, Athens, third; John CesOrientation will be at noon on Tuesday at Tuppers ElementaJy
pedes, Lewisville, rourth; Eryn
with ~lion atll:30 a.m.
Barret~ Vincen~ fifth; and Terry
Pamlts who did not allend the spring regisllllion or who arc new
Shafer, Glenford, sixth.
to the district will need 10 provide a oopy of their child's birth cer10,000 Pro Stock: Kenny Bryan,
~ a record of the various vaccinations and shots already
Jamestown, Ohio, first; Don Bat·
lrell, Albany, second; Eryn Barrett,
Further infonnadon may be oiJtained by calling the superintenVincen~ third; Terry Shafer, Glendent's office 985-4292.
·
ford, fourth; Richard Manzey,
Pomeroy, fifth.
Cash was awarded in five places
in each of thMwO semi-tnlclc pull
Two WRtb were investiptcd over the wcekel!d by the Galliaclasses, and the winners were: ·
Melgs·Post of the SIIIC Highway l'mll.
'
.
19,500 Pound, Semi: Chris NapA Putneloy tDIII sustained millor in~ in a one.gr aash on
per,
Langsville, f1rst; Dave Trou~
. Pomaoy Pike in Salisbury Townsbip Friday around 8:S3 p.m.
·
Albany,
second; Don Rose,~
Al:conling 10 the peii'OI, Stevm P. Ervin, 18, Ervin Road, was
·third;
Stan
Ragan, Albany, fomth;
IJCIIthbound on Po11coy Pike llld 1VCIIt off the right side d the I08d.
and Bob Williams and Sons, Rut·
His c:a- lllnll:k .. cmtwnkmrll\ IIIII oW:rtumed.
land, fifth.
Brvia was IIIDSpiWld by the ~ County limc:rgency Medical
22,500 Pound, Semi: Chris NapSavico 10 vea- Memorial HOspital ,where be was !lt8ied and
per,
Langsville, first; Stan Ragan,
n:le~nd .
Albany,
second; Ronny Eblin,
'DitDIIC 10 Enin's 1982 Rxd Mustang -listed as heavy and
Pomer~y,
third; Tom Myers,
djs+liq
LangsviUe, fotirth; and lloo Rose, ,
Racfne, fifth.
.
Sentinel News Stair

1989 FOlD &amp;orr

118,..0, rear detroit, low milo.
Nice car.

...

Tractors, semi-trucks pull their
way to victories at Meigs fair

Child aeata, 71l88l., v-e, u,
auto.: loaded up. Factoty Program

SAVE

'i&gt;_

tor drivea bJ Briaa W'mdoo was featured ill aa

1992 PLY. GRAND VOYAGR

95

~."~

,.t·

OFF AND PULLING • This 1951 Cllill! trac·

•Power WtnOOW$/Loeka l Molt

6-splied, sporty wlleela, buJT'Ciflr,
cuaette, t-owner, low miles.

miles.

Ust$319.95

H2-21M

~':n

• Air CondUiomng
•AM/I'M Stereo CnHltt

1991 NISSAN
4X2TRUCK

2 Door, rear defrost, stereo,
cassette. Local trade. Low

'

239

5 sl)ted, wont p;tekaoe. sp• e.
11tereo, elot h

AMutllmadll

By CHRISTOPHERSULUVAN fell, ·sustained winds blew at 140 said there were " one or two

-

1,

1 Seetlon, 10 Pogn 25 ..,..
m -Piper

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ, Monday• August 24, 1992

Hurricane Andrew hits Miami; two kitled

e-n

~~

PET WINNERS • PictUred ahoYe an lint·
place winners in Friday's Meigs Couaty Fair Pet
Show, rrom lel't, Michelle Browa, most UDIISUal;
Julie Spann , best bird ; Cindy Durst, best

Tuesday.

$1:50, Fumen Ba.n.k; Cllad Wheeler, Tuppe.n1
PWu, SJ.lS,.N..n. N-., Dodao: N'adiOioo
Dotwlllu,
11.6!, lfolzor Cllnlo: lob

'

c:

Tonight, mostly clear. Low
near 70. Warm and bumld on

u-.

-

.

Super lotto:
9-IO·IS-22·36-47
Kicker:
0-4-3-8-4-3
Pick 3:
8-0·2
Pick 4:
3-5·3·8

---

l..oedlvWa. 1. , Homo N•Uand Bank; B.uy

DeadJine for
filing disaster
lease forms is
February 16

GALLIPOLIS • Tobacco pro·
ducers with more than a 20 peltC!lt
crop loss as the result of a natural
disaster should file an ASCS-574
disaster n:port at the ASCS office
beftn the crop is harvested.
The producer is eligible 10 lease
away excess quota if the county
commiuee approves the 574 and
determines thill sufficient acreage
was planted to produce the farm's
effective qwta, the prOducer made
reuonable and customaJy efforts to
produce the effective quota, and
met all price support eligibility
requirements..
A disaster report (ASCS-57A)
may .be filed after harvest if evidence is still available to determine
the acreage, and it can be deter·
mined that reasonable and cUSIOm·
ary efforts were used to produce
the crop. A verifiCalion fee will be
· charged on all late-filed S74's.
Excess quota may be leased,
under the disaster leasing program,
within the COIDlty or across county
lines within the state. The disaster
lease must be fded before February
16.

Ohio Lottery

Meigs fair
quarter horse
race results

SpciiUIIIIll Qub; E&amp;n Thobobool, Albuy, SUS,
ltiUOU
.· c.
CtnopnJ;_!:,&gt;;Sdwii&amp;,-J,Sl.70.
0...-IW
ThobobM,SIAO,Dow-

Two Pomeroy men are being·
held in the Meigs County Jail pending arraignment on charges of robbery and assaul~
·
Linda Warner, Meigs County
prosecuting aUorney, reported that
the charges wen: fded against Tim
Davidson, 35, and David Spangler,
29, both of Pomeroy. The two
allegedly assaulted and robbed

State fair ends
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio State Fair on Sunday
ended a controversial year that
included haggling over attendance,
business ana charging for rides.
The Ohio Expositions Commission, which oversees fair opera·
tions, met Sunday in executive session to discuss tlie fair and its first·
year manager, Billy Inmon.
Inmon has come under fll'C from
some commission members for
negotiating a contnlet that gave the
Pepsi-Cola Co. exclusive softo((rink
rights at the fairgrotDlds. He also
iiked some Democrats by offering
to rename the Celeste Entertain· .
meat Center for ¥ .- The tenter
now bears both the names of both
the soft-drink giant and former
Gov. Richard Celeste.
Fred Johnson, chainnan of the
expositions c:ommisslbn, said after
Sunday's meeting that Inmon 's
perlormance 'would be discussed at
the commission's next regular
meeting, BCheduled for SepL 16.
Johnson said some memben of
lhe commission have retOIIJ!Ilend·
ed lballnmon mi&amp;n, but that com·
missioners "want to be objective
and need time to think about iL ••

\ 1.

Wiliiam Van Cooney, Sl, of
Pomeroy Sawrday night about 8:30
p.m. during a pany at the home of
Judy Sayre, 170 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Warner said that Van Cooney
waited several hours before report·
ing the incident to Pomeroy Police.
When the prosecutor's office
became involved, search warrants

were issued and a quantity of
money and illegal drugs were taken
from the scene. Charges of JlOSSCS·
sion of illegal substances were filed .·
today agains1 Sayre. Warner said. Pomeroy police who investigated the inciden~ reported that Van
Cooney had some face injuries
when they interviewed him about
the robbery.

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'Commentary

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~M:o":~:Y~·-A.ug~u-st_2_~~1-"~2--~~--~~~~~~---------P~om~
· ~·~o~y~M~Id~d~l~~rt~,~O~h~:_____________~----------~n.~.·:~:l~y~Se=. n~d;ne=l~.~~·~3.

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 24, 1992

Andrew slams into Florida; snow chills RockiesF

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Aug. 2S
Accu·Wca!]lcr• fon:cast for daytime conditions and high tempcr.1turc.

.. The Daily Sentinel
Ill Co1ut Street
Pome~.Ohlo
~TO TllllllfftRitST8

or THE IIIBI~KAIION ADA

ROBERT Ll WINGE'IT
Publil•er

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mmager

PAT WHITEHEAD
A..W.nl PabHsber/Controller

'

'

. LETI'BRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesa than 300
·Words. All letters are subject w. editing and must be sigood with. name,
: addresa aod lelephono number. No Wlligoed !etten will be publllhod. I.Atten
;sbcl.uld be in &amp;Dod taBle, ~slilig issue~ not penonalities.
·

Now it's the GOP trying
to use the draft issue
·

DyWALTERR.MEARS
·
·
AP Speeial Correspondeat
HOUSTON- In an ironiC swilch on the cmtroveiSY that dogged Dan
Qu!lyle four yem ago, Piesideat Bush's campaign SlnllegisiS are !tying to
make an issue of Bill Clinton's Vietnam era dlaft record. ·
·
It's going to take adroii handling to take. advan• now of a iAlpic that
nagged their own vice presidential nominee las! time. But the Bush people
think they can use it 10 boost the Republican tic:ket among men middle
aged and up, particularly the middle-class and blue-collar voters tltey're
trying to reclaini. To that ge\leration, military service equalled patriollsm,
a legacy of World Warn. I
• ·
·
Clinton and Quayle both .voided the Viernam draft, the vice ~deal
by enlisting in the Indiana filational Guard, the Deinocratic pn:sidCntial
nominee through a student arid ROTC defennent and, laler, the luck 'of a
high draft lottery draw.
·
But Quayle says "there's a big difference" because he chose to setVe
by joining the National Guard, and Clinton chose QOIIIfsillve at all. Clinton says he relinquished a ~fennent and voliDllltily ptJt his name
.
into the
drnft pOol in 1969, but drew a high number and was not caDed.
The draft question .became one of Cliruon's campaign headaches back
in New Hampshire; he dealt with it in detail theu, and when it comes up
now, he says he did nothing wrong.
''All I've been asked about by the press is a woman I didn't sleep with
and a draft I didn't dOdge," he lamented of those so-called character
issues during the New Hampshire presidential primary campaign. ·
Now the Bush campaign is out to revive the second of those topics, the
draft, in the fall campaign. ·
So Clinton's draft record was cited in speech after speech at the
Republican National Convention, often by indirection.
.Marilyn Quayle, for example, said that in the generati011 she and Clin·
toq share, a time of social turbulence, "Not everyone demonstrated,
dropped out, took drugs, joined in the sexual revolution or dodged the
drnft" She said the people who heard her speak Wednesday night could
draw any infere!l(:e they liked.
~o could the people who heard Secretary of Labor Lynn Mania nomi·
lllllj: Bush for a second term. "Inside George Bush is the heart of an 18·
year-old fighter ~ilot who risked his life for his country, who did not run
from his responSibilities then and does not now," she said. "You can't be
one kind of man aqd another kind of president"
There was no such subtlety from conservative Patrick Buchanan.
"When Bill Clinton's tum came in Vietnam, he sat up in a donnitory in
Oxford, England, and figured out how to dodge the draft," said
Buehanan.
," ... We'll be talking about the val~es of George Bush vs. those of Bill
Clinton, talking about a man who qnit scbool to go light for his country
and one who went to scbool to avoid fighting for it," said Sen. Alan
Simpson of Wyoming. Bush flew combat missions in the PacifiC in World
War II, the youngest pilot in the Navy.
"Twenty·seven million of us proud American veterans won't forget,"
Simpson said.
·
Simpson's convention synopsis of Clinton and the draft
"We'll be talking about an absolutely ambitious young man who at the
age of 23 wrote a letter about his draft status and said he did it to - and
please hear these four words- 'maintain my political viability."'
That letter, indeed the whole question of Clinton, Quayle and the draft
dates from 1969.
That's when Clinton wrote to an ROTC supervisor at the University of
Arkansas to thank him for "saving me from the draft," and to tell of his
feelings against the Vietnam War. He said in the letter th8l he admired
friends who had defied the draft but didn't wantiO do it ~If because it
would damage his career and "political viability."
During the New Hampshire campaign, he had said he dropped his
defennent because high school friends were being tilled in Vietnam and
"I just didn't feel right" about avoiding the drnft
Sen. AI Gore Jr., Clinton's vice presidential running mate, enlisted in
the Anny, also in 1969, and spent nearly five months in Vietnam as an
annr, hisiOrian in 1971.
• I think a lot of Americans, in faet most Americans, are really tired of
seeing the Vietnam War used to divide our country," Gore said last
month, defending Clin10n after his military record had been questioned al
a televised campaign town meeting in KeDIUCky.
Questions like that were a problem for Quayle almlll!l from the day be
was chosen for the Bush ticl&lt;CI. He entisted.in the Indiana Nlllional Guard
in 1969 after his college defenncnt ended. There were ~uggestions, which
he denied, that family influence helped him get the Guard slot that kept
him out of the drafL He said his unit could have been aclivated any time
during the six years he SClVed.
In Houston, Quayle said there's no comparison between Clinton's
=r~andhis. "I wore the uniform f(]I'S~ ~"he said in Ill ~C-TV
mtemew. 'I chose 10 serve my COuntry. B1U Oi111011 ~hole DOl to.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Walter R. Mean, vice praldeat aad columnist
for The Associated Press, has eovtred Dltloaal pOilttc.l eonwntloos
since 1964.

f

MICH.

Pork barrel knows no party boundaries

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WASHINGTON- Forget the
hot rhetoril: in Houston last week
that baited and ~ed Congress for
failing to balance the budget. When
it comes to carving up the bud·
getary pork, both Republicans and
Democrats respond to the dinner
bell.
President Bush, for example,
attacks Congiess for wasteful and
irresponsible spending practices,
but Bush is wisely gun-shy when it
comes to taking on capitol Hill's
chief QllrVeyor of polk, $en. Roben
Byrd, D-W.Va.
Earlier this year, Bush threat·
ened to eliminate 68 proposed pro.
jects in Congress's budget mcluding a $200,000 Vidalia oninn
project and $50,000 for a grape
entomologisL Bush vowed ·10 go 10
the brink with Byrd, but he beat a
hasty retreat after Byrd targeted
Executive branch perks and Republican-backed pork.
· In his new book, "Adventures
in Porkland: How Washington
Wastes Your Mone1: and Why
They Won't Stop" (Villard) author

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Brilin Kelly relates how even the
president's budget director,
Richard Dannan, is deferential to
Byrd. One telling example came in
1989, when the White House was
trying to pass a supplemental bud·
get to aid the Nicaraguan contras.
During negotiations, Byrd men·
tioned to Darman that a government telescope in West Virginia
had blown down in a 'windstonn.
The nonnally stingy Darman swift·
ly insened a $75 miUion provision
to replace the damaged instn~ment
Kelly reporrs that Dannan later told
friends, "That was the cheapest
$75 million telescope the federal
government ever bought" Taxpay·
ers might beg to differ.
Pork has been described as
spending with a "Zip code

attached." More suceinCdy, Kelly
describes pork as the money of
everyone being spent for the plea·
sure of a few 10 satisfy the re..election lust of 011e. Kelly figures that
taxpayers would be $97 billion
richer if all the special interest,
constituent-driven projec~ were
sliced from this year's ~L
Though defining port IS not an
exact science -one J?CISOII'S port
is another JlCISOII'S prune cut- if
Kelly's estimate is used 811 a ball
park figure, the possibilities for
putting this money to good use are
arresting.
With $97 billion, the U.S. Food
for Peace could be funded for
approximately 81 years - the
Drug EnfOitelllent Administration
f(]l' 157 years. Fedelal prenatal-care
programs would be covered for
about 430 years. At a time when
infrastructure is crumbling across
the country, $91 billion c:ould build
30,000 miles of Interstate High·
way. It's also four times the
amount it cost for the Apollo program, which put a man on the

JToledol85' I

moon.

THE LOCK'g
BEEN CHANGED.

We preside over the end of

IND.

•lcotvmoosleio I

W. VA.

Ice

Joseph Spear
to pay 'players something akin to
what they were worth, but it soon
devolved into utter lunacy.
By 1992, thanks to the money
generated by network and cable
television in competiti011 with each
other, the average salary was $1.08
million and even mediocre players
were signing $15 million contracts.
Players like Pitrsbtirgh's insuffer·
able Barry Bonds and Oakland's
arrogant Rickey Henderson got
greedy and whiny and sullced about
being underpaid.
At about this time, it occurred 10
fans that it wasn't television and
the Loopy Loops who were paying
these outrageous sums to watch
egotistical jerks pout It was them.
They were paying through the nose
for cable sports channels. They
were payin$ an average of $85.85 a
game for Uckcts, food, beverages
and souvenirs when they lOOk their
families 10 the park.
They looked at players like
Boston's Jack Clark, who made
$3.4 million a year and spent it on

3:

By Tile Associated Press
Wedoesday through Friday:
A chance of showers and lbunderstonns each day. Lows mainly
in the 60s. Highs in the 80s
Wednesday and mid· 70s to mid·

The speechwriters have had
The heady days of 111Challeoged em~oyment was either possible or
their day and those modern-day
U.S: economic supn:macy allowed desirable. N(]l' were private sector
Carte~
spear carriers, the convention delewage and benefd practices dial B
pensions available to that majority
gates, have gone hOme from Housunaffordable luxuries in the dog- of the workforce 1101 employed.!{.
ton, as a month ago they went a high (lremium on lean and mean eat-dog world of the 1990s. Only large COipolllions. For eYer}' S •
home from New York City. Prom management practices. That means extreme IIICliSiltes ca~~ avert a long worter, autoworker, miner or
here on, it's sound-bite city, with that job security is an iffy proposi- slide into seconcklass staiiiS. Inef- white-collar manager, there were
eloquence at a discount and rcpeti· tion. It means that old guarantees, ficiencies that could be tolerated three (]I' four farmwcdcers, gas sta·
live themes the currency of the like pension programs, are not when American supremacy was don operators, dime store clerts
political
.
worth the paper on which they are unchallenged are potenlially fatal and short order coots who had no
That ~the case, here's a wriuen.
when every industrial sector is fringe benefiiS, no job security and
theme either campaign is welcome
The morning headlines and under foreign siege. Fat, dumb and . no real hope of ever having either.
·
By Tile Asaoclated l'ml
to use free of cfiarge. It can be evening news drive home the point happy, we wae colleclivdy beaded
But the system held out the
Today is Monday, Aug. 24, lhe 237111 day of 1992. There are 129 days encapsulated in a simple .slogan: repeatedly. Major corporations for the slaughter pen. Wholesale
lefl in the year.
·
.
"Loyall)' up, loyalty down." ~· slice their payrolls by tens of thou· disaster can be averted only by prospect and the promise of both.
The official myth was that if you
Today's Highlight in History:
ever se1zes it early, develops it sands of employees, then slice seleclive llloodletting.
That's a long way from the stayed with the company, worked
On Aug. 24, 1949, the North Atlantic Treaty went into effcc~ witll the fully and convinces the vOICIS that again. Whole companies are swaJ.
~es agreeing that an armed 81181:k against one would be considered
he is sincere will be a sure winner.
lowed up by raiders, dismembered, heady days of the l1lc 1940s, wheo hard and played by the rules, you
'an 8l1ack against them all."
People of my generation may their assets sold off and their husks Congress passed a full ernploymenl could expect steady employment
On this date:
object that they have heard it tossed onto the economic garbage ac~ which eslablished as a mautr and a secure old ~&amp;e. That cwu ·the
way it WIS iuppoiCd to work.
. al I' that
In A.D. 79, long-donnant Mount Vesuvius erupced, burying the Roman before. If you served in the armed heap. Retired mineworkers are !Old 0 f nauon
· ptJ ICY ·
everyone
Now it doesa't and wen 'L All of
cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in volcanic ash. An estimated 20 000 forces, and millions of adult males their benefits will be cut, or in who wanted a job sbould have one.
people died.
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did betwe'en 1941 and tho early some cases eliminated, because of Today, the "acceptable" unem· us know lllc:ut aorDeone who has
Iii A.D. 410, Rome was overrun by the VitiJOihs, 111 event that sym· 1970s, you couldn't avoid it. For "changed circumstances," and ployment tate is around 5.S per· lost a job recently OI"IIICII a health
holited the·fall of the Western Roman Einpirc.
several ctccade&amp; after World War n, only detertnined union resistance cenL Up to 6.5 pataU iJ 101cnb1e. progtam s!ashed ~ly. Only
above 1 pen:em the V«:tJ nch .feel mvulnerllble to
lh .1572, the.slaughter of French Prolcltlnll • the hands of catholics two·wiy responsibtlities were staves off the calamity. There is Only When it
do
the
political
warning
beUs go ovem1ght unemploym~L W.e are
much
talk
of
redefining
the
way
be~ in Paris on SL Bartholomew's Day. 'l1lil ~~~ lasted until Octounderstood to be the basic ~t
ber,.aftd claimed SOI11e 13,()()() victims.
.
off,
and
even
thea
the
premise
is repeatedly warned thrle I! more to
of the soeial contrac~ in civililln as Social Security works for current
Ib 1814, I!ritisMon:es invaded Wiahinaton. D.C., and p~Cieeeded to set well a$ militltry life.'
beileficiaries as well as oncoming phony, since the realanemploy- • come - thai thrle must be more to
.
r~te to the capitqt and the White Houle.
·
·
·
. But what may sound like ol~ ones. Even the postal service, that .ment rare is about 5 patent higher come - for the good of the econo,i;l, fo, 1932;·~ , - . iao, ~ ~beelllle the fli'SI woman to ntake stuff to some of lis might a.s well be . ~ureailcmtic bastion of job SCCuri· than ' the official oae. That's my.
.
, ,
l!J
~ a '1iqri'810p ffi&amp;ht .icross the United
lmOiing from Loa Angeles to · written In Sans~t for alfthal il ty, Is suddenly told that some because millions or people have
Hoddl•a Carter 10, roraer:·
Nem;:NJ., in jUSt over 19 hours.
·
means to millions, of younger 40,000 middle-management slots simply stopped trying and bave State Departmeat spokesmaa
· Ih 1954, the Communist Control Aci weal into effect, virtually outlaw· Americans, Wllat they have seen or will be pared away.
joined the ranks of the "disc:ow· · ad anrd·'lriDIIIDI reporter, edt·
ing the Communist Pa!ty in the United Swes. :
.
'
. aged" workers, a neat bit of tor IIIICI pablllber, Is president ot
experienced coUld better \!e sum·
~ most. if not all of this, phraseology which obscures the · MtliDStreet, a WISIIID&amp;IDD; D.c .•
In 19S9, three &lt;lays after Hawaiian ltliehoocl; Hiram L~ FoolS was marized by a different slogan:
sworn in, as tile fll'st· Chinese-American
~enator, while Daniel K.
"You give' your all, W,e &amp;ive you is ablolu!dy lnevillble. i'ro!Jolle!IIS faet that they m '-'discouraged" kled television
com.. Inouye was sworn in • the fli'SI Jap~De~C-Alnerican tJ.$. ~ep~IIICII!dti¥e.
puJ ucl 1 sYDd.
writet lor
the shafL" The econ6mic 1y'stem of the new order mate a pcnuas1ve because they can 'I fmd work.
In 1968, Fnince blane.the world's fifth thcmlonuclear power 811 it that.iJ ~erging in the competitive · case, which goes something like
Mind you, no one except a Newspaper Enterprise Associaexploded a hydrogeli bomb in the South ~-:·
·
.
· world markets. of the.~990s pl&amp;ce!l Ibis: .
Marxist ever believed that full tiH.
·~
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Hodding

u.s.

Millard C. Jones

Charlene A. McClun~. 63, of
11270 SUIIICt Road in Marion, died
on Saturday, Aug. 22, 1992 at Mar·
ion General Hospital. She was a
Meigs County native.
She was the daughter of the late
Dale and Ella Will Smith, born in
Pomeroy on May 20, 1927..
Surviving are her husband,
Thomas McClung of Marion; her
son, James McClung, also of Marion; a daughter, Suanne McClung
Davidson of Columbus; and a
brother, Ronald Smith of l'omeloy.
She attended lhe F'IOI Presbyterian
Church in Marion.
Funeral services wiU be held on
Wednesday at 2 J.l.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. Fnends may call
there on Wednesday from liOOII to
2p.m.
Friends may also can ot~ Tues·
day from 4 to 7 p.m. at Hughes
Allen Funeral Home, 318 ML Vet·
non Ave. in Marion, where services
are set for Tuesday 11 7p.m. Burial
will be In Beech Grove cemettry.

Millard C. Jones, 72, of I 00
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, died
on Saturday, Aug. 22, 1992 a his

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 33

Ashland Oil........................22 31-4

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AT&amp;:T.............................. ..42 318
Bank One......................... ..43 1/8
Bob Evans ......................... 1911-4
Charming s~..................29 1/2
City Holding ...................... 18 3111
Federal Mogul.. ................ I6
Goodyear T&amp;:R ..................66 1/2
Key Centurion ...................18 718
Lands End..........................31 S/8
Limited Inc........'............... 21
Multimedia Inc ..................2A
Rax RestauranL ...................9/16
Reliance Electric................ l8 S/8
Robbins&amp;:Myers ................ 16
Shoney's Inc......................20 1/2
Star Bank ...........................29 518
Wendy Int'J.. ..................... .III/8
Worthington Ind................22
Stock reporta are tbe 10:30
a.m. quotet provided b7 Blunt,
Ellis aad Loewi of GaUipol.is.

residence.
He was bom on J111. 8, 1920 in
Pomeroy, son of the late Homer
Clyde and Gladys Mae Chapman
Jones. He was a graduate of
Pomeroy High Sebool and a former
sales department head. He ~
in the U.S. Air Forte during World
War n, and was a member of Dlew
Websltr American Legion Post 39.
Surviving 1rt his sister, Mrs.
Mickey (Joanne) Williams of
Pomeroy; and two nieces, Terri
Lynn Russell of Louisville and
Pamela Jones Wentworth of New
Jeney.
Besides his pareniS, he was preceded in death by his two wives,
Jean Williams Jones and Mabel
Parsley JODCS; and • brother, Kenneth Ctjde Jooes.
Funcnl aervices will be held on
Tuesday at 11a.m. a Ewin1 Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Rev.
Willilm Mlddleswartb ofllcialing.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory
Garderui. Milltltry araveside rites
will be conducted by the Drew
Websltr post.
Frienc!.s. may call at the funeral
home 011 Monday from 6to 9.

Meigs announcements
Womea'a rtlbwsblp to lied
. The ~County Women Fel·
lowship will meet Thursday at
Bradbury Cluch of Christ 11 7:30
p.m. Jill Johnson will present a
craft dernaulrllim. Public invited.
YOP' Deml to -.eel
The Me1g1 County Young
Democrals will meet Tlullday II 7
p.m. to select delegates for the
stalewide c:onYelltion.

(Conlhl.ed l'rolll Pqe 1)
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Ervin was cited by the patrol f(]l' driving undtl the illfluence and
failure to cmtrol.
A Ravenswood, W.Va., man was tiled after aone-'o'Wcle wreck
on U.S. 33 in Bedflld TOWillhip Sunday around 12:1S a.m.
David M. Phillips, 21, of 1~3 Pat: Ave., W. e *unl on U.S.
33 and lost contJV1 in a ri&amp;fl CUM, the patrOl ~ Hil pickup
slid off die Jell side of lht IOidway and Slruck I ditdl.
Phillips sustained minor injuries but relll8ed IRIInlent, the report
Slated.
.~ D W !i)!~' ·19!l0 TO)'OIII pickup was lilted u heavy and

diiaNJn-.
PhiOifJS -

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cited fur failun~IO control.

EMS units answer caUs

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:
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=lloB

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On Saturday at 3:12p.m., i'omcloy lqlllld - t to Collins Road
and took Mary Sens 111 Plealllt V'allcy Hosjlilal. At 4:34 p.m.,
Synicuse squad toot Rict Cullilon ~ the MeiJS eo.ty Fair·
grou.,da to Vetetans Memcrial Boipital. At 4:51 p.a., Rllllllld
squad went to S• ~ Roidand lOot Meliai F'lfo 10 v--..
AI S:59 p.m., Pomeroy squad wu Milt 10 Tile ~·· Millud
Jonea wu dead on arrival. At 8:45 p.ia., SY!I£U*I squad pi......
at lhe flirlroundi IIKIIOot Tony 1011111 to V
Al 9!S9 p.m.,
Tuppeq ~'faint eqUid _,to Reedlvllle. Dlivillleod - llbn 10
v~.

.

On Sunday at 3:14a.m., Pon~e~oy lljuad -10 MildleDcJt'for
Carl Stewllt, who wu taken 10 Holzer Medleal eenw;r:;;3:SS
a.m., Syracuse ~quad _.Ito Slian:la ROid for Jeny ~.
who.was liken Ill Velei1!11. Al9:S3 l.lli., Middleport .-1 - 10
SioneWoocl A!*biiCilll. Carol Wines was libln 10 Veca.....
¥ 1:2S P·'!'·• M;ddlepM llnit ~~ Riwnldo ApM'IDbilellelllllll for
Luedle Hendricb, who wu .IDDn ~ .na IC V.uoy. At 6:26 p.m., ·
PomCIOY I!'Juad walt to IAII HoDciw ROid ... Giltpr Lee. Sill! WIS
tabD 10 VetennS. At 10:18 p.m., Rudlnd lqUid WIIIIIO Dell« for
Travis Hayes. He wu tllren 10 VIIIII'IIIS.

'

,.

Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien filled 59 defen·
dants lasi 'IVeek.
Fined were: Lawrence S. Faw,
Rutland, scat belt, costs only;
Anthony W. S!Dilh, Cheshire, seat
belt violalion, COSts only; John R.
MiOer. Athens, aeat belt, casts; M.
Heath Richmond, Pomeroy, seat
belt violation, eosts ontg; Roy A.
Estep, Mason, W.Va., Ul, $3SO
and costs, 30 days in jail, suspend·
ed to tluec. operator's license sus·
pended for 90 days, upon enrollment and completion of the RTP
school, SISO of fmc and jail time
will be suspended; Gerald R. Dou·
glas, Athens, theft, 10 days in jail
suspended to three, $75 and costs,
restitution; Thomas P. Hunter,
Pomeroy, speed, $24 and costs.
Jeffrey A. Henner, Coolville,
speed, $21 and costs; Robert B.
Yowell II, Dwbam, N.C., $25 and
costs; Jaclc L. Smith, Long Bouom,
Seal hek violation, COSIS only; Mark
G. Kirk, Ashford, W.Va., speed,
$29 and costs; Sharon K. Smith,
Syracuse, speed, $20 and costs;
Patrick A. Larouque, Franklin,
Ohio, speed. $24 and COSIS; Timothy Michael, Racine, seat belt violation, costs only; David J. Her·
man, Columbus, speed, $25 and
costs; Seou Brinker, Pomeroy, aeat
belt violation, eosts only; Marvin
L. Dilloa, Grove City, camping on
Division or W'lldlifc property, $25
and costs; Teddl I. Jaekson, John·
Slon, speed, $22 and costs; Harvey
Mmis, Jr., Portland. driving under
suspensioo, $75 and costs, 10 days
in jail suspended to three days,
defendant 1D tum .in plates of Vehi·
cle for two weeks, reckless opera·
tioo, costs.
William E. Morris, Pomeroy,
seal belt violation, costs only;
David W. Smith, Shade, seat belt
violation, costs only; Mark A. Pen·
nington, Lancaster, speed, $22 and
costs, seat belt violation, costs
only; Ronald B. Carpenter, Jr.,
Racine, seat belt violation, costs
only; Herman L. Dillon, seat belt
violation, costs only; Mary J.
Coates, Belpre, speed, $22 and

costs; Kimberly L. Taylor, Rutland.
seat belt violauon, costs only; Todd
E. Evans, Middleport, tint~ side
windows allowing less than 7() pet·
cent light transmltt8!1ce, $20 ~d
costs; Ronald E. Atkins, Cheshire,
disorderly conduct while iotoxic:ll·
ed, $50 fine suspended to $20,
COSIS, six months ID jail probldon;
Jeff Carper, Radcliff, DUI, six
months 10 jail, suspended to 13
days, concurrent with sentence in
Vinton, $4S0 and COSIS, ~·s
license suspended for one year, two
years probation, alcohol assess·
men~ left of center, $25 11111 costs,
driving under SUSJlCI!Sion, $7S and
cosiS, sill months tnjail, suspended
10 13 days, concurrent with other
charge, two yem probation.
John R. Dillard, Pomeroy, fail·
ure to control, $20 and costs;
Charles White, Crown City, seat
belt violation, costs; Glenda D.
Doherty, Zaleski, seat belt viola·
ti011, costs only; Debmb L. White,
Hamilton, Silted, $2' and costs;
Franklin D. Hughea, Scott Depot,
W.Va., safetr violation, $SO and
costs; Chery Marnhout, Ratine,
passing bad checks, $25 and costs;
Jeffrey Stone, Panaoy, no license
plates, costs; Alan Luikart,
Pomeroy. disorderly cmduc~ $25
and costs, restraininc mler issued;
John Coleman, Racine, reckless
operation, $100 and COSIS, failure
to control, costs only; Elmer R.
Parson, Jr., Racine, defective
e:thaust, $25 md costs, failure to
control, SSO and costs.
Donald C. Ward, West
Columbia, W.Va., criminal mis·
chief, 60 days in jail, suspended to
30 days, $SO 111d cosrs, two years
probation, restitution, resisting
arrest. 60 days in jail suspended 10
30 days, $100 and costs, two years
probation, alcohol assessment,
domestic violence, six months in
jail suspended 10 30 days, $300 ~
COSts, two
probalion, restralll·
ing order ISSUCij, disorderly conduct while intoxicated, $50 and
costs, all jail time coneurrent, dis·
orderly conduct, $SO and costs;
Victona Buchanan, Long Bottom,

rears

On the other side of the counay,
across the tip of the Florida Perlin·
unseasonably
cool weather pre·· ·;
sula 10 the Gulf of Mexico today.
vailed
today
m
pans of lhe North· :
In addition 10 drenching much
west.
where
forecastas
predk:ted a
of Plorida, the stonn was expected
,blast
of
cold
air
and
seaueml
snow
to dump rain on most of the Gulf
flurries
would
chill
the
northern
Coast region.
R&lt;Jclcie$.
Rain also was forecast for the
Midwest, the northern Plains and
much of the SouthwesL
In Montana, a foot of snow fell
menacina. $100 and costs, 30 days in the mountains of Glade: Nation·
in jail suspended, one year pniba· al Park over the weekend.
Rain and thunderstorms extend·
tion, restraining order issued;
ed
Sunday evening over the south·
Richard Gibbs, Middleport, allow·
ern
Atlantic coast, the Gulf of
ing unlicensed driver to qpc:nte a
Mexico
region, the Mississippi
vehicle, $75 and costs, lhrec days
in jail, suspended, one year proba· Valley, the Appdachians, northern
Minnesota, the Plains and parts of
tioo.
.
Candy Harmon, Dexter, no the Roeldes.
Temperatures today were fore·
license plates, $75, sUSPCIIded to
$2S and costs with valicl registra· cast in the 40s in Momana and
tion within two weeks; Jeremy northern North Dakota; 50s in
Shockey, Shade, ~ssession of Wyoming and the northern Plains;
m.;juana, 30 days ]Iii, rulpellded, 60s in the southern Rockies and
$SO and costs, one year ~; 70s in New Mexico and northern
Donald E. Stewart, Cbdlicothe, Michigan.
Readings in the 80s were. -:
failure to control, SIO and costs;
Burl L. Putman, Sr., RoedaVille, expected in virtually the entire :
safety violation, S7S and cost; eastern half of the nation and the
William T. Pultz, Columbus, speed. Northwest; 90s in central Texas, ~
$25 and costs; Timcdly w. Morris, and central California; and above- f
Middleport, failure to yield, $10 100 in n&lt;J'thern and southern Cali·
and COSIS; Max Long, Reedsville, fornia.
Tbe high · for the nation Sunday
failure 10 stop afler an accident,
$100 fine suspended to $30 and was 100 degrees at lm~. Calif.
Across OhlO
.
costs, assured clear distance ahead,
Hot,
hazy
and
muggy
August
$20 and costJ; .Carolyn Atkins,
Racine, DUI, 10 da}'SIII jail, sus· weather is forecast through Tues-· ·
pended to three, $350 llld costs, day, the National Weather Service .
one year probation, operator's said. There 'II be a chance of an iso- ·.
license suspended for 90 days, lated thunderstorm or two, but oth· ·
upon enrollmelt and c:anpletion of erwise it will be dry.
Hi~hs temperatures will be in
RTP, $150 Ql the fine and the jail
the
m1d-80 and relative humidities time will be;~
will
stay above SO percent
Kim R. Lic6t, Athens, expired
Rain
and cooler temperatures
registration, $10 and costs; 'tracy
should
arrive
on Wednesday and .
Cundiff, Midd~ ICit belt vioaround
the
rest of the week,
stay
lation, costs; illiam Harris,
said.
forecastm
Pomeroy, reckless operation, SIOO
The record-high temperature for · ·
and costs, left of center, costs only;
James Harris, Middleport, ag~· this date at the Colwnbus weather . ·
vated IIICIIICing, sill months in jail, station was 97 degrees in 1948' ·
suspended 10 time suved, costS, while the record low was 47 in
two years probation, resuaining ·1971. Sunset tonight will heat8:16 '·.
order issued, domestic violence, sill p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:53 ··
•,
months in iail. susuended m tim~ a.m.
served, costs, two yem piobaliooJ;
Toby A. HyseU, Lancaster, DUI,
$600 and cosJS,. six months in jail,
operalllr's license suspended for
two years, five years probation,
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - · ~
alcohol counseling, driving under
.
The
bodies of two girls who had
suspension, six months in jail, em·
cunall with DUI charge, $200 and been missing since Saturday night · '
costs, five years probatioo; Patrick were found behind a downtown ··
·.
N. Jacks, Middleport, speed, $27 building.
Family
members
identified
the
··
and costs.
girls, who were found Sunday, as
Phree Morrow, 12, and Martha ··
Leach, 11.
Police Capt Richard O'Brien '·
said investigators awaited a report "
responsibilities Palestinians would from the Clark County coroner
assume under interim self-rule, the . IOday to confum the identities. But .
respected Israeli daily Haaretz he said, "We're 99 percent sure ·. .
··
rel'!l'!:ed IOday. And, the newspaper it's them."
Phree
Morrow's
mother,
Susan
SBJd, lsrlel will 8l1tiOUnCe its readi·
ness to negotiate on the basis of Palmer, said police told her the ·
.
U.N. Resolution 2A2, which calls girls had been raped and beaten.
She
said
she
last
saw
the
girls
at
·
for Israeli withdrawal from occu·
4:30p.m. Saturday. They were on :
pied land in return f(]l' peace.
Israel's previous hardline gov· their way 10 a balcery.
Pam Gooding, a cashier at the
emmenttold Syria the resolution
didn't apply to the Golan Heigh IS, bakery' said Martha bought dough·
which Israel captured in the 1967 nuiS at the stm about 5 p.m.
"She didn't act like anything .·
Middle East War and later
was
wrong," Ms. Gooding said.
annexed. Syria wants the Golan
She
had the cute little grin she
returned.
·
alwa
has."
-··
Sunday, Rabin announced a
~ Palmer said the police were
series of measures to CDC011118e the
latest round of negotiations. They notified when ~ failed to return · ·
included releasing 800 Palestinian home from the bakery. Relatives
prisoners who are nearing the end and friends began a searcb as darlcof their sentences, easing travel ness fell.
On Sunday, the family members
re~trictions into Israel for Arabs
searched
a place where the girls ·
from occupied territories and
liked
10
play,
near a stonn sewer ··
unsealing rooms in houses shut as
and railrolid tracks.
punishment for aetivists.

Girls had been
missing overnight ·.

Mideast delegations gather for talks
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Five
Mideast delegations are gathering
here for a sixth round of peace
talks that likely will include the
issue of Palestinian self·rule in
Israeli occupied ltn'irories.
De-legatioN from Israel, Jordan,
Lebanoll and Syria wac in Wash·
ington 011 Sun~ f(]l' talks sched·
uled to begin
y. A Palestinian
deleption was en rau after being
dela~ by a two-day dispute with
Israel over travel restrictions for sill
deleption aides.
The Palesti.U.W arrived Stmday
in Amman, Jordan, and were
expected to arrive in Paris early
today for their Dight to Washing·
tqn.

Tbe senior Palestinian negotia·
tor, Haidar Abdul Shafi, already is
in Washington and met Friday with
Assistant Secretary of State
Edward P. Djercjian, who will handle day-to-day U.S. stralqy.

The talks are the first under
Israel's new prime minister,
Yitzhak Rabin, who has slowed
Jewish settlements on the West
Bank, one of the major issues in the
talks. They also are the fliSI with·
out Secretary of State James A.
Baker m, who resigned to become
chief of staff and chief campaign
adviser to President Bush.
One key questi011 in these talks
is whether the Palestinians would
be willing to aecept limited self·
rule for the time being.
Rabin's plan for Palestinian
self-rule involves electing an
administrative authority through
which the Palestinians would run
their day·to·day affairs. Israel
would still maintain order in the
territories, where some 115,000
Jews live among 1.7 million Pales·
tinian Arabs.
Israel will propose Conning subcommittees to negotiate which

JolmreuUo.

The John family mmion will be
Sept. 6 a S• Mill Pat: with dinner at p.m.
Tent rniYII exteDded
Tent revival 11 the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene,
Reedsville, has been exlended
through Wedrietday. Services are 7
p.m. nighdy. Public invited.

..---Local briefs--

Today in history

s..,

South Central
mostly clear. l.ow near
70. Tuesday, parlly sunny, hazy,
warm and humid. High in the mid·
80s. Chance of rain 20 peroenL
Tonigb~

Charlene A. McClung

Ill

aoes

80s Thursday and Friday.

---Area deaths--

"••
•

Social safety net misses too many

C1992 Aceu-Weather. lne.

-----Weather-----

tics.,,

ers, singing cowboys and pizza
makers who tried to sell teams for
enormous pofll.
From plebeian nms, a prophet
rose and said to the fearful fans,
"Buy them yourselves. Form cooperatives, sell shares and purchase
your teams. it is not a wild idea:
The Green Bay Packers football
team has operated thi~ way since
1922.'' But the fans did not listen,
and the prophet, who went by the
name of Tbe Cum udgeon, said,
"Municipalize your teams; Float
bond issues and buy them." And a
governor of New York by the name
of Cuomo touted the idea, but it
came to naught.
Th~ it happened thai the people
lost all affC(;tion for megaball and
tur:ned their attentions to fishing.
Tbe moguls and swdlheads gradually clq8ted and the game reverted
to its pasllnl past and was cnjo~
by true lovers of the sport.
And the gtXls of OlymptJS JeSted
and marveled unto themJelves, perhaps by our curse on baseball we
have saved it
J-pll Spear Is a IJildlcaled
writer for Newspaptr Enterprise
Assodatioa.

SUMy Pl. Clooty Cloudy

Vi.t A110dtled ,_, Gtap#'ic~Ntt

baseb~ll

18 cars and condominiums and
country club homes and a drag rae·
ing team and they said to them·
selves, "Why the hell am I fodting
over my money to keep this fool in
toys?" And they stopped going to
the park.
Then the gods went to work 011
the Loopy Loops, who had been
saved for last because they were
already wicked and devioos and no
challenge at all. Indeed, the
had already leveled a cune on
in 1919 when one of their ilk in
Boston sold Babe Ruth to the Yan·
kees and another in 1958 when
Walter O'Malley moved Brook·
lyn's Dodgers to Los AnJIC(es and
still another in 1972 when Bob
Short lOOk the Washington Sena·
tors to Texas.
In 1973, the gods set down
among the Loopy Loops one
George Steinbrenner, who pur·
chased a large chunk of the New
York Yankees, then proceeded to
hire and fli'C 18 managers and 11
general managers and generallymake a buffoon of himself. Other
odd personages joined his ranks
and soon the sport was in the hands
of magnateS, ·developers, car deal·

area.
The eye of the storm passed·
across Homeslead, about 25 miles
southwest of Miami, just before
dawn. Forecasters predicted the
storm would rip its way w~

Judge O'Brien fines 59 .in Meigs court

Instead, Congress has chosen to
fund a rasher of programs that are
more comical than beneficial. As
Kelly points out, members of
Congress "make it their business
to spend the taxpayers' money."
Millions of dollars are wasted each
year on mundane things like stud·
1es of the sexual habirs of Japanese
quail and how long it takes to coolc
breakfast eggs. Other pressing
national ¢orities include a $7 mil·
lion grant to study jet lag, and
$500,000 to build a 10-story replica
of the Pyramid of Cheops and an
800-Ioot model or the Great Wall
o( China in Bedford, Ind.
Taxpayers have indirectly
employed scientistS to answer ·
pressing questions like: Why do
people fall in love? What causes
rudeness? Why do people cheat
and lie on tennis coms? What's the
likelihood of ~gian endive growing in Massachusetts? Are there
better ways 10 can mackerel?
In the words of former House
leader Tony Coelho, "pork is poli·
Coelho confessed to Kelly that
as head of the Democratic Con·
gressional Campaign Committee he
"coached" coli~ on how to
deliver pork Ill their districts - a
sldll that probably provides the best
fonn of msurance for an incum •
bent
Kelly bapl\zes Byrd "The Pon·
tiff of Port" ·r(]l' his fabled ability
to tum a sow's ear into a. silk purse
for his Appalachian constituentS. In
1988, Byrd became chainnan of the
Appropriations Coll)miuee, and
brazenly promised to deliver $1
billion wonh of pork 10 West Vir·
ginia - Kelly estimateS that he is
more than halfway there.
"In highway funds alone,"
Kelly writes, "West Virginia got
about $200 million in addition to
those it would nonnally receive.
West Virginia University was once
again one of the best.funded
schools in the country, as was
Wheeling Jesuit College, which
was slarting to be known on the
Hill as 'the Harvard of the Ohio
·River Valley."'
Jaek Aoderson and Michael
Diosteio are sy•dlcated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

li\M ...T\IATt'OOO

It saddens me to say it, but I
believe professional baseball as we
know it will soon be extinct
Future historians will probably
date its demise from April 18,
1966, when the Los Angeles
Dodgers and the Houston Astros
played the first game on fake grass.
This angered the gods of Olympus,
and Houston lost, 6·3. It also
annoyed Philadelphia Phillies first
baseman Dick Allen, who said, "If
a horse won't eat i~ ~won't play on
iL" And fonner manager and seer
Leo Durocher, who said, "This
travesty could ruin the game.''
Soon the people who own baseball teams - a special breed
descended from a European tribe
known as the Loopy Loops - were
ripping up real gmss in places like
Philadelphia and Kansas City and
playing the game in the open air 011
synthetic sod. The gods resolved
that baseball would suffer an ago.
nizing dealise.
First, they decided, they would
corrupt the players. Thus it came
about that free agentry and arbitra·
lion were invented and a union was
formed. This was good for a while
because it forced the Loopy Loops

•

Ry TM A5iiqeialed Press
llurricane Andrew slammed into
southern Florida before dawn
l&lt;Kiay, (orcing hundreds of thoU·
sands to Ocp and knoeking out
power in large parts of the Miami

Withrow may seek governor's office
By JOHN CdALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - State Trcasut·
er Miry Ellen Withrow has a good
view of the Statehouse from her
desk in the Rhodes State Office
Tower. By 1994, she may try to
move across the street into space
occupied by the governor.
Withrow, the state's chief
inYeS~ment off'~tet since 1983, said
she.is thinking about a bid for the
Democratic giJbematorial nomina·
lion in 1994.
"There's a lot of pressure out
there ... for me to run," Withrow
said in an inlllview. "It's coming
from a broad perspective or people.
The mgle in 1990 was all women.

Lottery
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
was one ticket sold listing all six
nwnbers drawn in Saturday night's
Super l..otiD drawin•. The winning
tic:ket is worth $4 mittlon, the Ohio
Lottery said.
The jackpot for Wednesday's
Soper Louo drawina also will be
$4 million.
Plck3N•ben

842

(eiaht. zero, two)

Plcll4N. .ben
3·5·2-8
(dlee, five, two, eight)
Saperl.Citto

9-10.15-~36-47
.
(nine, ten, fifteen, twenty-two,
thirty-six, folty-aevcn)
·

kicker

.

()..4.J-8..4.3
(zero, four, three, ei1ht. four,
!~We)

Now you're seeing it across the
board. Totally different," she said.
A race for governor would force
Withrow, 61, to abandon a possible
fourth term as treasurer. She makes
no assumption that her re-election
to her current post would be
assured.
"Well, you never know. With
the mood of the public, with the
word re-elect, I don't think it's
becoming a plus anymore. You
have to prove yourself, but I think I
have," Withrow said.
She is lonldng at all h« options,
including other sta~ewide off'JCCS.
"I feel I would have tabD a dif·
ferent direction (than Republican
Gov. George Voinovich) in many
situations this past two years, and
I'm IKll ruling It ou~" she said.
Withrow criticized Voinovich
for acting prematurely in ordering
$31S million of state spendin$ curs
July Ito offset part of a defiClt that
otherwise was expected to occur by

News
briefs
The English Chione! was

June 30, 1993.
"Well, you kno~, this is his
fliSt budget," she S81d. "I've seen
many budgets.''
"There's so much you learn
after going through this. I'm
always in awe of somebody that
goes for a top position the first
time, because you've got to know
wha to expect and how to handle
i~" Withrow said.
She acknowledged arguments
that the treasurer's office was not a
traditional SleWing stone 10 govet·
nor, but clled Gov. Ann Richards
of Texas, Gov. Joan Finney of
Kansas and Gov. Roy Romer of
Colorado u treasurers who successfully neJOIIaled the change.
"There is nothing any more
lmporunt than someone in that
governor's chair that knows how
the financi:a need to be handled.
That's the name of the game, good
management and fUliiiiCCS," With·
row said.
•

dry

some 18,000 years ago, during
Earth's last majcrJ!~Iion.
Tbe oldest u
ted artlfaciS
(mainly fluted points ever fotlnd in
the New World were made by
Paleo-lndlan hunten toown as !he
Clovis people, who pursued Ice
Age mammotha, camell, bilon and
horses nearly 12,000 years igo.
Ten pm:eQt of the Hmma who
fought for the United State in
Southeast Asia were killed, a pet·
ceiitaJe which, if they had been
Amencans, would have ptJt some
270,000 names on the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial in Washington
rather than the S8,1S6 that arc
inscribed there IOday.
t

••••••• 0

SPRING VAll f YCINE MA ,...,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
·•
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS • · ,
Roy Ellis, ll.utland, and Mary
Fowler, Racine.
.··
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - :•
JenyTucker.
·.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS • ,.·
Carol Wines, Middleport and . .. ·
George Reitmire, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Sarah Bayles and Roy Ellis.

The Daily Seminel
(tiiPII ... _ .

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports
~incinnati
' · MONTREAL (AP) -Jose Rijo
rhinks his teammates may have sur~ndered the Dag.

.

ter," Rijo said after he helped the

"Maybe mentally the guys !hint
After all, August hasn't been a
good month for the Cincinnati . they're out of the race and have Reds snap a four-game losing
Reds.
.
.
given up but we have.
bet· stteak in a 1-0 victory over the
Montreal Expos on Sunday.
The Reds are 9-12 in August
and don't resemble the club they
were on July 6 when they were six
sames in front of the Atlanta
Braves in lhe NL,Wes1.
Since then, the Reds are 18-23
and lhe Braves have soared to a
comfonable lead.
"ln order for us to win lhe division, we have to play every day the
way we're capable or playing,"
Rijo said. "Maybe not physicially,
but mentally ihe guys lhink !hey 're
out of the race but it's no excuse
not to score runs.
"We should bC worrying about
ourselves, not the Braves."
Rijo llad a nasty forkball and
sliiler going for him as he struck
out eight in seven innings before
giving way to Rob Dibble.
.
Dibbie·struct out four of the six
baners he faced for his 161h save.
Ken Hill (13-7) was equally
· impressive, giving up seven hits
wilh six sttikeouts and two walks.
"Rijo had good control of his
forkball," Expos cleanup hitter
Larry Walker said. "Oh, yeah. It
didn't bounce in the dirt and it
tbe middle row are Josh Lynch, Ryan Mitchel~
J.P. Ha1111on, Scottie Jobnson, J.D. Lona, Phillip
Smith and Michael Dorst. Behind them are
cosches Mike Mitchel~ Jel{ Martin, Tim Long,
Bill HatmOIIBDd Keith Lyncb.

W

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Saturday's scores
A\lanl.o ) , Sl. Louil2

Mul\relll, CINCINNAn I
HCI.lltOn i4, Philr.delpftil9
Son Di"'I4,llowYodl2
OUctao 5, Lot Aagolco 4

Sunday's scores

CINCIIN.m 1, MOIIUOll 0
HwiiDnl, Plliltdolphit 1
OUotJO 4, Lot"" ..... 2

San rn.,o4, New 'I'om 3

Son Fnnoiaool, l'iutbwJh 2

SL Louill, A...... 3

Tonll!bt's games
Plilltdelphia (Riven 3-2) II CINCNNAn (lhmmood 6-1), US p.m.
N~w Yom (Gooden 6-II ) «l Sill Prua~
cio«&gt; (Swill 9-3), 9,35 p.m.
auu.1o (Caltillo 6-10) n San DieF
(l!anio 2-4), 10:05 p.m.
Pi\\abwJ)&gt; (W.U. 1-4) " loa Anada
(H&lt;n!Wa 9- 10), 10'3S pm.

Tuesday's games
Phibdclphi a (Mathews 0·2) al
CINCINNATI (Bdcha IQ-1 2), BS r.·m.

Mon Lr eal (N1bhol% 1·9) at At 1nta
(Gllvine 19-3), 7:40p.m.
It

Moalnll, 76: Oria10m, Mootreal, 75:

Ho1111011

(Kile 2-8), 8:35p.m.

ChiCI&amp;o (H1rk cy 4-0) It S111. Di.CJO
(Du luiet 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
Pi tubu!Jh (l.Wm 6- 11) «t l.ol An,.
let (R. Martinet 1· 10). 10:3S p.m.
New York (fem.ndtz 10.9) II s.n
Froncisco (f. WiltGnl-12), 10:35 pm.

Dou1ion. ~~ 17: Poodl-. AI·
lllno, 19;
· , Son Dqo, 11; Bl&amp;·
well, HoullOft, n; Mumy, New Yod:,

HITS - Sbollfold, S111 Dic1o, IS2:
Pa 'ldm, 'Ailank, 150; VmSlyke, JliiU·
~. I.U; DcSbicld•, Montrell, 1-CS;
Owjona. Son llicoo. 145; 0.0.. Chil:qo,
1&gt;40; llollor, Lot Ao-.131.

o-.n,

DOUBLES Phillllolphio,
33; VanS1yto, Plaohu:tll. 32; l.tftk?Oid,

SL Louil:, 31; W, am, S1a fru~
31 ;
29; Sbeftiol&lt;l, Suo
Dieao. 29; Pa.d.ldan, AtllllLI, ~; Murroy)lew Yook, 27.
TRlPUis - D. San4oa, AlluM, I~
Fialoy,-,1 1;&amp;\lor,Lot"-la,
11 ; Alicot, SL IJI\IJI, Ill: VlftS1yto,l'laaburah, 10; Offormu,IM Ana•l•. 1:
Moraaclitli, Jlhilldclphi•, 7; DeShieWI,
lolono.ot. 1; Srn± ... Oti&lt;aao. 7.
HOME RUNS - Shefflold, Sta
Dlcao, 2:7; . M;Gri!f, S1a Dicao. ~7;
Daulloo, Pbiltdelploit, 22: Jloadi, Pinobwah. l1 ; HollinO, PhUodolphio, II; L
W t l k • , - II; K1-. Lot Aap1•. 17; Pcodldoa, AU.Dll. 17; Dawaon,
cm..ao. 11.
STOU!N BASES - GriaGm, MCII..... 63: DoShicldt, 42; t.nIMI. St. IJI\IJI, 36; 8-, Lot ~
36; Robcnl, ClNCINNAn, 34; Fialey,
- 3 1; Biflio,-3l.
JUallNO (14 ........) - Olomo.
Allanlt, 19·3, .!6ol, 2.41; Towbllwy, SL
Loui1 , 13-S, .721, 1.03; SwiDdcll,
CINaNNAn 12-6, .667, :ua, M&lt;qan.
Cbi&lt;aao. 12-6, .667, 2.39; Loilnncl~ AI·
ltnla, 1Q-S, .6li/, 3.17; K. Hill, M_....,
13-1, .6SO, 1.12: Cane, New YOlk, 1!-7,
.6SO. 111: B. Hunt, San Dicao, 13· 7,
.610, 3.42.
STRIItEOUTS
New Yodl,
214; Smollz. A\lonla, 110; S. F...,.dez,
New Yoci, 150; 0 . Mtd4u, O.ic:•ao.
141; Drtbe.k, PituburJh, •44; ltiJo,
CINCINNAn, I 37; Bflls, Sm DiiJO•
127.
SA YES - Loo Smilh, St. lAuia, 32;
Wdldand,
21; D. ba, Houa""'• 21; MJ"", s., llicoo. 27; Clladloa,
CINCINNATI, 24; Mitc:b Willi1m1 ,
Philolclphit, 22: l);bble, aNCINNAn.
16.

E11lem Dl.,klon

Team
W
Toronlo ................. 71
Ballimore ............... 61
M11w•ukee ............. 67
Delroit.................... S9

L Ptt.
SJ .573
S6 .S41
S6 ..545
66 .471
CI.EVEU.ND ...... .l B f6 .463
8 01t.an............. ....... S6 68 .451
New Y&lt;ri. .. ............ S6 611 .451

Dlvblon
Otlland ................ .15 49 .60S
Minnctot.l ..............69 5.5 .556
Chic.ao........... ... ...65 57 .S3l

Gl

1
3..5
12...5

13
IS
IS

W es l ~ rn

Teu1 .. ................. .. 6l

66

Cali!omil.. ............. l7

68 .4S6

.480

Klnus Cny ........ ... 56 67 .4SS
Seatlle ...... ...............Sl 74 .408

6
9
JS j
\IJ
Jlj
24.!5

Saturday's scores
801lon 10, Sctltle I
ClEVELAND 6, TeUJI
0\ic.go l,IC&amp;n111 Chy 1

Ne.., Yolk 3, C•W"omi.l 0
Oak.l1nd S, Baltimore )
Mil w111kce 5, Delroit I
Torauo 4, Minnctoca 2

Sunday's scores
Seanle 9, Booon 3
Cdifom.i• 7, New Ycd: l, 10 iminp
OUland 7, Bl.ltimore 3

Tt:l u l4, CI...EVELAND 4

Minni:IOY 1. Toronw 0
au..P. 3. Konou
1
Detroit 3, Milw«utce 2

c.,

&amp;m 6-J),7 : 35~ .

10,

lain~~,

Rodtellcr. Sea 'friiiOP.llcb~ftc:r.
CAUFORNIA ANGELS - Aaaiplod
Din• RidciiCIU', pi&amp;c:Mr, 10 &amp;bnonlon ol
\he hc:UIC Cout l...p
NEW YORK YANKEES - Traded
Tim l.euy, pildoer, IIUIOllh 10 \be Sotale
Mariner~

FIOridt S1t10 lAtiJUL Placed Tim Bwte,
pitcher, on the 15-dly .Uabled.lia, and
ShaWft Hilleau. phchar, aa imvoabla
waiv-. Roelllod a- Sprinpr and Jmy
NW.., pi~h&lt;n, !tom Co1um"" of \be
ln-tiono1 LooP.' l'wdlued 1116 ....
triU of • • W1;km1n, pitdacr, from
Cal.wnW.. , .

Mad!-...""
...........
li11. ..

OAXLAND A1111El'1CS - Placed
\bo 15day diltblod
10 A"'- 22.
Recalled Todcl Jlaveni1, pitcber, !rom
llulu&gt;lllo of\bo Swlhat!U.p
SBATI1.E MAIUNERS - Ac:tivat.ed
XoYia oulliddcr.li&lt;&gt;m \bo 15diJ di11blod lilt Pbcod Erik Htn•on,
pildlet, .. liMo 15-day diltblod litt. ()p.
1-ioMd SIPM 1\lmw, oulfiiBlder, to cil..
...,. ollho- Coaal Loopo.

Otklaad,

STOUIN BASES - U..dl, Mllwou-

O.troil (Kiaa 3·4) '' Minnuot•

-

~o~uucm ,

Football
Natlenl1 Foothill Ia&amp;•
DALLAS COWBOYS - Sianod
Tony Tolbod, clcloru.ive ad,lO a thzeo.

au...

,..._

_

PrrCHlNO (14 dec:ilion•&gt; - Ju1n

LOS.ANOI!ta IIAMS - A...,.d 10
wish s-. ...... ~ oa a

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

r......, 12-3• .aoo.:z.ll: 1...u.

-., r-10, 16-l, .162. 4.33: Fl&lt;m-

Mil••'*• (W~ 11· 10) 11 Now
• y . . (Mill..UO 2-0). 7:30r..m.
~·

Oail1d (Darlinl I -1) 11 1011011.
,. (Duwin " ' 7:35 , ....
7-5) 11 B~f '""
•.; (Suldil!e12- , 7:31p.m.
.
~.
Toro11.to
ella 7 -1) 11 Chic•ao·
t (ilooF 5-1 0), I:Ol ,..._
~
Dcttoit (H•u 2·1 ) 1l Minac1ota
~ (Tapttli 134), 1:05p.._
•' &amp;:... CU1 (App;. 14-l) 11 Tem
•1 (0...... IQ-10), l :llp.oa.
~
CUM!UNil (NaU 13-1) •• Soalllt
, (l'lomiq 14-5), IG-.ll p.m.

,. c.lil..,;.t''-

'•
:;.; Major league leaden
.

NaU..IILnne
BATIING ~ Sltollloll, San Di'F•

.339; VooS1yto, Pl.......... 330; Kriit,

r.

r,. Soon Twiny, oodlcldor. iv-

liiJlGd Twiny \0 Fod l.luderdllo ollha

RUNS - MdlwUo.
'31;HOME
Juao Gonzalez, Tu11, 34; FJ.eldu,

' . nanda S-7), 1:05 p.m.

•

BALTIMORB ORIOLES - R...u..t
Richie Lewil, pilcbot, lionl - . . , of
~. lllemtti.W Loop, l!tcod /oo Onu·
J..U: , oudiddct, on ih8 IS-dly&amp;lblocllia,
rtii'OICiive ~ Aaa- IJ. Pun:bMDd 1hl omU1ct. of Anlh1111'l.Talfotd, pilebcr, flam

Cllicep, 6; Mo1i101', Milw1ukoe.,

:·

I

Baseball

TRJPI..ES - OevarNUl, B1himore,
10; Aadenon, Blltimorc, I ; Lof\on,
a.EVEIAND, 7; L '"""""'- Cbictao. 1:
LiAICh. MiJ.wMIII:ce. 6; a.Alomar, t'Gftln.
6; Si&lt;m, Tow, 6; Wlti!o, T.,..,., 6:

.,:~~.

~1

23

140

10, 30.

twaoo, Chico&amp;•· 31; L

Tueeday's PID'"

141

239
11l

Calil011lia,l39; Mati&amp;ar, Mil••llkoe. 139.
DOUBLES - E. Martillcz , Suttle,
40; Mlllinalf, New Yort, 33; Griffey,
Suttle., 31; Je.fferiea, X1111t1 City, 31 ;
Hall, New Ym'.l, 31; Reimer, Tout. 30;
loyn.-, Kwu Cily, 30; Wlllfield, Toron-

r...... (l.ia••o-2) "OUctao (F&lt;o-

,•

I
14

AIOlfkaniAta-

LAND, Ill: MKk, Mianoo&lt;tt, 113; Ma•·
a..oly, Now Y,., 146; Mymul, o-;,
14!:; Dev. .u.l, ~ 139; Polmia,

•

, (Lueau 10-4&gt; I:Ol p.m.

21. T -..............9-~ 213

Transactions

11.
RBI - Fielder, De&amp;roit. 104; M~G·
...u., OM.IarMI. 93; GBdl, OUeaao, 92;
l'lod\011, toliMolciU, 19; /uaa OCII%llez.
Tcut, II; C..., Torordo, 17; Tbom111,
Qdoop, M; !lev......_ Boltimmo. a.t
HITS - Pueieu, ~. t6S; E.
M.u1i-, s..uJo, IS1; BoCIJ', CLEVE·

,· c.lilomi.t U.Abbooo l -12) dolum...
·: ou- 4-3&gt;1:35 p.m.
r·

19

c:..:·

BAn'lNO - E. Mlnin-.:, Su ttle,
.341; Puc:icu, Minnaota, .332: M• ~k .
MimNOta, .323; nu.na., Chia&amp;D•.321,:
R. Almw, TorcmU», .3U; Griffey, Scat·
lie, .31 4; Boerp, CUM!l.AND, .31L
RUNS - Phillipo, o.o..;, 90; E. Muliacz, Setalo, ll; rc-ueh, MianlllOII,
11; Pucbn, MillD .. Otl , 12: C.rtcu,
Tcnnw, 79; ~ Qic.aao, 79; R. Al~
mar, Toronto, 11; Aadcnan, B1ltimore,

too, 42; Lofton, CLEVI!lANil. 42; Aa·
dlncm, l•llimore, 41; Polonia, Califor·
Ilia. 41 ; R. Hendeu on, O•kl•nd, ·U :

(Widlmta Q-O&gt; 7:30p.m.
Olkbnd (S~oewan &amp;.1} It Bomn (Dop-

41l
!17

Ot.Mr recel•l•a w01tt: Southern Cal
136, N. Ctn&gt;liao S1. 121 , Vu.;.Jo 102,
T... Toob l1, Suo JMto SL ~:Z. Micbi·
"" SL 33, Aubum 27, Bt
Arizoot
St. 21 , 1\Wo 19, a.....,
16, Eul
Canolino 13, Manphil Sl. 11 Air F"""
II, ll1iacM 10. l'illlbwP 10, N«&lt;h C...
~~ 9, A.di:•L!N• 6, lfowlina_Cawn 6,
Arizont l, lncl,a~~ .4, LSU 4, ........ 4,
Kanua 3, Mino11ri 3, Vanderbilt 2,
Wullinpn SL 2, S111l... SL 1,

Mal._

Detroit. 27; C.ner, Toronto, 27; Dllct,
o.a.i1, 25: T -. Doooi~ 2S; Bello.
a.EVEIAND. 24.

~-

l21

- c-.

Milw•ulule (BIXio II ·!) 11. New Ycdr:

Tonl!lbt'a ......

II. UCLA ................. 9-~

19. ObloSI. ................. I-4-4
20. Callfamlt ............IQ-2~

22. Mitdoolppi SL ......7-:l-O
:tl. OocqioTecb .......l-:1-0
24. Bri&amp;htm Y""'' .... 8-3-2
Zl. T.....................l-~

Amerkan Lea&amp;ue

AMERICAN LEAGUE

::

IMI
Tea•
W~L-T Pia. Year
l.l&amp;mi (~ ...........IU-0 I,SII
I
1 " - (12) .. 12-o.4 1,4!3
2
1Noitollimo(6) .... 1Q-~ 1,40.1 13
~
·--..........IQ-2-0 1,252 . 1
l . - Sc. (1)...... 11-2-0 1,:!39
4
'~(!) ...... IQ-2-0 1,256
6
1. T. . . AAM(I) .. .IQ-2-0 1,13l 12
~.~.... Sl. .............. ll-2-0 1,122
3
9.AIIbtmtO) .......ll-1~ I,D9!
l
10. S -............. IQ-2-0 949 II
II. - . .. ..............9-2-1 120 ll
11 Cai....SO .......... ,...I-3-1 737 20
1!. CJom.. ................9-2-l 119 18 14. Ooooiio ................. 9-~ 61&lt;1 11
ll. C*ltliomt .............. 9-:l-O 662 16
16. 10Wl ._.............. IQ-1-1 l94 10
11. s...rn ..............1-4-4 S4! 22

V..S1yte, Pi111
, 1l; Buller, Lot An·
&amp;clot, 15; Band&amp;,
13.
RBI - Sbofriold, 1n Dicao. 87:

oaa- ---

PllllhwJh9, StnFnoeioco2

St. Louis (Comucr 4· 10)

RUNS - B!IJ!o. Ho~o~non, 79;
Hollin1, Philld~i1 , 77 : DcSbicld•,

71 ; 11ando,~70 .

l4 .l51

San D;qo .............. 66 51
. Su fnllcilco ....... j 9 6.5
HlMUI'I .....
.S6 68
Lot Ana&lt;J............ .52 12

c,r::th••·

,30$;

,.,._,AW.U,.!OS.

Pd.

New YorL ........... j J
' Philtdelphia ...........S1

•

aocilwd Pt.a 1992 pn~~euon collqc
footbtll poll, wKh fint-plle. vo&amp;ea ln
1991 ,cord, totll poinu
oo 25 poiou for • lint p1tco ....
1luvuP ,.. paml for 1 25111 plooo ....,
ond"'*"''ialhofiaall991-poll:

~·; .329; B.,..., Lot""....._

EutcnDhlllw
T..m

'

At the Meigs County Fair,

Monday, August24, 1992

llftftl

~a1 ,

S.oule, 1•-5, .731, 3.21; Appi",
Ita- City, 14-l, .137, 2.27: Kntopr.
' M1: p 1)111, 10.., .714, 3.90; Mc:Dowell,
lllioaaD,I1-1, .1'01, 3.11; ........,, Bold·
~~L.106, 1.13.
lllUIU!Olii'S -

MIAMI DOLI'IIINS - Sipd Tony
Paif'y fullbldc, 10 a nahiycu cantnct.
...rCuloDu...,IIUI ....
IIBW OIU.I!ANf IIAINI1 - Slpd

O..Atill..,- Mlllil, ...........

Clomoa•. a......

••~1•• caaVtcll. Waiva41 lu1l7

171:- Now YOlk, 16!; R. lolwcln,
. . . . LSI; Jutn Oazmb!., Tc..:11:wa., 131;
Appiar, l1n111 City, 131; Md)oweiJ,
CfdctiD. 132: K. BrowD, Tu.u, 132;

a,..,SAVES
T-1 :!1.
- l!UeroloJ, Oaklmd, 40;

Apilon, Mionoo..,, 32; M.......,..,..

"""' Cily,31 ; Olloa, Btlilinote, 21;
lclrR....U, T - 27; Roadoo, 8otlal,

:l611iauy, Mll........ 24.

. AP college root ball

preseason poll

Cut.., ~ Eflum 1bomu, 11foty.

n..... Orifftn nd Murin Oliver,
I' t

.

'

.t 8d.m Niall.. .._..,.

~ f1WCSCO 49l!ltS- Wti¥od
scau A••a, ti&amp;ht Md; &amp;:.via Evaa•,
.... NlliYr, n.T8 . . . piBir; Did·
mlflpo. Nl•r: '"'"' . _ llolltad,

-·

-----~-.Hockey

NallooaiH_J._
ST. LOW BLtii!S - Sif1od V'11l11

-..,,loft...,.

••

.

dido 't han,. Hill pitched a great
gam¢ but Rijo was better."
Th~ .Expos threatened in the
fourth when they got runners on
first and second with one out. Rijo
!hen got Jerry Willard to fly to left ·
and struck out John VanderWal.
• "Jose was living and dying l!y
the forkball," Reds catcher Joe
Oliver said. "When the Expos batters went looking for a forkball,
Jose threw a fastball in or a sharp
slider. The forkball really set up his
other pitches good."
'
The Reds scored their only run
in the second innin~, taking advantage of Willard's mexperience at
fiCSt base.
Normally a catcher, Willard is
one of seven fiCSt basemen Montreal has used this season. Willard
botched two plays and in a division
mce like the Expos are in, inexperience hurts.
"I feel bad," said Willard, who
joined the team Friday. "The hardest thing for me is Uy to realize
what your second baseman can do.
I hate to be learning !hose things in
a one-run game."
Second baseman Delino
DeShields had a routine chopper by
Paul O'Neill all lined UD but
Willard elected 10 venture toward
second to get it. That was mistake

No. I. Mistake No. 2 - Willard
threw wide of Hill covering first.
Later in the inning wilh O'Neill
at third. Willard was handcuffed by
a Darnell Coles lii'OWlder for mis·
take No. 3. U Willard had cleanly
fielded lhe ball, he would ~ly
have nailed O'Neill at ·the plate.
Instead; he had to step on first as
O'Neill scored.
"I was jumpy," Willard said.
"When O'Neill's ball was fiCSt hi~
it looked slow so I took off after iL
You can't second-guess yourself.
Delino told me he had iL
"If I had thrown a foot or two
more to Hill's right, we would have
been out of lhe inning. I didn'tlead
Hill enough. When Coles' ball was
hit, the first instinct was go, to go
home but lhe ball creeped up and
hit me on lhe right thumb."
If Willard had to do it over
again, he would have let DeShields
take lhe grounder.
"Without a doubt," Willard
said.
"Those kinds of thinss have
happened ~uite a bit this season
because we ve been using a variety
of fiCSt basemen," Expos manager
Felipe Alou said. "But we didn't
100 much to win with our bats. Rijo
didn't give us 100 many opponunities to win.''

HORSE INJURED - Following the rinisb of
the fourth race, Jennings Beegle's horse, Bold
Flick Bug, the winner, suffered a ~all in the turn

near the race horse barn. The jockey, Mark
Arnett was not injured but the horse sulrered a
broken back and had to be destroyed.

in the third inning, surpassing
Larry Parrish's 1987 team record
of 32 home runs, !hen hit a two-run
shot in the eighth, breaking a 4-4
tie. The Rangers scored 11 runs in
the last two innings to obliterate a
4-3 Cleveland lead.
The home runs impressed Texas
manager Toby Harrah because
Gonzalez had.struck out with runners at fust and second in the fiCSt
innin-g and had failed to produce
twice wilh runners in scoring position the previous day. His previous

Miami hopes for victory
after getting No.1 ranking
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
The last time Miami started the
season No. I, the Hurricanes
promptly w~.nt out and lost their
1990 opener to Brigham Young.
Head coach Dennis Erickson
remembers it well, and he's .determined to avoid lhe same fate when
his top-ranked Hurricanes open at
Iowa on Sept 5.
' '!'~reminded our players that
the last time we were in this position, we got our butts beat because
we were overconfident," Ericlcs9n
said.
Confidence and cockiness have
helped Miami win four national
titles in the last nine years. Now the
defending Associated Press champs
are the preseason pick to do it
again.
Miami received 40 first-place
votes and I ,511 points from a
nationwide panel of sports writers
and broadcasters in the AP's preseason poll.
"It's a little bit of an exua burden, but we're used to it by now,"
Erickson said. "Everybody is
always ready to play us, whether
we' re No. I or not."
.
Washington· is second in the
preseason poll with 12 first-place
votes and I ,453 points. The
Huskies were runner-up to Miami
for lhe AP championship last year,
but won the USA Today-CNN

coaches' title.
If the Hurricanes finish No. 1
this season, they will become the
fiCSt back-to-baclc AP champs since
Alabama in 1978-79 and lhe first
preseason pick .10 win lhe national
title since Oldahoma in 1985.
"That's out there and we know
it," Erickson said. "But.our goal
hasn't changed. Every year, we
want to compete for the national
chamr,ionship and go to a major
bowl. '
Notre Dame is third with six
frrst-place votes and 1,405 points .
Aorida is fourth, followed by Florida Stllte, Michigan, Texas A&amp;M,
Penn Stllte, Alabama and Syracuse.
Florida Slllte, Michigan, Te~as
A&amp;M and Alabama each got one
fiCSt·place vote.
Nebraska is 11th, trailed by Colorado, Clemson, Georgia, Oklahoma, Iowa, Stanford, UCLA,
Ohio State, catifomia, Tennessee,
Mississippi State, Georgia Tech,
BYU and Texas.
Texas A&amp;M hasn't been ranked
this high since 1986, when the
Aggics peaked at No. 7. Auburn
failed to make lhe preseason rankings for the first time since 1982.
For the second suaight year,
three teams from Aorida start the
season in the top five. No other
state has ever had three teams
ranked so high at the same time.

Sampras beats Courier to win
U.S. Harcourts championship
By BETH HARRIS
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Not
even lhe world's top-ranked player
coul4 ~top Pete Sampras on the
way to his third slraight victory in a
month,
" I' m very confident right
now," Sampras said. "There's
nolhing in my game that I'm not
hitting well."
He proved it Sunday in a convincing 6-4, 6-4 victory over Jim
Courier in the U.S. Hardcouns
final, successfully defending his
title.
Bolh Sampras and Courier are
taking Ibis week off to prepare for
the U.S. Open, which begms next
Monday.
Sampras, ranked third in the
world before Sunday's win, was
equally hot a year ago. He won Los
Angeles and lndian~lis and was
a finalist at Cincinnati leading up to
the Open.

"This is lhe time of year where
I really start playing well on hardcollfl, which is my favorite surface," he said. "It was a good
week for me. Each match I played
better and better."
After dispatching three unseeded players, Sampras defeated thirdseeded Boris Becker 6-7 (3-7), 6-2,
7-6 (7-3) in lhe semifinals.
He likes his chances in the
Open, where he, Courier and Stefan Edberg are among the men's
favorites,
Besides another U.S. Open title, ·
Sampras has his mind set on
becoming No. 1. He was partly
inspired by Courier gaining the
coveted ranking in February.
"I'm not putting any exua pressure on myself 10 do It within the
next si~ months or year, but it's
somelhing I defmitely want to do
by !he end of my career," he said.

10 home runs all came with the
bases empty.
"Juan and lhe young guys have
10 remember, you haye to go back
out !here for the next at-bat," Harrah said. "It's tough not to think of
that last one. You have to put it
behind you."
With seven home runs in lhe last
I0 games, Gonzalez now has 34 on
the season, four away from catch·
ing Oakland's Mark Mc:Gwire for
the major-league lead. The task got
a bit easier Sunday when McGwire
went on the 15-day disabled list
because of a strained rib cage, sustained while diving for a grounder
Friday night.
Gonzalez, who hit 27 homers
and drove in I02 runs last year in
his fiCSt full season in lhe majors,
said he doesn't pay 100 much atten·
tion to ranlcings.
"I don't look for records," he
said. "It's my job, my numbers. I
don't compare myself with other
guys."
Dean Palmer also hOmered, his
22nd, during the Rangers' five-run
eighlh inning against Steve Olin (64). Brian Downing had four hits
including his lOih home run, which
highlighted a six-run.ninth.
Ruben Sierra singled home lhe
tying run in lhe eighth and doubled
home a run in the ninth. .
The loss stopped !he Indians'
five-game winnmg sueak, their
longest since 1990. Even so, manager Mike Hargrove wouldn'tlet it
spoil the Indians' mood as they
concluded a 13-game homestand
wilh a 9-4 mark - their winningest
homestand since 1984.
"Our bullpen has been golden
for us," Hargrove said. "I don't
want to say we were due for this,
but I'm not going to sit here and
pull my hair out over one bad
game. We played well today. Just
our pitching fell apart. The .nature
of this business is, you forget abOut
your last win and you forget about
your last loss and go on.''
Kenny Rogers (2-S) got the win
for retiring lhe only batter he faced.
Kevin Brown, who was looking for
his league-leading 17th win, was
unable to hold an early 3-0 lead
and left in the sevenlh trailing by a
run.
The Indians scored a run in the
lhird on Kenny Lofton's fifth home
run and another in the fourth on
Felix Fermin's single. They chased
Brown with two in the seventh
when Thomas. Howard singled
home a run and Albert Belle hit a
bases-loaded sacrifice fly.

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CATALOGUE RACE- Matt Milhoan, a
member of the Meigs 4-H Pleasure ·R iden, is
pictured here as he competes in the catalogue
race for the 4-H Hone Full Sbow at the Meip
County Fair
After
a IUIII•

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By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StaJY
Thrills, chills and spills were lhe
highlights of the Quarter Horse
races at lhe Meigs County F,fir Saturday.
Beam Me Up, owned, !rained
and ridden by David L. Hoppel,
East Liverpool, raced across the
finish line m the ftrst race, a SSOyard dash for three-year-olds and
older, with a time of 32 1/10. J J's
Lemonade provided the uophy
blanket. Jeff Bryant pc:keyed Miss
Stolen Flame, owned by Earl
Cleek, Portland, and trained by
Dan Houdashelt . to the second
place finish. Easy Rocks, owned
and trained by Chuck Shields Sr. of
Millfield and jockeyed by Rick
Cullison, finished third in the 111CC.
In the 300-yard dash for threeyear-olds and older, Mamie's
Pride, owned and trained by Kevin
Sheppard of Racine, crossed the
finish line with Jeff Bryant the
jockey with a time of 16 seconds to
capture the trophy provided by R &amp;
G Feed. Liberty Star Line, owned
by Geor¥.e and Jean Can !tel of
Salyersv11le, Ky. and trained by
Marcus Connelley, was second

wilh Mark Arnett lhe jockey. Third
was Chip's Little Chict, owned
and !rained by Jennings Beegle of
Racine, with Jeff Yoder the pckey.
Galla Go Easy, owned and trained
by Chuck Shields and jockeyed by
Rick Cullison was fourth.
In lhe 220-yard dash for dueeyear-olds and older, Carl Circle's
horse, Sunday La Mark, finished
ftrst wilh a time of 12 1/5 to win
the trophy blanket provided by
Lambert Insurance. Chain Command, owned and lrained by James
Barney of Bellville and jockeyed
by Jeff Yoder, was second. Third
was Deck N Ready, owned and
trained by David Hoppel with Jeff
Zook the jockey. Jet Set Sarita,
owned and trained by Man:us Connelley, was fourth with Mark
Arnett the jockey.
The fourth race, another 220yard dash, featured two-year-olds.
Bold Aiclc Bug, owned and trained
by Jennings Beegle of Racine, fin·
ished first with a time of 12 3/S
wilh Mark Arnett, jockey. The trophy was provided by Dottie Turner
Realty. Jet Time Rose, owned and
trained by Kevin sHeppard or
Racine, with Jeff Bryant, jockey,

was se&lt;:ond. Thin! was Jet N Easy
Rose, owned by Melanic Beegle of
Racine and uained by Jennings
Bee&amp;le. with JeffYodet the pckey.
Irollowins the finish of the
fourth race, Jennlnss Beesle'·s
hone, Bold Aick Bug, lhe winner,
suffered a fall in ibe turn near lhe
race horse bam. The jockey, Mark
Arnett was not injured but the
horse suffered a broken back and
had to be destroyed.
In the fmal race, the SEOQHRA
Futurity, anolher 220-yard dash,
See Comet Go, owned by Glenn
Reed of Coolville, and trained by
Kevin SheppW. with Carl Ciltle
the jockey, rated across lhe ftnish
line for the lint place spot with a
time of 12 215. Dee Moon Dee
Moon, owned by Earl Cleek of
Portland, trained by Dan
Houdashelt and :!:f.ed by Jeff
Bryant, fmished
. Third was
Bid To Pus, owned and trained by
George R. Harris of Casstown. Jeff
Yoder was the jockey. Trophies
and awards for this I1ICC were pro.vided by Dairy Valley, SEOQHRA. Athens Landmark and
OQHRA.

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went the rest of the way untouched.
Miller, who was 15-for-28 for
263 yards, also threw a 20-yard
scoring pass 10 Tony Jones in the
second quarter that put the Falcons
(1-2) ~to silly. Norm Johnson
added a pail of field goals.
"They played their No. Is lhe
whole ballgame," said backup
quarterback David Aicher, who got
most of the wodr for lhe Eagles (22) after Randall Cunningham left in
the second quarter with a pulled
groin that the team said was not
serious. "They wanted to win lhe
game. We played a lot of people,
which is what we wanted to do."
On Sunday night, it was Pitts·
burgh 28, Chicago 17. Tonight,
Minnesofll is at Cleveland and Buffalo visits Kansas City.
On Saturday, it was Cincinnati
. 20, Indianapolis 0; lhe New York
Jets 20, the New York Giants 14;
Houston 33, New Orleans 3; Washington 27, lhe Los Angeles Raiders
23; Detroit 42, New England 9;
Mia111i 22, Tampa Bay 7; Dallas
17, Denver 3; the Los Angeles
Rams 16, Green Bay 13 in OT; and
Seattle 17, Phoenix 10.
Sleelers 28, Bears 17
Piusburgh made new coach Bill
Cowher a winner for the fust time
as Neil O'Donnell threw two second-half touchdown passes to help

lhe Steclers raUy from a 10-point
deftcit nnd beat the Bears at Soldier
Field.
Bea&amp;all 20, Colts 0
The Colts lost more than an
exhibitioa pme. Startillg quarler·
bact Jeff Geaqe Milt down with a
thumb in 'urv liat will sideline hint
for abouf'lour weeks. Sunday's
examination of OcorJe's rlsht
thumb revealed no 10m bgamenL
With backup Jack. Trudeau
unsigned, Tom Tupa and Mark
Henmann n the remaining QUIW·
terbacts. They were shac:lded 011
SIIIU!day as lhe Bcnpls recovc:red
three fumbles and ran back an
interoeptioa for a IOUchdown.
Jell ZO, Gllllfl14
The Gianu also loa their start·
ing quarterbec:t for at least a few
days when Jeff Hostetler went .
down with a blck injury.
·
Ken O'Brien's eisht-yard pass
to Tmnce Mathis made it 20-0 in
the third period before the Giants
rallied on a Phil Simms'. TD pass
and Louis Tillman•1 scoring run .
froma~ouL
4l, I'Jdrloa 9

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Mel Gray causha one scorins :
pass and returned a kickoff 9S
yards for another IOudldown as the
Lions enjoyed their bigest ICOling
~ in an exhibition game since .

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By The Associated Presi
The Atlanta Falcons were determined· to inaugurate their new
Georsia Dome wilh a bang - and
a victory. They.did both.
In front of 66.834 - tbe largest
crowd ever to see a Faltons home
game - quarterback Chris Miller
threw a 76-yard touchdown pass to
Michael Haynes on· Atlanlll's fiCSt
offensive play and the Falcons beat
lhe Philadelphia Eagles 20-10 Sunday.
It's not that the Falcons' first
offensive play in their new home
was a sec:reL Miller was quoted in a
Sunday newspaper as saying he
wanted the first play to be a long
one for a touchdown.
"I read about it in lhe newspaper Ibis morning but it just slipped
my mind," Eagles linebacker Seth
Joyner said. "I don'tlhink that !he
other guys knew about it unless
they read it in lhe paper."
"We decided the best way to
have a new dome is on the very
first play go for a touchdow,n,"
coach Jerry Glanville said.
"It was a nice way to start off,"
Millet said. "Michael is sofas~ lhe
guy didn't realize he was so fast
He got by him - and touchdown."
Haynes raced past cornerback
Izel Jenkins 10 catch the long pass
just inside the Philadelphia 35 and

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ber from the catalogue on the barrel be bad to
ride down, get orr bls horse, find the page, iet
back on and ride back. Tbe rider biVlng the
fastest time is the winner.

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POTATO RACE- Dee Canter, a member ol
the Young Riders 4-H Club, Is pictured 11 lhe
make her way back to the fmish Hne in the pota·
to race during the 4-H Horse Fun Show at lbe
Meigs County Fair Saturday aneraoon. Tbe

object of the class is to ride down, stick a potato
from the ground without getting orr the horse
and being the fastest to make it back to the other
end.

FIRST MATCH - In the first match of
armwresllln11 at the Meip County Fair Satnrday night In tbe 150 or under pound weight

class, Brian Warth (rl&amp;~t) ol Mason, W.VL lleat
out Tra'ris Gilmore of Pomeroy.

Winners posted in Meigs Fair armwrestling bouts

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
YAREA.
CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL
IT 992·2155

•

Atlanta beats Philadelphia 20-10
before record crowd at new stadium

Texas pounds Cleveland 14-4
By CHUCK MELV)N
CLEVELAND (AP) - Juan
Gonzalez, ase 22, is already oue of
the best power hitters in basebaU.
Aild he's learning more with each .
at-bat.
Gonzalez' bounced back from a
d~s~ppointing game Satur,day by
h11ting two home runs and driving
in a career-high. ftve runs Sunday
as the Texas Rangers beat the
Cleveland Indians 14-4.
Gonzalez hit a three-run homer

•

Beam Me Up, Mamie's Pride
among quarter horse winners

edges Montreall-0 to stop four-game losing.skid

ScoreiJoard
NATIONAL LEAGUE

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Page-4

FINISHES THIRD -The Big Bend Youth
League All-Stars fmished third at the Trimble
· Minor League Tournament, a 13-team diamond·
·fest held In July. In the front row are (L·R)
Trevor Buck, Brad Roush, Nathan Martin,
AarOD Ob6nger, JaC!l" .Smith and Brice HiD. In

In the majors ...

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The Dilly Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo

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FIRST PLACE • This Mlnneapolll MoUne
tractor, ~Hillbilly Hustler", ~rl¥ea by Mike
Hively ot_GaWpolis puUed the lronMalden l!IIJ

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feet to a rrrsl plaee win In the 6,200 DOIIIICI clall
at Saturday niaht'&amp; Melp County fair tractor
·pull.
·

Armwresdin~. a new feature of
the !29th Me1gs County Fa(r,
proVed popular as hundreds·of fair·
goers Docked to the grandstand and
onto \ the race uack Saturday
evening 10 warch the event.
Tile style was standup, double
elim!nation for men in four weight
classes, and a women's open. It
was conducted by tbe Ohio Valley
Armwreslling Association. 1
Trophies ·were awarded in five
placel in each class. The winners,
listed first lhrousb third, in -each
class were as follows:
ISO pounds or under: Oene
Dunn, Carrolto.n; Eddie Miller,
Lona Bottom; and Chris Brown,
Racine.
lS0-170 pounds: Bob Smith,
Oat HiU; Derek Daniels, Winch·
ester; and Chuck Rathburn, Rutland.
151-190: Jim Fox, Tuppers
PIBins; Jack Ervin, Langsville; and
Lester Wise, MicldkwrL
191-210 pounds: Walter Haggy,
Rutland; Jack Kennedy, Har-

risonville; and Keith Young,
Racine.
211 and over: Marty Dugan,
Rud111d; Jeff Berltley, Henderson,
W. Va.; and Chester Colmes,

Racine.
A:-nomen 0s ~ : nul~

Ul

Vien~a.

::rr: '
• t

W. a.; Jamie Bar e, :
Coolville, and Tammy Chipman, •
Racine.
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H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES

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KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Registered Represe•tatlve
· IRAs
. * SEP IRAs .
.
MUTUAL FUNDS * UITs
MONEYMARKETS

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IEIUII=SS
Secwllfes......
H.
433lla.&lt;!l •

114-992•72.70-

S..lllat,llc.

·lnf 1 TX 75019 · .

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�PlgP · I · The Dtlly Sentinel

$treet festival plans
...hearing completion
: Entertainment duoughoul lhe
~ay iacludes Dee and Dallas,
:Witite'l Hill Band, Belles and
, _ . Square Dancers, Big Bend
~s. Rutland Freewill Bai~Jtist

Deli- Au

• atitden: Thil il In
re1p0115e to "Mrs. WCfr! Ears lri tile
Well,• whc asked, "'Whll till lie
done about I person who DC¥a' S50pll
taiDng7" She went on to complain , .L.tCUl'U
about her hsband who "Wala:s ~

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Tbc Ultle Millar 81 Mils Caft.
rest will be held for childral aaa
6-9.
All cral\ tables IDd bake $1le

gear."

re:

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i5ems !ftUSI be i!l
bj 10 Lm.
; -.:re will be a fish fry, ice 10 bepn die r_,
II 11 a.m.
Furlher infOrMation 011 any
~.•• )qlCOI1I, snow cones and a
activity, ()r to rent a Clift table,
: Tltere will be a pie ud cake may be ()bf.aiaed by eallin1 Kim~ 001
. 7 ., Any ldnd of pie berly Willford It 742~2103, MarW111ue4t1 cates lllould be ill for j()ric Davis al 742-2809 ()t Joan
JilllliN 1ly I p.m.
Stewart at742-2421.
; Craft tables by many area

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Ann
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in lhc morning wilh his moulh in

games.

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BAND DIRECTOR • Meigs
Hla• Scll()ol BIBd Director
T-y Diaaess leads a llaad per·
rormance durla&amp; Tuesday's
Meigs County ·Jaalor Fair
Parade.

Hill named TOPS
best loser
Terri Hill was the best weekly
loser and Donna Jacks was runner·
up when Ohio TOPS Club No. S10
met at the Carpenter's Hall in
Pomeroy.
The fruit basket and gadget gift
were won by Terri HilL
Winners of the Summer Slim·
min' contest were Calista Searls
llld Julia Hysell.
KOPS will be honored at lhe
next meeting and JCOPS members
should aaend.
The lfllUP meets evt9' Tuesday
at from S·7 p.m. II the C8rpenlet' s
Hall ill Pomeroy, Furdter infonnati!ln may be obtained 'by calling

"Mol&lt;lf Moulhs" (as you call
them). come in beth genders. I
am lllliried 50 a woman who is a
high-energy wife and mother,
loving lllld well-ipbmed. but she
never S50pl talkit{g. When I brought
her home to meet my parents,
my dad uted, ·was Denise by
any cjtinte 11acciftlted with a
pllonc)&amp;taph needle?"
I wouldn't trade my wife f()r
uybody else's. but pleUe beaWIIC
that ·thele are just as many overly
talkative women as men. so Sllft.
peddle it, Annie. .. ESCONDIDO,
CALIF.
DEAR DIDO: Your point is
weD taken. Read on for more oo tile
subject:
From Cleveland: Please don't be
so quick 10 put dcwn people whc!
talk a lot. There could lie a medical
reason. My wife of 20 years
suddenly became a non-S!Op talker
and it alm()St drove me around
the bend. It turned out !hal she is
ll'llllic1lqnasvc. Aflt:z IJeing put on
medicllion, she has resumed her
normal speech paaan and our life
is good apia.
Dlllas: My husband used 10 talk a
lot • ICIDelimes I got so tired ()(
listening ti&gt; him I'd say, "F()f
heaven's. sake, Harry, will you

pleasO be quietr 'IhRlC yean ..,,
he was operated on for canc:ct of lite

. funniest jolces. 1 remember si~g
throo&amp;h die same timeworn s!OI'ICS
dozens of times, mumbling to
myself, "I cu't believe he's gain~!
7D ldl dtat one again. •
1\oe had u awful lot of quiet
evenings 111ese 1as1 IWo , . .. and
the loneliness is dRadiUl. What I
. wouiGt't pvc 10 hellr his vdce apin.
Lon! )toW I miss dtat manl 'Those
women who complain .~ their
husbands talk roo mucb sltoukl count
their ble8sinp. - SILf.NCE IS NOT
ALWAYS·OOLDEN
..
DEAR SILENCE: Your message
came through loud and clear. My
thuks 50 You and all those whc!
Wl'i&gt;IC for being so candid.
. DEAR READERS: Is lhcre a
lawyer in your life? Your soo or
daughter, husband, wife, parent,
sweetheart or good friend? Give him
or her tile new b!lot by Sen. Paul
Simon. Its informative, fascinating
and beautifully written. The !itle:
•Advice and Consent,. published by
National Press Books. The price:
$23.95 (slightly more in Canada).

larynx and now he ~ through a
mechallical device. How I wish I
could 11ear his nsiW'III voq again.
It 'NOUid be sweet m~ to my cars.
Detrclit: 1 am a male "Mo!Or
Mouth" who read your recent
column wilh intereSt. I was cwed
whenonewomansimplysaid, "Siuu
up." Men woo talk roo much are
lucky if they have a woman woo
will level witlllhem.
Goleta, Calif.: I think you made
a bad call on "Weary Ears." Yoo
suggested she put on earphc!nes.
That "solution" might give her a
bit of relief, but it cenainly won't
solve the problem. Her husband is
probably troubled about something
and the constant challer ia a cover·
up for his anxiety. He should get
some counselillg.
Fort Lauderdale: I wish the .
woman whc! CO!IIplained lixtut her
"M010r Moulh" husband woold
come to this part of die c:ouittry and
visit witlldle clor.ens ()f Yiiclows woo
were once married 10 men who
· talW too much. I am one of them.
My darling husband was the life
of die party, tile one woo !Old die

Syracuse Elementary
schedule revised
Syracuse Elementary has
revised its daily schedule f()f lhe
corning year. School will begin at
8:30 a.m. All studeats will be dismissed at 2:30 except bus riders,
whc! will lie picked up 11 3:3Q p.m.
More infonnati()n about tllis new
schedule will lie sent home on the
first day ()( IChoot

992-2234.

Several attend
25th annual
Eblen reunion
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POMEROY • The 2Sih annual
:
ROSETI'E WINNER • Clterjl.lflwel-llie ,..- ca.piall
reunioo
of the Samuel A. Eblen
• In the 4·H flower allow cc.petl'- It tile Melp Couty Jalor
familr was held recently at the
; Flir Wulaad17. Bert shefilplaJikr bldltloul......-st of
roadstde part near Pomeroy wilh
: ·aold dulls Ia a ._ket. CllerJiallo look pud dlallploll.ia kr 6S
in a5tcndance.
• project ollfOWIDI u ..alllowa a. hi 4-H ror 1M ywa, aile Is a
A
polluck dinner was held wi!h
: member o( tbe HanlsoavDie 4-H'ers.
games and prizes awarded 50 old·
•
est, youngest member, the one ttav·
cling the fartheat and a door prize.
Sam Eblen presided at the meet·
•
·ing
ani!' new oll"tters were elceled:
; The Chester COUICil N(). 323, Thelma White and guest, Susie Steven Eblin, prelident; Lawrence
:Dupm of America, met Tues- Bailey.
The meeting Cl()sed in regular Eblin, Yic:e-prcsident; Vera Eblen,
•Aef 11 die hiD with Thelma White,
form 101 relreshments were sCned seaeury,hreasurer.
aslocil5c 001mcilor,lftliding.
Several August bir!hdays were
• Tile hl•ilm oftheeveniftg was by Alta BaDard, Mae McPeek and celelnled as weD.
:conducted ud the Lord's Prayer Ada BisselL
: and Pledae I() the flag given in uni-

: Betty Youag was u;ultd ill.

----Wood returns from t r i p - - - -

: Susie Bailey, a farmer member
Ronnie Wood, Pomeroy, recent·of die council, ft()W a memller ()(
ly
returned home from a trip to
: UniiCd Council No. 17, Bellieve,
:Ky .• came ro visit witll her mother, Paris, France, where he -:::~­
,
• Mary Jo Barrinaer,llld grllldmocll- nled his nephew, Jefby ·
Germantown,
Md.,
I()
the
U.S.T.A.
: er, Belly Roush.
·
: Oilier members present were World Baton Twirling Champi· Jesn Welsh, Lcda Mac Kracotcr, onship.
They apentll days in r.ia and
: Belly Roush, Virginia Lee, Llura
while
there Brickles perfomed and
· Mac Nice, Alta Ballard, Sandra
finished
sixth in the juniar !)lCD' s
. White, Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek,
divisiOII
cftlle
worldcompetiOOn.
: Ooldie Frederick, Margaret
Brick)es
wiD
be twirliDI for his
:Amberger, Mary Jo Barringer,

~-------Names
RADNOR, Pa, (AP) - Drew
Barrymore says fame from two
soun:es - "E.T. The Extratcms·trial" and hu weU-btown f1111ily
:- led 10 years in which she battled
.alcohol and drugs.
: ·Barrymore was 7 when "E.T."
!tit it big ill 1982. She 500k her first
Clrinlc at 9, began srn&lt;*ing marijua-

high school litis fall and Will start
competitions again in February.
Next summer, he will travel!()
Grand Rapids, Mich., f()r the
Naoonal Competitioos. 'I)Ie W(l'ld
Compet1tlo~s 'fiiiL~ lleld in The
Ne!herlands. ·
Brickles is the.80ri cf Sue and
Steve Bricklea and lho ptdSin ()(
Jean and No- Wood and rons
Brickles, Pomeroy, 111d Donald
Brickles, Indiana.

. Community calendar

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DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
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SPECIAL
N()W Thru Oct. 31
O.W.G, Truck Sliders Installed
Clear Sliders $48.50 plus tax
Tinted Sliders $53,00 plus !ax
Grey Sliders $60.00 plus tax
88-92 Chev. K-1500 thru 3500
series truck sliders
$100.00 plus tax
Free 12 Pack of Pepsi W~h
Each Windshield lntalled
304·773-5710
At. 33, Mason, WV.

Quality Hi Efflcieacy

Now Water Heaten.
Bennetts Mobile H~~
1391 SaHord Schoal Rd.
Galilpolls, Ololi
&lt;ol(614) 446-9416 . ,..oo-172-5967

Public Notice

Approved Townehlp

Rqed (blacktop),1f4
mile from Rt. 7,

alloiLotNo.41,lylngEutol
!hat part sold 1c A. Pratt,
conveyed 10 Henry Winter by ·
deed.of Jacob Balk!, Admln-IWe)resm
lstrl!or with the Will annexed
of Henry Ohlinger, dated

locatlcl.,._
Tuppera

Cheater and

I

!rant
lloyar
anow
plow mounted
with powar
angling
hydraulic ayltam. Equipmen! II In axcellont con·
dillon. lloy ba viewed at
Malga County Shariff
Guage.
be oold • ••·
Is
with
noWill
wtrranUea
prwaed or Implied. Minimum bid $850.00. Tho
Melga County Commlulon·
ara rHerva tha right lo
rejacllny or II blda.
·
Mllga County
Commloalalltll
lhry HobetetW, Clerk
(B) I 7, 24 21c
----------

I

This Is your Invitation to ~II any Item for $100 or less and adv«tlselt FREE. Simply clip this
coupon (photo copies not accepted), fAIIn yow ad and mall It to us or droP It off II our
office. Your ad will run for 1 week.

,.,1..,

PlalnL
Each lot .. partilllly
wooded with excellent

(6

_ __

Phonal: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(oller lxpl.... 8131102) .

Eejlnt)

Sm.

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowen • c•ain Saws
• Weedeaters

614·949-2804

STELLA
would like t() thank
the doctorsllld ltaff
of v.-.na Memorial
HoapHal for their
care prior to htr

NEW usnNG - . Reeclavlll.• SR 124. Approx. 1 ..,.
Iota. GN&amp;I C&amp;mptng altea .. th boating '"""'"' has
frontage on aechlol $15,000 oac11.

, PIIMing.

A spec ..! thankl to
Doctore WIIIMrell

IIIDOLEPOAT - 2 a10ry llama home with 2 bedrooms
and tppllancu, newer rool and warm moming gas
llovt. ASKING 46,000.

llld Huntar,llld
Mlnlatar o-k

Stuin •
Alto
lhankl

hllltf~

SYRACUSE - Lte Clrc'- - Ranch atyle homo with 3
bedroom a, carport, appliancu, cable hoclwp in a rNIIy
nice neighborhood. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!

frllndl

i •

~

G

lOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7 &amp; 14
POMEROY BY·PASS
992·5114
mo.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
r.'!!lll!ll TRY OUR NEW
~· STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR
9:1:7-$275.00 16117-$450.00
OPEIEU llnALLED-Y. HP-$200.00

Door Plus o,.,••,

Wit• Pure•••• of

';j

•• •

J

..........

5·14·92·1fw

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITES and

TRAILER I!~
LANDCLEAR

DRIVEWAYS INSt
D
UIIESTONE-TRUCKINQ

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3831

CUSTER'S ~
STUCCO~

PLA~TER.
if~
1300 Vi• StrHt

Middleport, Oh.
JotCuder t
614·,92·2213 i
Jerry Custer )I
614-992·3159 :;

•aoROOnNG
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH .
GAUGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
•j Quillity AsiUttd Contractor•

20 Yr. bp.

Call AI, 614·742·2321:
111711111

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949•2391or
1·100·137-1460
Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
$hrubendTree
Trimming l Removal
R-1111 Com-1
F-EIIImll10

NORTON
CONTUCTING
Carpe~try

Electric

.,.....

Plw1tWig Rtplac11111111
Roofing

Windows

Free Eslintates • Low

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

Rates fer Sellion
No Too SmaU

Jo.

(No Slllltlor Calls)

INI2 t I'M. pd.

2/12192Mtt

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Downspouts
Gutter Cltanlng
Painting

FREE ESnMATES

949-2168
712...92/lln.

C.JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
OH.

c••••ire,

1/2/lln

AUTO RENTAL, INC.
8

l9e9§ A DAY AND UP

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

New Ho11111, Roofing,
Room Addition&amp;,
Kltchena, Porch• lind
Bltha.

IDWDPEN

CURIO

BARN

COIIPL.ETE

45633 ST. n 124
UCINE

773·5684 or
992·5249

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9·"
• • BI171Pd.

REMODELING SERVICES
FrM ElL • 20 YN Exp.

71'l11'1111

Plumbing
...... 1.

;if!

,OHIO •

WHALEY'S AUTO i PROFESSIONAl
PARTS
HOUSE
Sptdollzlttg In Custom
Fralllt Repair
PAINTING
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

l•terior • Exterior

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE

Spray • Rol· Bns•.2

DARWIN, OHIO

614·992·6949

FREE ESniltATES

CONSTRUCTION
•lliw Ho•l .

tGaragn

e(o!"Plett

Rt-.ll•g
Stop &amp; Compare
FIIUSTIIUTiS

7f.!t111211 mo. pill;

UNDA'S
t9PAINnNG
&amp;

TREE · MICIOWIYI OVEN
. a•d VCR REPAIR
TRIM and
AU. MAUl
..
..S:IhiOrW.
REMOVAL

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER

co•

WORK,
DRIVEWAY liOU •
aad UMEnOIII

'7ah 7H , . O.t 01 ,.,.,.,
- l.tl U1 llf II 1tr y.,•

DELIVEIY SEIYICE ·'
S•oll Dozer Work ·

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FilE

$25.00 Par ...,
RWOIIAILI UIU

HAVE
ltfort 6 p&amp;lona Mtssogo

992•7553

Ah• 6p.&amp; 614·985-4110

POIIEIOY, 01.

•UGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

. BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Kill'S ~IAIICE
SERVICE
· 992·5335 or
915·3561
1
"Ti7
't"::.~ ~·
PO. .Y,OIIO

312!.112hfn

8-11·'12·1mo,

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

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

PH. 614-992-5591
12·5-tln

Announcements
3 Announcements
Ado Nunn Smhh, P1tuo CliiJ

Kim Hammond At: 702-1117-3701
Or 216-466-0651.
•
Fr.. AduH T1lk Urw.
1-714-251 -~

Uve, One 0.. One.

ARMY
SURPLUS

POMEROY - S story building with a 50+ x 100 pari&lt;ing
loL Many polllbllitiea lor this slructu"'• A good invtll·
rntnl property, $28,500'
.

2

WE NEED US'llNGSI V,:E'RE SELUNG SO FAST
WE CM'T KEEP UP WITH THE DEMANDS OF
OUA BUYERSI· IFYOU WANT TO SELL GIVE US A
CALL TODAYI

_In Memory

.

County Rd. 111-

Peec:hlork Rd.
992.·7013 .
llon.·Sun. 1•-t pm
8ool uo lor your hun-ng
and baok 10 achool
needa. lnl'e llrgoat
aolacllon of military
ollrplua ltemol

HENRY E.

•

1117pd.

11

• Convertible Tops

• CUllom Carpell
• Cultom Seat
Covera.• A110 Bolta

All

WICK'S
HAUUNG SERVICE
36970 Ill I• IIIII
P-y,Oitlt

·~
loSAND •GIU~VEL • DIRT
.UMESTONE

(614) 992·3470

.,

Concen Stl'lp
5th, Bp.m. Tlckt11 lt.DO Qolillg
McKim•y•

In

Tt101lro, PIPI-nt No.,.m(W
Fa.t, Wlll•'e,l 114-441-al20.

4

•Headliners

•

CALL

1·8D0-141·0070
7131f91/tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

:

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly) ·.
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

111711111 .......

Happy "35th"
Birthday!
Terri
Bumgardner
Haynes.
Guess Who?
Gotchal

•

IIISlALLED PRICES

.. N.. ' 1----:..,..~·

2·7·92-tflt

nol

RACINE - One lloor frame home with 3 bedroom• on
ltYef lot cioN lo every!hingl Include• etorage building
ond ulfity room. Comfortably priced at $15,000.

$1.50 doz.

With 2 Transnilttars
W•lk" Alllr

667·6179

$34,QOO,

Mall To:

(lormarly 1;j. Rldga

985·4473

NEW LISnNG - OAK HILL RO. approx . 82.5 acroa
Mill 1Y. lloy ~. 3 bedrooms with appliancea. lilcludoa
IIUIUN and tilllblt acreage, ponds, ahed, oilo, mill, mUkhou..,la~ bam, chicken houN, w.ll and T.P.C. water•
$108,000.

Nallll:'------'------~--.;.__

P.O. Box 894-WIAer Alley
RAONE OHIO

915·3594 or

992-2259
608 EAST MAIJf
POMEROY, OHIO

(Note: 15 Word Limit and Your Selling Price Mult Blln Your FREE Ad)
(Sorry, this does not apply to Yard Sales)

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

drainage. Service by:
T.P.C. Water Co.;

Colurmue l Southern
Elactrlc Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
and up
Ownar Financed

'

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

P•IIIPs, F11'1CKes &amp;

COUIITRY LOTS
FOR SALE
1·51CRES

r

ROAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES

Air Cott!liloaen, Heat ·

Decembar17,Page659olthe
1873, recorded ~=:.~:~rJ.~~=~~~~:~
lnVolume41
PUBUC NOnce
llelgaCounlyDeedRecords.
Ohlo,Soae!ao
The 111a1ge County Budget
Also a rlghl of.way lor In·
Nlggomeyer,dated
CommiHion huoomp!tled
greoaondegreosoverthe1SI~:::~:r 20th, 1911 and
Ita _,.._on,. of Unlcl·
fool alley lacing Condor lro
In Deed Book
vlded
LoOII
SlrMI;
and across
rightrear
of ~:J~~r~1l~06~o~:n~~::E31:;8io:l
Ravanua
ondQovarnmanl
Undlvldad
way extending
along• tho
L.ooal Govern-! Rtvanut
of Iota 5, 6 and 7tc !he Weal
Ohio, and being
aa•- Funda lor 1113.
Uno ollhe above deocrlbed
propeoty conV11yed by
Tille r-u• 11 bated 011
premises.
Epple and Mergaret A.
proltcllone frolll the Ohio
REFERENCE DEED: Volto Jet1e Grueser. by
Olflca of Budget and
ume 157, Page n, Meigs
dateo1July23rd
llonapmant and IN only
County Dead Rec01da,
and recorded In DHd
llllmo!H of lie Mlounl of
Auditor'• Parcel No. 16pago12othereol.
00607
REFERENCE DEED: Votrevanua thot could bt
niCtlved by 111o1ge County.
The lasI publication will
146, Page 121, Malgo
Fo!!aw!ntl Ia 1 oomp!ala
be made on Sept. 7, 1992.
Deed Recorda.
brllkdown of the projacted
THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
Percol No. 1.11..,_
__;_Pu:.:b:.:ll.:.c.:..:N.:.OI::IC:,:e__ (8) 3,10,17, 24, 31, (9) 7; &amp;TC 00669
The 1111 publication will
(Peroant, LoCII Gov'l
Fund, Loca1 Gov't Rtvanua
PUBLIC NOTICE
be made on Sept 7,1992.
aa--.)
To:Emmen GilrnoN and
THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
County: 40%, $171,212.00, Florence Gilmore, II lvlng,
(8) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31, (9) 7; &amp;TC
Public Notice
PI,JI5.211.
whose addrHs Ia unknown;
T"""'""lpt: 30'li,
lheunknownhtlrs,devloeta,
Public Notice
S128,4qt.OO, $41,688.110,
legateeo, edmlnlalraloro,
PUBLIC NOnCE
Corporallone: :10%,
E1eculoro, and/or aoalgno of
TO: Thelma A. Grueaor, II
$128,408.00,$41,688.110.
Fmmon Gilmore and living, whon addreao 11
LEGAL NOTICE
TOTALS: 100%,
lor:o• Gilmore, II de· unknownjtheunknownhelra, The Mtlgs County Com$428,030.00, $138,1163.00.
CliVI ·
devlaeea, legaloaa, admlnls• mlaslonora, cJa Courthouse
VILLAGES:
ou IN hereby nodfled tratora, e.r:ecutors, and/or • Third Floor, s - d Snet,
Middleport: 38,88%, that your rultotelt sllualed anlgns of Thelma A. Pomoroy, Ohio 45761 will
$41,11121.42, S11,208.84.
II 2000hCondlndor Slrut, Pom- Grueur, If deceased.
accept
bldo
lor
PoMarol
· : 32. 23% , eray,
oa morolullyd•
TO: Jeau Gruuer, llllv· laaoe/pllrchoee ol an
$41,311.22, 13,436.33.
acrlbed bolaw, hes bean In· lng, whou lui known ad· tdciiUonal communication
specled by lhe appropriate dreu Is 1905 MI. Vernon aystam, . compallb!e with
I 0 •40 .,
RIC Ina:
.,., YlllaiJIOiflclalundlheolrue&gt; Avenue, Point Pleasant,Wool existing eyatalll campo·
13,384.&amp;4, $4,33S.&amp;S. '
IUN lllllllled theraan haa
now In un by the
Rutland: '-68%. $8,5110.56, been dotormlnad to ba ln- VIrginia, sn.d whoae present nanta
addresa Is unknown; the llelga County Emargoncy
f2.7•11.
Syracuae:
11.10%, cure and unufa llid uld unknown helre, devlaeea, lledlcel Sorvlcoo, until 12
S15, 112.16, ...,111.21.
atruclure thr811ena the 1m- legateea, administrator~, noon on Soptember 2, 1992.
TOTALS: 100.00%,
mediate hulth, aallly and executors, and/or aoalgno of B!da will be oponed at I
S121,401.o( $41,188.110.
wollaNto the citizen• of tho Jeeu Gry-,11 docoaaed. P.ll. on September 2, 1112
TOWNIH!P8
VIllage of POmeroy; Further,
You ere hereby nodfled and ratd publcly. Bide will
·
the delactlvo and un11fe
Iedford:'
. 1.60%,
the real ealale altuotecl be-~ •lol'-:.
an ,Ga. IT, 13,511.25.
condition of aald attucture
All biddeN ....t lumfsh
103 Cherry Streel, PomCheallr: 12.28%,
poua an omergenoy to lhe eroy, Ohio and more fully equlpmon~ lnata!IIUon tnd
S15,711.47, SS,123.57.
public health, ulety and doocttbed below, hill been doalgn work ID _,.... ...
Colu111blo:
7.41%, wollaroolthecammunlly,
ln.,- by the appropriate syotem, lhe purpoaa of
$8,515.11, 13,088.15
TheraloN, purouonllo lhe Vl!lageOiflc!ela end Itt atruo- which lo to Mabla all
Lebanon:
10.03%, aulhorlty Vllottd by the Ohio tura oUuatecl th.... hee county agancl11 to
S12,17U2,$4,18UO.
Ravlotd COde Stctlon 715 been·detonnlnad 1o be In- communicate wllh ona
Latert: 5.113%, 16,458.17, and Ordinance No. 427 of tho cure and unule and uld oyatem whore Itch agency
l2,011.15
VIUage of Pomoroy, you art alrUctura threatena the lm- hoe their own lraquancy;
O!lva: 10.:15%, S13, 161.12, horeby notlfltd that 11 aald medlale heelth, aalaty and yet all can coordlnoto
$4,273.10. •
structure Ia not ramoved or welfare 1o the cltlzona of the communiCitlona with aach
Orange: L 13%,
reltabllltatad within 1hlrty (30) Yl!lage of POmeroy. Further, othorln ., emorgoncy.
S10,431.15, S3,38e.30.
dayo from lhe lui publ~ the delactlve and unnlo
muotalaa l!lcluda
Rullnd: 8.15%,
tlon date ollhlo notice then condlllan of 11ld atructure 1 Bldclero
aorvlca conlfact for the
S11,10UI,I3,106.08.
!he Vll'-ge of Pomeroy will polio an emergency to tho
ayotem oa well oa tha
· IWem: 8.71%, $11,274.31, cauaa uld otructure to be public heeUh, ufety tnd -exla!lng
aystem and
.13,110.21.
removed.
wolltN ollhe community.
oqulpmonL
· 8allebury:
6.16%,
DESCRIPTION
Therefore, purauant to the
Each blddtr 1111111 Include
S7,1101.111, $2,511.714.
Situated In Ihe VI Page of authority veated by tho Ohio a bid bond of flvo porcont
lclplo: L05%, St0,336.113, Pomeroy, County of llolgs Revised Coda Section 715 (5%) ollha total bid payable
S3,MI.II.
and s.-te of Ohio and more and Ordlnsnc:e No. 427 ollhe to tha llolga County Comlu!lon:. LG%, 18,500.68, particularly bounded and Village of Pomeroy, you are mlsalonora. A porfo1111ance
13,111.111.
deacrlbtd 11 lollowa: Bolng hereby notified !hat If 111d bond will ba required of lha
TOTALS: 100.00%,
all lhat part of Lot No, 41 atruature II not rltllloved or oucceoalul blddtr.
S128,40e.CIO, $41,188.110.
(being on lhe eeat aide) and rthlbllltatad within thlr1y(30)
All blda muot ba In a
W1511am R. Wlcldlna, extending beck from Condor doyo from the lui publica- oaaled envelope, cletrly
1111ga County Audltar Street altho width ol47 1/2 a tion dale of lhl• notice lhen marked 'BID FOR EllS
.(1)24.1111
dlo1anceof1001eetandbolng the VIllage of Pomeroy will COMiolJNICAT!ON
cauae uld atruclure to be BYBTEII". The llalga
County Commloolonara r•
Real Estate General
removed.
..,e tho right to rojtcl ony
1
Situoled
In the County of end or all bldo.
DESCRIPTION
llolga, In lhe State of Ohio,
flpaclftcallona may be
and In lhe Village of Pom- obtained at the offtco ollht
eroy, and bounded and d• Melgo County Emorgonoy
acrlbed •• lollowa: Being a llodlcal
11111~
part allot number Elghtoan Helghta, Pomaroy, Ohio
(18) In Pomeroy, deacrlbed 457&amp;1.
as lollowa: Commencing on llolga County Conlmlulon
Cheny Slreet Sixty (60) .foal Mary Hobalallor, Clerk
from !he corner of Cherry ond (8) 17, 241110
FraniStraets,thence running
along oild Cherry Street
Twenly·al• (26) leal and ••- 5
Happy Ads
tending beck tram Cheny p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
StrMI etlhe width ofTwenly·
alx (26) l•t, Sl1ty (60) loa! to .
lal numberNineleen(19),the
aald prtmlaes adjoining the
Telegraph lol so call&amp;d, the
Public Notice

Now

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Stalad blda will be
rocolved In the office of tho
Melga County Comml•·
elonaN until 11:00 o'clock
A.M. on tlaptembar 2,11182
at which Uma bide wiH ba
opened ond rtecl tloud for
thalollawlng p!- of anow
-valaqulpmonl
OM modo! ST-110 7'.1 loo~

I

FRESH SWEET CORN

MASON AUTO GLASS

Public Notice
Public Notice
Fallowing Section 5715.16
of the Ohio Ravlaed Code,
Ute changea In val1111tlona
have been comptotad In the
county lor. In yoor 1992,
The changeo In valuation
will re!lect the general roappralula~d newconatructlon
lor llolga County.
Vtlueo may be viewed 11
the llelga County Audltor'a
oHiot between the houra of
8:30 lo4:3U,IIondoy through
Friday.
·
William R. WlckRne
llolga County Auditor
(8) 24; 1TC

RED HILL FARMS
· PRODUCE

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICAnON

(c.osw Sn DAY

-=======:;j;======;;;;l

"2000 Malibu Road."

BANGOR, Maine (AP) s~ Kinl. the master ()f horror
. C()mmunlty Calendar llema Tuesday, 6 p.m., 119 Buuemut ftCliOII, says Tte suppcrts passage of
a state "stalker" law parlly
appear two days before an evt11t Aveftilt\, Ponteloy.
bec•n!t' ()( his own real-life fear of
itnd the day or that evenL Items
being hounded by obsessive fans.
must be received weD Ia lldvuce
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
"They all say, if someb()dy
to assure publication In tbe cal· Conservancy District meets Tues·
wants
50 get you, lhey'D get 'f.!.!·"
~ndar.
day 7p.m.
King, wbose newest novel, 'Gerald's Game," rops The New York
MONDAY
POMEROY • Big Bend Stem- Tunes best-seDer lilt, told Maine's
: MIDDLEPORT - M,eigs Junior wheel Associatioo meets Tuesday, Sunday Sun-J()Ufftll, a Lewis!On
8 p.m.. Carpenter's Hall in newlpiPCf.
.lii~h V()Ueyball prac:~. ~y­
P()meroy. Anyone interested in
~day. 4:30-6 p.m., JUntorhi&amp;h.
uaitdng is invited 10 altcnd.
King's tormentors include .a
POMEROY - 1993 Meigs
man woo traveled frcm Bcrteley,
Marauder yearbook staff meeting,
RACINE • Racine Ruritan Club Calif.. 5o Maine, accusing King ()f
Monday, noon, room 310, Mcip meets Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Star c:onspirinJ 10 murder Jolin Lennon,
·High School. All araff auend.
and a Texas man who broke in!O
MiDPark.
King's home last year and fright·
WEDNESDAY
cned his wife with a fate bomb.
RACINE • Southern Athletic
The bill KiriB supports would
Boosten, clean up of boOiter buildREEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
ing and f()otball fields, Mcnclay · Sdloollioard ()( Education meets mate it a crime 50 lie in wait for
llrough Friday evenings. Brine Wecli!Oaday, 7 p.m. high school someone in a tltrealeniq muner.
M()fe than 20 ()ther states have
.Weed Eaters and painting 500ia.
cafeleria.
pauc1hlmilu lnra, • King asid
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic n()n-telebritict· need thai type of
. MIDDLEPORT • 0~ KAN
Coil Clitb mcetl ~. a-. BOOtlen meet Wednesday, 7:30 pRM«ticw 100.
' 'Thoro are people ()Ut there
Jarber Shop, Middleport. Soclal p.m., hillt achool. Public invited.
bolltl:lcd
by an ~ or an
flo!tr and uading aeuion, 7 p.M.
untoown
~~ra~~P.;\~tesaiif
POMEROY
•
Alzheimers
Sup.~· New members welport Group meets Wednesday, I
come.
. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gene
p.m.. Meigs County Senior Citi·
.;o '
Kelly marked his 80th birlhday
/'1.)
· zens Center.
11JESDAY
quieti~, wal!zinJ out of town wilh
·. HARRISONVILLE • The Har·
his wife 10 a pnvare V1ICIIion spot,
•
POMEROY
•
Wildwood
Gar·
-risonvllle Senior Citizens meet
a
frienclays.
dell
Club
meets
Wednesday,
7:30
~. lp.111. s~ ~AU
KeUy, w1toae blrdlday was Stm·
p.m., home cf Juanlll Will. Brin1
lliCIIIIIIenllltllld.
dly, ukcdlil famii_Y,IIIll io lhluw a
iunbersltip OOes.
party lhis year, wd die friend.
• · POMEROY • M.A.D.D. mceta
.~

PRESENTED ROSE'ITE ·Betty Den, rl..t, C1111nty Fair nowef lllow. Deal's arraaaeme1t
wu pralllted 1 I'OIIdle by Mary EUea Miller ot Willi tbe uture, art aDd ladustry nard.
Sclot() County w•() jud1ed Thursday's Meigs

in the news--------

na at 10 and Snorwt cocaine at 12. alcohol kept his career in constant
'
At age 13, after a suicide attempt. ~y.
·-r'People
always
think
lhat
it's
a
she underwent drug ud alc()hol
blessing 50 be a Barrytii()I'C," she
treatmenL
. Barrymore's father, J!)hn Barry- said in the lalest issue ()(TV Guide.
m()re Jr., had a hislclry of drug "More than anylhing else, it can lie
arrests. Her pllld(ather, John Bar- your dcwnfall.''
Now 17, Barrymore plays a
rymore, was a ttqe and ftlm scar in
the first half ()f lhe century, but trUS!ing prt whc wan1110 ~ a
H()llyWOOd star in the CBS series

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

*

~ Chester D of A meets Tuesday

•son

Monday, August 24, 1992

Talkative spouse annoys woman

•• Plans are being COIIIpletcd for craflt.rl wilt ba f · , ul as ·weu as
do annual Street Festival in· Rut- a moton:)'ele cniac-la•.
There wiD lie cloQr • Ill da
;bild. 10 be held Sepc. S II die fire
·.
)()ng, a dlillkil!l ill~:.e an3

.,..

~day,August24,1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Giveaway

". nyono lnt-tld 1n . A

l(;e

Gaunt Dag Not Suhobio ,-.,
Children. ll4·245-11211.
Jl

. Boatt" pupa •• ,, •• IWiy t~ '\
gQoilhoml, 114-M9:3014,

&gt;J

. Killona, I Woo~ltt"Trolnod
Slack • Ylhho· ·
CoUco'
tnqulrt: 1145 !!;on A._'
614·245-5573.

•

Puppioo: Mother Roalsii!OCI
BoKor, Father Full lloodod

~~,~d.~,
~"12· ~ ~;
304:.
a.r·

hell ....
-he Old.

�.

..
Plg1 8 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, August 24, 1992

•

Ohio

"'

24,1892

SNAFU®by Bruce Beettie .

:..

i

'

44 -.' - Apaiunent.·-•' -~..
1
t.or Jllnt P4: ''
.

54 IIIII!Cel~.

BORN LOSER

'

.

~T,TIIE

XIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

FI~TI¥\Ya'

,Mercha!ldiM .

Llrao--

"-.., 11

7

llazdo

ns;

Pottolllt Elactrtc Hitter,

Furnished
ROOIIIS ..

Brownlt unllorm • Silt 10. Largo

WOOdan daillc. ~47&amp;-1484.

Slttlllna ....... wllh~.
AltO triller
· All hookoupt.
Coli
.... -2:00 p.m.,
304-173INt,-WV.

$500.

4!0:1.

114-4-13,

~ lcrt

Country ...... whh
Yln1on. Colonl1l hum

46 Space tor Rent

nwao.

pond,
llolollt "'""' Park, Rt. vacuum · - - . 125; NC
ho.uoia -ly romodelld. 21trgt Country
manogomto~. ::;:.:tC:'P· • toM, UO;
blma, 1111m11er houM garage, 33N •• undtt 11u~lo, hunii"'J "'bin. i!y owner. Lot.,~j homt rtn1110, $238;
Agent• ...-come. Reduced! Din lt+....z~f7
~
EI Kift ~ill 0 1 nl~~ter• f!:
10
Bfock,IM 388 8210.
.
For Rant: Plfvo1t trtlloi spoct. 304 .f1
No
Comp ~Y 304471Eloctric KHchan Ringo, 30" $75.
114 ue 1720.
.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Olllct Spoco, noo aq. ft., 2nd
lloar. 1oo¥ locotlon In Pomeroy, Eltclrlc suniltom laWn mower,
1 acre nv. front IOta on Ohio lt+ia-Cin
3hp, 11" twfn bladN, InRiver b -lng 1nd .... ng 1
rota for 1n R1e1ne, aulatad, fSO,IM-112-2138.
1 1/lml. 1rom Rnenswooa ...__
.. _
114-la ' " '
For u .... ,,... nice. YOI.Itl
Bri~ In lltlat County. $4000

-,r"·

·.

and UP. I.....S..3M'1.

r,1ercha ndi se

ovlhlbla lor homo
conotructlon on R1yburq. Ad,
Ac-

reaaonable ,....rlct~n1, walar,
lnfarm.tkln 1malltd on request,

30H7W2A •

Land For Sala: 11 Ac,.s, $4,000,
Nlc:a View Of Ohio Rlvar, Phone:
114·367·'nn4.·
Ohio River' front 'loti, On llmH·
t... rood balow Honlont, WV.
OWner ' llnlncl~~·::bla wl1h
down paynwnt,
-2&amp;81.

Fmanc1al

Business

21
Wlllltd: 4 112ft. loft-llandad
, 6lub,
5 ,proltr
-_ _- _ _
bath

Employment Serv ices
11

Help Wanted

tooklng

for

Opportunity

INO'TlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
RentJIS
......,. .nell 1hlt you do butl·
- wl1h-" you k.- ond
NOT lo ttnd monty through 1ht - - - - . . . , . - - - mall until you htvt ln-rgt~..r 41 .Houses for Rent

m.lnl.gw

EatabUthld Vtndlng Rollft Elm
Up To $1,000 Per Wttk, 1.6IJO.
311-Vtnd·
Smlll acrotn printing buolnuo.
Everything you ntld 10 lion
lamorraw. Prictd 1o 1111. 304882-3804 or 882·3737.
Vtndlng Routt: Locol. Wt Hlvt

trolnaaa lor locll butlnaaa. Thl N...st MIChl,_, Making A
Sind rour I'IIUme tO Box c-11 Nlct Study Coah lncomt. 1·
cort Point Pltlllnt Raglt1t&lt; IOO.t53-1313.
200 llaln S1, Point PI-nt, WV
255!0.

AVON I AU Anoia I

Real Estate

Shl~ty

SpNrt, 304471-M:zt.

El-nt

Elrnl-

AI

A

Chrit1mu Arouncf Tht Wand

Oemonlllrator, Fr• $300 ICit Of

Chrit1mu ftMna. Alto Booking
Panloo, 114-379-2502.
Holt Slyllth ......... Guronlttd
Pd. Voc111on 114-4111-

;;r-HELP

WANTED:

R1 pUonllt

Household
Goods

2 Pltca INMI Llvi!'Q Room
Sat, $50; Largo Pln.-lc
lllc-vt o-; NO· 11" Color
T.V., 1711; Olhtr Illite. hma.lt+
31l'0631.

211,000 ITU Air Condhlontr, 30

Ful~Tlmt

•Trtlntcrlbtr
oComp&amp;Oer Dlta Cltrk. Ply Acconllng To Exptrlonct. Submh

31 Homes tor Sale
1

acre. 4 BR, 2 blth, 2 car

g~r~ga. llroptoc~,

click: 304471-lho.

hilt pump,

2 s(ory brick homt, good cond,
I raama. bMh, chy waler, bue-

mtnt, central aJr, g11 furnace,
Buck lt0¥1. Ftnet1 ~lot, wolklng

distinct

-

lrom

uooaytar

'

dl111, 304-571-2381 olltr

I :OOPII.
2'IT KtiiiY Dr., Oolllpollt, Ohio
451:11, Ttf......,., 114-441-3385,
Prlct: 112,000.00. Uvlng Room,

":sseall

e

3 Btdroam HouH, a.IIIIIIOIIo,

R11dy 111. WID ·Hook.Up,
$325/110. Dtpoah. Rotartncu
Requlrtd. &amp;14-441·23011, SM·223-

54 Miscellaneous

___
Me_rc_h_a_n_d_lse___

3br, Gallipolis, Clost Church,

64 Hay&amp;Grsln
56 Pats lor Sale
.:r;;;;;;;~ii~;i~;;;:fi;j ilor ........ Round bolto $20.
~

AKC

!ltllltt- Cockor lponltl

...,_; 114445-1224 Afttr 4

P.ll:

Newer 2 btd""'m homt,
lumlthtd1 hat ou1bldg, gooil
cond, Jtrocho Ad, 304-SH-2905.
Small Fumlohld 3 Room Col·
togt In Town, Clott To Grocery

lmnu dill I Dp8rilnga available

Transportal1on

.

Arid LaundlrY, Privati And
0Uiat. l14-441-2102.
Smtll HouH FOf Rtnt, Upper
Routo 1 Nonh, Dtpooh &amp;

v..

4~._!!,100;

runo grot~, IM-1012

ALDER

..••

AND fflOM NOv/ OrJ v11'4ErJ YOu
, Y.., ACCUSe YOUF OPPONeNT
Of FOOLING Tt-IE PUBLIC ,
TflY iO ~eeP T~E
eNvY OlJT Of
YOUfl VOIC~.

_ . , t131G, - ·

Avtnuo, Galllpolfo.I14.:Z56-1146.

(l 1t11&lt;l Dy fEA_woe

Accessories
3 aunrooll. 400 tulllo trtnL,
mite. 71 Chtv. nn pone, t14441-314hft•lpm.
•

...

campers&amp;
·Motor Homes

"

11110 , _ , Travll Trolltr
" '"· '

$110.tll UU171.

AIIA'II Coli
Ahor7.

3bdrm. llylt homt, 1 112
both, wchad ga-. largo
modtm
dlrilngillvlng
portunity Employer.
hao1 ~Llmi
Rood, lltl9f
.
lttd
llttthl OHman Ia looking lor o """"•
$43,400;
ilklng
Country ll•lcltil, Con 'd F CIIF1 truck. boll, IIC, on
111-111:1.
tnoclt, 114-111&gt;-30114.
'

••chon,

41131. IM-448-7112. Equll Op-

~Will

nithtd. t100 dtpoalt. Coli '""

0404.

By - · HlckOfy IIIII Eatotao.
R1 2 N. Pt. Plo-nl, Brick
"""'"' 3 1~&gt;.2 both, FA, CA, lol
polntmont
only. :104,.7S-M41
Of
"""
·~-· bv ....

!lo4.t71-4030.

Scrv 1ccs

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

plut •dopotlt. No - - &amp;M-4411314.

2br Unlurnlthtd Coblt .A~1
Clttn And Qui~,.,.

--- ..... -. -·

1111

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP-

lt+44f.4GI

AEHT-2-0WN
No Dtr1ot11 • GRAND OPENING
Hothl.. Dr Uatd,

Plat11c And lltdll Culvtn linch
ThN 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
EYint, Jackaon, Ohio. 1.6IJO.

1 Mclroom apertrMnt In Pl.

P l - . W.Yo., 1-304-11H042.

A~lt

:"U••

1111 Pfrmo&lt;lth Altllnl LE, 4cyl.

2.2 IHoi, P~1 !.'!. ~Itt, otoiOOI

537·11121.

$231, Will StU SISO. oM-448Wllh 4 Cllalnt 11.21 ~ Dr 4423 Dr Evanlnge: lt+441-t7114.
T - W11h Altd 4 Chain
W/Mito... Huk:ll $20.11 Wttk; Quo~ conning lart, 3 dortn lor
Aofl!garator $11.22 Wtt!&lt;; $10, lt+t12-:Mift
ary. lol .,....
WMII; ElactrfC Ringo With RNr window, Ills F-100 11181
Fonl pickup. $21.00. Whllo
-Door t11.22 WNK.
do"'!.!!_ t10.00 NCh. Col 304-

1117 Dodgo, PB, PS=:outo,
3ll1ftPII 11;150. lilT p mouth
=-40 mpg,AIC,
-

Musical
Instruments

unlumlthad

lpl&amp;,

-··~

lite
30 Ullh lkl

1IR Font ~ OT, lltck,
Lolded.l1t 111 2300.

BARNEY
CAN I GO SWIMMIN'
WITH JAMEY IF I
TELl. YOU SOME
GOOD NEWS,
AUNT
LOWEEZ.Y?

- . r Avanuo, Oolllpotlt. Stc.
Otoooi1
l - -· IM-44122M,I14-441-2N1.

ox•oltt bl~t- MO. Dry
out ltltlon, comb-oUt
.....,.1130, paoch. :104475-mL 58

-

Saalntrfl loNbool -

· Com-

pitt&amp; $800. 3044/W7II4.

:::J:..""='·~=

tt+tlrl .....

Snap
tit Inon
Ill,

;:s.ae
ltrlna -

ritw Cniftaman .,...
1111
-kat alta, i' to 120; 11+112· ::""'::-'-•.:..•011
,:.;.;.
•

-

-

,...

VA, I 111.

=·•Col---

- · good tiiN, tf71; lt+NI44111. '
'

•

\loiiMin

="lli0:,.210ii' :14 Pin-

I .nm Suppl

h
\ lt•.(•,l()( k

..

-trlcally
54 Alrllnt Info
55 Obtlln
58 FMC!ng

El.VINEY 15
WAITIN' FOR YOU
OUT AT TH'
GOSSIP FENCE

•

l

~LJL:JU rJ~lJU lJ(!]I:J
[JrJ[jlj [JlJ[JrJ[JrJiJ(j ..
..'
rJl!](j ..:J (!] lJ
L!J ljlJ [J
~lJ..:J(jl.:J I.:JrJL:J
..
..
l:I:.JDLJL!l ..:JlJL:Ji.JliJl!ll!l .,
~rJ~~ULUJL:Jlj rJLJU
~l!lLJ rJLJlJUrJL!IUUU
ULJL!lr.nmu ~rJtJuu
..:JlJI.J l!IU..:JlJU
..:H!lL:J l!l
rJ u l!l u m.J
L!Jl.:JlJI.JI.JUL:J[!] ..:J UU~
..:J(!]..:J LJrJi.Jli.J U~l!JU
'

'

[:)[J(•l

(•li:JIIU (•ll:II:J£1

2Setyr

I Word

7Rtgard

3llulleal
group
4 LOYIIIJ
5ChHH
CUlling
6 Fr11hwatar
ftlh

57DeprHIId

DOWN

31 PotUc
pqpotiUon
32 Type ol bNn

1 Center ol
ahltkl

8 Pilnlst-

Gtrntr
8For1arm
bone
10 Blta of fluff
11 Sltlltared
from wind

ar

·~~• I 'HAW HAW

...

ll'tlnurfl

HAW

82

Pll.mblng A
Hllltlng

.

IJio
10
CIM&amp;M
Junior
'Ywt ala 1111 To 1112

'

ltOI

--It=

Rnldu....

•

--'

I

........
I'
h
!!lrlnl.
P't ...,. n , , , W-J
3

IIIII

s

'

Aug. 25,

1112

You might get Involved In a tldellne en-.
&lt;INvor with 11110 ,friends In the 'fM/
ahead. In time, the three of you may ,..
IIIZII there II a marf&lt;ll lor your '1'1'1'8'
which could become aaacond source or
earnings.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22) II you lhara .

your time with friends you have strong
emotional bonds with. today will prove ·
enjoyable lor you. You need IO be
around people wholl feelings and In·
tereata parallel yours. Know where to

look lor romance and you'll lind II. The Iller for wntlng the day.
Aatro-Graph Marchmaker lnstanlly re- PIIC!S lfab. 20-MMch 20) Something
veals which signs are romanllcally per· you're presently Involved in can be
lee! for. you . Mall $2 pluoalong, oelf·ed· more succenlul II It's reorganized
dreteed. aramped envelope to properly.' Thla Is a good day to give It
Matchmaker, c/o this
P.O. your filii anentlon.
Box 81428, C-and, OH 44101 -3428. ARI!S (Mirch 21 ·AprH 11) This is a
LIIRA (hpt. ~1. 21) In your deal· good day to work on a sltuallqn you 've
lngs with others today, fat them know been wanting to resolve but haven 't
your virtues cannot be aualltd , 111pe- been abfe to as ~ol yet The results
c"lly by trying to c•t eotners In waya you:re hOping for can be achieved - 11
thai are, ular u you're concerned, ul· you try.
terty lnapproprlale.
.
. TAURUS (Aprii20-MIIJ 20) Your men·
BCOIIPIO (Oct.M-Nov. 22) Your areal· tal faculllft,lncludlng your Imagination,
eat - t today Is your lblllty 10 keep could be a bit keener thin uaualtoday.
lhlnga In proper perapectlve, where you 10 try to use t11ete attrlbulea conalrucdon'l tatca youloell or -.pmertlatoo lively. -It lhe lime to make plans for
aerloulll)l. FollOw your Instincts. .
. the 144t or the WM!&lt;.
SAGmAIIUI ( - . 2J.Oec. 21) You QIFF1(...,21...1une20) lr,rou·rettll·
mlghl IHI obligated to help _ . . 1ng or promoting something lor public
you like resolve a problem today. Hyou conaumptlon.loday could be a profit·
do 1~11 and llncerely expect nothing In obit doy. J:hlnk In term1 olo broad marreturn. you could be In for a pteuonr · . ket rothlr dian a narroW one.
CANCIII (olline·tt-.luiJ Zi) FOOIJs your
aurprtaa.
CAPIIICORN (Dec. 2Nia. 1t) Your -gy today on your peraonal lnt~·
reasoning fi0!'8'I are good todey, yet etta. ltlool&lt;s like you thould be able to
your male's could be aupertor. Before ,do who! you want to do tree from outmaking an lmportlllt decltlon , be aure · licit lntart.ltuce.
to dfac:ual thlnga Wfth vour apouaa.
UO (.luiJ •"111· 221 Ailde' from your
AQUARIUS (.lin. 20-Fab. 11) It's lm· abiiHy to m11&lt;t logical 1 - t l 1 o portant you ftnd aome practical ouflet : doy. yollr lntulllor\ 11 quite strong. Uaa
for your lime and talents today. If you . bot~ qutiHitll In unison when making
fall to do 10. you're likely to feet ~llty critiCal dtci11on1.

.....

16- Rica
20 way of • •
22 E (leglndiiJ
aource of
gold)
23 SllriiCI

OH, 600DY II
I'D RUTHER CHURN
~ THAN GO SWIMMIN'
1 ENNYHOW !!

~

.,
.,..

..:J lJ LJ l!J ..:J l!Jl:.HJ ..:J liJ l!J

24Renown
25 Furze 1110111
27 Clllld-ctra

....• .,
1

'

28 Trickle
20 - tnd endt
31 Jug
3511otea'
brother
37 Ttl
31 Pnlond

i

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-..

AAIC
Roflroad
-lolo:
- - Tloa For Salt ...,.
114, AI Porter, Ohio; It+
Jll .....

lllldeUlld to be
Watan.u
Forced fillY'
mtnt or
3g Scrape•
40 Big llftdwlch
41 lllnlrll .
42 Fallilon
dttlgntr
Donna45 Docked
48 Rubber trH
48 SlrloUI
qulllty
52 lllllllbtre

!~~

=·.,...--,::-:---

--="

1tA C.. -

AWAY II

ASTI\0-GRAPH

Ill.,....
1:11, , - 111

lw 0321.

33
34
35
36

-.l.--'6

7173.
au.. Com: - Ttblt Chtl,_ $20; Racllnv $20; ~ doL ll!!t!l- OOI!IIIIiM.
Couch Choir,_ S25; Fnnldln
Ad:; 11.111.114. It+.
_ . , . , , . . lraw.UO,
lltclrn.f15.114

FIRE

•'

H;i;:;;;;;;;1;;;;:'"iiii;;iiii:
""' piCk.

'

Anawerlo P,..loua fluulo

~~

Frultl &amp;
Vegetables

dUIY....,.
. . . _ -• ·
......11 ..-_

,.

rtiOfl

112~1.

-ond or Coara bullcllna
Good I l1dl oom Home: Gil 1n lllddltport, Nooth Stcona
Fumtct, Small Lot, All Chy A_,.,., Dtpoetl lftd •afw•rrw
UUIIIIaa. OWner Flntndng roquhd, 814492-2110.
14.000 Down, Altt on 1br, Furnllhtd, $220/llo. 4N
Loon. 114-441-1111 Daya.

t '

l

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

(abbr.)

26 DIIHr orfd

-a
11dnn.

·l

+H

53lllhl¥e

22 SUrniHtl
1
24=

-.,e...........,2.

Portable CD Ptav•. A-.
Bunk Comalelt 111.11 Control fiiiiY P,ogrommoblt,
w
...; aor. Altd
Choir tto.as Htadphona, RCA Jack llachar·
W...; Lampo 1U1 Wttk; gooblt B1ttery, Ukt Now, Rt1all: ST

Apartment
tor Rent

Otda.-lt

roll

15 Plrlte
17 Com(IIIU pl.
18 Welting
12 Wdl.)
11 Eet-tbl()td
21

I""'Giuun 2 Door, Black,
Ll&gt;adid, 111,000 IIUto, Excolltnt
Condhlonl M,- Phone; IM....11171, 114-448 1223.

PUAHCEI

Ev•.

44

12 Spoil
13 Downr duck
1411HWt11

Npolle. 0,1nklg eoon. 1'14-441oo

,_, llolllr h,ootillol. S2Wmo.

1439.

lmmtdll11y. ~~ .

4Looptd
labflc
I Gume

lpm.104-11U112.

At*Ohio
511 Jar Drive, OtiHpolll, 3 Bid· River, In Kanauga.
'a
- , I Bl"'!1.1noround Pool, llobllt Homo Pork, liM-441-1802.
Privott Lot, 0011$0. 814-441-

BEAIITIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlt1orlcal Anal Comer Lot • 818
llaln It Pl. Plt-nl, W. VI.
Compltltly AonoVItta: 2 Full
lolht, 3 ~ g.......... HVAC, - . Corpot. Avtllablt

I flying uuc:tr
(llbbf.)

2 1 R - - b - . F w·

2 BA: wit•, trath DOid. 1 mi.

j

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Puppy
Pit Co.8l!ofl.
Lacattdln- G.C.IIurphy
Qii.

I

+to
• A J tO 4
+KQJ6S2

+

1tA l'&lt;!nUtc 2000, MIG It+
1m Tany 1t R. W Conlolntd,
441 IIOIA. . Ip.m.
'
Sltop .. Good -lon.
11,200. 11t til llll

2 BA unlumlohld In Vlnl0t1
..... 304-e7&amp;-5711.

EAST
+98432
.K876 S
+A tO
+to

Norna Eost
Once, when play ing in a tournament
3t
Pass
in London and sitting North . I bid sev·
s+
en diamonds after a competitive auc·
Pass
Pass
lion in which our opponents had pre·
Db I.
empted us out of Blackwood. East
Pass Pass
Pass
sacrificed in seven hearts, whereupon
West took the diamond ace from his
Opening lead: 5
band , licked the back of the card and .
.,
stuck it to his forehead. My partner. L _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _..J
1
the kibitzers, West and I started laugh· .
ing. East, properly keeping his eyes on
his cards, wondered why .
U a card is exposed during the auc - , en no-trump. Luckily for declarer,
tion it becomes a penalty card, usual· ' West didn't have a diamond to lead. He
ty to be played at the first legal oppor· : selected the spade live. Expecting
tunity . There are some other possibil· West to be 5-7 in the black suits, deities but they don't arise in today's clarer tried to restrict his losses. He fi.
deal; whtch occurred 30 years ago. It nessed dummy 's spade jack at trick
alw features the diamond ace .
one, then, wtth the aid of three fi· :
West's bid of four no-trump was nesses, he took lour heart tricks. Next, .
wild with 4-8 distribution in the black South played a club to dummy's king .
suits. And when South bid seven dia· and cashed dummy's A·K of spades. · :
moods East couldn't wait lor his turn . Finally he led a club to his &amp;ce, pre- - '
He doubled and immediately led the paring to concede four down , when • ·:
diamond ace.
something strange happened. East, beSouth realizing that seven dia~ ing out of clul!s, was forced to discard
munds ~as doomed . retreated to sev- the exposed diamond ace.

Slclng.

1 -Btdroom
Tn.U.
On -Same 3Lot,
Good
Rental Pr-'Y, 141 Thin!

WEST

By Pbllllp Alder

\.,._,..,u:.&gt;
.. •,

2 bdrm. tralltt near Ra,clne;
btdrm. trolltr on A-,:.~2m1.
-~.;114-812
'

- :M=

1-11-t%

+Q76a
•2
+ ...
+QJB 7 6S 3 2

The rule
of law

B-2.4-

.I ~. .

Civic 4 Door, Good
Condit~ ....... 114411-1111.

1100.1 '

I I

SOUTH

Auto Parts &amp;

!CoolpOr, . . ., _

II

I' lrti~

NORTH

tnllor, oxc:

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

11113 -

II

PHILLIP

1-21111.
11Ft. lnvldlr, ~ bow, 11011lent condiUon, Ill tnllr, •
75hp. 'CIIIy, qlna , _ bul

1tA Flroblnt, v~;:omallc,

r r 1· r r I' ,. 1

.

'

+A KJ
.Q93
+98743
+K9

I

. 79

you develop from step No. 3 beJow.

BRIDGE

8udaot Trane"""lont. Ultd a •
robulll, ~ It $111: lron1 ·
1111 Coritolr $500,
- drivt ltir1fna It ....110
T07ota IIR3 Ptna Dr Whoto Cu, ·
11+241-~, IIW7t-22U.
--'nn4.
1177 Olda II, IUnl aoocl $1,100. -11111n~~pane,- "'
'lnlck
rodltoro, '
:10447HIIIofler 7:00PM. · ton
floor matt, 14o. 0 I A. Aulo, ·
1110 OIIC ahoot bod truck 4I4, A -; . wv. !IOW'IHm or 1- ..
PI, PS, PW1_PDL, 111-whttl,- ~'13.,515.
t1411~335ortt+.......,,

G Complete
!he chU&lt;:kle quoted
by filling in the missing words

~----------------~

":':4 $1800, wiM -wbltt,,

71 Autos lor Sale

111M, tao

A - lltqulrad. 814-44&amp;3710.

he ....

Impair ~ Crest · Lilac • Kennel • NEAR the PLACE
" "I worked at a lire hydrant plant." the not so smart fellow
told h•s buddy. Smiling his buddy replied , "And I bet you
CE~d".'!.fl&lt;lrk anywhere NEAR lhe PLACE'

tor Sale

BOIIp, 11101or l

p~rtybegins,
ends and your
walch

neighbor s

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

4hp E - mo101, t-.g
mo1or,lllnkola, :104411-11111.
ttft. HbtrVIttt Aun-Aboul - ·

-2115.

.

I I

Local

n v botlom - . 15 ft 1ralltr,

76

.

.

~~~~~MBLE FORI

.,

'='A ::'::i

12

.

1 18

I

,

1187 Chivy 314 ton 4, 4, ••c
cond, 304.f'II.I7Z4.
k Tralltr Whh 1187 OIIC S-11 Jimmy, 4 WD,
~1 PB, AC, AT, V4, IM-245-

2f3

.

7
_J
__
l.
_
_J_i__.l.-l.
. .....I.
L

...

141:1.

•,
pertlY

1

Wood burning flreotace lntllt, ~ ~G
· 1
UO; 10 gallein lith lw wl1h ao- Ooldlntl lriContlvt F
!"""==:2·~-----..,;,rita. $11; 114- 4331.
IM :lll'im
und, $1,800.
u.~....,
~,m 11on0od:r,c...ma.
Aa1oa6 Rool~:.::!•
...,~
55
Building
Club Cor.., Halter lroka, ,_,__ 1n Good Condftlon
_Altd HtHtrt Prlv11t - - ·
•
•
Supplies
!rlllr· - Champion AI OoiUt Jollnaon'a -.
........,. Cl....,ron AI Pllliy Ett1om " - GalltpoiiL
2 7
2
~·- 14'
- -~tnlry,
" '2- 11444t
Coun!Y; 432•
Alto 114
lllilnt
11MI
......_
"ICIOoo
4....Built. 75 Boats &amp; Motors

won Hilt~, Rtflnncee,
Typing Spttd And Any El·
2 ltdroom llobllt - .
Dtrlotll l -01101 RtqUirtd,
pOrl!not ~ Whh Compu1·
tr1 To; P.O. Bo• 1101, Galllpollt, 1 a..r-. F1mlly Room, 1 114-2!'-11122.
OH 4801. lltdlctl Olllct El• And 112 Blllvoomo 1 Cor
Garogt, Brick Fram Wttr. C.dor
porltnot Prtlt&lt;ftd.
for lull-tl.. and pon~lma
LPN'a. Comoltftlvt . _ Dl~
-~~~ wfth -ltnCo, rr..~
bit achodlllng anltablo. Con1KI thl Dlrtelor ol Hurting,
PI-I Ctrt Conter,_ 1111
P I - Dnvt GaiHpolow, OH

2 11om Oo

.

your

.--T_R_O_M_P_P~·..., :~~~ly lhe next time

SOME co•mes

Livest~

63

AKC A~- Alrtd1lt Pupo,
t100 Ea Exctlltnl Bloodline 2
ll~ltt I
onlhl Old, lt+2JI.

School,
Ubrooy,
$32Wo.
Reference, Sleurlty Dlpotit
Requlrtd. No Ptls. 114-446·1734

.

1117 Cortn~OOI llllto, In • •:

~========,---------j awnw.
Exctrtenl
• - - -1on,

I

To find out exactly where

1 16 1 1 .~.

5

drlvo.

and SUpply Shop Pol ooeh, ""''" bolto 12. • up.
Grooming. All . . . - . ltvlta. 3Q4.fl541&amp;0.
lima Pol Food Daaltr.· Jullt Mulch hoy for alt, 304471- · Colll14 441 0231.
5016.
3inon.
old
Alglallrtd Old hoy In 11om It Aldlanl
Hlmollyon ldl1ona. 1 malt Saol Olonn '-It, 41710 Btld Knoll/
Olbton air condhion•r 23,500 Point, 3 ....... Slut Point, $!0, StlvlmUit Road lonn. WIN 1111
BTU. 2vro. old. Coo1t 4-5 ""'"''· :104-NWIIZ.
Putting In central air. 304-e'JS..
bllttt - · · - 2284.
AKC Cockor 8ponltl pup, 10 Wlnltd To Buy: T - . Sticka, Wlnltd; lrlhor lor M ft.
3461.
moe old, t.maa., $100. 304-I'JI.. lT--ToBt~· bOll. 304-IIWISI.
222:1.
'
ntd Tolly Ftrm. IM-448-1012.

11112.

Momlng_L

4-

I

W Yl E N

I

1·wAS SOUND
ASl.EEP.. AND
T~EN !I-lEARD

e r::~;R~Y~~~RES 11

115-4143.

., ""

·U;-:..:::J·

011 oook otovt • fill hot Wlltr
hNter, $50 Nch. 304-173-1424.

OF WHAT?
IT'S TWO
O'CLOCK IN
T~E MORNIN6

6ROWN? I'M
SCARED ..

~OWl. ING ...

11114 Ford F.:zso.

~ ........... root,
.. ... ~
coon
-·
- g-, ....... orfco """ ..._... plga lor lilt.
2135orlt+!lt2
. ll+lllf· SM!O·, 40I72xM .,_loam: 304~.
,::;-...,..
For Salo: 4Z 112" Countarlop ~':'
~ lltalt1- Ant• ctlllo, 3 bulla,
With Eltc1rtc -coming Counltr· $14.1011;
1on Pool Frama 3 l\tlloq, 1 cow. Prioad lop R~a, 114-441-311112 Dr It+ Buf~. tW 112 3141 or :•:::::!:1'=' ::lon.:::.::l::t+::.:ll::ta.:::30=33.=--«e.g $50.
11'3-1341.
Regilt- CIHit b
Fiw Salt; llolt Aol1wtllt~ I Block, brick, lllpn, - . f14.1124110.
Montht 01~, 1175; 1m •ont - · .llnttlt, 11C. Clouda WinEconollnt von. $200, 11+371- 1.,_ Rio Oroncla, OH Coli It+
27!1.
245-112\

Gtn- Nutrhlon Pntduolt
1o11urtng Amino Acid Body
='-:'.~'1:5.. Largo Bulldlng1 wolah1 Iota and 111
bum• rormur1o. Avaltablt ox·
Savlnaa On AI VInyl I Co~ clutlvtly
at Rllt Aid Plllrrnocy.
In StoCk. $5.00 Up. 11o11o111n
Tht utt way 10 dltl.
rpota,IM-441-11144.

thl off1rlng.

'AVON' ALL AREASI Shiro your
tt.. wllh uo. You'll 1ovt tho
company, HIOOoftM356.
Aro you •aa-•lve, 1111
mollntad, willing to 1p~
yo~~rotll to 1 vory -trdlng
ivllh many addtd btntlll1? •
.,,

·

5I

um'00 -· ••• "'""

EVENING

Good Conclllon, ...- · 1134.

.

chal"' 111 oo;

I
1
I t 1'QtA,~ I

1m Ford Cugo Van, E·110,

h .,.yciOIIICIII buUd and ropalr·

0rop ""' tibia,

MON .. AUG. 24 • .

73 Vans &amp; 4 WO's

Compltlo Ill ol allltllachlnl• IUUtlrtttd. How to do

Crochtttd btd and lnhlon
dolla. $31-ML C.U Ht1tn at 104-

~ELLO, C~ARLI E

:10447H211.

114-441-

tto.oo ~11-ma.

Ford-

tt,lll; 1iil Fonl P.U. 11.1111;
BaD Auto Balta. lfwr 110 •
..... N. 01 U.S. Sl, ,........... t
11115.
110 Fanl Plck.IJp ll'uck, 30,000 : ·
IIIIN, Llkt NowiiM-4411421\
. Chavrollt, Ford, Oodg" olclaiD
btda. llhcHt or long. NO ruol.

Roomalor rom·- or-~­ Commarclll Slttl Oltlfll Door,
lnautatlon, ~lactric Opontrl
Sllrtl!IQ at $120/m&lt;l. Mottl. 12112,
..-lln1 . Condhlon

11t . . . . .0.

•

PIZILII

$2,l'N; 1111 C11t'l. 1-10 Aulo,
P.U. $2,211· 1113 ~ P.U.

Yard Sale

45

Television
Viewing

TJI€

H&gt;IT
~!

$2111· 1111 ._. S-.
n.iN; 1iiii Chef a-10 ,

TIATNILY

·
-14.111:
U $2,111;
1111....
Fonl F-110 P.U.

tao. 114-251 ens.

'

P.u.

10.

Anllqut 0.. Rango, 115; Aalory
1 - Puah Styli Lawn - .

THI~ I~

~"
Dl.'(,
~

i

:::: 8::r.
P.U. f.:.' ~-f=

- T--.
· Loot
Ill. P - Twin
·• vlclnhy. Raonnl.
:1044-. :1044711-5411.
Loat: llolataln Cow. Vlelnhy:
lulovlla PIU. Colll14-141-2114.
Loot: Wolltt ot Flatrock Grocery.
In

HELLO? l1IORlWPlE
ilt~IDVK.£ ... WI:HS

~.lot

1

72 Trucks tor Sale
1185 C11t'l 414 IMclld, IIMI;

Loll &amp; Found

*"75-1225.

t¥lT TAAT I OOtlT UNE HIA\...
!lUr AAVI~ Hill.~ H.L

5C.HOOL ...

Uood tlrW In aood iltipo to
gtvMwoy, 011 ~24!111.

The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..
.'

future

30Lodgar
42 - Ill

43~genua

~L~
48~01

newap-.

tilt cornlca . •
47 Group ol two
50 llldlcll
IUfllx
51 Throw tlowly' ~ ~

::..
CELEBRITY CIPHER

~-"'OI*""'too
o c,.•iii•n011J1Mdlr0tl'lct~
t Uc:•~-...,. . , . -·
E-.....,
.... .,..
~nGtt~W. r--.,. ..
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AWLEN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "One of my rules Ia keep my weiQht off Is that I
can't aat whtrl 1 watch telavttlon - everl" - Richard Slmmons.

'•

J

'

,

�Monday, August 24, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

C~ristopher Columbus'

a majestic

film with an enigmatic lea~Ea~~~~~!~~s
Christopher.Columbus:
Th DiJcovery
PG-13
••• (outolftve)
Wamr Bros.
(Naw p/aylllg 1111/lt Spri11g Valley
· Cillilma 7 Check /oclll /urillgs for

Ra:ed

float J•df[D~ con!est, wait for To.esday's Meip
County J'u1110r Fall' Parade to begiD.

Ballard birth
announced
Dave and Kelli · Ballard,
Pomeroy, announce the birth of
their daughter, Kristin Rochelle
Ballard.
She weighed seven pounds and
six ounces and was 20 inches long.
Matenial grandparents are Lois
Cleland, Pomeroy. and Thomas
Cleland, Athens. Maternal greatgrandmother is Leila J. Maybury,
Leesburg, NJ.
Paternal grandparents are Ralph
and Wilma Ballard, Long Bouom.
qreat-grandmother is Dorma Mornson, l'omeroy.

Lynch turns four

PINSON

of Poriugal prefers the African
route theory and turns him down,
Despite the recent contn)versy so COlumbus a®eals to King Ferthat labels Christopher Columbus dinand (Tom Selleck) and Queen
as the spark tl18l began a genocidal . Isabella (Rachel Ward) of Spain, _
explosion which nearly wiDCd ou.t
Infatuated with the young
the Na)ive Americans, Hollywood
·
h
is releasing not one but two films explorer, Isabella convmces er
less-than-enthusiastic husband to
about the exploRr.
fund
the expedition.
Christopher Columbus :_The
And, to provide additional wear
Discoyery , which OPODed Fnday, to a well-worn cliche, the rest is
is the first to be releaaed. 149Z,
starring Gerard Depanlieu, is set to history·
The film sl!lllS a Utde sluggishhe released ln October.
ly.
It's 45 minutes into th~ movie
In The Discovery, .Columbus before
Columbus and h1s crew
(Gcage Corraface), a ~nese car· even set saiL And those minutes
tographer and sailor, postts a theory
h
thai the most diRCt sailing route to are a little gorged at times wit
and unnecessarily long conthe Indies may be obtained by sail- detail
versations.
ing west into the open ocean
Once the Nina, Pinta and Santa
instesd of around Africa as others
Maria set sail, however, the movie
have proposed.
sails
with its back to the wind.
The problem is fmding someone
Columbus
an enigmatic hero.
to fund the expedition. King John His character isswitches
.from mght
wy,
like
a
quick-change
to Shado
Dr. Jekyll and ·Mr. Hyde, throughoutlntheonfiedmsce
. ne he may be a light- .
the hostess.
Officers were elected at the hearted adventurer with a smile as
recent meeting of !be Shade Valley Wl'de as the Strait of Gibraltar and
Council of Floral Ans held at the in the next he is hanging crewmen
home of Jaclde Frost. There .were suspected of sabotage from the
eight members present. Everyone yardarms.
brought 1D hclb dish to share.
.
0 'ed
O!ficetS an: Sheila Taylor, pres- on shelves discourages
ants. n
ident· Pat Holter, vice-president;
.
. herbs in arrangements or open
Kathryn Mora, second v•ce-prest- bowls or potpowri help to ward off
flies. Use a metal, wood or plastic
den~ benise Mora, secretary; and
window hox and water frequently
Jackie Frost, treasum.
••• by
The group work~ on entry but avoid root rot cau~
·soggy
signs for the county flit.
Belly Dean presented a program roo~.thanlc-you was read from Bob
on Herb Windowsill Gardens. Mint and Alice Thompson for flow.ers
and tansy are said to dew mice and received for their 50th weddtng
spigs of peMyroyal, rue and tansy annivezsary.
rime)

BALLOON FLOAT · Members of the HarrisonviUe 4-H Club, second place winners Ia the

Review
ByREVIN

·

Floral arts council meets
The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts met recently at the
home of Betty Dean with five
members present
Mrs. Dean read "What's In a
Name?" and ~'Color" for devotions.
Rowers were sent for Bob and
Alice Thompson's 50th wedding
anniversary.
ThC bulb book: was received and
orders should.already have been
turned in.
Next month's meeting will be at
the home of Jackie Frost. Everyone
is to mng an herb dish to share.
Sheila Taylor presented the program on arranging.
. Refreshments were served

KRISTIN BALLARD
0 ~ ll.J. fiiiYJiiQU)I

.

impressive, e~1ally compared to
the disappomtmg performance
given by Marlo~ .Brando, who
plays Grand InquiSitor Torquema·
da.
b red .th his
Brando appears o WI .
role. If there were wnst'J:tch~ !n
the Fifteenth Century. ran o.s·
character would be checlcmg h1s
qwte onen.
·
Columbus, as captam of the
small fleet, must fight more than
weather, waves and wind.
As the departure time drew near,
his crew was still shon-handed.
The explorer was forced to fill
. the
··
b s
gap with supei'Silbous, mu nou
criminals from Spain's dungeons,
who receive a queen ~ s pardon for.
signing on the expedition.
'
Columbus' ~llling switches
in characterization ~et uncomfon·
· h'
able at times. W en 1s crew
comes ashore in the ·New World
and encounters the local natives,
the meeting is peaceful until
· th
Columbus' greed gets m e way.
Once he discovers there is allm·
ited supply of the gold he ~
to retrieve for the Sptllish ~.ll',
·
and .......
C.C. lines the Indians up
their gold jewelry from them ljke •
dictator crazed with·avarice.
Portrayed as a religiou1 mp
throughout the film, Columbua
attains a level· of zealous fcrvQr
th
while attemptmg to conv4rt c
"heathen natives" to Otristillli!y.
Columbus forces silt of the
natives to mum with him '!!Spain
so he may. present the queen with
examplesofherlateStconvlll\'l.
On the journey, the ~t~Ativea
refuse to cooperate with 111!1 conversion and Columbus ordcu them
shaclcled and threatens to sell them
into slavery.
·
A character who has h~n
looked on as a historical hero for
most of the two-hour mm sudden!)'
forces viewers to leave the tiJcller..
with a sour taste in their moudls:

Reds
beat ·
Phillies

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
7-9-8

Pick 4:
5-1-6-6

Page4

•
Vol. 43, No. 81
Coprrlghled 1882

. "

By MELISSA CONTI
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP)- The most powerful hunicane to hit Plcrida since
the 1920s churned acroae the Gulf
of MCltico toward Louisiana today,
leaving smashed homes and a
wrecked Air Force base in its
wake. At least IS people were
killed and damage was put at at
least$15 billion.
More than I. 7 million people in
Louisiana and Mississippi were
asked or ordered to evacuate as
forecasters warned Hurricane
Andrew could hit tonight
Dade County emergency management director Kate Hale put
damage in south Florida at $15 billion to $20 billion, and at least
50,000 people were left homeless.
Andrew stormed ashore shortly
before daybrealc Monday at Homestead, 2.S miles south of Miami,
arriving at high tide and bringing

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Attorney John R.
Lentes will serve as the president
of ihe Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission, following
Bruce Reed's resignation from that
position on Monday.
Reed announced his resignation

south or Naples on Florida's west coast. Seventyfive boats were damaged at lbe Williams Capri
Marine dry stonce area. (AP photo)

from the ptesidency of the board
during its regular quanerly meeting, he!d yesterday aftcmocin at the
Meigs County Public Library.
"When I take on a job lilce this, I
want to give it 100 percent,• Reed
said. "and duo to·increased respon.
sibilities (at Farmers Banlc), in my
family and in my role as Mayor of
Pomeroy, I can't devote the time to

this job thai it requires."
Lentes, who has served as First
Vice President of the commission,
was named to succeed Reed as
president Don Poole, Manager of
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis·
trict, was named flrst Vice President, and Reed Second Vice Presi·
denl
Jennlags CODtract
The commission voted to discontinue a contract with Consultant
James M. Jennings of Columbus,
who for several y~s has represented the commission in lrans·
ponation-related matters on the
dlepon men:!Wtts will be presented state level.
Instead, the commission will
to the queen ~ her court. Special
invest
Jennings' $1,000 fee with
donations include the crown by
the
Meigs
County Chamber of
Ingels, the sash by Mill End Fabric
Shop, the flowers for the queen's Commerce/Economic Developbouquet by the Middleport Flower ment Off'tce and tbarorganization's
Shop, flowers for the other contee- efforts toward transportation
tants by Anhur and Beulah Strauss, improvements in the coun!y.
Reed said that the commission's
and trophies from Middleport Tro- ·
executive
committee had "milled
phies.
emotions"
reg&amp;rding the contract,
Announcement of the queen will
but
said
thallliey
considered "what
come on CatfiSh Festival day from
the flatbed stage on Nonh Second is best for Meigs County" when
voting to recommend non-renewal.
Avenue at 12:30 p.m.
"(Jennings) has been an inte&amp;!B'
Meanwhile, other plans are
El
of Meigs County," Reed saul,
moving forward for the festival.
'and
he has done an excellent job
Reservations for spaces along
representing
us.•
Nonh Second for craft, game, and
"When this commission hired
n:freshment booths are to be made
Jennings,
there was no unif!ed
with Brian Johnson, 992-3481.
chamber
of
commerce or acuve
Entertainment will be featured
highway
committee
in place,"
throu~hout the afternoon and early
Lentee
remarlced.
"Now
those &lt;!fill·
evenmg. Numerous attendance
nizations
are
representing
Me1gs
prizes, donated by merchants, will
County's
highw•y
interests."
be.awarded during the event
Housing Specialist Jean
·
TI'IIJseU, representing Middleport
Mayor Fted Hoffman said that
(Conda..ct on l'l&amp;e 3)

Middleport Festival Queen
contest headed by Amsbary
A queen contest will he staged
in conJunction with the Middleport
CatfiSh Festival to be beld on Saturday, SepL 19, noon to 7 p.m.
Merri Amsbary, a former Big
Bend Regatta queen, is chairman of
the contest which is open for Meigs
County girls, ages 16to 19.
To compete, girls must register
with Mrs. Amsbary either by telephone 992-6826.or 992-2550, or by
mail at 34496 State Route 7,
Pomeroy.
A queen, a flfSt runner-up and a
Miss Congeniality will he selected
by out-of-town Judges. Public .
speaking ability will weigh heavily
in the selection of the Middleport
Festival Queen, Amsbary said.
There will he no talent nor bathing
suit competition, but there will be
formal gown competition.
Plans call for the judging to take
place on the evening of SepL 14 at
the Captain's House in Middleport.
Numerous gifts donated by Mid·

Justin Ira Riebel, son of Roger
and Robin Riebel, Chester, recently

celebrated his fourth birthday
recently at the home of his parents,
with family and friends.
A Hulk Hogan theme was carried out.
Those attending wen: his sister,
Jessica, grandparents, Roger and
Hazilee Riebel, Sandra Ball, Keith,
Beth, Josh, Joel and Jalce Lynch,
John Ohlinger, Wendy Clark.
Sending gifts were grandfather,
Charles Ohlinger, great-grandmother and grandfather, Manion
and Mary Eblen, David and Rhonda Carnahan.

\'

--Local briefs---.
Accident reported by police

15 my. "11r". 1.2 my. n~o1 ine av. per cigareneby FTC method.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Resul.t in F.etal
Injury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth We1ght.
•

JUSTIN RIEBFJ..
'

'.

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*Based on mfr.'s list price reduction.

wind gusts of up to 168 mph and a
tidal surge of up to 12 feeL It left
the Miami area bruised and battered as it cut a swath across South
Florida.
As Andrew crossed the Gulf of
Mexico today, a hunicane warning
was posted along·410 miles of
coast from Pascagoula, Miss., to
Pon Anhur, Texas. The moot lilcely
target was south-centtal Louisiana,
forecasters said, and fears that New
Orleans, in the eastern part of the
state, would take a direct hit eased.
At 8 a.m. EDT today, Andrew's
center was located near ?.7.2 north
latitude and 88.4 west longitude, or
about 210 miles south-southeast of
New Orleans, moving west-north·
west at 17 mph.
·
Maximum sustained winds were
near 140 mph and that strenath was
expected to be mainlltined', fore,
casters said. Stonn surges of 10 to
IS feet were possible near and east

of landfall, and isolated tomadocs
were possible in parts of Louisiana.
M1ami's Dade County was
under a dusk-to-dawn curfew
today, and about 2,300 National
Guardsmen were called up to stop
scattered looting.
Gov. Lawton Chiles said some
guardsmen would get a new assi!Pl;
ment this morning: helping police
search for victims and rescue people from wreckage.
" We've got aleas we were DO!
able to get into," Oliles said. Tha
governor today put the state's death
toll at 12, up two from the previous
count, but gave no details on the
latest-reponed victims.
About 825,000 hooseholds and
businesses, repitsenting more than
2 million people, remained without
power th1s morning. Many were
told to boil their water for fear of
contamination. About 34,000 peo..
(Continued on Page 3)

Middleport Village Council

iLentes named planning
:oommisslon·,· president ·

Celebrates birthday

4,

Andrew kills 15; damage
estimated at $15 billion

HURRICANE BOAT DAMAGE· Terry
Guoan of Naples, Fla; walks by boats that were
damaged Monday during Hurricane Andrew's
visit to tbe Isle or Capri which is located just

JOEL LYNCH

1 Section, 10 p - 25 - ..
A llulllmodlo Inc. Now.po'*

Pomaroy·Middi&amp;J)!)rt, Ohl!,!, Tuesday, August25, 1992

ttiiiCCO co.

Joel Andrew Lynch, son of
Keith and Beth Lynch, Middlepon.
celebrated his fourth birthday
recently with a pool pany at the
home of his paternal granGmother,
Delores Surface.
A WWF WrestUng theme was
carried out with The Ultimate Warrior on his calce.
In addition to his parents, other
guests wen: his brothers, Josh and
Jalce Lynch, maternal grandparents
Roger and Hazilee RiChe!: 1to_ger,
Robin Riebel, Jessica, JustJn, Diana
Johnson, Ricky, Christopher,
Rhonda and Dave CliD8han. Renee
Riebel, Ray, TiaCey Smith, Jacob,
Ashlee, Dorien O'Neal, Tyson Lee.
Sending gifts were paternal
grandmother, Delores Surface,
Donna, Gary Griggs, Jemifer, Jar·
rod and Craig Cundiff.

Mostly dear tonlgbL Low
near 70. Partly sunny, warm and
humid on Wednesday.

Board recommends 20 percent
increase in water,·sewage rates
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

- .

portation has approved an elderly
and handicapped grant of
$35,010.44 to go into the Blue
Streak cab operation. The funding
is used to decrease the amount
which the elderiy and handicapped
pay to lake a cab.
Also received by the villsg~ was
a grant of $3,000 from the Department of Natural Resources for
removal of eight uees in the village
which arc either diseased or
destructive to sidewalks. The
required local match, the mayor
reponed, will he provided by inkind services including the worlc of
n:gular employees.

Middleport Village Council .
members agree that sewer and
water rates in the village will have
to be increased.
What they disagree on is the
percentag~ of i~ needed. .
Council at 1ts regular meetmg
Monday night heard a recommendation from the Middleport Board
of Public Affaire for a 20 percent
increase in both the water and
sewage rates. This would take the
minimum billing from $6.98 to
$8.35 per month for water and
$S.94to $7.13 for sewage.
· After a motion by Dewey Horton and a second from James Clatwonhy to approve the full 20 percent increase, Council members
Judr Croolcs called for m!We fUl8JIcia reports to review, and Paul
Gerard questioned the need for that
COLUMBUS (AP) - State rcgpercentage of increase.
ulatm will let Columbus Southern
After some discussion in which Power add a few more cents to its
Gerard talked abou.t the impact on rate increase beginning next year.
residents, and the need to someBut the electric utility says
times "get by on less", the motion
that's not enough and it plans to
and second were withdrawn.
file
an appeal with the Ohio
''We have a financial crisis here Supreme
CoW'L
and we need to face up to that" said
The
Public
Commis·
Gerard in a statement of an sian of OhioUtilities.
late
last
week
overview of village fmances.
approved
rate
changes
durin¥
Council agreed to meet with the rehearing requested by the utility.a
Middlepon Board of PubUc Affairs The PUCO on May 12 approved
at its next scheduled meeting, SepL higher
overall rates for Columbu
10 to review fmancial repons and Southern.
assess actual needs and methods of
"We're grateful that it went
cost-cutting.
well,
but it still leaves the major
The manu of a joint water treat- issues hanging, •• utility spokesman
ment plant for Middleport and Tom Holliday said.
Pomeroy was again discussed and
Columbus Southern will add
Council agreed to pay half of the about 9 cents to mondlly bills of
cost; $7,400, of an engineering the average residential customer in
study for a new facility if Pomeroy May 1993 and II cents in May
will pay the other half.
1994.
Grants
The residential customer who
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported uses 500 lcilowatt hours of electricthat the Ohio De~ent of Trans- ity now pays $41.18 but will be

It was decided during the meeting that the village will apply for
Issue 2 funds in the amount of
$33,000 to be used f&lt;l' paving and
curbing in the downtown area, and
for monies, amount yet undetermined, for storm sewer installation
in the Logan Slreet area.
The Betsy Ross housing area
was discussed and the mayor
rcpdrted thai he has received three .'
proposals for building eight boule.t'
on that block. They came from
Valley Lumber, Fal!liiY Homea,
and Bissell Builders. Plans w~
made for each builder to , _ will :
(C.:ontlnued on l"'lt :t)

Utility allowed to
charge few more cents
billed $43.65 in 1993 and $45.74 in • ·
1994 for the same usage.
The increases will provide an
additional $I.7 million over three
years.
'
Columbus Southern wanted the ·
PUCO to reconsider its decision to
disallow $165 million the utility
spent in convertin$ the Zim111or
plant near Cincinnau from nuclelr
to coal power. Columbus Somhnt
owns the plant along with CincJn.
nati Gas &amp; Electric and Dayton
Power &amp; Light
•
Columbus Southern has 60 days
to file an appeal.
The Ohio Office of Consumers•
Counsel supports the slightly biiher rates because they correct a
minor calculation error made by
the PUCO, said counsel
spokeswoman Beth Gianfan:.o_
But the Consumers' Counsel
still could file an appeal on the
overall rate case with the Supreme
Court, she said.

Light damage was inclined to two vehicles in an accident Thurs. day afternoon near the Roum 33 OirryooL
·
Pomeroy police re~ today that a 1984 Ford driven by Carrie Barlcer, Guysville, 71, was SbUclc in the right side by a 1984
Buick driven by James Ferrell of Racine. The pusenaer aide and
headlight area of his vehicle was damaged. Neither driver was
injured and there were no citations.

School schequle (lnnounced
Eastern i:.ocaJ School District has ilnnounced. its schedule for the
commencement of the 1992· 1993 school year.
Teachers will report on Friday. Studenta are to report on Monday
for a full, regular day of instruction (slarting and ending times are
the same as last year). Lunches will be served the fust regull!f
school day at the following priCes: elementary studenle (k-6) $1.20,
high school students (7-12), $1.25, and breakfast, 6S cents.
Eltmentary stUdents new to the district are til report to the IChool
·nearest their horne on Monday. New students in grades 7-12 are 10
repon to the high school sometime before the opening of school,
between !be hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Information J'CI8Ifl[inJ 'Mrl:·
boolc fees and so fonh will jle furnished on !be linl day of school.
There have been few chlngea in the diltrlct'alnllljloi!Mion 11)'5tem. Paren~ ·are asked to hav~ their,children retldf f~ ~ Cllly
.because some routes may hegm earlier than lui year: Quei1IOIII can
be directed to the superintendent's office 11985-4292.
(Coa~tMd oa Pqe 3)

.

-·

~I

,_

and flllller llaaanl; Melp Cou•ty Fair Little MliW
· W...
dllq llld Lllde Mill Chllnlaa Bwrre. ,.._ left, blck ..,, . .
A111dD Sa!'ft, G-3 aontha, aDd mother Anita; Deull Gc 4 H ·,
months, llld IIIP'hr Raquel; James Hart, 6-11 mona., Ulll ....._
·er Sllljly; Braod01 Jfanalaa, 12-18 months, aad lllllaw Kr I' 1 1 :
Morp~~ Ke!IJMII1, II monlbs-2yean, aDd mother Deblllt; D hi
B~Ide,, 2-3 7'111o lllld mother Pam; Daria. , 3-4 yean, -* 116 '
er IJIIdl, llld .laMia Leach, .C.5 :yean, aad falber Duncu.

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