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                  <text>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..
'

'.

While other brands raise prices, DOAAL announces that we are
reducing our manufacturer's list price. At participating outlets, you
will enjoy anew everyday low price each time you buy ODRAL, and
save up to $2.60 on every carton and 26e on every pack when you
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And with our special coupon promotions, you'll receive even
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you're a smoker who hasn't tried DOAAL., there's never been a
better time. DORAL., the unbeatable combination of taste and value.
*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.

�•

Pomeroy

•

eomRtentary

OHIO WcJthet
Pagill . 2-The o.lly SenUnel

Accu· Weather•

for

By Tbe oUiodatcd Pre&amp;ll
AcrCIII the Dation

r.&lt;:H.

Th:e Dhlly Sentinel

Wrestling with the politics _of sleaze
'

HOUSTON - When the late
.- llleo.tlb•t
Lee Atwllet fell like plottlna polit.
110), Oblo .
icalslrategy, be'd often 11111e bis
I . GOlD '1'0 ftllll'l'ala'n fW fti'RK'I IUIOIJ ADA
1V to pro wrestlinJ. Jusa Wlldtlng
the aowd, be once told me. helped
him gauge how C. a pol can 10 in
fooling 3ome ollhc people some of
the time.
So Atwater would have beea
· IOIEIT LWINGE'JT
tickled -to see his convention pals
l'ublllller
perform lbe4' Re)JIIblican raaslin'
-their Onad Old Puty Taf Team
PAT WBI'lJ!IIEAD
hal all lbe class and integnty lhlt
CHARLENEHODLICB
bas
made pro wresding what it is
A''t~
GeMniMmllpr
. today.
l:.liT11IlS OP OfiNION 111 Mlcome. Tboy lbould bo lea IUa 300
We saw the Grand Old Party
_.. AU ...,.. .., lllltjec:t to edilinc mel mllll bo li&amp;aed wilb - .
Tag Team in action: One wrestler
.....__. • .., lllllllloor.No ._.loiWnwillbo bl'11bod 1.e11m
jumps into lbe ring, clamps on I
I wll,llddNaia&amp;--.,
w
' -lllalld llelD, FOd
not peiiOIIIliliel.pu
, d'..
... y hold (tall:i
. nt abo
~ut one of
..__ __.._ _ _ _.........,.._;;_,....__ _ _ _~ . thole
sbze ISSUeS
President Bush
piOI1Iised to avqid), lbca apolosizes
- and lap a teammate who does

•a

Bush promises new
economic plan

force any sleaze issue upon the and help Bill Clinton."
pu61ic. They were much better at
What Busb/Quayle &amp; Company
conllining their out1JiC all winltr didn't want to do, of course, wss
and spring, when the news media brag about the great success
kept pressing Clinton dsily about they've ll8d a.t getting some of my
infidelity. Back tbcn, Quayle unwi\ting media colleagues to ·.
S~hmm
eacoJU18C!) reporters, contcndmg . become their lal·leam par1lletS in
politi~ semper fidelity is a fmc !he ring .;.... as reporters keJ1t the
Chairman Ric1J Bond. who tagged J1lfaSIIre of ~lial cbaracra. · sleaze issue alive, raising·it WJihout
Bush/Qua Je Cam · Cbairman
The other day, Quayle was promptinf. so it can be turned
Robert ~osbach~e was led probaJ!ly right -:- but monlbs laic against Clmton, yet again. Exam·
1leefully in I~ the IJ!.ud by a - when ~ lectured reporterS after pic: It was a report« who asl:ed
reporttt's qnesnon - mon: on the the ~ 1ssue f~ally landed on · Mosbacher ~ fidelity sllouJd
media's complicity later), who Bus!J s doonlep: When .YDU Slart play a role in judgin&amp; pn:sic!entill
twed U.S. TreasUia Catalina Vii· ~g ~t sleaz.e, I think.some chncler - and that lei bim get in
taJj)ando (she called Bill Clinton m the media ought to look 1o the his new sleaze swipes. 1..a1er Mas" And
be wss disingenuous
· allowed that
' be
and former San Antonio Mayor mirror·he
added "I
, think f bacber cheenly
be
HenryCislleros "lkirtcbasers'').
w n
. : . C8!' t
o wouldn't dare bring up such matWe aJ so recently saw 0.eorge any ~ mou~auns fai:JOr (for \hC I«S himself - but can discuss it
Bush and Dan Quayle poundmg the med1a.s quesuons about fidelity . "only in aDSWeiS 10 qnems "
mal in feigned pain - sudde1_1ly allegallons about Bush) Olher:than
ll's time for serious journalilts
outtaged lhat the media would dare that you want 10 hurt the presulent to s1ar1 understanding the role lhcy
are reaDy playing in the political
process. Consider our August

----Weather----

·

But, wliile lhc fiscal erosion occUIIcd on Bush's WIICb, nat C:'laJOIIC
blfi'I'IIS him. Among many explanations offered ue lhll he inherited lhc
jiobleu~ lhat the l"msion caused it and that it resullcd from tbe aviags
and lola aisis.
Bush blames Con~s and Democnts, stating in his acceptance
speech to die Republican national convention that "Two yean ~go, I
made had call onlbc Democ:nu' tax increase.''
With ''my bact agains( the wall,'' lhc President said, "I aped 10 a
hlird blqain: One tax increase one lime, in return for the 100ghest spending limiiJ ever." But Congress continued 10 spend
Some critict, however, assign blame to the White House OffJCe of

\

'

n ...,..._.. Sanrdar.

Force releases recommendations

Rather dian declining, spending rose. Radler than generating $175 bilCOLUMBUS · Funds bave been
lion in additional revenues between 1991 and 1995, the evidence now
scan:e
for most people in Ohio and
indicale'f revenues will be $528.5 billion below lhc projec~ made in
aaoss
the
country during the RCC!'t
199,(), &lt;o
, I
recession.
Unemployment . 11
. The menuc sborlfall is perllaps more underslandable dian lhc spendincreasing
and
good wages and
ing rile. How could spendiPg get so out of hand?
Daniel MilclleU, budget analyst at the Heritage Foundatioa, a conser- jobs ue decreasing. As a JeSUit of
the dowDtum in the cconomy, gov·
vati~ tbin1l: lank, offcn Ibis explanation: .
emrnent
revenues bave abo fallcn.
"Unfortunately, the Bush administration and Congress were not conPeople
CllllJOl pay taxes if they
tent to leave well enough alone. In 1989, the While Hou3e and Conpess
do
not
bave
a job. Although we
used bud&amp;U lrimmicts llld ICCOUIIIing tricks 10 evade Gramm-Rudman's
don't know what die next several
fiscal discip!lDe:···
This "reckless policy,'' ays MilcheU, "inc:reMcd the gap between lhc monlbs will bring, Governor
pr9jectcd deficit and the legally mandated Granun-Rudman defiCit reduc· Voinovich nevertheless decided to
cut state spending by over $300
tion target fur lhc following fiSCII year."
'Faced in 1990 with pnspects of having to reduce projected spending million a1 the beginning of the swe
inaeues in fiSCal 1991 to comply with Gramm-Rudman, "ConF and fiSCal year. The largest cuts were
made in higher education. Consethe While House decided inslead 10 negotiate a new budget plan. '
"When il comes 10 taxes, I've learned the htnl wsy ,' the president quently, Ohio's public colleges
said in his speech. Now, he said, be would propose across-the-board tax have begun reducing staff and
incressing lllilioa.
cuts so long as lhc lost revenue would be offset by less spending.
Before the budget cuts were
''Wbo
D:USt in Ibis election?" asked a peniltllt Bush.
imposed, the Governor called for a
study consisting of higber educa·
lion and state gOYerlllllent officials
and business and industry rep!e&amp;elllatives, to fmd wsys to improve lbe
higher education _system in Ohio.
Aft« a~· the "Managing for the
Future Task Force released its
~eport last week with recommend&amp;·
lions lhat include dividing academ·
ic reSJIOI!sibilities amon' ~lleges
and placing tenure reslriC:uons on
faculty.
According to the chairman of
the Task Foree, the repM specifies
lhree general reconuneodation for
I
reform in higher education: liuking
state colleJcS and univenities,
more effccuvely sbengthening lhc
responsibilities of the Ohio Board

oo you

Berryls World

CHANGE'?

D\0 YOU SAy

YOll WAI'lT

CKANGE?

today in history
'
·':

a7 neA- lll•ed rn.

fodly II Tueldiy, Aua. 25, the 238dl day Dll992. Thele ue 128 days

leiUIIIbe yc~~r.

=The

.

r•••lfillllilbl mHilluy:

011 Alii- 2$, 19&lt;U, Allied fmtee lillellled Pllil, ending four ye111 of
aa;.
IUIIOilller of Maj. Qen, DieiJieh 'on CbollilzIIIII

Adolf Hitk:r's onlcr 10 JcVd lhc city - aet off wild

llleell.

.

611:
.
. 1111718, lullllecb of Plench colonisturriYed in Looisi1111, with some

of Regents and redesigning the
overall higher education system.
~

.1, •

Sen.]an M. Long
The Task Force report also sllessed
that the Board of Regents and stale
elecled officials need to provide the
leadenhip for reslnleluring the sys·
tem, while at the same time makins
the point lhat if the g~ of higher
education is to pnllluce well-edu·
cated citizens, the state must be
willing 10 commit to funding edu·
cation.
Recommendations in the Task
Force report which could help 10
connect the 63 public education
cam)JIIses include (1) course,con·
tent accepi8IICC so that students can
transfer 10 another Ohio school
wilhout losing crcdiiS, (2) developing a comprehensive community
collese system to provide a more
direct response to local communi·
ties by joining teChnical colleges
and branch campuses in the same
communities into community col·
leges with one governing board and
giving the colleges the primary
responsibility for developmental
and remedial education, (3) eliminating or consolidatin' academic
proJnlllls where lhere IS unnecessary duplication, and (4) designat·
ing lhc Ohio State University and
the University of Cincinnati as
Ohio's comprehensive research

.

~

for Jesse.
I guess everybody l)c callin' you
they main man. But everybody
ain't in the pain I be feelin' aft«

Chuck Stone
walehin' thi Republican National
Convention. I'm hurtin', Lord,
'cause diem Republicans is some
mesn people.
~
They bale everybody who ain't
in they tent - single mothers, welfare mothers, Chelsea'• mother
(Hillary), pro-choice molhers, liberal mOthers, black molhers, iunetcily IIIOiheri, gay lilothers, congres.
sional mothers, Democratic modiera end mothen who be prayin' to
God wiJIIoul clearin' it fnt with
Pit RoberiiOn. Man, dial's enough
hale to JO 'round lhe world twice
.on Sunday and still have some left

of them eealinl in 11 .,.-41y New Odew.
1111825, UJUIIIIY dlldlred ill independence 6om BIIZil.
Ill 1135, ,.. JtttJ'a¥', ~ by * - 10 lllve becin lbe early lniC love
of AbriiiU J Am!M, died llllllinoia • 88D 22.
·
1111875, ClpL M!I!!Jew Webb beclme lllo tnt~ to swim acrou
the Bnpilb Qirnel, tmeliDg 6om Dover; Bnpnd, to c.Jala. Frllnce, ill

22hoad.
.
•
.
'
In 1916. die Nldoall Palk SeJVIc)C Mle811btishcd wilhln tbe ~­ '
mentofdle~.

&lt;CaM~~~

inslitutions and developing selected
centers of research strength on
oilier uni~ eifilpliik ~- •
In order to strqlben lhc BC*d
of Regents' responsibilities toward
the h~ education system, die
Task
report would bave the
Regents work widl jllliversity and
college trustees and presideniS to
develop expectations of trustees.
The RegeniS would abo be n:sponsible for ensurinc that during the
budget process the stale considers
wbelhcr the missions of inllitulions
ue being accomplished llld if lhc
state should continue 10 prolect
institutions from the financial
effects of dec linin• enrollment.
Other responsibilities of the
Resents ·would include setting
statewide goals and objectives for
higher education, guidins the
development or institutional missions, and eslablishins statewide
funding priorilies.
Among the ideas expressed in
lhe report 10 redesign the ovenll
higher education system were
improvements in student performance and academic programs,
increasing productivity and reducing costs, ensuring accountability,
and securing resources to make
colleges more affordable. To
accomplish lhese objectives, the
Task Force recommends lhlt each
institution be involved in strengthcning collqe or technical Jlltj)Mi·
tory requirements in conJUnction
with lhe Slate Board of Education,
slreamlining its organization, col·

campus operations.

.

Further recommendations lltC '
for each college o develop faculty .
workload policies defming performance standards and to n:defme
academic tenure in a way ·lhlt (110lects academic freedom bat does
not guma~ee lifetime employma1L
The Task Force also sagesu lhlt
schools should dev~~f.:~rs to
measure quality and
liVIt)' in
leaching, student 1e1 nces, student
achicvemen~ and acbolanhips llld
research.
.
The repM gives lhc higher cdu- ·
cation system new sugsestions · ·
which could improve the opention .,
of Ohio's collegc:s. I would caution . :
die Regents to not create further
layers of bumlic:m:y 11 nmpany new duties, and 10 look Clld'uJ.
ly at how to assiga specific
research 111:15 to univenilies. Ne.
ideas for tenure could also belp
bring new life 10 Ohio's sc:bools.
This report could be an important
step toward education reform. 1
expect the report will be coriUO.-.:r·
sial. and receive considerable
debate when the LegisiabR rewms •
10 session.
•
As always, I welcome yoar ..
comments on this or any other
issue that concerns you. Please . •
writc to me at my offiCe, SenaJor '
Jan Michael Long, Ohio Senate •
Slatchouse, Columbus, 43215 or •
call (614)466-8156.

Additional informllion and
· tmen11 n available from 9925912 during office IIOin.
IIJilOUI

Dissolutions of marriage granted

DIIIIIIJil&amp;e

Pomeroy,apind..-.F.~

ita..........
S1ory ll!ldatcd lbe commission

!

"

Development
AJent for tbe Cooperative Exlen·
sioft Servlc&amp; in Jacbon - iJrm.
duced by Meip County'l CNRD
Apat C'indv Oliveri IS lhe exten·
lion ~~I u . . .illiciln". Craw·
ford jllellelltcd siatlatical inform&amp;·
lion 10 the comrniflion re~arding
Ohlo'i Appalachian countieS, and
offered Ilia services to lhe commis·

lhc rea Dl tbe QJIJidur · ·

ulllavea...U~Ihe
bYJ*I,
~ that
-~
j.;"dlat I
am COIICCII
r.w,. Co.lty'a

Tile COIDIIiuion abo endorsed
the p&gt;;ipMd renewal of a IIX levy
for the Meis• Couaty Health

~·~t
..... meetins of lhe group

EMS reponds
to four calls

cv-a11111

==..........
-to'=--=-

.

Units of the . Meigs County
Bmeraency Medical Service
,responded to four calls for assisllllce on Monday and early Tues·

~"7".t-'O:..~"r:u w;

t•..:,;. .,,

......... ,
N

b

day IIIO!'Jiina.

.a..

On Monday al 6:Q.4 p.m. the
Middleport Fire Department wu
called 10 North Tbinl Slreel for a
IU..aJo In M (i\ljltlty owned by

.ftaA

Meat!··'£·~
, ,C·. , .
'*'"""
NowC(
m ftlrol - .
Nowliiil.toon.

Now

Bob Jolllllon.

I'OBriiAsrD:-""-It
...- . m c.-.

,..

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

~

I~"'

At 6:22 p.m. the Racine unit
wa1 called to Baahan Road for
Dursel PaiOII whil Wll ti1111f10!1·
ed 10 Velalnl~jal ~·
On Tao1day It 6:36 a.m. tho
lacine anlt iteated bat did not
ltanlpoft Stephanie Sayre 11 the
Rachle F'n IlepirlnNnf,
At 7:01 i.ill. die Middlepcrt unit
wu called to Village Gteen Apenments for Dail)' S'auorfield ~Vho
was liken 10 Pleasant Valley Hos·

111.,

S,Clontww..._._
0......_
________,__,__,,:
c..,,
•
-··-..- ..:....._;,,_ ..
o..-.______
IIIWII:aCXIP!
ftiCJI
~~-----C...

=
..
-............
,
.
......
------·
.... = Cancellation
II

. .,,..~e-

---·

ltfto

-.en. ........ 110 I lp!l ..,_.. ,.-wta

pilll.

.

• .• at

aa~r.wa....,

...

I

... I

~

~~

-

-0 III1 . . . . C . I)

'II

.........___
__ __
-----•-:Jii
II'P,
8111 I

~

.......... _

,

,_,

,_

--

.

Wecinelday'1 RIUlar meeting of
the

,.........,._w

MeiP~:i3 Comrniuloners

has been
·llld rescheduled
for friday at 10 a.in.

Hoc'tft·

Hospital news

will be held on OcL 26 • • location
10 be IIIIIOUJJCed.

........ C'I ......_. )(....,.

immcdialcly available.
In the Kendall ues, road! of
downtown, die wind blew roofs olf
homes, peeled plinl off ·W illi piled bees and cars on 10p of eacli
otlwr.
"We w~re jusl defeaselea100 percent defenseless," said
honleowner Mike Garone. "It 1pit
all the shingles, and it mowed dlil
entire development down. We'D
baveiOIIIItalloverapin."
At Homeslead Air Force Base,
where 6,500 military people and
I ,000 civilillils normally work,
CY«'f buildincwu either desiiOycd
or heavily c!amapl llld two F-16
fighler je(l....- Wla:bd. Bm ~
were no en llies; all but 18 peapie, lllil all but tbe two planes, had
been eYICU""'l
"Hom ·ittvl Air Force Base no
lonp exills," llid Toni RionJIII,
spokeswoman for lhc 1t11e Com'ty • ......_n..-.__.
mwu
It wulhc flnl ,tlnJc die Milmi
bad liken I dilecl·bit lliDce lfllni·
cane Betsy Ia 1965, and die IIOSt
powaful huuiraaeiO.,_Fiorida
. since an unnamed 111n1 in 1928
that tilled 6,000 people ill florida
NATIONAL IWMARY:
and lbe West lndiOi.
Florida audoides aid lhc deaih
fniWing tlnugh !he Gul of Moxico ~-. IMattoov londf~l olong
Ihe Olfllrll CW Co.IIDmDnDII' nWf. M1f'm WMhlr wi1 oontinul in h £811. Ratn ll1d thunden"'""'
toll
could rile. '"l'bele's a lot of
bo coo&lt; bul d~.
dalnlged b11ildinp Mille IOIIIh cad
of Dade County whicll havea't
-----Meigs announcements---- been searched yet," llid MetroDade Police Detective Israel
Reyes.
Cbld:tD barbecue
VFW Post to meet
Three delths were COIIfilmed ill
The Olive Township Fire
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post the Bahamas, wbere Andrew
Department Firefighters Associ&amp;· No. 9053 will meet Thursday at passed tluoogh 011 Stlldly.
lion end Ladla Auxiliary will hold 7:30p.m. All members ue urged 10
their ..nual chicbn barbecue~ attend.
S II the flt'C Slllion'in Reedsville.
Free clothlnl day
Servinc begins at 11 a.m. and
There will be a free clothing day
Council 10 present his •••114•7'1
carry oui dianen are available.
at the Salvation Army in Pomeroy proposal before any decili011 i1
There will be pmes Jbraulhout on Thunday from 10 a.m. 10 noon.
the day, including a horseshoe All area residencs in .-1 of cloth- made on who will COIIItiWCt die
houses.
pitchina contest, a car mull and a ing are welcome.
Now that lhc bnildil&amp; hal'number of Mnll fot children.
Amerlcu LeaiOB to meet
rued
and the poaad 1e 5 :led, die
A fund-raising auction or donal·
The Aineric'a'n L'egion Drew installation of UJililies. *ttl and
ed items will begin at 1:30 p.m. Webster Post No. 39 will meet
are beinl......-.
and band&amp; will play country and Sept 1 wilb dinner at 1 p.m. and sidewalks
Meeting with CoiiiiCiiiO djtam
gospel mUJic lllarting M4:30 p.m.
meeting at 8 p.m. Beef stew will be possible low interelt loan• and
- The Olive ToWIIShip VFD fm served.
available grant IIIOIIicl 1111 IIIJIII!l·
atalion II lOcated in Recilsvillc near
Beginning day luncbeon
ing.of saniwy sewtn and treat·
the inlt~~ection of Route 124 and
There will be a free clothing day ment facilitiel wu T · lflrrilol
Route681.
al the Sallllllion Army in Pomeroy
lhc Ohio BoY ill• ••
l'll*lc·
Proceeds from Ibis event go 10 on Thursday from I 0 a.m. to noon. of
lion
Agenc~. She disculcd lbe
purchase and maintain equipment All area residents in need of cloth- Wat« PollutJOn Conod t.o. Profor the Olive Township Volunteel ing are welcome.
gram which she llid bas u ill
Fire DepartmenL
Weekend ser¥ice
objective 10 make upmjecliiiOI
Weekend services at lhe Red affordable for a~. 111ft
Brush Oturch of Otrist on Bashan affordable."
Road will be held SaiUrday at 7:30
She talked abOut faadiaa
p.m. and Sunday al 10 a.m. and 6 options and pacU,CS, u well u
p.m. Denver HiD, Foster, W.Va., refmancing of completed pmjecll
•
Am Ele Power ...................32 S/8 wiD be lhe speaker. Public invited.
10 bring down tbe COli 10 die . .
Ashland OiL......................23
Orleatltloa mtetlna
lagc. Loanl are availlble llbe lli1
AT!.T................................42 1/8
Meigs Junior High will sponsor for 20 yean 11 &lt;1.11 and 4.2 10 .U.
Bani: One. ........................ ..42 1/4 an orientation picnic for all new lages, and di8COIIICI on lhoiC fie·
Bob Evans .........................19
studencs and their parents on
are .melimeiiY'DeNe
0Jannin.1 Shop..................28 1/4 Thursday from 6-9 p.m. Schedules uresAGHJMV
Plu Af.JN o1ecf
City HolilinJ ......................I8 3/8 will be available and a building oriCouncil
p~ a final ror!' 1 at
Federal Moiul................... IS
entation will be provided.
adopted an ordiDance of IIJIIIO'II
GoodYear T&amp;R ..................63 3/8
of
the AGHJMV (Athens, GaUia,
Key Cenlilrion .................. .18 S/8
Jacborl. Meip 1111
Lalids End.......................... 30 S/8
ton)
'd
Walle Mv a Cill Dif.
Pick
3
Numben
Limited Inc....................... 21
tricL
1-9-8
Multimedia lac..................23 3/4
The "no· vote was cast by
(seven, nine, eight)
Rax ResiiUIIDL ...................9/16
Councilmsn
Paul Gennt wllo bas
Pick
4
Numbers
Reliance Eleclric................ IS 1/2
5-1-6-6
consistentlr
weed
apina die p1111
RObbins&amp;Myers ................ 16
(five, one, six, six)
on lhe basis of COil IIIII lllc pmvi·
Slaley'1lnc. .....................20 1/8
sion
which would allcnv IJI1liiCrlY
The
jackpot
for
Wednesday's
Star Bank ...........................29 3/4
assessments
if tbe lsn«iil apaa·
Super
Lotto
drawing
is
worlh
$4
Wendy fllt'L ...................... .Il 1/4
lions
fall
iDto
defiCiL
million.
Worthin&amp;JOII!nd. ...............217/8
Clert-~Ralpl
Stnck reportlare the 10:30
Brian Conde, wllo w elected
a.in. qaotes provided by Blunt,
clerk-~ for a C. ,ea tenn
Ellllalld LOewi rl GalllDolls.
VEJ'ERANS MEMORIAL
last November and IDIJt cm:r lhe
Wer~gtolll ex-diritfencl
MONDAY , ADMISSIONS • office on April I, • • · 1 bil reslodiJ.
Nono.
.
at lhc meetiJla,
MONDAY DISCHARGES • ignation
Reasons for the resigulion,
Mary Fowler, Clyda Allensworlh
according to a leaer ftolll CORde,
and lielen Kennedy.
was a change in his emplorm-t
situation.
The name of Lisa Mitchell, HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Present at the rneetiJw was Tsi
Discharges, Au&amp;. 24 • Mrs.
office m~nager for City Ice and
Fuel (Riverside Food Mart, Garold Baker and daught«.
Births. Aug. 2.4 • Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy,) wu unintentionally
omillcd from Information reganllns Brian RuaeD, a daught«, Gallipothe 4-H LiVestock Sale allhe 1992 lis.
Meip County Fair. Riverside Food
Man and Cily Icc and Fuel pili·
LEIAL IDTICE
chased the Gnnd Olampion Slecr,
Grand Champion Lamb and Grand The Pubk UIINties Comnission of
Ohio has set lor Pllblic hearing
Champion lq.
Case No. 92·102·EL·EFC, lo
review tile fuel PfOCIUIIDIIII praclicas and policies of Columbus

Lottery

slon u needed.

portionoftheprojeclilnatllicted
don ill llilllll ol piarity aow.w
Gmancl oa die fltlt potlioa of
the local project, lhat IICCtion rom
Roc:k SpriiJI 10 Five PalaU, is
expected to be broke• Ia 199&lt;1,
S1ory lllid. The ieCJIIired Blivima·
mallal IIIII*' Sillily for lllc flllft
18-mile llreiCII fmlll Roct Spinp

pie remained•.•
in~?&lt;~o-~n~~~·~··~-~u~£:ii~\f
shelters early
P • • 5 . . . ....,., 5 r' ::
Andrew
today. No damage eslimll wae • a pllil:e Jeep_,,...,..... :

Stocks

Naturallteto~rces

~::!'!:a-DILMc sir aow
support a bf• li, Slllly aid, and
lhll pro~ 11 BOW •oalriCkw witiJ

.ur-ewo

:;Id

~more.
S1111 CrawCIIfd, Canmunlty and

011 tho SfiDRC' • 1a1e11 efforu to
complete tbe tOIIIway, iiiCIICilag
the recent ldditioa of I I
q r

'

·

to lhc RavenswoOd ~ is beii\g
done at once and has caused a
delay Ia OUIIIbiLiioa.
. lroclare laded
The C011in1111i0n plodacd SlJJJ)
toward printinc • u¢w« ~
Cowlty --lwoc:hale, lD be dislribated by lhc Cbnber 10 polential
IOUrisllllld 10 lllllrilnl luaus out•
lide die localllel.
Chamber/Ec:otlomic Development Director Paala Thacker
reported that the curreniiiOCk of
broch- hal been oxhaulted IIIII
augCilcd minor re-design before

Hottman - in ra- of relllnin1
Jeanine•' servicea, .and Coanty
Collm_ifli1Ror Itic•ant B. JOIICI
voiDd
· ·CCIIIIBCL
- die IIIOiion 10 discoft.
tinue die
SIORC •pilate
Steven L. Story, Chairman of
Mcip County's delegation 10 the
Southeueall Ohio Reaional Commission's Highway Usen' CommitttJC, reporte!llhlt tbe CAP.tol
Corridor (Ravenwood Bndae
O.a ICb) "'oob 1110re IKe a real·
ity than in uy lille Iince I can

•

.:zJ,od4
,

(Caalla ltfnar.J&gt;

The Daily s-.· +e1

television 'cause I be hopin' them bein' presidenL He
Republicans say somethin' to make in a movie the whole
)'elrl.
me believe they ain't just tbe party ran a game on us, and w.: tool: him
of white folks.
serious!
But they is. And you know
I also done fisured out there
somcdlin', Lord, the media jes' as ain't no one Republican Party. ,
bad. The media don't be hatin' us. They dlree Rcpuhli.can Panics• . :
They just don't be hirin' us. I got There be the meaa Republican :
so tired of seein' all them while Party flllcd with balrcd - die two :
faces on tdevision 'splainin' what · !'ala, Buchanan and Robenlon, llld
an them white faces on the conven- the IWO Quayles, 0... 1114 MlrilJD.
lion floor be doin'.
There be the ptlcr Rqil~•n
That's why brolhers and sisi«S · Party -. Barbara Bush, Jack Kemp
in the South Centnl Los Angeles and Jim Baker. And there be the
'hoods don't be walehin' no con- George Busb fence-strlddlia'
vention. Well, maybe, they Republican l'WtY lryia' 10 aet them ,
watch~ Jacl: Kemp and Barbara otha IWO to do lib bailb: 'Olme, :
Bush. Ain't silo a bl·ad grandmom- let us reason IOgetber, saith die •
ma?
Lord." But all the time, IIIey be :
Mr. Kemp a nice dude, 100- rcisonin' in two different ditoc:- :
for a.conservative. He be wanlin' tiona.
:
to help brothers and siii«S in the
I got an kish friend, Lord, who •
gheuoes gel down to raise IIIey- bereadin'lhc sayinpofalrillunan :
sel- up.
' named Mr. Dooley. And tbiJ Mr. :
And I want to lhank you, Lord, J&gt;ooley say, "the Dimmycratic :
for Arsenio Hall cacb 'night. Parly ain't on speald• ICmiS Qh 1
Republicans llld die media may be itsilt.'' This lime, the RcpaNic• ..
dissin' mv humanity, but Aisenio Pany ain't on spcakin' terms wif
tell us that we il somebody.
itself. Shoot, it don't even be on :
I found out two thin~from speakin' terms wif the American •
Wllcliin' thiJ convenlion.
't be JlOOI&gt;Ie.
:
lhinkin'meabypocrite,Lord, I
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER !
dug Ronald ~·s speech. It hit ENTERPRISE ASSN.

r.

Name omitted

.

eon.v.

Southern Power
the
operalion of h$ Electric -~ CQm.
ponenl, and related llllttlrs. This
hearing is scheduled to begin 111
lhe Commission ollicas Ill 10:00
a.m. on Seplernber 22, 1992. ·
All inleresled

p.~rties

will be givan

an opportunity to be heard. Further

information . may be obllined 11v
contacting the Corl1miisian 11 1811
East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio

43266·0573 .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMIS·
S!ON OF OHIO By: Gary E. Vigorito.

Secretary
- \ ~·

·-·

~

Another day of mum c:oadi·
tiona was on tip for Obio belen
the weather breaks, forecuten
said.
It will continue to be houad
humid on Wednesday with 1
chance of an afternoon tbundor·
storm. Highs will be in the Dli4 .,

BoaJ.id... &lt;c.......

Al:lions for diuol1llioa
bave beeil Jillllcd in Me.i
County Com11011 Pleas Court 10 Dlle M. Blam ~ WiHiam
Elam llld 10 Tholllu C. Thobllleii llld M1n1ii MD Eiltallln.
·
An action for divorce 1111 been r~
A. Ack-an.

Lentes...

..
.,••

the nation east of the MiW•aw
River; in the 70. ud SO. il tile
NortlrNcst and • •IIIKID l'lliDI; tilt
90s in Texannd lhc .,._ J f •
sippi Vailey; and above 100 Ia die
SoUtllwesteln dc:sc:all.

... _'"'"' . . . . . . ,._" ........The-""""' ..

....:z;.-

IOCiallll !IiCea.

Meanwhile, moisiUre left over
from a Pacific hurricane, Lester,
moved into the northern Plains.
Rain fell today in Nebrask and
Wyoming, and lhowen were forecast·alons a front extending into
the Great Lakes legion.
It wa1 clear and cool across
much of the West. Tem~tures
were expected to IUDain m the SOs
and 60s in the WCII«&lt; Plains and
Rockies- wdl below normaL
Wisdom, Mont., dipped to 17
degrees on Monday, breal:ins its
record for the dale. Tllcson, Ariz.,
broke its low-temperature record
for the dale wilb 64.
The high temperature for lbe
nation Monday was 103 a1
Lemoore, Calit
TemperatureS today were forecast in the 80s across the most of

--will-

Planned Puenthood of Soulheut Ohio will 110ve its Meiss
c1iJ!ic: from 236 East Mall Slteel. in Pomeroy 10 S09 South
Third Slnlet in Middlepon 011 Monday. Ofi"ICO hoan will remain IS
follows: Monday: wedlllllday, Friday 8;30 ua. 10 S p.m., Tuesday
6om 9-.30 a.m. 10 6 p.111. Family ~ clinic ICisions are beld on
Tuesday~ llld bi--lbly on Friday moninp.
,
J'laniiC!d Pae• Mid provide&amp; lllcdicai8CIIIIIIiJia llid examination
with a Pap tell for birth conaol, lelli and Inti - t for sexually
lrlnlmilled diser1, pqnaney 1e111 aiid edac:aJipillbout --'uc·
tive helltb. Clients an: refcmd • needed tor addidonal
l!ld
~

'

laborating in cost-effective .
employee health care plans, and :
· apptopdatel~ )itlvillil'lfg' slime·-

1 " - hael).

Planned Parenthood to move

•

Trouble·d GOP is troubling BoQker
With the Republicans girding up
their polllical loins for electoral
battle, it seemed appropriate to
check in widl my prayertul Harlem
friend, Bool:er Malcolm Jackson.
During a recent visit 10 New Yort
City, I stopped by his Harlem
apartment. On the table was a
prayer he had written after the ·
R.:Cblican National Convention
e
Just IS Celie in "The Color
Purple," wrote down her prayers.
Bool:er too records his conversa·
lions with the Almighty. When be
wasn't looking, I slipped his prayer
into my pocket to share with you.
Yo,Lordlt's me again, your main man,
Booker Malcolm Jacbon, J11S1 in
case ·you done foraot - and I
lmow you be bam' 111 many folb
to be worryin' about - it'a Boot«
for Booker T. Washington, Mal·
colm for Malcolm X ani! Jacbon

.-------Briefs... - - - - -

popped. we may look bact at this
convention monlh IS a lime wben a
few unwiuing journaliscs did the
dirty wort for both parties, while
the pro wrestlers winked and
wailed.
(C)199l
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
•
'

'te.

W~~~::.':~cl1:~qjc·r=:..~scd · Task

l'llnday, llloWI!I'Iand llll!llder·
likely. Lows in the 60s.
Highs lllllllJ* 701110 mid:-801. Friday, a clla11ce of lhowaa and lhun·
dentorms. Lows in upper 50s 10
upper tiOs. Hi~ in lhli 7011. SaiiJr.
storm~

answered.
Loilg after the cheers are over, ,
after the balloons have chopped and •

=::r~~.:~~~.:b~~r::~:

clay, a chance ct rain. Lows in the
SOs. Hiahs ill die 7011.
S.tla Celltril
ToniJh~ IIIOIIlly c:lear. Low near
70. Wedne1day, partly Iunny,
warm end hlllllid. A slight chance
of afiCI'IIOOII thundentorills. High
BS-90. Chlnee of rain 30 patent

87 Tile Awncla!M Prea

press conference witb Busb ,ind ,
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzbak
Rabin (surely a better lime could
have been found to set Bush's
comment).
3. Nex~ an NBC reponcr went :
fiShing in lhc Oval Office by ISit· :
ing Bush wbelbet he'd ever bid 111
exlramarilal affair - a CJUCIY !hat
has no place in •y inJerMW.
4. FinaDy, • . ltiCjUimg KlfiOIItt
made Mosbacher's day by asl:inc
another question no one needs

All this occUIIcd in conttadiction to the president's avowed pis, IIIII
crysmdlhc impression of a leader unable 10 conirollhc govemmeat be

''

W. VA.

2. A CNN tq1011etllllde a bid ,
call by asking about lhll repon • a

in 1993.

1

•I C~umbus!ss• I

excesses:

li4 onll)elldina and lower !Illes.
While Busii dechred his ~ to control lhcsc three ileau, all hive
rlirlll Iince be assumed the presidency in 1989. Most l'raslnlin&amp; and
Cl!llllnlalng of all, the ~et defiCit has more than doubled in dlat time.
1The 18tter fifure. lhe most widely used {'Opular indicator of ftacal
IICCOIIIItsbility, Jumped from $153.5 billionm f!Scal 1989, wbea Busb
~Nr- president, 10$333.5 billion in 1992, and it may reach $341 billion

~MB fi~ lhat die 1990 apeemenl would reduce budget

PA.

Martin

·NEW YORK -President Bush may have a problem convincing lhc
ADiaican public lbal, unlike Gov. Bill Clinton, be is for less replMion, a

the

the Loulsia~a-Miuissippi coist
today, and the remDIIIts of a Pacif.
ic burrkane brought rain 10 the
1101 tbem l'lainl.
.
Forecasters warned Andrew
could ltaCh lhc cenllll Gulf Coast
by toni1ht, and residents were
insii'IICted 10 leivc coutalareas.
Andrew mowed across South
Florida 011 Monday widl gusts to
168 mph 8i)d atidalll,lt~ up 10 12
feet, llllishing homes illd wrecking
every bilildini oil Homestead Air
Force Base. It lhen moved into the
Gulf of Mexico.
II Wll lhc most powerful hurricane to hit_Fbida since the 19201,
and It was South Florida's rust
direct hit since Hurricane Betsy in
196S.
.

IToledo!e1· I

much lhc Umolbing lhc next day.
F"n~ was lhc llammer-llllluner
b ~le Campaign llepJ1y
~ Mamhn, who lAgged GO!&gt;

87 JOHN CVNNJFF
AP Bu'a !IS Alllyst

was elected to lead.

Hurricane Andrew closed in on

•

1. The New York Post went.
beyond responsible bouads by
devoting its whole lion! page 10 ..
unverified allegalion found only in
the fine pinl of a foollue ill anew
boot (a cbd 111111 oacc lllid Bush
may have had a IIYst. yean ~go).

Ohio

Hurricane heads for central Gulf Coast

Wednesday, Aac. 2Ai

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Augutt 25, 1982

~ddleport,

v..

$SO % •ilflllllll1

lid. •
11111: _ . 5 I - il Sllalft. :
Cll! Dade Cu
ty, • I vee• tile •
MilE ..... of K
lhe :
Aari7a :re.,.. 11111:
olf :
roo&amp; . . left • ..
by J
........., -.lllililJ J!Uia. siling
and liwe 5 ,. 411ia..
"'llle OIIIJ- a. IIlJa( uP
- die fialliDor." &amp;ba:l Pol-'
IU, 52. Slid • lie b•ed II lhe
M •ollliJ...._
ne h frr·Piil uas were :
SCikd olf; -m·c n wen:·
woba! 1D 1111 a&amp;
wBIIina
10 Iene cmld dD • ClllJ llllder
~a:-c ol Flllla I'Uwu

..a..,:
I

•

_,

na.

1: Li&amp;k
a il o.de, .
llrvwlld . . . . . ~
....
wCR ~

pcaa. _, llility ·
offici* llif .... 7lrn: to
wait weeb lor aniLe 10 be ·
•Cilllled.
Fllli!a'sO.O.-Ipmd
tbe ei•
I = 7oalhe :
~..:.a.. of....
•
-I
. . 1k Iii-.- llif G., ·
Anold, e•u1 W opemions
IIIHIJCI' lor ,J.zliCr Canty in
W ( I
I Rali&amp;
Milm Bcac:l's Ad lbo aa, .
-....,
of lbe
7

I

7

,_,_ .

I

·-

.....

rtl•- ._.-left··

stma, ...._.. lk ,....,....,. ·
R1 ·
widl2 to 3 feet of Wlta' il its .

•-----!--

llldm....,.

~~

ty M lfwJM I ~ wiiUieft .
- . . , - - . . . . . !#...,.._ ... .
.
......d•aae • it _,.. IIIIIIMJII tile

c. i l
19119.

,..&gt;

_, iiiD . . Car I

ill

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Tuelcllly, August 25, 1992

P'fll 4

Cincinnati beats Philly 8-5 to trim Atlanta's lead in NL West
ByJOEKAY
.
CINCINNAn (AP)- One way
or I!IOtber, tho CiPCinnali Reds
have . . . Dllelhial biaTitelr 1-5 vicUiry ~Y night
over 'Piiiladelpbia wiD JO dowll as
eilll!lf tbe &amp;tart of a btg mge on
fust-pbce A11an1a ia the NL West.
or u !be 1111t of one men big dis·
appointmatL
"It's ~y up 10 us," 1III11I&amp;C1'
Lou Piniella said. "It's the end of
AUJII!t. the JI!IIOS are startillg 10
dwilllle dOWn. We've got to make
a mo.e in lbo 11ex1 week 10 10 dsys
and dille tho pp.
"We have 10 start winninJ. We
need to act on a liule bit of a
sueak. We haven't been 011 a snak
in a)911g time."
Their win Monday moved lhcm
1D 5 Ill games behind idle AOanta.
Tbe Reds opened lhc month in first
pial&lt;o, but have slid 10 as many as
seve• games bact because ·they
can't Bet• winning Slleak going.
They ltaven 't won more than
three straight games since the end
Of Ju!J, preventing lhcm from hold·
ing tbelr ground. much less making
1 cltaqe a the Braves.
"We haven 'I been hot ia a
willie," Piniella said. "It's time to
mike a move.''
Their offense finally got hot
Monday, with Dip Roberts and
Bany Larkin shanng the leading

role. Each had lhl'ee llils, including
a solo homer, u the Reds buill a 50 bd,led Plli!adelphi1 CUI it 10 54,1hen pulled away apia.
TlleReds'undependlbleoiJeue
twn't had miDy games like dial in
the pest montb - die main teata~~
for their ~cs.
"IIIherc s any lime 10 pc tc11sislenOy hot, now is lhc lime Ill do
it," Larkin ssid. "We've 10110 lei
it dono now...
"If we don't w,\n,there'a.ao
Jli'OSSUR' on Atlanta. Robelll aid.
The PhillieJ' offense~
the Reds on Monday, b!'l their
bullpen cracked once aptn when
the game wu on lhc line.
'
The Reds scored five J1IIIS illlbo
fust three innings off .Ben Rivera
(3·3), who had won his last three
starts. He gave up six hits, oae
wallc and five nuu in 2 J. 3 inninp.
"I had pretty good stuff,"
Rivera said. "I threw five or six
pitches high and they hit them ~ty good. That was tbe~JC)blem. '
The five runs almost werea't
enough. Damn Daullllll hit a tworun homer, his 23nl, 10 bighli&amp;bt a
three-run fourth, and Mariano buacan's RBI ground out I1IICk it 5-4
in tile fifth against swter Chris
Hammond (7·8).
Piniella replaced Hammond
after tile inning, making sure tile
struggling left-bander would gel

P!-

•n w.a...s.r · ,
~·"·
~~ - ·l2;~ ll;
Y10SIJb,
... ~- Jl:

Shomoli.S..DioF.·-Inol, 19; .... - . . . . . 21.
TRJPIJ!S-I)• ...,_,A- I~

v...,..,

Anlo!.-11;-.... -

11; Alicoo, ..........~
Alo'"'""'· 10; Olf...,., 1M Aqoloi, I;
N01111cl:iai, Philaddphk, ~ Dfn• , ..
-7;~7.
.

OOMEl

:

·

hil SecO!Id vi&lt;:rory in his JUt
(leclsjoes

diD,-.

"HeHaprlally,
be'l 41ri.e ~ COIIfideniie froiD
....,.. p. i ''wllid.
Tbe Plailliell' bul~ bas pvra
m..,a Jitll Fle&amp;OII liale ..._
b fflll! ' ce all11 1•l II filled ·

cclebnited.
"He calls him safe and then
out," Fn:gosi aaid. "It's 'get

lhf

game over wilh. • u
"I CID' I figure tllat CIJI out,"
Kruk ssid. "I don't--- But it's

over witll. I don't think that one
call il goiag to tum the season
IIOUDd for us.''

apiat.bda7.

hoaleril illeliKllloff~KyiDAIIbotl,

saacllinl tile lead 1111-4.

Tbe ~ a.! a d t r= 10 lie
ill lbo llinlll ...- Jelic¥11r Norm
.Ciwltol. bat llo lOIIis m widl die 1ae.1p ota ditpJied call a
1 aa lint

anchec•+l willltwo cia&amp; wbea Jn
Krvl: grovnded to Larl:ia The
alloc'*P 11111e11 10w1n11 .eC:ond
realized be CQlllda't - the f~
0111, dlca 11mr 10 lint. w11ae Hal
Morris wu several step• away
from !be ~»~·
Morris lOOt the throw, whirled
and luaaed at 1M buc with his
aJoye. Morris' pwe and Krut bit
tbe bq aiJaoat aimullll!COualy.
Umpire Harry Wendelstedt
appeared ready to call Kruk llle.
lhrll cailed biJII OIIL
Fregosi •aued while tbe Rods

·

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

..'

I
!

,S.Diop,

:U; Sboi!MW, S.. Diop, 2 ' 1 ; -

If.·

"""~ n: - . r 1
21:
Hollia•, PhilaMlpllial, II; L altw,
M - II; luioo, 1M """""' 11;
--17;Do-alolea.
17.
STdLEN IA5E'C b 11.. ......_
11, 63; DIS'Pti+, w.u..l, •2: ......
............. !I;.....,.._ So. Looio,""

•-.CJNaNNAn. ,., - . . -

..., 3 1 ; - - l l .

Pri'CHIRO u• ""*-).-Oia....,

Al1oou, 19-3, .164,1-11; T......,, SL
Louil , t:J.~ • .121, ·2.03; SwiHtll,

CINCINNA11.1U. .667, 2.51; ~
CbkiJo. ll-6. '" '' 139; J
t AI•
- lf.l, .filii, U7; l . l l i l l . t:l-7, .6!0, 11:1; C.., Now Y""- IJ.7,
.6S0,1U; B. lhtJil. hn Diec,o, J)-7,
.6!0, :I.A2.
STllU:OUTS-C01., M•• York,
7

210;--l~lP=

12'1.

w--.21;0.-.-

SA VES-I.oo Sooidl, SL l.oulo, 32;

..., 21; w,...s. ,_, 2'1: ~
CINctNNAn, U ; Wllc~ WiiU~a• ,
PIW~, 22: DiiWo, C~NC~NNAn,

"

AMEIUCAN LEAGUE
Eallern INvldoll

T-

WLPtt.CI
1~ ..................11 "' .w
• . - .................

,.,

,,..

3

:1'7
66
CUlV!!LANil...... JI 66
Now Yudc ............. .51 61
801Da ..... _............ .56 ~

.500
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..456

3J
IIJ
12.5
14

Mil...-............67
o-o. ..................-'0

w.....76Ooklond ................
Mi4nel&lt;&amp;l ..............69
Chiaao ............ ~.... fi6
Tua ...... - ........... .. 61

.441

15

7
9
16
ll.l
19
25

Moaday'sscoru
Calilolllit S, IJU ' eZ
OUapl. T01an10~

Toa~t'•P-

Milwa~ee
e~11II · IO) 11 New
Ymk (Milildlo
, 7'30r.'"'
Oakl1nd (Dnliaa I · I) 11 BMion

(Duwin ...~ ' '" .....

Califomia (811-.. 1·5) • Ba1t1mote

7,3.'1 pa.

Totonlo (Walla 7·7) It Chic:.aso

(H~ah l-10~ J,QlpA

Detroh (Han l · ll
Ml pa.

11 MhlANOtl

(ro,..UIJ.I~

kanttl City (AppW 14-S) ll Tuu

(Gu~man

10.10), 1:3.5 ~

a.I!VEIAND (llaU IJ.I) ot Sootllo

fFlanial 14-5), 10:)5

i•

J'•r- (Yiola
out..,- ).4)11Wod.....

I ~ I 0), I :d'S p.m.
Yllwauk• (RIIftk 1-S) M New Ycd:
(1(""""""'*1 J.IO), 7:'0pa.
Cautomil (Valla 6-9J • ~

&lt;M..-1:1-l). 7:!5 , ...
T.._ _ , _ 74) 1t Cllloop
(~H~I:Cilpa.

O.rait (Dohlllp ._,, II Miuttoll

(Smilor I Ul.I,Glp.a

k111111 CitrJAq.iH ).3) II Tna
O'&gt;vlik 1·1),1:!5 pa.
:loS)"10.12).1t.o! ......

a.I!V!!lAND-

Major league leaden
N1tloltlll.apl

lATTINO Uollklj, lu~
.331~ INt. N' ' ...... .SSJ; v,
'

r;.,......,_
.327: Q....
.317; ow,., .... Dlop, .!10;

a..,., .!07; 0

7 't
~Ad~~~, ONCINNAn .J115;

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.

111, . ..

r. •

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-

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n· ·

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r

JIITJ-IHmOI~..Su

1

~.

.-.r,..v
1...: Dt'Hllds.

,..
145;

, ISS;

....

~.i!'t ~ DioFo !&lt;IS;- Ql

.

·~~-

B7 ne AJsociated Preu
Dave Stewart beats tbe Bosron
Red Sox in day games and in night
games. He beats them 81 tile Oatland Colileum and 11 Fenway. Parle.
He beau thcm in tbe n:gular season
and in !be playoffs.
Only be Clll't figure out why.
"I've just been real fortunate
when I come in hen:," uid Stewart, who won his 13th straight
game apinst Boston by a 9-3 margin Monday nighL "Either I'm fortunate to pttch a good game or fortunate 10 get enough runs that we
can support a not-so-weU pitched
bsllgame."
Stewart (9-8) has been fortunale
against the Red Sox since Aug. 19,
1988, wben be last IOSIID Bos!OO,
7-6 at Fcnway Park. The remark·
able stteak also includes 1 victory
in lhc 1988 playoffs and two more
in lhc 1990 playoffs, both won by
Stewart, stiU recovering from a
son: elbow that disabled him before
tile AU-Star break, lasted only S 113
innings, giving up three runs on
four hits and three walks, but
snapped a lhrec-game losing strea1c.
improved to 13-5 lifetime
against BOS!Oll and 2-0 this season,
winning S-3 at Fenway Park on
May22.
·.
The last time Stewart lost to
Boston, the Alhletics had lhc best
record in baseball and a commanding lead in the American League
West.
Tbe same is true now.
Oakland won its third straight
and moved 10 a seven-game lead
over tile Twins in the West Divi·
sion.
"It ain't big enough," ssid Oatland manager Tonv La Russa, calling the situation 1'fr1Jile." "We
get 10 &amp;bead lhc middle ol Septem·
bcr, I'd say that's a preuy good
lead"
Tbe Athletics put the game out
of reach with a five-run fifth
inninl.
Mill:e 8cnlict led off witll a single, moved to second on a wild
pitch by Jolm Dopson (6-6) and
came hOme ail Rickey Hendmoa'a
double. After a sinale by Jerty
Browne, Headeraon scored when
J010 Caaaeu ~ on aa error.
Terry Sleinbach followed with his
Jllh OOnler, a duee-run shot.
In other pm~ it - Detroit 6.
Minnesota 2; New York 9. Milwaukoc 8; Clticuo 8, Toronto -4;
and Califomil Salti- 2.
Tlpft "Twlltll
Daa Gladden retuntcd 10 the
Me!ltldone, wltenl be beiJM!d tbe
Twins to World Series utlea in .
1987 and 1991 for tbe fust time
and had a two-run homer 10 lift
Detroil. He al19 bad 1 couple of
trademark leaping catches at the

ke

NcwYOit9,MiiM'*oel
o.llond9.-l
[)droit 6. MMI!etll'll 2

Braado~t Werry, Broou Job•aoa, Joitatboa
Auee, Trnor Buck aad JOIII Lynclt. Beblad
them are llllislaat COIIclt Joa Buck, bead -~
Kei.. LJI!dl ad I 'aat COI!Cil Ray Smltll. Not
pictured were Micltael Doni, Cole Hanert7aad
AndyHyseD.

Feature: Dave Rice, Kcim, Wil·
Myers continued in second
ahead of points leader Mike Bowl·
Sentinel Correspoadent
Taking the lead from Dusty ing, but Keegan had tile fteJd COY·
Rodawalt on die seventh circuit, ered. After Myers suffered Bill Kraylet. Wayne Buckinpam,
Dave Rice of Findlay scored his mechanical problems on the last Mart Pridemore, Bob Wilbams,
second PRESS econo sprint win in circuit, Bowling moved into sec- Scou Cramer, Charlie Stevens, Ted
a row, while Mart Keegan claimed ond, ahead of ChatUe Fisher. Mart Ridenbaugh, Mite Linder, Brian
his second Super Sprint win, and Willi:ens, Mark Goodfleish. Ken Neeb.
SuP.tr Sprints
Jeff Houser his third successive Kimbler, Steve ~. Jim Nier,
Heat: Mtke Bowling, Tyke
Late Model main Sauday ni~ht in Todd Cranter and Tim Jodrey. Heat
the Autoworks Fan Apprcctation winners were Bowling, Fisher and Kistler,Rkt HoOey, Dave Freed
Keegan. Chillic:otbe's Mill:e Imler
Heat: Charlie Fisher, Mart
Night program at K-C Raceway.
Goodfleish, Ron Myers, Tim
The Street Stock main was claimed tile ''B"-main.
Jeff Houser of Olillicothe led Jodrey
fogged out after six laps and Dave
tile
first Jar and the last lap, but
Heat: Mark Keegan,Steve
Greeno was delcared lhc winner.
tllat
was
al
that
mattered.
Delmas
McCann, CJ. Holley, Malt Imler.
The rust-ever Econo Sprinuacc
B-Main: Mike Imler, Landon
at K-C brought out a great field of Conley came across tile ftnish fiiSI
cars, which put on a great show for after taking the lead on the second SlOver, Roger Mossbarger, Randy
go-round. but weighed in 100 light Fink.
the anxious K-C crowd.
FEAnJRE: Keepn,
Dusty Rodawalt led lhc fust six despite 1 couple of unsuccessful
Fisher, Malt Wilkins, Mart
•
tallies, but hea~ winner Dave Rice trips 10 get wciJhedHouser's
vtetory
was
his
!bird
fleish,
Ken
Kimbler,
Steve
blasted inlo !be lead oli lhc seventh
circuit and never looked back, s!lllight at K-C in tile Reno AulD McCann, Jim Nier, Todd Cnnet,
although Clay Keirn put the pres- Parts 199 Bulliu Otassis. He wu Tim Jodrey, Greg Foltz, Ron
sure onduring a couple of points in followed by Craig "Fudge" Leis~ Myers, CJ. Holl~te Imler,
Charlie Seymour, RJ. Conley, Jon Mart Imler, Dave
tile latter stagcl of tbe race.
Rick Hoi·
Dan Willey fmishcd third ahead Osman. Tony Tllrockmorron, Rod ley, Tyke Kistler, Wayne Mcl"cet.
Late Modell
of Joe Keegan, John Ivy, Paul Conley, Gn:g SteVenS, Scott Wolfe
HEAT; Butch Dowdy, Dclmu
Weaver, Russ Adkins, Dusty and Duane Acldcy.
Rodawalt, Brian Prater and Bill
Heats went to South Shore, Conlcy,JeffHouser,JonOiman. .
Heat: Tony Throckmorton,
Ky~ 's Butch Dowdy and Tony
Kraylek.
Joe Keegan won the dash, while 'l'broc:kltuJon.
~~razier. Fudge Leist, R.J.
Weaver claimed lhc Oilier heaL
Dave Greeno toot advaatqe of
The Super Sprint "A• main was Carl CGieman and Bany Bfl8doa's
FEATURE: HOUSER, Leist,
a thriller for lhc lint 12 laps, when bad luck. lhcn called in the fog 10 Charlie Seymour, R.J. Conley,
leader Ronnie Myers of Caldwell claim his lint Stmt Srock main of Osman, Tony 'l'llrockmorton, Rod
aboard the Pete Smith "West Vir- the year.
Conley, Greg Stephens, Scou
ginia Sprinler" and Mart Keegan
Heat winners wm Greeno and Wolfe. Dwaye Actlcy, Cladr: VID·
hou!en, Roger Edwards, Joey Dun·
battled wheel-to-wheel, nose-to- Barry Bragdon.
K-C hosts the non-winged seith, Ores Wilson, Butch Dow'!)'.
tail
Myers. in tile All-Pro Cylinder USAC sprint cars, tho stars of Ron Adams, Mart Frazier, Cblrlie
Heads Schnee IX utilized lapP.cd ESPN's Saturday Night Thunder, Fannin, Dave Temple, Delmu
traffic 10 fead off Keegaa unul a for the filS! time ever this Salurday Conley.
Strtet Stocb
caution flew for fifth place Jim night.
SUMMARY
Heat: Bany Bragdon, Roger
Nier, who jumped the cushlon in
Praa F.cono Spriltll
Fn:nch, Bob Callihan, John Reaser.
tum three. One lap later a red flew
DASH:
Joe
Kccgaa,
John
Ivy.
Heat: Dave Gm1110, Carl Colefor lhc flipping car of Rick Holley.
Russ
Adkins,
Paul
Weaver.
man,
Brian Conkle, Peny Smith.
who had know place to go in
Heat: Dave Rice, Clay Keirn,
FEATURE: Dave Greeno,
avoidin&amp; several spinning cars.
Smith, Bill McEilmh, Roy Ceder,
Holley's mount had severed dam- Brian Praler, Russ Adkins.
Heat: Paul Weaver, Mike Lin· Steve Day, John Reeser, Dean
age on tllrcc comers, but Holley
der,
Dan Willey and Charlie Osborne, Barry Bragdon, Bob Calwas uninjured•
Stevens.
lihln, Fred Jlsnlhilier.

Detroit 11 a he qent last off-ason, misled the ftnt two ~Cries with
Minnesota with u iltjury.
Eric Kina (4-4) aUowed a run oa
four hits it aevcn innlngl.
Cecil Fielder had his 28th
horner of lbo J!Cif.
BiU Kntepr (I~S) lost.
Ya!!Ms 9, Bnwen 8
I Mite Sranley'a RBI dOuble in
lhc eigllth iuing ~ 1 fwr-run
comeback fa New Yen
Tho winnina rally came off
n:liever Doua Hmry (t-2) wilb two
outs on Danny Tartsbull's two-run
double, Mel Hall's RBI llinalc and
Stanley'a double
Jerry Nielsen (1-0) got three
ouiS for hil rtnt majQr leque vi&lt;:tory. Steve Farr pitched die ninth
for his 20th saw.
Robin Yount singled 10 srart a
tllree-run seventll tllat tied it for
MilwauktJe, lbcn doubled home !be
go-ahead IUD in tile eighth U !be
Bn:wen toot an 8-5 bd.

Gladden, who signed with

unearned run.

Jim Abbou (6-12) give up eight
hits in 8 213 innings.
Arthur Rhodes (4-4) gave up
four runs in 4 1/3 innings for tile

losl.

----.;._-Sports shorts-----NEW YORK (AP) - The has a provision that allows the
league presidents ignored the league presidents 10 call a joint sesobjectioa of Fay Vincent and called sioa if a commissioner n:fuses 10
a special major league meeting act on tbeir request within five
Se,I!L 3 10 discuss !be commission- days. NL I'Rsident DiU White persooally deliveml the fonnal call
·er s SI8IUS.
It wu 1101 clelr if a Jf(q) ol dis- for tbe mcetini 10 Vincent bcfose a
sident owners would auempt to brief telephone conference call
force Vincent out of office during among owners 10 approve the sale
tile session, which will be held at of the Detroit Tigers.
Rosemont, IU. Vincent's term runs · Basebsll officials ssid Vincent
through March 31, 199-4, and die probably will not auend tile session
commissioner and his supporters because he believes it will be
say he can Dot be fired. However, unlawful. In his absence, die ownsome owners disagree with that en would elec:t 1 presiding oiTtCU,
inteqmalion of thC Major Lcaaue and oae owner ssid be expected tile
leape presidents would run the
AgrcemenL
session.
The Major League Agreemmt

&amp;cond Annual Gallia Co~nty
~pel ~ins

•
tl

~

i

~

CalHa County fairgrounds
friday. Ausust. 78, 7 p.m. .. 'r?
&amp;turd11y, Augu~t 29, 3 p.m. - 'r?
Rain or ~hine
Outdoor &amp;t.58e
Bring Lawn Chairs - free Admission
3040 N11tionallllld Local Croup!!
Concession &amp;and Avallllble
for More Inform11tion Call
446-2546. 675-?213, or 67%621

~,~~~

-~~

~

~

It

ll
It

ll

-~-

By ne Associated Press
The Turk paid another call on
NFL ll'llinlng camps u teams pared
their rosten 10 60 players on the
way fD getting down ID tile n:gularscuon limit of 47 by next week.
Some ol tbe playm SCI free could
probably rmd wod: witll the woeful

Cleveland Browns.

Cleveland was blasted 56-3 by
the Minnesota Vikings Monday
night, matching the most points
ever aUowcd in an exhibition game
by the Browns. Ironically, Cleve·
laad pvc up those S6 points in a
1954 ~ill a 25-pointloss 10 the
Dcb'Oit Lions, tile 5!1me team the
Browns beat for tile NFL tide a few
monlblla!«.
If these Browns are to turn
things around- they are 0-4 in
exbibition games so far - they
probably will have 10 grab some of
the talent cut looee by tile oilier 27
NFL clubs on Monday. And per, haps the first team they should
chcl:k with is Minnesota, which

~f.!:'ac!:J=:.~l1ag"~

"'aioas
The Browns began making
moves immediately, acquiring
lincbacw Frank Slams from the
Loa AnaeJes Rami and guard Ron
Milstead from Dallas , both in
exchange for draft pi&lt;:ks.
In Monday night's olhcr exhibilion game, lhc IGutsas City Otiefs
thumped the Buffalo Bills 35-0
behind new quarterback Dave
Kriea.la!e of the Seatdc Seahawks.
Krieg puacd for 160 yards and two
TDs as Kansas City scored on four
oflu lira five potscssioos in hand·
ing Buffalo its wont-ever exhibi·
lion defeat.
Among players let free on Mooday was315-pound offensive tack·
le Bubba Paris, who enjoyed his
best dsys anchoring the offensive
lineaslhcSanFrancisco49erswon
three Super Bowls.

1

1:'

em~~~:~·~:~ ~o~n!t~

debut at K-C Racewav'J Saturdav'J night

By SCOTi' ~OLliE '
SeatiDeiCOIItspoDdeat '
Many of the greateSt and most
familiar names in sprint C:.ll!CiQg
will invade K-C Raceway near
Chillicolhc Saturday night u tho
United Srates Auto Clu6 (USAC)
ma):es its first-ever non-winged
sprint car appearance on tile 3/8mile high-banked, din oval.
The accomplishments of
USAC's elite cast of drivers has
made tllem famous, however, the
names themselves have become
familiar to many casual fans
through ESPN's "Saturday Night
Thunder". These stars ol "Saturday
Night Thunder" will be coming 10
K-C tbis weekend. Known as
USAC's ''Thunder and Lightning"
division, the sprint cars in the past

~ a training ground for
•
C winged sprints have
appeartd at K-C in tile past, how·
ever, 1ho fast, somelimes unsteady
non-winged rockets mate tlleir ini·
lia1 stop Saturday.
Allrop len drivers in the USAC
standings sre expected 10 be at K-C
except for former point leader and
SNR star Jim Keeter, who reccnOy
broke his wrist and suffered a
puncture wound ID his ankle during
a violent series or flips It the
Lawrencebur8 (IIid.) Speedway.
Already entered is defending
USAC Otam)ll'on and \frints leader Robbie Stanley from rowsburJ,
Ind., second place Eric Gordon,
and four time champion, Indy car
driver Steve BuOcr. Tony Stewart

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - AU has
been quiet on Lalce Erie's western
front the 1ut several summers. .
· The walleyes quit biting and so
did lhc rtsltermcn. Restaurants and
motels saw business drop, and
charter captains 'Nele huning.
For wfialever·reuon 01 reuollll
-Wiler ton warm, waiet too clelr,
fish migrating cut in searcb of
f!)Od, fith staying in tile Western
Basin· but choosing not 10 bite the aaJiingiCIIOn - jull about
over by the July 4 holiday.
"A mlndsot quietly developed
U word of Iosier filhilia IIMXCSJiin
t1Jo WCI!etll Basin ~ lbo sumA:-mel' .........
"J"--t " CarJ Baker
. t UUIWIWUI
of ~ Division of Wildlife's Lake
Erie Research Unit, told the A1aOn
Beacon Journal. "The fishing
would be done in May and June
apd other tllings would be done
later in tile lllmlller."

But this year. July proved 10 be
1 splendid month for fishing tbe
Western Basin and charter boat
captains are predicting nne rtShina
through August U weD. It is a weJ.
come and·DOCde" ~for tbe

The New York Giants cut 13
players and placed wide n:ceiver
Millard Hamilron and running bock
Charles Young, both free agen!S,
on injured reserve, meaning IIIey
cannot play tllis season.
Among tile 10 players released
by Phoenix was third-year defen-

slve lineman Craig Patterson, who
started 13 games last season.
The Garrett family took a dou;
ble setback when Judd, a running'
back, was released by Seattle and
brother John was cut by Tampa
Bay.

-Area sp.orts briefsLadies' linkjest held
The Meigs County Golf Association held its Ladies Golf TOtmlrllCnt :
Tuesday at lhc Meigs County Golf Coune.
Afler 18 holes, the winners in the 14-player field were Josn Childs
(championship fiighl), JuUa Hysell (rust flight) and Mary Bowen (second
night).

M e£t t he ~
N • h Th UrSuay
..1
~ eam Jg t
Meigs High School will hold Meet lhc Team Night for its football ·
team Md cheerleaders ThiUSday at8 p.m. at Bob Roberts Fteld.

Meigs to host Morgan in preview
Meigs will mectlhc Morgan Raiders in i!S annual footbaU preview Friday at Bob Roberts Field.
.
The freshman ~age gets underway at 7 p.m., followed by lhc :
reserve scrimmage and tile varsity. Each scrimmage will last two quarters. ·

Unity S&amp;L cycling tour Saturday
Unity Savings &amp;: Loan wiD sponsor the rust "Unity Savinga &amp;: Loan
Tour of S-E Ohio." which wiU be held on Saturday and Sunday ia the
hills of Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vinron Counties.
Sign-in for lhc rour. hosted by TeamCOLUMBUS, will open SaiUrday
at7 a.m. atlhc Wilkesville town square's shelterhouae.
The rust da6,~~ tile tour wiU start with an eight-mile time trial in 1ho
morning. The
I performer on lhc eight course will be the lOUr leader
Then in tile ~oon. lliCCn win compete on a 38-mi!e COtD'SI' covcrmi
Vmton and Metgs Counl!es. The second day of the tour.will have 1ho raeers cycling on a 55-mile course running through Gallia, Meigs and Vinloa
Counues.
Tile top 10 lliCCn in each stage will receive poiniS for tbe ovenlllllllr
championship.
In addition 10 lhc speed race, !here wiD be a recreational tour for !bole
who want 10 enjoy lhc scenery along tile way. The recreational tour Will
cover most of tile same roads as tile lliCCIS.
Proceeds win benefit tile Wilkesville Communi!)' Center.

the eight players involved in the
of Columbus, Ind., who recently federal court suit against tile NFL
tlipppcd out of tile ballpuk on tile over he agency. Noga was let go
high banks of Salem (Ind.) is fiflh by tile Los Angeles Raiden, who
. in tbe standings. Tray House, Jeff. also said goodbye to veleran run·
The Gallipolis !&gt;arts &amp;: Recreation Department wiD sponsor tile fotril
Bloom, Gary Cameron, Donnie ning backs Terrence Flagler and annual
Gallipolis ()pen Bass Tournament, 10 be held on September 26 *lei
Adams and Jim Mahoney round Vance Mueller.
27
at
the boat launching area.
out the top 10.
Anothef player witll Super Bowl
Flight assignments for tllis pick-your-own-panner tournament will lie
Also e~pcclcd are~ Carlson. credentials, guard Bruce Collie, made
a fust~. fust·serve basis, with the paid date or 1"41 t
Steevie Reeves, Kev 1n Thomas, was n:leued by tile New York Jets. date asona deu:rnurung
A guaranteed pooe of $2,000 wiD be IWinlChip Thomas, and many non- Collie was a part-time starter at ed - $1,000 for rll'll factor.
place,
$500
second, $300 for tliird and $200 ftw
winged Indiana driven. They wiU guard for s.. Fntncisco's 1988-89 fourth. There will also be a big bassforcontest.
join the KC re'gulars, who will lake Super Bowl champions.
For mon: information, call the P&amp;R off'JCO at446-1424, exL 37
off !heir wings for !he fust time
since Super Sprinu invaded the
area nearly two decades ago.
Competing at Lawrenceburg
two weeks ago was lndf SOO vctcr·
an Tom Bigelow, who JOins anoth·
er SO() veteran Johnny Paraollll Jr.
on tile USAC roster.
wooden
a
Gates open at sp.m., and warmYou'llllke Its-~
....,.opt!fiiHon,and
the wayM
upsareat6p.m. Racing~ns•S
wlue
10
your
horn~!.
p.m.The sprinu will be joined by
the always exciting Super Late
and see the BllCO Basemen I Door on _ . ,
··
atadmlerlilledbelow Try H. Qlldc
ModeiStockCIIS.
·
· Ita featum. See why lis best for

Beauty, Performance,
and Durability.
door...,

·

yourhome.

lake's ClCQIIODiy.

RCUO!II are varied, but Bater
said it's a matter of having more
fish in tile 11te11 u tile rault of
ttemendous hatcb in 1990.
"Youna fish don't migrate 10
tile extent of older fish, surveys
show." • Baker uld. "So lhc youna
ftsh stayed and tbe filbemten have
been abli to CIICh them." .
The llngerlna spring and cool
summer also have been reaponai.
ble, at !cut in part, Baker said,
· with tbe chwr boat ·
~ beUe.e walleyes flee
shallow Western Buin u water
temperlluro rii!O&amp;

:
:
·
:
:
•

:
·
:
·
.
·

September bass tournament posted .

a

1;

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
555 P•rk St. • Ml..leport • 992·6611

STEVE BU1Uit .
II

'

bls 24-yard toucltdoWII raa in the leCOI1d quarter of Moaday aigbt's Nn. ultlbltloa pme In
Cleveland,wbk:b the Vlklap'""' 5'--3. (AP)

NFL teams announce plaver
cuts
'J

TS AC to h0 ld non•Wlnge
• d snnnt
• CaT

better on Lake
Erie than in past summers

-~~

I'

T

U, .ti.

'()(]
n a(J eye fiIS h"mg

.-.....-

s.

Jell field Wall,

w.lte Sao I, Blue J171.f
Lance Johnson, Carlton Fisk
and George BeU homered and Alex
Fernandez shut down Toronro.
Fernandez (6-7), staed 10 a 5.()
lead in the second, allowed two
runs on seven hits over seven
iaaings.
Doug Linton (1·3) gave up all
five nuu in the a:cond
AaJtb 5, Oriola l
CalifOIIWI won for the fifth time
in six games, beatmj Baltimore on
the '!&amp;Y shortstop Cal Ri~en got
the ri&lt;:best c:ontrll:t in baseball his·
rory on his 32nd binhday.
Riplten, who signed a five-~
$32.5' million J*l witll the OrioleS
befii'C tile gsmc. then went 0 for 4
with an error that led to an

INTOTHECLEAR-Minnesotarunnin&amp;
back Roeer Cnlg (33) eicapes the attempted
tackle ot Cleveland safety Eric Turner d•rlng

~Xtfn:.C~~~~!:~~;::~~:

Bowo:a,

Oakland beats Boston 9-3 to hand
Stewart 13th straight win vs. Sox .

Oakland.

., .fOI
S6 .152

S1 ..S37
66 .410
Cdifomio .............JI 61 .060
Kansu Clay ..... - ... .56 6'J ,.S,
Sc.uh:~ .............,_... Jl U .«&lt;I

IS'~Iill• IHI~

MIDDLEPORT RED SOX - The Middleport Red Sox mlaor Jeaaue bucball lea• II•·
lsbed ltaltiiCia wltb a 13-1 re~ Ill the lroat
row are (L-R) players R7aa Qualll, Wea Call,
bat boJI JordaD Buck and Joel L)'lldl. ..d plaJera Jacob Smltb and Mat Yoater. st..di•l
teammates are Cbad Dailey, Andrew Balter,

I

N,.. Y.._ 1!0: 0. ........ ~ W..,..
1•41: Dnbell:, PilulNrp, 14-';_!Rljo,
CINONNAn, 1:1'7: • - s... Jlioto.

field goil halfway throuah .the
Glll)non ~ up a 35-pouu fourtb quarter. Tbe 56 points
first half br. billing Carter with a "!atched the most they have. ever
52-yard Hail Mary pass, tipped inro gt~ up in an exhibition
Tbe silver lining? Tbe';'lime
the end zone by teammate Cris
Carter.
tlley aUowed 56 points in tbe p&amp;e•
Gannon wu 12 of 14 for 191 seasoa, !be victor was Detroit, and
yards in his fll'll srart of tbe swn, the Browns bell tbe Lions Ia!« it
mer. Scan Salisbury, who had start- that 1954 ¥I801l in the NFL cltlmed the lint two giiiiCS while Gan- pioctship pme.
non worked out conlntct problcims,
"Maybe it's a wake-up type
took over in the second half and thing, to make liS reiJi2e the level
directed three more touchdown we have to plav at," • coach Bill
drives, going 7 for 7 for 68.yR.
Bclidtict ssid. {,Getting Ilea 56-3
Rookie Ronnie West scored -lherc ~m~'t 100 many ot !bOlO. I
twice on the ground, and G~. hope il stays unusual. We just got
Roger Craig and Darrin Nelson thOroughly defeated, trounc:ed. It
..
also ran for IDW:hdowns. Carl Lee just went from bad 10 _
n:lurned aa intercePtion of a Bernie
Kosar, who hid 1101 thrown a
Kosar pass 58 yards for a score.
pau in the Browns' first two
In all, Minnesota soore4 eight of games, went 8 for 13 for 84 )'IIIII.
tile 10 times it had the ball, failing He was sacked three times aall
only when Fuad Reveiz wu short intcrteptcd OI!CC.
on a 51-yard field goal in the rust
Cleveland's defense yielded 4n
hall and wben it men:ifully ran out yards; its offense gained 118.
tile clock inside tbe Cleveland S at
"Whenever you loae,
have
tile end of tile game.
to worry - .one point, ~ints,
"This offense is ideal for the whatever," ltneba\:ker Mike John·
~I we have," Gannon Slid. son ssid. "Hopefully it's behind us
'That Includes myself, the now. We just have 10 line up and
receivers aad the running backs. pia('
It's getting better each week. I'm
'Tell Cleveland Brown fans 1101
sure we'll be even betler next to give up 011 111 yet," linebacker
time.''
Richard Brown Slid. "We Clll'tlet
The Browns (1-2) didn't scon: ounelves get down over a game
until Mall Stover kicked a 36-yard like this."

By scon woLFE

.......... 11 , .
DALLAS IIAVSI!CEI-Sipo4
o...c 7 . , ..............

-

Carter on !beii finioffensive plaf.

Rice, Houser among· K-C victors

n. IAIID CAIDI!IAU-Iipol

JIIIICi

B1 CHUCK MELVIN
CLBVBLAND (AP) - Rookie
head caach Dennis Green, encouraged tllat his Minnesota Vikings
won so easily 11 home, wondcftd
how they'd do in a hostilo cnvironmenL
Notro worry.
The Vikings lOOk their incredible preseason show on the road
Monday night and obiiteratcd tbe
Cleveland Browns 56-3. Minnesota
has outscored its three exhibition
opponents - Buffalo, Kansas City
and Cleveland - by a combined
The game was the first of four
straight on lhc road for tile Vikings,
including tile exhibition finale at
Washingron on Saturday and the
fust two n:gular-season games at
Green Bay and DeaoiL
"Something we've got 10 learn
10 do is play on the road," Green
said. "I don't think lherc's another
team in tile NFL tllat finishes the
preseason with two games on the
road, then opens with two n:gularseason games on tile fOld. I think
we took a step ill that direction
lOili bL If
~ Vikings dominated from lhc
start, stopping Cleveland's first
series on a fourtll-down play near
midfield, then scoring on Rich
Gannon's47-yanl pass 10 Anthony

oo-

POIIIII'OY llddlepoi"., Ohio

Minnesota whips Cleveland.S6-3

110-6.

Lllti• led off •e Rcda' fifth
wilb a homcir off lay Baller. Joe
~. Rllhilllle- ia
theiMIICRoberta tile• llit Ills aecoad

lint._ . ·
Tbe Piumca llad 1

1\/Hday, Augu.t 25, 19H

:

:
·

:
:

�TUeaday,Auguat25,1992

Ohio

Groom drops dead during wedding
IR111 Relllltrs: /11111 011 wacmioll,

btll I lllrYt lfjl kltiltd tf lilY
filWJri/6 CoiUIIIIIIIill yotlllla}' lla1IL!
lflissed tile first lilfte IIIYJW, lllopt
}'OIItlljoy
-hut l.MIItrs
Dear Aaa Lailden: I 111
iil0t:i4ccl lboitl a ocaUia riowrion
IIIII would like 10 ~ wlul )'llU
dlint. My ....._. llld llwve )let~~
~ about it fol aew.ra1 days.
He aid if yollpe wilh- he will
Map.
Lui Seplentber, we weMed the
utlh!J d a fellow my ~
used 111 WOit with. I say 'l&amp;ted to."
..... the IJ'OOIII cktljljltd di:ld of
• tan IIIIIICk cluriiC lhe _.....

Ami

ta

oem lilY·

The 111ialller proiiOunced tile
oouple . . alitl wife as he lay 011
the clltipd lloclr.
The bride c:lained abe- Ieplly.
cntided Ill llclrlli&amp;liaid'J CiiiiiC. His
(llfCIIIJ said she was not. They
IOii: the mallei' Ill court The .iudF
deelaRd the couple was leplly
married when the man died and
therefore she is entid.ed til the
widow's IIIIa Of the elllle.
Thcle ... beon a lot oC lilt llbout
dis ill our IOMI,IIIIII would liD 10
.._ Ala ~· opiliol d the

AHNI.UIDDI
•"'JH;Loi .......
,.._.,

•

Cnlillnl)

7

I

. .

. '

ot

,

judae's verdict. - WANT TO SEE
JUSTI~DONE .

He is an only child. When his
father died his motht:r lived with
us for the fust 17 years of our
marriage. She c:oobd evay holiday
meal. Any time we had peltS, abe
took over. I wu never able to blh
him a birthday eakc. His liiOiher
always bcaiiiiO 10 iL
This morning when we were
di""'''ing a dinn« party fur IIJICCW
liiends, lie suggt'le'l having it •
his inod)er's houal. I hit the ceilinJ.
When he saw how upeotl was he
said, "Well then, let's have her come
over here and coot the dinner." I
consider it an insult thai he would
rather have his mother coot for
special guesu. By the way, I have
lined out IIOiliC excellent gourmet
meals 011 my own.
Pbac tdl me whll )'llU rhink oC
this situation. 1 admit r111 too cloee
10 aee it dearly. -ONE-UPPED BY
MOMMA
DEAR UPPED: You 1R not going
10 alw the rdationlllip between ycu
husblnd and "Mama." She has the
l!lilbiliCal coni WOUld ~-htl
.... y IIOUIId
his neclt and that's whrl'e it's going

DEAR WANT TO SEE: Ann
Landers does not accond-guess
judges. The decision was, I am sure,
baed onlhe e-.ideiiCC pacated, and
if tho judge ruled the couple
husblnd and wife at the tilile oC
his deldl, abe is . . lep1 widow
-entitled 10 aU the bmefits thmlo
lllllldmg. Cue cloeed.
·Dear An Latlden: What do
you drink of my 1luDid, a IIIII!
in his mid-50s who's been married
for 3S yean. owns his own home
and has plenty of room 10 entertain.
but wllen we have IIJICCial guest~,
be suggests that we all eat at
his mother's house or else have
her cane over here and cook· lhe !Ostay.
Since you can't change the
dinner?
telalionship, change )'011' d!inking.
Tell. him. "FDIC - .let your mother
do the cooking and biking. I'm
going 10 lhe beauty Ilion.' Then
go. Pamper yourself. Get the

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
nv~l&gt;'ng

;;w

TAICI PART IN REAP· Tlleae atacleatl
rn. Melp Coanty, co11pletecl the Rle Early
: AeM Pr:c:.~~p I) IJid Rio Eclwaidoul
• Auaettell
(REAP II) durila a • -a; aeuloa at the University of Rio Gnade.

4-Hers represent
Meigs County at
Ohio State Fair
Meigs County - weD represented at the Oltio Slate Fair tllis
year with than SO 4-H mtm·
ben .,.nicipatilla in foods, cJotb.

bcllth, ~ bcncs. eleclric:ity and
oilier misccllancous ~jecl!l.
Eight of the 4-H'ers were select·
ed Moul!ltanding of the day" willl
their projects. That awud is presented 111 the w:&gt;p 20 percent of all
participuts in each~· - .
The wianers of ':::special
awanlMR:

·

LICENSED ond BONDED

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

ILlMIIII
......... Or . .
Pick\!!.

lEN'S IPPLIAIICE
SEHICE
992·U35 or
915·3561
............ Ofllc.
217L ...... II.
PO!IIIOY,OM

Bl'LLETI\ BO.\RD

3123192i1fn

IULLEnN BOARD DEIDUIIE
4:30 P.· M. DIY BEFORE
' PUILICAnON

hu--..

SHRUB &amp;·TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•UGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

PRICE REDUCED!

111o price
$68,1100 11\d
.
_
nr.nctng
"'
\4&gt;
..
"'
omounl moy be ......... for~.,....
son lo.buy ,.IY ntco 11omt on 3~ aa. In
Roc:lnec 4 BR, 3 .,_, 2 - rented I
P"'IJ'IIIY uoo eq. n. '"""

"'""*'

fll' Others;

and Bonnie Scott, Langsville,
Aquatic Science;

Misi Neutzling, daughter of
Mike and Brenda Ncutzling,
Pomeroy,~

.

.• .

Out for Clothing II;
.
Crystal Vaughan, daughter of
Roy and Linda Vaughan,

THIRSTY TODDLER • Chris Loudermlll, 1, - of Del nd
• ae.. Lotd-llt, driDks • pop before COIIIJM!tllll ill s.t.Nily's
: idelp County Fair Pretty Baby Coatest.

;Friendly Circle Class meets
Dorothy Woodard presented the

: progn1111 "Just My Intuition" at the

· recent meeting oC the Friendly Cir·
: cle oC Triftity Churth at lhe home
·of Gay Perrin.
Mrs. Woodard spoke of the
~still small voice or God" that is
.~ and seen ill words of scrip·:iare, poems, pra.rers, ideas and
expressions. lntuibOR poinu out the
true way to follow. The program
;closed with the Lord's Prayer in
11nison.
Ruth Francis telld pan or a story
she is wrililll- The humorous story
,.,as abouiiOIIIC women trying to
stop the city from culling down a
)lety old oat 1ree in.the city square.

~'Vining
.. .

OPEN MON.-SAT.
9·"

..

LINDA'S

postage aNI llluullillt) /Q: Gms,
c/o Allll LDitdtrs, P.O. Boz Jl562,

~PAINnNG

Cllicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (111
Cllltllda. selld $5./fl.)

..,., 7N ,.. OJt j'JI , ..... ,

&amp;

:: , Descendants of Howard and
Mianic VininJ held their rirst
reunion lf(:CIItly • the Ohio Valley
-christian Asacmbly Camp, near
Olr'Win.
'
· .. A picnic hmch, swimming and
• visitilll trete enjoyed by the 50
l)CII)I)k It allielldlnce·
·:" iiriJJ111 Wll\l·awWed to the per·- nvellq the farthest, Robin
.: V(illit; die )'OIIIIP.. Ryan Jeffers;
die oldeat, Francis Vining Over·
-; 1111t1; and the penon whose birth·
'6ty- cl:1111 ., the reunion date,
.ftlytlia VlnlnJ.
· Tile P!•~r for tbe meal was
;;Jiw:tr ~ Del Jefhn. . .

' AaadlrJ,...eBIJIIJidWanda
. :VItii!ll; Slllirri Vlnin1 Darst. Corey

CllriJtopber; Terri Vining

111711111-

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homts
-Garages
•CoMplete

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Spt&lt;Wiztng Ia Custom
Framt R~p~lr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
All MAKES &amp;MODELS

Smiths host Hollidays

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOlL FREE
I ..OG-141.0070

Thllll ycu lnvlallon to HI any Hem for $100 or leu and advertlle It FREE. Simply clip thll
coupon (Jiholo c:opl11 not accepted), fill In your ad Mil mall II to u1 or~ II off at our
office. Your ad wll run for 1 week.

RefreWncnlloCsandwidlesand
chips were acrved by l&gt;c?a~t:l
Evana. Rath Bbmblcb _.
a.
WhiiiC Ill the Betty Dena1, Lillila
l'lemolty, FIW tdwardi, 1011111
~d J.
Wllite, Elinh. Selrles, Darotlty
Pin. Scatles praided at the .Evans, Pooclllmlu, Nora .JardJn,
_. . . and devotions were given Ruth Ebenbldl, Betty Giby IIIII
Ji111eulah White, "Just For Today" one guest, Rcv.J1111e8 Seddon.
aild HMeditations on the Lord's
The next meeting, a wiener rout
'l'ra,or.• Roll call wu answered · at Pooch Brewcr'a, will be Sept.
: witlllltllllbers givina a bible verse. 17.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MIINIENIIICE

Tlil-

I~OWE~M~12~4~-~~~~~~~
Clnbta1or2flni'/

-.g
ullliof.
........
a.........

prlold

-ilrV.
·.---·
- " "· 4.5
amo n&gt;l, ~·IIGNIOr
a quid&lt; • "· Colprof*od
iodoy 10 -11
•
rJitQNIWAY lti RACINE- TNo nonch typo homo hal 3 BR. 2
b.,., lallfl Mill IQOI\I, IIIIIIY room, n l - olr. Tlil hoo)1t II

Quality
Stone Co.

-

SIZED LIMESTONE

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, We&lt;idlng,
end Seeding.
Shrub end Tree
Trimming &amp; Remov•l

FOR SALE

Call614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Chts.IN, OH.

A•ldon111l ,6 comnwoiOI

F-Eot1motoo

In a good lomly nolgi'Wtoood ell• t o -· 1'11codlo&lt; • quid&lt; .

SCale AUlD's llready
loWpiUIIUniCIIIbe
ra'..Sftal 111018 by

iramgbolhyowcar

MtDDLEPORT - Thll2 . . , . _ ilouM II I good Mltlt ..-. l.l&gt;olalrl rou wllhd 2 BR , bllh, LR,Idl. - n . , .
twa largo roon and a belL olloo, alauncty room lll1d a ono car

(Nota: 15 Word Limit and Your Selling Price Muat Be In Your FREE Ad)
(So,..Y, thta daM not 1pply to Yard SaiH)

let us lei you just
how much yow scw~'1QS
CMbe.

-- ---prlold~.

ATHENS - Angll AWaa Ad. - Thll2 BR 601c12 Sdul -~~
iiOmO I I - on 2 - olllr4.118-

Do,-......,...ely_.

- m i l l - ntco. na can
I« $20,000. I!UI
111o0 " ' . - 11 ......., 11101 can be Nl honl lor ofllr

"-=--- - - - - - - - - - - - -

54.500.
MlllDLEPOAT - 543 N. 2nd. Lll uo .,_ you this comlllomtl Vou'l l.. ln .... wlh II Thl- 18 3 BRa, 1% balhl,
LR, rcn.. utl!l1r
1M! · - · 2 car ganaao and rwo lallfl
r-111 lotio"" Y&lt;&gt;"•ranL 1n 11w 30'a.

p~·=-------------------------------

room,

9e2-6687

'1Aul-•.
ft'/--·-

_..Auto ,

(oflei' expi!MI/31182)

IMuraltCe CcNnpanle1

-

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

...

.•

'-~-

......_.., _____ ---1 ....... ~ ..-

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

MIOOLEPORTTl1lo ..... ho... llln vert good
... -lllld II
pl1old lor- ol you j\11111111·
1ng out, « u .• oolloomonl-.118 3 BA lll1d 1'~ balhL Clooo

to-..Low 20'a.

Look Who ·
Sizty Today.
Happy
Birthday
Kenneth!

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

"

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

NORTON
CONTUCIING

Carpeltry Electric .

Naw HomM. Roofing,·
Room Adcltfon.,
Kllchane, Pon:bae and
Blithe.
COMPLETE
REIIODEUNQ IEIMCEB
Frae EaL • 20 y,. &amp;p.

·==Ill
.,....

Ph!llll!llg
Roof..

1

Free Es,_tes • Lew
Rates fer Se•n ·
NoJHTooW

....

IEliiiiY SIIYICE '

111111 lour Work •

$25.00 Per HOtr ~

FREE ESTIMATES

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

,_,,ow.

IWOUIU UTES

CALL

992·7553

614-992·6949

,_IOT,OH.

7/2amt1 mo. pel.

8-11-'92·1 mo:

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC • .

or

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
(No ......,

OFFICE SEIVICE
AID SUPPLY
I 12 W. •ta SlrNt

Poal~

01. 45769
(614) .t2-6U6

Office, School &amp; An

Suppllea, Office
Furnllura, Adv•nlalng
Speclalle8, Typing,
LAminating; CoP.J, F.x
&amp; Notary SerVICee

CIECK ~ 8ELEC110N
AND PAtCE81 FIRST
t-11·'112·11110.

c.,.,

2112192Jtfn
•

nooROOftiG
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
GAUGES .• ADDITIONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
Ou•lity JssuNI Co•t,.ctor"
20 Yr.ll:p.
Call AI, 614-742·2321_
•j

1117111n

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS
County Ad. 19Peachfork Rd.
982·7093
Mon.-SUn.• """ pm

8eo uo for your hunting
1nd back to ochoot
nHdt. ,_., targeot
aoloctlon ol ml!lt1ry

ourpluol1emol

1117pd.

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

*I9e9S A DAY AND UP

.

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUTo CENTER
264 UPPE;R RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CUSIEI'S
SIQCCO
&amp;

lEW·
STEEL INSULATED
UISED PUELIWGE DOOR

PWIER
13"W•Street
....
tr011. .,
614-H2·2213 ti
Jerry Cater 'loi
614-f92-3159 I:

lli••t::·

IIRIWD tRICES
9•7-$275.00 1'•7-$450.00
OPEIEU tiSTIWD-Ya HP-$200.00
With 2 TrsMIIJinlrs

Wit• Pure••• of

hor Plus Ope•or

Announcements

DAHW.LE - 1Y. ICfll m't hu atmal houtt on I or room to

-«put a -

.lot .. -

you 11ill - p&lt;1ood rltlhl·

_A. . ........,.lit..

SHADE - Goo&lt;11tonly locatod '"' 3 ..,. n&gt;1 wrtn a gt1ll
V1tW. You wll!nd 5 Bllo. Ill, ORA&lt;rT cooilbo, 2 1111111. lalnlly
ooom. den, utlly no., -lllld 1• - garog~. Locatttl'
hoi Mil'
&amp;
Iilio.
•

FRESH SWEET CORN
Now

$1.50 doz.

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Corn, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

.

.

~.

In Conn~ Sta!O

Me~

Ttooatro,
·
5th,
ID.m.PIP!Tlckoto U .OO !lolng
Fast, ~lll't.&amp; 114-448-2120. •
Roduco:
GobHo

aalo

l

tabtoto

hot

wtlh

l

E·Yop
Dlur.Uc, IVIillbll It Frutt'l

Pharm•cy.

Giveaway

4
I

Kilt....,

W..ned,

Litter

Trolnod, 8f4-4.41.2r53 After s

P.M.

LOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY IY·PISS
992·5114

992·5249

INIIt-.p&amp;
-

RED HILL FARMS
· PRODUCE

Fo.. Adult Tall! Llno.
1·71HI1·2801
Uvo, Ono On Ono.

773·56140J

-

law """"""""lind loW
on alkod """"'"· •
hu 2 BR (OOOI!d ba :i), be111, 1111.. Ill, u1ltt1Y rm., largo aorago,
'"""" yMI,II\d a~- Low SO'o.

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY

-lor-

POIEIIOY -!NIIolly HoltiN• - Tlioonolloor nonch homo II a

Mall To:
214 EAST MAIN

laterior • Exterior
Spray • Rol· Brvs•

7/31f!l11tf

949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

.I!J

7/17/1 mo.

SMALL DOZER
WORI,
DRIVEWAY WOU.
111d UMESTONE

DARWIN, OHIO

recently.

•and home with the Slflle
AUlD Companies.

CHARLIE'S

985·4473
667·6179

Tara Grueser, daughter of
Danny and Debbie Grueser,
Pon1cr0y, Joyful Jumper, and
Jennifer Mora, daughter of
Richard and Denise Mora,
Pomeroy, SpectMrr Spii tswear.
·

Smith, Shannon and Mauhew; Rill
Vining Smith, Whitney aad
Me,an; Phyllis Vining; Francis
Vinm$ Overholts; Jim and ll«nice
Moodte; Jim Sinlleton. Cody llld
Paige; Joe and 'J&gt;am Overholts,
Brian and Misty; Greg and Brenda
Vininjl. Jemifcr, Amber and Plai;
Goldte Graham; ·Bemice Vinina
Jeffers; Des and Joni Jeffers, Katie,
Nathan and Ryan; Robin and ~f
Willis and St.ICCy; Beverly Ti ,
Holley and Joshua; Susan and Jeff
Hale; Evelyn Wilson, Micah,
Annie, Shluna and Monica; Kcllny,
and Geneva Overholtl and Oact.
At the close of tile tt~uaioa.
plans for next year's mmion WOIO·
begun willllhe 1993 ,........, 111 •
·
hefd in AuJUI(. ·
.

PROFESSIONAL
HOUSE
fill UTIIIAftS
PAINDNG
't!rltn,~N

CIIIJII.I'rlllft
-ILI'rlll

flEE ESTIMATES

Langsville, Lounging Clothes;

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Holliday,
Charleston, W.Va., and John Holli·
day, Dexter, were dinner guests oC
Freda Smitb, Albany.
~r . 1_11d Mrs. Larry Stanley,
Edison, and Mrs. Nancy Prather
and 9011, Tharon, Westaville, were
weekend guests of Freda Smith

"12D92t-.

Ill

RetnOtltli•g
Stop &amp; Compare

2-7·92·1foo

." Middleport Busy Bee class held
,,. Tile~ ·"Tbere's a Time for
B'la)'llliiiJ'" by Fliuohelh Searlea,
.!311 111d the Avpat meeting of lhe
. lily lloe
d die Middleport
Firat BaptiJt Cltarch held at the

co.
r..•

FlEE ESTIIIATIS
HAVE IEJIIENCES
ltlari 6 pa u.,, ....
Altar 6p.a 614..,5-4180

reunion held recently

'

~:.a.

Maida Mora extended an invill·
tiCfl 10 e~IC 10 the open house
Sept. 6 from 2-4 p.m. in honor oC
Maye Mm's 90111 birthday.
Gay Petrin praidcd lllhe meet·
ing and mninded everyone 10 get
their craft items ready for the
bazaar 10 be held duringlhe SIMI·
wheel Festival.
A think-you note was recei¥00
from Dorothy Woodanl for Oowen
sent at the time of her brolher' s
death. She also thanked everyone
for cards senL
A dessert course was srrved by
Mary Elizabeth Olapman and Gay
Perrin ., members and two guests.
Amy Perrin 1111(1 Ruth Flllllcis.

5-14-92·""

(614) 992·3470

45633 ST. RT. 124
RAONE

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

(6141 985·3594 or
915·3§• § .

COMMERCIAL and 6ESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSEll &amp; BURKE

A'- and J.a DowDio, PouiQ\iy,
Dnla Up EYCI!ing Wear;
Michelle Sc:ou. dauliMcr of San!

and up
Owner Financed

•• .........

Covers • Al10 Boats

•SAND -GRAVEL • DIRT
•UMESTONE

BARN

Elizabeth Downie, daughter of

• ·N·· •

~

CURIO

JUNIOR GRANGE· Cl11lna Mallt&amp;ome'1, rip&amp;, a -ber of
Jaalor Gruae1 receiYeclllnt plaee 11 tile JIIIIIGt G~~t
siHIIr at tile Ollto Stliee hlr tor tier ~~~~· t01 •~~et
red
wltll Cllelle1 Ia her tootller 1ild JuaJor r1111 Le~er Llllda
Moata-«y.

........
(!]

a

·

LOTS FROM $3,500 ,

New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

INTlRIOR &amp; EmRIOR

·

Electric Co.

Wlltflr AllfY

992·2269

IIW

Public Notice

:
I

"'"
+

BILL SLACK

:Uopt

P\lbltc Notice

Pia me.
•.
Each lot Ia partially '
wooded with excellent
drainage. Service by: :
T.P.C. Water Co.; · ' '
Columbua &amp; Southeril'

36970WRaR...

USED RAILROAD TIES

cat 614-lill2-71041or-.

• Cuatom C1rpets
• Cuatom Seat

mile from Rt. 7,
;
1ocatld bet- .
Cheater and
• Tuppera"..1·

614·949·2804
:•

eHaadllnet'l
• Convertible Top•

Road (blacktop), 1{4 ';

lliiMI
PARTS .&amp; SERVICE
Mowen • Cltd Saws
• Weedeaters
•

MICROWAVE OVEN
1111 VCR REPAIR

Approvld Townahlp .

IAOII,OIIO
(For..!y &amp;;. Ridp W

12·5-tfn

-~t~u.,.,,,.,

Xelley Grueser, daughter of
Danny and Debbie Graeser,
Pomeroy, in Btellds nand Sewing

Decisions;
Erin Smith,.daughter of Ernest
and Shirley Smith, Pomeroy, Tune

P.O. In 194-Wtb Alty

PH. 614·992-5591

order for $4.8S (tllis llldrules

in&amp;, conservation, deniOIIiltUiliot._,

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umealone,

COUNTRY LOTS ··
FOR SALE ··
1·51CRES

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
.

BULLDOZING

Dirt, Gravel and Coal

worts.

When the guests .nve you11 be
ftah .. a daisy and lhe wort will
be done. If anyone COIIImeRIS onlhe
food, by all meaDS, give your
mothcr·in·law CftJdiL Most of the
women Will envy )'00.
Conftdential 10 In a Vcry Big
Mess But I ~Well: Tate your
lumps. Don't loot for an eacapc
hlll:h. OICIIr Wilde was fi&amp;ht when
he said. "It is always wirh the best
oC intentiols thai the wont wort is
done."
WAal Cllll )1011 givt IM ptrSOII who
has tverytllillf? A1111 La11ders'
booklet, "Gems." is ideal for a
lliglrlSilllld or CJ!ftt lllblt. "Gems"
i.s a colltctioll tf Alut Lalldus'most
rtqlltned f1M11S 111111 emys. Sad a
se/f-IMII/rtsKd, lollt, lnuiMss·siu
t11w:lopt aNI a c¥ck or IIIOMY

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

7/2&amp;W/1 mo.

Howard LWrfteHI

ROOFING

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZ!!! 1_~CIOtOE
end TRA\iMUI: WORK
AYA!LABI.f.
SEPTIC IYITE. .,

NEW-REPAIR

HOlE IITEI 8lld

Guttsra
DowniJIOuls
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

UME8101E-TliUCKINQ

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE EmMATES

949·2168

.~~
DAIVE~D

992·3838
II

Gllll1 HI Effkllllcy

»
CMt1111rs, Heat
p ;s, ,. .... ,
Now Wattr Neaten.
Bennetts Mobile Home

&amp;

I Itt Whnl w..t ...
Golpol~ Oltlo
Cll(.14) «ft.MI6 ar Hoo-172-5967

6

Loat &amp; Found '"'

Found:
F-

'Ill ..,. l

Llgt4 !an

a.- -.."'-' Milo
BI-Aroo. ro::d-Frkti '
1121182 l14o3la II&amp;.
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54 . MIICIIIIIIIOUI
Mllrchai1CIIM

KIT 'N' CARLYI.Eill bJ L11TY Wrlpt

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MI. UIO.

~110 0.011111 Alt. PI, PI, '
AC. 'till. Qoocl ooudldrA J04.
17J.3114or104-411-J401. ·
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Ohio

The Dally Sentln:l

!"age-&amp; .~
I ·

LOSER·~r--...,

U!~HnJT
YOUR ~~'IC.£ ?
WAAT 6o /'l~'10000

.

.......
.. . .. . . . - $11tlon.
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on '

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1992

Television

.'

Viewing

'

..

•.

." ''
I'M SO.RR't' [ .
WOKE YOU UP
LAST NIGHT,
C~ARLIE BROWN

,'

Pomeroy,

· ~~

3

WH!:N I llEARD TJ.IOSE
CO't'OTESIIOWLING,
SOUNDED SO LONeL'1', I ..

LINUS, THERE
AREN'T AN't'
CO'(OTES
WIIERE WE

LIVE ..

l VIcinity

•

I

0 N II E Y

'

.:t
.?

One sCientist to his dis·
lraught colleague: 'One of the
L-..1..--1. -.L.-1..--1 ~
most dangerous forms of
.-------:-..:•:.-, human error is torgetllng what

hl~lsi"""T-1--.-1-1

I llEARD
CO't'OTES
~OLilLIN6,

;I

CHARLIE BROWN

Ieyouar&amp;tlying
l o --.·
I'
I
Complete l!:e
quoted
'bv
I. I•' I. • •
devolop from slep
3 below.
S T C HE I

chuckle

&amp;

filling in the missing words

No.

L-,1,-+-L-..L.....I.....J you

.

I

Ji;
Merchandise

\ L,,.._,,toe k

73 v,nl l 4~D'I

_,. ... -.,.....m
lulh HDg.l14 Rl e m

OWner, 114 441 0101.
1117 Chevy 114 ton .... • ..
oond,IOW1W7M.

eo.-·

1al ... - · 1110 ....... 1117 Coman 14J!IO lllloo, In
W Willi loa~ I( W 'WIIh lEILooll

.........

-...-..

• .,.arl1tteatM

!a.

Pold: All Old U.S.
R1na!, Sllvw Cclno,
II.U. COin Shop,

-

-

·

·--.Oolllpollo.

·=110!.~h

;::=

--·-

F1nanc1al

Good I

Business

21

II.

Houllhold

·--··

--NO, THAT'S CAPTAIN

=:.~~~
C.. IILd

0

- . oouch &amp;

AcCIIUI'III

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31 Home• fDr Sele

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or..,*•·

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1 ocro. 4 IR, I l:olll, I car !::;!"'~Ad,OUI- 'aooil
cr~=- pump, - - .
...-.-.
l:::ol For Rtnt, Upper
7 N0111:, Dllioolt 6
:m
Golllpollo,
01:lo -Rolon:Roqulnd. ,,.._
4113\ 1i
.: 111 Ul 3315,
- : 112. .DO. Uvlna R-, ~
t lrdFOOIH, Farnlty RcxNn.L. 1
ANI 11.1
I ..:r 42 Mobile Homll
Gl:ngo, l:lcl: f:ool Wttt: Co*r

1 t . , . . . .... ,.~"··
MtiiPM .......

for Rent

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left..

Z bd:m. troller - r Aadno; I
btdrm. trtller on Routt Mt Zml.
from PonllliOJ,: 114 ta ....

loCh good collllllllon. _.,..
11111.
.

111::u-.·-

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llrgo
1111no1om1 "'!''f :w, anc1 _.,,~~~~
rorloo!-110ipliil . . 10:
""'PD
- lol . llolgo
-Cooooly. --.rood
Uo:i
""'1·~-Rood,
411, ....,.,""400; io1dng Pi,OOO. Will
OOflllt'W 01r1 tl'1iok. bolt, IIC. on
,...• ., ......... - . . , ...... IM-111•·-

Hooollol IJPOI:o&lt;l rollo, ::cljuolo
10 fk twin to ...,.. elzt INdl,
1100; 114-112-1511..

,_

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$108. ut

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litho, s Uro! · - · No. C;:n;ol. Avollol:lo

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porloo:oo . . ., ...,. ....h .....

t12,Aornan
4 LIUnChlnl

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10 ttollaft capitol
12 Of l:tlrlng

rru.

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tor«: ~:I

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lllllltnl::ll\t JIMI1ilo. lolory

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Can:lll-

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Sttuatlon
Wanted

Bualneu
Training

HIIOniY

Apanmant
fDrRent

111edlcll

30 ~1::IIIIUII

~· ··......

~-.,.__1 ··· -

31

' flell

....
l ti~T· TD SD
. ON ~ HUNTIN'
TRIP,
JUGHAID!!

uon of

32 Actor

Brynner
33 ,,........loci

clop

5 Fron:- -z
1Qulckitllc1:

3 quill~
l:tood lor

7~,TIEM
a 11a1ur1t1t

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tFillrplt

BUT DD'II

UNCL{SNUFFY'S
GOT A BR~ICE

LESII

'
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104~.

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.ASTRO.QRAPH

,'

birthday glh. Send lor Vlrgo'l Aatro- . PIICII(Foii.IO"n ahiO)Youhovea
Grljlli predlcllonllor the~ by vMd lnulglno!lon, ~let: Ia a morvekiuo
ma111111 $1.25 . ptul a lqilg, Mll·lld·. , - ·
you rrily rocuo on neg •
dr-. oto:npld envelope to Aatro- · all¥o P,~nteo rlllilr than poaltiVe.
·· BEaNICE
Grljlli, c/o thll .newspeper, P.O.' ~· ·"'* today, inlklnO , youniOtl unduly
BEDEOSOL 81428, ~lrtd. OH .44101-3421. Be ~­
IIUte to llate your zodiac lign..
Alllll ~ II·Aprll11) 11 you're GP·
LIIIIA (lept.II-OcUI) Ac10oe l r - orating on ui:lomHior turf today. JOint
ol youn, wlloll a better uieorlian Ilion _,_could be,.., "ll!y.'' You may
. . . . . . . . . . uoundiiWMimtntcounaelor, moyglvo kid you.-tl Into b::1111~:g you have a
•
you a tip lodiY that will require a - - ' good - ~. In !act. you don't.
bplnlon. Don't be gullible.
. .. tAUI!IUI (April ....., 201 Oomellie
ICORPIO (Oot. ......,, 21) -Guf"ii, dliaa •:••t• 'bttWoen you anCI vour
IQIInot tilt lnelnlllon today to do' .. - a :oon•t be~ today by bring·
• IOmlllilng out ol oplte. II may ond up · i!1D ao: oli1llder Into tilt act. II Will be
. hUf1lnO you • - u H.._ tt:e lnd~· :' hard tnougt: to , _ 1n accord oneWiual w1t1t- you want to get-· ·
IAGITTAIIIUI ' (-. II-Oec 21) In- ·. 0111111 (Mirl1-.luMIO) You might
i - Ill ctlngl"'l to procodurel thA!, Nnk up with -teloday w11o kn, hove, lhul lw, proven unprodJICIIVe., u little u you do about a ~ mil·
Aug. B, 11112
j diolf:gage you~ lnd try oomethl"'l , ter, yw~ ~~you may look to the oth·
·
,., • • ,
rteW today. You haW nothi"'IIO 1oM - : ·er lot export advlco.
II you.,.~ pillpared , tilt vea::: bul.-ythlng to Qtlln.
CAIICIII (.ltilto 11..Julf Ill) . be
ociuld be I one lor you CAJIIICORII (Dec. ~Waft. 11)
rot1tir .,1-lll::g and aartng
· ...,.,. Nlkllractad •:terprlm n ' lngtoro..a-whatyou.can•t 1 · bulyoullll!l&lt;de:lotefOi!i'lf1lr8Y:I~o:':.!.:l
COC:CIIIted, Tilt .M:CIII you're Cll)lble I alfOrd :oon'l mekl W0U unldncl or lllngy WI'IIIIO • I UGCt. 8llocl l8rgetllllal
olll(pl:ilncl::gcould beirt1W 1...
today. But k will,_, you panrnoi :P~:oc~-mnl*:gluiNtumo.
·
VIIIQO (Aug. .14p~ II) Mundane ' dlgfoeolcommon-.
LIO(oltiiJ.'tllollllnordwtoMM
malllll ihould 'not be evoluotlld lrom · AGUAIIIUI(.Iati •.,....11)Youcould\ your
1 today, you
on emotional ,.,_,,.. today. II you : be a trills vulnerable today; you may put! • • utiiiD tKtk:o 'tlill , _ tt:e boot
111 fOil' Nllingo
commOn yourMIIIn a poalllon -you .,.loa, t cotateo ncaciCIIned. Don't
_
; loQ!col conc1u11ona ire apt 1o · ..-:dent upon anotlilr. Stand on· IMililr your_, at olltn' .._ .
ev* you, Virgo, lroet yourMil to a . your ~ two !MI.
••
.

H-.

Mualcal
lnltrurnenta

82

Pltnblngl
Helling

for Slit ·
EllctriCIIl
RtfrlgtrMiolj

~

_. , 2=·

22 UncOtlll:
24 Deolfl Fox

'•

T:1-.,

32 Mobile Home•

MEDITA11N~.••

'
.)!••

Ftnonci!&gt;i

Rolo Oii
IMn. 1*-1117 lloyo.
To: ... CLA 211. CIO Homo For Solo In C1:oo1:lrl 'I1J.
Dolly
~ logo, • • l:oth, Lt· Flit
""""'- OeiUp 11 1, ""'- • .-. a ~ L• 30 "II
y
-·-,
' ·.
..,_
Pt:ont:: 114 441 •171~:
Aftor 3:30
U.Oin P.ll. IM-441-o425.
,..... home, 22 woodtd ecm,
pni!gl, decitlllrnll~,..
Yo«&lt;, nt~r M High,
oild
110'1, 114·912· tM.
II :d _NIII!b Only. &amp;olllll

0' '•
dlugl:ltr
17 Rltllld
18 Pullod (II.)
20 IIUIIIcll

a Lle:.T R.ACC R::lR

"•:o;

lodrocim - : Ooo

M,OOO Down, -

l&amp;r:

e

••

Pori·'ll::lo ~~~- Fu..-, S:noll i.DI, All City

.... . Looo1 P - Club. 1,.,._ UIINIIn,

~CILWI

wlll:h'll:onte

'"'"'· lllof. ~:.0.;:.:..:;·-175-&lt;1;'7.;;030:,;.=::-;=:::-;:;::
Good

..

'

4

Z lA homo lw ront. fill'
· fiOO · Colt ollor

Pl•elnl, W.VL, 1-304-IJI.I0G.
1 •1111100:n lumllhtd .......
. . . 110 ,.... No Hud, rol' :lop,

...

14 Era
15 Hlmllayan

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Trdnsporlallon

,...._,..,_

1 bedram IPII'tmlnl In Pt .

.

AI:ROIS

·~-znlollo!c!"!!'!iil
t l 00111 horne, unlur·
olr,- ,.,.,, 110

b::mocllllly.lt~.

'

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DIDolll l AI II ..._ Required,

.. ....... Hlcl:&lt;:ry , .........
AI 2 N. Pl. ""-"' l~ck
,.n::h, 3 lA~ IlLII, fR, CA. k:1
1S.1
Showft
DOl:-~ only. or

7

...

111111 - ..... . .,... 1114411olor

44

.,

East

r, ,. ,

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-ky.

• /..

Nor~

Wnl

•,'

tlon c.nler ... 1ft Ill•• alllltt
Df ling tw Y tiMe LPN, 11-

IIIJiy Drift, GaltfpDIII, JIM7p::l olill .....,, oo~n h1d -.a 1o111o, ~ - ·
.,. e~nc1, - . ....... PrtYif• Lot, ISI.AO. I~
0011
CMil
1431.
RJI.D.O.N. II · - - "" IIAIITIRJL HOUSE fOR SALE
..
..... """' 1:: ,...
..."""""'
11 roc:IIII'Of ·~ a Htltodcll AIM Comer Lot ·11f
Rllhelllll•"'n c.nw. EOI.
Mlln St. Pt._
Plan~J\1
Yt.
Complo!Oiy
_1, W
2. FUll

Vulllerable: Both
Dealer: South

Ofgoftl

MC
R1;t11 iC1
Goldin
~~~- ...... 4 liill::o. , ..

h...., lorgo both,

oontnl olr - · cd 114112.,110 enningl tw .,.,. 141
High 11., M't• r r.. OhiO.
IIMinl. Aancll .eyte ~ 'f 1/2

-

wood -... *--·

Ko=.

I -- I Bedroom
1'hlllr On IMnl Lot, Good
lnll Property, 641 Third
, _ Oolllpollo. 114-25f.1141.

"

old
. . 11011
'" ""' lor ..... llaund •-....,., l:l1loi:t,
I ,toilt
NO.
Pol'!·~ !!'!'_Ill - - . .... ~-P.. up.
Hoovy duty -~-"wood
- . . . , l o r ..... 101-175opllttor. Fllhlr

Nrlww :1 b I d OOih ....... partir

.....,. .., ... -.,. ...... lalIW!t

~

TIMt1 ,......
OoolloloiiiL
rr A. ·
..... .,.. •• , f\
tiPI ..._. .... CUEillnu4

Real Estole

lor

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IV 1 :uiiJvN.

:art~~
Or '

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~oo~a~~i!Gu;;ti
.......
.. ... ~~. ....

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!Cot

j:oolilo

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lnotMallon.IM-'I ;d . . . . . . . clltll lor 114. MIIJJ7,

IN.-01112-3'131.

LipiD'""

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lloglol-' - Cltllo, I bulle, - - ~ lioHo!t, 1 - · Prlcod upon

tomouow. Prtoed to .... JIM..

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ltt,;!

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\.,;Aves 8 ·2)

""" llott"'"""o "'" lor ulo. ~-11M . . 1117.
,. Clooor. -

~=',"r\.~~
lpm.

Smol1 - · printing , . _..
E•orytl:lng ::old to otorl

II

CAPTAIN ~ONfC.

.... Cl'-.114471-

+72
'I'Q76%
tAKZ
+AKQJ

Sol~

•

.

.

,,
In 1957 AI Roth and Tobias Stone In· 1+
I+ Dbl. z+
troduced the Sputnik Double, named ,
Paa Pass
Pass
lor the Russian satellite. It was renamed the Negative Double, and the
Opening lead: I K
original version has been modilied so
that now Us primary aim is to local~ a L - - - - - -- - - - - - 1 • ,
4-1 major-suit fit. For enmple, you .
· .::
have lhe North hand In today's dia gram. After your partner opens one
game because ol the known com· · ·
club and West unkindly overcalls one to
blned
strength.
spade, whal do you do~ U playing pen· Against
four hearts, West cashed his : .
alty doubles, you are in an untenable lwo top spodes
before switching to the · ..
position. You have the points to bid,
dUunondjack.
but you have no sensible bid available. Having lost two tricks, declarer bad •&lt;
Enter the negative double. It shows to play the trumpa for only one loser. .;
enough points to contest at the level Thio
required finding an opponent •
the auction has reached, and, In prlnelwith
ace
doubleton. Judging that Eut ~ ­
ple, four cards in an unbid major.
would
have
lop honor for bls two- ·
(However, in this position North might spade raise,one
declarer
decided to win :.:
have live bearts if he holds 10o few
trick
three
with
dummy's
diamortd ·::
points 1o bid a forcing two hearts.) No
queeu
and
lead
a
heart
to
the
.
length is promised In the second unbid When that woo, he returned queen.
a
lou
.
·•
oult, though tbe doubler will usually
heart
and
ducked
in
the
dummy.
The
·
~
have length there, or length in port·
appearance of Eut's ace was a pleas- . .•
ner's first suit, or the values for a no- ing
sight.
•
lrump rebid.
(5I WI, ....,UIII DIJIIU I II Alta.
South made a value. rebid. jumplng .

=~ ·lorltl.

•A¥0/W' AIJ. AAUSI llloto , _
Iloilo I&amp; You'l lovo tho
,. r ny. 1100 ta.e351
I -oy

tJ107

I

By Pbl11ip Alder

· ... I'M

.

":b...
2alorl14-112
.

Opponunhy

E:rnplnymenl Servrces

.JI5

Negative doubles
are useful tools

tiOO~'S ftiiP
ov~~ r~rFE.

lor .... la00,1141N ISIZ
For oliO or 1 - nlco, YNIII tiootor loloiZ, 40,10 IIIIo
hound,
114-1112' ion 111111 441 -

•:na.

'

SOUTH

Two 1
. - utoo olllll lout tinlo

..... . . c l ' r " &amp; For ...., • ....,...... toblcoo Hlrdwn.l14 .......
. . . . . . . .71·1117.

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'I'AIO
U65
+tOH3

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In Aadno,

r.1erchand1Se

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EAST

WEST
+AK1093

PHILLIP
ALDER

IU 111124177.

lolo lor -

.

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.KBU
tQBU
+BH

-.z....UV - I n P...n&gt;y,

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Cllleo ....... 1100 .... ft., '2nd

•n•···

NORTH

BRIDGE

_.. ...

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•

.'

SC:I•M-'..ITS ANSWIIS
1 · 2•
Bestow • Quail • NeWly • Prompt • MOW'S his LAWN
To flnd out exactty where your property ends and
your neighbor's begins, watch carefully the not time
he MOWS his LAWN.

"

1il4
Ford f.UO. 4 - - '
1111-41Q.

•

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

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f .•rm S11ppl1t·'&gt;

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W Y M Y 'II F K I r .
PREVIOUS SOL~ITION: "T!:oll wl:o ore too omort to ~ In P01111c1
.,. punlol:ecl by 1:111111 -::eel tiy who n dumbor. • -

.. '•I!'

25

.. ..~

PIMa.

_.,14..1

-YIM!•

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,

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~·~ tr

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�.

PIG• 1D-1bt,Dilly Sentinel

Pom&amp;{Oy Mlddlepon, OhiO ·

6

Wolfe family holds reunion

'

~eat ofthe B,end...
by Bob Hoeflich
Novda 'tlhat special? ·
Roule 33 llctwceo PolllCl'Of' and

6

.

Mllllll in Alllalt ~ bu been
"'""'
=ed llld IMrll bridges have
bcell ar lie being replaced If you

, . bid uy hope of a four

•

~omoroy

•

from

to Athens, don't bold
' • ' yow lnatb. A lot of SISIC money
' •., ,JIU ,becn pCiuftd into the repairs so
' i&amp; llppeall tbal aectioas of the nar• row ro.l m still goinl to be wilh
; 111 far along time to come. By lhe
WilY. !be route in Meigs County is
~ • • c:enterlines so you'D
~w
your half of the rosd

il.,

-.e

. Rick Edwards, Meigs Athletic

Dilleeor, chaired a sports medicine

clinic recently at Meigs High
Scllool for members of coaching
,l tlffa of all three Meigs County
,iChool districls.

. Ted Oeorgeff came in from
Columbus to conduct the clinic
which was sponsored by VetmDS
,MinioriaJ Hospital.
. Coaches were joined by some
iMS personnel who included
'Bn.t E. Imboden, Ebcr Pickens,
·Eber Pickens. Jr., Wanda Imboden,
,illd Jeff Maynard. all of lhe Syra.;9UH Squad; Gene Lyo_ns an~
·wayne Lyons of lhe Racme urut
iDd two coaclJes from Gallia Counalso on band. From the
·
Local coaching Slaff were
'tammy Capehart, Dennis
:Eit:biliger, Pam Douthill. Don Jack:- . Ron Hill and Arch Rose while
Southern was ~presented by Scou
Wickline, Howie CaldweU, Jeanni
Couch, Don Smilh and Dsvid Gaul.
AllCDding from Meigs Local
besides Edwards were Carson
Crow, Mike Kennedy, Kathy
. Doidge, Gene Wise, Dale Harri·
1011, Jollll Krawsczyn, Teny Wy511,
Cliff leennedy, Tammy Chapman,
Toney Dingess, Fred Baloy, Phil
Harrison, Rick Ash, Jim Oliphant,
Betty Ann ·Wolfe, Bryan Zirkle,
Mike Kloes, Ron Logan, Chds
·Stout and John VanReeth.

·J;:

You might ha~ wondered why
the boat was at Pomeroy·for so
long-about an hour. MaXine Grif· .
filh, who was aboard along with
her group of compaliions from the
Bllllk I traveling pro~ says lhat
lhe QUCCII was • Pomeroy with a
helicopter hovering about for such
a long time because aerial phoIOgraphs were being taken to be
used m the boat's promotional lit·
erature. By ·the way, Maxine
reportS lhat she has seell the lalest
brochure issued by the company
owning the Mississippi Quoeri and
it does include two photos of
Pomeroy. Coming up in the
world?
And, by the way, Maxine's
daughra,:Karen, was observing her
40th birthday on the day the Mississippi Queen was in Pomeroy.
ICaftn was on shore, but imagine
her surprise when the calliope
played Happy Birthday in her
honer. It probably did like some
of the edge out r1 turning 40.
Racine's Bob Fisher repoits lhat
Sw Mill Park is quite a popular
walking spot these days, from
dawn to dusk. The Racine Park
Commission has made a track
around the park and it is being
widely used. And why not? No
traffic to fl8ht there. Eventually,
the traCk is to be blacktopped. Bob
says. The county does nocd more
such facilities for the public.

Tbanka to all of lhe personnel
who again this year staged the
annual junior fair livestock sale at
the Meigs County Fair. Appllait·
ly, most of tbeac wqrten are cledicaled parents just doing their thing.
It obviously is a heap of workmagic wands are hard to come
by- and the groiJp does a lftal job
in keeping the whole process moving.

Trevor and Jordan Buck
Brothers celebrate birthdays

Trevor and Jordan Buck RCently celebrated their birthdays with
parties atlhe home of their parents,
Jon and Tami Buck.
Trevor was eight on Aug. 16,
· and Jordan turned ~our on June 7.

Attending and sending gifts
were: grandparents, Fred and
Pauline Hoffman, Addie Buck and
Ellen Smith, Mike and Vickie
Hoffman, Bev Hoffman, David,
Kathie and Lian Hoffman, Rhoda
Duckwmlh, Dolly and 'led Spires.

Round dance lessons offered
A series of round dance lessons
wiD begin ScpL I at lhe American
Legion Hall in Middleport.
Glenn Anders, Rio Grande, is
the insttuciOr fcJ' the classes which
are offered on Tuesdays from 6:308 p.m. for beginners and 8-9:30
p.m. for others.
·

The fii'St two sessions are open
and the lasl date to enter the classes
is SepL 15. There will be approximately 25 sessions.
Further information may be
obLBined by calling Mary Skinner
at 992-2500.

Community calendar

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Junior
High Volleyball practice, lhrough
Friday, 4:3().6 p.m~ junior high.
RACINE - Southern Athletic
· Boostcn, clean up of booster building and football f~eld.s. through Friday during the evening. Bring
.. Weed EaJtrs and painting tools.
HARRISONVILLE • The Har·
risonville Senior Citizens meet
Tuesday, 7 p.m. Snacks served. All
members auencl.
POMEROY - M.A.D.D. meets
Tuesday, 6 p.m., 119 Butternut
, Avenue, Pomeroy.
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District meets Tuesday 7p.m.
POMEROY • Big Betid Srem11'heel Association meets Tuesday.
8 p.m., Carpel)te(s Hall !n
Pomeroy. Anyone toterested tn
aililling is invited to atlend.

RACINE • Racine Rurilan Oub
muts Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Star
Nil Park.

REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
School Board of Educstion meets
Wednesday, 7 p.m. high school
cafeteria.

f

Reg. Llftstyle Prices
Odds &amp; Ends. Many
styles from which to
choose.
-serving Cart
•Patio Dinettes
•Patio End Tables
•Patio Umbrellas
•Patio Lamps
•Patio Swivel Rockers
•Patio Arm Chairs
•Patio Chaise
•Patio Folding Furniture
-Garden Bench
iUmbrella Tables

VaL 43, No. 17
Copyrtghlld 162 .

Andrew's fury strikes Louisiana coast
By GUY COATES
Assoociated Press Writer
FRANKLIN, La. - Hurricane Andrew threw its deadly
fnry inlll Louisiana's bayous and
marshes, striking only a glancing
tilow at New Orleans before headill8 deep into Cajun countrY today.
It weakened as·it moved inland but
~ JXIU!Ided lllwns and ftelds wilh
winds of 100 mph.
:. The s10rm, already labeled the
cpslliest natural disaster in U.S .
bistocy with damage put at more
tllan $15 biUion, idded plenty to
tile bill it ran up earlier tJiis week in
Florida and the Bahamas.

A tornado spun off by the storm · Huey Bourgeois of St. Mary
ripped through 1 New Orleans SJJb.. Parish. He said no one was hun.
urb, and 30 people weft reported
Andrew was blamed for 17
injured. Andrew also flooded deaths· 14 in Florida and~ in
roads, upooted trees, tore off huge the Bahamas. Official r~pons of
limbs and started power lines pop- any deaths in Louisiana were nOt
expected for hours.
pinF, throughout the region.

'This house is falling apart
around me," said Ken' Perry, manager of an airport in Patterson, 60
miles west of New Orleans. "I'm
standing in water right now in the
house, and we're 10 feet above sea
level," ·
A high school in Patterson
where 120 people toolt refuge lost
its roof to the wind, said Sheriff

oft in
ll!ent .or Hlahway Safety yesterday•
'with proaiotloaal t·llilrts are !lOme or the partie·
·lpantl Ia 1 prea conl'erenee held yesterday at
tlle Mlzway Tavern. They ar._e, 1-r, C~r~sly

Tens of thousands of people
rode out the storm in shelters and
boarded-up homes.
The hurricane's leading edge
came ashore about 11 p.m. CDT
and scraped along Louisiana's
coast. a marshy aren dotted wilh
cypress trees, Spanish moss and
fields of sugar cane. The storm
~ter came ashore four hours later,
~

eDinettes Salt I.. At ~9CJOO

styles &amp;colon to dlosttro.SIIrllng At • 399

u•

eHetAoards St~1 S2 900

• McBucks for Education, a fund
raiser designed to share the
McDonald's commiunentto educa·
tion wilh lOCal school grours and
organizations, was ltickcd of Tues·
day afternoon it a meeting held at
McDonald's of Pomeroy.
Owners Roscoe and Sandee
Mills and their management teams
tllet wilh school representatives to
outline lhe plan which will funnd
monies into the schools.
. An initiative of Mr. and Mrs.
Mills atlheir Pomeroy, Spencer,
and Ripley, w. va. restaurants, the
program will benefit participating
schools in Meigs County, Ohio,
and Jackson and Roane Counties,
and Wahama Hi~th School, West

eCLASSIC CHEDY fiNISH QUEll
PIECRUS'f TilLE Is a Mllltrfllacctat ~ •
ftmrttt dtt* or a...sltle taWe.
... $199.00
Yi OFF

•tt"

•TWII SIZE IUSS lED

Y2

.... $351.00

•ASSORTED PICtURES
eOAK GU.II CAIIIIET
$325.00

SAlE '17901

•1o-•1s-•1t
SALE•1

LA•I•IOY, LANE,. IASSm

dlmtilllon1,110und
conatructlqn, utra
clllhlonlnglllltlrllle
andadel1111
lnnenprlngllliiiiiUI.

moct 'I1Iurlday II Bnctury Church

of Cllilllt 7:30 p.m. Jill1ohnson
will pcCICIII I craf\ cletnonstration.
Nllic lnvilcd.
.

filE Nllllf
OPEl DillY
TILl PM
FRI. Till PM
446·3045

~., ...ter C1nl

The

thermometer. .

: Deputies of the Gallia County
and Mason County, W.Va., sherilra departmenll seized more than
700 ~!ants, with a sttoct
value
. at $1.2 million, in a
tWo-day sweep of portions of both

counties.
' The marijuana p1an1s weft spot·
tal by aerial observers who ~te4 deputies on the ground to where
the plants were
" Accordinato

Sheriff Dennia R. Salisbury mo!C·
lhan 300 of the plants were 'seized·
in Gallia County.
· Salisbury said many of the
plants were of the hi&amp;h-quality
"sinsemilla" variety, seedless
female plants P'Oducing high levels
of lhe diug Tile.
Salisbury and Mason County
Sheriff Ernie Watterson estimated
the seized plants' street value at
approlinwdy $1.2 miDion • .

Salisbury credited . the Rio
Grande Village Police Deparuncnt
and Chief Ralph Steinbeck for their
~in sc~g the plants.
Salubury wd tbe Rio Grande
Police Department aeizcdJ~Ianta
Ri~G~spoaed near the village of
o ,.,...,..
"We were glad to receive cooperation from lhe Rio Grande Police
Department," Salisbnry said.

$149°

Sale

ITEMS SUBJECT
TO PRIOR .
SALE

smm,
1

•· WINNERS. ne .... fA rci.r Milaa cO..
:tlau to " ,r~~eated $25 1Ift eertlrfcaltl to
,lropr's.a a (1111 fA 1M.,.,...... fA Vllenu
,MeiDOrld H01_1ltal at.the Melp. (COlli~ fair,
:were •Jected 'heldaJ at ... boilpltal. lfOipltal
·Aclmbllltrator Scott Luca II plctand drawlaa
:die .... ,._ • - 11::,:r.~ 0or11 We;
•.,.....lalltradft aalstalit.
011 1t IM.IIft II

..

'•

::=data

:tf.

LOI . . VWSJ tlltbe
pnt
depf8tawt. o..r 2,201
C..IJ Nr
tun llablln4 to wlltbe
at tbe IIOIJIIII'I
. r11r boatlllllt wwk. nt wtuen w11o _, P,kk
up their eertlftc.lta rro. the W1111ea'1 AUII·
lary In tile lllospltal lohbJ are Cla:reace
Lawrence, Portl•nd; Pats7 Ward, PollltrOJI
Zeua
. Copkk, Portland; ad Dean Hill, RadDt. .

.

guarantee lhat schools would COJ!·
tinuc to be exempt from any additional spending cuts that may be
needed'IO keep the state budget in

balance.

Primary and secondary education was protected from $315.7
million in reductions imposed by
Voinovicb oli July I, the swt of
fJSCal year 1993, to offset )Wt of a
projected $520 million budget
deficiL
Voinovich said almost all
options for saving money have
been exhausted in the event additional cuts arc needed in 1aauary,
the midway point of the current fucalyw.
•'I would do almost anything we
can not 10 reduce secondary and
primary because of the high priority that we've given toiL But ... we
SliD have a nut to crack in terms of
the budget," Voinovicb sai~.

Elementary, Joann Panalo, Rejolclna Lira,
Christian School, and James Carpellter, Melp
Local; John Reibel, Meigs Cou1ty ll!Jitriata.
dent, seated right, and standlnclell, the Men..
aid management team, Teresa Haley, Dl..a
Johnson, Greg Mills, John Hoffaaa, Slllella
Kebter, Wanda Skages, Lady Davis, ud .\alit
McDonalcl.
·

Meigs County kicks off special
designated driver program · .
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stair

·8tfoim Hua:hes. Deputy Director

0

45631

PROMOTION KICKOFF • Area school representatives met Tuesday aflernoon with Roscoe
and Salldee MiUs, pictured at the thermometer,
to bear about MeBucks for Education, a
McDoaald's fund raiser for schools. Allending
the seaton at the Pomeroy restaurant were,
seated around the table from lbe lefl, Steve
Beh1, Carlelon School; Joe Scites, New Have_n

Meigs County officials and tav·
ern owners teamed up to fight
drunk driving yesterday, at a preas
conference held by the Ohio
Department of Ohio Safety at the
Milway Tavern.
.
MeiJS County was the last
county m the state to hold such an
event, which kicks offa special
year-round designaled driver pro-

QUill

eo~• Of 11110 &amp;OUYl

lives and legislaiOrS at a conference
By JOHN CHALFANT
that he was "committed to doing
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A timetable something about that formula
outlined in February for reforming before the end of this year."
The current formula for disthe state system of fmancing local
schools likely will not be met, Gov. tributing state money to local
George Voinovich has acknowl- school districts is being chaUcnged
in lawsuits by some school sysedged.
But Voinovich said. Tuesday, tems.
The bipartisan education comafrcr the ftrst meelina of the Ohio
Education Goats and Strategy mission was created by the LegislaCommission, that he still hoped 10 ture to oversee reform of the pubtic
have at least a blue~t for change education system.
Members include chairmen of
in place by his original end-of-year
the House and Senate education
deldline.
·
· .VI think that whit wiD happen is commiuees, the swe school superthat afjer the repor,l l CO!Jic back, intendent. and the chanceDor of the'
and some of lhe recommendations Obio BOard of Regents.
The commission is 10 -develop a
and so forth, dull we may not get it
strategy
for changing the education
done, but we will have a plan on
how to gel it done," Vomovich system. and ~mmcnd any legislalion 10 lhe General Assembly by
said.
Jan.
31, 1993.
On Feb. 19, Voinovich told a
Voinovich
said he could not
group educators, busiiiCS!! execu-

.

McBucb will be redeemed by
McDonald's on Nov. 25 and
checks will be PftSCnted the first
weelc in December, MiDs said.

loiCIIMa

...Hress

came ashore, it had winds of 140
mph and gusts of 160 mph were
reponed, the weathes service said.
"It's still a powerful storm ...
but loss of energy from lhe warm
gulf waters is going to kill this
thing. It will die a slow and painful
death," said Roger Edwards, a
meteorologist at the hurricane cen-

grceo; doUar-size McBucts

R.. $159.0DSALI*459"
gentrOUI

rain was hittin' the window in
sheets," said Junws Crocliel, asaiJ..
Lafayeac.
tant police chief in MorpD City.
As the storm rassed through
Franldin. i IOWD o 22,000 some 35
A tornado cut a swath seven
miles long through LaPlace, 1 town
miles SOillheast of Lafayette, Bourgeois said the losses to cane farmof nearly 20,000 people 20 miles
ers would be sevm.
west of New Orleans. Nine homes
"Once this cane is flauened,
and some offices were destroyed,
they can harvest, but the sucrose
said Arnold Labat, St. John the
Bantist Parish presidenL
content will be so low lhey 'll lose ter.
~'There's notbin&amp;lelt biltiPlinmuch of what they would have
A storm surge of 10 to 15 foci of
had." he said.
water was possible near the eye, ters," Lucille Peri110ux, .c6, said of
At 8 a.m. CDT, the center was and up to 10 inches of rain were her home. "Alii hean1 was aloud,
loud noise. I turned to 10 inl(l the
about 15 miles east of Lafayette, possible.
and the slllrm was moving slowly
"The rain was whipPing really house and it picked me up ·• nd
nonhward. Its top suStained winds bad. We could see 11, but _you lhrew me. II rolled me ~ the
(Continued on Paae 3)
had dropped 10 roo mph. When it couldn' t sec outside because the

55 miles south-southeast of

will be given to customers, one
worth five cents for each dollar
spent, at the time they ~lace their
orders and before the ~gtstet drawer closes. To receive McBucks,
customers must ask for lhcm, MiUs
said.
At the end of each. month
schools wiU be asked to report the
number of McBucks they have collected to McDonald's where the
total will be recorded on a large

.
•SI"p Sofa• .
FllltllrMextra

BRADBURY • The Mei~s
Coun!}' WJ!men Fellowship wtll

Columbia, Masoll- and New Haven
Elementary Schools in Mason
ColllllY in West VlfBinia.
It will begin ,.on Aug. 31 and
continue through Nov. 20. The
redemption deadline foi the
McBucb bu boen set far Nov. 25,
with the check p&amp;aenlltiona to be
made the first week in December.
According to the plan IIICSentcd
by Mills, the three Mc:Oonald's
restaurants will ~ live cents of
each doUar S{ICDI in the restaurants
to any partiCJPilil!i student group
or organizatiOn Wilhin lhe school
system. To qual!fY for 'he
McBucks for EducatJOR, theft JS a
$3 minimum purchase.

$4900

WE'23,.

~

ford, Jullee Patrlek H, O'Brien, Proaeeator
Steve!~ L. Story, and Bonnie and Georp litglts,
cnn~en of the Mmvay Tavern.

Gallia, Mason deputies seize marijuana

STARTING AI
1WIN

... $399.00

_,

Meip EM!
Rabfrl Byer,. ~ller11flJIIDa
~ ~. Smllihy, OSP Commuder Li:'Rolikt Wood·

McDonald's owners initiate fund
·raiser to benefit tri-state students

00
Se.tlag At 589 ea.

SOFAS

2 SectiOn, 11 , .... 21_..
Allulllrnedla In&amp; Na tprper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednelday, August 26, 1992

.,..ector

. -cherry Plant Stand
•L.Ips Slarllag At 54900
•Uving ROCIII Tables

c••ir'

'

f

•

•...Coftrt or the ,Dep.-~t or '"'PWI!Jiilftb',

Are Stacked
In Your Favor!

TIIURSDAY
POMEROY - Regular meeting,
Meigs C9un1y Public Library
Board of Trustees, Thursday, I
p.m.

•

Page4

Tonight, mosUy cloUdy wltb a
obanoe or showers aud tbunder·
storms. Low near 70.

Delay seeo in reform of
state's school money formula

The~vlngs

POMEROY - Wildwood Gar·
den Club meets Wednesday, 7:30
p.m .. home of Juanita Will. Bring
membership dues.

POMEROY - The Me~ County Youna Democrata wtll meet
IUii!DSVII.LE • Tent RVivalll 1buraday II 7 p.m. to IICiect deJc.
lk Pellowship Church of the · ptcl far IMIII&amp;eWide con~lion.
Jflarene, Reedsville, has been
. . . . . du'ough Wcdnelday. Set·
· J\l:{e 7 p.m. .nijhtly. l&gt;ublic
Oa liard 14, JJ0'7, JlplliiiM imml·
pt1oa to 111e United Slates wu rellrleted br Ji1 tiMntJal order.

. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)
-The king mackml, or lringfish.~
is considered the prize game ftslt of·
the Atlantic. Its weight averages tO,.
pounds but occasionally reaches ·
100pounds.
The kingfish is dark bluish
green on the back wi~h silvery
sides. In spring, Icings are common ·
in lhe Caribbean, and they move
nonh toward the Gulf and Carolina .
coasts in summer.

53900

POMEROY • AJzheimers Support Group ·meets Wednesday, I
p.m., Meigs County Senior Citizens Cenrcr.

lllcod.

Underwater game

•Uvilg R0011 Occasional
Chalrt5t•t.. -AT $9900

POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m., hish school. Public inviled.

MIDDLEPORT • Planning
meeting, Micldleport Catfish Festival, Thursday, 7 p.m., Midcllepon
Council Chambers. Anyone wanting to assist wilh the festival may

James Lewis gave a l3lk on the
"Wartd" society and lhe corruption
in iL He concluded his talk by singing "Ship Ahoy." which Elsie
Roach bad pRviously tequeslf&gt;d he
sing.
Hany Love closed wilh prayer.
The 37 ~gistered wm: Mr. and
Mrs. Lesrcr Love, Letart; Stella
Krebs and Stacie, Lctan; J. Roben
and Elsie Roach, Mason; Austin
and Donna Wolfe, Racine; Teresa
Ord and ~ daughters, Letart;
Jim and Nora Lewis, West Columbia; Beulah M. Webb, Mansfield,
OH; Jcny, Dixie Wolfe and Hannah, Racine; Pauleua King, TJ.,
Alice and Rissie, Charleston; Paul
Roberts, Alum C~k: Addie and
CarroU Norris, Syracuse; Harry and
Kathleen Love, New Marshfield,
OH; Bub, Pat and Jamie Lewis,
Jacksonville, FL; Aaron Wolfe,
Racine; John and Mary Ord, Letart;
Paul and Alice Randolph, Letan .
and LaWRnce and Peggy Wolfe,
Leroy, WV.

earance
·50% OFF

'

four present; John Wolfe family, 19
present, for a IOial of 37.

Buckeye Five:
3·5·16-23•30
Pick 3:
6·8-7
Pick 4:
6-9-0-9

SEMI·ANNUAL

•ALL PATIO

. SUPER SHOWMAN.·leiiJ Sheets, rnerve +-plaa •arltet
shOWIIIIII, dlrectl .... pillnJIIDCI 1M Show Araa dlll'llll Wedaesday's Melp Conly JDIOr Flllr Swiat Showmanship Sllow.

Reds
beat
Phillies

FamHy count wu taken. Of the
late l-awrence P. Wolfe family, 14
present; Mae (Wolfe) Love family,

The descendants of lhe late
James M. Wolfe met August 9 at
Broad Run Zion Churth for lheir
44th annual reunion.
James Lewis offered the grace
prayer prior to the I p.m. covered
dish dinner.
The aflcmoon business meeting
was ca1lcd 10 order by pRSident
Aaron
Wolfe.
The
seaetary/IIWiftf Alice (Wolfe)
Randolph read the 1991 JepOrl.
Those recognized and presented
Rifts were- Beulah (Wolfe) Webb,
76, oldest lady; Jack Ord, 73, oldest
man; Hannah Wolfe, 18 months,
youngest j!irl and TJ. ICing, 16,
yOIIIgcSI bOy. Bubby Lewis and
family traveled lhe farthesL Newest
grJIIdpalcms weft Elsie (Wolfe)
and Robert ROIICh.
Other R(lOIIS: HmTy llld Kathleen Love bad a, RniJI(Ison, born
December 1991, to Willanl Lee after being llllllried 15 years; Mrs,
(Lesrcr) Goldie. Love bad books
·available that she had pu\)Jjsbcd.
One was given 10 the presidentllld
one to Paul R~ first time attending reunion.
·Oflicerspresident
and
seaetary/IIWIRI' weft retainod
far 1993. The 1993 Runion will be
held the secood Sunday of August
at the same place. There was a separate donation io the chlllth.
Party balloons. candy and" ball
point pens weft diStri~ Get
wen canb we~e signed for Orion
Roush, Claris Lyons and Harry
Manha11 Wolfe.
Lena Mae (Wolfe) and CarroD
Coli wm to go to Gennany to visit
their.son Bany ll!d familf. when:
he is stationed. Bany WID be a
Lieutenant Colonel when he completes his training.

Ohio Lottery

LIFESTYLE FURNITURE SHOWCASE

In case you didn't know, the
Meifs Fair isn't officially over
Meanwhile, back to the RCCnt unli you wash the fair dust off
pass through of the Mississippi your motor vehicle. Do keep smilQueen.
ing.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an eveDt
aDd lbe day of that event. Items
must be m:elved weD In IICivance
to assure pubHcation In the calendar.

Tuesday, August 25, 1992

of the ~t, explained lhat
three years IJO, th~ department
began conducting camvaians to
encounp d!aiP.atod driven dur·
ing major bolluy aeasona. That
JX0111111 wa extended to • ·JX111111D, 111111 die to the IIKCCII of
tbaltiJI'OIIII*,dledl!*bi.,.hll
opted to promote the collcopt all
year.
Simply aaicl, the program
CJICOUI'IPI thole who pllft bi drink
tO appoint I de1i1nated driver
before drinking bella, '111!11 driver,
In tum, ablllinl from alCohol tO
asawe a safe trip homO.

ul mlllt llftll Jltat a desiJN""d

· \'I.

driver is notlhe person who is the
1979 ~ Ohio's ~~ ye~r
least drunk," Hughes said. for drunk ~vm. During dtat tow.
"Instead it's the person who has 841 uafftc deaths were direc:dy
decided ~ 10 drink at all, so that linked to drunk drivers. Such
his or her friends may get home deaths have decreased Steadily·
safely."
since 1986, when acli~ c:amPai&amp;lia
to stop the problem be1an in
"Through the media, efforts of camesL 'Last year, 594 dnmk'ildy•
local law enforcement offteials and ing deaths were reportod In lito
woni of mooth, the depenment has state.
begun to promote this idea for at·
''This campaign is DOl u antihome parties as weD as in taverns." drinkina or a pro-drinkina cantHughes said. ~ .. . . ...
(CII!IInllld oa Plee 3)

Local briefs--......
Meet the team night set

Meet the team night wiD be ob~ed prececi~:M c11y
. nia:ht footblll IICI'imllllie at Eastern High School.
w11 lit
introduced at S:30 p.m. and the ICI'inuniF will begin 11 6 p.m. A
bonfire will be held lfterwuds.
,

EMS units answer calls
·Three calli for assiiWICe were answered by anita of }&amp;JII
Emerptef Seniccl on Tueaday.
At 2:21 p.m., Middltpo•t'aqnad went to
way far William Ctildl, who wu llkal ID Halla Medici~ Ct
At2:49 p.m., Middleport II(U8II wmtto Ollllllal . . tDat p ' 1
Jones 10 Pleasant Va1Joy Hoapilal. At 9:18 p.lll., yn J 11ft .a
wen110 Dairy Queen. Chris Rayburn refilled 11M eeL

Ganl..._ "*"

._.,.,,;;,

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>August 25, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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</item>
