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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..._ "*"

._.,.,,;;,

�~-~-

.

·'.~-~

..... .

.

' "' '

'

....

-~·

.........

-.~---

'

~-,

-·

....... ,.,.. .....-... ..... ..... ....... .... .

Ill Coatlta11t
• . •.,. Oldo

.~ ·

· ·· · DILVOiltD 1'0 TBa IH I '*'lila 01' 'mallitiCJ&amp;.IIAIIO AltU
., .

·•.·
r.

ROBOT L WINGETT
r.ws'ur

r

LETI1!RS OF OPINION on ...teo-. Tboy llboald be lea IUD 300
worda. All 1ettm are aubject to editia&amp; IIIII be liallld with ~~~me,
oddma IOd telopbone numiler. No wl&amp;llld lealn wiD be p!hllobed Leam

.J

:· L..!lbould~~be:.m~
· !good~tu~lo:.!,N~!d~rN=n~'D!I:i•:-::.:·DOt~pll=fi=""='~U!ies:
· ~- _ _ _ _

,.

~-Taking

back what
: t he 1980s gave
,.

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buslltea Analyst
.
NEW YORK - Almost evt:l'f day anolhcr news ircm bclps define lhc
. early 1990s as a patient suffenng problems of overilldulgeace in the
!9SU,.
· Based on corrective efforts now under way, the bigpat- ol all
·· may have been the belief lhatlhcre was no limitiO what oouJd be done by
· business, science and government. and by houscbolds bent on improving
• their lot.
'· The '"ult in many instances has been dashed hopes, big debls, au
· effon by government and business 10 sbed RSp~~~~Sibilitics, 11111111 ~p~~~~~­
.·• ciation among households lhat mere survival rather lhan mattrial progress
· · iS sufficicnL
'·· Companies lhat allowed payrolls 10 swell are cUlling back. Govern.· mcnts at all levels look foc ways 10 save. Flmilies pay down bills when
they Clll, and resist efforts 10 lwe lhcm blct 10 the mukdplace.
· · While the bailie seems to be fou~t tvaywbrre • once, it is especially
·· toud and bitter over the distribuuon ol bealth en benefits, lavishly
· Promised and bestowed in lhc 1980s IIIII now bcina Jdendessly snipped
. ' baclc.
. Citing It cost-per-vehicle of $929, a GM spobanan told The Wall
';Street Journal that lhc company has been "examiniDJ ways to control an
.. .lJil8CCCptablc inctease in bcalth-carc: COSIS."
And at Navistar International, a cnalitioo of unions IIIII retired workers
' . sued to teep the company from reducing retirees. bcalth-eare benefits
after tbc company IIIIIIOUIIced last July 28 tha1 it iDialdcd 10 do JO.
.- · Such cost-cutting effons are more common than rare. They spring
• from an old realization tbat was long ignored: wben life is llillltelhcre is
: almost no limit Ill the amount of money that migllt be i1pC11L
:: Society now is fon:ed ID face the bitter aews lhallimiti must be
I wtli'Ced. Nowhere is the effon 10 curtaillll(ft olrlious thin in bca1tiH:are
· i benefits for corporate retirees. They arc bcin&amp; relcodessly CUI.
::
A survey of 1,380 employers by a New Ycrt COl poilie bcnefitudvisel
!· found two-thirds of them have changed their relirce mediall plans in tbc
• past two years or intended to mate chanaes by 19'J3. MllltcircdCOIIS lKid
•liability.
•
.
The survtr·by Fosles Higgins also found employa'slll08tly c:ommonly
are raising retiree conuibulions, increuing cost·sblrinl provisions and
. tighlaling eligibility.
It found also lhat nine of 10 tmploycn arc 1101 mavins to prcfund
:· retiree health-care: benefits, which would suggest along-tam commit,: ment, choosing instead 10 provide provide benefits on a pay-as-you-go

WASHINGTON (NEA) Many of the nation's airlineswhile admitting no wrongdoing have agreed to n:11J111 almost SSOO
million on future tickets as the
result of an anti-uust swL However, consumer advocates claim the
proposed settlement offers bavelers
iittle. enriches a small group of
lawyers, and will end up actually
cosbng the airlines almost nothing.
Most of the nation's airlines
have been accused in a civil suit of
violating anti-trust laws by pricefixing on tickets sold between January !988 and June 1992 for trips
originating, or passing through,
some 34 hub airports. The defen·
dants are American, Continental,
Delta, Midway, Northwest. Pan
American, TWA, United and
USAir.
Plaintiffs (i.e .• travelers who
bought liqets during the period).
will be divided into three classes:
(A) people who bought only a singlc ticket during the period will
rcceive a maximum of $100 worth
of vouchers by simply filing a form
saying they bought a ticket; (B)
people who bought at least five

Robert J, Wagman
how man~ claims are filed; (C)
peo_ple who bought more than
$2,500 worth ollickets in the period will need 10 amass proof of purchase from their records, but will
not have 10 supply tbat proof when
fiting a claim. How much in vouch·
ers this last class wiD get wiD also
depend upon how many claims are
filed.
If you bou$lJt a ticlcet on any of
these airliiiC,II m that five-year period, you can file a claim. Ten million forms have already been
mailed out to people identified
from frequent flyer clubs and the
like. If you have not already
received a form, you can obtain
one by writing Airline Anti-Trust
Litigation, P.O. Box 267,
Pennsauken, NJ 08110.
.
There is, of course. a catch to all

this.
The bigg~one is tbat no matter
how many vouchers you end up
with, they c8nnol be redeemed for
more tban 10 percent of the value
of any future ticteL That means
that foc a $250 ticket, vouchers will
only be able to reduce tbe price by
$25. A second catch is tbat there
wiD be heavy !ravel blactout periods when the vouchers cannot be
used.
Another catch is that the SCIIIcment will cost airlines little or
nothing. Travel agents will not be
able 10 issue tickets for which settlement vouchers arc used, Instead,
you will have to go directly to an
airline's city ticket office or airport
counter.
Airlines normslly pay travel
agents a 10 percent commission.
About eight 0111 oliO airline tickets
todar arc issued by tmel agents.
By limiting the vouchers 10 10 percent of tbc valtiC t;J the ticket, and
forbidding lnlvel agents to issue
tickets having voucher credit, it
will cost airlines nothing for
redeemrng
' 80 .....,._of the vouchers.
..--··

lroledo!73" I

Predictably, travel agents are up
in arms. Paul Ruden, a spokesman
for lhc American Society of Travel
Agents, says the settlement will
cost tmel agents about $12 billion
in business. "Tbis ~tlemfnt is
totally unfsir,'' says Rudell. ''II
actually shifts the cost from the
defendant airlines 10 travel agents.
We arc the ones who will more
than pay the airlines' costs in lost
commissions and lost business."
In a brief filed with the court
opposing the 8elliement. lhc travel
agents group nisc an interesting
poinl: Because all the defendant
airlines got together and qrecd on
a set of canmon blackout periods,
aren'tthey practicing the same
kind of anti-trust violation as the
price fixing tbat is tbc basis of the
suit in the f11'5t place?
.
And naturally, this being the
American legal system, the pro·
posed settlement will mate the
lawyers who brought the suit very
rich. Of the $458 million oltbc.settlement, $50 million will go iniO a
fund to pay lawyers and adminisuativc costs. The Iauer have been
cstimated"at about $5 million.
If you
"member
tbe
class"
- are
thata is,
someoneofwho
bought a ticket and who will he filing a claim - there mighl be
something you can do aliout the
proposed sculemcnL A ftaal hearmg will be held in Atlanla on OcL
16 at which time tbc sculement is
to be finalized . You .have until
Sept. 8 to write the court exprwins your opposition to lhc propoal.
Some coasumer advocates sug~est changes should include limitrng total lawyers fees to $S million,
allowing vouchers to be used for up
to 50 percent of a ticket's value,
eliminating blackout dates, and
allowing tickets to be issued by
uavel agents who would be paid
full commissions.
Slrould you be interested in giving the·coun your comments on tbc
settlement you Clll do 10 by writing: Clerk of the Court; M.D.L.
861, U.S. District Court for the
Nonhem Disuict of Georgia, P.O.
Box 77827, Atlanta, Ga. 30357.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENIERPRISE ASSN.

I

r

f;Today
in
history
.... .

.

r

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein

t!'i

:

•"'tte.

.

c

(

By Joseph Perkins
.. BuSh has character. Americans
will nol pat a man in the Oval
Office about whom they have qucstions of character. That is why
Oary Han and Joe Biden abandoned their campaigns for the pres·
idency four yean ago. It is why
many Amaicans will not vote foc
Clinton this year.
Pictwe the second presidential
debate. Bernard Shaw of CNN
O(IeDS the procccdinas in San
Diego by asking lhc ArkanJas JOY·
ernor point-blank: "Mr. Clinton,
have you been unfaithful to your
wife and, if so. do you think y~
are qualified to SJ1Ci1t about family
values?" Lite Michael Duklkls
four years sgo, Clinton .will be
unpreparccl for such an opening
voUey. The charlcter issQe will dog

him throughout the campalp.
Bush ia the more conservative
candidate. The Ieason of the last
three presidential eleclioos is that
ideology mMters. Conservatism is,
more chan justa ·label. II ila polilical philosophy. Amaas other
things, it means limited government, individual liberty, free markets, personal ri:lpr)nsibjlity and
traditional, Judeo-Chriatian valuea.
When faced with a choice
bet~ a COIIICI'VItive and 1 modem-day liberll, American voten
feel more comfortable with a conSetVIIi.ve in the White HOIIJC.
Dukatii tried 10 Jet around dtia
in 1988 by ll)'inJ lhc eloclionabout "competence, D&lt;ll ideoloJY·" But Bllib pol-ed bim Wllllll
by COIIdacliJIJ I Cllllpaiaa of ideological~
·
Tbe artful Gov. Clinton has
posilloned hi!nself as a moderate.
And he II moderate - for tbc
Democratic Party. But l:omo
· September •.when the ccrian
SCISOII ,belllna In CII1ICit.
lKid
the Repulilicw will remiad VOiilll
.~

.

t.

!sao I•

Court riews

Andrew's...

and

r.

C

~~.-a~

Stocks ·

or

They promised Hand a replacemenL
But then the Navy changed its
mind and told Hand ID sue lhc federal government, a process that
could talce an eternity and idle a
lifelong commen:ial frsherman.
With a COIIlbination of profanity
and persistence, D' Amato warned
the Navy brass that Ire would late
10 the Senate floor daily to shame
the service - which Ire was accusing of "high-seas piracy" - until
it compensated Hand, who couldn't
cam a living for seven mo!llhs.
Although the vessel was insured,
Hand couldn't collect bccaillle the
Navy had sunk iL
One official remembers that
when the Navy offered ID sculc for
$7S,OOO D' Amato erupted telling the Secretary of the Navy
that the offer was a piuance that
couldn't put Hand "in a row
boaL" UIUmlllely, D'Amato engi·
neered a special amendment in
Congress to compel the Navy to.
compensate Hand some $220,000.
When he gels his new boat,
Hand intends 10 name illhc Shinnecock II, and invite D'Amato fishing. In the meantime, Hand is helping D' Amato troll for votes by
recounting his srory -just one in 1
vast sea ol8C11810rial social wad.
Copyrigh~ 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Action pending
in injection probe

narded

.t

Mayor Hoffman . H&amp;l ILOCI OFFEIS INCOME Til COURSE
processes cases
IN PO.IOY, OliO

.

...

reall'l

ol just how libctal Clinton
is.
Bush is on the right side o the
issues.
· Tbe Democnts are bet~ng oil
the economy and abortion u tbe
defining illues tbia year. Bush is
indeed vulnenble on tbc econonty.
On his watch, the ·lonPFJ
time CX)lllllioq iD Amalcan .
came Cl'llhln8 10 a haiL The
•
~ent'sl!cst strate.BY. il tp tum lbil
JUUe around by lclllng veten that
be waa virtually powcrlc11 on
doineltic policy bcc•te be r.ced I
stubborn, Dcmocralically controlled Conarca•
A1 for abortion, it1i1Dply Ia
ovenatec! .• I plvmizina illno. If
we at;cqJt die premlac lhll a .....
lty ol Americlllliijipilit lllilriloa
rights and we 111ume t.at this
~ly did 1101 lldlcnly ....Jeec'e
durjng lhc 1ut four yan, • we
must aiJo ·COIIclucle that ..-of the
lasl three presidential 11.11Ctions
tnmed on tbe abcrtioo ilslll, Oilier·
wise, how c:ould pro-llf~ R$11bli·
CiDJ R.oilald Reagan snd Dutil win
landslides?

1

ll:1:U

,

'"-•

·-

s·

,,

this date at lhc ColtJ~~~bus v,Uiher

Acnss Oblo

Ohioar!s are getting some relief station was 98 dtgrees i• 1948

EE?

The how and why of Bush's re-election
World War II. In the process he
exorcised from the American psyche the specter of Vietnam ·and
unleashed a wave of palriotism not
witnessed in at least a half century.

Rain from cold fronts was
expected today in the northern
Plains and the aorthcm MidwesL
Hazy, humid and w~ weather
was in the forecall for mlldl ollhc
East, with bot, 111111y wntber fucling wildfires in the Well.
Temperatures in the .60s were
forecast foc much ol the northcm
Plains; 70s ill the Great Lakes
region and the Rockic:s; and 80s in
the NoriiJeast, the Appalachians,
the Mississippi Valley, the Midwest, the southern Plains and most
of the West.
Highs in the 90s were forecast
for the Southeast, southern TeJtas
and inland poctCII or California
. and Oregon, with readinp in the
IOOs in southern California and

- -,, - Area deaths--

swt. However, mere's a

D' Amato's political career, and was a congresswoman £rom
how it could serve as a springboard Queens. It was one of her iop priocfor him to mount a come-from- ities."
behind re-election win.
Although most polls show him
trailing Ferarro, the ra~ promises
to be a mudfest. If Ferarro mentions last year's Senate Ethics
Committee probe of D'AmaiOwhich cleared him of most charges
concerning influence peddling by
his brother - D' Amato can fire
back with rcccnily published
rep01ts linking some Fcrarro assoOn paper, D' Amato should be ciates 10 the Mafia.
running scared because he is facing
D' Amato is drawing from a
a double whammy: he's an incum- deep well of senatorial social work
bent male facing a probable female stories to mate his case with new
challenger.
radio spotS that are energizing his
But no member of Con8'"5 has once saaglng biSc of support. ·
ever run a constituent service shop
In the ads, a litany of rust-perlike D' Amato has. Even his fiercest son accounts is followed by the
critics concede that D' Amato hus- bottom line lie's trying to drill in to
ties when it comes to righting votelS: ''Sen. AI D' Arila10. Geaing
wrongs for his 18 million con - it done. Mating waves. Taking
stituents. And his nickname them on."
"Senator Pothole"- is an alluWhen Long Island, New Yort;
sion 10 his focus on the par:ochial.
flshennan Dan Hand accidentaUy
"He's fiUed in a polllole bul his caught a World War U to_rpcdo in
votes have destroyed the road," his frshing net and reported It to lhc
charges Frank Wilkinson, press Navy, nobody eJtpected it to prosecretary for former vice presiden- vote a war with D' Amllo. But it
tial candidate Geraldine Ferraro, did. A team of Navy demolition
who is the strong favorite to win experts put explosive charges in
the Sept. IS Democratic primary Hand '1 boat, the Sbinnecock I,
and race D' Amato this November. because it thought that the only ·
"Gerry Ferraro ran a rust-rate con- safe way 10 dispose of the SIWied
stituent service office when she torpedo was to blow up the boat.

The Dilly SenUnel Page 3

----Weather----

ft\ltY l'RESit9Jr /UiifWSJftRUNMtJgD :~h~t
D' Amato's constituent service second to none

'· bas'

..,._ , ..

Meigs County.. &lt;coatbaect rr. raae

Many olthe nation's major airlines have agreed to return almost
$500 million as the result of an

-~J3N

-- __

·----~- - -

from lhc warm snd muggy weather. while the record low wu 47 in
But, (USl, they'll be getting weL 194S. Sunset tonighi will be 118:13
Tbe National Weather Service p.m. and sunrise ·Thursday at 6:5S
says rain tonigh~ Thursday and Fri· a.m.
day will be followed by 4rier and
PA.
cooler conditions. High temperatures will be in the 70s, about 15
dtgrecs lower than they have been
Mansfield
this wect, and relative humidities
Ten were fined and IS .othl:n
IND.
will be below SO ~L
forfeited bonds in the court&lt;of
Forecasters said tbc showers and Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed. MOnthunderstorms c:ould dump up 10 an day nighL
:
inch ol rain on some areas.
Fined were Brent Gaoge, t.!id·
The record-high temperature for dlepon, $53 and costs, speeding;
Kenneth Barnhart, MiddleP!lrt,
dcstnletion
of propeily it VeteriiiS ·
(Continued from Page 1)
Memorial Hospital, $313 and coits;
ground, almlllt 10 lhc IJII'eCt. ..
Charles
Blake, Racine, $100 1nd
Tbirty injured people were Jatcn costs, petty theft at J'owe Is;
southern AriJOna.
The high temperature for the to River Parishca Medical Center, Jonathan Banon, Mincnvillc, .$25
nation Tuesday was 104 degrees at which was without power, said and costs, speeding;· Cif!(ly CpnW. VA.
hospital spokeswoman Rose ley, Ponland, $40 snd cosls, speedBuiUJead City, Ariz.
McDuffrc. She said three of them, ing.
:
all seriously hurt, were ~~taken
Also fined in the court were
to New Orleans-area hospi
t&gt;
Danny
Haggy, Pomer9j, $50
Parts of Grand Isle, a 7-milc- costs, no
insurance, and $63. tad
paign." Hughes said. "It's just a ness as well as stiffa law enforce- long barrier island 110 miles south costs, improper
towing, witli 30
realistic one. It targets basically ment effons as lhc reason for that of New Orleans, were under water days license suspel)sion; ~ichard
and power was OUL The 1,452 resi:~nsible people who may not irlc:rea$c.
Both O'Bden 111d Prosecuting dents had left in the frrst wave of Hamilton, Pomeroy, S40 and aisls,
· that their ability to drive is
disturbing the peace; Brian Bass,
impaired - that they might injure or Attorney Stev.. L Story ~iscusscd evacuations Monday.
Racine, failwe to comply, $63 and
President Bush to&lt;Jar declared costs;
1c:i1l themselves or somebody else." proDOSCd legislation which would
Jamca Schaetel, Long BotHe explained that as a part of make a founb DUI offense a pans of Louisiana a maJOr disaster tom, $48 and costs, speeding;
the llfOgram. free marmals such as felony. 111d both endorsed such a area, DP.Cning the door 10 federal Richard Stewart, Pomeroy, no tine,
Soutll Central
By Tbe Alloclated Press
.elicf atd.
t-shrrts, posters, cocktail napkins law.
intoxication, to report to
Tonight,
mostly
cloudy
with
a
On Tuesday, 2 million people in public
Story ~ 111 old adage,
and recipes for non-alcoholic bev~y ~I!UP SUDday:
Health
Recovery
5emccs.
Friday, ram likely. Lows in the chance of showers and thunder- erages )IIOUld be available to tavern sayin_g tha1 " an ounce ol 1/Rven- Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas
Forfeiting
bonds
were Donna
mid-50s 10 low 60s. Highs iD the stonns. Low near 70. Chance of IIIII bar owners interested in partic- lion IS worth tons of cure when were either ordered or advised 10 Good, Pomeroy, $50, no insurance;
preventing diUnt driving.•
leave. They included the I .S mil·
upper 60s to low 70s. Saturday and nin il SOpercenL Thursday, show· ipating.
Mathews, n, Cheshire, $65,
SIOry also credited the effons of tion residents of mclropOiitan New Gerald
Sund~;y, fair. Lows in the 50s. ers IIIII thundtlstonns lilc:ely. High
Hughes and tbose local officil(s
speeding;
Christopher Hall; Midncar 80. Chance ol rain 60 percenL who spate about·the program yes- OSP and the sheriff's department Orleans, a bowl-shaped city with
Highs m the 70s.
dleport, $73, _speeding; Ro_ger
terday stressed the importance of with assistance in an 80 percent large areas that are below sea level Roush, Wcstervlllc, $66, sptedulg;
cooperation from those business increase in DUI posecutions in the and protected by levcra. ·
· Haym,an;·Racine1 S6.5,
county.
Even before the storm hit, Gov. Clare~ce
owners.
speedrng; N. H. Tarr, Qallipqlis,
Roben Dyer, President olthe Edwin Edwards declared a state of $60, assured clear distance; J6hn
"It would behoove taverns ownOhio
Assocwion of Emergency emergency for all u Louisiana.
Eva Clair'e Amsbary
ers
who
sec
an
intoxicated
cusJack L. Smith
Proctorville, $60; IIOp sign
Medical
Services and Director of
On Monday, the storm, with Carrey.
.tomer
in
their
eslablishment
withEva Claire Amsbary, 99, 1057
violation;
~ Spencer, LOng
Jilek L. Smilb, 65, 11 POint out a safe ride borne to call and Meigs County EMS, a1Jo cntbxd sustained winds of 1-40 mph and
Fourth Ave., GalliPOlis. ~ Tucs· l'leulllt,
Bottom,
$68,
speedrng; Marj~rio
died Tncltlay, Aug. 25, arrange transportation," Sheriff the P.'!lgram.
gusts over 160 mph, smashed nearday, Aug. 25, 1992, nl Scenic Hills
Lawson,
Racine,
$60, .istcip •ign
1992, in J&gt;leenq Vlltey Hoepilal James M. Soulsby said. "Such
'If you've ever ridden on a ly every building in a swath of violation; Terry S~aun,
NIJI'sina Center in Gallipolis.
Racine,
arrangements Clll save lives and squad run lo an accide~t scene Florida just south of Miami, then $60, stop sign violation; Brian ~ai­
She was born Feb. 24, 1893, in followiai I brkf lib
Ben fiiiC 8, 1927, ia Smithfield, extensive property dama~e which where lhc driva- has been drinting, churned its way across the Gulf ol
• Hocking County, lhc daughter of
W.Va.,
be- I - t1 the lale Bad can occur in drunk clrivmg acci- ou won't Corset it, • Dyer said. Mexico. At least 50,000 people ley, Long Bottom, $80, no motortbc laic Oliver Wbclhcc 71111 Nancy IIIII Clnha
cycle license; James Smith, Ricine,
(Eum:'
) Smith.
.
were left homeless, and authori~ S80, squealing tires; Debra Conilol·
dents. The designated driver pro- It's a klUglucenc."
Biggins Whetbee She was a memHe_.,~ ia death by
LL Robert Woodfucd, Commail· went house to house in search of ly, Pornt Pleasant, W. Va., $65,
is csaentiai, snd pRcipation
ber of Orace United Methodist
two
sislcn
ud
a
buMbtr.
der
ollhc Gallii/Melgs Poll ol the people reponed missing.
local
tavern
owners
is
also
Church, Gallipoli1, and the
s~ecding; Kim!&gt;«IY ~we; R~d­
Employed
roc
30
)'CII'I
with
lhc
Ohio
State HighWIY P1lrol, report·
Dade County, which includes cliff,
imponanL"
Women's Society, Kanauga.
$62, speeding; Kurtas English,
County Court Judge Patrick H. ed that Meigs County claimed t1uee Miami, was under a dust-to-dawn Middleport, $67, speeding; Patrick
She was preceded in death by
O'Brien swm thai DUI arrestS arc highway fat•litia in 1991, and 60 curfew, and about 2,200· National Snyder, Racine, six month's probaher husbands, Sidney Stewart in
Pleaait,
be
w•
I
\'OIIIilleer
for
on the riae in Meigs County, percent ol those were believed to Guardsmen took up positions to tion and ordered 10 stay out of bars,
1957, Gus Amsbary in 196910d by
AARP
at
both
Rober
Medical
Cenreporting that 179 mcsll were be alcohol relatccl. This year, one stop scattered looting. More than assauiL
,
three brothers.
of
the
two
fatalitiel
c:an
be
linked
ter
lKid
J&gt;leeiiiDI
'YIIIey
IIDipital.
200
people
had
been
irrested
for
made
last
year,
c:ampared
10
104
in
Amsbary is survived by one
looting and curfew violations by
niece, Mrs. Jobn (Ciaryss) Tobin, He Rnded Fairmont Stale Collep 1988. He.credill increaaed aware- to a drunk driva.
IIIII
was
a
-bcr
ollhc
Chun:b
of
IIID TI!Ciflay.
Columbus, and two nephews,
Chrilt.
· Robert Biggins, Bellaire, and
Survl · are bi.l wife, Ruth
James Biggins, Cleveland.
Am Ele Power ...................32 5!8
(ICoc:her~
fOil' dluptm,
Services will be held Satunlay.
Ashland Oil........................22 7!8
August 29 at the McCoy-Moore Yvonne Sbava- ol Monpla,
AT&amp;T................................421/2
. FUIIClll Home, WediCilbolt Chapel, W.Va., Cbriltine Smitb ol Pomeroy,
Bank
One...........................42 314
PoUt
Gall~s, with Rev. CJ. Lemley Gcgldjnc Powaa '
BOO
Evans
.........................19 318
, offiCiating.. Burial will bell Mound Pice 11, Sne Alii Rouall t1 Hur·
Charming
Shop
..................28 1!8
nc-; ' 1011. David t;l l"ccu.
Hill Cemetery
City
Ho~s·...................... l9
·· Calling ~ will be August 29 ~ two liiiCn. Ellen Powell
Federal Moiul................... 15
from 10 a.m. until the hour ollhe IIIII ~ · Wood ol Smithfield;
Goodyear
-~&amp;R ..................62 3/4
brother, llicbard ol Fairmont; II
service.
Key
CenlurlOII
·........... ., ....,.l9
grandchilcllm llld one great·
Lands
End.
.........................
30 114
psndchild.
.
Limited
Inc,
....................
.,
21 3/8
. Tbe funerll will be Thursday, II
Multimedia Inc...... ....., ......21 3!8
a.m., • lhc W'Jbru:a fluncni
Ru
Rcstaurant ...............,.,.9/16
Ralph K. Smith
Home wilb Mini•er Cluck Boston
Rel~ Elecuic................ l9 .
offlci'lli . Burial will be in lhc
Robbins&amp;Myers ...........,.. .,IS 1/2
Ralph K. Smith, 84, of Village Kirldsad"'Maac.ial Gardens.
Shoney's Inc............... ., ...,.19 518
Manor Apanments in Middleport,
Pria~ CID Cilll ll die funerll
Star
Bant ....... ., ..........., .....JO ·
died on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 1992 at home tbil ovenina. 7 10 9 p.m.
Wendy
lnt'L.........., ...... ...... ll3/8
Holzer Medical Center.
Worthington
Ind...., ....,., .... 22
He was born on Feb. 8, 1905 in
Stoek
nports
are the 10:30 .
Haydenville, son of tbc late George
Lm. quota provided by !Jluat,
W. and Minnie Alice O'Hara
Ellis and Loewi of GaUipolis.
Smith. He was a former chicr cleric
City Holding is ex-dividend
for the New Y00: Cenrral Railroad.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
today.
.
He was a mcmbct- of the F&amp;AM in teen-ager whose prize-winning
Columbus, Aladdin Temple, Ycrt steer may have been taalpered with
Rite and Scottish Rite, and attended at the Ohio State Fair must wait
the United Methodist Chun:h.
until next mooth to leam if he will
He is survived by two nieces, keep his awards.
SPRING VALlEY CINEMA Alice R. Mascari of Marion and
A veterinarian who examined
446 45l4
: . '
Ruth Irene Minor or Bluesprings, the carcass of the steer shown by
Mo.; and several great-nieces and Tavis Shane, 17, of Fostocia, said
great-nellhcws.
vegetable oil had been injected into
Besides his parents, he was J!fC· the animal's hide. The oil would
ceded in death by his sister, Opic make the steer look fuller and
Marie Struble, and an infant broth- therefore better to judges.
tlae bleyelea wen
011 Yond! Day
tile
A WINNER -Glean May of Pomeroy- ODe
er, Walter Smith.
Tbe family has denied tamperl29di
Melp
Couaty
Fair.
Special
pat
Ronald
of five bicycle wlnaen at tbe MelD Couty Fair.
Graveside services will be beld ing with lhc steer but said someone
MeDOuld bandied lbe pn~e~~tallou of lbe bley·
Provided by the Melas Fair 11oard, Bates
at Oat Grove Cemetery in Logan else could have injected tbc oil.
elel
aad buadnd. ol otber prlzea CODtrlbuled by
Amuscmeat
Co.
and
MeDonald'a
of
Pomeroy,
on Friday a1 I p.m. There will be
Glea Hoff1is, director of the
I'U
venclon
aad lotai l&gt;••s'nesse~
no calling hours.
· Veterinary Teaching Hospitill at
Arrangements are under the Ohio State University, said tissue
• dirccliqn,ol ~wina Funeral HJl111e umplelllkcn fnJm under lhc bide
.,. iD Pomeroy.
.
were tested. Test results confumed
the peamce u the oil.
Hoffsis met With fair orflcials in
a closed session Tueaday. Officials
. .
The Daily Sentinel
had eJtpected a recommendation for
Thoulande of people ....-n how to PNP.. lncon tllx
Three were filled and five others
action to come fran m. meeting.
(VIPIJIIIib
forfeited
bonds
iD
the
court
of
MidNlUml
from HAR Blook and 1hert ..n money •
The matter will be discussed
""bttoo•od ":"1 afton...,, Monday
dleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Toes·
1noom1 tax pr..-era. HAR Black, the wartd'1 largMI
ScpL 16 by a livestock commiuoe, day nighL
...._ ~ U Coar&amp;SJl::wc;,
Ollio II)' !lit Oblo Val1tJ
iiiD"I
which will recommend action at
lncamt tax .,.._.lion ••~•. offwa Ill lncollll Tllx
Fined were Marvin A. Oiler,
~v:··llii
••
~:--r·
lhc
Ohio
Expositions
Commission
CourM
8fartlng Sept. 14th. Mamlng, 8ftemaon, evening,
Oldo 411;;w I'lL lln-11111.
• clalo
Middleport, $425 and costs and ·
.....
at p
OJ, ()do.
meeting later tliat dlly.
lnd weekll'ld elM I II ... IVIIIII!ble.
ShariC c:ould lolc tbc ribbons he three days in jail, physical c6nb'OI
N1 t . TbeJ'n~'llt'" ,..._, ... th•
won llld the $1,600 be received of a motor velticlcs while under the
Experienced lnatructara •ell tllx law, thiary, and appiiOl!lo No~
No"-!
Mva.W11
. a&amp;all.ft, BraMID
from lhc ale of the SleQ', He also influence of alcohol or drugs;
CIIIIon. Clalaroam ciiCUIIlan 8ild pi'IICtlct problema
m ntnt --.
could be barred from state fair Thomas M. Mc.{:oun, Middleport,
--10017.
$10 and costs. operating an unsafe
JH'CIV* etudlntl with e tharaugh undlratandlng al Mch
I'Q8I'IU8TIII: ~~~~~~- ...._ ID
co;t:i~=
placed ICCOild in ill vehicle; and Scott G. Thoniaa,
tax topic Included In 1M c:aurM. Stucllnlllllm how tO
'l1lo DeOU"Iillol, lit Cnrl II.,
21• WI ALU-la.
diviaiound fourth overall In lhc Leroy, W. Va., $10 and costa,
hllndll
lncrewlngly complex Income tax IIIU8tlant ••
~
.
'
junior fair. It wu not sold It the
DICI PUSIIIOWII. ''
·~uta
Cline, Canal Winch·
theeotn8Pf0Qli .....
Sale ol Clllmpion.L
IIOilEL lt1ZPII
ester, $60, matin1 a illcJallurn;
.
.
01ro
j.eo
Shane
&amp;lao
ullibited
.
t
be
grand
Olio-~~~................................ . ......
.Ill
!dell far people who want ~ lnCiUee their tllx kn~wle
champion tlllrbt limb that brought Dwaine L. Weaver, Pomeroy, $S2,
r.--.. .
Olio - ............................
JIIJO
speedinJ;
Lisa
G.
StarCher,
Vfett
ecfte,
1ht !*I'M t119h11 IIUdentll haw to uve moilly
IIIIGJ.S corr
I~ $13,500 It lblllalo. ~
, PIICI
W.Va., $51, speeding;
UST 449.95
wu no eYDace t1 tamperiliJ with Columbia,
an 'lhllr tuM end lll8o ~ them far a rewarding
.
llroll!o..................................... - 0.0.
Angela
Marie
Eltins,
Letart,
W.
the Jamb, laid Ned Plrreu, Ohio Va., $53, speeding; Douglas Lee
. . . . .,.
lJ
Ceil&amp; ,·
It _
llilaooldoobii!IID=.'!"~
_
_ .... ......
ton. State meat 1pecialist, who exam- Eavenson,lluntington, W. Va.,
ined m. CIICIU.
The affordable M lncludll ..xlbaab and auppllel.
~a.llrool oe a - · obi or II
$55, apceding.
'
-.er.-wdltoo ..... car.dulll•• ntae1w C:.llll'" 1 of Actllftwnll'lt 8lld coneS1ta .i
tinuing ecluallliln
(ClUe). QuallfleclgredUitH of
No ........
.., ..0
...,. _
_ponollloollrt
_.... to
. _
1ht OCIUI'M nwy be atrerec1 Jab lntllrVI- with H6R
HOI.ila MEDICAL CENTER
iO 2 LJ
Dilclarpa. Aaa. 25 - Mn. RtlaBlack but . . under no obligation to accept
Veterau Melaorlal Ht~~~~ltal
IICII P..Dpterlllll dqhtcr, Randal
employment.
.
TUESDAY. ADMISSIONS •
IJ ~-~-~....... ........&amp;!:.14
Chriltlan,
Mrs.
Quia
Nelson
and
.......'" .. __ .................._ ..__ 11
Marjorie Grimm, Racine (SUDday);
1011, Mrs. T'un Smith llld 1011.
'
......
;........................
Thaea lnlar••d In more lnfarntlan about H6R Block
0 2, . . . . ""*
Blrtha, Aua. 25 • Mr. and Mrs. Hc1co Gibba, MalOn, W.Va.
Tu CcMne t1111y aotitllot 1ht Tall F,.. Phone No.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES •
JJ
lMter Lewis, 1 daajhter, .Racine.
........
... .........
.
.
.
...
........ .....
1.....
8•2000 01' Clll 11~1182-tll74.
Mr.llld Mn. Olristcpher Yeaugcr, Marie Punlcy, Anthony Adami
............. _................
'
'
IIIII
O«qe
Relanlie.
.
a dangb!llll', Syncusc.

r-------·'f't.-tl---------------------.. .

•,
JS.
WASHING1UN- Marine Cpl.
:
Some of the cost-culling effon was prompled by clllnges in finlllcioJ
Chuck
Kleckner lost the use of his
: accounting standards that require most employers 10 ~ bca1lh-carc:
right
band
while serving in the mil• · liabilities on their financial statemenls beguuwrg in 1993.
i
wy
in
the
19 SOs, snd was dis;. The need to cut costs has prompted many companies 10 bile the bulleL
charged
with
70 percent disability
t While the immediate ~oal is a healthier looting financial statancnt, lhc benefits. About
10 years ago, a
:: moce basic molivation rs to shed burdensome obligations
•·
"Employees are no longer changing their retiree plllll simply bec••sc mugger savagely beat him on the
:: they changed their active employee programs," says Patricia W'rbon, a . sueets of New Y00: City, crippting
: consulting specialist at Foster Higgins. She said maJOr changes n likely hiS other hand.
Kleckner went to a Veterans
: 10 continue.
Administration
physician to have
In the good-lime 1980s, the companies ~ave IIIII didn't particularly
his
disability
raised
to 100 percenL
L _worry about iL Now, lhcy're worried. and therr laking bact.
Instead, it was slashed to 30 percent because the doctor saw
"improvenicnt" in his right hand.
Despairing and facing destitu·uon, Kiectner called New York's
Republican Sen. Alfmsc D'Amato
in a plea for help. "Anger was not
:
By The Aslocialed Pras
the word," says Klcctner. "Fear
,· Today is Wednesday, Aug. 26, tbc 239th dlly of 1992. There arc 127
was the word. Fear. Terror."
~:. days left in the year.
Not only did D' Amato get ·
·: Today's Highlight in History:
Kieckner's benefits restored, he got
;. Twenty years ago. on Aug. 26, 1972, the summer Olympics games
them increased to the fuiiiOO per~ opened in Munich, West Germany.
cent disability K!eckvr deserved.
I :
On this date:
" I don't thinlt that if Ire and his
f· In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius c - invaded Brilllin.
orfrce hadn't gouen got involved I
,; In 1847, Liberia was proclaimed 111 indcpendcat rq~~~blic
.
would have had a prayer," Kleclcn~-· In 1873 radio electronics pr·oneer Dr. Lee DeFon:st was born rn Couner told us. "Somebody finally
:- cil Bluffs, Iowa.
cared. Having been hurl in the
~ In 1883, the island volcano Krabtoa bepn t114J(ilrg with increasingly
1950s, I had lhc disability so long.
large explosions.
Then getting hurt again - emo~: In 1920, the 19th amendment to the U.S. Conllitulion, guanrnteeing
tionally and physicaDy it destroyed
· American women the right 10 vote, was declared ia effca.
me."
. In 1939, tbc f11'5t televised major lcaluc bac:blll pnes were s!Jo~ ~
Kleckner's story and thousands
;..experimental station W2XBS - a doublehtader betMcn the CIIICurnab
or others show why constituent sert tteds and the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbeb.Field. {The RtJdl won the fii'SI vice has become the hallmark or
~ pme. 5-2, tbc Dodgers the second, 6-1.)
~-- · In 1957, the Soviet Union announced it had s~fully tested an
~ ilitercontinental ballistic missile.
~; In 1961, the officiallnltlllational Hockey Hall of Fame opened in
.:· roconto.
.
. .
..:. In 1964 President Lyndon B. Johnson was IIOIIImted for a ttml.of
Is George Bush destined for
: ifrJCC in !liS own right at the Dcniocratic national convention in Atlantic defeat
in Novcmbrtl The pollsters
: City,NJ.
·
say so. Milly media pundits tblnt
•· • In 1974 Charles Lindbcr~h - the flnl man to fly solo, non-SlOp
so. And the Democua hope JO.
:: icross the Atlantic - died at his home in Haoii atlhc IF ol72.
But the wager here is thai the
~- · In 1978 Clrdinal Albino Luciani ol Venice was elected the 264th
president will win IWicction. Htle
Pope ol
RolDan Catholic Churcb following the dcadl dl'lul VI. The
are five n:asons:
·· new ~toot the name Pope John Paul L
Bush rises to lhc occasion when
~ In 1983 Soviet President Ymi V. Andropov offered 10 "~" his the odds are stacked apinst him. In
: eounlry's ~-range missiles as part ol a superpowa llgreCIIICIII m
1988, the Slllle pollsrers, the same
pundits and the same Democrats
Un:f~: Poland's Roman Catbolic primate. Archbishop Jozef wrote off lhcu·VIct Prelidcot Bush
~ Glemp, called on Polish authorities to release Solidarity founder Lech
when he wu i 7 points down 10
Michael Dukakil (tbe figure by
~ W~= yem asil: In an attempt 10 eliminate a ~pe!pO-· stumbling which Bush cumatly traib Bill
: bloct, Welt German Chancellor Helmut Kohl said bill COIIIItry would Clinton) with lillie more chan t1uee
; ~ ill 72 ~ing lA rockeU if Wasltinaton lKid Molcow acrlpped months remainins until the elec• all tbeir iDiallledill&amp;-rgc nuclelr weapons.
tion. Blllh bee I•IIC I laPiinaiOr on
:· naZ:r.::: 111 addrcas 10 the Supreme Soviet, lhc Soviet Unioo's · the campaip trlil a ullimllely
~
•
, President Mikhail S. Gorblchev promiled national breezed into tho Wblte Houae on.
~ eiDo liarrlll in a lllt-ditclt effort 10 p enne bil parllllall, but leaden ol the llrqth ola
~ SoYillt •cv-llla told him the oo. 11central power !1111 p r d
Similarly, lllllly lhouaht Bush
~ , Todly'i Blilbdays: Former Wasllinlton P1:J1t Excc:utiYe Editor Ben- would meet his political Waterloo
:·JimiD Brldllle·ls 71. Author Ben J. Waa•mlil S9. FcaoiCitllemG- by darin&amp; 10 10 10 _. IPinll Sad~ cndc ,ii:vpreNential nominee Clerlldinc Fen110 Is 57. Singer Valerie dam Huuofa. Tho Democratic
· $1m~ Ia 44. "ToOiaht Show'' budlcsdcr Bl'lllford Minalis is 32. I~ lD Con..- IIOOd four·
• ..-Ua caulay Culkin Is 12.
.
sq11110 qailllt tile prwiclent. But
~ ~~ for Today: "Whom the IIOdl would dellroy they fnst mate Bulh )xellidecl over. the greatest
..'m" -Eaqlidcl. Greet poet (c. 480 B.C.-406 B.C~)
Amencan 1111itar)' victory since
,\
J
~

round-trip tickets must indicate
what airports were used to get
voutlrers in an as-yet-to-be-determined amount depending upon

By Tbe ~laled Press
Aer0111be aatloa
Hurricane Andrew tore through
Louisiana with 140 mph winds
early today. but the storm slowed
as it ran througll warm Gulf waters
11111 turned inland.
The hwricane touched off a tornado that ripped through the New
Orleans subUib of LaPlace, injuring
at least 30 people. Andrew also
flooded roads, uprooted trees and
cut. power lines throughout the
regron.
At dawn, the storm was abuut
3!1 miles south-southeast of
Lafayeue, La., and maximum sustained winds were liS mph.
Forecasters predicted up to 10
inches of rain from the stonn in
Louisiana and tbc southern Mississippi Valley. Rain from Andrew
was expected well into the P.lains
as tbe SIOl'lll moved nonhwcstwanl.

MICH .

·Airlines settle suit and still fly high

The.Daily Sentinel

----- -- ·

Andrew hits Louisiana, churns inla-nd

Weather• forecast for daytime c:Onditions

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
.Wedntldey, AugUit 26, 1ee2

.. ------

Pomeroy-lllddleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Th,rll4ay, Aug.l7

Page 2-The Dally sentinel

'

1

,.,
-~

Wedneaday, Auguet 26, 1182

rCommentary

.•
•.

- ..

,_..,
_c.nw
w•
. ... . .-..........
. . . . ..-. . . .

Marty-r.

........

.... =

...... . .-

Hospital news

.

'299 ~ 9$
.
....

..,,

....

unn.

=

w-.. . . . . ........ .-......,. .-.....

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

Hospital news

.

,.

.· f
.)

"' .,

�Wedneeday, Auguet 26,1992

The Daily Sentinel

~,Sports

Wedne~ay,

Auguet 26, 1982

,.,. .'
I!' t .

~)Jelcher's arm leads Cincinnati to 7-1 victory 'over Philadelphia
:. :
ByJOE KAY
.
::- CINCINNATI (AP)- Greg
•• Swindell has a bad t.:k. .Josc Rijo
~ has a tricky e~ and Cllril lfaril.
~o. lbond has no~:;·

Jf the~ Reds are going ~;
..
to mate lfiiiiD theNL West, Tun
I welcome the challenge..
Belcher's going to have to lead it Belcher said. "I feel! can be a btg
wi~ more performances lite. his 7· part of i~. I haven't been re~l
I VIctory 1'uesday over Phtladel: oleascd wtth the way my season s

:•
::
•:

;. . In the maJOrs•.,
·: ;
:: :

::

Eut. . 0 1 w L M

Gl

::• . =:t:::
::: :::~ ~ ·:~
Ooi&lt;oao. ...............- 63 62 .!04
••

2J
7.$

s, J..ouU
-1!0 "67 .451
..ua
New
YcU........
...... - ....,.J,
::
l'hilldclpllil .......... .st 73 .411
·: :
w.- 0 1 M

P.S
14
19

.. .

,• · Alllnll ....-........._..74 -49 .fOl

:: : ~~ ::: ~~ ~ ~ "{
••

s.. n.n.............$9

~ .461

16.5

~:,d; :: ::::~ ~ ::;: ~

.

Chieo..,
l'lloMa, w-

.... khl ToUey.liaOI- o...u JWr.
"'"'· .,... ,...;..., Rob

Tuesday's scorn

'"· 91: 1... Oonulo&amp;.

~..'io,"is;~:&gt;ll;
~·
HITS - - . . . , If.
·o, 166; E.

~'!".::~d-FI•m~J~..;~~
bJcko, ond nnl&lt; _;........,- . _

-U5;
-Mica.
. IJ9:
Cl.m'll·
LAND,
JIL. _,
a, 155;
MatNnr Ylllt, toM&lt; Fr-. o...u,
1
Seollle.
40; Maltjftalr. N... Yod. 33: Orilfer,

Pt....t Habc:nlwn,
Tro•il Dovil,
.... "cllle,
Shoun
wit*,_;_,..,
en••d
Ia·
Jwod
~ CrrY CHII!PS . _
HcrtM Andenon. Eric E..,;..,. lllrmond bvin, com...,.ca: Donrl o...~

31;1t...,;,T....,30:Si-,T....,:!O:

wido-wn:DoonlbowoiOIIJanrO.-

".i.f!r,

=w-"'i ~

~~!\!f31~!:.":m~~!!;

to. 6; Siom. Tau. 6; Whilo. r........ 6:
- · C1licqo. 6;
6.
HOME RUNS - MoOWo, OU!ood,

-....Mil........

s.. Diop 7, C!icoa• 4

Plu.bwa)&gt; 10, lAe AnpiJo 3
New Yodc l. Saa Frua.co I

~:," 2't"'T-....lloaoil,
c:1:!::}::.:.'~~:
Docn&gt;;a,
:ZS; Bolle,
!lJM!L\NO.Z4.
sroLIIN 11AS1!S _.........,Mil.....
•
•3 I H d
d •3
2),

~-•1an ' ~ ;
.... "' ; , a eJIOCI, ~
Loftoo. CLEVELAND, 42; Aa...noo,
Botlim..., 42; Polooio, Colifomio, 42;
.._, 0&gt;ap, 31: L - . au...
p,36.
PJTCIDNG (14 dociliGlll) '2--3 .1110, 2.35 Jtct

1•••

n..-.... "'

- - . ,....,.._ '

Thursday's IIIIMI

Monuu.l (Oud.aor fi·l) a\ AUan~~
(SmoiU 14-1~ 1:4ll p.m.
St LouiJ (O.botnc 9·6) at HOUiloa

(Williomll-4),1:3l p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EulontDI•IIIoo
T""'
W L M
t ......._........ -....71 l! .!63
Blllimcn ......... -....69 l7 .!41
Milwtubc .............67 51 .!36

Gl
2
3..1

66 .410

10..S

C!J!VELAND ...... .SI 61 .464

12J

Botton.............. _....S7

69

.4$2

l4

H ....

lO .603
l7 .loll

7

57 .S40

1

66
69
61
74

.414
.4.17
.4.12
.413

IS
11.$
19
:M

Tuesday's KOI"tt
New YOlkS, Mifwauba 1
lloOian 5, OU1ond 4

'

;

MorriJ, T..,.11o, 16-!, .762, 4.33; PI~ Sooalo. 15-5, .-no, 112; Mcllowdl.
&lt;lll&lt;op,I7·7..1QI, 3.11; loluuioo,Bohi·
..... 1:1-!, .706, 2.13; AJIP!e!:,I.IMII
C!IJ, 14-6, .700, 2.4'; llooii&gt;;

Mil........

s-.

11·5..61'7,3.19.
STIIWlOUTS - Clemeao,
171; ...... Nnr Yod:. 165; K. kltol..,

-·-

;---.

.

Transactions
Nlllt.oiLoopo
LOS ANOEIJ!S DOOOI!RS - Acti·
...... Eric Dovil, - · 1\an !he 1l·
o... •
, WI ihe ll-doydilobledlill.

:z.wc:;bled

lioL-

SAN FIANCISCO GIANTS Ploceol BID Swill. pildler, IIIII Malt Boi·
..,, - · ... lilt u ...., dioobled lil1.
DIYO Blllbe, J&gt;itd-, lad Lewio.
· - PbomU. "'lito ....
cificC..Lotp.

t ±· l.&amp;.bdre Arr

w.t.-m arauaa, nllllll.D.St•nn
IIO'Wil,. "•*
BW

a.a

k v,

Wt....IGa u4 ........ Sadda. oan.bocl!o; 0....U 11oat11tat ~ad N_. """llcltlol, uxllbioS-.pwd.Ploceol

CuM Mel

.~ . . . . . . . O.Y6

bwallal, liCkle.- ia)aild . . . . .
BUFFALO IU..U - WaivM Htl

a.m., 1' + ... o.a ....... ~

back; Jia Coucla, placet.idtu; Dou1

II'=w,,..··

lleDt....U, Jl'llllOr. Rodpn. 1 - Otildo, Clft'OIIIivo liaamon;
t..aaud
CCIIDid •+: Prlllk.
lmd
....
lcoooo; ....... a:U;

a.,
-""'
Wllta. wid&amp; ••
eel..,.; X..y Gllllhle, lllllllin&amp; hock.
Pia* Job O.Yil, oft'«&lt;liv• J.l.a-an:

_..u,.

•
.
.

·

RUNS - liJI!o. Hounon, 79 ;
Holllno,PIIiloHpWo11; V..st,U.Piatburah, 17: Bullet, Lo• Anaelu. 71 ;
llc.lhleldo, · 76; CJrioiool, 1o1m""'
75 ;- Daul~DB, Pliifaclolp~ia
74.
RBI
, 19:
Shclfldd, Sen Di-so, II; McOrift, San
Dieao. ll; Pendleton, Atlanta, 79;
V&amp;nSI , U . - 7:1; Bt....U. lloutlM, tl; BGDC11, 9fuibutp., ,1 ; Mum,,
NewY411k,11.
HITS - Sbelliold, s.. Di&lt;to. 1l3;
Allonto. ll:l; VonSIJb, PIUI.....h, l SI ; DoShioldo, Moouool, 147 ;
s.. Diep, 14.1; ~~
14Z Soo4bcrJ. 0Ucop, l40; lhller, C.
......... o!O.
DOUBLI!S - W. Oak, S.. l'nocilco, n : Duncan , Pbiladolphia. , ,
Vo nSI,.t~ l'illollwiJI. 33; LWfonl, SL
t...u 31· Sh&lt;lliold; Soo~30:00..
aom, ~au1.29;W.
,'2&amp;.
TIW'LI!S - D. - ,
IJ;
finley, - . I I:
11; ....,_, Sl. Louio,IO; V..stJb, Jloo.
b..p. 10;
Lao ""'"~.W::
Monndino, Pllllo4olplllo, 7; DO$
Mcouool, 7;Otioo-. 7.
IIO!oll! IIJNS - ~ S. Diep,
29; lt..m.W, San ~. :r7;·Dn.llc.,
Pllllodolflll•, 23; - .
21;
Hollia1, PhiltUlphil, 11: L

' L - .....J!Ically.Hd+ lo I*·

a-.-

o..,...

.

,

-

-.loltolo~oodYuWollon,

In '•*-'1 Jtlf &amp;1111, tftlll qdi A•·
•II• Ololtb, .We receittf', Plettd

Allonta. .306.

·
.
.

Iomio lbllw, ........ boc1!. Olld Do..,t
Wrat,-.. boct, oallto
unablo· lo-ptr!orm lilt. PlaC.d Funk
Milllke,
wWo - - · ... WI Slq&gt;ha&gt;
110ft. 11 t l~tc, oa in~~
CIIICAOO III!AIIS - WliYOd Mowy
Bllfont, puatc; Jloa M~t~oe~, ofrealin
•c:tlo; Eilo a...,UaJa eod; 1 - Loo
IIIII Malt Btny, .....bocloo; Jaloo Wi·
l•y • ..ttty; J.. a Browa tnd Gene
'I'Mmu. wide tacei~•a: Nikki Fi.lher,
f\llJbrMt;; W a.i1 Wilfoa. tia±c:¢a.
CII'ICII'INATI IINGALS
..,..._..,,.. ............ , ck
CLIVILAND IIOWNS - lo •

a....,

a..,... s..

...

LOS..,..,.~ •• uMS

. ....,.J_ . .,....

•"' ,..,.. '""..,.,...,,w-.
..._'""
.....•-•..

r... -. ......

11,. llock, Olld hlrkk a...., wide ,..
ct~wr............. ,......,
I)AIJ.AS COWBOYS - C!oimed

Chad faraa. ~tnd, off wlivcn fftlrn
lho 'W uhiDJIOa'k•• Rclcuod Brian
Milchell, OCIIIII'tltct.

DENYEII BRONCOS - Apeed to
Yllnl wiLII Wen. PDwm. dclcnivc tnd.
DETIOIT UONS - Sipod K..in

-

Glover.......
OR1!I!N BAY PACXDS - Apod
to . . , . . wb.h Raben Brown, clefcruive
HOUSTON On.EilS - Waived P11

lloolo, -

wiiii-.J'

1

,

•
•

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Plocedllut lAe Dybo, - ......... ..

....

lilt.

,_,..,.,y&amp;icall,.._blo-.........
....
-.-··

lacy Vinctml, comerblek, ud Raben

uv.l'looed

......ho-Gil"-'·
....:J.:b,
,,_, 11--A~
· ....
RIOl'Yt-nwwu 11. 11Jpld

Oll I

o-a•
Dev...,, tl&amp;ltt 1011, ~ad Bobby
Mone,fulll&gt;odt,tolhe_... .......

.. todtlo. A,....t to ....,

'+ ......c:aa~you

mrs - -I traiQ:
-

NEW
YORK
lcue
W) UIO Hctan Uaivmily u

ins lite throulh :1009. lteocheol iiiJm7 ,.._
llanmt with A.B. Brown. n111181altact.
MINNESOI'A VIKINOS- RoloJMd

Allrod Andcnon oM Rid&lt; l'&lt;naeJ. Nil·
nin&amp;bocb; Brion Dolt!. IY• Cocw Uld
Ed Suuer, linct.dl.a; Bla Oriflhh an4
Eric Wcnul, ofCeoaive tltklu; Lydcll
uxll.nnw.. Onba, ....... bocto;
lnoiD Smith and Cunil BIDka, oomabocl!o; a...~~]olln
leu. punter, Roman A.o6ene~:~, ti"r,
Xeadal Sm ith , wide roe:ei.vu; Briaa
Sm.itb, de!CIIIive end. Placed l..orenJo
" - . deiOOiivo.....,.,. LuU Am,
tiaht 1M ...
Nib
Clicldlo, ................. lilt pbyliCJIIy.

injwed--

n•LJa liCI pafoun liR.
PmSBUJIGH STEBLERS -

WliYOdCni&amp;V_,-..-,

0..--..

Comeli11 B"eaton, qoartlrback; Mite
S.W\den •d David Dllliell. nwalraa
bo&lt;b; Aodmr Hilt ... lahoor Wllbo',
wido - - l'lul Slllll, daJil cod; H•·

homlomoil'""
li-:1coto~...rEoc}-ao4p.

linobto:kon; Dmd Hupu, -~.::
Na• W'r.D.-., clc6alin liiMmla.
Oary Joru11, Mlety, OD iftj;red niiiOn'a.
Claimelll Mit:tty WMtUn.-.

.. ..u.. -

'

k,

lito Nowl!qllod l'lai-

011.

PHOENIX CAIIDINAU - WliYid

---

Bri.mBn.....,.,todtlo.

SAN DIEOO OIAIICI!IS - WliYid
c-~~uow.
Ittr&lt;~~o~ta,

"""""''

-

m

BJ BEN WALKER
AP BasebaU Writer

The MoniiUI Expos have seen
plenty rl Tom Glavine this season.
And, it's safe to say, they want tc
scehim · .
Tbe = s again solved the
Atlanta ace Tuesday night, ending
his 13·pme winning stteat with a
6-0 viciOr)' over the Braves at Ful·
ton County Stadium.
· Glavine (1!1·4) is 1·3 with a
5.87 ERA against Montreal this
JCISOII, and l·lllifetime. He's IS.
I with a 2.11 ERA against every·
OIIC else this yw.
"I've had a tough time a~nst
them in my career. That s no
secret," Glavine said. "If I had the
answer, it WOQ!dn't happen."
Glavine, trying to win his sec·
ond strai&amp;ht Cy Young Award, had
not losl since May 22 - at Mon·
treal - ud had set a franchise
m:cnl for consea.tive viCICJies. He
won back in MoniiUI last week,
bullhis time the Expos tagged him
for five runs, three rl them earned,
011 seven hits and lhlee walks in 4

.lea••

afler Thursday. But Atlanta, lead·
ing the West by 4 1/2 games, and
MoniiUI, trailing in the East by 2
1/2 games, could IIICCI in the play·
offs.
That could give Tim Wallach, a
.386 career hitler against Glavi.ne,
and the rest of the Expos another
chance.
·
Chris Nabholz (9-9) outpilChed
Glavine, giving up seven hits in 7
1/3 inningJ. He bad been 0·2
against Allanll lhis year and 0·3
lifetime.
Nabholz drew a wallc in the sec·
ond inning that loaded the bases
and led to a bases-loaded walk to
Delino DeShields and an RBI single from Spike Owen.
In other games, St. Louis
downed Houston S-3 in 13 innings.
Pittsburgh routed Los Angeles 10.
3, San j)j, stopped Chic:ago 7-4
and New
defeallld San Fran·
cisco 2·1.
Cardllllls 5, Astros 3
Houston, playing at the
Astrodome for the rust time after a
mmth·long road trip, still couldn't
get home as it got I'IIDJierS thrown
out at the plate Ia the lOth and lith
innings by left fielder Bernard

Tm

Gilkey.
Andujar c..teno, called up from
the minors earlier in the day,
became the first Honaon player 10
hit for the cycle sinco Bob WIISOO
011 J~me 24, 1977. He ~led iD the
~ iDnlng, homered lD die sev·
enth, doublec1 in the 11th and sin·
gled in the 13th.
Andres Galarraga singled home
the~ run in the 13th for SL
Louts off Joe Boever (3-6). Cris
Carpenter (4-4) pitched I 2/3
innina• for the victory and Lee
Smith got hil33nl sa'le.
l'lnla 10, Dodltn 3
And_y VID Styte homered and
drove tn four cans u Piusburgb
won at Dodger Slldium.
Vu Slyte and Alex Cole each
had lhlee of the Pinla' 13hits.
Danny Cox (3-2), cut by
Philadelphia earlier Ibis season,
won hia fint decilioa for Pitts·
burgh. He - called up from the
minors Jut wet and pitclted 3 2/3
scoreless inninp for the viclory.
Ramon ManinCz (8-11) failed 10
rctiJe • batter in the lhinl inning.
He pvc up five runs m five hits
and two walks.

Dooold ""' linaoyll.J;re. - Jlw.
l)'l]cnl:iN, lOCkie; IUcb 1..... puolor,
Dorrick IIAioat, ......toocl!; Cluio Q4.
ham, aalety, aDd Cnia WeB. ., d.pt
a~d. PbCid a., ~Ct-: ..n.,
and Dnid an,.oa,
«, an 11M
ph,CCIIIJ ........ to
Ploced
I&gt;Onni.e Eld•, oameitlact:; Jaha. ~

9-·'""
)wod-...

Malt Noo ............

SAN FRANCISCO~- Slpod
Jmy Jliot, wide ....... to • - - tl
three one-~ar coauaeta. Jiaaod rua
JUOI1dtuk,~ ....... Conley ""'Adom

w-..-.-:

T.., KJI&lt;o 1011 r .. s...-. .w. ...
oe:iv.a; Mib 5 11lfrr't DnW Wiaial.

Odell H•uW, Mlcltaol- ud
Cony Mly&amp;.W. ....,_.,,...._. W..nie hck1011, nf•)'t ~ Saai~.
linebtclcer, and Chuck Thomu, c.ter.
Ploced Rn&lt;iney 'lltomoo. _.. ....... "'
injwed .......
SEATILB SEAHAWill- Woived
Ruuy HUaer q.anttblct; Mite Jovanovich 1M 1I ' ' , atr..i"

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

__

ooiY«. Plocedlla)'D I
injwed-...

...

lip,....,,..,

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -

.w.-. .......

Sip..t Joey Browaer, NhAJ;,Wilnd
Ridtr NoaW.
10n, deftui" be.t; U111 A1GU0 Hiponiil&gt;IIICIRoiMIIHulJ,_~IIoclli

Avo1o SuRPRISEs!
CALL BEFORE YOU DIG
1-800-362-2764
II yai re planning a prqecr !hal
requires digging. you can save
yourself a 101 of trouble ·· ana
rnavbe even your life - by calling
the Ohio Utilttes Protecton Service (OUPS) before you start
State law reqUIIes you to
contact utility companres
before excavation begins
10 make cenain you

wen 1 hil any electncal . tele phOne. gas or water lines. OUPS
w1ll nandle lhe deta1ls lor yoo. free
of cnarge Jusl call the toll-free
number at least two days
oefore you beg in your
pro)E!cl. and they'll notify
member utilities to mark
any lines in the work area.
No surprises

.. -

'

LAYAWAY NOW FOR
BEST SELECTION.

of Ohio

-jh

.;:;:s

•

Mtjor~ 2 ·

'Ill ~

[~~sacrili a,:, llewt

1

IOC "~ •
Davtd ~~~=
~~~ !10 S 1•3 ioo' . willl fCU"
and
Mite lfcn.
110 'IChcr (I
• •
~::. founh
.../'linal O:f::
1111
got
2ht sa~
.
all
Kevin ~u (!3-~e:' :ven
~~runs
and waited
llllllllgs, struck
two.
.uatlll
9
Rick~'(13-ll) ICIIICred
. .0 .
. •
Bald
15
four btU
at
~ got 4 . .
one 111 every= and Cbito Mar·
. Milt~~ !be Orioles, who
~ the thJ'triple play in the
.
.
the second at
m&amp;Jors thiS season,

uu- •

!au::

..:f

:.":ne

f O:t :J::f'll kasl

~BT~(6-6)gaveupfour

runs and ~isht hits in five-plus
innings.
Ran1en 6, Royals l
Kevin Reimer hit a &lt;444-foot
two-run btxncr in the third inning,
and Ruben Siena lidded a solo shol
in the Ciftb as Texas stopped a
losing SII'Cak.
Gecrge Bleil went 2 fa 4.

seVCD•pnlC home

Jose Guzman (11 · 10) aUowed
seven hits in seven innings, while
loser Kevin Appier (14-6) _.ve up
five runs and nine bits 1n five
innings.

WINNING FORM -Seattle slarter Dave F'lellil11e8u11Kk to
ftre 1 pitch to the plate In TuesdaJ alpt's
leu I 1• a-t
against t.be vlslliag Cleveland 1ndlaiiS, wbo rea 6-0. Fkrlaa .._. a

A••

two-bluer. (AP)

HOLE.IN·ONE PRIZES- A lucky golf who
aets a bole·la-one In tbll weekend '• Tblrd
Allllual CbUclren's Cltrlltrus Golf Tounament
cOiild drive away Ia one ollhese cars. Pictured
with tile can are (L-R) J.D. StOl')' rl Smilb·Nelson Moton, BW Qllic:kel ol Davii-Qalekel Insur·
ancet Jim Asbury ol Sout.bern
Oblo
Coal, Bob
·n•-

Soulhem Ohio Coal Company
will sponsor the third anauaJ Cbil·
dren's Christmas Tournament, a
four-player scramble Saturday and
Sunday Rivaside Golf Course.
The entry fee is $200 per team
and includes a nine-hole warmup
on Saturday, with cart from S
to7:30 p.m. along with a weiner
roast and music.
A hole-in-one during the touma·
mcnt' could win a lucky solfer a
choice of a brand new car furnished
bY. Don Tate Chevrolet, Oldsmo·
bile, GEO, Smith Nelson Moun or
Tri.County Ford.
Other sponsors for the touma·
ment include Davis·Quictellnsur·

1...._ a-.:

.,..,_lilt.

tllnlnl$, and Bernie Wtlhalls
~ olf Din I"
two-run
dri¥1: m ~fwt-NII
j
. lgtn C,RBI leader c iJ

Roush of Riverside Golf c.;oune; JtOa lUlU ol
Tri·Counly Ford, Mu Wllitllkla o1 Sou!Mn
Ohio Coal, Rusty Book11a1 of Booltraa aad
Assoclltes, representln1 C0111moowaltll Natloa·
al and Midland Natloaal, a1d Gew~t 811111 of
Doa Tate Cbevorlet..OidllnobJie.GEO.

Summer

Southern Ohio Coal to sponsor linkfest

Chria Collina ••• Otlaad Thuloa,

992·3148

-- .···--·---

Montreal hands Atlanta 6-0 loss
to end Glavine's 13-game win streak

.AT IIG liND HOI.nl I FI11ESS
MOI.•WID. MOIIIHS 10 1.11.
MOI.·WID. IIGHIS 6:30 P.M.
IUIS.·TH•. liGHTS 5:30 P.M.
Ow• 992-6893
Awje ConnaiJ 247-4215
IIG IE. IUDII &amp; FlliESS 992·2149

COWMBIAGAS

"

bee;;:

auc.io

..

linobJcba: Codrio

~

,)

canidlle,IOO.
~ina didn't allo~ a hit until
cootie Kenny I;ofton lined a doub_le 10 CCDier With two outs m the
SIXth, and be fintshed with a twohitter Tue51\ay night, leading the
Seattle Manners over the Cleveland Indians 6-0.
Fleming (IS·S) struck out six
and walked none !n his founh com·
pi~ game and third shutout.
Mark Grant told me that aftet
the first~ you know if you've
got no·hll stuff," Fleming said,
referring to his Seattle teammate.
"I ~ thinking about it because
KeYID. Gross recently threw ooc. It
was m tbe back of my mind
.rvc.,~_!leen !hat far."
. . mg &lt;u~""' ~ff the Indians
wtth JI!Sl96 pitchc3 m a P!RC that
took JUSt I hour, SS mmutes .
Loftoo got both hits r..- Cleveland,

CUSSES IIIII lUI. 31

'

··=~----· -·-~----~~--

Amencan League Rookie .cf the
Year. A ~ew more ~ like the
one he Pitched qamst Cleveland
and:he'UbeatcpCyYoungAwant

singlin with one OUI illlbe ainlh.
savQ lc:ader, got Terry Steinbacb
c~ was so fnlslrallhat on a grounder w!th the bases loadCarlos Baerp, a swiiCJI.hiaer, bat· ed and two outs m the !i"'lh f..- his
ted left-handed against the left· 27th~· Paul QuanmU &lt;2·2)handed Fleming in the ninth. He the WIIIIICI'. •
~out to~ blsc, end·
MlleSOII6,BiueJa;p3
mg the game.
A power outage caused a 19·
Charles Nagy (13·9) allowed 11 m~ delay in the sixth inn!ng at
hits, suuck out four and walked Com.tskc~ Part !lcfore Chtcago
four in his lOth comt:~-- wontts !~ Sllai
. . ght. Toronto losl
one behind American
lead· for the SIXth bmc 1n seven~ as
er Jacll: McDowell of Chicago.
Charlie Hougb.(6-10) gamed his
In ot!wr games Boston beat 201st career VICtory and Shawn
Oakland S-4
beat Toronto Abntl hit a pair of RBI singles.
6-3 New Ycrt beat MiJwautee S.
David WeDs (7·8) allowed six
1, Detroit beat Minnesola 4-3, BaJ. runs IDd six hits in 4 .1·3 innings.
timore beat California 9·1 and !tO!Jerlo H~andcz ptlChed three
Teus beat Kansas City 6-2.
IDDinp for bis fourth save.
Red Sox s, Atllldic:s4
VaMw5,Jrewua1
Dennis Eckersley (6-1) blew a
Sa MilileUo (3-0) woo for the
save chance for only the second third time in four major leque
time in 421ries chances this season, . ~ allowinJ o!'J run and seven
allowing Billy Hatcher's two-out, . b!ts. '!' SC¥1:!11DDIDgs a .~g
two-run double in the ei,hlh 11 vtsmng Milwaukee tn tiS thud
Fen way Park after intenuonally Sll'llight loss. ·
waiting pinch-hitter Wade Boggs.
• Danny Tartabull homered off
Hatcher's seventh· inning homer Bill Wep1111 (11·11), ~allowed
closcddleRedSoxto4·3. ·
fourrunsandsevenbitsln61·3
Jeff Reardon, baseball's ca.-

:... Bob Clttlalon, ........ boo*: Jlw.
noll Colbert. Donic:t ~ Wllllo-

UI:O.-. .....

;::?
...
16. 4 '

Da~e Fleming looks like the

IDIIICS

TUDITIONAL
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
AVAILABLE
THROUGH

...., Aii~':.-~n:
-..

; IJ Tile ADOCillled Press

~ves and Expos are not
scheduled ~play apin this ICISOII
COLES li'IJURED Clnclnnali's DarneD Coles (left)
has bls rlpt ankle checked by
trainer Larr7 Starr alter lnjur·
lng II durin&amp; the Reds' aame
wilh tbe Ylsltlnl Plllladelphia
Pblllles Tuesday night, wlllcb
lbe Reds woa 7-1. Coles was
taken from the field on a
stretcher. (AP)

lldd11p1Mt, Ohio

Fleming·'s two-hitter pushes Mar~~ers t.o .~-0 win over Tribe

2/3 . .

c...

ciiiCINNAn. 1:1'1; • - · a. Jllolo,
·~"''IIIII - lAo ..
a. ~
)3;
W~'

That was one mrung after OUt·
fielder Glenn. .Braggs .left because
f blurred
buted
o .
v~ston attn
to an
allergic rcacllon.
, 'It was crazt" Oliver said..
all
"But it's been I way
year.

~~~~

'• a-..

·~ - C--YIIIt. '

n~! ~th wthht.lenl&amp;!idi~ngg~lonewas
1 ID e I UIDI ,
p....,
taken from the fie!~ 0!1 a stretcher.

P!acltney Olld Pu1 - · 1rocoiven. oacl Ouioo M~noJ, tl&amp;ltt

=

2 1 4 : - . - . 170; .. - .
' Now Yolk, 154: 0 . Mo.W.., Qlooao,
. 141; Dnbol, Pilllborp, 144: ll]o.

~·~--

1011

-l·Ilk•,

Ill,-.

.

"""""a ....... J.... ~
J Sdo 'dw, ....... ~
Courtney Otiffin and Evoreu. Nicholu,
delenolve l&gt;ocb; Hendricb lolutooo,
I

-..,42:....,

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· 11-1. II: lomo,IM
17;
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- .... Xelviolloail, ..,_,

-.u.-.

..... 11;~~11.
IITOUN BASES - Odoooot, - .
a.1,63; D Sill II
1M~"' IM*fool, St. ....... "'
lobono, CINON!!An, S!; llgo,
:12: rw.,. ~ 31 : llieo,
Alllolo.31.
moDN0(14' I ' ) - Ciovloo,
AtiJolo.lt-I,.H6,1!6;T•I J, k
Lowi1, 11-S, .7:12, 2.03; lwiMtll,
CINCINNAD. 1:1-6, .11017, 2J&amp;; Miqll,
as-,IU, .1161,1:11: I '
t Al..... 10.!, ...,,127; 1..
1).7, .«JJ. Ul: Ow Nnr Ylllt.l)-7,
.650, :UI; I . lloa~ s .. Diop, 1).7,

errantlCS:us~li~~~

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:

Phillies managerJiil Fresosi
was surprised when Wendelstedt
wentiO the mound. Williams has
been Ibis wild ~fore - he hu
wallced a team-high 49 baatn and
hit five in 62 2/3 innings.
"I guess Mr. Wendtlwck bun't
watched him pitch very much,"
Fregosi said.
Although Sanders was ~
about beinR hit, none of die Rods
thought Wtlliams was u.owing 81
them.
La·~:ve
~d !'!B'HeforfOCS
fCU' yss,'h'
f&amp;IR SRI •
thr0111
spurts like that. That s wh8l
mates
, A:,. .
him effective- you can t "''lm.11
Besides, the Reds llad more 10
worry about besides Williams'

NEW YOIUt'OWII'S -Sic* Cui
Banb, Jirl·cker. WI CIIII-Jaii'CXIIIIICt.

BuebaU

todtlo: U...collomm, lliduel otw... ·
""' lobby OIIYe, wl... - - Sltonat

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Stowll\, GeM llc:tl&amp; Jlached ~ ICitwiill- ..__
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Pnakil taidl.

Nadoaal Leque

'Sboweli,
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. YES -. &amp;bnlei, Oatl&amp;Dcl, 40;
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AtpW&lt;n, _ . . , , 3 ; Mwli&amp;'""IOJ,
IW!ou CitJ, 31; Olooe, Bollimo,., 21:
·~ •~ ,...., %1 u _ _._ 8ollon
77: llomy,llil........ 24.

ODd; Doo
a.,.w.. ..
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tocklo; llloboM
Allte, li&amp;)o cod;

BAlTINO - Slto!lioll, S.. Diep,
.~ ICiut. Ptlild,lda, .333&gt; V..slyb.
PIUibarp, .3», otlct,Loe Ao....,
. 311:
Diop, .314:
Chkqo. .3117; o..q . .• MaantJ. .306;
Wlio, aNCNNAD. .306; l'eHiolOo,

Woi...t Alberto Whire. lioebodttr.lllb
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NEWOIII.!ANS SAINTS- WliYid
s ...,_ --~-~ H - ~~-,..
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IobnBIOWOJndEv&amp;-R...U.widJ,..
ce.iven; Kevin Ventuao, ~\llltelbl;k;

FoolbaU

Major league leaders

poollr,

vich,l:ickor,

8'L '?'AN"Cfn'B'S1'A riEits ~
0
1

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. ATLANTA
No-.r-..'fALCONS- Woived

8oltimono 9. Coli!.... I
Otico,..6, r ...... 3
Deaoil4, Mimcocu 3
Texu 6. Kn11 CU.y 2
S..llk6, ClllVEUoND 0

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1011

Sande, Ul; A....., ' - • CitJ, 131;
1.,. o..m..,
137: 1... a...
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OUJond ........... _....76
MinnooGlO ........ -....69
OU.caao.......- ... -....67
Tu• ............... 6l
Colifomio ......... _.. JI
Kwu a., .......... .S6
S..alo ....................Sl

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x-. c;,y,:!O; Woofiold. T.....
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M011b'DII ~ Atlantl 0 J
SL l..ouU 5, H..- 3, ll iMiap

NewYIIIt .............$1 61 .460

~=~ ~j1 :',.~~
l.&amp;ooMI:•..,.

IO: An4onon, ao~u...... a: tan...

CINCNNAn 1. AUla, , ;;, 1

DooroiL............. -....61

II'IDIANAI'OUs COLTS- Wolwd.

c..;itw~: o.o.;, I06; o. Bell.
~; Nco-. OUI~nd, 9!:

NATIONAL LEAGUE

r....

~~~:~·ali lou."!, ~'~~:::":0;

.__.._

Minooa

1

•

8_one. I've had some bad games- the way."
SIX or seven real bad ones.
Oliver and Barry Larkin made it
"Now there's a little les3 than easier for Belcher this one night
4~ gamQ left. We're in s~ing Larkin hit a two-run homer in the
distance. We have five left wuh !be first and Oliver hit a three-run
Braves. It's time to forget aboul all homer in the fifth off sraner Greg
that other stuff."
.
Mathews (0.3), handing Belcher a
Belcher (11·12) pill:hed his best seven-run lead.
.
game in nearly a month Tuesda~ to
"II always helps when you
help the Red3 move 4 1/2 behind score early," Belcher said. "Scor·
fust·place Atlanll with their third ing even one run in the fU$1 inning
straight win. He aUowed four sin·
is a boost. A starting pitcher loves
Jles ud four walt3 in eight·plus
to go out with a lead to start the
t"""""'m
~J~~· }~v!nthg
with the bases ~·Two nms is a bonus, and we
y,.; run ,
-1" adding on."
Known for Slrong finishes,
Mathews gave up seven earned
Belcher has struggled since the All· runs on nine 'hits in five innings·,
Star lnak. He was just 2·5 in eight . dooming the Phillies to their fifth
starts before his outing Tuesday, straight loss.
and had lost three of bis last four
Philadelphia's only miHnents of
starts.
cxcire_ment~courtesyofreliev·
The slump ended Tuesday. ef~ Mttch Willt~msh, w~ohgoht thed
Belcher allowed jUSIIWO runners to
lfSt two OUtS ID t e e1g I an
reach scoring po3ition before he went wild.
tired in the eighth. Reliever
He threw. a pitch behind Bip
n..-.- Honrv p- up a sacrifitce
Roberts while wallcing him, threw a
~WOl'"' - - ,
·~
fly to Mariano Duncan for the wild pitch over Reggie Sanders'
Pbillies' run.
head, then hit Sanders in the leg,
"That's what we CJtpected from drawing a warning from home plate
Tun," catcher Joe Oliver said. "I umpire Harry
Larkin
"':..'-be'
'
do·~··the
of
...,...
I able to
._ rest
Died OUito end lbe~~

Pomeroy

DEFENDING CHAMPS AGAIN - Tile
Mel&amp;&amp; Marauder golf team is ready to defend
ttbe Trl· Valle~ Conference ebamplonsblp for
the secood stnagbtyear. TC8111memben Include
(l'ront row, L-R) Jerod Cook, Todd Mltcb, JUH
Taylor, Adam Kra'II'ICayn, Joba Be!itley, Ben

EWing, Jerrod Dou11u and 1)1er Wolle. Pic·
· tured Ia lbe second raw are eaaela Job
Kra'II'IC)'II, Re11ie Pratt, Travis Gnte, Chris
Knlabt, Jay Harrll, Jay Cre~M~D~, J - Hart,
Rlcble GOkey and ScoU Wbltlakb.

ruu=r-last

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In a pre-aeuon scrimmage at
Riverside Golf eo.ne on Wednes·
day, m 19, the Meill aolf team
defeatod PoiDt Plcuut 31!1·332.
ladlvilual Xnwaczyn
with • 78, Harril 79. 0•1 ,_ 80
IDd flirt ~ 11le . . - - tbe
T I h) Ill Pllnt&amp;a Valloy
Qotr Coane tPiut Jack- and
Cheaapi'eJre 'l1ie wiUIIte J*tln
the l.ancallor lllvillllionll r ment at Valley View Golf Coune
on Wedneadly apinll New Lex·
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The Meigs Marauder golf ICBJII, Bolton Field Course in Columbus.

under the director of John
Krawsczyn,lw complded pre-sea·
son preperalioll in defense of their
IWO consecutive Tri· Vallcy Confer·
ence cham icnsbi
Meigs
year's regu·
1ar season with a 46-0 record and
were sectional champion runner·
up. The finish advanced them to
dulricl play where tho Marauders
mis.sed advancing to the Slate tour·
nament b'/13 shou. This year's
edition o the team must replace
two ouuranding seniors from last
reason's IC8JII - Phil Hovatter and
Tim Peterson.
The 1992 team returns seniors
Jay Harris, Jay Cremeans, John
Bentley, Chris Knight and Scott
Whitlalch. Harris was a fust r.eam
all· TVC performer from last year
wbile Bentley and Cranew were
second ream selections. Juniors Jer·
rod Douglas and Jason Hart, a fnt·
team all-TVC performer, from
1991 also return. This year'&amp;
sophomore clus il led by Adam
Xrawsczyn, the 1991 MOll Valu·
able Oolfer in the TVC. Otbcr
sophomore include Ben Bwins.
Richie Gilko , Reggie PD;a. Jason
Taylor,
Midi, TraVII Qrale,
Jerocl Coot llld Tylllr Wolfe.
Milly rllha Mei&amp;l J)lfen bave
J*lidr
!eel in IOUfi*IICIIt
m preperatioa for Ibis year'l JOif
lleiiiO'I' Player~ ill 'dle Tri-Coanly
JDDior I .Min•e were Harris, Crt·
miilaa, i'Jbt, Hut. Xrawaczyn,
Cook, Mftc~ and Gilkey.
XrawiCZ)'II finished Ia lhinl place
In the 15·18 qe division. ~is
IDd IC.rawlczyn alio paaticipaled iii
the Ohio Optimist Tournament at

25%

. WAID CROSS'
SONS

Meigs returns several all-conference
linkmen for ongoing defense of TVC title
er, Chillicothe: Marieua, Jackson,
The Meigs team also was well Logan, Athens and Belpre.
represented in the Ohio Rotary
Junia' Oclf Classic 81 Slat Fort 011
July 28. Team members participet·
ing were Harris, Knisht, Bentley,
Cremeans, Han and Xrawscz:yn.
Harris was awarded the 16-18 aJC
division long drive championshtp.
Bentley ud Krawsczyn played m
the Ohio Jooion Champioos Tour·
nament a1 Granville in June. Harris
finished fifth in the 96 player fteld
at the Tri·State Junion tournament
in Huntin3ton.
Recently, Xrawsczyn won the
Mei's Golf Course club champi·
onship with Harris fmishing as run·
ncr-up. Krawsczyn also played in
the West Virginia Junior Amareur
Qualifier at Riverside in Mason
and the West V~inia Junior Arns·
reur Championship Ill Moundsville
Country Club.
The Meigs team members have
also received video swing 8Dalysil
and instruction from Bill Childs of
the Meigs Golf Course. Childs also
IPOIISOI'ed the players in the tripaiO
liolton Pleld and Salt Fort.

Merehan.ise
REDUCED

ancc, Bookman and Associates,
Powell's Super Value, Krogers,
Vaughan's Cardinal, Masm MOld,
B.P. Slltion, Sears, Marks Auto,
Middleport Trophies, Locker 219,
Added Touch, Mason Resraurant,
UMWA Local's 18S7 and 1856
and USWA Local 5669.
Proceeds from the tournament
wiD go !0 Southern Ohio Coal and
the UMWA's annual Children's
Christmas Pany for the area Cbil·
dren's Homes. For more informa·
lion you can caU !be Riverside Golf
Course at 304· 773·9S27, Bob
Damron at 992-6659, Max Whit·
latch at 992-3130 or Jim Asbury at
669-2910.

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--------·- -·-- ----

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-"

Ohio

- wednnday, August 26, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel Page:-7

COPYRIGHT 188!l ·THE Kl'IOGEII CO. ITEMS AND PIIICESOODD SUNDAY,
AUG. 23 THROUGH SATURDAY. AUG. 28, 18121N'

-POM~ROY.

. WE RESERVE THE AKlliT TO LIMIT QUANTillES. HONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

By JOHN POMFRET
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Hcrzcgov·ina (AP)- Sarajevo burned today
targeted by the fiercest Serb
anillery bombanlment in weeks, as
world leaders talked peace in Lon·
don with key players in Lhe Bosnian war.
Sarajevo was hit by hundreds of
rockets, mortar sllells and anti-airctaft heavy machine guns from Lhe
encircling Serbian positions, in a
barrage lhal began late Tuesday.
Bosnia's Muslim-led government claimed some successes
' Tuesday in their drive 10 break the
Serb siege of Sarajevo, but a U.N.
o_fficer said it a,PPWcd the ofTensove was spuaenng.
Serb artillerymen and mostly
Muslim defenders of the Bosnian
capital ceased their duel for several
hours after midnight, only to
resume it at daybreak.
The bombardment begun Tuesday damaged the presidential building and the adjacent militarr. headquarters. Several large buoldings,
including a twin-tower high-rise,
were set ablaze.
The main public library was
.burning loday, along with millions
' of voiwnes. Some 155,000 rare or
. old books had been moved 10 the
basement for safekeeping. ·
Seib fighters in Lhe hiUs around
, Sarajevo peppered die area with
anti-aircraft machine gun fire, trying 10 prevent pn:venling foremen
from fighting the blaze along the
banks of tile river Miljacka, in a
mainly Muslim section of the old
city.
Machine gun bursts took chips
out of the crenelaltd building and
sent firemen scurrying for cover.
Mortar rounds landed around die
building widl deafening crashes,
kicking up bricks and plaster and
spraying shrapnel.
• Asked why he was risking his
• •life, fiR brigade chief Kenan Stin·
•· ic, sweaty, soot-covered and two
:.:.vards from the blaze, said:

Cooks, Waiters among 19 released
by Browns; Slaughter still a holdout
BEREA, Ohio (.AP) - The lladecL 'rhey aid .IIIey don't Willi
_Cleveland Browas have cut 19 Ill 1n1C1e him. We'~e pretty lldanwlt
~ P'laJ«&lt; from the roster, with 011e about IIIII." Duffy Aid.
~ cutdowlllelt Maaday. Bill the tey
&gt;\Jbcl if Sliupter will IIIia all
: player 111 the Bro~:J..be one or pan of the - · Dully uid,
.• wiiO bu IIOIIieea 1D
camp "II depolllb oa llow deiCllllilled
·: IIIII.
they 118111 impro¥e dill lellli." .
: Veterlll wide ftJCOiver Webller
'l'lle BJOWM naivcn, Dllned
··_ !IIMalllet telllllna 1 aJIII1ICt ldl· by lkopped balb, have If niCep.
: out Willi oae ullibilioa left. lioallllil oae lOoK "dowa cAic:IIJa
~ aiPt IITIIIIIJI ~10 daee ~'bltD
.
:lbe repllr- ~Sept. 6 II
Browa1
Modell
Jadi...-.nl'
said Rowe's in;.ty will DOt illllua bWiinS 11 wide eace ~with Sh9tn.
JeleCIIceivo'v.~r., esoeciallY after loeint No.
"We'Je not &amp;Oin.JID Jldelip
i JIICt Paitict lowe to a \nee - o&amp;ase Ill lllit biJ desilel II a
in)IIIY Monday Dig111 ill a S6-3loll receiver. II bu DO belriDJ 011 10 111e Minodola Vitin&amp;J. He was pre~entlitualion. Webster hu
p1acec1 011 injured H:ICive Tuesday appvenUy made up Ilia mind lbal
llld will miss d i e - with w1w be doesa '1 want to play for the
il believed 10 be 10111 " - - · ill Browns llllllbal's all the messap I
Ilia left bee.
-·-SCI-"
Rowe suffered the iajury 011 a
Browns head coach Bill
30-~ kickoff-.
Belichick said he hopes 10 have
'We're sorry to bear about S~!"!ntao:ful
· Web .............
Rowe. bul obviously, we'~e lillillc
-preay rialll now" said BiD Dully be said. "Hope ully, somedlilll
S~&amp;PPw'•..tt. Duffy, who~ will b&amp;PJI!n 10011. V.:• woa't be
'clellied a JeqU011 for the BIOWDIIO able 10 pick up I R~Ce~ver of Weblllde hisclieal, 1111 Aid tlluaning ster's category (on the waiver
- ~:::· for Ilia evellllllla-• will l!'iR). I cloll't dlink thai's Rllis·
.. r-.....uc"
II least $1.1 mollq a year- no
·
leu than lllealalyofiOpclrlftpick · The Browns roster wu at S7
T0111111y Vllllell. a fuDbact
players. dne below the pesellleiO"We'n: in no h!IITJ at this point. player limi~, f!I:'g· Belicbict a
Our RCI!IeBI i1 for Webstn Ill be ct.ac:e 10 llill
I Ill 1101110 play·

::.=Art

TiiiC..

en. The f!IIIIIOIIer will have 100111

for-47 playas. .
Tile cull Tu~ included
linebrier Jollllic
•• former
fUU·IOIIIId drill pick of the lhenBaltilaore Colli. Coots, wllo
plaJed wltllllle Colla ftum 1982 Ill
1988 ud IU New York Gianu
fniii9111D 1991, Wll picbd lip
by die Browat ia 1991.
OdJen Jet ao
~ Cart
Bu, comerblct· Lalla · Be~
linoiUer Lonnie BnO-n, .
ead Jeff Billa, quarterback Jeff
F~ liNiilcbr Jllllei Goode,
puatet Brlaa Greeafield, wide
icc:elver Rod Hlrril, oftetllive lillomaa H=C;.~yael, · wide
receiv.
OIOIIia, 7 ...
·bact Bruce
oft-'ve lillo111111 Dustia Quiioon, wide Jeeeiver
~Shaven, oflauhe u.nan
Tim Simpsoa, linet+ • Mlllony
Mou, linebacker Vu Waiters,
defenaive ljnemw Klllt WeDs llld
safety Tony Za:bry.
The BIOWIII placed playen 011 the (JIIYikllly .uiiJie ID _per·
form lial: offensive l i - 1'1111
wide recehea l..awJw TW·
maa aad offensive tackle Rob
Woods. Tbey'n: elipble 10 Rlln
OCl. 14.
The BIOWIII lbo pUt COIIICibidl:
Selwyn 101101 aJona with Rowe 011
illjlnd r ve for the 1011011

-=

FINAL TUNIWP - Stutonl quarterback
Sleft Sl1 Ill M loob lite llac dlll'iq lite
Car.....'l flaal pracllee T1elda7 II Oru&amp;e

Cout Colleae Ia Costa Mesa, Calif. StaDfoid
will face Tez11 A&amp;M I• llle Picstia Clusic

toaJcltl. (AP)

""·,

c:uu.

"It's 1M way the Benpis hive
traditionally clone things, 111 cut
doWII Olllier ~- Olherdo, so we aet lllOR coacentraltd
wort with die guya dlat we feel
hlve~~ilimate shot at mlking
lbd
1*1," Shula aid
Haddix, a fd'lh·yar player from
Liberty, was obllined 6oni T1111pa
Bay 011 waiYen in the middle of the
1991 He had 12 solo tatk·
lei IIIII oae lllilt in sevea pmes.
Wilb Haddix waived and
Mitchell Price holding out, the
Ben&amp;als bavo oaly four corner·
bleb - Rod lone&amp;. Antoine Ben·
aell, Eric Thomas and Leonard

Wlteeler.
'
'l'lle Beaaals' roarer does aor
incl"" die lellll'l No. 1 draft Diet.
lluutoa ~ o.vid 11in·

.aJar, or lloidoul otrealive lillcmea
Joe Wllter IIIII Bruce Kounki, or

'safety Jllckey Dixoa or defensive
ead Nllll 1\•ll&amp;alna
Allo IIOIIillld - wide recciv·
or Eddie BIOWII, who ·has a aeck
illjaly 1111 problbly will mia the

~~~~~ill.•., M~y. wbellllle Ben·

. . . . . aim Ill -47 playen. deci·
lioal will be • liUie J011811e&gt;, . .
cla!ll.11'1
• 7a .,..,
.... bact.
COIIIpelilive liwa·
·
"
Sllltla
llid.
"We'w
lried to
11011,
-~
•
Jiw PJI 11 ,_.. lillie 11 we can

.

ask for," Miles said. "II tilowt that
IIley DR Rally evaillllilll me and
givona me a fair shot."
Taylor, a. three· year Yeteran
from WOII Virzinja. has utaa 11010.
"He'1 ptling a run lbol, wbicll
.is n:ally cuuing off some of the
guys lbal ..ve been heR," Taylor
said. "It's limitiag yoar tilDe 011
the field 111 keep your job 111111117

'"
';,

"Yoa can look II it diffeRIII
ways. Eilbcr they really lite bini or
tlley are coafideat ia wllo IIIey

w-

Greea, wllo lias played oaly
dne quanm
of illjaricl,
bas rushed 14lilaol,lllll Ball has
10 ~ Fenncir bu 1evea, Tay·
lor IIX, Dingle five 11111 S&lt;*1 one.

NHL meeting sees rule
changes on fighting,
required helmet wearing
oa lnwling lhCy originally soug~
17 nED GOODALL
lhey'R confldell dial the instiplor
AP Sports Writer
rule
il a lluso step in the right
ST. PllttRSBURG BEACH.
direction.
Fla. (AP) - Traditionalists and
"II is very sianificant," · said
abolilionilla Rlldled •
.
Harry
Siadca, ~ manager ol
on fiahlinllhll both
the
BoAla
BruiDI, who Jlll.lhed for
go a lona way lllward improviaJ
hlilher
~L
"k (fi~lilll)
the imqe of the NHL.
lnstif~atora of fights will be should 110 loiJer be I IDCUC by I
ejecltd rom aamea next season. team!D win alloctey pn10."
Uoder lite !Dvioul rules, I play·
The leaJue's baud of governors
or
delliiCid
to have imtiptr4 a fiJht
also bopes dlat malting helmeu
n:uhred
a
IWCI-IIIPillle penalty ill
oplioaal for all players will help
adclidoll
10
• fi-iaule fJ8111iag
cwb vlolenc:c 011the ice.
major.
Tbe
new rule calls for a
The initiative&amp; WCR IIRIOIII the
a-M
•i..,..,.ICI
iD adclirioe 10 any
rule changes approved Tuesday
wllen the board abo voted 10 COD·
penalliea
tinue to study die feasibility of
NHL players panicipaUag ill the wen: asse•ted in aeariy a lhinl of
the NHL '1 7SO fiabla lise 1011011.
1994 Winrer Olympics.
He
doem'l diat .... IIJOII&amp;CI' puaAlthough tbe anli·fighting
isl!wiD -* ilmcR difi'ICUII
forces didn'I get tho outright ban
for Je1ieRe1 to eab\:e the IICW iule.

:=

~te~dla=lllr

Special oE the Week!

-~

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.

DOOLEY llEI'IIliNG - Wab Fanse llead
football e.dl Bill Doolq, lllowa walklll1 with
._. plaJtl'l......_ pndlc.ie T..UJ Ia Wfilltoa.

Salftu;'N.C~

••nOUad euler lllilmoatb 11111 ·
be would redruller lllilm 111'11. (AP)
'

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Midas is coming to your town with one of the family. You can develop an all-new Midas ·
Muffler and Brake Shop. Or, if you already
most exciting fraochise opportunities that
own a repair shop. you may be able to
exists today. Now is your chance to join the
convert it to Midas.
leader in the autOIIDtive aftermarket.
Midas is on the move. And if you're an
As a Midas franchisee, you have the
aggressive enlrepreneur, we'd like to make
name people know, the prixlucts people
our move with you. just give us a call today,
want, the warranty people trust. And with
all the training you1l receive, you don't even and we'll discuss all the possibilities. Then,
if it makes sense to us both, we'll send a
need an automotive background to begin.
representative to meet with you.
There are two ways to join the Midas

1

II

aad blocteri, but

~.::~= =;;_

llld Eric Ill ...s tile lilt, .d ll oae
or two_. to be cOO.

';I

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WI fJ •
ro., 1011110111111bodJom~1

(MIM•) fili JDC 10 JO," na.
bicts COICl JIM Aadenoo &amp;aid.

:·

216-642-8662

FOOTLOIG

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woatborM otlbe preMIIOII. He
lladt a. 1e1111 willt 26 Cllriel for

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By GlEG MYRE
. Wednesday u the Red Cross was
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) -tryhiJ 10 transfer diem 811d their
- The U.N. secretary-general famitiesoutofthecityofKismayu.
wants 10 send up 10 3,500 armed
"They were of a diffeRDt clan
observers to help proteCt Lhe emer- of those in Kisrnayu and felt
gency effort 10 feed Somalia, when: unsafe," said Gn:goire Tavernier;
the Red Cross says 11 of its wolk· an ICRC spokesman in Nairobi,
ers were killed last week.
Kenya.
Meanwhile, equipment prob·
He said local authorities had
lerns, leaking cooking oil contain- ~teed the workers' safety but
ers and a mass of storks on a run- 'uncoouollecl elements" Slopped
way Tuesday slowed the U.S. air- them 11 Kismayu's airpon. In the
lift in nei.hboring Kenya, where confusion, the men were taken
thousands o( Somali refugees and away and Rpollediy killcd, he said.
Kenyans are in need of food.
Once the U.S. airlift bcRins. Red
The United States, which has Cross workers likely wifi handle
been delivering food to northern the distribution of food in Somalia,
Kenya since Friclay, plans 10 stan U.S. officials have said.
airlifting food this week into Soma·
The Red Cross, however, says
lia. Germany began its own airlift lhal if that is 10 be the arrangement,
Tuesday.
Lhe planes cannot hive U.S. mark·
The aid campaign has been dif- ings or cany weapons.
ficult in a country where the
Stephen Hayes; a spokesmaD for
drought sweeping southern Africa the U.S. operati011 ill Kenya, said
and civil war have combined to the Red Cross' concerns were
aeate chaos.
under discussion. He would not
AI. the Uniltd Nations Tuesday, elaborate.
Sec:Riai)'-Genczal Boutros-Boutros
The United Sta~ea has been fly·
Ghali poposed sending up 10 3,500 ing food 10 nol1hea&amp;lem Kenya for
anned observers 10 help proteCt and drought victims ~ ....-Jy ~~
coordinate the aid effort. The Secu· refugees - mainly Somalis - m
rity Council could vote on ihe camps along Lhe tiol'du. U.S. forces
requesllaler this wed&lt;.
had made a total of 38 ftlghts llld
The observers would include a delivered S68 metric lllns of food
SOO·member team already by Tuesday, said LL Col. Robert
approved by die council. Bouuos Donnelly,ofSIIffa:n.N.Y.
Ghali urged the SOO observers be
Panos Mou.mtzla, a SJlO!ccsmao!
sent "as soon as possible." ·
for the U.N. ~gh Com_IIIIJI!oner of
Up 10 2 lnillion \)CI&gt;Pie are esti- Refugees, Slid '!'•~.ay dlat the
mar.cd 10 be in imnunenl dan~ of ~.S. food was gomg wt!ally Ill the
dying from starYation. A moiiion dosplac:ed aro~~;nd Waju, Kenya,
people in Kenya - Kenyans and ·n~ the ~ border. None had
Somali Rfugees - are hungry.
arnved yet m the refugee camps, a
Since the overthrow of Somali day or more away by truck.
dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in
The relief asency CARE was
January 1991, 1&amp;\V and order has distributing~ U.S; food in Ken~
been replaced by clan w,rfarc.
The Amenc_,. lint Wget m
Barre bad fueled clan divisions by Somalia likely will be either
carrying out purges of clans oppos- Baidoa, w!'cre ~ IIIIIIJ IS 300 peoing his regime.
.
pic are dJI!Ig ~, or Belet Huen,
The International Commiuee of on the Ethiop!lll bixder, Donnelly
the Red Cross said Tuesday that II said.
employees were killed last

:
By PETER LANDERS
last year.
.
:
TOKYO (AP) - Teils of thou·
Nakagawa said lhe key 10 suc·
ha - - - ' p cess wu mariter retii*Ch. A com·
: , sands of 1apanese ve ......,..... 0 h pany survey showed IIOWid 15 per·
: ~'Copies of a wa1erproof Bng~is
cenl of Eagllsl!-'•ft-e lllldents
•. , vocabulary book dial turna ume
- .. -.
: • !pent in the bllhlub iniO study hall. said the bldltub was their favorite
•
The boot, entided "Remember- place Ill
: ina En&amp;llsll Vocabulary in the
Since '
or·~.- need
: Bath " loots lite just another of 10 learn Enalilll for Coueae eums
: the .hundredl of English primers or 10 Flllhead II Wlilk. lhallS pet·
~ available heR.
cent•op 111'11 a lizable potential
•.
But ill wateipiwf paper, made martel.
i · of the~ polypropylene, lOll
ll[llpll•mteliiCIO uadilialally_ICCde.inll:
: it II*'- 11 do thO booming sales a ·bot badl lithe end of die day,
•· it's racldn8 up in boobuns.
11\dlougb. the CUI!Om Ia usuail)
~
o.iichi Nabpwa, a spokesman e~plalned u provldilll real from
: for !be book'Mublisher, Kyo· . the day'110ila, not m opptiiUIIil:y
:•. aatUsba,llid I I1X) c:opies :;-,at to boDe up 011 ~-voc:abalary·
S7 .SO each - have beell sold \IIJICe ·

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Will FIIU...... J.l.t

~;~, lilt aia~-roand pick
Hotlltolo •u

Acting U.S. Semtary of State
Lawrence Eagleburger said befm
the, conference that intensified
bombardment by Serbian forces
may lead 10 new sanctioas on the
Serb-dominaled rcmnanls of
Yu2oslaviL
r;lbo Serbs obviously DR inUlll
on establishing as good a position
as they can on the &amp;rollld prior 10
the convening of die conference,
and it's an outrage,'' Eagleburger
said.
On Tuesday, NATO leaders
delayed a decision on sending
6,000 soldiers 10 ~ n:iief shipments into Bosma-Herzegovina.
The Western allies were wary
about becoming embroiled in the
conflict. and a NATO scurcc said
the alliance W811ted to see what
happened atlhe peace talks.

Waterproof English primer big
seller among
]apa~ese students
.

"'11111'• w1111-. IIIII b '•••
fro•

:
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'
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For details on a new shop or a
conversion, call Dan Beverage

-tope-.. .. ~.1101
oaly •

'

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• 111111111

observer sta1111.

calls for more
~ force after deaths of
~ 11 Red Cross ~orkers

IIOIII1d.

uve."

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f.~ U.N.

F-.

-

....... llllllllilll
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:Klinger-less Bengals cut Haddix
:to trim team roster to 58 players
.. CINCINNATI (AP) - Never
milld die 60-_. limiL The Cincin·
IIIIi Benpl• e111 their 1011er to S8
: :r..;~sins comerblct Wayne
·
: "We didn't feel thai War,w: lit
. into - plans for Ibis year, ' said
c-b Dave Sbula. "There was no
smse in Jl'Obwinl iL"
NFL uns wen: requiled to get
dOWII 10 60 piayen Tuesday. But
Cincinnati 'typically makes early

''Because I was born here 111d they
are burning a pan of me."
Bosnia's Muslim, Serb aad
Croat factions had 'been trying 10
strengthen their positions before
!he peace confen:nce ()penlJIIIoday
m London, sponsored by the European Community and die Uniltd
Nations.
The conference is die largest
imernalional forum convened so fat
10 seelc 111 end 10 fighting in .Bosnia
and ease tensions ill neighboring
republics.
"In this room are peopie who
can stop this war,' • British Prime
Minister John Major said, as he ·
opened the London conference. "I
don't believe dlat world opinion
will readily forgive 111yoae who
impedes that work over the next
couple of days and be~''
Radovan Karadztc, leader of
Bosnia's Serbs, said today be was
prepared 111 SllliOIIda' up 10 lS percent of the territory held bf bis
forces while resisting ill~
insistence on Bosnia's territorial
integrity.
Karadzic liter walked out of Lhe
talks 10 procest being granted only

.

·

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I
I
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I
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I
lb.
I
I
UIIIT I
U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE f4·7·LB. AVGJ I
I DF

.4-7.8.01. FROZEN

Kroger Pizzas

Frozen ·Turkey Breast

$10.00

-------·
p7

IIECULAR OR THICK
SI.ICED MEAT

oscar Mayer
Bologna
1-lb. Pkf•

Armour Meat
Wieners
1-lb. P/cf,

HJI
PRICE
/ifCiULAR RETAIL .. . S2.J9 EACH
"IN THE DAIRY CASE"

ASSOIITED FlAVORS
LICHT 'N LIVELY

100 calorie
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s-oz.

FROlfiN FREElfiR Pf.EEZER

Fudge
Bars

12·ct. Plcf.

HALl= HJIL~·
PRICE PRI

�&lt;

•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•.

•

..

.,

&gt;

\

n.,..

~DLEBRANCH PERFORMS.
dayanen.- tabpn ~1M W. crud blue ll'UI ppel •uk f1l Mlddlell.-.cll
.which perlormed oa tile llil!llcM •lilt· .. die
Melp Couaiy IJ'OUP wldd . . bela WI zht

less lluula year are trom the left, Jim Caruhla,
11151, Boll White, mmdolia, Lanj Joaes, Ield
sill&amp;« IUid rhythm pilar, R01er Biuell, llaajo,
IUid Chuclt WUIJIJu, pilar•

••
••
:~

DeQe Sllezelleld, C..,.aai Vaajbu, IUid Cya.

B~k, l·r, are Matt Krawsczyil, Graul Arnold
and Jamie Glassburn. ·
Dsllu Weber otDK's Farm Toys iu Middleport,
pidilred Ia rear, alou1 witla Dan Smith, Aac·
tioaeer, lpOIIIOI'ed priz&amp;

UGHTWFlGHT WINNERS • Stacy Smith,
seated, was the 1991 Kiddie Tractor Pull
· ligbtwei&amp;ht cbampioa at the Meigs Couaiy Fu
. ou Saturday. Also pictured, front 1-r, are Asllley
O•Brien (second) aad·Tirtaay White (third).

tlala.CoaerllL fife f1l dtoee afrlll· .Jeulter, Tara,·
Kelley, Ellubetll ud Cr:fltal • recemd Q.t·
ltllldilll of die Day 11-. at tile Olllo State
Fair fer ... dotlll.. pnjectl.

HEAVYWEJGHT WJNIIIERS • Mark Daney,
sealed, won the heavyweight division or lbe 1992
Kiddie Tractor Pulls at the Mei~ County Fair.
Also pictured, l·r, are Larry R;tcbie .(second),
I

·ChriS Krawsczyu, Chris Rilterbect, Kay,Haat
(third) aud Chris Barringer. Dallas Weber, wlro
co-sponsored prizes tor the competitloa, .. alao
pictured •

Hymntimers hold
reunion picnic

OVER COST ON ANY
1992HONDA IN STOCK

-,_ .
''

'

•

The sixth annual Country Hymntimers reunion picnic was held
recenlly at the Gallia County Fair·
grounds with a polluck dinner:
Prayer was offcn:d by Dsn Hayman and the door prize was won ·by
Lyndi Fielder. The oldest living
member present was Hairy Hay.
man.
Next year's reunion will be the
second weekend in June. The
reunion concluded with singing and
music.
Attending were Jerry, Diana,
Menssa and Brian Frederick; Marvin and Debbie DodriU; Cheryle,
Becky, Linda Knight and Bradley
Ashley; Evelyn Roush; Harry,
Vera, Sid, Carol, Robert, Jim, Apil
and Angel Hayman; Mary Carney;
Dan, Faith and Tamara Hayman,
Priscilla Dodrill; Gladys and Je$Sica Collins: Lyndi Fielder; Larry,
Mary, Roseann1 and Rhonda VanMetu; Louise Urvoe; Carol Mayes;
Goldie Frederick; Jackie, Corey
and Tyla Wamsley.

6.5" GOOD

6.5" GOOD

UNTIL
AUGUST 31st

UNTIL
AUGUST 31st

t~;' 1

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'

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F~UI'·I~IIIDth.:e~ ADdrea Buckley, dl.llter
of Pam and Bryce Buckley, sleeps In her carriaae alter Saturdly's
Meip County Fair Pretiy Baby Coutest.

,
GIRL SCOUTS
.
• Tllne. 1!rl ,
were ll•ored aa outstaadlna meaaben
~Youtla ~at tile the Melp
·
are, A rn Neabllq, out·

;Jtaadi~~alor l'rem Pomeroy T'!'ti.!'J
Delln
O.tmozdl•l s.Jor l'rell ·
Sealor Troop 1108, aad Sam Houser, Out·
stllldilll BI'OWIIle
Pomeroy Troop 127L

rram

APR FliED UTE FOR 60 MONTHS

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

Jack reunion held.;..·- - - - - - - - - - - - -

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

..... \

'

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-•Wmt,PI,PI,eal:fs II

*2995

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............... ........
Cwl •• 71,410 .,._, ..............
..... •• AMifll - . 4 cyl,

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1918 BUICK SkYLARK

Ll, 84,111 ..... l .. .. • ....

*4995

1

'5495

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1911 OIEVY CAVAliER
AI, 7I,Dil .... ead'U I,

*

- . , AIIFII--., doclr, IIIIo., PI

llnl•, Wtng.

'4495

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1H1 OIEVY CORSICA LT

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17. . . . . . . "'_......,. 1 - · .
--~ P. ...... MIFII, ........
4Dr~•·•-.l ..

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*7995
1990 CHEVY IIRElTA GT

(Not.: 15 Word Limit 1nd Your Selling Prtce Mult Be In Your FREE Ad)
(Sony, IIIII «** not 1pply to Y1rcl SliM)
Nlml::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

H,ltl 11111-. ,....,.., I .,...i,

..... AWFIII-, .. *·1-,
'· - · • '"*-· VI, ,_ .....~

........ '1595

PlioMt: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mall
To:
'·

rfhe .Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
,. . . . . . . .liZ)

enew

The annual reunion of descen- Utah;Mr.IIIIIMn.Allen]acband Mrs. Dauuy licks, Mitch and'
dants of Levi Earl Jacks and Vir· three chlldral, ~; Mr. IIIII Deana Jacks.
RiJ1ia Morrison was held n:cenlly at
the old Jacks place in Rolland.
Following a noon luncheon, a
homemade quilt was awarded and
ELECTROLYSIS PROVIDE$ PAINLESS
other gifts w~ given.
TREATMENT FOR HAIR
Attending wen: Russ and Marie
c - , ee• - H I
Mozingo, Rutland; Verlin JackP
(Buddy), two .daughters and a
niece, from Montana; Brie and
Chenna Mozingo and son, Jacob
Tyler, Rutland; Carolyn and
Willilrn VanMcltl, Slranuda, Mid·
Joor-- ....... ,.
.dlepon; Bud 111d Wuda Thorpe
'td

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l917 MEIOJRY SAllE

Tblt 11 your Invitation to 1811 any 111m tor $100 or leal and ldverllte It FREE. SlmiiiY clip this
coupon (phOIO coplaa not ac:ceptld), Ill In YCIII' ad and mill It to u1 or drOP It off II our
office, Your ld·wUI run tor f week.

TOYOTA/SUZUKI.

wu the illraut pampkla at the Mlep Coality
Fair.

GREAT PUMPICJN ·Cody DlJJ, 5, t1CNclle1
by his blue ribbOD pumpklu. At 170 poalldi, Jt·

'

ATHENS HONDA CARS
'7HE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State St. • Athana,Ohlo
New Car Dept. 584-8555
U11d Car Dept. 584·211 t\

__ ., , *"'...,
- ..'1..to=.,.-:.:=

.~

.~

2

1nd Brie, ~oodbridae. Va.; Bud
lllld Donna B.IOMI, Lancaster; ScoU
Brown and friend, Anette, Lancast·

"~r;

Clarence ind Maxine Jordan,
Pomeroy; Misty and Rodney King,
Tr'enda VanMeter, Pomeroy;
Shirley Gibbs, Lucille Gibbs,
P.omeroy; Robert and t.Jary Jacks,
Newark; Chester and Margaret
Johnson, Salem Center: Bob and
'Pam Wharton, Lancuter; George
and Flora Bing, Lancaster: Rocky
IJ1d Beth Johnson and 10115, Col)'.
.Todd and Amanda, Daniel and
Diana Hutchinson, StePhanie. twin
lirls, Stephanie and }oe Whalen
ldn Jean Whallen, CbriJ Mahan,
Qallipolis: David and Jannie
)CRJpb, West Virginia; Jerry and
tinda Jackl, Vinron: Sanh Jacks
~d George· Estep and daughter,
,Tim,1eri and Jody Jacks, Colum·
bus: James, Georilna and daughter,
Tiffany, Lancaster; Belinda John·
'ion and children, · Virginia,
Michelle Shuler, David, Jeuie
Lucas and friend, Kenneth Sartell,.
l;anasville; Rachel and Mickey
Rutton, Rutland, 111d grandson,
Cory Hutton, Loraine Newille,
~Y Hutton, RUIIand; Gary and
JOAnn Jacks, Silem Center: Karan
9.'ills, Mite Wills, Chasidy,
MichMI Ray lllllld Mindy, Chria
tane. Pal f:lld Cindy Aeiker, ~ny
· l)IIY, Palridt Aclkcr, Tim B1111U,
Sarl and Jean Jacks, Rull1nd;
:r~Y Capehart, John and Jason
Sheels. Michelle and Plul WIIIJ Jr,
Paul, Stephen, Cody, Patty and
Herahell White, Jeuny, Chuck,
Qebbie Borah and children, AnJd,
'ly~~~, Zacb, RtJilond; 1o1m Hllrkll,
poodles and Karen McGI'IIIr and
children, Levie, AnaeJa. Rolland;
foe Andreoni, Milly Walter, Rut·
lind; Randy IIIII Lori Moziqo,lllll
'1011, Nlcholaa, Llncaater; Rutly
~ozinao. Ratlapd; Stony and
· S)leDy JohiiiOIIIJid clrllchn, Jenny ·
~Leroy, Headier ICeainpr, Rut·

lind: Jack IIIII Lanna Nand, Rut·

,·dleport;
*"" 111dLinda,
IIOIIs, Jolm, Juon, Mid·
Kary, Rea Ann,

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5uplrior Toyota/Suzuki is proud to welcome Suzuki
Into their family and the Parkersburg area.
Suzuki m.nutacMee and dlstrtbut" a full line ot
high qullity,ICOt IOmical epori/Utlllty vehicles and
pMIIIIQif 1:111. We also offer a complete Parts &amp;

8 I [Jcl&amp;_._ ............. - -

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10% Din un Off FINt Ofllol VIII

SIMcl~t.

PIHH 110p by and -

Candy's Electrolysis

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Vionno,

wv•101

our new kids on the blqck.
Tom &amp; BJ Hathaway

RT. 50 EAST PARKERSBURG 424·5122

295;.4633

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WIJH TRIPLE

STORE HOURS
Mo11day~ Sunday

VENDOR COUPON

,,'

8 AM-10' PM

.'-, .

298 SECOND ST.
· POMEROY. OH .

(Stt.Stoft For
Details)

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$ 59

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BHF

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....... .
...

Rum Roast ............~.. 1
• MOKED HALF
$ 19
P1cn1c Hams ..........~!~... 1
BALLARDS WIENERS or
(
79
Bologna"-·-······-·~~%"····
11

••

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$ 49

BEEf

FRESH

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$ 99

USDA CHOICE BEEF

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Round Steak .........~~~.. 1

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Ground Turkey··-!!." 89.
Mountaineer
.(
69
S-aus·age oz.
UNks

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PEANUT
BUnER

.

HARD PULL • Roger Taylor ride&amp; atop

..

19J6 Joba Deere A on bll way to a 21U foot

lbe •500 pound, 1938 aad uDder dlvlsloa.

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JELLY

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TWIN PET

MAXWEll ii.OUSHDC • EP

CAT FOOD

COFFEE

6

$160Z.

Good On
Powel'1 Super Vllu
Ollw Good rg. 2J llru Aug. 21, 18112
Limit I Pw Cullo11111

.

$3'' '

390Z.

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LUCIYLW.

CIDER VINEGAR·
$259 .

GAL

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799' 5.Gal.

-~

Lt. Spread-..-.1~"..".. 1
FLAVORITE
C
Ice Cream.....~t.,i~.~............. 99·

46

SWIR

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Pineapple....!!!!;~" 2 1
HUNTS
C MO~TON . • . .
$
79
.,•omato Ju1ce
• ......WJ...oz. 7·9 Fr1ed Ch1cken ...~.~&amp;~.... 1· , ROYAL CROWN
'

SAVINGS

~­

(

$ 19

BLUE BONNET

DOMINO SUGAR
$1 '69 ~

or Will/It] order for SS (this U.cllliks ·
poMgt lllllllttuulli!lg) ro: NMgg~ll,
c/o Anlllmtdtrs, P.O. Btn ll562,
Chicago, 1/1. 60611-0562 . Un
CIUIDila, stiUI $6.)
.

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24 oz.

Celer ·-·"··"···"····"··· 2 ·s1
VA~EY BEL •
$ 79
2Yo Milk..................t.u•• 1
$

IGNORED
DEAR N.L.I.: I like your-llylc,
lady. NOihing succeeds likc.saceess.
Ann Land.ers' latw twoiiet,
"Nuggets and Doozits;" .laos
tverythbsg from tilt outrageorisly
j111t11y to tht poigiiiJI)I/y illslgh(lll.
Send a stlf·addresseg_, li111g,
busilttss-siu tlllltlopt 111111 a clftd:

SATURDAY

I'

·

~.What's yows?' · . . .
My husband has ~ver· failed 10
inirodii!=C me since. ~ NO LONGER

BASHAN • Weekend services,
Red Brush Church of Christ,
Baslwt Road. SIIIUrday, 7:30p.m.;
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver
Hill, Fosler, W.Va., speaker. Public
invited

::

LIBERTY

linld iX mnindin&amp; l!im (wilb i pile
nqe) that I w-. ~L
Aboutlhftic IIIOillls aaO. wlleA he
forsot for )he lii!ptee~~lh ~ I
llcpped f01 w•!l. putonmy bialeat
smile, exlended .my.UKI.to ~!IIOSI
atlrll:live. min· in the group, 'llid
pum4. ' Hi, lh«e; My name is Mal}'

DRIVEWAY

BASHAN • Ice cream social,
Friday. S p.m.,•~h~~aslwl LadiCs
Auxiliary at B
(lire Houe•
Sandwiches, bam, bot sausage,
sloppy joes and bot dogs. Eleven
flavors of lee cream. Homemade
pies, coffee and so1t drinb. Music
by Specks of Blue Grass Band.

pull darlae S•turday's Meigs Canty Fair

::

.••

•...

Antique Tractor PulL Taylor was a coatestaatla

~~~

:

•,;.

180Z.

FRIDAY
CHESHIRE • Oallia·Meigs
Community Action, me ciOihlng
day, Friday, 9 a.m. 10 noon, old
high sebool building, Cheshi!ll.

-

.

1 LB. ROll or
10

My addle-briined hUiblnd
never used .io ini!Ocb;C IIIC tO Iii
l'rielidf eilhet, and I. got sick llld

SIIWl.

t,

FRESH _ .

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Get some counseling and urge
YOII' falhcr-in-law 10 do the same.
Your thenpist will ad vile you ·in
~~ 10 sharing this with your

Community
c·alendar

w

~

320Z.

Tile lcUa'
fran) Mrs. Invisible ~y sOt 10 tW·
I was Mrs. InVisible, iOO~ an.til, I lot
Dar ADI Ludei'l:

The Martha Bible Clau ol the
chun:h will be haviilg their moothly meeting Wednesday,at 7:30 p.m.
and an members of the eburcllm
invited 10 attend aad present any
ideas they have for this celebration .

~

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ocassion.

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HEINZ

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Corn roast held

::. .

CO~K'S

......
•.

wheels, becaiiSe rubber tractor tire&amp; were apeD·
sive, aad the method ror makln&amp; them bad not
been perfected.

STEEL WHEELS • From left, George CoDins
aDd Robbie Cllaway examllle a 1936 AN Joba
Deere tractor, owned by Barry Thomas 01 Plail
:: · City. Machines like tbese used to bave steel

•·

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•

•

ANNUNDIIIS ·

Dear Ann Laaders: Recently
you prinled a leuU from a 18111ady
wbo signed herself 'Heigbt of
Happiness.' She 111ve several hinll
on how to handle beingllll.fd like
10 add my two cents' wonh. (I'm a
guy, by tbe way.)
· ·
· t. 111ere is a -i:!lanse iluuilllde
betwcc;ao hiP scboolllld ~··
and "'-. but both ~~ ~-~-- and · In, high' school,~ moat J!o)"~Jirl
1 reci~ OlD' 1o¥e '~ki';. be pairs COI)Iislcd of a Shol1. ~
denied. I don't know what to tclllxc cheUieadcr and a 1811, mueuline
or if I should teD her at all. Please BMOC - usually a COOiball jOck.
·
N
2. 8ICk when ankle-lqlb coats
adVIle
me. - .N.P.
C1111C out. the short. giriJ slumped
DEAR N.N.P.: 1bere was a.time along like c:ows. I actually saw one
when I would have looked for the
.
New Haven postmark on th.e , ~ fall (her foot Jot •
m. lxc
envelope 11111 muttered a few words .hem). ~ 1811 girls swuled •n a
about'those Yalies." But today, rd graceful glide when they wallccd.
believe anything.
.3. At dances when I got ~k
w1th three or four peewees m a
row, my neck would swt 10 ache
from leaning over (11111 S feet 10
A com rout wu held rec:endy inches 1811), but one dance with a
at the Bradbury Cburcb of Christ
with 50 peQp1c lllending.
In addition, hamburgers and
hotdogs were served and fellowship wu enjoyed by all.
.
The church is mating plans 10
celebrate ill tOOth univcrsary in
1993111d members have been busy
cleaning, )llinling and contn'buling
ideas ·ao mate this a memorable

• i!=!

'

I

anyone else.
I am 29 years old and have a
lcmly wife, tine beauliful children
and a sec:we job. I un very much in
11m with my wife's fatber.
My wife and l ..ve been IOgethcr
for nine years. 1 have been in
love with 1xc father for two years~ 1
discovered eight lll&lt;illlhs ago ljlat he
has the same feelings for me.
His wife died years ago. He wants
a life with me and I love him, but
I don't 1mow whit 10 do. Neither
of us appean 10 be gay. We 1111
sure no one has the slightest idea
that we feel so deeply for one
anotha';
My wife would be
sbockcd

~

TO .LIMIT QUANTITIES
. 23 THRU AUGUST 29

PRICES GOOD SUN., .

I'

you enjoytlltm. - AM l..luiMrs _
Dear Ana Landen: I am wriling
to you lbout my~ btc••se I
dQn't have tbe cowage 10 talk 10

1"

..'

Ia!! ~ ~ DIY ft!!Ck 'rilcowaCJ.•

'Ibis 11 JUst one Jella!s view, ·for
whatever it'• word\. Annie. Sign
me •• BIRDWA.TCHlNO CAT
FROM CONNE.Cnarr
DEAR BIRD WATCHER:
T,han~s for meowing, in "tlli~
diRction. ManY .JlUII~ Wl'OIC to
COIIIment. but you were the only

A ....,...;,

favorite colwruts ,_ )'DM mts'J'IItwt . lUlU
lllilstd tht /irstlimt 111'0/Wl. I /rQpt

..., _

. . ,. RESIM .THE

''

· bi/J .I ' - '4 btltbtt(loirw tf Ill)'

.

•••• 27,.28, 29
•.

Dtlll' Rtadtrs: I am 011 vacation,

~

PONS

••

Man in love with wife's father ·.

...... -

PLE •·

The

Ohio

•..
....

Ohio

COLA
' PRODUOS
2UTER

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.

.....

OLD ENGINE • Georae Fraula,
Pomeroy, works oa a 1923 Herculea aasollae ·
entiM, oa display Saturday at the Melp C011aty
fi'alr. Small 11oton like the Hercalea ailed to

ll'llld cora, pump water ud power wasben 11d
ilryen, c.. 10111etlmes run aU day oa aeallon ol
gas. Fraacil took • second Ia botll slnele gaa
ea&amp;llle IUid Iii ea&amp;lne display Ill lbe JIKIIiag.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Co_mmunity· calendar

:•z -------------------~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~--­
Commaalty Caleadar Items
REEDSVILLB • Eastern Local ing 10 assist witll the festival may

. ., appelf two daJI before 11 eveat Sebool BOitd of Education meell
: IUid tile daJ fJI daltevtat.ltelll Wednesday, 7 p.m. lligh ·sehool
mlllt lie recel.ed weD In advaace cafeteria.
to illure public.alloa Ia tbe eal·
, iadar.
.
POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
Boosten meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m., higliiCIIool. Public invited.
. · WEDNESDA,Y
MIDI)LEPORT • ·Meigs Junior
• Wildwood GarHigh Volleyball ~~· i!Jmugh denPOMEROY
Club
mee1S
Wednesday, 7:30
.· Friday, 4:30-6 p.m .• JUDlor h1Jh.
p.m.. home pf luwta Will. Bring
&gt;
ltACINB • Southern Athletic membenblp Qa.
Booilus. elcln ~.bclosW build·
· THURSDAY
il!g aild foolblll
. • ~ fri·
POMEROY
• Regular Jlleeting,
day during tbe eve01ng. Bnng
Meigs
County
Puolie Library
Weed Ellen and peinling tooll.
Board of Trustees, Thursday, I
REJ!DSVILLB • Tentt~~vival at p.m.
the Fellowabip Church of the
MIDDLEPORT • Planning
Nautene, Ree41vllle, hu been
meeting,
Middleport CatfiSb Fesliellellllod tbroUJh Weclneaday. SU·
val,
lbunclay,
1 p,m., Middleport
vices are 7 p.m. nightly. Public
Council
Chambers.
Any011e want·
lnvired.
•

auend.

BRADBURY • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship meell Thunday at Bradbury Church of Christ
at 7:30 p.m. Jill Johnson will present a enfl demonsuation. Public
invited.
POMEROY -·The Meigs County Y01111g Demomtl meet 7 p.m.
Thurl!lay 10 elect delcJates for
Slllewide COIIVGillon.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The '(uppen Plllns VFW Pollt No. 9053
wiD meet lbutsday at 7:30p.m. All
members are IIPd to auend.
POMEROY • Free clothing day,
Salvation Anny, Pomeroy, Thurs·
day, 10 a.m. 10 noon. All area residenll in need of ciOihing are wei·

OPS Fu ••
LEN•ANNOUNCEM E
RENT •CLASSIC CARS•ANTIQUES•

THE.CLASSIFIEDS:'
'

'

A world of opportunity in a nutshell I.

COIIIC.

.

'

\

,,

.,.,
••
''•
'

�·- ....

, PeG~ 12-The Dally SenUn,!

~omeroy-Middleport,

·--·..

-·----- -

- - - - --·----·----..........

~- ------

... - .... .. ... ·-·- .

Wednesday, August 28, 1992 .

Ohio

. ~ames in.
·the news

DE
BUILDERS

, i LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jane
Fonda says ~ has ~ regrets about

giving lip her acting career to
devote her time to h~sband Ted
Turner and her fitness business.
: "I won't be in movies anyJI'(ore," Miss Fonda said Tuesda
in a telephone interview fro~
Boulder, Colo. "I walked all(ay
with nary a glance back. I did it for
30 years."
: Miss Fonda, 54, who first
~ed an exercise studio in 1979,
was promoting her 16th fitness
video " Jane Fonda's ·s~ Aerobic
and Abdominal Workout '
She says she wants to savor life
with Turner, chairm311 of Turner
Broadcasting System, Inc., parent
of CNN. "Yes, I'm in love. I'm in
a life that is fun," she said.
Her last film was "Old Gringo"
in 1988.
.

New HolliN, Rooting.
Room Addltlona,
Kltchena, Porellet and

Bathe.

COMPLETE

773·5614or
992·5249 .

To place an ad

Call992-2156
Mo:o;, thru FRI. 8A.~.-5r. " .

- SH.B-12

CLOSED Sntl.ll

POLICIES

USDA Choice
CentorCii

run 3 day. at no ~harJe.
• Prk!e of ad for all capitallet.ten i• doub~ price of ad c:Ur~l

Boneless
Beef lib

• 7 poinlline type only u1od
• Sentinel il~~;ot re~pon1ible for error• alter firt l d.y (check
(o; enon flnt day ad run• in paper). C.Ulw.fore 2:00p.m .

day after publtcatiOn lo mal!.e eorrcclton
• Ad. th.t mul be pt~id in advance are:
C.rd of Thonko
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A ciMiifted advert.i~enaenl plated in the C•llipolit Daily
Tribune (e1cep1 Claaaif.ed Ditplay, Buinea. Card or Lepl
Nolklet) will•llo appear in 1M Painl Pielunt Regiater and
the Daily Senlinel, raaehing over 18,000 homes

Bl .LLETI\ BO .\R D
IULUnN·IOARD DUDUIE
4:30 P. M. DAY IEFORI
PUILICAnOI
I

Southern

SPECIAL
MASON AUTO GLASS
Now Thru Oct. 31
O.W.G. Truck Sliders Installed
Clear Sliders $48.50 plus tax ·
Tinted Sliders $53.00 plus tax
Grey Sliders $60.00 plus lax

eac es or

CCIIIfornla Reel

89-92 Chev. K-1500 lhru 3500
series truck sliders $1 00 plus tax
Free 12 Pack of Pepsi With

.~..Nectarines

Each Windshield Installed

304-n3-5710
Rt. 33, Mason, WV.
Olfof Good

""'6I\CIII ~ -

&lt;lntr'

675-Pl. Pl•l•11ant

367.a-hlre
388-Vin245-Rio Grande

Pomero7
9115-C~r
143-Pordand
247-Letart FoUo
949-Roelno

4S8-J....t,..n
576-Apple Gro••
773-M•on

256-G•r•• llioo.
64l-Arallla Dill.
379-Wolnut

882-N-IIo•..

Pack

l!lilllnecl Pnnthood of Southeut Ohio will
·tMWe ltl Meigs County Clinic from 236 Eut
SIIMI, Pomeroy to 501 south Third
Mldchport on Monday, August 31.

wllll'lmlln ulollows: Monday,
Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.,
a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Family plan-

"'l1day,
-

Viewers
zap
.·
.
conventzon

cUnlc Hlllonl are held on · T~~e~day
Rtmoons and bi-monthly on a Friday

..tnlng.
.
Far Information about Mrvk:el or to make an

.

call 912-5912 during omct

Real Estate General

32- Moloile llo'"" for Sole

Far. . for Sale

34- Bu.~ine~• Ruildinp
35- la&amp;a &amp; ,\(ore&amp;«ll!:
36- Rul t:a..le ''anted
\I.~

41- Houtalor Real
42- Mobile UoNel for Rent

43- Farm• for Renl
44-- Apartment ror Rena
4~ Fumilhed Root~~~
46-- Space for Rent
47- 'l'•nled to Heat
41-- Equiptaenl for Kent
4C)... For Leo.e

Grade A

.lggs

r:1ts
--·~· - •out

Assorted Varieties
.....

OPEN MON.-SAT.

,_.,,

~JAYMIR

LIC£NSED ond BONDED

Call614·992·

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Dirt, G1'8Vt11 and Coal

6637

St. Rt. 7
Cllt~llire, OH.
1

oH1adUners

=::u-.OIIIcl

Fu
~ Advtrtlllng
SpeclllliM, TYPing,
Lalnlna11ng. CoJ!Y, FIX
&amp;NotarY 6lriiCel

62- 'l'aoted io il.y

SHRUB &amp; TREE

!F...tr~RIIIps-1

lllf.. lt Ill Or ••

REMOVAL

7:1- Yono A: 4 'I'D'o
74- Moktreyc!..
1~ Boa.. a Moton (01' Sale
76- Aukl Porto 4 A«eiiOneol
71- Auto Rep~ir
78- C.•pinJ E,uip-

PARTS1'1ERVICE
Mowers • Cltall Saw'
• Weerleaten

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

•UGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

~11\\111.~

'
: r•':.::'"::.;..!'"!!!·"'::."~·..~·
i •
(!]
~ - N ~!. 1--_.,...v•

P.O. lox194-W•• Mty

RAOII.OIIO

71- .\utoa f&lt;or Solo
72- Trucko 1.. Sole

•

8
po
82- PluMJi.inl &amp; HulinJ
83- Excn•tina
II+- EloctricoiA: Refr~1eraijo~
85- Generol Hau~.,
8l&gt;- Mehi.le HoMe HePI'ir
87- Upholo1ery

I

..

PI.!~!!­

H-92-tlor

Real Estate General

JEW UITING - OAK HILL AO. approx. 82.5 acm
wllll1 ~ -home, 3 badnloml wi1h IPI)IIancle. lrroludM
....,.. Md .... 8CI'IIgt1 ponda.lfMd, lilo, mit, mlk·
houae, largo bam, chickln hoUM. well end T.P.C. w-.

Klondike
Bars

11011,000.

NEw UITIHG - .-.vHito 8R 124. Approx. 1 ..:,.
lolL QNal Camping • • wi1h boating _ .. hu rivw

or Sandwiches

1Rw 1_,. on

4 to 6 Count

_,lot I15,COO each.

IIIDJ)I.EI'OAT - 2 H&gt;ry fiMII holM wit. 2 btrdli&gt;oma
and 8111111ancta, newr roof and wann momlng gu
11M. ASKING ta,OOO.
.

1'8

8\'IIAQIIE - LM Circle - Ranch ~homt wi1h II
bedl-•· carpolt, acdanctJ. cilbfe
In a rNIIy
nice neighborhood. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
~.100.

RAciHE - 0nt llaor frwM home wilh 3 bedroom• on

. Kellogg's
Corn Flakes

IMI lot dolt 10 eveJYthlngl lnckldel 110'9 bliNding
llld u111y -...Com~ priced at •15,000.

Appm..! •••hKIIr..!

H11. . Protlircts __

0

Glality Hi EWKiellcy
Ai' Colllliliolers, Heat
PllllpS, fii'IIICes &amp;
Now Walw Healers.
Bennetts Mobile Home

Dnr~

Public Sale

:IC.

1391Soflor4 Sdlotllll.
~~ Ohlt
c.JI(614)446-9416 or 1400472-5967

I

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR lEW
SREL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GAUGE DOOR
· IISTAWD PllaJ
b7-$275.00 16•7-$450.00
I'IIIIU IISIAWD-Y. HP.$200.00
With 2 Tntnsmlttars

Witll PurcH.. ef
Door Pills o,...r
llctliYI Fill ·
Settllrl.

Flad A Better

••• aoonNG
AND EVERftiiiG UIIDERIUII
GAUGES • ADDinOIIS a SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
o.u, A.,urel c••,,.,,.,.

•A
20 Yr. lfp.

Call AI, 614-742·2328
1117JIIIt

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

CNoS...ayCd•l

OFFICE 882-2886

Saturday, August 29, 1992
10:00 a.m.

SURPLUS
County Rd. 111-

129

Mon.-Sun. t __. pm

a.. •• lor your
and back to

.

otory home with
aiding, newer roof, newer double pan• windowa,
_ , wiring .nd plumbing. H" 5 rooma, 2 btrdrooma,
lind- car gongo on apprux. )1.,. of gruund.
RACINE - Famlll nulled - For thia 1~ atofy1. 3-4
bedroom home wtth ' pon:IMro, ...., ba-~ aining
room, fwniiY room, end a amaJt outbuilding. Good llzod
lot
$Zf,500.
CHESlER - Bumnw Road - A grecll lillie 1111 awar or
1t1111r home. Hat 2 btrdrooma, 1 balh, W oil 111...wilh ~It 34 ......
132,500

oomlo!1a. quit pieces, doff c:radea. 12 cup pan:ulalot, tnrdde
MWing llillchlna, buklll. rdroad llnlem and oilers, miner
lUnch box; brua apl_,, poll c:ard c. 'kdon book. - h
boanll, old
aid scales, copper boiler, wnk. 100'1 of
paper booklllld olherl, ,_,;~. player. 2 portable heat011,
lawn IIMnilunt; porch swing glider. wooden lazy susan, 2 old
--..Cini'Sitlrpl,pllltplow,6HPtiler,lawnmDMr
mo1ar1, wheal barloW, 5 HP garden 1ractor with
nn lawn can. 41100 BTU condllon. 10,000
ahoudillon. hay .U.. die.
. c&gt;hliruaw, BIDakifhaw,hand drill,
vile, Crafllman Gil, CIOII C:UIIW, 2
-.1 11101
dtains,

IIOOLEPORT - Slap Alghlln - And 11M -r a well
Hllbfllhod bulint11, the WESTERN AUTO. Comtt
with d llock, 110,. ~x~u.... and a 2 IIIMy commertlal
bulking. Hu potanlial for 4 apamenll uplltlra. GINt

bo•.

polllnliollor OI..'OCIII

ONLY $125,0011.

IT. AT. 124 - A bM..-ful brick nrnch, 3 bodroomJ, ~
ball home. Hu tuft baNmenl end lllac:hod 2 ""r
gnge.
......

u

IIDI!LEJ'ORT- 1. tmnd- A large older brick home
with trig ~ room, lining room with built-in hu~. '

bedloomJ, 1)I batht, WIIIP"IOIIhd po~. 3 ft~a,

~~~. ~amps, Wl,.lllrllddtviln, lltplldder. 20ft.ext.

-.eoo.

lind n1oe tr1g 1ot Much pa~an-.,.

WILLI IIU. ROAD· AIIMil home 1111 can .be bot.9tl
u It or wl llnilh. Haa a Cllhednll cellng, lelge
liYing 1110111, diMig,liM, talahen, - badtaom, ulilftr

.... -

":.:!:
$8,000..,

....... mol4lr dl)•d• ~. All

-

CAI.L 10i¥YI

DOTTIE TURN~J!,.Irotc. .................... ,.............tt2-Ht2
BRENDA ~EfFI:Iftl,,..........................................ttNOH
DARUNE8TEWART..._ ..................................tt2..,_5
SANDY eUTCHER............,_ ...........................ttW371
8HEAYLWAL1EII8,CIIHhlra.......;..............:.....H7o0421
.lEARY IPRADLJNQ .............................. ~3041 112-MN

and~

t33,COO llniahod.

OUR IUYIIIII IFYOU WllHf

..... t ·., ...'HD-- ....·..- -...._.__....111
1RACY • UfU.G ER..-........- -..••••.......- ......Itl 14•

-----..t... .

. . tRUIIILL.------............- ......... 2110

•

of mflltary
aurplua llomat 1117 pd.
11la~1lon

- -·-----1111211

..

Approved Townlhlp
Roed (blacktop), 114
mill from Rt. 7,
loc:llled 11M-.
Ch....r and TuppeN
Plllna.
Each lot .. .,...ullly
wooded wllh -ll•nl

drainage. Service by:
tP.C. Willer Co.;

Columbua &amp; Sou1htrn

125,800.

WE NUD U81INCI8I WE'RE
WE c.wT ICIU Ul' """..:=~-~-.,..~

OIIRCI

hunting
aohoot

nooda. AIN'a tare-at

POMEROY PIKE - Ct....., - A -

LOCATED 4MILES SOUTH OF POINT PLEASANT
ON RT. &amp;2, STOVER FARM
WILL BE SELLING THE PERSONAL TOOLS
OF UTE WtWAM E. STOVER, SR.
ALSO THE TOOLS AND CHA1TELS OF THE
LATE WOODY KNi OF POINT PLEASANT, WV,
HAVE BEEN MOVED TO FARM TO BE SOLD.
VEBYPABDAL USIJNGI POI1Ible TV, end llble. quills

COUNTRY LOTS
FOR SALE
1·5 ACRES

WILSON'S ARMY

- --··-·-

IINCtu,..

Limill Per
Family .
Please ·

&amp; Cooling

2112/92mn

1'01 W{ • 3 tlory bullling with~ 50• X 100 parldng·
1111. Many paaallllill" for thlt
A good lmielt·
1111111 pt1411ir1Y. t21,15110.

18 oz. Box

..

011.. WV. &amp; H.U.D•

5-14-92-tfl

205 Norlh Saconcl Ava.
MkldiJiport, QH . .

·y.., Choico · RogJcr crll.

llo llll (h \IH'I'-

614-949·2801. 949·2160
or 915·3839

~

........

J)uuldl \'Hit

902-7083

Great Anytime

'

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Tow••·

".......~

TRIM and

lUIIllll

614-949-2804

~\.

Peachfork Rd.

992·2259
608 EAST MAI.ft
POMEROt OHIO

Clorox
Bleach

2-7·92-111

MICROWAVE OVEII
alii VCI REPAIR

Brawny

~~.

667·6179

•u-'1:1-11110.

URNEA REAlTY

c

Reaular

Limit 1
Per Family
Please

985·4473

AND PAICEH FIRST

RACINE,MOWER
CLINIC

63-U-toek
64- Hay A: Craifl
65- Seed A: F.nililer

FIIEE ESTIMARS

CHECK 0111 IELECllON

q ....

\J,IhJ!l

eGa rat••

eCompltlt
Relnotleli•t
Stop &amp; Compare

Olflce, School a Art

,\ I I \ I ' I tl I I"

ATTF:\TIOl\

•New Homes

,_.""'
01. 4571t
,,,., H2-6171

l I' I' I II· ~

-

992·5114

CONSTRUCTION

112 w. .... .......

M•ilc•l .l~tru...u

POMEROY BY·PASS

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY

Ill

I

•

LOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143

71281'12/11n.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER a SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Ume1!one,

• Convertible Tops
• Custom Carpets
• Cullom Saat
Covers • Alto Boats

Of Sweet Co111, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

949-2168

• • 8/17/Pd.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BUllDOZING

&amp;

Limit 3 Per

Limit 1 Per
F~Pieose

FREE ESTIMATES

12·5-tln

51- Houoehold Condo
s2- Sportin1 Condo
53- Antiq5+- Mlle. Merc::handM
SS- Builcli,. Suoolieo
_56-.PetolorSolo

Designer

Kellogg's
Pop·farts

Guttar Cleaning
Painting

PH. 614-992-5591

\1 11!! . 11\\lll~l'

~

Downspouts

RAONE

22- M..,y to Lo.n

I \1 i \1

Guttars

4S633 ST. RT. 124

23- Prof..iional SerwM:ea

Ill·. \T

ROOFING

BARN

. 21- O...i...O. o.....,...oaily

8

Food(lub

NEW-REPAIR

Fl\\\11\1 .

6

FAMILY PWIIING SEIYICES

CURIO

667-4:aolv1Ue

3 AMOUncements

Oil or Water

•A doctor d1scovered Jackson's
high blood pressure during a routine examination Tuesday and
wanted to run additional tests, said
Nick Gold, a Jackson spokesman.
"It's nothing serious," Gold said
· Jackson, 54, was expected back
iO: his orrace Thursday. The Democrat served two ttnns before being
succeeded by Andrew Young in
1gs2. He was re-deeted in 1989.

NOW OPEN

Howard L Wrilesel

895-l.otort
957-B•ffolo

742- Ru~ond

59- t'or Sale or Trade

tatized with hi$11 blood pressure.

-........

R-1116~1

sa- F'noiu a: v,..to~tt.o

Mayor

Free Esi' tes ·low
Rates ior Sellon
No .... Taa 5ltall

F-Eotlmlloo

992- Middleport/

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES

*"''
.,.....

Lawn Mowing,

446-GaiUpoUr

$1.50 doz..

PI ling llflln•rll
Roofing

Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Now

Electric

C.,.ulry

1-800-837·,460

Gallia Counly · Melp Counly Muon Cu., WV

S7-

Maynard Jackson has been hospi-

IOITOII
COITUCTIIG

949·2391~r

Clouified poge• c011er rlae
following telephone e:cclaanges•• ,

~

midnight. Don' Miss the Fun!

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINRNANCE

I:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedn.....Jav
100 p.m. Thunday
I :00 p.m. Friday

.

ARNIE'S SPORTS LOUNGE
Presents
GIRLS NIGHT OUT
Wed., Aug. 261h
Great drink apeciala untH

7--

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Salurday
I :00 p.m. Monday

COI'Y OEi\OLINE
Monday l,apcr
TUCliCiay Paper
Wl.'dncoday Pal""
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ad• oulltde the eounty your ad run• mutt be prepatd
• Receive dlleountlor acb paid in advance.
·
• Free Ath: Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 word• will he

: BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP} F11rmer Gov. George C. Wallace
gclt a special present .on his 73rd
birthday - a discharge from the
hOspital after a two-week Slay.
'Before leaving Tuesday, the
four-term governor shared a vaniUa
c$e with about 15 Univemty Hospifal employees.
· "He was in good spirits, alen,
siCiing up, smiling for visitors and
serying the cake," said hospital
spQkesman Halik Black.
Wallace was admitted Aug. 12
for ueaunent of painful muscle
spasms he has had since a 1972
assassination attempt left him pllllllyzed from the waist down.
• "He is generally irnp-oved, feeling much beUer and looking more
like his old self," Black said.

LOS ANGELES (AP} - Television viewers switched off the
Republican National Convention in
search of entertainment programming during last week's prime-time
broadcast hours.
A CBS movie presentation of
"2000 Malibu Road," a fo~r­
episode replacement series, was the
No. 1 television show last week,
according to ratings released Tuesday by Nielsen Media Research.
The highest-rated night of last
week's GOP convention in Houston ranked 52nd.
Fox Broadcasting Co. received
its highest overall ranking yet,
tying with NBC ibr second place
wiih a 7.5 average. CBS was riJSI
wiih an 8. ABC was third 7.3.
Each ratings point represents
921,000 homes.
Reruns of ABC's "Roseanne,"
CBS' " 60 Minutes" and NBC's
"Cheers" ranked second, third and
fourth, re~tively.
A special presentation of ABC's
"Arresting Behavior" ranked fifth,
followed by a rerun of the network's sitcom "Step By Step."
ABC's newsmagazine "20-20"
fi nished seventh, followed by an
original episode of NBC's "Blossom" sitcom.
Tied for ninth place were CBS'
" Murder, She Wrote" and "Mur·
phy Brown," and NBC's
" Un10lved Mysltlies."
In the network news competition, ABC was first with an 8.4
average rating. CBS was second
with 7.8 and NBC was third with
7.4\
Here are the top 10 shows, their
network and rating:
" CBS Sunday Movie: 2000
Malibu Road," 16.1; "Roseanne,"
ABC, 15.5; "60 Minlllta," CBS,
13.7; "Cheers," NBC, 12.5;
· " Arresting Behavior" (Soecial},
ABC, 12.4; "Step By Stepf,-(Special), 12.1; "20-20," ABC, 11.8;
' "Blossom," NBC, 11.6; "Murder,
She Wrote," CBS, "Murphy
. Br,o wn," ,CBS, and "Unsolved
Mysteriel.'_' NBC (tic), 11.5.

FRESH SWEET CORN

REW\DELfNQ IEIMCEI
F- EaL • 211 Y11 Exp.

BILOXI, Miss. (AP} - Miss
Iowa was crowned Miss Teen USA
in a pageant rearranged around
Hurricane Andrew.
. The pageant in this Gulf Coast
city was to be televised live on
CBS Tuesday evening. With the
approach of Andrew, it was taped
ellflier and the contestants were
bQSed further inland to weather the
storm.
: Pageant officials called the runn&lt;rs-up until two contestants were
left Then they filmed endings with
e8ch of them winning 50 the conteStants would be surprised when
the pfOgram aired.
· The winn~, Jamie Solinger, is a
17-year-old high school student in
Altoona, Iowa. Miss Oklahoma
Angela Logan, 17, was rust runnerUJ!,
-The hmricane passed to the west
of &amp;iloxi, bringing only heavy rains
and high winds to the city.

ATLANTA (AP) -

RED .HILL FARMS
· PRODUCE

Electrie Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500

and up
Owner Financed

1614) 915·3594or

HOUSE
PAINTING

915·3~

lll•teriDr • Exterior
Spray • Rol • Ins~

An no unce men Is

FREE ESTIIA1E8

CALL

614·992·6949
7/lllt211 mo.

3 Announcementa
Ado Nunn ....... PlHoo Coil
Kim l-101\d IU: '102·~7111l
0..211411 DIN.

F'" Adult T.. Uno.
1·l'IW51Uvo, Ono On Ono.

CHIRUE'S
SMilliOZIR

....&amp; .....

lt...~ In

M~ ~rrt.

liMo
fl Ieo.:rM tkteomber

...... Will'l,l .,,

;

.

,fta'f.~

IIIDUCI: ..... oil 1111 ..... ·,...

... ..

.-u.no~l

;.:•·..:.c.~w~'·•FNII, ,
Dricg.

$25.00,., ...

...
'tab ~t! FMh Phem!MJt

992·7553

4

............ .....................a.....
lllllllf IIIMCI

.

'

IWOUILI UtU

~-~

· Giveaway

:

• • ·~

�Ohio

1992
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

11 Autos tor Slit
1111 l'ontllo SllnbPrd, ....
aundY. With 11M lntorlor, UM
lloW ..,IC!O. IIWliUW.

{\f.c/
·,, ,A~.

. '"'

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio
5Q '100 OOIIT
/fOIE:f, WOII ?

~

11/f. NXIf.

Television

...

I DOIIT AAVE

WEI.L,lllfli£J,.

TMTUILY
PIZILII

0 lour
Roorrange lottoro of tho
ocromblod -.u be-

OOJ6Ii
/101£'{!

4)

'

low to form lour limple

EVENING
1:00 (J). (1). (I). • •
0.111 .....

(I) CltlriM ~~

3

~~sr;l

C~ARLI E

BROWN ! I
~EARD TI-lE CO'IOTES
A6AIN!T~EI'SOUNDED
SO LON ELV IT
SCARED ME ...

1

OI-l. 1M SORRV .. DID
I WAKE YOU UP? IS

THERE A TIME C~AN6E

WHEI{E YOU LIVE?

1

liii~,.Wori:IT-

1

I DON T THINK 50 ..

I

1:06 (J) I Love L110J

A BLOCK APART..

1•30iL,:;:rJI

I

0 KwE A

I' . I
I 1
s

~· I' I

....;,Lr-:;A~N::..r.E~M,_::E~-1~ don't live in a -·- ....."

Cll•lll•AICNtwaC

~ ::.::-~sro·l;l

1• I 19 G

.L __l-..1.-l.

.... ~;~

~=:::::..

0 lcoolly Doo
DUpCioM

tr tI· I

I had returned lo my hometown lor a class reunion. One
~ alumni smiled to another: "II
.
· • no one knows the trouble
,.-----:-~....:..., you've seen. it's certain you

Gllltra_..

WE ONLY LIVE HALF

A

.L-..1.--1.

PRINT NUMBERED

aJ LETTERS

you are trying lo ACHIFifE •

IIIIIL 11000. JIM.Ili.JI71.

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

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llolld, lldwd,
lloldor tiO. ,._

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; Mu•• OEA.-: 2:00 p.&amp;

'

FRANK AND ERNEST

1. . Hollvp.llll, 14112. 2 Ill, 2
botii.IOIIIIIIOC. ~~- COf1dlo
lion. :IOM'J$.1141•
1111 Ro-..d, I Ill, 2 111111.

- .....

AM/'IESIA
CI.INIG

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.P01111roy,

'

.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

--- .....
·=

Business

14

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Sale
&amp;Auction

on-

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tOM
llol11ood, .....,
WV.
Ownor101&lt;1llnlncN .........
down PlrtMd, tCM • llli.
-

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dillon, 411; tlnill _ ...,... 55
t100; • - CooMt Building

_

8p1alal T1ta comedian
di18CII hla oharp-wttted song
paJodlll and polnled
one-llntr1 at till men and
women w1to lllk 1nd hOld
public otllca. (0:30) s:.reo.
Domt
Joe blcoln• till campus

Suppllel

•• Ill.,..._
.. EEK AND MEEK

hiWttltrob which

-I .... ait llOM. EICIIIInl

1111. '-"' .... 101
Studentl PNP118 tor a

-a:ow,··

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42 Mobile
Homll
tor Rt-

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'IP'IIA I'UIINITUIIE AND U.
PUNICII
Itt 1111421

44

No Dopolll • OIWI) OPIItiHCI
f!ollllil .........., Or u.t.

~~-2~l::·

Aplnment

torRent
t
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100 Amp,

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SpaJita

22 Po~ of.,.
fiYChl
23 Monaalery
resident
211 Cllar91 In
court
31 Female
ralaUve
. 32 Sian ot Ml~

DOWN
1 18441n"·

lion dati

2 Mrt. Cherlto

IIOid Jade tltlnlta 1tar r.m11y
mey be 1tar only lllvatlon

whllalell.Sterto. Q.
1.:.
:Tlot Taite (2:00)
•
•

NoooStno.

Leny Klnl Llval

elcareaow and .... King

1:30 (J). Ill Wlttp Antonio IIICI
Hllen pooe u

an engaged

~foollrnmtgratlon •

~People- .2.. A 13-nalkln
survey halpa to JIVNl till
~I and global •
consequencaaot
C1Y8f110pulatlcln. (1:35)

"'*

-=

201ca
· 21 Collledlon

111• 1D. 2000 Mllllu

UH•• I COULD
USE A LITTLE
CARD-PLAYtN'
MONEY!!

Crtinl Out Wlndo• ill 114121
11.1 W/8tonw IHII I.._.,
ta,JM4411tll.

Choir ma
tut
w.;

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Willi 4 Cllllre ·rua lfll!k; o.
.,..... Willi - - And 4 CPiolow
W1' I 1*'1- ~ w.;
""""'"'81\22Ill 111M
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I Dryor

I&amp; Club -

Tim !rill to give AI
lnelrUCIIonl In till tint art of

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Disneyland Ptglkln Ctallllc:

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Texu A&amp;M ve. Stlntord at
Anaheim. Calli. (L)
(l) Julia Cltld Mel Cnp ny

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "SomeUIIIIII I IIIII I have no connection btlwten
my brain and mouth." - (TV talk show hOlt) Crlatlna Sarak!gul. . •!

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•

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�Ohio Lottery

Pigskin
Classic
scheduled

Super Lotto:
9-10-16-20-36-43
Kicker:
4-6-2-8-3-6
Pick 3:

Periods or rain tonight.

0-6-8

Page 5

Heavy rain and thunderstorms
possible. Low 65-70.

Pick 4:

7-4-9-3

TYSON • HOLLY FARMS
"

'

Mixed Fryer
Parts

Vol. 43, No, B8
Copyrlghtod 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 27, 1992

2 Secllona, 12 Page1 25 cenle
A Multlmodllo Inc. Newspaper

'No-fly zone' goes
into effect over Iraq
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON- U.S. warplanes are in the air and ready to
enforce President Bush's ban on
Iraqi civilian and military flights
over southern Iraq in defense of the
region's oppressed Shiites, Pentagon officials say.
Bush's set 10:15 a.m. EDT
as the deadline for the air
&gt;mcou, That would be dusk in Iraq.
surveillance planes and
fillh~r escorts

LB.

free to cross Iraq's borders south of
the 32nd parallel to pinpoint the
movements of Saddam Hussein's
ground and air forces, Pentagon
officials said.
"No Iraqi aircraf~ either fixedwing or rotary-wing, military or
civilian, will be allowed to fly
south of the 32nd parallel," Pentagon spokesman Bob Hall said
Wednesday.
"We will respond appropriately
and decisively 10 any Iraqi failure
to comply with this requirement or

Stokely
Vegetables
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Pot Pies
7Oz. Boxes ••••••••••••••

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• Joint Chiefs or Starr
Director or Intelligence Rear Ad ral Michael W. Cramer
explains President Bush's ban on civilian and mUitary nights over
southern Iraq io derense or the region's oppressed Shiites at a Pentagon brienng Wednesday. Bush said the no-ny ban, dubbed
"Operation Southern Watch" would remain in efl'ect until it is no
longer required. (AP photo)

, II'I!IHGIIII.

Com
Dol•

·

99~ $1~!

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - U.S. Rep.
Clarence Miller has abandoned
efforts to have the Ohio Supreme
Court look into irregularities that
he claimed led to his defeat in the
June 2 Republican primary.
Supreme Court spokesman
Harry Franken said Tuesday that
Miller sent the court a signed
notice of dismissal, which he
expects will be routinely approved.
Miller did not send the court an
explanation.
The veteran congressman's
office in Washington said he was in
a meeting and not available for
comment
He lost his bid in the 6th Con·
gressional District to U.S . Rep.
Bob McEwen by 286 votes, in the
only primary in the country
between two Republican congress·

Ted Strickland, Democratic can·
didate for the Sixth U.S. Congressional seat, will be bonored with a
reception at the Meigs County Public Library on Friday.
The reeeption is co-hosted by
the Democratic Parties of Meigs
and Gallia counties. According to
Sue Maison, chairman of the Meigs
County Democratic Party, the
reception will be the best opportu·
nity for local residents to meet this
candidate.
"The local Democratic Party is
proud to Support the Strickland
campaign," Maison said. "Ted is a
powerful candidate who relates
well to the people of Meigs County
and Southeastern Ohio. He believes
strongly in the work ethic that we
as Democrats hold dear, and he is
(

zone.''

In advance of Bush's announcement, the Iraqis moved all rotary
and jet aircraft out of the southern
region but put some of their top-of·
the line Mirage jets just north of
the 32nd parallel, one defense official said.
U.S . combat pilots have been
given "a certain nexibility," in
deciding whether to pursue the
Iraqis. But they will go after any
aircraft acting aggressively, the
official said.
"We know we won't catch
everything. But we're not going to
be stupid about i~'' he said.
Shortly after Bush' made his
announcement, Iraq said it would
not abide by the order. It proposed
seUing up a ''wisemen committee''
to investigate conditions in Iraq's
south for Shiite Muslims, whom
Western governments contend have
been brutally repressed by Saddam.
Bush said his ban was authorized under U.N. Security Council .
Resolution 688, which demands an
end to Saddam's repression-o·f ·
civilians.
Apparently attempting to blunt
criticisms that he was motivated by
personal political interests, the
president said the allies agreed to
act in response to "new evidence
of harsh repression" by Saddam
against the Shiites.
Bush said the no-fly ban,
dubbed "Operation Southern
Watch," would remain in effect
"until the coalition determines that
it is no longer required."
"We seek Iraq's compliance.
not its partition," he told a White
House news conference.
"What emerges from eyewit·
ness accounts ... is further graphic
proof of Saddam 's brutality," the
president said.

Miller drops cou~t challenge
to McEwen's primary victory
men.

They wound up in the same dis·
trict as a result of congressional
redistricting, which resulted in
Ohio losing two of its 21 House
seat,~.

Miller filed what is known as a
contest of election with the court
on July 23 after a recount in the
southern Ohio district showed
McEwen with 33,194 votes to his
32,908.
The recount was required
because McEwen's 297-vote margin in the initial returns was less
than 0.5 percent of the total vote of
66,141, or 331.
The recount showed McEwen
the winner by 286 votes among
66,102cast
In his challen~e. Miller contended there were megularities and
inaccuracies in the tabulation of
votes in several counties, including

Strickland reception planned

t

with any other interference in our
air operations,'' Hall added.
Pentagon sources, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said they
fully expect Saddam's fortes to test
U.S. and allied resolve with possible "cat and mouse" ploys, perhaps by Hying aircraft just over or
quite near the border of the " no-ny

,,

concerned abotit the working people of the sixth district."
"We believe that the !'OOPle of
this district are tired of a Congressman who takes advantage of the
taxpayers and the sacred position
that he has held for over a decade,"
Maison said. "Not only did Bob
McEwen bounce 166 checks in the
House Banlc, but he has needlessly
traveled across the globe at the tax·
· payer's expense. Meanwhile, families in Meigs County and South·
eastern Ohio ale finding it harder
and harder 10 malcc ends meet."
The reception will be held in the
Riverboat Room from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tickets to the reception are available at the door at a cost of $15 per
person, and $25 per couple.

v

'

Highland, where McEwen lives.
Contesting the election meant
that the slate's highest court would
have to hold hearings, leading to a
decision to confmn or reverse the
results, or order a new election.
Miller, of Lancaster, has been in
Congress since 1967, and McEwen,
since 1981.
McEwen will face Democrat
Ted Strickland, a Lucasville psychologist, in November. Strickland
ran against McEwen in 1980 and
received 45 pertent of the vote.
McEwen said Miller "has stood
for fiscal integrity and conservative
values" and is an outstanding Congressman.
After withdrawing his challenge, Miller voiced support for the
McEwen campai~n. according to
McEwen, who S81d he appreciated
the gesture.
The Supreme Coun had not set
a hearing. Chief Justice Thomas
Moyer had removed himself from
the case and asked Associate Justice Robert Holmes to rule on
whether Miller's challenge had
merits.
Moyer, also a Republican seeking re-election, said he removed
himself because of the possible
appearance of a connict of interest.
Holmes, a Republican, is not
seeking re-election. His term ends
in January.

SCHOOL BEGINS • Children at the Car·
leton School in Syracuse began classes on Thursday morning, and most seemed pleased to get
back to "business". Primary class members pic·

And~ew

spins out, leaving
trail of misery in two states
By MARY FOSTER
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS - The remnants of Hurricane Andrew
drenched the South today after a
rampage that left 20 dead, at least
250,000 homeless in Florida and
thousands more in Louisiana
unable to find out what's left of
their homes.
Flooding, fallen trees and other
debris on road·s prevented
Louisiana residents from learning
the extent of the damage caused by
Andrew, already the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history at more
than $15 billion in florida alone.
" There are going to be a lot of
broken hearts when they see the
damage that was done," said Rila
Folse, a cashier at a reslaurant in
New Iberia.
Earlier Wednesday, the hurricane plowed across low-lying
southern Louisiana with gusts to
160 mph, spinning off tornadoes
and unleashmg torrential rain. New
Orleans, the state's biggest city,
was spared the worst of the storm.

In south-central Louisiana,
Andrew ravaged houses, turned
trailer homes upside down and toppled trees.
"We've got no house, no
· money," said Margie Powell, 53,
of LaPlace, whose tr3ller was
smashed by a tornado. "I'm
scratched. I'm scared. But I'm
alive."
By late Wednesday, the storm
had weakened into a tropical
depression with winds below 38
mph · and was centered over
Natchez in southwestern Mississippi.
.
Showers and thunderstorms
caused minor flooding in Mississippi and knocked out power to
35,000 homes and businesses ,
authorities said.
On Monday, Andrew cut a
swath across South Florida, wrecking 63,000 homes and leaving
250.000 people homeless. Preliminary estimates in Dade County put
the damage at $15 billion to S20
billion; the damage wasn't immediarely known in Louisiana.

. "Our first priority is just clearmg roads of trees and geUing pco.
pie back home,·· said Lionel
Oubre, spokesman for Iberia Parish
Emergency Management Center.
Meanwhile, water, food and
medical SUpPlies were trucked into
ravaged neighborhoods south of
Miami. About 600,000 homes and
businesses remained without electricity as search team s picked
through rumed homes for bodies.
"The destru ction from lhis
storm goes beyond anything we
have .known in recent years," said
Presodent Bu sh, who met with
evacuees Wednesday at a sports
arena in Lafayette, La.
Bush said he had freed $77 mil lion for emergency relief in
Louisiana and $10 million for
cleanup. Florida is slated to get $50
million. plus $10 million to hire
temporary help to rebuild.
About 322,000 Louisiana homes
and businesses were withou1 power
Wednesday, and at least one person
was killed . At least 15 died in
(Continued on Page 3)

Spratley calls company's profits excessive
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
William A. Spratley is going after
the fifth-largest telephone company
in the state, charging it with
"excessive monopoly profits."
Spratley filed a complaint with
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio Wednesday saying that West·
em Reserve Telephone Co., based
in Hudson, made too much money
in 1991 • an estimated $10 million
profit.
Western Reserve serves 131,000
customers in ea~tem and southeast·
em Ohio, including Meigs County
residents.
· . Like other telephone companic!s,
Western Reserve is a non-competitive monopoly under state regulation, but Spratley said it showed a
31.7 percent profit in 1991 and a
30.7 percent profit during the past
five years.
"These numbers are off the
charts," Spratley said. "We think
it's time to file B§ainst the tele·
phone companies. ' He called the
complaint a ''rate case in reverse."

Reed appointed to board
Paul E. Kloes, President and
Chairman of Fanners Bancshales,
Inc. announced on Wednesday that
Bruce J. Reed, Executive Vice
President in charge of lending of
Fanners Banlc and Savings Company in Pomeroy has "been appointed
to the Board of Directors of Farmers Bancshares, Inc ., to fill the·

lured art, left to right, Nicki Wilson; Jennifer
Gray; Diana Ash, an instructional aide in the
room; Kay Tackett, primary teacher; Justin
Boyd; Jennifer Arthur and Ashley Rhoades.

unexpired term of the late
Theodore T. Reed, Jr. That term
will expire in April, 1994.
Reed has been employed fulltime with Farmers Bank since
I 980. He and his wife, Rita, reside
in Pomeroy with their three sons,
Tyler, Jordan and Justin, and
Reed's stepson, Chris Jenkins.

'

Fred Griech, regional president and understand exactly what he has
for Alltel, parent company of West- filed. Until we physically sec that. 1
ern Reserve, said, "We ant to read will have no comment."

,.--Local briefs-_,
Men plead to charges
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souslby reported that Brian
Durham and Jeff King appeared in Meigs County Coun on charges
of receiving stolen property and criminal damaging as a result of a
, vandalism incident at the roadside rest area on U.S. Route 33 early
Tuesday mornmg.
They pled guilty to the two charges and were sentenced 10 six
months in the county jaiL That sentence was saspended to 10 days,
and the men were placed on two years probation. Restitution within
30 days was a condition of the probation.
According to officials at the Ohio Deparunent of Transponation,
costs to repair the damage at the restroom facility was just under
$900.
Sheriff Soulsby also reported that a warrant has been issued for
the arrest of Matt Parsons of King Ridge Road, who was implicated
in the incident.
Soulsby reported that UOOpctS from the Athens post of the Ohio
State Patrol came to Meigs County 10 talk to Durham and King
regarding the entry of a vehicle parked along U.S. Route 33. Troopers wiU )JIUCIIt the infonnation to the Athens County Prosecuting
Attorney for possible filing of charges.

Thefts reported to authorities
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department took a complaint from
the Tuppers Plains Elementary School, stalin~ that someone had
taken the basketball hoop from the outside banking board.
.
On Sunday, Milce Warner of Forest Run Road reported that a
white 1992 PWSO Yamaha motorcycle with pink trim was taken
from his bam sometime after midnight on Saturday.
Harry Hill of Letart, W.Va. notified the sheriffs office that
sometime last week, someooe took a set of platform scales from his
packing shed.
Continued on 3

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