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,.

- Pomeroy-:-MiddlePQrt-Galllpolla,
OH Point Pleasant, wv
'

P11Q1 DB . SUnd8y Tlmu Sentinel

'

..

Ohio Lottery

'

New doctors are introduced
or

POMEROY - New doctors at Carolina University School
Woodlands Center, Inc. , Mark Medicine loc•ted in Greenville, N.
C'MMikr, M.D., medical director, C. and a five year double board m~­
a141 Nucy B. Graham, M. D., idency in internal medicine and
dilector o( Child aild Adolescent psychiatrY in June, 1991 from the
Payc.iatry, were introduced to West Virginia U!liversity School of
.local phyaicians, hospital and Medicine, Charleston DivisiQII,
heiiG qency penonild at a recent located in Charleston, W. Va.
,_..,. lleld at ~ Meigs MultiHe is manied and has two chil.
Building confmnce room. dren, James, nine and Jessica, five.
doctors will be taking His wife, Cathie is a registered
apPclintmenta at the Woodland nurse.
Ctaten Oulpllient Clinic located
Dr. Graham, director of Child
i1 1M Meigs Multipwpose Build- and. Adolescent Psychiatry,
ill alonJ With working at the Gal- rece1ved her bachelor of arts and
Iii Inti Jactson County facilities.
master of arts from Michigan State
Dr. Chandler joined Woodland University in East Lans_ing, MichiCt I a' Iliff as a full-time medi- gan in French with a minor in Chig~· clieekw last month. He received
nese. She earned amasru .of arts in
~Ia undergraduate and Doctor of
English ·at Marshall' Uiliversity and Medicine degree from the East · for nine years taught, English,

·PIIJ:i.

Reds wallop

French, and Chinese in public

Pick 3:
125
Pick 4:
3839
Super Lotto: ti
5-11-17-24-36-42
Kicker:
850443

San Diego

schools.

She 1raduated from Marshall
Univemty School of Medicine in
1987 and completed an adult psy'chiatry residency in 1990. This
year slle rmlshed her fellowship in
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
also at West Virginia University,
Charleston Division.
During that time she worked on
a pan-time basis for Shawnee Hills
Mental Health Center, Kanawha
Pastohll Counseling Center, and
Woodland Centers.
She is married to Nolan Graham
wllo worked for WSAZ Television
for IS years and is now womng on
his mastm (Iegree at Marshall University. They have three children,
Nathan, 15, Nadia, 13, and
Nichelle U.

(

Page4

•

•

a•
Vol. 43, No. eo

.

'

utive director, secoad from left, and Malcolm
Orebaugh, 11550Ciate director, for a get-acqualat- ·
ed luncheon wlth Meigs County doctors and
other bealth agency personnel.

on NASDAQ under the symbol
AKZOY.

THE AGENT WJ=IO INSURES YOUR

CAR AND HOME CAN ALSO PROTECT

Jolmson, prod11ctiDD ~perbilelldeat, Joim Barnett, top process operator, WIDiam Mayes, sblpping services operator, Jay CISlO, top mecbanlc,
Charles Blesslag, laboratory aide, and Bill
Brady, plant miUillger.

PRESENTED CERTIFICATE - Joel

~I
e•to ChemiJ:aJ Company, Gallipolis Ferry,
rtcftd)' presented the Preferred Supplier certlflclk lo Alu:o employees Sandy Wallace, laborat..-y aronp leader quality assurance, Chuck

Money Ideas

Interest rates

By STAN EVANS
GAlLIPOLIS-TheFederalRe- ·Sdiscount rate CUI in early July
had a positive effect upon aU fixed
income rnatmity ranges. However,
rates declined
JIIQierapdly iii the
slutlDintcrmedi• 8IIIUrity ange
dlllltlley did in the
~,e.ll'el. M

maytritY
a result,

dttl slope of the

yield CIWVC !leepcned furdlc:r, creating the largest
spq1 between short aild long-term
yieldl ia than 150 years.
Although the Federal Reserve is
COIIIIIIiaed to using aU the resources
11 ill di,......lto move the economy
up the JfOWlh curve, any further
declilles in short-term rates may have
nepti.eeffccts on the dollar in inter·
llllionlllllllkcts. The July discount

rate cut did bring about some pressure on the dollar before govenunent
banks stepped in to support il
As a result, we are not expecting
any further important declines in
shan-term money tateS. A weaker
dollar could easily ~ into
domestic inflation pressure. ShQnterm rates are already approximating
the current inflationary rate.
Funhermore, a 1SO-year high
spread between short and long-term
yields indicates any additional easing by the Federal Reserve would do
very tittle for long-term tateS. The
90-day treasury bill has declined
. significantly in the past 18 months,
and year~vcr-year is down SO percent - no extreme that is seldom
reached.
Although short-term rates are not
likely to decline funher, the potential
exists for an additional drop in longterm rates- an important objective
of the Federal Reserve. The environment remains ripe for such a decline.
Real rates arc still high on longer
term maturities. Economic activity
will remain subpar as the economy
de-leverages. The historically large
spread between long and short-term
yields also suggests investors' demand for higher yielding long-term
maturities will remain strong.
[Mr. Evans is an investment broker for The Ohio Company Ia Its
Gallipolis omce.l

New regulations
.
t0 heIp f:armers

WASHINGTON (AP} _After
.
etl!ht years of bureaucrauc ~gling, the government has devised
a set of rules aimed at protecting
farm· workers from on-the-job
Akzo is a global chemical comcxposare 10 JlCSticides.
Tbc Envrronmental ProteCtion pany whose 1991 sales were more
Agency regulations were caught in than $9 billion. The company has
a struggle between the Agriculture operations in 50 countries where it
Department, which said tficy could manufactures and markets basic
hurt the aJricultural induStry, and and specialty chemicals, salt, manfarm actiViStS, who said they didn't made fibers, coatings and heallhcare products.
go far enough.
·
All:zo employs 65,000 people
The EPA said Thursday the new
worldwide.
In the U.S. and Canada
regulltions wiU affect nearly 4 milAkzo
employs
10,500 people at
lion people nationwide nod could
mll"C
than
150
locations.
The compment between 10,000 and 20,000
pany
is
headquartered
in
Amhem,
pesticide-related injuries nod illnesses a year. ·

RETURNS -Tim Hall or
Racine Is returning as parts
•pager at Tri-County Ford,
461 South Third in MiddleJIGI'I. He bas 14 years experietKeln the parts business.

Peoples Bancorp Inc.
earnings up 18 percent
MARlETTA · Peoples Bancorp
lac. reponed primary six months
earnings of $1.80 per share, up
1K over the same period in 1991.
Second quarter earnings for
Peoplca Bancorp were $1,129,000
In 1W2 compared to $880,000 last
yeat. For the six months ended
Jane 30, 1992 net income was
$2,079,000
compared
to
$1,663,000 last year. Primary eamiap per thMe this year wm $0.94
.t 51.80 for the quarter and year
to 4Pte compared tO $0.80 and
SU2Itllt yea-.
On a fully-diluted basis, earniiiJI per ahare were $0.87 and
SI.62 for the quarter and six
11011111 compared to $0.70 and
SIJ3Itllt ,err.
Tlte incrate in net income can
lie attributed primarily to an
hH ?' in net illllltelt income. F,or
tO "tltCIIIII• ended June 30, net
. . . . illoome incrt.ued 16.5% to
~:::~:Durins this period
II
IIICII ~by
~~=~10~ 1liabilities
5426,068,000 and
ill
increased
to $372,569,000.
People• Bancorp
netintlll'est
' by
utilization of =r.ble
The decline in
illlnll rate• lw aJao benefited
B~ u iU intercat·
JiiiiUlticj ld.lu*d to cur-

=

- a ta _ . - quiddy dian
1111 Clll&lt;Wndlllllell.

YOUR FAMILY'S
FUTURE.

For Ide insurance that can provide financ1al
security for those you love. calf:

MIDWAY TAKES SHAPE -The Rock
Springs Fairgrounds took oa a new lank Sunday
as the midway rides were moved into place in
preparation for the opening of the U9tb MeiRS

CAROLLSNOWDEN
J4l Seco!ld Ave.
G.Uipolls, Oblo.
Phoao 446-4:190
Home 446-4518
I

~

A
..........

State Fann Sells Life Insurance.

GDC employees
picket holiday
work schedule

State Farm Life Insurance Company
Home Office: Bloomington.lllinois

COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)The Ohio State Fair reported that
182,274 people visited the event on
Thursday, up from 144,361 fairgoers for the seventh day of the
1991 fair.
Thursday's attendance pushed
the total number of fairgoers
through the seventh day to
1,253,881, compared with
1,189,714 through seven days last
year. the fair reported Friday.

'92 SUNBIRD
LOADED
*Air Conditioning
*Automatic
*Cassette
*Sport Mirrors

LIST................................................$11 ,852
NATIONAL REBATE..........................~OO
OHIO REBATE..................................-500

WHAT, ANOTHER SHAMPOO? -Becky Snowden's lamb,
Shebas, dlda't take much to her shampoo Sunday after110011, but
the Harrlsoaviiie 4-H Club member bung rig•t In there. Sbebas Is
a market lamb 1o be sold at the livestock sale Oil Friday evening.

Jurors drawn for Lindeman case
The names of 150 Meig~Coun­

W. Crow III late last week, 75
names were drawn as prospective
ing to serve as potential jurors in jurors, nod an additional 75 names
the capital murder case of Donald were selected as a "reserve pool" in
Lindeman of Racine.
case jury selection cannot be comLindeman was indicted last pleted from the fmtlist of 75.
month for the June robbery and
Lindeman is represented by
shooting death of Long Bouom Athens County Public Defender J.
postmaster and grocer Howard . Michael Westfall and Columbus
Lawrence.
Attorney Robert D. Head. LindeAccording to
flied by man's trial is set for early next
Common Pleas
Fred month.
ty residents were drawn this morn-

ROBERT STEWART
do ·College of Law, he is a former
president of the Athens County Bar
AssociatiOn 111111 '""' served on the
OSBA Council of Delegates for the
past tlu'ee yean. . .
' "' he
Among many CIVIC ICIIVJUes,
is a past chairman of the Athens
County Red Cross and Heart Fund.
Stewart and his wife, Machelle,
reside in Athens nod have two children.

HOUSTON (AP} - Republicans concerned about lqsing their
12-year grip on the White House
looked to ignite President Bush's
lackluster campaign wilh today's
convention start. The president
declared himself "fired up and
ready" to ·take on Democrat Bill
Clinton.
Abonion, the sagging economy
and the increasing hostilities wilh
Iraq threatened to disrupt the harmony that Bush nod his campaign
chiefs had hoped would surpass the
Democratic love-fesl in New York
last month.
Still, Bush said he was eager for
the convention -nod the fall campaign.
"Barbara and I are fired up and
ready," Bush said in a Sunday
afternoon telephone call to workers
at the Republican National Convention. He acknowledged the
uphill fight ahead, but said that
with lhe bang of the opening gavel
today "I pick up the torch" for the
race against Clinton.
Looming over lhe festivities in
Bush ' s adopted hometown: the
potential for a convention-week
showdown with Saddam Hussein.
Bush left little doubt Sunday
that a military strike was an option
if Saddam a11ain rebuffs U.N.
teams inspecung suspected Iraqi
military installations. But he feverishly denied a report he was trying
to piclt a fight for a political boost
at home.
In sharp contrast to Clinton's
celebration at the Democratic
National Convention a month ago,
the buildup to the Republican convention has been marked by intrapartY bickering over abortion and
JUSt what Bush needs to do to boost
the economy - and his standing in
the polls.
Opening night highlights
include Texas Sen. Phil Gramm •s
keynote address and speeches by
Bush's primlll)' challenger, Patrick
Buchanan, and former President
Reagan.
Bush was due in Houston this
evening after an appearance in
Indiana. Vice President Dan

ON ms OWN - At an impromptu press conrerence oa the
White House House South Lawn Sunday, President Bush counters
press reports that suggested he would launch strikes against lr!K]
this week as a means of boosting bis campaign. Bush bad just
returned from a three-day weekend at Camp David, preparing for
bis trip to the GOP convention that begins Monday in Houston.
(AP)
Quayle was arriving earlier, and
had a busy convention week
planned as he tries to reshape his
battered public image,
Clinton, whose lead in national
polls hovers near 20 points, was
home in Little Rock, Ark., tending
to state business but promising 10
return GOP salvos. Republicans
were already firing away, contending Clinton's economic plan would
cost jobs and contrasting Bush's
World War II heroism with Clinton's lack of military service.
Clinton had surrogates in Houston, led by Democratic Party Chairman Ronald Brown, who said nny
new Bush economic plan was 100
late, and would probably be roo little.
" We'd like to know where this
plan has been for the last four years
during one of the deepest nod darlcest recessions in this country, "
Brown said,
As they waited for the four-day
Astrodome party to begin, the

By KEVIN PINSON
OVPNewsStan
About 90 employees of the Gallipolis Developmental Center,
members of the Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association Local
1#2710, formed an informational
· P.icket outside the GDC entrances
this morning to protest a change by
the administration in the Labor Day
holiday work schedules.
Umon President Sharon Brown
said that emJ?Ioyees discovered Saturday mormng when work schedules were posted that management
had made a change in the Labor
Day schedule that breached a section of the union contract concerning holiday premiums.
In the past, GDC employees
were scheduled for 40 hours of
work for Labor Day week and paid
a premium which gave them lhc
equivalent of 52 hours of pay. This
year's schedule gives employees 32
hours of work at 40 hours' worth of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} body ends up a winner like that"
pay.
Gov. George Voinovich said he
Voinovich said later in the bud"We're just out here to get our was surprised to know that budget ~et year officials will review
holiday back, basically," Brown cuts would reduce funding to lhe tncome and spending to sec
said. ''That's aU we ask for."
Ohio Cooperative Extension Ser- whether adjustments need to be
Brown added that lhe picket will vice by 19.5 percent.
made.
remain in place until GDC SuperinVoinovich said Friday he 'd
He ordered cuts earner this year
tendent Dr. Michael Dey agrees to reduce the cut to 10 percent That 10 offset a budget deficit of more
meet with the union.
would mean its bud~et would drop than $500 million.
"If it's one person at each end by $1.6 million - mstead of $3J
The extension service, pan of
(of the GDC grounds), we'll be million - to a total of $14.1 mil- Ohio State University, releases
here until he meets with us."
lion.
research information to farmers and
Mildred Hamil10n, a member of
"It's certainly a large amount of others, It also handles 4-H prothe State Board of Directors and an money, but in the scope of the big grams.
employee of GOC, said the picket picture it's not huge," said John
Jenny Camper, a 5\X?keswoman
is protesting a safety issue, not just Meyer, a spokesman for for the governor, satd spending
Voinovich. "There doesn't hnve to time with extension officials apparan income issue.
Hamilton said lhal by cutting be an automatic loser when some- ently was responsible for making
the work hours during the Labor
him aware of the full extent of the
Day week, shifts will be cut by one
cuts.
third and that may endanger the
" Having extension people
safety of bolh the clients and the
around for two months, he was
employees. The GDC works with
made aware of the cuts," she said.
the mentally retarded and the
A Middleport man was hit over
develol?mentaUy disabled
"This union is most concerned the head nod his 1987 Ford van
with the client's well-being," she stolen early this morning.
According to Middleport Police,
said. "You have to feel compassion
Raymond
Manley arrived at his
for our clients or you wouldn't
residence
at
lll Beech Sl about
work here."
12:1S
am.
When
he got out of the
Dey said this morning that the
CLEVELAND. (AP} - A ranvan,
he
was
struck
-from
behind.
dom
telephone poll showed that
schedule change was made 'Yithout
the knowledge of a contract breach. His keys wm taken along with his . Democrat Bill Clinton was favored
He said the union •s claim is being wallet containin~ about $SO in by 44 percent of the Ohioans surcash, his driver's license and other veyed, while President Bush was
examined.
"We are researching that and if important papers.
favored by 33 pen:ent, according to
Manley managed to get to the a published report.
that is indeed correct, we will
change th~ schedules," he said. house to alert police. The van was
The poll, conducted for The
"We do not want to violate the con- recovered by police about 20 min- Plain Dealer by Gordon S. Black
utes later at Ash and Art Lewis Corp., said IS percent of the
tracL" ·
Dey said thai he had planned 10 Street in the Free Will Baptist respondents wm undecided and 4
meet with uniod representatives Cbun:h parking lot
percent didn' t prefer either candiManley was taken by private date. Another 4 percent refused to
this morning. Brown said she has
not heard from him or any other vehicle to the Holzer Medical Cen- answer or picked anolher canditer where he was treated and date.
members of the administration.
"I guess a lie is better than not released.
The newspsper reported results
Middleport police have contact- of the poll in copyright stories Sunsaying anything," she said. "We're
sure the man was aware of what ed the BCI for assistance in investi- -day and today. The company congating the incidenL
tacted 1,010 Ohio registered voters
was lllldng place."

2,210 delegates got a taste of
Texas, Uteraily, enjOying barbecue
and Tex-Mex as weU as unusually
comfortable August weather,
Their message for Bush was to
lay out a clear agenda for a second
term, wilh a focus on the homefront
"He has to ~ive us reasons he
ought ri&gt; be prestdent for four more
years," Senate Republican leader
Bob Dole of Kansas said on NBC.
''Lois of reasons.''

Even fierce Bush loyalists had
to a~.
• I think he got complacent after
lhe Gulf War when he popularity
was so high," said Bob Bobosky, a
Bush delegate from Oregon. "I
think he just assumed that by being
alive on Election Day he would
win.''
Utah delegate John Updike said
Bush was paying the price ror
breaking hts 1988 no-new-taxes
promise. "I think he needs to apologize to the public," he said.

Agriculture department's budget
cuts reduced from 19.5 to 10 percent

Man struck over
head, car stolen

" He knows the good work they do
and 4-H does."
Voinovich also said the state
was going to put " big money" into
the Ohio Agncultural Research nod
Development Center at Wooster
and be supponive of renovations at
the agnculture department's
Reynoldsburg lab complex,
Paolo De Maria, assistant director of the Office of Management
and Budget, said final numbers
have not been worked out.
Bobby Moser, vice president of
agricultural adm inistration and
dean of the College of Agriculture
at Ohio State, said he's happy wilh
the governor's announcement
" It will help us fill some open
positions that we would not have
been able to fill nod to keep some
4-H agents," he said.

Poll says Clinton still
ahead of Bush in Ohio

Windon retires after
19 years service
LONG BOTTOM - Billy L. sr. in 198S.
AI home, Windon enjoys woodWindon, of 47580 Route 248, Long
working
and gardening and just
Bottom, retired recently as a coal
keeping
the
house in good fCll8ir.
equipment operaror-sr. from Ohio
He
and
his
wife,
Lela, also are land
Power Co.'s· Gavin Plant. He had
of
spontaneous
uavel. In other
19 years of service.
A native of Pomeroy, Windon words, retirement willaive them
was a heavy equipment operator freedom to ~ in the car ll!d lad
for a number of contractors befll"C out to wherovcr lbey (eel like going
on that paniculrr day.
joining Ohio POwer in 1973 as a Windon
served in the U.S. Army
cdal handler at Gavin. He was profrom
19S4to
19~ moted to barge handler and coal
Thc Windolll bavc a daupter,
Patrk:la of Racine, IDd two pndchildren.
.
1977 and coal equipment operator-

m.r.::.'!P::t ~in
'

Co~1n1YFair today. Alwaya ~~~::.:
the Super Trooper•
In the rareground here as it was beinR erected by carnival
workers, Kevin Dryden, Lonnie Vance, and
Curtis Storms.

State fair attendance
is still ahead of 1991

Atty. Stewart named to post
POMEROY - Athens Auomey
Robert W. Stewart has commenced
a three-rear term as District 17 representauve on -the Board of Governors of the Ohio State Bar Association (OSBA) . He is the son of
William and Louise Stewart of
Racine.
Districl 17 includes approximately 150 lawyers who live and
practice in Athens , Hocking,
Meigs, Morgan, Noble and Washington Counties.
Stewart was elected to the Board
of Governors by area lawyers at
the annual OSBA District meeting.
His term begin on July 1 and wiU
run through June 30, 1995. He succeeds Judge William A. Lavelle of
A!hens, who served as District 17
representative from 1989-92.
The 21 member Board of Governors is the stare bar's governing
body. It meets monthly to manage
the association's business affairs,
set policy, review pending legislation and conduct other business on
behalf of the Association's 23,000
rnember lawyers.
Stewart is in private practice in
Athens. A graduate of Ohio University nod the University of Tole-

According to Joel Thomas,
manager of regional pun:hasing roc
Monsan10,the award is "one tangibte result or the Joint Quality
Improvement team that was formed
between Akzo and Monsanto" in
1990. The award is CQIICrete evi. dencc that ~·s com~itmen~ 10
the total quality process lS allowmg
lhe company to meet customer's
.
expectations.

'

GOP national convention
to get underway tonight

Area plant presented award
CIDCAGO - All:zo's Gallipolis the Netherlnnds. Its ADRs (AmeriFerry, W. Va., plant has earned can DeposiwyRec:eipts} are traded
"Preferred Supplier Status" from
the Monsanto Cllemical Company.
The Gallipolis Ferry site jams
an elite group of 16 Monsanto sup- '
pliers, from a total of 3,500, who
hnve earned this recognition. This
Akzo site manllfllciJJ!el pbosphorus
based flame retardants which are
used.in the production of Monsanto
carpet fibers.

1 Section, 10 PIQH 25 cenhl
A llul!hnodla Inc. ,__.,._

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 17,1992

CoPJ'rlghlool 18$2

NEW DOCTORS -Dr. Mark Chandler,
new medl~ director for Woodlands Centers,
Inc., left, and Dr. Nancy B. Graham, new direc- tor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, were
joined by Dr. Bernard Niebm, Woodlands exec-

n.o.-. left, manager of re110Dal purchasing,

Low tonight In mid-50s.
Dense fog. Tuesday, mostly
sunny. High In low 80s.

'

I

\

from Aug. 9 througli Wednesday.
The margin of error was 3 percent,
the newspaper said.
In the poll,_49 j?Crtent of lhose
questioned said Clmton represents
their interests best, while 36 percent picked Bush.
Carl Sterner, 59, an Akron
accountant interviewed ror the JIOU,
said he voted for Bush in 1988 but
planned to vote for Clinton this
year.
'
"I've seen four years of what hC
(Bush) can do, nod he hasn't done
anything," Sterner said. "It's time
to stop looking overseas and time
to start looking at this side of the

water."

�•
PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

·. Commentary
The Daily S~ntinel

Te~as

D&amp;VOTZD TO T11B IN1UJI81'II or TIIB IIBIG8-IL\801f All&amp;\

By Jack Anderson
and
haeI Bm'st·DJ'n
"'

ROBElT L WINGEIT
Publlllttr .
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeneniMatu~Cer

LI!Tl1lllS OF OPINION are welcome. Tboy should be less !han 300
wordl. All )etten .,. subject to edilili&amp; 111K1 11!1111 be li&amp;ned wi!h name,
lldchoiiiiiKI!elepbone DUII!ber. No unaiped letten will be publilhed. Lel!m
lhould be in soo&lt;1 IaSio, lldclreolias iuuea. not penollllitieo.

Campaign custody fight

for family values issue
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Con espo.deat
HOUSTON - In the political equivalent of a cusiOdy fipt, rival
While House campaigners are sln!ggling 10,bring home the family values
issue, Republicans insisting it is theirs, DemociiiiS preparing new evidence fer a counJersUit
Tho argument already has ~ nasty CII!JUgh for divcrce ooun. ·
It is linked Ulthe rumors and claims of exlnlmlrilll affairs that Clinton
coofronted during the Jlrinwy campaisn and Bush denounced as a sleazy
lie w~ the
was put to him by a CNN repoilci and in an NBC
!llleMew on
y.
.
Each campaign disavows such talk; each claims that the other is
fomenting it
And .it is impossible to miss the intent of a Republican platform line
extollin$ "the fine example of family values IK!d family virtue as lived by
the president and the first lady."
.
·Clinton has acknowledged past problems in his marriage, and still gets
asked about it "I have done JhiJigs that reinforte family values and I have
demonstraled I think, by the fact that I was able to keep my ~
10ge!her and that we have a fme child, that I have lived that 100," he Slid
on a CBS- TV caU-in program on Monday. "And if you want to vote for
somebody who's perfect, who's never had any marriage problems, 1hcn
you ought to fmd somebody else.''
· On the broader issue, Clinton says in his standird campaign speeches
thit the Republicans talk about f101ily values while Bush vetoes bills to
m'CCI family needs.
-"That's their way of turning your aucntion from the real economic
problems of this country," he said recendy in Burlington, Iowa. He ciJeS
as evidence the ve10 of a family leave bill two years ago, with a ~q~lay
due this fall.
The Democratic Congress is sending Bush a bill that would require
ftnns employing more than 50 people to offer them up to 12 weeks, of
unpaid leave a year fer family needs and emergencies, including the birth
ora child or the serious illness of a close family member.
· Bush has said he favors granting family leave, but not forcing it by
Ia~. The De!IIOCtlll!l see the bill, and the lhrcalened Bush veiO, as a campaign retort 10 Republican claims to family issues.
Clinton also says he wanIS to help every family, not (riy the traditional
kiqd. The Republ,ican rebuttal: a platform amendment opposing any law
pt,llllilling homosexual marriage or adoptlau.
·
•" The Democrats right now have been using the tmn family values
very loosely," said Cathy Mickels, a platform committee member from
W)shington. "Republicans know what ~ily val~ means." .
.
'. In the campaign platform the Republican NatiOnal Convenllon w1ll
aiJI!rove on Mondsy, the family values issue also is tied to the plank that
opposes abortion. The platform says U.S. funds will be withheld from
iotemational organizations involved in abortiOn "because we uphold the
falnily as the building block of economic progress... "
.
;. Another platform provision says family values are under hberal
~ult, denouncing the idea that "children should be able 10 sue theirparerus over decisions about schooling, cosmetic surgery, employment and
oilier famil matters."
· That's aked at Hillary Clinton. .
.
. .
.
: Republican National Chajnnan Rteh Bond made II explicit, sa~ng
Mn Clinton believes children should be able to sue insJead of helpm~
wllh the chores. "She has likened maniage and the family to slavery,'
!IQnd said Wednesday.
.
.
· .The Republicans cite articles Mrs. Clinton wrote for legal journals m
the 1970s as evidence of those views. She has described them as analyses
cif the legal rights of children in crisis situations, not the everyday settings
111e Republicans talk about
. "They're getting pitiful," Ointon said of the Republican criticism.
· · And they ,lite the DemocraiS, are just getting srarled.
·: EDITOR'S NOTE: Walter R. Mears, vice president aDd columnist
rot Tbe Associated Press, bas covered natloaal polltk:al conventions
sl~ce 1964.

en

•

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ARE HERE

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MICH.

SPOUSE01='TME USA.

L.OTS OF COOKIES.

ness told prosecuiQrs that he had
ad the younger Britos talk about
protection they received from a
bn!ther in the miliJary. Col. BriUl,
however, testified that, "The only
involvement I had was bailing
them· out of jail. None of them
involved me in any way except I
bailed my brother out of jail."
Tbe trial was punctuated by
death threats directed against the
district attorney, his family and
investigating agents. Msrio ullimately fled to Mexico and y.-as
convi&lt;:ted in absertia for organized
aiminai activity. Billy was charged
with the same offenSe but never
tried as he 100 fled 10 Mexico.
On July 23, 1991, both of Col.
Brito's brotbcrs were indicted,by a
federal grand jury on four counts
charging them with assisting a
major Mexican dru.g lord ship
planeloads of cocaine thro11gh
TCJUIS in10 Chicago, Orlando ·and
Miami from 1984 through 1987.
The next month, a Texas district
atlllmey's offtCC seized a house in
Brownsville, Texas, that lisled Col.
Brito as the owner. Brownsville
Drug Enforcanent Administration
agent Armando Ramirez told a
reJOier at the time, "We seized it
because it was purchased from
drugpocecds. He (Col. Bri!O) said
be didn't know it was in his name;
It WI!S paid for in cash and placed
in his name. ..
On Much 10, 1992, the U.S.
Army security clearance office
informed Col Brito in a memo that
his clearance had been suspended
"pending further investigation to
clarify allegations of drug-smuggling operations developed in your
case." Brito has since denied that
bis cleannoe had been revoked.
In February, the U.S. Alton!Cy's
office in Housloo hailed the federal
probe into Brito, apparently
bea!use they felt there was insufficient evidence to tie him to the
&amp;ug smugglm. Other law enforcement sources clo6e 10 the case stiU
barber deep suspicions.
David Barron, the disbict auurney who prnsecuted Mario Brito,
Ulld us: "Personally, I think he's
dirty." Barron says his office is
aggressively pursuing perjury
charges stemming from Brito's testimmy at his t.other's 1990 !rial.
Jack Aaderson and Michael
Biastein art syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
bJc.

It is widely predicted that this
will be the presidential election
from hell. Gresham's Law will
come into play with a vengeance,
with bad politics driving out the
good. The ticket that hits the low
road first and often will be the one
that wins, or so we are !Old.
The assessment is only partially
correct. Negative campaignin~ is
going to reach a nadir. Both Sides
have skilled technicians who love
nothing belter than a fast-paced
game of pin-the-dirt on your opponent. Labels will be attached as fast
as they can be manufacJured
But saying that is almost irrelevant to the likely outcome of the
presidential election. For the vast
majority of vocers who are certain
that the system needs something
more than a light tune-up,. labels
will be iJrelevant What they will
be seeking is evidence that at least
one of the two professional politicians ·the Republicans and
Democrats have offered them has
sensible proposals for reinvigorating the economy and, mon: importanlly, revitalizing the nation's
The open secret of 1992 is that
most Americans are Perotistas,
even if Ross Perot himself turned
out to be a flawed icon. Their overwhelming desire is for a system
that works. The malaise that afflicts
so many of us is grounded in the
uneasy suspicion that something is
badly amiss, that America is off
course and drifting.
Ross Perot did not invent the

national mood that his brief campaign so dramatically tapped. It
was there, waiting and growing,
and,
_ if anythiDJ~. his abrupt with----------

Hodding Carter Ill
drawal froin the mce intenSified it
He was much alcin to the J?Rlvelbial
blind man ll}'ing to describe an elephant, but he proved one thing.
What he encountered was much
bigger than he knew or expected.
!1 is also bigger than the old tags
of right and left, liberal and conservative. The people are impatient
when not disgusted with what curn:ntly passes for political dialogue.
They underslaild that it is a curtain
behmd which organized interests
advance th.eir individual agendas
with minimum regard for the collective good. They do not believe
anyone has the answer. If many are
certain there is somethin' wrong
with "big govemmeni,' others
have become no less disenchanted
with a political theology that deifies the market and, lite Marxism
of old, promises pie in the sky in an
ever-retreating by-and-by. What
most are scelcing is a political leader whose POlicies reflect what they
see as both possible and necessary.
Because so many adult Americans are uncertain, unhappy and
pessimistic about the future, this
presidential election is already the
most volalile in American history.
The polls. have repellledly drawn a

picture of 1he electornte as genie,
changing shape with statlinupced
and ease. Just two weeks before the
Democratic Convention, the combined negatives of Bush, Clinton
and Perot were higher than their
combined positive ntings. noweeks before thai, Perot's •Niing
in the polls was hiJher than any
third party candidate in Alnerican
hislcry and his neplives ~ half
as high as President Bush's. The
president's poll numbers have
swung from mediocre to record
high to near-ftCOid low, all in li11le
more than a~­
Bill Clinton and his running
mate, AI Gore, are currently the
beneficiaries of the people's restless scarclt for someone to uust,
but they know it can't last. Temporarily, they have managed to be
all things to many peqlle, offering
in their th li!d vigcr the impn:ssion t~, as Jack Kennedy
promised in his campaip 32 years ·
ago, they will set ''the natioo moving again." Because the Democnts
in 1992 have n:leamed an old lesson, which is tbal you have to win
before you can do anything else,
they have papered over the old
fault lines tbal split tbem so badly
in the past.
But the paper will U if Oi(!ll!n
and Gore do not cmvincc the 1101ers over time that they 1ft: JIIIDillc
whose vision extends further than
Nov. 3. Geoqe Bush, the incwnbent president, must coaviDcc the
Voterll that his second term will be
something far better than the sec·
one! act of a play they aln:ady dis-

lil:c.
in both CBS, the key to SU~XeSs

can be found in the evolving consensus among the JIIIDille that give
rather than Jake is what the situ&amp;·
lion mplires. That is not Ul ignore
the fact that the fmt priority for
millions of Amm:ans is 10 find a
job or feel secure in the one that
they llold. It is 10 recognize J!lat the
uncasc which llfllicts so many of us
bas deeper roots than the long lingering recession. The campaign
which capitalizes on the growing
eooscn•os that it is not enough to
operate, individually and in groups.
as special (!leaders, is the campatgn
that will wm. ·
This is going to be the longest
presidential campai~ in history. ·
The Democna an: already running
all.Qit, and the puident is clearly
in baule gear. Ordinarily, that
would be something to decry. This
year it is a positive development.
The peo(Jie Willi to hear, at length
and in depth, what the candidates
intend to do and how they intend lo
do iL They may be offered an inordinale amount of chaff before it is
over, but the voters are looking for
wheat. Whoever offers the most of
it in this election, wins.
. Hoddi•l Cuter Ill, former
Slate Depart•ent spokesman ·
• awanl·wimlil!c npomr, edi·
10r ud pt1bllsller, Is president or
Ma Slftet, a W151tington, D.C.·
"-' tele..WO. prodlldion com·
pMJ ud a SJIIdk:ated writer for
Newspaper t•terprlse Associa-

Robert}. Wagman
those given· the best chance of victory in November 1ft: receiving the

most financial S!JI'POfl
Most impreSSive, so far, is the
fund raising of Dlinois Del!locrat
Clrol M6seley Braun, who defeat·
ed incumbent Sen. Alan Dixon in
ihe primary. She has raised more
than .$1.7 mUiion COO!plnd 10 Qlly
about $500,000 raised by her opponent, former GOP White House
opttative RiCh Williamson.
In California, the two women
running on tbe Democratic aide fer
the two contelled U.S. Senalt seatS
- former San Francisco mayor

Dianne FcinsJein and Rep. BarliiA
Boxer - have eam raised dose to
$1 miUion so (If, That is lbout 2S
percent more than their Rep!Ninln
opponcniS, one of whom is incumbent Sen. John SeymcU.
But women less favored ID win·
are having more difficulty. In
Pennsylvania, Democrat Lyan
Yeakel is given some chance to
defeat incumbent Sen. Arlen
Specter. Sbe hu been able 111 nile
more than $1 million, but this is
still leu than half of what Specta'
has blnked. In Kansas. Democnlt
Glqria O'Dell is tbouJbt to have
little hope of nnscaUnJ Senate
Minority Leader Bob Dole. Dole
has $2.3 million in the bank,
0' Dell less than one-tenth that
amount On tbe Republican side,
challcn&amp;tt Ollllcne Haw in Soudt
Dalr:ota bas been able 10 llisc only
.about a tenth of what incumbent
I

•

IMansfield l7s• I•
IND.

Democrat Tom Daschle has.
As is often the case, this latest
FEC release shows that incumbents ·
wlto have li11le or no ~lion are
raising and banting millions. Most
could easily win SI1Clldin2 onl the'
II!Odest filing fee. tbis )'tit a ~
example is Hawaii's Democratic
Se.n. Daniel Inouye who won rcclectioltlast time with 74 percent
of tbe vote. He could do as well
Ibis lime witbout spending a cent,
but hu wod:ed hard to raise $1.5

million. Why?
T!lat question is partially
answaed m the new "Handboolr:
of Camp•iJn Spending" (CQ
Plas, $13()). 1'Ml ~ Los
Anades Tlll!tS repoiiM, Sanl Fritz

ancf Dwight MIXris, constructed a,

complex computer data base, and •
miautely aalyzed the campaign
qmtio!J R!IJOIU of all COI!gression. :
al ~andidates in the I 990 race. ' .
I

p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be a1

By Tbe AS&lt;ociated Pms
Dry weather and sunshine are
expected to continue Tuesday.
Early moming temperalun:s will be
iii the 50s and afternoon highs will
be bout .80.
A cold front is expecled to bring
a threat of showers and thunderstorms'back to Ohio Wednesday.
Temperatures through Friday may
hold in the ~.
Early morning temperatures
today were in the low to mid-SOs,
which is about 10 degrees below
normal.
The recOIII high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 in I988. The record
low was 48 in 1981.
Sunset today will be at 8:26

80s in the S011th, Plsins, eastern
Rotties and Pacific Coast: the 90s .
in south Texas and the western
llorties· and above 100 in most of
California. Nevada and Arizona.
Sewn! Southw It 11 and Wfllll.·
ern cities bad recmi highs Sll!day,
including Phoenix, where it was
113; Tuc:son, Ariz., I~; Sactarnento, Calif., 107; and Riverside,

6:46.
Aroud die llllliaB

Rain developed iD the sjlpcr
Midwest and lingaed over:dtc &amp;II
Coast early today. The Sdwel1
endured anotber .......rhno•......_
Rain and ~feiiia E · •
cities from Boston 10 ~
S.C., fed by a front tbll blll!ta
over the area for at 11:ast ihill . . _
Another front CllfYing ovu die
nonheJn Plains Jmqm DML
Rapid City, S.D.
On Sunday, 4 inches li Din in
six hours caused sum ,floo!li• in
Goldsboro, N.C., and wiDd psiS
damaged trees and power 1iDcs iD
northwestern Gecrgia:

Ice

SuMy Pl. C/oiKiy Cloudy
C1992 A.ccu-Weatlier.lnc.

-----Weather----South-Central Obio
Tonight, mostly clear with
patChy dense fog developing again.
Low 55-60. Tuesday, mostly
sunny. High in the low 80s.
Extended forecast:

Wednesday through l'riday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Wednesday. Fair Thursday and Friday. Lows mostly in the
60s Wednesday and in the 50s
Thursday and Friday. Highs in the

.70s.

--Local briefs---.
Two hurt in one-car crash
Two people we~e admitled to Veterans Memorial Hospital for
observation following a one·car crash on Ohio 143 in Rudand
Township Monday around 2;20 a.m.
.
According 10 a report from the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pauol, Lee M. Bing, 61, 37625 SR 143, Pomeroy, was
northbound on Ohio 143 when he drove off the right side of the
road and struclc a mail box. The car came llact on10 the roadway,
went off the left side of the road and went iniD a creek.
Bing and his passenger, Christina L. ~. 66, 37625 SR 143,
Pomeroy. were transported to VMH by the Me~gs County Emergency Medical Service.
~ 10 Bing's 1977 Cadillac Fleetwood was listed as heavy
and disabling.
Bing was cited by the patrol for driving under the influence and
failun: to conlrol

Southern board to meet
Southern Local Board or Education will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the high school.

II Death Valley,

EMS units answer calls

Meigs Emergency Services units answered the followin~ caDs
this weekend: Saturday at 12:12 p.m., Mic!dleport !ffiit to Lincoln
Street, Celesta Coates to Veterans Memorial Hospttal; 3:01 p.m.,
Middleport to Baiely Run Road, Larry Thomas to Veterans; 4:45
p.m., Rutland unit to Hi~ Road. Nora Canoll 10 v.~: 4:56
p.m., Pomeroy squad to
eroy Nursing and Rehabilitauon
ter. Clara Custer 10 Veterans; 7:04 p.m., Rutland unit to ~ew Lima
Road, Jennifer King treated ai ibe scene; 7:32 p.m., MiddleP&lt;_Jrt
squad to Beech Street, Jenny Dawson 10 Vetenns; 11:16 p.m., Middleport squad to Riverside Apartments, Kenny Jordan was treated.
On Sunday at 3:07a.m., RuJiand and Scipio uniJs wcntto.Siate
Route 143 for Marty Hutton, taken to Veterans; 4:44 a.m ••. Middleport unit to Overbrook Center, John Cooper to Holzer Medical Ccn·
ter; 9:48 p.m., Middleport to Story's Run Road, Nina Wyan to
Holzer.
.
. At 2:20 a.m., Rutland squad went to an auto acctdent on State
Route 143. Chris Haning and Lee.Bing wm taltcn to Veterans. '

.Golf team to meet

The Southern High School golf 1!8111 will hold a team meeting on
Monday at 5:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Golf Course.

U.N. weapons team
completes inspection,
silent on findings

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
jackpot for Wednesday's Super
LotiO dra · will be $4 million.
A sin~uper Lotto game ticket is worth $4 million, because it
shows the six numbers in Saturday
nioht's Ohio Lottery drawing.
of the winning ticlret
will result in $153,846 a year for
26 years, before !aXes, or a discounted lump-sum payment of
nearly $1.8 million.

MANAMA, Bahrain (,4.P) U.N. weapons expertS compleled a
I 0-day inspection mission in Iraq
today following reports they would
target sensitive siJeS, possibly provoking a military confrontation
with Saddam Hussein.
Team leader Nitita Smidovich
told reporters in Baghdad thai
today' s inspection had been without tncident and that the team's
mission was complete.
Hm are Saturday night's Ohio
He refused to name the siJe the Lottery selel:tioos:
inspectors visited today or to char- Super Lotto
acterize the mission's fmdings.
5-11·17~·36-42
(five, eleven, seventeen, twentyfour, thirty-six, forty-two)
'I1le Daily Seolinel
The jackpot is $4 mill!OD.
Kicker
Pablt1hed e'I'II'J' !ll'temOOil, Mua~
8·5-0-4-4-3
.
"""""' Priola~ 111 Coarl 8':.. ~... .,,
Ohio b)- lloo Ohio Volley ,....l!oh!"'
(eight, five, zero, four, four,

,.Validation

tluU)

Pick 3 Numben
1-2-5
11-.: '1'111-alod !'No, aacl !be
(one,
two, five)
Oh&amp;o NIWI~per .Uxd•ttqe, Nati.OIL&amp;)
Mftrtbi"' Re-ntau... Brubam . Plc1!4Numbm
NawopoJIO! !!&amp;!!", 731 Thlnl A&gt;u..,
3-8-3-9
Ntw Yon, !&gt;low nn UI017.
(three, eight, tluU, nine)
POI!TMABTEa, Send-........ 1o

.,-..--..

Tile Daily Sentinel, 111 Court 8&amp;.,
P
oy; OHio 4157119.
IIJIICIIIPilON UIU

OM Waot.. ......................................l1.60
OMMoGib........................................t6.95
OM Year................................ - •.183.11()
IIIIGUCOPY
PIIICI
~....................................... -215C..ta

8
DO! cloflril!l !o Jill liM ""'"
.. ..., ...tlln otraiooo dlncllo Tho
Dally lllnllnol .., a lbno, ala or 12
Cftclll will be ..... I

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No oobocripd001 by
pmnlllod tn
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m.8418
78

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11 w..u. .................................... $1&amp;!11

a w..u....................................... MUO

--Area deaths-Clara Custer
Clara Custtt, 88, of Minersville,
died Saturday, Aug. IS, 1992, at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born oo Jan. 31, 1904 at Minenville, she was the daughter of
the late Alonzo Custer and Effie
Davis CusJer. She was a homemal::er, and a member of the Minersville Uniled Methodist Church.
She is survived by a nephew: .
V.ic Hannahs, Pomeroy, and a sis- ·
ter-in-law, Thelma Miller, Sym-

Am Ele Power ...................33 1/8
Ashland Oil.. ......................24 l(l
AT&amp;:T................................43 5/8
Banlc One...........................43 7/8
Bob.Evans .........................20 l(l
Channing.Shop.................. 31 1/4
City Holding ......................20 1/4
Federal Mogul................... 17
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................67 3/8
Key Cenrurion ................... 19 1/4
Lands End..........................32 5/8
Limiled Inc....................... 21 3/8
Multimedia Inc ..................25
Rax Restawant ...................9/16
Reliance Elecbic ................l8 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 3/4
Shoney's lnc...................... 22 3/4
Star Bank ...........................30
Wendy lnt'l... .................... .ll 3/4
WorlhingUln Ind................ 24
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Ldewi of GaUipolis.
Fetllral Mogul is ex-dividend
today.

cusc.

.

Besides her parenJs she was pre. :
ceded in death by several brotbcrs
and sisters.

*'

Graveside services will be held
at I p.m. Tuesday at the Beech
GriM Cemetery. The Rev. Glenn
McMillan will offtciate. There will
be no calling hours . Funeral
ariangaDcnts are being handled by
Ewing Funrnl Home.

By law, the patrol can inWCIJi..
gale crimes on sta1C bigbways ..t
state property. It also hadlcs
drivers' license examillllioti,
school bus and truck ·insp!!Cii....
plane crash probes and SbJIIiity b
the governor.
Recently, tbe patrol also has
investigated the presidents of
Ohio's two-year colleges over W..
bying activities; five Ohio Depanment of Transportation ~
for allegations of nepotism; .and
former Human Services Deputy
Director John J. Ray for tbcft in
offtee.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) at tbe Ohio State Fair ·

A~

~elf:'~l\lr~ have

gone Ul tbe fair since it began Aug. .
7, oompm.d with 1,618.549 people ·
IJtrou&amp;b the ninth day in 1991, fair
officials said Sunday.
Attendance on Saturday was
220,817, compared with 296,048 ·
fa: the nilltb day a year

SPR ING 'lAlLEY CINEMA ,..,,

SHAVER

Hi

~ 5i 4

,

·.

$395

...

FRUTH PIIIIIIICY

7161.s.c. . . . . .

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Goldie Little, Pomeroy, and Helen
Prunty, Vinton.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESNone.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Paula Brown, Racine; Celesta
Coates, Middleport; and Jerry
Tucker, Mason, W.Va.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES- Jeffrey Haning, Helen Prunty, Larry
Napper and Goldie Little.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Auc. 14 -Discharges: Mrs.
Greg Halfhill and daughter, Lynus
Harrison, William Keerer, Betty
Sorrell, Ollie Swick and. Leora
Young. Birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wilkett, of Wellston,
daughter.
Aug. 15 - Discharge: Larry
Stephens. Birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Stewart, of Cheshire, son.
Auat6 - Discharges: Karen
Jeffers and Mrs. 'Michael Willcett
and daughter. Birth: Mr. and Mrs.
Heath Stover, of Rio Grande, son.

Edition In
•
The
Sentinel
Monday, l•gust 31, 1992
RESIEIVE

••••,

FELLOWSHIP CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE

IIIEIIISEMENT

992-2156

WILL BE HELD AUG. 18·23
7 P.M.
lew. Jl• I(IHII fro• Winchester, Ky.·will ••
the ••a..ellst with the Sisson Fa•lly of
lillllpells slntllll nightly.

ASK FOR DAVE or P.

In CIH of bad Wllther IIMCM wiD be held lnalde.
LoCifed on St. Rt.124ilcrou from Fork Run St:ata Park.

J.

AD DEADLINE WE-,IIIUST 21, l991
II

.
·
·
·.

State fair attendance .
is down Saturday

TUESDAtAUG..II-12-11.3

IITHI

~', '

drug smugglers uStug ill!n'tt''C
highways: and more dogs tolia!l
oeonle, drugs and l*uperty·
'·-.-.There is almost ,. sense of
arrogance that we pen:eivr: ill 6e
State Highway Patrol," B-worlh said. "They do not play on the same field that dtcof us are foteed into."

l.dlllln:&lt;b 1......
Ad;s...ts.Gr lS

·.TENT RniVAL

'

Calif.

S..llayS..tkt
AI Pills blrl

Stocks

•'
:
:
•
'

The high fer the !Wion was 121

*'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The State Highwar PaJrol taking
on more responsibilities, but it is
not growing into a stale police
force, a patrol official said.
The Buckeye State Sheriff's
Association has said it was concerned with changes in the palrol.
"It disturbs us greatly," said
Marion County Sheriff John Butterworth, president of the association. "We are definitely not in
favor of changing the highway
patrol ... to a state police force.''
Ohio is one of 13 staleS without
state police, a single law enforte·
ment agency that can investigate
any crime in any jurisdiction.
Palrol u. Col. Richard A. Curtis
said the patrol is working closer
than ever with the 88 sheriffs in
Ohio and denied that the agency is
evolving into a state police force.
He said the pattol is charlging to
l!andle a growmg number of drug
cases and investigations of state
agefieies and employees.
·
Gov. George Voinovich has
given tbe patrOl a larger budget and
more investigative duties. He has
asked the pai!OIIO investigate 11101e
crimes such at embezzlement,
nepotism and bn'bery in state government, Curtis said.
The patrol also has added a 25member Special Response Team
formed 10 handle potential hostage
and temlrist _threats:.tesl!'s to fmd

'

cur., t06.

Patrol denies it is growing
into a state police force

ComJ*.DJ'_.,.:atttiDIIlla lao., PoJMrOy,
Oblo 411!1!1, Ph. 11111.1116. Seoood .._
,...._,.aaatP
o;,Ohlo.

lioL.

'92 races are niost expensive ever
the woman," those running for the
Senate are showing mixed fundraising results. As is usually the
case - regardless of gender -

PA.

&lt;:en·

Will negative campaigning return?

WASHING10N (NEA) - The
Federal Election Commission has
released the latest campaign fundraising figures, and the obvious has
been confumed: This November's
elections will be the most expensive in history.
Tate the Wisconsin Senate liCe
as an el181Dplc. Three Democrala Rep. Jim Mood , millionain: businessmen Joe· ~hecota and Russ
Fingold - an: vying in a September primary 10 sec who will face
the GOP incumbent, Sen. Robert
Kasten. Both .Moody and Checota
(who is mainly using his own
money) have l'llsed more than Sl
million and will probably ipcnd it
all on the primary. The primary
winner will then have to raise
another small fortune becau"" !Cas·
ten has a $2 million war chest
ready for November.
·
Despite this being "the year of

•

CAN 6VIJN ur'Ul ~

JUST REtlltMB~ 10 A.~WA'(S .
KEEl' '(OUR MOUTt\ SHUT ANP

spirit.

:AAff'-f

radio transmiuer
an airplane
belonging to his younger brother,
Billy.
Customs suspected the ·plane
was making drug nms from Mexico, and one night followed Mario, a
second Brito brother 10 a clandestine strip where the plane was supposed to land. Billy made rw (IIL'ISes over the strip in bis plane,
smelled trouble and 1hcn Dew llact
to Meaico. Mario got urested on
the airfteld with two J)istols. marljuana and over $13,000 in cash,
Ironically, during tbis same
time, Col. Brito was runnin~ the
Texas National G.-d's ckwl·U!Iel'diction program lad had unlimil«d
access to sensitive information.
Two days after the arrest, Col.
Brito amved Ill the Grimes County,
Texas, courthouse in full uniform
to bail out his cnAe.!.~~ther
Mario. By 1989,
sand
the Texas Depanment of Public
Safety had launched probes into
Col. BriUl. After being questioned •
by a federal grand j..-y in October
1989, Col. Brio was subsc:qutndy
relieved from .his drug-post, but
remained in charge of plans, operations and training for tbe Texas
Guard.
At the state uia1 of his brother
Mario in 1990, a govemrncnl wit-

E:Tf~ €)!99~ FOtrrWOIIIII STAA·TEIEGIWJ

RU LME

Accu-Wealher• forecast for

guard colonel's pa_soot haunts.him

.He was in s~ with you 01 any membei of
tlie j,ress. He does !Kit speak 10 the
dicllon rrogram for the Texas piess."
Nationa Guard before being
Internal National Guard doi:uremoved from that post at the
'
request of the CUStoms Service.
He is currendy under investigalion for .possible perjury, and,
·
acecrding 10 published repo11S, has
.
recendy been the target of a federal
drug probe.
II'
Earlier this yem:, he even lost Jt!s
lY.dC
U.S. Aryny se.curoty clearan~ m
conne~l!on wtth drug-smuggling
allegabons.
ments obtained by .our associate
Despite this slew. of charg~ and Dean Boyd show that throughout
allegallons, Col. .Rtchard Bnto of this summer Brito has played a
the Texas National. Guard ·has central role in crisis planning for
played ,a centJal role.'!' one of !he the convention. For example, on
Gu~d s most se~stuve s.ecurtty June 8 to June 11. Brito persOnally
assognments:. drafwtg conun,enc;y visited the California National
plans to assost H?uslon pollee m · Guard fer advice on crowd conlrol
the event that nOhnJ! breaks out at in the wake of the Rodney King
the Republican Nallonal Conven- riots in Los Angeles. His fact-fmdlion.
ing mission led to a paper entided
Was Brito the wrong man for "Support of Civil Authorities" in
the job?
which he details lessons learned
Texas
National
Guard from California and how they
spokesman Lt. Col. Ed Koman- might apply to Houston. He then
dosky argues: "No, it has posed no helped draw up the fmal contingenproblems whatsoever.... ll's been cy plan.
two years and no one's charged
Brito's past suggests that he was
him with anything.'' When we curiously cast for such a role. His
asked to interview Brito, Koman- !roubles began in 1987 when U.S.
dosky replied, "He's not going to Customs Service a~ents installed a
HOUSTON -

·nry weather, sunshine expected to continue

Tuesday; Aug. 18 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
llondlly, August 17, 1992

c~ of ovezseeing the drug inlet·

lll .COartltnet
PcDero,, Obto

PATWWIFJIEAD
Aul•nt Publlaber/Controller

Page 2-Tiie O.lly Sentinel

.
·•·
.

�..
, *. .

--

The Daily Sentinel

~sports

Monday, August 17, 1992
. Peg~

Cincinnati bombs San Diego 12-2 to keep grip on second
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds have held their
ground in the NL West. Now
comes the hard pan - making up
ground on the Atlanta Braves.
The Reds kept sole possession
of second place over the weekend
by winnin$ their ~game series
with surgmg San Dtego. A 12-2
victory Sunday gave the ·Reds a
t~~roo-game cushion over the thin!-

place Padres.
With their closest pursuer
falling behind, the Reds can stait
concentrating on what's aheadthe first-place Braves, 4 1/2 games
away.
"We're not in the best of situa·
tions, but it could be much worse,"
said Barry Larkin, who had four
hits Sunday to lead a 15-hil aaact.
"So much depends now on what
l\flanta does."

And what the Reds' offense
does.
It has been self-desuuc:ting the
past month, falling to take advantage of scoring chances. That happened Friday night, when the
Padres won the series opener to
move witltin a pne ol the Reds.
But Larkin orought the offense
alive the next two games with his
consistent hitting. He had four singles SIDiday and drove in two runs,
completing a series in which he
went9 for 12.
Just luck, as far as Larkin could,

became undependable and the
offense failed in the cluu:h, letting
the~ ~et close and the Braves
open up thell' lead.
Tim Belcher (I o:11) sii'Uggled
again SWlday, giving ':Ill five hits
and two runs in live inmngs. But he
ended up with his second victory in
his last
and that

said. "I wanted him to get out of kind of a senes to get our ·confithere on a positive note. You can dence back."
talk about confidence, but when
Piniella didn't want to read too
you win one- that's confidence." much into the weekend, noting the
The Reds' offense has regained offense has shown signs of coming
some of its confide~ the ,last two tog~ ~fore, o~ly to com~ apan
days. They had 26 hits and 17 runs agam. He s mac mterested m how
in their two wins.
· things work out .on a six-game road
"This is a big lirt," said Joe trip to Philadelphia and Montreal.
Oliver who had three hits and
"The important thing is where
drove ~
runs Sunday. "We we from here," he said. "We'll
· ofa game and this
out in the next week."

tell

"I had four ground-ball hits,"
he said. "It's good to be good; but
it's good to be lucky. Any one of
those balls could have been right at
somebody."
Bunbey weren't, and that's
what seemed to inspire the Reds.
Everyone excep1 Glenn Braggs had
a! least one biL The~ 12 runs Sunday marched their season high.
"It becomes a little conta.ous," manager Lou PinieUa said.
guys does it, and it makes it
easier for the second ~Y· Then you
get the doniino effect '
Padres starter Bruce Hurst (127) gave up Six runs and nine hits in
4 1-3 inmngs to lose his four-game
winning streak, and the Padres'
bullpen gave up six more runs on
six hits to let the game get out of
hand.
· "I can't remember a 'arne when
we've been like that,' manager
Greg Riddoch said. ''It was an ugly
day."
The Padres can't afford many
READY FOR REDMEN -Adam Allrahamowkz, left, pitcller
more like iL After closing to within
for Loraiu Catllolic Hig• Sclloolas a sealor, bas aii"Hd lo play for
one game of the Reds, they find
the Univenlty or Rio Grode baseball team this fall. Willi him Is
themselves three games out of secRedmen Coach Dave Oglesby.
ond place again and 7 1/2 behind
Aflanla.
That's not where they hoped to
be after opening the series with a
win.
"We can't have any setbacks
now, because it's too late for that,"
baseman Gary Sheffield said.
Adam Abraharnowicz, a leading of 1.40, in addition to a .432 bat- thin!
The
Reds can't afford any more
pitcher for Lorain Catholic High ting average. He has continued to bad stretches
lite their last few
School during his senior cam~. hone his skills as a member of a weeks. The starting pitching
has agreed to play for the Uruvcm- summer league team in Lorain.
ly of Rio Grande baseball team this
Sports shorts
The son of Don Abralwnowicz
fall.
.
Auto raclog
of Lorain, the new recruit was an
A two-time Golden Arm Award All-State pitcher with an "outstandBROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)winner for his school, Abrahamow- ing high school record," Oglesby Ricky Rudd ftnished a car-length
icz is interested in assoming piu:h- said. "He should help us immedi- behind winner AI Unser Jr. in Slting or third base duties with the ately and upgrade our pitching staff urday's final lntemalional Race of
Redmen. Rio Grande is coached by signilicandy."
,
Champions event to capture the
Dave Oglesby, who will enter his
TheRedmen were 17-21-1 over- ovenll series tide.
sixth seasolf..With the team next al1last spring, finishing founh in
Rudd came into the 50-lap race
sprin¥- The team competes in a fall the Mid-Ohio Conference (8-6) and of Dodge Daytonas at Michi$an
pracuce schedule.
fifth in NAIA District 22 following International Speedwar_ trailing
As a senior, Abrahamowicz an appearance in the district play- Dale Earnhardt by 1 1!2 points.
posted a 7-1 record on the mound offs. Oglesby's cum:nl record at Rudd finished witll68 1/2 points, 5
·and recorded an earned run average Rio Grande is 95-89-2.
1/2. more than Earnhardt
.

r.One

Lorain Catholic standout set
to join Redmen baseball team

Sunday's~eora

In tbe majors ...

-DI-

a.EVI'JAND-1. r ..... z.l•.,..

T...... 6, CI.IlVEUND 2, 7lld...,.
Mil-..1,a.....o ·
Korooo c~zy u. a-...z
OUiorul 5, Coijfomio.
S..lllel, - . - 7 .

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T..,.

WLPd.GI

PI•IObullh ....... - ..66 51 ..564
Monboil ................64 54 .541
CID&lt;alo..................57
SL u.ua ................\5
NowYadL ........... ..51
Phil.odclpbia ..........49

60 .-117
61 .~4
6"l .-152
Iii .422

w-.-15 .609

Au""' ...................70

CINCINNATI........66 !0 ..169

~ ~.,;;;;;;~ ::::1:

2J

OU..ao&lt;.NewY.a2

1~

l"
~

0

:66 :~
~1
.441 19J

llaoolm ,.................12
Loo AnJ&lt;la ......... ,.49 61 .419

Saturday's StOres
H.......

0....06.r.... o

9

s.aucoaoo

CINONNATI S, Son !);cso 4
........ 7. Pl..bouF 5
SLLouiJ 6, Montlell&lt;4
Philldolphia 4. New Yo« 3
San""""""' 2. Loo A,.dtol

Sunday'siOOI"a
SL Louia 5, Monn-12
PiustMR.b 4. Allanll 2
CINC!IiNATI 12, Son Di&lt;p 2
OUcaJO ~ •. ~~auaono
.
AU.ladclphi1 1t New YOlk. ppd ., mn
San l'r1noUa&gt; 2. Loo Anaefa I

Tonil!bt's pma

CINCINNA'I (Swindell 11 ·~) at
P!illldclpbia (SdUllinl10-7), US p.m.
Atlant a (Smith 2· 0) at Pi.tuburab
(Dnbd&lt; 9-9),7J5 pm.
S1n Fr•nci~eo (Olivcn• 0· 1) at to.
Anpo (0.. 5-11), 10o3S pm.

Tuesday's pma

Atl1nta (Lcibraadt 9--4) 1t Montte~l
(Hilll3-S ). 7o35 pm.
QNCINNATI (Rijo 9-1) II Plillodcl·

phio (Schillin&amp; 10-7), 7:35 J&gt;-m .

San Dies._~ OKn- 9-10) 11 PialbwJh
(flllllin 11·7). 7:3!5 p.m.
Houttoa (J. Jonca S-S) at St. Louil

(Oli•.,.. 6-7),1:35 pm.
Now Yolk (Cone 1:1-5)" Loo Anp
(AIIIcio H), 1Do35 p.m.
OUcaao (Moraan 10.6} at s.n Fnncil·
00 (Bll&lt;l: 9-5).10:35 p.m.

TOIIIIIbt'o&amp;IDia

New Yod: (Jcra 9·11) 11 Chicaao
(IJ;IIIIood 7-5),1:0! p.m.

Douoir. (GWlic:U.:m Il-l) a1 Kauu
City (Rood~~ lo:l5 p.m.

Tlltlday'saoma
OU..I.Iad (Wocne 12-9) 11 New Yort
(S a '
10.1). 1:30 p.m.
Califamlo (Lanadai 11· 10) II -

(ea.- 14-7), Hl pm.
S•llle (l'lomina I:1-5) II BIIU.....

=·

~12-JJ;.7i~.!""'w· ·
a.9) a1 CI.EVELAND (MoA 4-9~ 7:3l pm.
.

Toroato (Key7· 10} at Milwaukee

(lluftloi~.I:OS

p.m.
Tow (8....,. 16-7) "01icoJo (Mcllonlt U -7),1:QS p.m.
Deuvh (0\llli.Wioa 13-1) at &amp;a.aa
City (Rood ~~ l o35 p.m.

Major league leaders
Natloul Lt~&amp;~~~

BATTINO - Sboffiolcl, Sill DiCJ••

ICNk, Jlh.ild lp'-i· 336; Vldl,U,
Pittaburp, .321;Q.Jftll, San Diqo,
. 319; Butler, Loa Aaplu, .31 7;
Ddhillda, MaalrDI1. .314: Ftmd'·- Aalanll, .313.
RUNS - DoShicldt, MooltOII, 75;
Hol.lilll, Pbiladelphia, 12; Owynn, !111
Dqo, 72; Bigio. -" """"'· 71; Pomdlo""'·Allan,., 71; Giiooom, Mam.l. 10;
.~

Knik,
l'llilldelpllll.
69; ·
611;
v..
Siyt~ l'!llobwp,
69; .B
Wor.Coo

An-611-

lBI - Sholfiold. S.n Dieao. 14;
Doullool,l'lliiNkll&gt;'&gt;io, ll ,l'ladl&lt;lcm, A&gt;
111111. 79; MoGrilr. Soa Diqo, 71; M.,. ·
nr.NcwYadL, 10; Bopdl,u.o-,67;
llaodo,-..... 65.
llrt"S - Sliolllll1l_ ~~-.~~
P 'rtr A1la~M. 1-. rr:sm.&amp;a., _...
lte.ll, u2.; OWfD.D, Saa Di•ao. 141;

VmSbb.l'll1obwtll •.lll; a.-, llllca·
... 1»: ,.......lllicqo, 132.

DOUBLES - Dunoon. PlliWolohlo.
31; l.oillOtd, SL Louio, 19; Sboft'oold,
Soa Diop, 29; W. Claot. Soa P "ooo,
29; Vod1yto, PituborP, 29; on-.
W011tn1l. 2&amp;; Pudl-.oa, Atlaall, 21;
16lnoJ,NowYadL,27,
TIUPU!S- D. Sondm. Allodo, 13;
I'Woy.-,u:,BWor,LooAqelol,
I 0; AU.., SL l..oDWao 9; Off.an&amp;nt Lai
Antol•, I; VIDSiyko. Pinobufl)l, I ;
M011DdW, l'bilodelplaja. 7; DoShioldt,

- 7 ; s..-.Cdeo... 7.
IIOMIIIIJNI - lldldl!; laa Dlop.
27; Sholliold, S• Dilp, :15; Doalhia.
Plillodolpbia. 21; Boodi, Plaobarlll. 20;

L Wd•, M

21, 11: P

"¢=

ltl.·

W.., 17; .:...., Lao~ I~ Dow·

.... ~16,

STo!J!W'IL\SBS -

Dill. .0,

oa-, Mao-

J !+, . . . . . . .,. Ld•
food. SL ~ 34; Budor, Loo Aoplol,
n

r

31; Plale7• HolltOD, Sl; loiMnJ,

CINCINNAn, 31; &amp;-. . - _ 10;
DJUn. PliJ I 1 I:,, 30; Hila A&amp;lalu.

30.

I

-!!\-.
c-.-

.lmliiNO (14
-.1H.fS7,1JO;L

II, 1:1-S••m,z.~

.....,._

..t,l:l5, ."12:1, :Z.MI T........,, ilL TAw, 12-5.
.706, :Z.CII; Sllladoll, aiiCINNAn, 11-J,
.611. :l-iP: B1oct,laa l'rilldo&lt;o, 9·5,
.643, 3.:16; Smolll, Allanto, lol-l, .6:16,

:Z.7t

I......,_,

mDU!OUTS - C - N"' YOlk,
2011;-._
Allanta, 164;
Nn Yod&lt;, l".i 0. Mad&lt;l,., au..,o,

143; Dnbok, riuoborah, 135; RiJo,
CINCINNAn 124: ..... s.. Dioao.

w-

120.
SAVES -l.oo Smi1h, SL Louio, 30;
-11011, 27: D.-'-·-""· )!;_ M,.._ s.. ~ 2$· C11u1ron,
CINCINNATI, 2&gt;1; Mhcb Williomo ,
Philo4oloiU. 22: Belia4o. Jllaobuop. 15;

Dibble.tiNClNiiAn, 1!1.

Alllerlcu Lnaue

BATTJNO- £ . Maniaoz, S..W.,

.331;
- -.326;
- ~
...... .QDao.
330; -·~
tfi IIIII,
.320;
~.nonow, .311; fllera•.
&lt;UVB~AND, .316; a.-'-· T_..,

I!•!P'..!!.
.315.

RIJNI- Phil[il:~ A;--

.a,-,12;

II, 10; B. Martiaa, S.ult, 79; Carter,
T......, T7; 11iomoo, Clliaao, 76: ......
~ 76; M&lt;:Gwloo, Oiklllld, 76.
RBI - Fialdor, Detroit, 100; McO.

.U.. OUIIII4, 91; 0 . Boll, OU..p, II;
-.n, Mianooooo, 17; Clllet, T....to.
ll; J~ Ooaal•, Tuu, II: Thom~.

au..... 71; l'eymon,-. 71.

HI1'j - Pucten, Milm•ota, I S4;

lAND,
l·U;
- · -1&lt;49;
. 1E.
3ManiaM,
0 ; -f"Male,
· C1BVJ!.
Pryntan, Detroit. 137;,Jefforiu. X.U.•
Cilr.135; Molilar.MilDOUBLES - £, Moniaoz, S..ule,

m.

36; ltll"-.~ooooo Cloy, 31; Maoiqlr.

Jo,....Ooi!rer.
t-U
SOIIIlo,19;

Now Y..t. 31;
lloll. Now Y..t.IO;

-.T....:!9.

Ci&amp;y,"30;

a.-,

TIUPU!S - Dov9:
Aadenoa, Btl&amp;imon, 7; L. Joba1oa,
auca,o. 7; U.llda. Milw•ukee.. 6; It
Al0111ortToronto, 6; Siem1,,'~exu, 6;
White, armto, fi; Rllin•, Ulicaao, 6;
Molilar,Milwoubo,6.

HOME RUNS - Mo0w1ro. Ookload.
31; Jutn Ooftula:. Teua. 30; Fielder,
Doa.il,27; C.., T.....,26;T-.
DoiiOI~ :15: BoUo, CLEVEUNl), 23:
Dooo
.......~ 23.
.
~IUUIN BASES - ........... Bolli-~-. Colifomlo.~ Liolooh.
Milnukoo, :19; Lol\oa. CLJ!VJ!LAND,
39; ...... Odc:IJO, 31; I. H t IOU,
OUiood, 31;
Qioqo, 34.

L-,
PITCJDNO (14 dscialou) -

luaa

a.-.., T-12.3, .100. 1.15; llmio
MaaU. r-. 15-5, .7!10, '-46&lt; Fl...
.,.. kmlo, 13-5, .m, !.27; Aooicr,

ltlaooo Ci&amp;y, lH••721, 2,36; lt. S",;,..,,
Tau,l6-? • .696, 3.:19; M....... llllli.
men, tW, .617, 2.12; v= watt. Ola... IJ-7,.612,3.A5.

miDOU11- a-..

a-.

1561- Now Y..t, 153; l . I - . ,
Sooa1o, 1&gt;11;
T - 1!7;
Rr-.
Touo,
131:
·
' - " CiiJ,
126olt.B....., r ...;l26;be~.
r...,126.
SA YES -llcl&lt;onlOJ, Ooklaod. 37;

.._au-.

Apllon, Ml-••· !2; M""''""2J·
lioooo Cily, 29; Olloo, BollioiOio, ;

Itlfa.-,
T- 27; - · - ·
2$; a..,.. 1111--.23.

Transactions
B..tlall
.
N-1~
CHICAOO CUBS ...;. Soop•oded
..-.. ftoo. crt' " r torn •atna
t1 lho APOIIocldoo t.o.- f• lho , .

..... it..- .

171992

Niners top Redskins; Bengals,
Browns fall in NFL tuneups
Jets 24, Packers 7 - In Madison, Wis., Browning Nagle passed for two first-half touchdowns one a 70-yarder to Rob Carpenter - and set up a
third as New YIXk improved 10 3-0 in the preseason.
Saturday
Rams 19, Raiders 16 - ln Anaheim, Caliif., former Oklahoma and USFL' star Marcus Dupra:, used
sparingly after joining the Rams as a free agent in
1990, rushed for 100 yards on 22 carries and had four
receptions for 28 yards in the secol!d half of the
Rams' overtime victory.
Dolpllins 31, Broncos 27 - In Berlin, Germany,
the 60,813 fans who paid up to $86 per ticket may
have left wondering if they'd stumbled upon a game
between two antateur teams.
There were 10 lumovers, 16 penalties, several
fights, a malfunctioning clock and a power failure.
... Miami backup Scott Mitchell threw touchdown
passes to James Saxon and Tony Martin in an 88-second span of the thin! qwuter.
Eagles 27, Bengals 17 - 1n Philadelphia, Ran·
dall Cunningham completed 7 of 12 passes for 66
yards and ran seven yards to set up Pbiladclphia's
fii'St touchdown.
Bues 40, Falcons 28 - In Tampa, Fla., Vinny
Testavcrde threw for 119 yards and three touchdowns and Steve.DeBerg threw a one-yard touchdown pass to KiJic Kirkpatrick with 5:17 to play.
Oilers 17, Cowboys 16- In Dallas, Bucky
Richardaon threw a 22\yard touchdown pass to Wade
Hopldns with 31 seconds to play to give Houston its
second exhibition victory over Dallas. The Oilers
beat the Cowboys 34-23 in Tokyo two weeks ago.
Giants16, Browns 7 -ln !last Rutherford, NJ.,
ex-Brown Man Bahr kicked field goals of 34, 45 and
SO yards, as New YIXk limited Cleveland to 86 yards
in taking a 9-0 lead after three quaners.
Vikings 30, Chiefs 0 - In Minneapolis, Minnesota sacked Dave Krieg six times in the ftrSI half
and held Kansas City's fii'St-string offense to minusfour r.ardsVikin~s quarterback Rich Gannon made his debut
after ending·a holdout and completed 12 of 18 passes
for 175 yards in the second half. Krieg was 5 of 16
for 42 yards.
·
Seabawks 27, Colts 10 -In Indianapolis, Robert
Blackmon had two interceptions, including a 48-yard
return for a touchdown, and Kelly Stouffer passed for
two touchdowns f&lt;r Seattle.
Cardinals 20, Bears 17- In Tempe, Ariz.,
Timm Rosenbach threw fii'St·half touchdown passes
of 53 yards to Ernie Jones and 23 yards to former
Bears back Johnny Bailey.

By The Associated Press
Sieve Bono took advantage of his latest opportu·
nity to show he's no ordinary third-string quarter·
back.
Bono, S-1 as a starter last season with Joe Mon·
tana and Steve YOtiRg sidelined with injuries, completed 13 of 21 attempts for 167 yards and two touch·
downs as the San Francisco 49ers rallied to beat the
Washington Redskins 17-15 in SWlday's exhibition
in Wembley, England.
Bono doesn't expect to move ahead of Montana,
still sidelined with an elbow injury, or YoiDig, 12 of
17 for 95 yards in the fii'St half.
·
"I'd like that, but I don't think it will happen for a
variety of reasons,'' Bono said.
Bono cut Washington's lead to 12-7 with a 12yald touchdown pass to Ricky Watters with 6:53
remaiaing in the thin! quarter and gave the 49ers a
. 14-12lead early in the fourth quratcr on a 35-yard
touchdown pass IQ Troy Kyles.
After Washington took a 15-12lead on Chip
Loluniller's 45-yard field goal wilh 3:32 remaining,
Bono drove the 49ers to the Washington 30 witll
three seconds remaining to set up Mike Cofer's
game-winning 48-yard field goal.
"In the second half, that's about as bad as I've
seen out of us in a long time, aU the way around,"
said Washington head coach Joe Gibbs, wbo warched
the defending Super Bowl champions drop to 0-3 in
the exhibition season.
Washington quarterback Mart Rypien, playing his
fll"St game after ending a 23-day holdout, completed
2 of 7 auempts for 50 yards before being replaced by
Cary Conklin midway through the second quaner.
Washington opened the scoring in the fll"St quarter
on Lohmiller' 32-yard field goal and made it 5-0
when Tim Johnson sacked Young in the end zone
with 10:44 left in the half. Ricky Ervins scored on a
two-yard run with 12 seconds remaining in the half
to make it 12-0.
In Sunday's other game, the New York Jets beat
Green Bay 24-7. On Saturday, Miami Cl)ged Denver
31-27 in Berlin; Tampa Bay beat Atlanta 40-28;
Philadelphia defeated Cincinnati 27-17; Phoenix
edged Chicago 20-17; the New York Giants beat
Cleveland 16-7; Minnesota shut out Kansas City 300; Seattle defeated Indianapolis 27-10; Houston
edged Dallas 17-16, and the Los Angeles Rams beat
the Los Angeles Raiders 19-16 in overtime.
On Friday, San Diego beat New England _20-10.
Tonight, Detroit visits Buffalo and Pittsburgh is at
New Orleans.
Sunday

BLOCKS PUNt- The New York Jets' Fzic
McMillan (right) gets a cbestlul or
during bis block or Green Bay punter
Waper's boot durlag tile lint ball~ .
NFL

exhibitioa 1ame at Madison, Wis., whlcb the
Jels won 24-7. Tbe Jels made tile recovery on
tills play. (AP)

f

JOY AND PAIN - Several Clnclnnall Reds
players (background) celebrate tbelr 12-2 win
over San Diego Sunday, while the Padres' Gary

MILLER GOING TO RIO - Caldwell Hlgll
School basketball standout Shan a on Miller,
seated It left, will play rur the University ol Rio
Grande women's basketball team lhis falL Seat-

Shemeld walks off lbe field after billing a 11meeodiog groundouL (AP)

Caldwell graduate joins Redwomen

Cleveland, Toronto win in DH
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Wondering why the talent-laden Toronto Blue Jays aren't running away
with the AL East? Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove has a theory.
"Biiltimore had more intensity,
I thought," Hargrove said Sunday
after the Indians split a doubleheader with the Blue Jays. "Those
are good people over there (in
Toronto's clubhouse). I was Sill"·
prised their level of intensity
wasn't as high."
Cleveland won two of three
games a week ago in Baltimore and
lost two of three against Toronto
this weekend. Still, Hargrove suggested the Blue Jays are getting by
on raw ability, rather than desire.
"There's no comparison in the
· talent of the two clubs, either their
position players or the depth in
their pitching staffs,'' Hargrove
said.
Toronto lost the fll"St $arne Sunday 4-2 but came back w•th a flourish and won the nightcap 6-2
behind the pitching of Jack Monis
and the hittmg of Dave Winfield.
The split boosted the Blue Jays'
lead over the Orioles to three
games. Baltimore lost 15-2 at
Kansas City.
Winfield, who drove in five runs
in the second game with a home
run, double and single, wasn't
bothered by Hargrove's comments.
"Intensny doesn't always win,"
Winfreld said. "We're still in fll"St
place. They (the Orioles) have been
chasing us all year."
Monis (I 5-5) benefited from an
early six-run 'lead and lasted seven
. innings, allowing two runs mKJlive
hits. He struck out seven and
walked one while improving his ,
career record against Cleveland to
31-10.
Winfield hit a tw&lt;Hun home run
in the fll"St inning, his 20th of the
year and 426th of his career, tying
Billy Williams for 20th on the aUtime list.
Toronto scored four more in the
second on Randy Knorr's first
career home run and Winfield's
tllroo-run double.
Winfield later added an infield
sin~, leaving him a triple shy of
hiwnf for the cycle.
"I m still the oldest man ever to
hit for the cycle," said Winfield,
who did It laSt year at age 39. "I
just would have been older."
Kenny Lofton and l.1arl: Whiii'JI
drove in runs for the Indians. Dave
Otto (5·9~ took the loss and ~­
bly lost hiS job I~ the llidians Start·
ing rolation.

111 the first game, Dennis Cook ans came back with three runs in
(4-S) worked 6 2-3 tedious innin~s. the second against Todd Stottleallowing just two runs despite giV· myre (7-8). Glenallen Hill bit an
ing up seven hits and five walks. RBI double, Jim Thome's groundHe sii'Uck out seven.
out drove in a run, and Mark Lewis
Cleveland is 11-3 in Cook's last had an RBI single.
John Olerud's double brought
14 starts, though he has rarely been
around long enough to get,credit. Toronto within a run in the third,
He had a string of four no-deci- but Paul Son-ento expanded Clevesions before Sunday; the Indians land's lead to 4-2 with his 15th
home rWl in the sixth.
were 3-1 in those games.
Robeno Alomar was thrown out
''I've pitched well as of late and
'the team has won. That's what's stealing by his brother Sandy in the
important," Cook said. "I'm a fifth inning, ending a string of 17
le8IJI player, but it feels good 10 get successful steals, two away from
a win. I take my hat off to the the Toronto record. Sandy, meandefense. They saved my buttloday, while, strained his left knee on a
slide in the fourth inning but played
no doubt about iL"
Devon White homered on the rest of the game before sitting
Cook's second
but the lndi- .out nighll:ap.

The rants of the University of coming season."
Rio Grande women's basketball
Miller is the dau~r of Ralph
weD.
team have been boosted with_the and Diane Miiier of
Smalley, formerly assistant
addition of Shannon Miller to lhe
roster, Coach Dave Smalley coach of the Morehead State Uni •
versily women's basketball team,
announced.
A 1991 graduate of Caldwell assumed coaching duties with the
High School, Miller comes to Rio Redwomen this summer aftec Doug
Grande following a year at Foote accepted the men's coaching
Glenville State College in West
Virginia.
In high school, Miller was a
four-year varsity letter winner and
By HOYT HARWELL
saw a win-loss record of 72-12 durBIRMINGHAM, Ala (AP) ing her career. Caldwell's best
showing in a single season while After bogeys on the seventh .and
Miller participated on the le8IJI was ninth holes, George Archer had a
21-2. She compiled a career record little talk with himself.
The greens weren't holding very
of743 points and 189 rebounds.
well
and the putts were talring off,
Her honors included the AllDistrict 12 frrst team, All-Eastern in sharp contrast to the fmt two
Ohio, the District 12 All-Star rounds of the BrWlo's Classic.
"The other guys started coming
Team, All-PVC, the Associated
up
and I knew I had to make pars,"
Press Eastern All-District Team,
he
said.
and the Marietta Times All-Star
"I said to myself, 'You used to
ftrst le8111.
"Shannon will give us additional be a good chipper and putter, so
depth and experience at the guard just pull yourself together.'''
He didn't tear up the Greystone
position because she is a transfer
Golf
Club course the rest of the
from Glenville, where she redshirtway,
but he held on for a oneed," Smalley ooted. "She wiD be a
stroke
victory for the biggest payrole player for us and we look to
check
in his four years on the
utilize her at the two-guard spoL
Senior
PGA
tour, $105,000.
Such experience lends maturity to
Archer, 53, winner of the 1969
what will be a new le8IJI, and we
are looking for her to make some Masters, has been plagued by
significant contributions in the injuries "throughout his career. He
had two steel rods inserted in his
spine in the late 1970s.

MONDAY, AUGUST 17
4:00 p.m .~Kiddie Tractor Pull· Sbow Arena
6:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage - Carmel Sunon
Children's Choir
6:00p.m. - Draft Horse Sbow
7:00 p.m.-DemoliJion Derby· Grandstand
8:30 p.m.-Hillside Stage- Shady River Shuffiers

TUESDAY, AUGUST 18
7:00am. to 2:00 p.m.-KIDDIE DAY Everyone gets in for $3.00 at gate.
9:30 am.--4-H Horse Show
1:00p.m.-Draft Horse Fun Show
3:00 p.m.- Poultry Judging
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tnctor Pull • Sbow Arena
4:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage- Dee &amp; Dallas
4:30 p.m.- Junior Fair Parade
6:30 p.m.-Junior Fair Board Auction-Show Arena
7:00 p.m.c-4-H Open Horse Show
7:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Beef Show followed by
Open Oass Beef Sbow-Show Arena
7:00 p.m .~dstand - Ellis Brothers
7:30 p.m.- Pony Pull
9:00 p.m.-Grandstand - Ellis Brothers
9:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage - Midnight Cloggers

job at Marietta College.

The Redwomen posted their
season (lS-7) in 1991-92,
finishing second in the Mid-Obio
Conference {11-3) and second in
NAJA District 22 Division I following an appearance in the district
playoffs. Smalley is a 1982 Rio
GJande graduate.
best~ver

Archer wins Bruno's Classic

PGA CHAMPION - Nlc:k Pr1c:e or Orlando,

onsbip Sunday at Bellerive Country Club In St
Louis. (AP)

Fla. naslles a grin after slnldnl hill par putt 01

tbe 18th green to win lhe 74tb PGA Cbampi-

Price claims PGA Championship
...

The 1992 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

ed ~t right is ber mother, Diane. Standiag are
ller tatber, Ralpb, left, aad Redwomea Coach
Dave Smalley.

and made him a millionare in
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
ST. LOUIS (AP)- A year ago, endorsements.
On Sunday, Price earned his
Nick Price gave the golf world
fii'St
major title with a pressure perJohn Daly. This time, Price saved
fonnance
where he had faltered in
·1he PGA Championship for himprevious
J.eStS.
self.
·
Price shot a 1-under·par 70 over
"It's been a Ion'- wail, but it
was well worth it, ' said Price. long and tough Bellerive Country
"Winning majors was not my Club to emerge from a bot pursuit
strong point because a special kind group that included British Open
of golf is required. I've got a big champion Nick Faldo to win by
three shots with a 6-under 278.
monkey off my back."
A chance at last year's PGA
Price had to withdraw at
wasn't
the only thing Price gave
Crooked Stick Country Club at
Carmel, Ind., in 1991 because his Daly. He also loaned him his n:gular caddy, Jeff "Squeeky" Medlen.
wife Sue was due to give birth.
This
time around, Medlen got 10
Daly, the last alternate, drove all
percent
of Price's $280.000 purse.
night from McmJ!his to take Price's
Last
year,
Medlen made a down
spot and make h1s tee time. Daly's
payment
on
a house with Daly's 10
·'prodigious 300-yard plus drives
percent
Medlen
said he will buy a
carried him to the championship

car from SWlday's earnings.
"My knees were shaking,"
Medlen said. "This is all a little
bizarre. John let me carry his bag
last year because Nick couldn't
mate iL"
·
For the 35-year-oldPrice, it was
redemption for two British Opens
that blew away on pressure-packed
Sundays.
Price, winner of three PGA Tour
events, gave the 1982 British Open
to Tom Watson and couldn't keep
up with Se.ve BallestA:ros in 1988 at
Royal Lytham after leading for
three rounds.
His win here came just in the
nick of time. Price's 10-year
exemption for winning the 1983
World Series of Golf was running

Riverside to host
linkfest August 30

The third annual Children's
Chrisunas Tournament a1 Riverside
OUL
Golf Course in Mason, W.Va., will
be held Aug. 30.
Entry fee is $200 per team for
the four-man scramble toumanicnt
· Until he came to the Cavs in the with fll"S! pizc, $800; second prize,
Ron Harper deal with the Los $400; thrrd pnzc, $300; and fourth
Angeles Clippers, aU Ferry ever did prize, $200; as well as gift cenift.
was succeed. He was a high school cates and prizes for closestiO pin, a
All-American, then the 1989. car for the person that hits a holein-one on No. 9, longest drive on
NCAA Player of the Year at Duke.
''What has made Danny's sihla· No. 18, longest putt on No. 11 and
tion unique is that when a team 16.
Deadline to enta" is Aug. 25 or
trades for a high-visibility player,
when
lhe first 40 teams have payed
usually there is a need for him.'But
their
entry
fee.
lhat was not tbc case with the
The enll'y fee includes the Aug.
Cavs," said his father,"Bob Ferry.
29
nine-bole warm-up with cart, 5
"I'm a former general manager
and
7:30 and a weiner roast with
(Washington BulletS), so I'm aware
musk:
on Aug. 30 to Which a guest
that there are only 96 ·minUies .
may
be
invited.
available at the two forward posiThere
is a 40 handicap minitions. I know that Hot Roil and
mum
and
only two players per
Nance are terrific pia~.
team
may
have
below a 10 handi"It's also why I worry about
Danny. This is a very difficul! situ- cap and only one may have below a
ation for him, more difficult than six handicap. Proof of handicap
even he knows. He is under must be provided.
Further information may be
tremendous pressure to prove himobtained
II caUin 'Riverside Golf
self, but he can't do that from the
Course
at
(~U4) 77~-9527.
bench."

Ferry uncertain of his role with Cavaliers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Danny
As usual, Ferry takes the high
Ferry Irnows the problem.
road and does not criticize
"I've been wifh the Cavs for Wilkens' handling of his situation.
two years, but I still don't have a Yet he cannot resign himself to be
the NBA's highest-paid cheerleadrole on this team," he said.
er.
But that might change.
"I'll never ask to be traded and ·
· "This is the year we should start
to find out about Danny," head I won't be a disruP,Iion on the
coach Lenny Wilkens said. "! plan team," Ferry said. 'But I've let
to give him an opportunity to show them (the Cavs) know that I've
reached the• point where I've
what he can do.'
The NBA season is still three learned all I can silting on the
months away. What sounds good in bench. I need_JO play.
"I'm not.blaming anyone, but I
the relaxing days of summer Clll be
put in cold storage under the feel like I wasled last year."
Ferry averaged IS minutes a
weight of an 82-game schedule in
game
last season, and there were
the dead ol wiota".
14
~when
he nev~ played. .
On opening night in November,
'I
know
11
101
of people think
' he will be 26 years old and he'll be
I've
failed,''
Ferry
Slid. "I don't·
. malting $3 million. In his two years
think
that's
fair.
I
understand
my
with the Cavaliers, Ferry has
played little. A 6-foot-10 earth- situation with so much talenl playbound power forward, he is sli!Cked . in~ ahead of me. But I. also don't
! behind two leapers - veterans think rve had a chance to fail. If 1
get a chance, I won't fail."
· Larry Nance and John Williams.

'.'

'•

"At my age, I take whal I can
get," he said.
:
His final round of 74, 1wo over
par, gave him 208 for the tournament, one- stroke better than Jack
Kiefer and Rocky Thompson, and
two strokes ahead of Mike Hill,
Dick Goetz and Kenni1 Zarley.
Archer, winner of two other
tournaments this year, has won
$506.552 in 1992 and $2.3 million
on the Senior tour since joining 'it
in 1989.
He moved from fifth 10 third ,
~g Jim Colben and Rodriguez,
m this year's winnings, and now
trails Lee Trevino and Hill.
The course, Archer said, was
mm: diffiCult than on the fii'St rwo
days, when he sho166 and 68.
"It was hard 10 survive,"
Archer said. "I wasn' t 1hinking
binlies; I was just going for pars. It
was the toughest round of golf I've
played in a long time.''

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
&amp; UMWA Assignment
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

BEND YOtJTJI FOOTBAI.L
9:00 A.M. • NOON

SATVRDAY, AUGUST IS fl AUGUST U
BIG BEND BEAU118 JI1TNESS CENTER
(Old Elberfeld's Warehouse, Mechanics Street, Pomeroy, OH)

Open To AilS"' l 6" Graders In Me~ or Mason Counties
Wishing To Play Foolbal or Be ACheerleader.
(Camot Be Af1J 13 Prior To Seplember 1l
ForMOH lnfonutlonC:.U (614) 992-J4" after 5 p.m.

'

�......

..

'

'

'

I

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

Paga 6 ~

Wives with 'telephonitis' should
'let their husbands do their job .
Dell AID bacJert: I work as a
in a busy public service
agency. One' ci. my duties is to
answer a11 ~ calls and ·c1ca1
with the public.
w~ have nine ptOfessional men
in our offiCe. )be pR!blcm is their
wives. SOme ci. dtese women call
sevcnl times a day. We try to

answer all phone calls by the
third ring. Can you inlaginc how
annoying it is 10 be tied uti on a
line, with • CliaJmcir waiting 81 the
window,llld thea gellltOdlCf caller
who asks, "Is HOOeybuns thm!r
Thele wives call 10 11:11 Daddy thai
Junior hit Sissy, or theY can't decide
what to· make for supper. Often
their husbands are busy and it's very
disruptive to have to listen to such
drivel If the huSband doesn't return
his .wife's c:a11 within 10 minUtes,
she calls.bact wanllag to know if
"Honeybuns" was Jiven the mus ge
and if SO, why he hasn't mumed her
c:aJL She also warils . ~ tnow how

HOLDING GEIALDO • Telnlaloa tall
all- •olt Geraldo Rivera 11 restrained by
I! ta¥1De, Wis., poJJct olllce11 after aUe1edly
~-..... ma scaflle wllll a wblte supremacist

Talk show host Geraldo Rivera and
:{(lan member charged·in scuffle ·
JANESVILLE, Wis. (AP) Geraldo Riven, who suffered a
brolcea nose four years ago in a
cllair·dlrowing melee with skin·
heada, Jot arrested after another
sCuffle· with 1 white supremacist
8ild c;ame away !his time with cuts

and liNiles.
De lilt show host said a Ku
Kiu ~ auacked him Sun; ~ he and his crew taped a Klan

Riven and McLaughlin were
held in jail for about three houra,
Loveland said. Rivaa postal $500
bail for a hearing Aug. 31. Love;
land said he believed McLaughlin
had also made bail
Rivera said his thumb was
severely bitten and he bad other
cuts and scrapes. The Janeiville
Gazette reported that Mcl aogblin

much longer his meCiiilg wiD last.
The one 1 bale the moi is, "Why
didn't you !Mill that be ftGII1I my
call befcxe he left the efface?"

A .;;, ..;.
l'Ulll

·

WW .DHIIII you for writing '.h"' ,,.,;,.

I woodllr bow many ofTICC bulletin

l1oards this column

plow wllll .power ongllng
hydraulic oyotom. Equipmont to In excollont con·
dllon. llay be vltwtcl at
lltlgt County Shtrlll
Will be oold 11 Ia
with no warrantlea ex•
prHatcl or lmplltcl. lllnl·
mum ·bld $850.00. Tht

affectionate man, ;

next ~y morning. Thanks for
scoring a bull's eye.
Dear Aaa Landers: After reading the leiters in your column
from the 35, year-old woman in
OaJcland and !he beautiful 30-yearold auomey who hadn't had a date
in 10 years. I had to respond.
Women aren't exactly saints
when it comes .to looking for a
man. If you need proof, just read
the "peiSOIIllls" published in the
PaPCf· ! am really IWlled off by
what females consider lmponant
qualifications for a suitable male

o.,._

....... COUnty Coorlrnlaolon-

female.
·
·'
It makes you wood« what kind •
of wodd we live in when meil who ·
beat up Oil their girlfrlCnds to
get wooien who coolin~ to love .
!hem, wbile the deceRt men like me ,
get nowhc!re, - MIA,Ml
DEAR MIAMI: You sound like
such a thougblfuf, 'solid, decent

.,. ~ttrwt tho right to
Njtotany or Ill bl•.
.
·

Mary--·

(I) 17, 24 21a

IUCCIIIfllbiddlr.

'

AH 111• muet be ln a:
tytlolll, .tilt
of tNitcl envtlop~~ cl..riy.
whlah Ia to
all morktcl 'BID fOR EllS·
oounty oguolaa to COIIIIfiiCAl)ON
..
IYITEII". Thlt !lltlga
oomMunlcata with
aya- •!we _. aganoy County C:O.mlulo,... .., ,
hoa lhtlr ·own lraquanoy; .,. oi!llli i!&gt; rifect lillY ·
, •
yot all aan aoordlnalt 11141 Oflll............u.... with,-h ~lf!otdont II!IY bt
oblllrltcl.ll the ollloe jlf the
o4htrln an_.,..,.
81 JJ ra MUll tallo In aU.
011C:::!Jo:·~·
, Mu!Miry"
....tc. confrect lor tht
Helghlo, Porotroy, Ohio;
":~~~~~
........ the
~.
.IJIIIIW
and

.

.· RJ-,.. cbargcd with battery
al'ld Jolla R. McLaughlin, 42, of
m., was charged with

conduct. police LL Larry

Did.

...

:r.

CGIII'IIIu·
lated Brace Flsber, left, tile Jufy wlaaer
t•e Home Satety
Awareness Procram. PreRnd111 blm a Flnt Alert 11Doke Ilana is ·
Jay Buskirk, rlgbL
.

Poet's corner
I don't know
One gave a lantern r~ oivc me
Time seems to rush so swiftly light
Didn't know how to usc it and
by
bought !he wrong fuel
When no one seems to care.
I called someone and was
Pas! IS, you'd think you'd learn
shown just what to do.
And no longer care
That's all that could be offered
But love seems always there
I'll sit in my tent thai gives me
If someone would just care for
shelter and look around alone
me
I guess I' ll never grow up
In the light from !he lantern and
With no one to show me how
wonder when I'D go to jail.
With jail lurking ahead, I just
They'Dgive me more than a tent
and a lantern
wait
May be someone there will care.
Don't really care.
Many years ago, a baby was
No home. even though my fault
born in a bam
·it is
No oCIIer place for it to lay
What makes the difference
But Mary and Joseph never lefl
when Jove is what
its sick\ and bisuxy !hal did make.
I need and is no longer thm~.
Why must time rush so swiftly
My heart aches.
I can never go back to find !hal by
We just forget to care.
love
From !he goodness !heir heart
Josephine Tyree
Ones ! want !he most to care
122 Mulbmy Ave.,
One gave me a tent for shelter,
Pomauy, Ohio
where I'll put it
JUST CARE

•
MICHAEL ENGLE

First birthday
• Mii:had Allen Engle celebrated
Ills f11s1 birthday recently at the
lane Larry and Agnes Sellus in

or

Pixdand.

A cake fCIIIUring a 11'8ined filled
widl candy 011 each car was served.

Oucsu were Agnes and Larry
Sellm, Briuany and Stacy Black,
Sinlh and Debbie Engle, Maril
and Olriltie Cooper, Shawn En:.
Qeryl Se1le11, Julia Engle, Ruth
Seuers, Calina Wolfe, Judy SeUers,
Jlcob Sellers, Belinda Gmy, Jeremy Ross, Hope Bering and Vincent
GiaY Jr.
;..; Scndins gifts were Kristi Rich11101111. Ruth Ann and Kasie Sellers.

.

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

Pllnl and apeclllcatlonl

... on IVtin ·lho Doportmenl
ol Tronoporlallon tnd lhiol•
llct ollho Dlalrlcl Dopuly Dl·
rector. ·
Tho Director rHorvoalhe
rlghllorojectonyandollbldo.
JERRY WRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(8110, 17; ZTC

.C m:eivinll a special delivery !his
~

in the fonn of a free ~~etViee.
cillled Boob By Mail. This service
Ji:proYided to area residents from

ttie Meiaa County Public Library

1111 dlo Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL).
allows people to
.r ~
from
tbdr liome and
b CM
.
!4 ' lifBclallj 101111 for d)ose who
Jllve cJiffk:!'l..~ttin&amp; to. the

•'-..:J..MIB-

••1· Cily

Clll reccave a

CIUllo&amp; by ca!Uq the Library at
m-5113 or calling OVAL atiIII0-75-IS37.

.·. n.n ...ltulldleds or books to

«o -. 6ola In our ca~y fD use 40
PIP Cl.t.loa. The service Is just
Jti.a ~ lb'!IIY as you borrow
die bcdl for a few weeks and then

......
tbent.
in
If • ....
1 ~=
.
. difl'mnce
the mail and
. ~ . .'t 1tll'le 10 1elve your home
• !MCBhe 11!1 •rice.' All POIIIIIO
. . . far II fiJI. the ·~ to tflo

"'

r

wen

or

one

ulnriea

892-7093
Mon.-aun.t . ..apm

Virginia, ond whooe preoenl

nttda. ArN'o largott
ttloctfon of military
ourpluollflmol 8117 pd.

addre11 Ia unknown; the

unknown
legate11,

Boo uo lor your hunting

devl..aa,

etructure thrtalena tht

l~noo

modlalt hoollh uloty ond·
wollart1o lho dllzlfra of tht
VUllgt ofPomoroy. Further,

the defiiCtlve and unaafe

and VCR REPAIR
ALL MAliS
lrl•t U Ia Or Wt

(Sorry, IIIIa doea not •pply to Yanl Salel)

Name::_______________________________________
Phonet: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Mall To:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(ofltr explrtl 81311112)

•
'

t

•

~~
I

..:.
L---------------------------------------------------------------J
.
'

FllEE ISTIUI'ES

Ch•••in,

9·??

KEVI.N'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2398 or
1·800·137-1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
ond Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

laterior ·• E11terior

ROOFING

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

Wlltn lllvlriHI.

949-2168
71281'92/tln.

1300 VIne Street

OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY

614-992·2213

112 Malll '""'
POillrCIJL 01, 4$76t
(614) Yf2-6376

SMALL DOZEI

DRIV:A\'wou
and LIMESTONE
DELIYEIJ SERYICI
S.all Dour Work

us.oo,,., H01r
992~7553

POIUIIOY, 01.
8·11·'92·1 mo.

Spedtilzlng In Custom

Franta Repalt

FREE ESTIMATES

CALL

WANT ADS

w.

AlE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

Olllce, School a Art
SuppNN, Olllce
Furnlture1Advertlalng
SpeclahOM, Typing,
l.llmlrurtlng, Co))y, Fax
&amp; Notary S.rv!CM
CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PRICESB FIRST
..11-'11·1

COUNTRY LOTS
FOR SALE
1·5 ACRES
ApprOV«&lt; .Townehlp
Road (blacktop), 1!4
mile from Rt. 7,
located batMen
Cheater and Tuppe,.
Plalna.
Each lot Ia partially
wooded whh excellent
drainage. Service by:
T.P.C. Water Co.;
Columbua &amp; Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
.and up
Owner Financed

(614)985-3594 or
985·357

BISSELL BUILDERS,.INCo
New Homes • Vinyl Sidi•g
New Garages • Replaceme1t Windows
Room Additio1s • Roofing

LINDA'S

~PAINTING
~&amp;CO.

COMMERCII\L 1111d RESWENTIAL
FilEt: ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

'TIIit TN,. O.t 01, . ,
-l.tl U1 Dtlf Ftr Y,.'

(No

Sunday Calls)

INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
HAVE RIFIIIIKIS

._,..,,,.1'1
AUTO RENTAL, INC.

REMOVAL

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUto CENTER

7/31f9111fn

cauae said atructure to be

•.t

NEW USTING- LETART· 93+ acres with a 1 floor ~arn e
larm home with 2-3 bedrooms, 2 fire~l aces, well &amp;cistern,
Includes barn, equipment buildi ng'A corn crib, ~iut trees,
good read and .. . RIVER FRONT• GEl Asking $53,500 ·
P~EASANT RIDGE

Very nice f tl2 story lreme home wilh
3 bedroomshtocaled on two lots 50 x I00 each. Very cule ·
affcradabl&amp; orne. $18,900
BLOCK PLANT RD.· One lloor lrame home with vinyl siding
2 bedroom, both, carport, basement on 2.29 acres. Peaceful counfry ootting, yet Close to toWn. ASKING$24,900 .

~J~R:o~TsW,~ ~~·::ocs~~~~~-ii~~·l'fv ~~A~~
US HOW WE CAN SELL YOUR I!OME.FOR YOU I

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992·2269
.USED RAILROAD TIES

WICK'S
HAUUNG
SERVICE
36970 WI• I...
P-oy, Olr1o
~

. .. .

.

I•SJIND -GRAVEL • DIRT
•LIMESTONE

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
~­
TRY OUR NEW WolljRC
Wdync
Oallon STEEL INSULATED D·lllun
RAISED PANEL GUAGE DOOR
INSTALLED PRICES
9x7-$275.00 16x7-$450.00
OPENERS INSTALLED-Yo NP-$200.00
With 2 Tnnamlttera

PurcHn of

Receive FREE

Door Plu1 Ope1er

Seel TriM

992·5249

HOlTON
CONTUCTING

~...try Electric
,..htg ........
Roolllg
Wlttdows

..,.....

446-2820, 304-675·1189, 30H~
6495.
.

4

Giveaway
•'
PuppiN1 Mlxod Brood, TO ·

7
Giveaway. o14·367·7265.

A Good Hom• BtauUtul Black
Slinky Cit lntjdt Only, 614-256-•
1793.
;

Australian Slut Huler Pup, '4'
Months Old. 614-446-4053.
.,
Concrete Blocks: First Comtt.
Fiosl S.rvol Galflpolls Dally ,
Trlbunel.~ S Third Avenue, Gar~
llpoilo, utt 4J;63t
•.,
Female Calico Kittens, 8 Wnks
Old, Wormed, To Good H&lt;~m~ .'

German 9htphllrd puppi11, ·I"
ftmalta, 6 m.lee, 304-675-6899.

Golden Lab Retriever, Mind. 2.,
Yura Old. 614-38fl.87'11.
,
Good Home: Female Calico :
Bob-Tail Cit, Under 1 Yetr Qt.
Agt. 614-441.0723.
.:

BrH3'

Loving Adorsbtl Mixed
Ftmall Dog, Approx. 2 Yearfo•
Old, NHds Homt In Country

___

Away From Hlgilway, Good Whb,

Children. 814·37'9-2233.

,.,

Lost &amp; Found

6

•

.....;...;,;;;;;.;.;;...._~ )

Found: Black &amp; Brown Whh I
Bastett Hound, Ott 141, Qn.._
Graham School Road, Donlf,t;
Sh11tt, 11'14-446-3812.
:'

Yard Sale ' •. .,

••

•

&amp; VIcinity

ALL Yard S.lts MUtt Ba Paid~l

Advoneo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.f!t:

tht da y bekn the 1d lito ·
Sunday edition • 2:00 p. Friday. Mondey edition • 2. ·
p.m. Saturdly.
~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

•

:1

:; .•
All Yard SliM llull a. Paid ~
Amnc:o. Doadll,.: 1:00pm'""
day bokHo fho ld Is to ...,;'
Sunday ldhlo"' 1:00pm Ftlda,l'~
Mondly
tdltlan
10:001.~

Saturday.

:11

8

.:~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Peerson Auction Company
full tlma auctionMr, comp111i
tutUan
ltnllce.
UctnMd
t65,0hla I Wttt VirgirUa 304·

773-5785.

9

'

Wanted 10 Buy

,
Old marbltt, toys, comic books !
lanttms, plcturts, Iron skllltt.; t
and furniture, Osby Martin, 814992·7441.

All

Old

u.i!.J

Coins, Gold Rlng1, Sliver ~net
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop •
151 Sac:ond Avenue, Gallipolis. ~· ._

•

Employment Servtces

FRESH SWEET CORN
5
Now
doz.

1.50

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES

Of Sweet Corn, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.
LOCATED CORNER OF II. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY IY·PASS
992·5114

11

Help Wanted

'A~ON' ALL AREASI SNare yOUI
tlmt with Ul. Yau'll love thl
company. 1-100-192-&amp;3511.

AVON f All Aroaa I

Shi"•Y

Spears, 304.fi75-14H.

:

Cart Haven of Polnl Pitt unt ell
btd ICF facUlty II c url'tntl~
1111dng Dhctor of Nursing
apptlcanl must be 1 graduate of
an ecerldltld achoofh1ve valid
WV llctn.. or bt eUglblt tor
llcen11, prior nursing ~~;...
parltnct prtJtrabty long llfTI'I
cere t ltting. lnttrntld .,._.
pllcan11 apply lo Can Htven 'ot
Point Pl"11nt, At. 1 8oM
Pt. Pit, WV 24550 or call tor ah
lllltrvltw 31)4.1754005.
. -~.

wv:

3;!,.

Coun1er Pw10n, Experltncllf1
Prtftrred, Outlts Include: MH~\

Frte Es~Ntts • LDw
Rotts far Sellon
No Jo&amp; Too s.au

~~ r:~:r~~A~~nT~:r.:1~·

proxlmafely 25 Hot,~rt W..lll~

APPLY fN PERSON, Cantlnao,

Dry Cttan1r1, Ohio Rlvtr Plaza .

INU1JM.pC.

(,t,

GaiNpoU1.

Dlroc:for 01 Nursing _.,. F
at

Progrt11lvt 111 Std Long Ttnn'
Care F1clltty. l..ona Term c,n~
And ManaQimtnl: Exparienca A:

•Headllnera .
• Conv.ttlble T~
• Cullom Clrpttl

• CustOIII Seat ,
Covell • Allo Bostl

All

COmmpo!hhitt

Plua.

Qwallty HI Effkletry .
A.. c.•tiolers, Heat
P~~~p~,

F1111ets &amp;

Now Water Healtn.
Bennetts Mobile Home

Uti Sofftr4 SdooaJ Rd. :~:~•
Gallptll~ OW.
Cal (614144 ..9416 • HDG-172-$967.

I.\

S1ata Theatre, PolntPleisant "'
Main St. Nov 5th. 8P.M. $9. 614-

Top PrieN Paid'

New Homaa, Roofing,
Room Addltlon1,
Kltchen1, Porchtt Md
Batha.

773·5614 or

McKamey's Southern Gos~

Wanted To Buy: J unk Auto~
Wfth Or WHhoUI MOle.,.. Calt-'
Larry Llvoly. &amp;14-381-11303.
:;.,

. RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS
COMPLETE

Uvt·ln Nur The Holzer
Hospllal, Any A\}1. 614-446-3411!

Ultd Mobllt Hall'lls, Call 814-.
446.(1175.
'

(614) 992•3470

AEMODEUNQ SERVICES
FIM EoL - 211 Yra Exp.

Wanled : Lady Companion To

Gallipolis

s.19e9S A DAY AND tJP

•UGHT HAUL,II\IG

Fre1 Adult Talk Lina.
1·714·251·2606
Uva, One On One.

7

·lilitl6 , •
Aflw 6JI&amp; 614-915-4110

TRIM and

DAIWIH, OHIO

-·

..... •

014 ~367·'7'100.

992-7013 or

992-5553

[!]

7128112/1 mo. pel.

SHRUB &amp; TREE

or TOll FREE
1·800..841·0070

W.. kt,A IItr

Announcemenl s

614·992·6949

NEW &amp; US£D PARTS FOR

All MAKES &amp; MODUS

.....

GEl SOME BREAD .
WITH AWANT AD

Spray • Rol • Br~sh

IRII ESnMAllS

.. WHALEY'S:AUIO ·
PARTS

614·949·2804

PROFESSIONAL •' •
' · N·'
HOUSE
••
PAINTING

· Howard L Writesel

38904 leadl!ll
Creek Road
Middleport, Ollio

CHARLIE'S

PARTS &amp; SERV.KE
Mowers • CUll Sows
•Weedeaten

3 Announcements

Guttara

59

~) .

i

Flllktlnt1al • Commercii!
frM Eellmatee

12·5-tfn

J•.,•v Culftr

RAON(.OHIO

•

PH. 614-992-5591

Middleport, Oh.
Joe Cu1ter

loll 894--Wil• Mty

:•

NEW- REPAIR

&amp;
PLASTER

(for-ty 11t1t 1.... s..tl

985·4473
667·6179

LICENSEOand BONDED

CUSTER'S
STUCCO

oComplete
· Remodeliag
Stop &amp;Compare

6637

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
~

RACINE MOWER
CUNIC

St. Rt. 7

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

·TROMM .BUILDERS

12 rooms, 3% bathe, scenic view of
river. Located on 110 High Street In
Pomeroy. Available tor Inspection by
appOII)tment•. Contact Millie Midkiff
at 62·2133. Sealed blda can be sent
to Bank One, P.o: Box 586, Pomeroy.
Bids will be open on WadneacteYr
August 2811:1. Bank One reserves the
right to rtlect any or all blda.

Call 614·992·

915·3561

AND II:O.U.IYTHING
UNJ.JRNEJ•H
WI:
'1
GAUGES • ADDinONS ~ SIDING

LAIGE 3 STORY COLONIAL
HOME FOR SALE

FOR SALE

45633 ST. Rt 124 .
RACINE

iiSSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•GaNIIS

SIZED UMESTONE

Alronlroa Ptat Oflko
217 L ltco1141 St.
POIIIOY, OliO

L::=======r::::======::l

(Note: 16 Wonl Limit and Your Selling Price Mull Be In Your FREE Ad)

BARN

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

romovtcl.
I'
II
'
DESCRIPTION
OH.rfy Allure (Hfrtdor•
LEGAL NOTICE
Sllualtclln tht VIllage ot
20 Yr. bp.
Call AI, 614·742·2328
Tho Board of Btdlord P.omeroy, County of llefgo ·
TfN!nohlp, 111t1ao County ol
Slalo of Ohio
1nd more
ptrllculerly
boundod
and Ohio, wtllraotlv. .... until ond
7:00 O'oloek P.M. the lltl doocrlb~ •• lollowo: Being
Real Estate General
• .ol ,...._~ 1882 lor tht oll tho! pari ol Lol No. 41
purahale of uatcl 1110tor (being on lhe Not oldat and
oxlondlng book from condor
altho wldlh ol47112 o
I'J~II IPEC!FICATIONI Sfrttt
dlollnoeof1001111andbelng
AI FOLLOWS:
ENGINE: 4 Cyllncltr wlntt ollol Lol No. 41,lylng Eoof cl
horo.,ower of 141 • !hot part oold lo A. Prell,
DIDII•8tor • Dry ~ ... Air con~oytclto H11rry Winter by
deed of Jacob Bolkl, Admin·
a ..... wttl,....t.~~r.
lolralor wlfh lht Wlllannntcl
TRAHIIIIIION: Ful
Powor lhlft w/lntogrol ol Hanry Ohlinger, dofod
o.-nbtr17,1873,roccrdad
Torque-.
BRAKES: (4) Wh.. ttlf· In Volume 41 Pogo 551 of tht
odjuotlng hydrtullo wltll Mol go County Dttd Recordo.
Alao o right ol way for 1,.
Powtrloo-.
REAR AXLE: lplrtlg~~~o grooa ond ogrtao over tho IS
with no epln clllorontltl.
fool alloy loolng Condor
,FRONf AXLE: To be ooUd Strttl; ond tcrooo o right ol
bar oonttruadon welded way extending along the rear
atttl -'lone • Whtoi loan olloto 5, 0 and 7to !he Wtat
~08 EA$T .MAIN ..
. .P.~OY, OHIQ
Hgto 1t1t or rlllhi (Not loot lint ol lht obovo daacrlbod
lila• 17') OOolDratlon Total promluo.
REFERENCE DEED: Vol-· {.iiiiiELCUFF· 198S s~y1ine 24 ~ 42.;.;;;;factured home
(Not loot than 12 ...., .
umo
157, Page 17, Molgo
,TANDEII
DlllYE:
"Like New· condi~on offers 3bedrooms, 2 baths, central air,
Doolllttlnlit Wtldod otttl box County Dotcl Recordo,
appliances, sl&lt;y~gh~ steps, underpinning. $29,900 Make an
Audltor'a Poralf No. 18Hattan With oil tlilht hout·
offerl
00607
lng 20"x8" • lproobt Drlvt
Tho taot publlcollon will
NEW USTING- Pomoroy· 1 floor frame home with 3
Cliolft 1.21"•.
bedrooms, f !12 batho, patio, carport. storage building,
•TIREI: 14:0012., 10 ply be modo on SOpt. 7, 1GG2:
enclosed porch, full basement with finished room s, appli·
on 10" rlmo • Almo to be THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
anct&gt;s,
wall insulated. $44,900
(8}3,10,17,
24,
31,
(8}
7;
&amp;TC
lntarohln I 'e.
STEERING: Hydrott+.
NEW USTING- Doxfor• 1 112 &amp;lory lrame home 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms, newly painted includes cellar and garden space.
Real Estate General
large Iron! porch. Asking $16.000

This Is your Invitation to sell any Item for $100 or lela and advertlle It FREE. Simply clip~
coupon (photo copies not accepted), fill In your ICI and mall It to us or d!'OP It olf at our
office. Your ad wUI run for 1 week.
,

Quality
Stone Co.

CURIO '

PltkU~

R
0
I n NG
WI DO
.

Therefore puraUIIntlothe

OUihorlty ·vt~ttcl by lhe Ohio
Revfoed Coda Sootlon 716
end Otdlnonoe No. 427 oflho
Vlllago of Pomeroy, you ore
hereby nolllled lhot ll uld
otructuro lo not romoved o~
rthobllllolodwllhlnthlrly(301
dayo lrom lht tool publiCI•
lion dofo olthlo noflctlhen
lho Vlliogo ol Pomeroy will

NOW OPEN

OPEN MON.·SAT.

. You ·
lhot tho rut
at 103 Cherry
Porn·
oroy, Ohio and moro fully
•oortbod below, hoo bllin
lnopocled by lho.oppropNit
VIUolgo Dlllclota and lit otruoturo- olluolld• thoroon heo
boon dallrmlntd to be .....
curt ond unule ond ufd

Public Notice

OVAL, Meigs library program lets
residents
borrow books from home
.
,:' It's tNIIime of year again and
tUi1 boxel in rural Meigs County

Couniy Rd. 11PeachlorkRd.

and b•ck to 1chool

_....

or

the readers and returning them to pos11ge is paid by OVAL for both
ways. There is no charge for the
OVAL is paid for by !he !lei'Vice.
Novels, romances, mysteries, reader with this service. This sa·
westerns and other books to read vice is funded jointly by Library
for enjoyment are !here fD borrow. Servicea IIIII Coilltluctiori Act Tille
There are information boob such I funds provided by the State
as a biography of Magic: Johnson Library of Ohio and by the Meigs
County Nl1ic La'braly.
and Oven:oming Insomnia as
Established in 19'13 as the fust
as hooks for children. In addition
swe-ftmded
Jeglonal public libmry
!here are special ICICtions ci. books
in larJt type for those 'Witlt difr'ICUI· system in Oliio, today OVAl.
ty teeillg, IIIII a teetioll on ca~y 10 administera throush local public
read books for adult jtut lcamlng 10 libraries a variety of programs
desic~ IOtc!,~rrove and extend
read.
reaiden!J. OVAL
Boob By Mli.l is easy to 1110. A setv - to
is
llld
up
public
1n !he
post card order fonn is pooided ia
countiea
il
Atheai,
Hocldng,
Jack·
the caralog and anyone inllnlted
son,
U.wiCIICC,
Mcip.
Pilce,
Roas,
in checking out a book simply
writes their name IIIII tKiciRa and Scioto, and Vintoa. The OVAL
the title of the book on the card, Boetd of TroaleM, which llOllliall
bUStee from each member
drops it in the mail, and in a few. of
public
library
board. determines
days a nylon mailing bag with the
policy,
controls
finances, and
boots will be delivered by their
naakes
filial
deciliolla
on what IIU·
local posral carrier. When they've
vices
will
be
offaed.
finished rcadlns the boob, they
The Mela• County Public
simply go becl In the nWlinl 1111
and are sent bact to OVAL. ne Lll!ney II rcpraenred by Wanda
Eblin.

BLADE RANGE: LUI
llbovo ground 11" • Pitch
Anglo SS dog. - Bonk
Cutting Anglo 110 dtg. •
Cuttlnglloptl! 2r.
CONTROLS: Hychulla.
. SCARIFIER: Cutting
Width 48" -llounltcl behind
front Whttlo wlth (5)
Shanka.
CAB: ROPS wltlnttcl glltl
• Sound Suppr-lon ·121
Fan CO,OOO BTU • 1)
Dtiroator Fon • Fr&lt;inl • Aur
Wlperi • lnoldo lllrror •
Suoponalon Soat
Adjuolllrlt Still Po do Ill.
INSlJIUIIENTATIDN:
llounltcl In llghltd pantl •
Hounnt.., • ~ • Full
Gauge • Engine Oil and
TrantmiNion 011 Pr-ura

Business Services,

WILSON'S ARMY
. SURPLUS

eulgno of Thelma A.
Gru-r, II deceooed.
TO: Juoo Grueoer, lf liv-

-•tel

..... Coullty Coorl- .
lndudt ....., -lolllr, ct.k
(I) 17,24111

JULY WINNER • The Mlddlepart

lfalore, executora, and/or

~:

Public Notice
wll to tilt 11t1ae County Cotllmlttlonwt. A ptrl--~
bond wl!l be -INti of the

"""
...

unknown i the unknown helra,

devl.... , legal-., admlnl•

condlllon of ·oold ofructu·ro
pooeo on omorgoncy I~ lho
public hulth, oolefy ond
NOTICE TO CONTRAC. :
12) . Htad (2) wollare at tho community.
TORS STATE OF OlfO DE· Stop • Tall (2) Btalt.U, . •
Thtrl!ttore, purauant to the
PARTMENT OF TRANS. Tum llgnalo with •- r d aulhorlly voolod by lho Ohio
. Switch • (2) Blade Llghlll •
PORTATION Cofumbua,
Rovloed Coda Secflon 715
(I) Rotr Working U!llllo.
Ohlo July 31• 11112 Controd
CAPACITIES: Futl Ttnlc end OrdinanCe No. 427 ol !he
Soltt Logal Copy No.l2· (70) Gollono Hydroullc VIllage ol Pomeroy, you are
811 UNIT PRICE
·
•
hereby nollfled lhol II oald
CONTRACT BRF·11173)
Syat.m (2S) GtllonL
atructure Ia not removed or
Booltcl propooolt will bo OPERATING WEIGHT: rthobiUialed within fhltly(3Dt
recelvtcl at tho olllce ollht fT /1«1 lba.
dayo lrom tho laot publica'
Dl~ootor . ol tho Ohio Deport·
SPECIAL EQUIPMENT: lion date ol1hlo noflce !hen
monl of Tronaponatlon, eo. lltck-l.lp Alliin • SIIY Sian - lht Village of Pomeroy will
turnbuo Ohio unlll 10·00 Anii·FrttZt • Rtar Tow e~~uae uld atruclure to be
'
'
'
llll:h • Front Hitch
A.ll., Ohla Sllndord Time, ONLY MACHINES MAN removed.
Tu-y, Stptomber 1,11112
.
•
DESCRIPTION
UFACTURED IN THE U.S.A.
lorlmprovomonllln:
Situated ln rho County of
lltlgo County, Ohio lor WILL BE CON81DERE!).
Molga, ln lhe Slalo of Ohio,
Improving -llono MEG·7· OFFE.RED AI 1RADE~N: and In lho VIllage of Pam•
15.08; MEG·7·15.37, Sfllt WASCO Modtl
UO·H .-oy, and bounded and d•
Routo71nChoolorTowno~lp, Ortdtt ltrltl No. 330HCL· ocrlbod 11 lollowa: Being a
pen ollol number Elghfltn
by grtdlng, clrolnlng, pevfng' """
wllh rtlnlorcod concreto ond
lllclcllr to tubmll dtlllltcl (181 In Pomeroy, doocrlbod
by iepolrlng two txlallng If aclllcallono of aqulplllllll •• folloWa: Commencing on
ollucturN.
olltrod. Tho Board of Cherry SlrHI Slxly (601.1HI
· Proltc1 Ltngll: 751.80 Trualllo IIIIIVI the ~ght ID from the corner of Cherry end
llnt~r foot or 0.144 milt
nJoclony or all blck.
Front Streett, thence running
Work L..nglh: 1,400.00
By ordll of lit Botrd of along oeld Cherry S!rttt
llnt~rloet or 0.205 milt
Truttoeo allltcllonl Twonty..lx (281 fur ond ••·
PIVOft&gt;Oftt Width: 221ttt
·
T-'* lending bock from Cherry
Tilt Ohlo Deparlmonl ol
Barbara J. ~. a.rlc Slro!llollho wldlh ol Twonly·
T~onaporloflon horoby nor~
Aobtrt F. HtWil olx (261 IHI, Slofy (60) loot to
n.. Ill blddara !hal II will
Etm. F. Btli.y lolnumborNine1Hn(19l,lht
offirmetlvoly lnouro !hal In
VIrgil C. King oald prernloH adjoining lht
ony eonlroct onlered Info (I) 17,15 2la
Telegraph lol ao calle&lt;;f, lho
purouant lo INa advtrdae- -------------- obovo •ocrlbod promlua
mlfrt, mlnorlly buohwoa on·
Public Notice
being the aame lot or parcel
torprloN will be ollorded lull _ _..;...::;.:.:.:..:;.:.:.:::...__ of lend convoyed to Th...
opportunltylooubmllbldoln
PUBLIC NOTICE
dora Nlggomeyor by Goorgo
r11ponoo lo IIIIa lnvllldon
To:Emmen GUmora and Way01mlllor and wile; by
ond will nol bt dlaorlllllnaltcl floronca Gilmore, 11 living, deod bearing dolo ol Auguol
ogolnol on the groundo ol whoeo oddr- lo unknown; 25!~ 1873 and recorded In
r-, color, or national origin tho unknown holro,dovlotto, Dotcl Book 41 on pego190 of
lnconol....aUonloronoword. tegol"l . odmlnlolroforo thorecordaol Dotclool Molgo
.. Minlmumw~gera_._ torthl1 executor~ end/or aulgna oi County, Ohio, Boo aloo dotcl
projtot hevt bttrl prtclofor• Emmofl Gllmo·ro and lromMoryNiggomeyor,deted
mlntclooraqulrtclbylaw.ond Florence Gllmoro, 11 do· November 20th, 1911 ond
ore ttlloith In tho bid prorecorded In Deed Book
poul." "Tho dolt HI lor
You· art hereby nollfltcl Number 108 on pego 318 of
campltllon of thlo work oholl !hal your 111l1alolo tlluolod thorecordaoldeoclaoiMolgo
be HI lorlh ln lhe bidding ol 200 Condor Slrlll Pom· Counly, Ohio, ond being lho
P~•tl..:'...~~~
oroy,Ohloondm.,.....;llyd• umt propor1y aonvoytcl.by
'&amp;di ....... 'ihen be r.. ocrlbtcl below, hoo boon l,. Julluo Epplt ond Morgorol A.
qulrtcl 1o lllo wllh hlo bid I optOitcl by tho opproprlolo Epple 1o Joooo Gruirtor by
COfdftod chedc or ctoh'-'• VhlagoOIIIclllnndlhtoll'lfOo ciHd burlng dotool July23rd
check lor on omounl aquof to turo ollualtcl th"""' hoo 1821 ond recorded In Dttcl
n~o por can! of hll bid, bulln boon dotermlned lo be In- Book 133 ot pego 120 fhorool.
no ovonl morothon flhy lhou· cure ond unoelo ond uld
REFERENCE DEED: Vof·
..nd doller•, or a band for atruclure threetena ·the lma ume 14&amp;, Page 121, llolgo
ton por cant of hlo bkl, poy- medlofo hltellh, ooloty ond Counly DoocfRocordo.
Audltor'o Parcol No. 1.6oblo 10 the Director.
wefloro to lht dllzono of lho
Blddor muotopply, on lhe Vlllogo of Pom•oy. Furlhor, 008611
Tlla laal publlcallon will
proper le!rrna, lor quollllco• lho doloctlvo ond unoalo
lion ot ltootten dayo prior to condlllon of oald arrudure be modo an Stpt. 7,1992.
tho dale uttar oponlng blda po- on omorgonay 10 lho THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
ln accordonct with Choplor public hoolth, oaloty ond (8) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31, (9}7; eTC
5$25 Ohio Rovlotcl Codo.
wllloro ollho communlly.

Is lllcohol rllilling yo11r life or the ·
life of a loved OM? •Alcoltolism:
How 11J Rtcogniu It, HOw 10 Dtlll ,
Wilh It, H11W 11J C011qutr It" 1:411 ,
t11rn tlrillgs wolllld. Seltd 11 ~1/· '
addressed, long, bMsinesi·sire :
envelope and 11 ched: or IMnty ,
ortkr for $3.65 (this iNclu_dts ··
postage and lrlllrdling) 10: Alcoltol.
clo AM L1111dm, P.O. Box 11562, ''
Chicago, Ill. 606II-OS62. (ln ..
Canada. seltd$4.45.)

.JIIIMinl,
..... WOlle..

Clerk

Public Notice

man it makes me a bit SOllY t1tat r

All

llollgo County

Comrntollo....

have an iron-clad rule against
pulling my readers in touch with
one another.
Don't despair. Continue to go
to respectable places and keep
your eyes open. She is out Ibm! ;
somewhere, It'U happen one of these
days. [promise.
.
Gem of the Day: Kissing is what
happens when two people \\lho like :
each other a lot gel so close together ;
that they can't sec anything wrong .
with CIICh other.

Public Notice

Jq," Riwra said. "Theil [ bit him
back. Thea we feD to the ground
IIIII I pll 011 Ulp and we Wen! both

'
a

wiD appear .011

companion.
The rust thin&amp; they menli011 is
Here's a mcsaagc for wives · looks. They want someooe wOO is
of worting men: Your h!JSband rail and ' llllraCtive." While some
had several cuts and scrapes and has a job 10 do. He.is under a lot men may be interested in a trophy
of pressure. He Deeds to I:OIICCIItrate to hang on their arm, most men like
apjlcared to have los! some Ieeth.
McLaughlin did not tetum cans on his work. He can't handle myself want someone 10 love and to
your marital, family or plumbing be loved in return.
to his home.
In 1988, Rivera's nose was bro- problems over the phone. Please
In the 10 years since my divorte,
ken by a flying chair when a btawl save these conversations for I haven't been able to establish I
·~ 011 tliC set of his S(low dur- after S:OO p.m. -- CRANKY IN relalionship. No one is willing to
ing· taping of an interview with CALIFORNIA
make aaxnmi!111eaL AD the Wlilllen
young white supremacists and a
DEAR CRANKY: Every husband ! meet want to be "friends.·
black civil ri his leader.

at 1110 and kicked me in the left

a caring,

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: Tllolma A. G1'110101, ll
living, whon addreoo to

Ing, whose laal known al;fbRAWBAR: T-ohoptcl,
,_VIiaqulpmonl
Ont mollol IT·IO 7'.1 loot, Wtlded Can•tructlon dreoo lo 1905 MI. Vernon
Avenue, Point Pleaunt, West
front mounltcllhyor onow lr"xl.ll"xll".

honest and hard-working. rm 1)01
rich but I live comfonably. Whi.lc
good looks are a bonus, I am '
primarily iii~ in inlenigcnce. .
I am not threatened by a brainy ,

_ 'He first called me a !pic, then
a- dirty Jew, then lhrew somedlinJ!:

•iCIICd...

rm

, PUbliC Notice

Pli8LIC NOTICE
8talod bldo will bel·Iraao'"
...-vtctln llo olllao of tht
llolgo · County- Commie·
olonan until 11:00 o'oiOGk
A.M. Oft . . . , _... 2, " "
ot whkoh ·timt bl• will be oootlon
op...,., t!~d reocl aloud lor
... loiiowtnt pl-1111 onow 360dog •

Monda~August17,1992

secrctiry

The

OhiO

Salo/f,l

StntiHI
Available.
Send
Amnne And S.l1ry HlltOfY lo,
Adhnlnllrator, Plnectut ·eanCtnttr, 170 Plnacrllt Dtivt (btl.•
llpolll Ohlo41631. ~
' ., ••

'

.

~~~.

Euy Worllf ExeOIIont Ply! Aoil

Hmble Product• At Homa. CeL
TOll FrH, 1-100-457-IMe, ' EXt.
313.

,,

Excollont . Eomlnga~ Ao ' _.:
Chrlttmll Arouncf 1ht Wor111
.Otrnonttrator, Fr• $300 .Kk Of,
Christmu hems. Al10 looking

Pa"loa. 814·31114502.

II

'

�Ohio

Sentinel

11

SNAFU® by Bruce Battle

Help W.l)led

44

54

Aplrtnlllll

Ma~handlae

Family Sarvloo - r '"'. ~artCMmwM. RDMwE~
tary aeiMOI. a.· "'la,.t-. i,.
Mlgh ~ oil~ ar GED.
MUll lla¥t oar, wlh valid V/V

· - •ICQI.l.
c-clll
· d~vara
~vora
Salary ·
baHd on MUCIII:ianal ••·
po~onco. Apply Southwo!llorn
Communltl ACtion Council, Inc,
540 Fifth Vi, Hunllnaton, WV,
dally 1:00o5:00, aooiY
by 5:00 PM FrJ, Aug :n, 18!12. .
SCAC, Inc, E.O.o.

lll:lo6282.

Upetelrt,
Stcond AYMYI, Galllpolla, Na
::~ Excollanl CondHion, 114·
6IH.
Plid, 1

l•dnaom,

IO LI:Wiry, puking, hat, air,
rotonnco. dapoall roqul..... 114-

"I won't have nlghlmarwlrom thla
monster mqvle, but I wllllrom the
back·lo-school commercials!"

t=========t========::1

To
lho Jolo Trolnlng
In Othlr
NotOnEatontlal.
Work Can
Lood
Areaa. Apply In Panon To
Rlchord Nan Or Gltnna Dovlo 18 Wanted to Do
Bl1w- 10 A.M. &amp; 2 P.M.
Tu11day, Augull 18th, &amp; Wid- Mlu Pauto't Day Cara Cantor.
nnday Augull 111th At tho Sail, attordablt, chlldcaro. M·F
Rhodia
Studant
Conttr 8 t .m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 210-10.

Cttttlria, Morrltont Cuttom
Managamsn~. Unlvaroity Of Rio

Before, 1ftar schoot Drapolnt

qual Oppoitwdly Employer...
Hair Stylish ntlded. Gur~ntMd
~gn Pd. Vaclllon 814o446-

Want To Babysit In My Home,

Wtlcomt. 814-446-8224. Now In·
Gran~•. No...,..,. Calla, "An E· rant Toddltr Care, 614-441-122T.

Po=,

mlnltlrttivl Aftd Pr~ramm~llc

RatpontlbltHy Far A 21 -Hour
Child!""'• Critla Tmtmont
Program Sarvlna An 11 County
Aroo. Warll Whh Community
Youth Aganclt'!o ••Coum, Law

Enfon:etNnl w~elels, Whh
Sttta And Lor:.~ Clutter Groups.

Sotory Hegotlabfa Dopaclnlng
On Exptrltnc:e.' Sind Rtsums
To Sandra McFarland, Personnot Offlctr•. Woodland Cordaro,
l~c~~ 3011 ~Itt Routs 180, 011llpv~lo, Ohio 45831. EOE IAA
Employor.

Submlttld By: Barnard F.
Nlohm, PH.D., E11cutlv1 Dlrec·
tor
For Furthtr Information PINII
Ctll Sherry Gordon, P8nonnsl
Aulatant At 114-448-5500 Elll.
18.
Produce Dtpattmtnt Manager,
at "'" 1 ,_.,. •xp~~ritnct In
prodUC8 mtMgtrnent. Exc.lltnt
pay and btnlfhs. Supennarkst
located In SoiAhlltt Ohio, grett
work almotl)htre, condUifve to
tamillu. Send r~~1umt to:
Praduc• Manager, 405 Psar1
StrMI, Mldd~, Oh 45760.
Secretary • RectpUonlst, Jaw
Urm. Good ucrtttrlal skills ,.
qulrH. Typing, dlct1Uon, word

pr-slna, lie. Wrlla 801 C-30,
cart of Polnt Pluunl R-ailltr,
200 Main St Point Pltaunl ,WV.
25550.
WANTED: Fuii·TI1111 Uctnttd
Prtctlcal Nuru For Two Com·
munity Group Homes For Ptr·
IOMI With Oevtlopmtnttl DlsabiiiUn In GtUia County
IGtnlpollo/Bidwtll). Hours: 12·
BP.M., Thurs-Mon; lncludtl 2·
Hour WHkly Staff Mettlng; Or
At Olhtrwlu Schldultd. Currtnl LPN Ucentt (lntsrlm Ptr·
mlt
Accsptabls),
OOPNESINAPNES/Or
State
Board Approved Training, Valid
Orlvtr't Uctn~1 -Good "Driving
Record And Wllllngntsl To
Drive In Congllted TraMic
Areat, Good Communication
And
O~nlutlon
Skills,
Punctual, And Abls To Work As
Part Of A Tsam Required; Ex·
perttncs Working With Psrtont
With Menial Rttardttlon And
Dtvtlopmtntll
Disabilities
Prtftrrtd. Salary: $8.00/Hour, To
Start. Send Anumt To Cacilla
Baka'l P.O. Boll 604, Jackson ,
OM 4oll40; OR CALL t-800·531·
2302. Dladlln. For Applicant"
8120192. Equal Opportunity
Employor.
Situation
Wanted

Wilt Care For Eldorly In Thoro
Homo, Ezparlancld And Car·
tltlld. 114-317·7123.

14

Any Hours, Have Excellent
Rtftroncn, 6t4-446o601t
Will Babysit In My Homa, Rio

Granda, Noar Unlve,.ny. 114·
245·9661.
Witt do babysitting In mv homt,
3452.

references avaltaDie, 614-992--

Will Do HouNCioanlng, In Ga~
llpolls Aria, Hnt Re,.,.ncll,

614-446·8199.
Will takt cart of tldtrly or ill
,_opls In 1htlr homH1 ~ dtyl a
WMk, daytime, 304-17H519.
Will taka cart of olda~y panon
In my homt. Ezparlanctd,
loving cara, good reterenctt,
614-797-4955.

Yard
&amp;
Tobacco
Work,
Housteltanlng &amp; Painting
Ret.rsncH A"vallab... 614 ... 46=.
6790 Aftor 3'00 P.M.

21

Business
Opportun lty

INDnCEI
OHIO VA( LEY PUBLISHING CO.
,..commtndl lhlt you do buslnsn with people you know and
NOT to send monty throuah tht
mall unlll you hive inv•Hg.. ld
thtoHtflng,
• Eom $1,000 W11kty • E•
ttbllshtd Pay Phon• Routt. 1·

Retrain

Nowii!Southeallam
Butlnltl Cotlago, Sprina Volloy

VENDING ROUTE: Gtt Rich
Quick? No Woyl B,. Wo Havt A
Goad 1 Study, Aftardabl•, Bullntss. Won't Last. 1-800...214·

end

acrHIIOd In pon:h, frM goa, Spring
Avonut,
2IMI"'!,
largs blm, trurt trill, prlcH on $18!/mo.j 1bdrm. 1175/mo.i $1w
lnopocllan; BIY Williamson, f14· dopoaH, no palo, 114-117·3083
11t2·2007.
after Spm.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

45

Furnished
Rooms

W Acrw, Yacanr Lind, Prlvttt,
ChHI!Ire Or Addlaon Area. 614Rooma for rent ·week or monlh.
245-8503 btnlngt.
~=~'lf at 1120/mo. Qallla Molal.
AcrNgl avaltllbiO lar homo I
9580.
construction on Rayburn Rd,
reaaonabfa r1111rtctlont, wator,
lnfarmlllon mallad on roqutat,
304-175ol253.

Rentals

for Rent

800·9=s4.

Real Estate

31 Homes .for Sale
1 112 story houot, Mlddlopo~.
2bdrm., bathroom and kitchen
rsmodsltd, clo11 to schOOl and
city pork, Gravol Mill araa, 614992·7722 onor 5pm., 614-992·
3879ahor 9pm.
2.story homo, 3bdrm., 2-bath,
knchtn, living room, olnlng
room, btttment 1 ga• hut,
23,000BTU tlr conditioner,
tltctrlc tlovelrttrigtrator, 2 lott
•• h 1 tl k ~
Wnn c • n n ••net, garage,
nlce ntlahborhood,
809 Maple
St.,
Mhldlaport. (Comtr
of
Hadlsy) 1 814-992-3468.
217 Kallay Or., Gallipolis, Ohio
4513\ Tolophono : 614-446-3315,
Price: &amp;52,000.00. Uvlng Room,
3 Btdrooms, Family Roome 1
And 112 Bathrooms, 1 ar
Garage, Brtck Front With Ctdar
Siding.
3 h*oom Houst Trallar On
Same Lot, Good Rsnttl
ProP.trtl, 641 Third Avtnut, Gal·
llpotlt. 14-256-1646.
7 room larmhouu, on 1 tcrt
lot. No plumbing. City Wottl
avalloblt. s .. ot Rt. 2 &amp; 67 Jet.
on Lll)la Mill CrMk Rd.
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlll~cal Area Cornar Lot • 816
Main St. Pt. Pltooanl1 W. Va.
COmplstely Rtnovttea: 2 Full
Bath1, 3 Lsrg• Btdroome,•Ntw
HVAC, Naw Carpet. Avallabto
lmmtdlatly. 614-4464205.
Galllpollt Cltv: Wtll Molntolnld;
Great Location, Bastmtnt,
Garage, large Rooms. Postlbls
Financing Or Trade. 814·2588855.
Homa For Sail In Chathlrt VI~
lago, 9 Roomt, &amp; bath, Lg. Flat
Lot By Dwntr, 6-3:30 P.M.
Phon.: 114-446-1878 Ahor 3:30
P.M. 814-441-ll425.
Ntwtr homt, Z2 wooded acn.s,
gorago, dock. battmant largo
yard, noar Molga High, Pile• mld
$70'1, 814-111:1-2454.
Oft Raccoon Rd., 105 Ann Or,
Galllpollo, 3 yra. Oldl 3 Btd·
roomt, Groy 'llnyt Sid ng, 1 112
Bath, 2 Car Gt1oga, Lorgt Dick,
Mill Pump, CRy 11c:haolt
$!54,1100. Call Moore'• 814-4464850.

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1112-:17111.

(

r

11171

Ford C1rgG Vtn; 1·150,

.

1:00 &lt;21.

'

cond, 304of'll.m4.

AM/FM atoreo, 140; IIIII told
llltlw boota;· SIO; 814-1121282.
Appla HCompultr, With Piinttr.
l Dllkt, $500 Or BHI Otftr, 114·
448-4005.
Attondo Mldlum DI-ablo
Cont1111nt B~oho Ill In 801 Coot
S8S Salt For 110. ~·
Lovo-t, Alotlqua Sin·
gar Stwlng M~hlna, Rlgulotlan
Slu Ping Pong T1b .. , Camel
Boown ROcbr, Racllntr Cflal1,
China
Sot,!IICIM Wild
£alar. T
614-446-8'11111.
I

8-r-wo•

1aat Plymouth Voya~rod
wHh wood grtln; 1118 I
h
Vonoar, . . ,, .PW1
, Air,
AIIIFII llorao, tlOIIIInt Cond~
tlon. Can ba .. Harrtt
Fann., ,.._~, OMo.

0

a......

74

L.--------T""---------i

Capohart AMIFM MPX · 8-lrnk
stmo
ptavar,
IUmtabfa,
apaaka,., plut lloraol..iooltt
adaptor tor &amp;-track, 14G: t14992o34n.
Cor dolly, flu 13' and 14'
whattllrapa. L.aaa than I , yaar
old. Finn $150. 304-1'111-2013.

54

Mlacallanaous
Merchandise
·
Mlc-vo
· w-•-, ••s,·
'~- ..

To=

•

mo.

Farm Supplies

&amp; L tvesto ck

1:01 f1J I IAN Ulcy

1:10 &lt;21. 0 NIC Newa C
Cll NOwlt c... .. TIIIT

11711 SUNol 110 11104on:ycla,
n.tda soma war11 150. or will

ONawZ1m1E;'I

41

-

Nutrllton

XMOO, Qood Con-

I

Hand mlllt qutna 178. and 1100.
:_ndlna on doolgn,
7S3
.
0 4 - 1

' 0

75 Boats &amp; Motors

...

7:10

TtilrJGS TO

tor Sale

MAt:f

1·18 Ft. . aluminium ca-.
$315.00 Exeat- - l o n.
114-44&amp;-11111 Dr 114-446-1248

QJ

i&gt;~OPl.f

t

t&gt;O TOPAY

14 n alumn jon - . ~
3Zif.

2 or S bedroom houst In
Pomeroy, &amp;3001mo., dopooH tnd
refliencn required, &amp;14·1853997.

1fllll Johnoon - · SO HP
Jaltnaon
$1,100. Good
Condition, I
·1025.

U:0:4J

..
0

NIWiy rtdecorattd 111 tiiC
lrallar, 3 btdrooma, CA,
washtrldryer, N
wtttr, no
pelt., rttlrtnC11 1 304475·2133.

Small Tralltr For Atnt Locllld

In Oalllpollt, Utllltl11, il.'iortnct
1 Olpotll Roqulrld. 114-441-

1151

·

2br, Mobile Homtl,
RsftrencH I Depotht R•
qulrod. No Plio, 114441-0527.
TwO

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 bedroom ll)lrtmtnt In Pl.
PINaant, W.VL, 1o304oi'IS.e042.
1 Badroom antclancy apart·
ment, no anlmale, part1ally furnlah~ dapottt roqul,.d, 114.
111:1 ....11.

ALDER

'

'

'.

:tl !...!.":::""' E;1
(J).

M:l:..·. ,..,.,

rl

(JI.MijoriAague

~

E;J

Sha:ra

,..

eero..tn

1:00 Ill. 1111 "'"" Prtnce of
1111-Air Will meeta hta .
mother' a new beau and
lnettntly dlallkea him. (R)

" - ClvootiCIU A young
Indiana Jonn IIIII In love
wHh IIi
auffrltgetfe.

!'1-f'

!£!Covtntgt/1tt2
rlllliifac1111'1 Palltlcal

EEKANDMEEK

=

I1D~
Clooll .....
~:;~
NI'L Pren•- 1'0011111

IVOT MUSH

The World Almanac 11 Crossword PuZZle ; ~:

Dt1roi1 Lions 11 Bulfllo BHII

.
RtpUbiiCIIn Nl1ltlnal
Co!MIIIIon (3:00)

c

1

l!piiOdN
1:10 (D. iiJ) IIIDIIOm Blolaorn
wrttea
10 her mom.

i.n.r

·
.MijorDeciA

iiD.
MY

l:llo.DS 6UIL-DINS- A

BIEr

e.L.i~ a-ITHE
F~TLAWN.

r

Mlline rnee11 a beauflful
newalelll!!ltr and lalla In
love. (R) E;1

HOPE IT ISN'T'ANO'Tl-Ef&lt;

AT'f'E;MP'I" 10 HaP ME
01.10-i l'HI:ecH:X&gt;L. esus.

HniiOr'l unknOwn
lleglflmafll dl.qrter rolum8.

;'i'Gr•~...,.,
Murphy lnvtlll lite gang to
apend I Wllkatod II her
Mura farm. (R) Stereo. E;1

1 On Sola now lnlarlor lilt latoz
~ior m:·~ool~~ A~,!"~ paint SUI _(Ill, tlltrlor flat
dnlonar, 1126• 14,000 ITU Air lot11 . pall'll 113.118 gal. I gal
Cooditlonar llso; QE Wtahtr, •tumn flbtraltd polnf$21. Palnl
$95; GE 0ryar, $95; Moytog P~1 • 2416 ........., Ava, 304Woohtr Ukt Naw, $150; Eltctrlc 8~14.
Rongo, 30 Inch $•8; Sloaggt Ap- Ono {litton otona lug, $7;
ptlancoo, 7e Vlno Strootj! kltchln tablt, $10; nkw electric
liours 8-8 Monday Thru rtdty; hM:ttr, $10; EurH.a IWtlptr, Pi
9 To 2 P.M. Stturday. 614.,.4a. 614-111:1·7173.
73118, 1.aotl-499-3499.
Plastic And Madill Culvtrt linch ,
Solid wood s pc btdroom suita, ThN 10 lnoh In Stock. Ron
full slzt ~rta msttrtu &amp; Evans, Jtckeon, Ohio. 1..aoosprings, $450. 304-675-1504.
537-952a.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNitURE, 62 Radio 1~ TV tub.~, 12"'
Olivo St ., Gtlllpolta. Now &amp; Uttd _k..., 110; laathtr warll
tumltu111 1 hul. ., Waltem &amp; ohoat, U; baby owtna, $5; 114317-7'72V.
Warll booto.l14-446-31".
7
~U:.:Nd:::..:W::a::t:::hl::r.:.l:,Orvc.:.:..a:.:rSaO::.Ia1:-$1:-:00 Ronchtr'a Longth Shlapoldn
&amp; Up, All Sold With Wornnty. Coal, Slza 40..£~ Oood Condilht Waahtr I Drytr ShQPP.I, tion, IM-4111-ZJOU.
758 Stcond Avtnue, Gellipolfl, Room alii tlr condntonor, good
614-446-2944.
far campar or oman apa-,
$10; 114-1112·1131.
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-441-3158
Slgnlluro 'VHI Ca.........,
Rent·2.0Wn
mada by Panaaonlc, 114-11115085 lfttrlprn.
Wathtf And Dryor $17.18 WMk.
Bunk ltd Camplett, 11.2i S1rnmana Hlda-A·Bod llaktt
WHk, 4 Drawtr Chllf 13.12 OuHn Sla lid, Full Sla Btd
Watk1 Racllnor $5.24 Watk, With · ,Mapta
B-a,
Solo And Chair $10.31 Wool&lt;.
HNdbo41rd, a o,ak - · Sat
At Ftaallall..llokaoiiAYIIIut,
CASH
AND
CARRY
Point P I - , WV LOI124,
Rtfrlgarllora Slarttna At me.
whlllbtnw t~­
Racllnart 1141, 211 Bun~~~~ Small
mlllr 1l4llp.. Sttra Roabuck,
'"· Olnttlt Sat Whh 4
~r- Plalno-. 114Chllra $121. OPEN:
ThN Saturday 9A.M. To IP, ,
Cloaad On Sunday. LOCATED: 4
Mllal Off RoUit 7 On Ro..a 141,
In Cantanary, 114 Milt , On U~· aM llltfilr boato, lam coin Pl,ka,
"'Nia'o 1114, ly lan~~
POll
Olflca,
P'rl, ""'' tun.
IIOon.f:OO PM. Othar din ...
~ btloro,11:00 All.
Union. madt
•dvtrllilnt

Pci4 bttllad DIG to good hama,
hall il11ar tnlftid, 4 monlfta old,
$100, 304-773-IJIII.
Pat Iaiiy Plgo And Rlbblto, 114.
315of34S.
Raalllarld PH Bull pups, ahota
anil wormed, raady In 4 WMkl,
IIIIW taklnt dapooHa, lt4-H2·
7121.
SunrtH K,nnsls, AKC Alafl.
tared Chow Chow Puppln, tl'ur·
rtl'll Physical And Shota, 11438U21D.

57

sso· ......
tampa, 12s...,;.1r ~aw 'ty,110:

FER WORK

GLORY BE II
DID YOU GIT

YORESELF
A JOB?

58 Strained

DOWN
1 AntxofUz
Taylor
2 Fencing
IWOfd

3 Diminutive

aultlx

llbbr.)

4 Go 1wlltl'
5Dya
compound

10 Group of
lhrH

:; ; ,
......
11Dutch~ ,:
12 Aolttf
1f Stl ol tooll
21 SuDr22 Dtlicllelv
pretiJ

8 C.lurt

7 Oltlo ell'
8 Dodge
8 Elernaly

STUMPED? ~;~,:=~·T=:1o0 :"::=.. ~~ .._
~:w~:-··~ ~:

eaca-llld MIL ICing

't:IOCil• w• •• o•

25 llohtnllan
28 .,...,.

"ip!lt':nConwal~•

1

CoVIIIII Uvto -.ge of
1ht 1tt2 Repubbn N"ationll

:

0

highway

Dnlalllt 'II: Till

ConviOflon Uvto "0011Yvet.,nga...,. oorl
lite 1992 RII)Ubllcan Nlllonal •
Convlnllon from Houlton.
(1 :00)

do'e ICIIa

..........

a

unc~~~

....., . ..

40Totl1tlltef.
ltfld lklt
50 Taite cart ol
52 DtlanH

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54 llrolhar'e
nephew

a-

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11111 Chivy 414, u Olaall 114-

.
4Harga knlle · .: ·

ID8PI IICattlo
e llepulla n Na1lallal
Convlnllon Wntp-Up (0:30)

wcsirthday

•

oleanlllllrt
44Hanktflnt
45 To 11111 place

•(I)Itswuwauh
••• o,....
A• Ar11111o H11 Sfllrlo.
1 ...... ,.....
• CloOit and

.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "t want to do roles tha1 ore trail. I lhlnk tn. 'real rraglle." - .t.rmand A811n1,e.

lltd ... 1111'11 WIIPIIII

11:111 m•

M 0 E' Y

' '·

"

'111111 81lreO.

(1 :10)

'

0

o•~~~mer....,

~ 'Your

Bucktyo Farms: awaat ~ for
ult, GaWen Outen and Sliver
Qulin, 114-1112~ or 814-llt2·
242\laavamo-.go.

· ··

38 Noun 1111111
38 Sharp ona- .'
42 Whlt1o poplar
43 Dancar

(2:46)

(1).

.: :

37 AccuatOllltd

A v11~ wHh Blrlilra Mandratr
and a look at her hOme. (P11
of 2)(1 :00)
0 l'OO Club Willi Pat
Rai111CDn
10:JG 1D 1110'111: N&amp;tada 11111111

11:00&lt;21. (J)

.,

32 Exlatl
· .,
33 Note of Gut- · '-.

ltepe.C'Cift NIIOi..

perfect tor you. Mail $2 plus a long, self· you are loday. But your ace In the hole
addressed , stamped envelope to will be your nalurallnsllnct for discern·
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. lng what Is workable from what lsn'l.
BERNICE
8o•91428,
OH 44101· 3428. PISCES (Fill. 20-March 20) There are
BEDE OSOL VIRGO (Aug.Cleveland,
23-lepl. 22) Occasional· strong Indications you might be able 10
ly, you have- rather remarkable hun'ches . generate a greater yield from a source
regarding tho oulcome of material thalia presenlly proVIding you wllh Inevents. Don't Ignore your lntulllon to- come. The discovery coutd occur today.
day; II could be qullo accurate.
ARIEl (lloolch 21·April 11) Everyone
LIIRA (hpl, 23-0cl. 23) There Is juatl· Involved will have a . more enjoyable
flcatlon at lhls lime for your feelings of lime today If they delegate you chair·
hope and expectation . Thlsls a promts- man of socllll aciiVIIIes. You'll lnstlnclng period tor you to turn your dreams • lively know What 's fun tor 1111.
Into reaiHies.
! TAURUS (April 20-MeJ 20) Something
SCOIIPIO (Oct. :MoNo¥. 22) You're In a " ' you thought would be diHicull to ton·
gOod achievement cycte atth18llme, ca- l, elude looks like 1111 going 10 work oul
pable of accomplishing What you set ' much bellar thon you hid anticipated.
Aug. 11, 11182
, your mind to. Eatabllllh objeetlwllodoy i' Keep thll Incident In mind WheneVer
· thai are mtMingflll and rewarding.
' you b;gln to think negatively.
A rise In status In your presenl field oi l· SAGITTAIIIUa (Nov. 23-0.0. 211 Be a . GIIIINI (...,. 21.Jtone 20) Try to aeaoendeavor looks very likely tor the year keen o b - todoy of thole you aeao- ) elate today with lndlvld~ala you know
ahead. Begin now to prepare yourself elate with, B~P&lt;~CIIIIIy those Who you feel ~ from oxperlence to be 'lfKY good at
for this possibility.
I are aucc:eeafuf. Whal you learn can be •· helping you expand your Ideal and
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A similar situs· , eHectrvety used In ~r ctrcumtttincei; ~·: Plana. They could prove to be a big
lion lo one that caused you aggravation , CAPIIICORII (O.C. 22-.IM. 11) Don t · help.
recently might be operative again to· j resist change todo,; shifting condlllono : CANCIII (June 21-.luly 22) Give priori·
day. This time, however. you won 't , are likely to bantflt ·you, mar. then oth· ty to 1 molter today Whleh you fMt hea
make the same mistakes. Know Where ' ers, In the long non - oven though lhoy · profitable pollfbllltlea. The upects In·
to look tor romance and you'll lind it. r may be the ones Who Initiate tttern.
dlclte you might pull oft something
The Astro·Graph Matchmaker lnslanlly 1. AQUARIUS (Jan. »Felt. 18) Aaao· / . lmpresalve.
. reveals which signs are romantically tla~~-might be more lmagl~~llve. ~ha~ , .. . .
.

.

30 Atl111tron- . ..,..
~
" •'
.,.,...,.. .,:

Texu (1 :30)
10:00 &lt;21•

0

. ...

2fAoman

Convention lrom Houlton,

ASTRO-GRAPH

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Naff.Nnnar
·-·
Bluo
Woo baana,
baana1...
_ ·-·
oannb!ll---.
1:l"lt.W TV, Jl0,1M;.112-:MII.
fOil piCk. bring own oonlll-.
Tandy 12fK color -PUll• Stobart" Formo, At; 124, 1um
TV 1 1apo raaordar SilO. light 11 Portland algn , 1at
loiultanltlt.
OBO. 304-1'11-1111.

57 Paid
attention

at Clllbr11111 Ollltllill XIV

=":.~~~.::.=
T- 1n11 ......

DOWN AT TH'
SAWM ILL LOOKIN'

1110 Chsvy lumina Euro Cpe;
all opllanlj 304·77'3-5722 tftsr
8:00PM.
1fltt Mu11ang LX1 _~.. 8500
mUM, loadtd, 114·n2.fo82.

Musical
Instruments

_.......

Slx-m~n 11(1

Repo Man.
at Naill ... Now

DaVIa Sawtna Machtno And
YIICUum c._.,., Repair, FrM
Pltk·Up And Ootlvory, Qoar{ltt
c,.ok Road, 114-441-0:!14.

Ano Sa11phont, vory good
condttlon, AIO; 1-11'21111.
Tnnpot, $100; 114-141-21173.

S8

56 Begin aglfn

Malldor va. Nally Boys and

BARNEY
PAW ?

bench
51 Dtllcllt
53 At rlducld
prlc.t (2 wda.)
55 Louillona
French

33 Command•
34 Singing
Yolctl
35 Pull up
money

flllm
11111clt: Hlglt Energy and El

WHAR
YOU BEEN,

480ccu~a

En~co-

Ill WWI' Pttme T1me

Sholl, Wormtd, $11~, 114-3181811.

«

1111111

~i"':.~: Till Unlold

w.....,.

40 Denert
paatry
41 Ltalltlr
factoi'J
Chrlltlan
•rmbol
47 llont111a c)IJ

21 Slntlehlntltd
23RII·-·28 Tum lilt
page (abbr.)
27 Slanted
31 Pflyllcll~

ltDt1ll The FBI folia I pial
10 avtrtho ow lite governnlenl

Flllh Tank, 241S Jackaon Avo.
Point Plaalll'll, 304-175-2083,
full llno Tropical flah, blrda,
amallanlmalland 1upp111a.
Half Chow pupplal, I wka old,
$50, 304.e7S-2312.
UO.. Apao Pupolaa AKC,

38 81111111

18 lnllalld
20 lltdlcal

8:01111). 0 , . _ . Thl1 . . A

~

37 Cornparalln
aufflx

Snlcka~ng

IOUnd
7 Waver
13 Alghllo
ChOOH
14 Ptrlorm
tiCIIII..Iy
15 Abhor
18 Wnltm rope
17 Actr- Ruby

0 a-u: Till IMt
Stereo.

...

ACROSS

(L)

8

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

. . .-".. _

event.

ADIAtNISTRATIOJ S IS

tAK2
+KQ6

or:· ':

,...• • ! ..............
Taylor holdl I gll&amp;ge Ale
10 !'!~buy a new car. (R)

SOMf:TIM~') lHiiJG) fa.. 50
e.AD JUST CHAOOIIJS

•Jio 3

wtn ··'·

Cofiwantlon Tom Brokaw,
Robllt MacNtll and Jim
LAhrer [m up tor this news

Transportation

SOUTH .
t A983

+

• ....... Stereo.

56 Pats for Sale
=-~==-==--===

tH3
+832

For several years Edith McMullin
Welt Nortk East
Scutb
ran the novice games at the North
Pass
Pass 2+
1 NT
American Brldce Champiooships.
All pass
Pass 4+
2+
' '
Here "novice' means inexperienced,
not incompetent. Drawinc on her exOpening lead: J
perience, and with the help of world t . __ _ _ _ ____J . '
''
champion Mike Lawrence, McMullin
decided to produce a magazine speN
d
cially lor the duplicate-bridge neo- queen. ext comes the spa e queen to ·,
phyte. It is called the 0-20, 99er and your king. How do you continue?
· '··
You must count declarer's points. It .
299er Newsletter. Quite a mouthful , seems that he has the K·Q of clubs, or ::but the numbers refer to masterpoint partner would have been more enthu- . .;
brackets. (In tournament bridge, you siastic at trick one. South must have .. ·
don~t win
prizes; you · collect ft
K
•
'
masterpoints.)
n A· of diamonds, or partner WOIII~ ·.~.
have won trick two. And declarer baa ,
The instruction is in a Iicht style, the spade ace, since that spade play •.
with amusing cartoons. To subscribe surely was a finesse. That is 16 pOitlti · .. · ·:
for 12 issues, send a '30 check, pay- accounted for, so partner must have · .
able to Edith McMullin , to 3012 Mem- the heart ace. 11 you switeb to the kiail . :;.
ory Lane, Sitver Spring, MD 20904.
and another heart, with luck you
Today's hand is taken from the first get a heart ruff on the third round
issue, published in December 1989 · the suit to defeat the contract.
. ;
/Wilen 1 ,.. lnvil&lt;tl to ar4oplq ""'"' ., •
Sitting West, defending against four
spades, you lead the club jack: four. UO..tol'flilllpAIII«,mcorooiWI~· ".:
two, king. Declarer plays the diamond Tfleyc.on be ...Mly t.Vcoorll lite l'Cll-.
two and wins the trick with duil'iniy's ·
~~&gt;·--

o• ,•...., FIUd

Hay tar 11ta, Rounil balal $20.
aach. oquaro balaa 12. a up.
304-41711-3110. '

.A7~42

.K8

0 4..., ,

By Pbillip Alder

llaubll Cincinnati Fleda 11
Philadelphia Phllllea (L)

•

•

1-t'&gt;tz

+6S

e magazine
for the majority

wMiJ;'L..oua ........

111• Whael of Forute

'·

EAST

WEST
+K72
+9864
· +JI097

7:411D NI'L Tonight

Merchandise

28dnn. houu tor rent, hut
pump, .,.. carpot, 11'111 yord, 51
Household
country -lnG In llalhan,
1250/ma., dopojlt Md roflranGoOds
roq10rod, 114-143-4135 oftar · , _ _ ___;;;,:.:;.:.:;.,,.....,_
2 4 Pltct Colftpltte Bedroom
1·2::::::1:..1 -:dnoo-m-:Ho-:-mo-=Fo-r-=Ron--:t, Sunn, Solid Wood, $200, And
NNr Galllpotla And Gtlllpollt 1250. 114-441-7021.
City Schoolt. 6,._.46-1617.
B"-k • --t·" "'--3 a-•
-room
·~ - - To
Town.
3 Bldnoom
R ... 1 - - - $500.
_ ... a
Mil
ancn ...._,.,.. ~pprox. 1 t1
From Town. $425 Asflmsc:a
And
Dlpoan
Roqulrod.
Wl~tman Real Ettatt, Inc. 114~~~.,-.,..,.-='--­
~41
36U.
HouH tor 'rent In Pomsroy, ,..
qulrtd oacurlly dapotlt, 304173-11587 afttf 9prn.
Nice Homt1 4 Bedrooms, 2
BalM, Eat-In Kttchtn, CA,
Gl'lln
Sc~t.
Deposit,
AsfertnCM Required. 614-4C1·
1715 Boforo 5 P.M.
Small 2bclrm. houtt, IIYing
room, kltchsn, hth, land toi'
gtrdtn, cowa, etc. $125/mo.,
$125/dtpoon, St:l-214-5086.
OVtr ltutftd mint grttn lovs
42 Mobil I Homes
Hit &amp; aofa, $500. llko now, 304·
675-3693.
lor Rent
PICKENS FURNITURE
2 bclnn. trtlltr near Raclnt; 3
NtwiUstd
btdrm. trtlltr on Routt 143, 2ml. Houuhold furnishing . 112 mi.
tram Pomsroy,; ~14--112-5858.
Jsrricho Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
2 bedroom mobile homt, unfura call304-8'15·l450·
nlahtd, csntral air, nlc;t ysrd, no A. &amp; s . Fumtturs. New, u11d, lfl•
palo, 301o4711-1221.
tlqu11. HouHhold fumlohlngt.
2 btdroom mololla homo, unfur· Moton, WV. 304·773-5341.
nllhtd, ctntralalr, nlct yan::l, no Rttrleerator, Frost Fret, Top
palo, 304-1711-1221.
Freozor, 1150; Rttrlgarator 2
2 ltd room Trtltar, Minimum
Wltor, Trothil Paid, Dlpotlt &amp;
Rotaroncn oqulrod, No Plio.
814 411 4879.
2 IR mololla homo for ront. Fur·
nlohtd. 11100 daposit. Call aftar
8pm. 304-175ol5t2.
3 ltdroom, 14x1U, Largt Ytrd
And Gtrd.,, 8 Mllaa From Gt~
ltpotll 0n HOUit 218. 614-3811t$18.

PHILLIP

f.:O~'riltt~ertaw·.nti1MIIIH114 Tonlgln

I

Q·l "j

+A~ 4

Alllnta Brlvtlat Pifllburgh
Plratta (L)

I~

. ,,
·,

NORnt

7:01(1) ..,-uartr 11m-,.

~.

'

chuckle quoted

+QJ 104
.Q96
• Q 10 7

OTIIIW.._

-

th~

by f•ll•ng •n the m•sstng words
you deve lop trom step No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

....... Palltlca 't2

FRANK AND ERNEST

Complete

Willi

Ill. (J) • Young loi~dll..
ar,.,.

Groom . and Sutlllly
Oroomtna. AI llr'tido,
lama Pal Food Dlltar.
Wtllb. Cal 114oo4411-G231.

.

pick up the dinner check is an art to some people. You really
have to hand IT lo THEM.

Now Yor1&lt; YartkMa II
Cl1lCigo Whlfl Sox (L)

cfuolva,l)&gt; II Rita Aid Pharmlcy.
Tht ta!O war lo dltt.

.

Typhus · Blimp · Exult · Artune · IT Ia. THEM
From The Dodia Ever Notice Department: Being slow to

1(9·. 1=:.2

Procfucto

::,.= :.

.

SCRAM.tETS ANSWERS

Stereo. C
II)Mijor'l.eaguellanbll

=~na,_:at,p:

Houses for Rant

l:jJ

~!~
u:m•
000

-uv

.

PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS IN SOUAiES

I::IIW Andy Gotllltll
7:00~· IUIWhaelofF-

1171 c~oavy Lw 4z4 For s.1a,
Trtdt, For Van, Fun;&amp;aii Truck,
$1,200. J14.448.8332.

111110 xR-eo.A,
ovar·
MUiad, 11100. 110 cond, 304-e7S.:.34;.;n..;.;.._ _ _ _ _ __

I I e

18

8IICIMJitte

~~~~~~~~-

1111 -

7

1_

1D UpCioM

1011 chtap 1ar plrlt, 304-1752211.

dklon, R-ly o..lhaulad,
Boola And Q - lncludad. $1,100.814-448-7371,
1111 Kawuakl 300 Bayou
12,000. ••• cond, 304-182-2117
attar 3:00PM.

.

A

IIU=...~~ewaE;J

Ill ICoaby Doo

I

.

~~...())..:.::,.... ,a.

1181 H.D. -hMically A...
t
- , Finn.
L4okt
U11t Ftt Boy,
te,IOO
814445-4911.

I

0

-=-,1

.m.... one ~T

&gt;

I I I' I r

I

oaa-n

Motorcycles

'

To sell our house we had
MU RR
hung "For Sale" signs on two
5
trees in front of our house. The
. . . . . . .. doorbell rang, and the young
a. man asked, "How much are
,..~-R-E_J_S-E-T
you 'asking ···the - ... ?'

lrom Brooklyn, Mich.
8 World Today

.

Chott Fr111tr $75; Tiblo Whh 'UIId 10121 Flreolont Tractor
Four Cflatno
1100; Rowlna lit•
•-•• •--·~ ,_ &amp;1 Fann· Equipment
china
$78; Or Boll Oftor. 114- :;,.. o25; 1-•• _,.,. --.
131 MF Tractor, 700 Hourt,
441-4831.
.
ply, 125; 114-117-S212.
Sharp, 180 MF 01-1, Nlco; 285
Commarclal SIMI Ooro- DOD&lt;, -~ Htattr Salt 12, 40, 31 Qal. Mf W·~ ~~!i ~ MF With
~
lon ttactrlc and 40 0 lnautatlon, ElactM OpoM&lt;I N•tu,.1 vC; v..u,. chalot. luth Hog.I1WIH622.
12lt12, ucatlln1 CondHion
$1,100. 114 448 84113, 114-441- $151.118
• Thamat 1118 3 II' Fairbank&amp; Mo,.o An4503.
HardwiN. 114-448-0185
tiquo Qoa Englno, 11137 S-14
Farmall To-, 1300 Each. 304.·
Com nd bow Btar
Wldcflna Gown, Navor lt2-2033, EYOIIngt.
hunl!':"wHh a1g't.ia, q.='~ Warn, 114-2tll 1031.
Brutlofloga, back bladH, bol
rawa, I l l - . Llkl now.
WhtriPDOf Llrga Capacity 700 bladli0,
"-!at 4ft, br..hhog,
1
178.00 ~71-433l
Woa Microwave $100; Or Trilla 1311,114MM:nl.
Com...-ar prtntar 011-20 Epaon Far ICing Or Quo., Watorbtd,
b11nd, allra rtbbona, jiil01 saa, ~~14~~3~841~1o13~11:_.- : - - - = - : - Farmall c, Auna And Lookt
VIIJ' good condHion, 114.812· . Browning 12 Oauga Batgl...; Groll, 11,171 Finn; 65 HP Call
lnilpondanl PTO Lookt
1737 or 114-1112-304\
DIU $1 ooo· Couch S - ITS, llada
And Auno Oood, 114o2ii.a985.
Dark Ptna Plaid Sofa, SlOO; Ll'l' 'iOOI Btnch, ur; il1'"",
Stolnlooo Still Sink $20; Camp- 115, 114-44HI11.
toloacco lllckl lor 1111,
l_ng like S7Si Con8oat Sttreo F1u1e tor $100; KWCICI"' heater 304oC7S-3308.
150. 814-448-3134.
1ar 110; Smhh earLivestock
Ethan Alton Wlna Back Chair, r a r , Manual $21. 114.•7- 63.
Sta Foam GrHn And Mauve, .
2 llotot•ln Nailor Colvn, 3
Good Concltlonl 151). 814.211- Wtdtltn,!! gown, alii 8 from Monlha Old, 1410 Far Both. 014·
6401.
AridrH a, ntWt worn, IM--.. 441-411&amp;3.
For Salo: Naavy Duty Black And 99Jll, bta,.lhll prlcO nagotlabfa.
Dlokor ~II Bla . Shorponor, .5S
Building
Good Condnlon, "lN. 114-4414311.
Supplies
.ca. Caok Slon, WUI Burn Bot·
tla Or Natural 011 Oood Cand~
tlon, Hat Clock a Timer, $'IS,
114-211-1783. .

I 1 1~ I l
3

IE!"~NASCAR

lftc.

I

KRYJE

(J). • •

(!)lqunOIIITV

WE FINALLY
FOIJND TI-lE
COURTf.lOIJSE,SEE .
AND Tf.lEN M'f
ATTORNEV PANIICKED.I
AlolD RAN ~OME .

1m . E-110 Convlt'llon Van,
Roof, Dual Air • Htlt,
C.O)~.!Y,,!I,OOO Mtlao, 113,100.

f1J.

~~~~

•

1187 Chlw 314 ton 4x4, txc

- · ~n. ~K-1112-m8.

1

EVENING

1tml Dodga 4 WD pickup, ahort
bad, vary good Cond, 304-112•
3251aftorf:OO P!,l.

'

I I lz I I I

Wont!. TlC

TV Lollu'\g lnt FT

4 WD's

8134.

Mand:z

E&amp;R TREE SERVICI. Topping,
Trlmmlng1 TNI RtmOVII, Hldgt
Trlmmtna. Frta Elllmatlll 814·
317-'llfi'T"Aiar 4p,m, .
~nctd planfal and or•
t•illll wll glva 11110111 In my
h-, 114.111:1-1232.
GMINI
Houat
Cltanlng
-onalofa Ratat, 114-311:11414,
II Na Anowor, 211·1221.
·
(laorgat Portabta Sawmltt1 don'l
haul your to tM moll juat
..1130H7S-1te7.

Vans &amp;

tlllurtng Amino Acid Body

Vtndlng Routt: Lcx:al. Wt Hav•
The Ntwttl Mtchlnn, Making A
Nice Slttdy Caah Income. 1·

10'138' troll«, partially carpotld,
olldlng alaN - · bathroom,
lots of cro..t 1pace, $2000, 114-

wanted to Do

batha, 2 btdroomt, 304-175- ....... 1 Badroom Apartment,
3317.
~~1~4~4~41~03!!80~.- - - - 1191 Clayton 14x70, 2 IMdo MI. Vernon AV..
floor, 3
roome, 2 lull bllha. c.ntr1l tlr, roome I bath, 1
I rtf tur·
$18,000. 304-175-3414 or 81oH41- nlahtd. Exc cond a nalgfobor·
'11151.
hood. 304-175-4580 or 67S-1882.
1991 Sunahlne Mx70, 2 Btd· N. 4th Ava, -.....,., Ohio. 2
~2 Bathe, C~ Low Pricol room attlcllnCf afll, l!lltltln
8
2HO, 1144,.2840.
.~~•• ~
. 11t ·1: ref. 304·882·
Lookt~ F'« A Dtal? ~A 'I5H
··•
Prt-Owin.d Mobile Home, L.arg• N.. Ctnlenary: nlc:t 2 BR.
Selection, Low Mon.y DoWn, Waler, ltovt, r.t. fUrnished. No
Freo Sot-Up And Dativary, 1o800o - . $240 par month. 614-446511-1710.
103a
Lind Mome Dlvtolopm.nl, EJ. Nke lludlo apt, vwy unlqut,
Ml Horne Cent« WUf Show You cab$~ hook-up, DIUI water, _you
Haw! Your New Single Or ply tl1C1:~~ 1 $11&amp;. mo, plus $150.
Double~ Wall, Stolle, Found•· dlpot.n, ...... anor ~:00
Uon I urlveWay, Allin On• Loan PM.
Pocloago, l.ow llotoo, Opon Loto
With IJgmld Homat. 1-114-m· Ont btdroom apt ·.with bllh,
-o
vtN n•-- "•" ....,,... •n.._ • .,._
- ·
'' ~·· •~·
"• ..,..~,~
4001 lfttr 5:00PM.
33 Fanns for Sala
an. bodi'DDIII tumlohtd apt,
._ R·'land, 24 .1 10,.. 2 ._ __._ very clsan 1 nict, no pets, 304·
1
~Yo houu
wnlrapl:,
67$.1388.

83U

Plaza. Call Today, 114-441-436711
Rag.ftt).OBo12'1'11.

18

1188 Skyline mobile home, 2

A~ 7p
A
- Qoltlpolla. f14 4114411
~""::,'~·m:::·:,..,.---,...,..,....,.
aroc~- Hvtng. 1 ond 2 bod·
room aportlnlflll tl 'llHago
Manor
and
Rlmalilt
Apartmontoln Mlddltpo11. From
111111. Can 114-111:1·77Bt EOH.

800·1141·1111.

Rodman Stoltontl Homo, 1t0th
Aero, 3 Bldroom 2 Fun Balht,
Outbullalng, Galllpotta Sohoolt,
$32 ,BOO. 11~-441-1581.

Business
Training

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

441- ...... 7p.m. •
Fumlahad ~1'111 Far Rani
In Oompolli, .1 Bado-n, ean
l~\4a Aftar I P.M.
fumlohad Apl. 1br $235/Mo.
Utllntaa Paid, 10t Stoond

73

SEFHIL

Ch t97

Good concltlon, f\200, 1'14-4*

30 filion flllh. aqua~um . with
hill• and""'- lllar, Ill llkt

Fbmlthtd iportmal'll, UIIIHiat

Comi&gt;!llly Fu(llllllocl, 1br, not

l

18tt Ouronao 8-10 1rucft. 24,ooo'
mU., 4 a:yl; I ......_ tlk. .ov.r
poymonta, :Jo4.I7S.III4.

_...i

u.-

,. ,;7
rolan tlparitn&lt;:ld In wattr warlla
ob. Mull llvt In Mlddloport. If
nttttsltd lind resume to:
Board of Public Atftlro, 237
R Sl Ill Po B.. 113 MI .. _
aca ' •
' ""'
dltport, Ohio. Jun Null, Citrka
Bo..U of Public Affll,.,
N...t matur~~ blby 1it1ar tor 10 &amp;
12~-,yr oIda • I tay over n1gn•t •
•v•nlng•J aoms mornings,
groat call bltort 3:00 PM, 304'15o7349.
Ptrt-Thntl
CUt
Manager
IT-htf F'« Goodwill ln•-, Point Plalllnt. ~~~
dull ,_
Roq~lrtd. Soma Travol.
nd
Rn~m1 To: Poreon~J_P.O. Box
'138~ Hu;;:;;$.""• w• 25704.
Ota lint
y ll24/i2, JTPA
Training. EOE. U/FIVM.
Port•Tima Janltwl Poaltlon
Available, Fltxlble Schedule, In
Oallfpollo
Location.
Send ·
Qualifications &amp; lntonnaUon To:
CLA; Box 232, C/0 Gtlllpollo
Dally lribu!_ll!l 1 1215 Third Av•nua,
Galllpolla, -'"' 45831.
Photo TrlmiTIIrl
tarn to $125 per day, no exp.
nsaclad, 1.aoo-212-4319.
Posltton Available: Mtnagtr,
Our HouH Youth Crttll Center·
Ctnldatn Wllh Masttra Dearta
In SW,
Or Rolattd Flatd,
With Ma
Emphaalo In
Chll- raflrrod. Two Ynra
Expo- Whh BahavlonHy
And ' Emotionally Dlllurbtd
Children, Proflrrod. Knowltdgo
And Exptrlence In The Ar.. Of
Admlnlttrotlon And Human Str·
vlctt. Potltlon Will lncludo Ad·

11n Ford Ptck.Up Truolt, 30,000
Mjlat, Lilla -1114-441-131~ .

m·

1·112 ton .......~
old·
orgon .lloot, 125; I ti09f stk:kt,
Wall; labia, $10, 114·112-1173.
2 LOla &amp; Vaunt, Chalco, In Ohio
Vti!Oy Mtmory Qardant. can
(Pnoctoryltla) 81j 1111101.
2 Plan. Tlcloatt To ljawall $200
Exc~. l14-379-21iJ7 Afttr 1 P.M.
··2-14"' new railt vents, 130
1· call Iron lavMory, $10; 114.

food, lltri . -na. E....
Ina houll, . . ., 304.773-6321
alfari:OOl'll!or., lnlo&lt;vlaw.
-

Food Sarvlct Warll110 -~
Qoow a " - With On. "'
Tha Natlona ...,_ Food Sirvita
Otpnlullonal
Eam
PramollanO, Paid Vaclllono,
Lito' lnouronct, Hoopltallzatlon,
Croclt Union a Othor Bonallto.
Pravtous Ezpa~onca Datlrabla

72 Truckl for Salt

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® lly Lury Wrlpt

Miscellaneous

fOr Fltnt

'EXpo-..~~ - . !lluko,

12

17,1992

·~·
." • t l

...

• 0

, Cl 1i82 t1y NEA, tn.;,

15

' "

'' - - - - - - - - - - - - ------..:....._·....r,
.,"

ol• ,•

I,

I

'

�-

~

By ED PETERSON
Social Security
MlllaJtl' iD AlbeDS
·, I know there are
men and
women in our community who
Would like to join lhe ranks of lhe
more than 10 million s~lf­
tmployed Americans. !f yQul.are
wondering whelbei' now IS lhe nght
time to become an entreprCIICUI'; I
can only cile Calvin Coolidge's
observation dull "business will be

many

bellel' or worse."
If you think business will be

beller and take the plunge, you
need to be aware that selfemployed individuals have special
responsibilities wilh regard to !heir
Social Securily coverage. For
example, lhe self-employed pay a
Social Security lax equal to the
combined rale paid by employees
and employers.
This year lhe Social Security laX
rate for lhe self-employed is 15.3
pen:enl on earnings up 1o S55,500.
Anolher 2.9 percent on eammgs up
w$130,200 pays for Medicare cov-

eraryou Sl8lt a business and have

net e111nings of m&lt;m !han $400 in
self-emvloyment, you must me a
federalliiCome tax rehl1'11 and pay
any federal taxes due-and the
Social Security tax. The tax. is
reported on Schedule C (Profit and
Loss From Business or Profession)
or, where appropriate, Schedule F
(Farm lncQme and Expenses) and
Sc.hedule SE (Computation of
Social Security Self Employment
Tax.)
If you have bolh wages and self-

employmem income, you should .
first figure lhe amount of wages on
which you have paid Social Security taxes and then add your selfemployment earnings up to the limits I mentioned earlier. If your
wages alone exceed lhese limits, ·
you do not pay Social Security
taxes on the additional income .
earned in self-employmenL
Anyone who wants more information about Social Security and
self-employment can call our
office. Our number is 592-4448.

Giro/ami participates in
summer training program
Frank Guulami, a 1971 graduate
of Meigs High School and science
reacher for Mason City Schools in
Mason recently participated in a
national summer uaining institule
for outstanding middle-level science reachers, sponsored by the
Association of Presidential
Awardees in Science Teaching
(APAST) and the National Science
Teachers Association (NSTA).
Girolami was one of29 teachers 1o
participate in this year's
APAST/NSTA Institute held
recently at lhe University of Maryland at College Parle.

The participants were chosen
from more than 300 aP,Plicati~ns
nationwide based on their teaching
and leadership abilities. During lhe
three-week pr~gram, teachers
learned about sc1en~ content and
insUuctional sualegJCS ~ tcac_h·
e~ who have woo the ~~tial
Award for Excellence m Sctence
Teaching.
.
.
Girolami, son.of GIJ!do Gll'Oiami, Pomeroy, will begm his 17th
yeas wilh Mason City Schools this
fall. He, with his wife, Karen,
reside in Loveland.

Grinstead
reunion held
The GrinSiead reunion was held
recently II New Haven !'alt.
Sharon Vickers, J;nSiden~ wdcorned everyone and Maxine Wagner gave the blessing for the picnic
dinner.
· Atlending were lmogei)C Freeman, Orlando, Fla.; Belly Rice,
Marion, IU.; Mr. 111d Mrs. George
Wagner, Lancaster; Jack Slewart
and Jackie, Walton, w.v-.: Alice
Miller, Marietta; Peggy Harless,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Wolfe, Ricky and Nicholas,
Ravenswood, W:Va.: Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Johnson and Jacob, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grinstead
and Eva North, Nelsonville; Mrs.
Paul Grinstead, Amy and Paula,
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs; Mike BroOker and Kfle; Brunswicl;:; Mrs.
Robert Gnnstead, ·Dick, Bob and
Mike, Albany; Mr. and Mrs. David
Grinstead, New Marshfield; Eulah
Bellamy, Mary Fowler, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Slewart, Tiffany, Ci'vstal, Chipper and Katie Hendricks,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Roush, Jamie, Jodie,
Jordan and Michael Todd Roush,
Doris Yonker, Letart, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Carson, J .R. Hysell,
Francis Stewart, Liz Ohlinger,
Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Knapp, Ywnne Gill and Jodi,
Patty Paugh and Jackie, Stephanie
Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Duncan
and David, Mr. and Mrs. William
McFarland, Mary Fry and Andrea,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bumgarner, Troy
and Lori, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Grinstead, Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Vickers, Am,
Shari, Ken and Aaron, Joan Taylor,
Kathleen Rosh, Kathy Rickard,
Ella Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Knapp.
.

Families gather for 68th reuni~~.

~ 68tlt annual Hayes-Young
Holiday School Rcunioo was held
recently a1 the old school grounds
with 7S in attendance.
A basket lunch was sened with
blessing by Leroy Sauters.
.
The afternoon program was
called to order by Hollie Hayes
who asked Craig Dougan 10 open
with a prayer. He also asked for a
moment or silent prayer for those
deceased dwing lhe year - George
Gilkey, Weber Wood, G.G. Hart,
Cui Brickles Mud Wood Garnet
Smitlt A~ Well and William
Qui '

~·secretary's report was by
Kathy Dougan and officers were
elected: president, Hollie Hayes:
viCC-prestdent, Craig Dougan; secretary/lrcasurer Kathy Dougan·
game CQmmiuee' Garoldene Boyd
and Crai DougaO.
g

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Monday, August 17, 1992

Pomeroy-lltddleport, Ohio

-Your Social-Security

·~

Gifts were presented to lhe old- Cheesebrew, ~!bert, K!m·~ Y
est man, Pearl Gilkey; oldest and ~el Fne~'LrneJ'e
woman, Clara Gillr;ey; youngest, Kandi and S~ve Jordon'
Ciara Warmke; farthest away, Mace, _Jeremtal_l Jor ;::· Gla;!js
Miranda Alsept; runner-up, Juanita Cummmgs, Whitney piOns 1•
Richards. Meloo door pnzes went Breydon ~~tall~, ~
1o Britnee SauleiS.
and Adam umm~,
Theresa
Songs were sung by . Craig GJIIDTral
and DrcwSbff lb=da EastDougan and Colleen Bn~kl~s . and
cy a er,
Kath·
Jamie Boyd played the v1ohn. man,Chuck.:t:n"' ~· Mark
Holly Friend read a poem that she leen, Oden . usse11 d K
1
wrote called "I Am America." Dianna, Bntnee an S ~
Mandy Easunan and Fern Cheese- S~utc~.i.en?Y and ?or~ ~
•
brew also read PQCms. The pro- Counney Haines, VUg11118 Gl~,
gramendedwilhagroupsingingof "Jim and Garoldene and Jamte
"Precious Memories."
Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. Don Wolfe,
Games were played and prizes Ken and Dorthy_Ch~
were awarded to lhe children.
. Hayes, Kala, ~g.
dClara
Attending were Rob, S~phame and Cory 0 Neil,= 'Cru.nc
and Miranda Alsept, l_lolhe and G!lkey, ~~
Y S~
Linda Hayes, Grace Rtchardson, Lmdsay Bollll, BillY~ P
Floyd and Colleen Brickles, Audra SWindell, Margery Doug • atty
Hayes, Juanill ~bards, Mary and Arnold and Evdyn Warner.
Jessie Jordon, Bll1 Mullen, Fern

Draft horse

872
Pick 4:
5289

show results
Pages 4-5

•

=
Vol. 43, No. 11
Copyrlgh*1111t2 .

Republicans blast Clinton as convention begins
Vietnam draft evader.
, said Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad.
••where was Bill?" the deleAt the welcoming rally, Bush
gales bellowed when conservative promised the fruslratcd GOP failhPatrick Buchanan recalled Bush's ful, "When history writes about
World War II service. Now in this election, lhey're going 1o say it
Bush's corner after an initially started right here when you fired up
scorching primary challenge, this president to take this message
Buchanan said Clinton's agenda . to lhe American people."
was topped by abortion on demand,
Vice President Dan Quayle was
gay rights, and combat roles for at Bush's side, and laler went 1o the
women.
convention Door 1o caleb the openBush walehed from his hotel- ing night's proceedings.
also his legal residence- while
"! don't care what my critics
working on his Thursday night say," Quayle said. "I will never
acceptance speech. Republicans back down from talking ~bOut Iraemphasized the imponance of that ditional values."
speech -and the need for Bush to
Clinlon was home in Arkansas,
define h~ campaign themes.
with one eye on solving a state
"We're here to learn the theme budget problem, lhe other on GOP
and message of this campaign," attacks.

Butch Skid.more, manafer• said c•at several
years ago Landmark decided to give up buying
animals at tbe Uvestock sale where only a few
beaefited, and belp everyone by serving free
food. Several hundred were served.

Karr, Grand Cbampioa ill poultry aad d~M;ks
aad geese projects and Reserve Champion In
showmaDShip; and Kenai tit Kirk, Grand Champion Showman. (Sentinel Pl!oto by Brian J,
Reed)

Board relents, rewrites ballot language

Gillilan named All-American Club members
give reports
She was also named to Who's
Elona Lee Gillilan, dauj!hter of
George and Linda Gillilan,
Pomeroy, has been named and AllAmerican Scholar by the United
StaleS Achievement Academy.

ELONA GILULAN

Who in America Students for lhe
third consecutive year for her academic achievements.
Site is a 1992 graduale of Eastern High School, where she main-.
tained a 3.4 or better grade pomt
average. She was named an honor
roll smdent and was active in sports
and clubs.
During her senior she was a
member of the Varsity "E" Club,
played varsity volleyball, basketball, softhall and was a member of
the National Arts Honor Society
and senior play. She also received a
senior athlete award and the Ivan
B. Walker for outstanding girl athlete.
In softball she helped the team
become district champions as she
received awards for most put outs,
most improved infielder, along
with SVAC All District and AliSiale. She shared co-MVP with a
girls from Symmes Valley.
She has undergone knee surgery
this summer but plans to attend the
Universit:y of Rio Grande this fall.

Community calendar
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village
Council meets in recessed session
Mondar., 7 p.m., council chambers,
Sw Mill Pat!&lt;.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Junior
High football practice will begin
Monday, 3·5 p.m.
CARPENTER - C~lumbia
Township Trustees, spec1al meeting, Monday, 7 p.m., townhall.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Regular meetin$,
Drew WebSter Post No. ~9. Amencan Legion, Tuesday, dmner at 7
p.m., meeting at 8 p.m.
RACINE - Southern Local
School Board meets Tuesday at7
t

'

p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Tent revival,
"Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, ROUte 124 in Reedsville,
through Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly
wilh Rev. Jim Kittle, Winchesler,
Ky., and The Sisson Family~ Gal·
lipoilis. Nursery provided. Fellowship after each service.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Tournament,
Meigs County Golf Course, all
male members over age 65, Callaway handicap, select your own
foursome, $2 enuy fee.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
J&gt;.m., at the ·high school. Public
tnvited.
I

The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daughlers of American, met at lhe lodge
hall, with Aha Ballard, Mae
McPeek and Ada Bissell the
hoslesses.
lnzy Newell presided at the
meeting. She read from U TtmOthy. .
The Lord's Prayer and Pledge of
Allegiance were $iven in unison.
Betty Young IS home from the
hospital and a get well card was
signed for her by the members.
Membe~ answered roll Cl!ll by
naming a member you remembered
that belonged to lodge years ago.
Thelma White gave lhe treasurer's report
Goldie Fredrick's great-grandson is in the hospital and Betty
Roush has a new great-granddsulthter.
A thank-you note was read from
the Ads Bissell family.
Erma Cldand read a poem, "It's
Home."
Games were conducted by Erma
Cleland and Mary K. Holter.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses.
Attending were Opal Hollon,
Marcia Keller, Elizabeth Hayes,
Jean Frederick, Alta Ballard,
Goldie Frederick, Lma Damewood,
Cora Beegle, Ethel Orr, Mary K.
Holler, Mary Jo Barringer, Pllll~
Ridenour, Betty Roush, Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Enna Cleland,
Laura Mae Nice, Sadie Trussell,
Margaret Amber11er, Charlotte
GIIUlt, Thelma While, lnzy Newell
and visitors, Charlene Griffin,
Aorida: Sandra White and Shilley
Beegle, local.

Orientation picnic
slated Aug. Z1
Meigs Junior High will !IIJOilSCl'
an Orientation P.icnic for all new
students and their pareilts Aug. 27
from 6·9 p.m. Schedules 'frill.be
available and a building oricntauon
will be provided. Reservations to
attend should be made by Aug. 24
by calling 992·3058.
·

He said of the blistering criticisms, "It's the best thing they
have, since they can't run on !heir
record," he told CBS. His campaign ridiculed the arch-conservative Republican platform as a document "with universal ~ - as
long as you're an exuemJSt."
Buchanan was the first of the
party's likely 1996 presidential
prospects in convention prime
time, but hardly the last. Tonight
has keynoter Texas Sen. Phil
Gramm, whose visits with Iowa
and New Hampshire delegates
underscored his ambition, as well
as Housing Secrelary Jack Kemp
and Education Secretary Lamar
Alexander. Also, a 1996 longshot:
Massachusetts Gov. WiUiam Weld.

Their job is to continue the
boost-Bush-bash-Clinton routine
begun Monday.
Buchanan said Clinlon 's foreign
policy experience amounted to
'breakfast at the International
House of Pancakes." Quayle conceded, mockingly, that Clinlon hsd
"a summer internship with the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.''

Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson
echoed Buchanan's reminder thai
Clinlon never served in the mililary. South Carolina Gov. Carroll
Campbell suggested the Arkansas
governor's economic plan would
cost jobs. Not to be outdone, delegates wore buttons referring to
Clinlon as "Failed Governor of a
Small Stale."

Pomeroy Council approves
firehquse repair project

POULTRY WINNERS· These 4·H lera
were Grand and. Reserve Chaiaploas fOllo!rintl
Monda_Y's Junior Fair Poultry Sbow, Pic:lllred
witb LJYestock Princess Lisa Holl'man, rar left,
are Odie Karr, Granlf Cllamplon markei. pen
and Reserve Champion poultry project; Becky

classes for dolls-and stuffed aDimals as caD be
seen here as Karen Lodwick works dlsplayinc
entries. You can see tbem all in the seDIOI' fair
building at tbe Meigs Count)' Fair Ibis week.

1.Seclion, 10 P•go• 25 conla
A Multimedia Inc. Newooa-

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ, Tuesday, August 18, 1992

HOUSTON .(AP) - Republi- Congress chorus. At a welcoming
cans are uying 1o steer lhe wrath of rally, he rebuked the Democratic
disenchanted voters away from leadership as the "sultans of the
President Bush to the Democratic- SlaWS quo.''
conuoUed Congress and paint Bill
In the cavernous Asuodome, the
Clinlon as a failure as governor and de legales' refrain was "Clean the
novice at foreign policy.
House" as Ronald Reagan sought
· After an opening night reflec- to convince v01ers the change they
tion on 12 years of White House need is on Capitol Hill- not at the
' dominance, the Republican Nation- White House. Chants of "Four
, al Convention looked ahead loday, More Years" were designed to
with a tribute to congressional reinforce that poinL
·hopefuls and a prime-time parade
Republicans previewed fall
of !996 presidential prospects hop- campaign lines aimed at reve~ing
. ing 1o boost their own stock while Clinlon's double-digit lead in the
. helping Bush.
polls. They portrayed Bush as an
The president arrived Monday unparalleled world leader now
for his second coronation as ready 1o tum his energy homeward
Republican standard-bearer and and the Democratic nominee as a
immediately joined in the anti- failed governor, closet liberal and

NO LETUP IN TillS LINE • FOI' the third
consecutive year Athens Landmark aline ou tile
night before the opening of tbe Meip County
Fair to serve food to boys and girls briDging in
tbelr animals. Hungry and tltlrsty, there seemed
no letup In the line to enjoy the refreshments.

TALENT G,U.ORE • There's DO doubt allout
it -Melp Count)' bas maay talented people. A
total of 343 eatria wm made ia the 108 ••ams
of the domestic arts department at lite Melp
County Fair. A veal increase was sllowD In tfle

Low tonight around 60.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. High
In 80s.

energy. t An insulating blanket for
your water heater which will save as
much as 10% of your water heating
energy. t Two three-foot sections of
ool1reth1vle1~ewrap for your hot
water pipes that will cut the heat
loss between your water tank
and the point of use.
t Twelve Insulators which will help
reduce the heat loss
around switch plates
and outlets in your
outside walls.

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It'll Cost More Not To Buy It
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tAn energy-saving showerhead
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fluorescent bulb producing as much
light as a 60-watt conventional bulb
while using only one quarter of the

But Jazwa said his $fOUP does
not plan to ftle a lawsUI~ which it
had considered.
He gave board members copies
of editorials from newspapers
around the stale that criticized them
for splitting the proposal, an act
Jazwa and others said was designed
to confuse voters.
"The outrage your action has
provOked has been benefteialto our
goal of passing this amendment,"
Jazwa !old the board.
Taft had voted against splitting
the issue.
'

You can begin by filling out and
mailing the coupon below. Or call
1-800-282-2118 toll- free_

At presstime on Tuesday, Racine and Bashan emergency crews
were at lhe scene of a suucture fue on Barringer Ridge Road.
Officials were unable lo make positive identification on the
owner of the house, but reported !hat at least one minor explosion
had been caused by a bottled gas iource on the property.

CllpAndMaii CheckOrMoneyOrderPayableTo:

NIAGARA,SMARTPAC

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aSMARTPACI at $23.00each.
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"You don't have to persuade
me," Tan said.
But three Olher members of lhe
board declined Taft's invilation 1o
reopen the lenn limits discussion.
They included Espy, Columbus
lobbyist Thomas Winters and
William Morgan of Columbus, a
membq of the Ohio Bankers Association.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, who also had voted to divide
the proPQsal, was absent Monday.
The labeling-bill language,
which OCA called an oulrage, said
at lhe beginning:
'

"Cre.ates a new tax and civil
fines to pay for implementation,
adminisllllion and enforcement of
the law and to award grants to
groups claiming a need, to study
environmental exposures to chemical substances. Stale and local government officials administer the
program. Stale and local governments and privale businesses with
nine or fewer employees lite
exempt from the law."

More layoffs are
possible at Armco
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) - The
success of an experimental steelmaking process at Armco Stccl Co.
could mean another 75 layoffs will
be added lo the 675 already can sed
by the closure of the company's hot
strip mill.
.. ".
The layoffs are from the continued idling of Annco's sinlel plant,
wMch reclaims iron from waste
products. The plant was closed July
II while lite company uied determine if it could operale solely by
making steel from ll'On pellets.
Bill Scaggs, spokesman for
Armco's Ashland Works, said
Monday that the experiment was
both economically and technologically successful. However, Scaggs
said the company had not yet
decided whether to keep the plant
closed.
Scag$S said the sinter plant's
fate is hnked to the shutdown of
the hot suip mill July 24, which
came afler Armco moved its hotrolling operations to its Middletown, Ohio, Wotlcs.

--Local briefs----.

-------------- -----------------,1

~~~

ISSUCS.

Structure fire underway

CheckOne:

I

ered.
Taft said after re-reading the
text following the Aug. 7 meeting,
he agreed that the tax language
should be revised.
"I regret not having done tha~"
Taft said.
The board refused 1o disturb lhe
text of a what had been a combined
proposal to limit the Ienos of members of Congress, statewide elected
offiCials, and members of the Legislature.
Ohioans for Term Limits,
through sdlikesman John Jazwa of
Cleveland, 'repeated its objections
to an Aug. 7 decision to split !hat
~roup's proposal inlo three ballot

To Order SMAKf PAC.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The Stale Ballot Board, in the wake
of widespread criticism, wrole new
language describing a Nov. 3 ballot
proposal requiring the labeling of
products that can cause cancer or
reproductive defects.
The board on Monday clarified
and moved further down in lhe text
a provision placing a laX on industries releasing or selling toxic
chemicals.
In an easlier version, approved
by the board on Aug. 7, the proposal opened with the words "creates
a new tax," and did not explain
lhat the tax applied to industries,
not individuals.
Backen described lhe tax languageils a voter turnoff.
The original language had been
drafted by the issue's opponents
over lhe objectioos of Ohio Citizen
Action. which circulat~ petitions
1o place it on lhe baliOL
Ed !'lopkins, OCA spokesman,
said the revisions made the language '.'more. fair," but that parts
of it are still misleading.
Secretary of State Bob Taft
reconvened the board at the request
of Sen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus,
who asked only that the language
of the labeling issue be reconsid-

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StaiT
J&amp;L Insulation of Middleport
was hired to perfonn repair work at
the Pomeroy firehouse at Monday
night's regular meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.
Besides that Middlepon firm,
estimates were received from NorIan Conuacting, in the amount of
$9,500 and Superior Home Maintenance, $7,210.65. Estimates
exceeding $10,000 were received
from Home &lt;;reelt Enterprises and
Charles Sayre and Son of Long
Bottom, but acceptance of either of
those tirds would have required
councillo advertise for bids.
The project calls for replacement of the firehouse roof and
installation of vinyl siding on a

C1992 Amtf'kMI Eiectrlc '"-er

.

EMS units answer calls
Nine calls for assistanpe were answered on Monday and early
· Tuesday by units of Meigs Emergency Services.
· At 12:26 f:.m. on Monday, Racine and SynJCuse units went to
Slate Roule 2A for a sttucture fue at the Larry Taylor residence.
The fue was believed to have been of an electrical nature and damage was limited. The units returned at 1:53 a.m. At 1:51 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Apple Grove-Dorcas Road. Chclsey Imboden
wits taken to Velerans Memorial Hospital. At 3:46p.m., Middleport
unit loOk Jessica Barringer from the Rock Springs Fairgrounds to
VeleJIIDS. AI 4:54 p.m., Pomeroy squad was ~110 Bone Hollow
Road. Karen Milliron was taken to Veterans. At 8:32 p.m., Racine
unit went to State Route 124. David Pauley was uansportcd to
Holzer Medical Cenler. At 10:08 p.m., Racine. squad was sent to
Bashan Road and took Lavemia Hayman was taken to VetcraDS.
· On Tuesday at 12:59 a.m., Middleport squad went to Stonewood
Aparunents. Eugene Dou$hly was taken 10 Veterl!ll. "'7:15a.m.,,
Pomeroy squad went to Village Green ~ts. Linda Jones was
taken to Holzer. At9:0lll.m., Racine unit went to State Route 338.
Marie Pursley was taken 1o Vetcillns.

\

.
'
HORSE BATH • Rod Tuttle, Radllt, boles dowl one olllls
horses MQoday iD preparatloa fOI' tbe Meil• Couty Fair Dran
H~Sbow.

portion of lhe building.
Council al~ approved lhe sole
bid received for paving West Main
Street from the Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge to the Middleport eotporation line. The bid was received
from Shelly Company in the
amount of $26,597.45. Funding of
that project, which is planned in
conjunction with the Ohio Depanment of TIIUlsportation's paving of
Main Sueet from Kerr's Run to the
bridge later this year, was also discussed, including possible borrowing by the village . No action was
taken.
Council members discussed
sileS within the village in need of
mainlenance and clean-up. Councilman Bill Young commended the
police deparunent for removal of
junked cars and site clean-up that

he had requested earlier.
The village's share of the West
Main Sueet project was described
as an ongoing paving program
within the village. Earlier this summer, Union Terrace, Fisher Sueet
and Prospect Hill were paved.
Mayor Bruce Reed reported that
fine collection was $10,000 over
that from this time last year, and
stated that several offenders with
delinquent fines were now spending time in jail.
The next regular meeting of
council was set for August 31
instead of September 7, due to the
Labor Day holiday.
Present, in addition to Young
and Mayor Reed were Council
members Betty Baronick and John
Blaettnar and Council President
Larry Wehnmg.

POULTRY JUDGED • Becky Karr exhibited ber newly-fouud
knowledge of poultry during Monday afternoon's Junior Fair
Poultry Sbow. Here, Karr discusses one of ber projects wilb Judge
Duane Plymaltn of Jackson. Becky took Grand Champion honors
In the poultry 111d ducks and geese categories, and resene cbampi·
on Ia the showm111sbip category. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian J. Reed)

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