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Ohio Lottery

Hoople
observes 50th
•
anniversary

Pick 3:302
Pick 4: 9198
Cards : K·H, A-C
2-D;Q-S

Super Lotto:
15·21-27-32-39-44

PageS

Low tonight In 70.. Tuooday,
partly cloudy, high In 80s.

Kicker:87130l

1 Section, 10 PIQ!Ia 25 c.~ to
A Muhlmedlo Inc. NowiJNiper

NICE RANCH STYLE
located on
Kineon Or. oH81S 3 BAs, bath, LR, kitchen,
full basement, gas heat, Nice starter home
or retirement home.

BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME offers lots of
attracdve feat\Jres: 3 BRs, 2 112 baths, LA,
FR,stone FP, heat pumplcent.air, 2 car
attaclted garage, city schools.

CLOSE TO TOWN BUT SECLUDED
SET11NG- Located on Neighborhood Rd.,
11/2 story home offers 4 BAs, bath,
equipped kitchen. LR, DR. part. basement.
Block bldg. with 3 nns. and carport behind
house. Situated on 1. 75
mil.

Gorbachev takes
blame for coup

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD
BUSINESS- Plus laundry. Located on St.
At. 35. Call lor more inlonnation.

CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE IN VINTON
- 2Bx32. Concrete floors, 220 electric
service, forced air fuel oil furnace, two 7x9
overhead
one walk-tn door.
::UJD~:o setting just minutes to
downtown . Home features 3 BAs,
w/range &amp; refrig., LA. DR, carpet,
fireplace, city school dist.

CONVENIENT . LOCATION
COMFORTABLE HOME - Just at the edge
3 BAs, bath,
garage. Nice shade
FOR- Newer all brick home just ·
minuiBs from downtown. 3 BAs, 3 baths,
great room. family room, 2 car attached
garage, heat pump/cent air, city utilities .

PURCHASED 27 ANIMALS • The Farme~ Bank and Savings
Co. is always a strong supporter or the junior fair livestock sale,
and this year purchased 27 animals. Here Bank Officers Bruce
Reed and Paul Kloes join the loungsters from wbom tbey purchased animals for a picture. ert to rigbt, tbey are front, Lori
Harris, Joshua Ervin, Cluld Wheeler, Adam Sanders, Jamie

211 ACRES, MORE OR LESS,
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP - Brick home
offers 6 BAs, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen, LR,
FA, alee. and wood heat, cellar house, log
bam, sheds, frontage on Raccoon Cree and
Utile Raccoon.

STATE
acre
nice home ofters 3 BAs, 1 bath, Jiving room
kitchen range and refrigerator. fireplace. city
water, basemen~ city schools.

LOOK NO FURTHER--A dream of a place.
Walnut Twp., Miller Road. Beautiful
Hearthstone log home offers 3 iiRs, 2
baths, LA, kitchen, FA, DR, tun basement, 2
fireP.faca,, wrap around deck,' log garage,
46•So bam, spring and pond on property, all
fenced, in Wayne National Forest. Just
ATTENTION HUNTERS - 35 acres in Clay
Twp. Small frame house on property.. 2
water taps. $15,000.
.

BAs, LA, kitchen, bath, full baeamant gas
forced air, attached garaaa, ~ achools.
EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
- Presently used as Riverside Marine,
steal building with approx . 3.000 sq. ft ..

VERY NICE RANCH STYLE HOME
LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160 - 3
BAs, LA, kitchen w/range, refrigerator. one
car attached garage. 100x300 ft. lot.

LARGE HOME features 4
baths kitchen, LR, DR, unattached 1Bx29
garag~. North Gallia School District.
640
1112 stO&lt;Y home offers LA,
kitchen, dining nn., bath, nice back porch,
gas heat, close to elementary school.

LOTS TO OFFER-This property is located
just at the edlj&amp; of town on Rt. 160 and has
four tracts, pnced separately. One leatures
a 2 BR home with gas heat. Three
additional lots for sala-Call our office for
details.

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.OOiTION'..:.J~,•t a block
from grocery store. Nice home offers LA
kitchen, BAs. bath, large front porch .

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONEI
Large log home can ba purchased with I 62
acres or 2 acres. Th~ home offers 4 BAs, 3
baths equipped kitchen, LR&lt; FR&lt; 2 firepia~ . heat pump/cent air (backup system),
oven~ized 2 car attached garage. Frontage on
Raoooon Creek.

OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT 250
SECOND -Office down and 1 BR
apartment upstairs. Very nice building. Call
for details.

campaign to elect all union organs,
including the president, " Gorbachev said. He did not give a
timetable.
Gorbachev previously proposed
drafting a new Soviet Constitution
within six months of the signing of
the Union Treaty, to be followed
by elections. Diplomats and Soviet
officials say that process couljl take
two years.
Gorbachev's chances of concludin~ a Union Treaty to bind the
repubhcs together in a looser federation have been put in serious
doubt by the quick moves by the
Soviet republics to leave the Soviet
Union.
In other developments today:
- Lawmakers voted 436-7 with
15 abstentions to scrutinize the
behavior of all Soviet or~aniza­
tions, presumably includmg the
Communist Party, KGB and
Defense Ministry, during the coup.
They also voted to demand an
"informational report" on the
putsch from Gorbachev.
Supporters of Russian President
Boris N. Yeltsin, who has emerged
as Moscow's main powerbroker
after leading deflllllce 10 the coup
plotters, are seeking to flush out
any hard-liners who remain in GarContinued on page 3

·Meigs County Fair animal buyers Police group president is
· hooer~d;·Saturday with banquet
pushing for officers' rights bill
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
were honored Saturday night at the
Sentinel News Stan
annual banquet held at Eastern
Animal buyers and sellers, . High School.
along with others who made the ·
The sale featured a record num1991 Meigs County Juntor Fan ber of animals purchased by a sinLivestock Sale a smashing success, gle buyer and record selling prices.

Sales of existing
homes down in July
WASHINGTON (AP)Sales or existing homes
slumped 6. 7 percent in July
after rising to a 2 1/2-year
bigb a montb earlier, a real
estate trade group said today.
Tbe drop, which was con·
centrated In the Soutb, fol·
loWed five consecutive monthly increases and was not
viewed with particular alarm,
the National Association of
Realtors said.
Sales or single-family
totaled a seasonally adjusted
annual rate or 3.35 million,
down from 3.59 million in
June. It compared with
increases or 1.4 percent in
June and 6.9 percent in May.
Still, the July total was 0.9
percent higher than a year
ago.
"The market is holding
strqng," said Harley E.
Rouda, president or the group.
"Buyers flocked to the market
(in May and June), causing
sales to jump. However, sales
spurts cannot last indermitely.
Now that some pent-up
demand bas been filled, the
market is easing back into a

more stable course or
growth."
Long-term r1Xed mortgage
rates, as measured by the Fed·
eral Home Loan Mortgage
Corp., ticked down slightly
during the month to an avera~e 9.58 percent, compared
w1th 9.61 percent in June.
Since then, rates have con·
tinued to slide and the trade
group said it expected that
would help maintain sales
growth. Lower mortgage rates
translate into lower monthly
payments ror home buyers.
The sharpest decline in
sales occurred in the South,
where the seasonally adjusted
annual rate declined 14.8 percent to 1.27 million units. In
tbe Midwest, sales feU 3.3 per·
cent to a rate or 890,000 units,
while in tbe West tbey edged
down 1.6 percent to 610,000
units.
However, in the Northeast,
whicb bad surrered most
severely from the housing
slump during the recession,
sales rose for the fourth consecutive month. They were up
1.8 percent to a rate or 580,000
units_

The Home National Bank of
Racine topped the list by buying 35
animals, followed by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy,
which purchased 27 animals.
Whaley's Used Cars and Parts
came in third with eight animals,
and McDonald's of Pomeroy,
fourth, with seven. Centtal Trust of
Middlepon, Bank One of Pomeroy,
and Veterans Memorial Hospital
were also among the top multiple
animal buyers at the sale.
Nick Leonard, president of the
Meigs County Livestock Sales
Commiuee, emceed the program
and introduced the buyers, many of
whom presented checks as they
were recognized to the youngsters
from whom they bought anin1als.
Leonard described the sale as a
success because of "the buyers, the
4-H kids, and the parents who support them." He credited the auctioneers and their crew with the
smooth operation of the sale and
thanked everyone who had anything to do with itwucccss.
Introducing John Rice, Meigs
County Extension agent, Leonard
spoke of his valuable role in the
overall youth program, and then
announced that Rice wiD be retiring in 1992. There was a s1allding
ovation as Rice, Meigs agent for
the past I 8 years, moved to the
microphone.
After confuming his retirement .
plans, Rice commented on the
tremendous cooperation and teamwork which it lakes to bring about
a successful sale and complimented
both exhibitors and buyers.
Near 500 auended the banquet
including the 4-H'ers and their
families, the buyers and their associates.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Society has turned its back on
problems such as violence, drug
abuse and prostitution, leaving
them for police to solve, the head
of a national police union says.
"That's why we see a lot of
officers with cancer and heart disease. There's a high divorce rate,"
said Dewey Stokes, president of the
Fraternal Order of Police and a
Columbus officer for 24 years.
"If the public stands up with
law enforcement, they can overcome these problems," he said. "It
means standing up and saying
who's dealing drugs, even if
they're friends or family members.
We have to run the prostitutes out
of the neighborhoods.''
Stokes said a national bill of
rights for police officers would be
the top goal of his third two-year
term of office.
He said the 226,000-member
FOP also wants legislation passed
to appropriate more money for
states to upgrade computers that
make tracking criminals easier.
"It is time to turn things around
so criminals know there will be
retribution and they wiD have to do
hard time in prison," Stokes said.
"We lost more people to violence

in this country the fast three years
than in Vietnam in 10 yeats."
Stokes, 50, said he is "a big
advocate of geuing funds to the
local level, where they get the
biggest bang for the buck."
Although he has no duties with
the city, where he has been an officer since 1967, Stokes receives
$30,000 a year as a patrolman, in
accordance with the FOP's contract
with the citv. He also gets $27,500

a year froni the national organization.
Stokes said the respect shown to
officers when he was growing up
on the city's west side is rare today.
Officers today deal with more
stress than ever, he added.
"Kids in my neighborhood
knew the policemen. If they told
you to do something, you did it.
Even if it was get a haircut," he
said.

--Local briefs-Police probe minor wreck
A minor accident on the Video Touch parking lot at the corner of
Walnut and North Second in Middlepon early Friday evening was
investigated by Middlepon police.
The vehicle driven by Mary D. Hoffman, Pomeroy, was struck
on the left side as she pulled into the parking lot by a car being
backed from a parking space by Maljonta Tromm, Rutland. There
was minor damage to the Hoffman vehicle and none to the Tromm
car. Neither driver was cited.

Two hurt in car-motorcycle accident
A man and a woman were injured as the result of car-motorcycle
accident Saturday evening on S.R. 124 in Sutton Township.
Accordimz to a reJJOn from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Continued on page 3

Appalachian counties are still
distressed according to Hollister

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YOU'LL MAKE A SPLASH WITH THIS
ONE- Just off SA 35 this lovely home
offers 3 BAs. 2 baths. LR. FR. dining area,
equipped kitchen, 1&amp;.32 pool wlvac.
sysiBm, 2 car attached garage, gas heat,
cent. air. Very well kept home. Call for
appointment. '

FAIRU.-tc1C8ted on Bulaville-Porter
3.44 acres and a nice one story
home with 3 BAs, 2 baths. LA, kitchen. FA,
OR, carpet, oil and eleclric heating. 4 car
unattached metal garage. bam, approx. 4
acres fenced pasture.

lovely.

Drake, (Reed and Kloes) Travis Lodwick, Bobby Kauff, Jessica
Barringer, and Kimberly Pierce; second row, Andrew Rollins,
Heather Dailey, Jennll'er Taylor, Kristen Slawter, Mary Frances,
Mary NaUy, and Matthew Evans; and third row, Robert Hof'flnan,
Tim Epling, Patrick Gibbs, Alyssa Hofl'mao, Anita Calloway,
Jonathan Avis, Amity Dixon, and Kelly Dalton.

MOSCOW (AP) - A chastened
President Mikhail S. Gorbachcv
today blamed himself for failing to
head off the hard-line Communist
coup and promised national elec tions for all government posts ,
including his own.
In an address to Soviet lawmakers meeting in emergency session,
Gorbachev also pledged to remake
a union sent reeling toward disinte gration in the aftermath of last
week's three-day coup.
Six of the 15 Soviet republics most recently Byelorussia on Sunday and the Ukraine on Saturday
- have declared their indepen dence.
Georgia took measures to cede
from the Soviet Union earlier this
year.
The coup has given a big boost
to independence drives in the three
Baltic republics - Lithuani~.
Latvia and Estonia. And Moldavia
is to consider formal secession
Tuesday.
In his speech to the Supreme
Soviet legislature, Gorbachev said
he had returned from his three-day
imprisonment that ended Wednesday to a "different country." The
legislators erupted in applause.
" Immediately after the Union
Treaty is signed, we must begin a

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FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BRs. LR,
eq.~ipped kitchen, fuel oil furnace, cent atr,
tun basement, attached garage.
/

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EXTRAORDINAAY-112 A. mil,- beautiful
large Jog home, 4 BAt, 2112 baths, LA,
kitchen, DR, FR. 3 firll!)laces. CaD 1or more
detaila.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
The director of the Governor's
Office of Appalachia has her office
in the state capital, but still lives
among the people she rCI'resents.
"My home is in Marietta," said
Nancy Hollister, fanner mayor of
that city. "My roots and origin are
in Marietta. I felt very strongly I
couldn'tlivc in Columbus."
So sbe spends three days in the
capitol, two days on the road in
Appalachia and weekends at home.
Ms. Hollister, 42, supervises
programs to help an area Gov.
George Voinovich called a "forgotten region of Ohio" during his
campaign for governor last year.
Voinovich appointed her to the
post.
Appalachian Ohio covers a 29-

nt

county region in the southeastern
quadrant of the state ranging from
Columbiana County on the north to
Clermont County on the west.
Those counties suffer from high
poveny and unemployment rates,
and have few urban areas and a
rugged geography. They generally
have fewer highways, water and
sewer systems, and more problems
with education and housing than
other parts of the state.
"We have several counties that
are recovering, but most are still
distressed by state standards," Ms.
Hollister said
The state provides help to the
area through money from the feder·
al Appalachian Regional Commission. The state has $5 million available this year and has received

~·

$280 million from the ARC since
1970.
The money is used mainly to
help with highway projects and
business development. When
matched by local and private
money, the federal money is
expected to generate as much as
$15 million for various projects
this year, Ms. Hollister said.
"The problems of the
Appalachian region didn't happen
overnight," she said. "There won't
be any solutions overnight. There
will be small victories."
Ms. Hollister said her contribution is 10 meet with local officials,
discussing their needs and prob·
lems. So far, she's visited 27 of the
29 cowtties.

..

FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL • Today was the
first day or school for student$ in the Meigs
Local School District and the E4stern Local
Scbool District. Pictured fll'f students arriving at

Pomeroy Elementary School as they go from
tbelr bus to the building. The Southern Local
School Dlstrkt wiD begin tomorrow.
~

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

r,

Pomeroy, Ohio

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DEVO'I'ED TO THE tNfERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARIM

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L . WINGETI'
l'ubllsher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller
AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should II&lt;&gt; less than 300
words long. All letters are sub!ect to edlllng and must II&lt;&gt; signed with
name- , address and telephone number. No unsigne-d letters will be pub·
II shed . Letters should twIn good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

lles.

Another familiar cycle;
maybe there is a difference
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By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondeat
WASHINGTON (AP) -The cycle is too familiar in the long agony of
western hostages in the Middle East - a note from the Beirut netherworld in which five Americans are imprisoned, a photograph, a man
released, then another, a surge of optimism that the rest will finally be
freed.
Then silence.
This time it is said to be silence with a purpose, a lull in the public
phase of negotiations to end the hostage situation but not a break in the
effon.
And this time, the dealings openly involve governments, not only
back-channel attempts at contact with the faceless kidnappers who hold
10 westerners missing in Lebanon. Iran, Srria, Israel and the United
States and other nations that are the homes o the hostages, all have been
involved. The United Nations is mediating efforts to exchange the captives for Muslim prisoners held by Israel.
But there also are unsettling parallels to what has happened before, as
promises have peaked and ebbed without an end to the ordeal. In the past,
delays have become dead ends. And once again, an international crisis has
erupted elsewhere, unrelated but diverting attention just as there seems to
be progress on the hostages.
This time it was the three-day Moscow coup that temporarily ousted
Mikhail S. Gorbachev. In earlier rounds, events ranging from aircraft
hijackings to the Penian Gulf crisis have pushed hostage release quests to
the backgrouod.
"It's uncanny," said Peggy Say, the sister of Terry Anderson, longest
held of the western hostages. Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent
for The Associated Press, was kidnapped in Beirut on March 16, 1985.
While the international focus was on Moscow, there were said to have
been diScussions Wednesday in Tehran on further steps toward a hoslageprisoner exchan¥e.
Iranian offic1als and leaders of Hezbollah, the Muslim organization
that links the militant factions holding the hostages, were said to be talking about the relay of information on seven Israeli servicemen missing in
Lebanon, some for as long as nine years.
Israel insists on that ,accounting as part of any har~ain on prisoners.
The Muslim militants who hold the hostages are seelcing the release of
more than 375 Arabs imprisoned by Israel. .
A U.S. official said the Iranian government had been worlcing privately
with United Nations Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar on the
hostages. The westerners are held by militant Muslim groups loyal to Iran,
where the government now is bent on improving its ties with the west.
"I think they've tried to be certainly more constructive," President
Bush said last Sunday. " ... There's a feeling around the world that it's
time to end all this.
"But we've still got a long way to go ... "
Bush said then that Perez de Cuellar was n01 pessimistic, but thought
that a release would lake more lime.
Since he came to office, Bush has tried repeatedly to gain Iranian help
in freeing the captive Americans, saying as he was inaugurated that good
wiU would beget $ood will.
While the administration's stated policy remains ''no deals,'' the president has encouraged U.N. efforts to bargain for what would amount to an
exchange of hostages for Israeli prisonen.
· That would end pan of a problem which, in different phases and forms,
has plagued the last three administrations.
The Tehran embassy hostage crisis helped _Ronald Reagan win the
White House; arms-for-hostages deals with Iran led to the worst scandal
oJ his administration after the proceeds were diverted into forbidden aid to
rebels in Nicaragua.
: President Jimmy Carter's bid for a second term was crippled by the
'tehran hostage crisis, 52 Americans held captive in the U.S. embassy for
444 days, until the hour Reagan took office.
: Reagan Said no deals, and threatened "swift and effective retribution"
aJainst hostage talcers. But tJ!ere was no way '? retalia~ when Muslim
factions in Lebanon began kidnappmg and holdmg Amencans and other
yZestemers. And there were deals; three Americans were freed while the
~eagan administration was sending secret arms shipments to Iran in 1985
and 1986.
; And a vestige of the earlier hostage crisis remains to be settled, with a
c!Jigressional inquiry due next month into allegations that the I980 Reagan campaign dealt with Iran to avoid an ''October surprise'' in which the
embassy hostages might have been released before election day. boosting
qarter's bid for re-election.

Monday, Augult 26, 1891
Page-2;_The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 26, 1991

The signs pointed ·to· a Soviet coup
wASHINGTON - The blips
on the nadar showed danger ahead
even during Mikhail Gorbachev's
honeymoon days of perestroika.
When Kremlinologists sift through
the debris of the Gorbachev era,
they will see why last week's coup
ip the Soviet Union was a given.
The Bush administration always
knew that it was taking a river-boat
gamble on Gorbachev, a man who
was as mistrusted in his own land
as he was deified in the West. But
Gorbachev and perestroika were
the only bets worth making.
There is strong reason to believe
that the last hand has not been
played, that the Soviet people
themselves will ante up, and next
time the winner wiU be different
The Soviet mood was described
as one of "hope, frustration, and
foreboding" in a report prepared
by Richard Fairbanks, former State
Department Ambassador-at-large
and a noted foreign-policy scholar.
Fairbanks wrote the report after an
extensive fact-finding tour of the
Soviet Union in 1990. President
Bush requested a copy and gave it
high marks. Fairbanks correctly
foreshadowed the coup when he

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CAA seeks accounting firm
New federal regulations require the Gallia-Meigs CAA to per·
fonn single agency audits of its programs. The agency is seeking an
accountinjl firm to perform this function. Interested licensed certified public accountants only are encouraged to participate in the
bidding process.
Requests for proposals arc available at the CAA's office, at 8010
N. Route 7, CltcSllR.
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Contact Sid Edwards at (614) 367-7341 or 992-6620 for more
information.

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Volleyball court completed

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A volleyball court bas now been completed at the General
Hartinger Part, according to Roger Williams of the Middleport ·
Recreation Department
Equipment for ute at the court will be available 10 the public and
may be signed out at the miniature golf stand throughout the
evening. Teams are also being sought for a volleyball lblimanlent
on September 21 and 22.

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EMS units make 8 weekend runs

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Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
eight calls for assistance over the weekend.
On Saturday at 10:57 a.m., Rutland unit responded to Meigs
Mine No. 2. David Gandee was taken from there to Holzer Medical
Center. At 5:23 a.m., SYJ11Cuse unit went to Pine Grove Road. for
Annetta Pierce. She was transpOI'ted to Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal.
At 9:22 p.m. on Saturday, Syracuse and Racine units went. to
State Route 124 for an auto accident. John Ingel and Glenna Eklich
were transpOrted to Veterans. Douglas Circle was treated but not
transported.
On Sooday ,at 3:54 a.m., Racine squad was sent to State Route
338. Claire Mams was taken to Holzer.
At 4:23p.m .• Middleport squad went to Flood Road. Kelly Tyree
was talcen to Veterans. At 5:38 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Butter·
nut Avenue. Cody Bartow was taken to O'Bicncss Memorial Hospital. At 8:09 p.m., Middleport squad went 10 South Fourth. Sarah
Osgood was talcen to Veterans. At 11:12 p.m., Racine squad went to
Bucktown Road. Trudy.~ was ~!~ken to Veterai]J.

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Conservatives have been understandably appalled by the job the
liberal media are trying to do on
the record of Ronald Reagan. In
half a dozen hard-cover books and
uncounted magazine articles and
newspaper commentaries they are
attempting to trash the whole
decade of the 1980s and Reagan as
its creator and symbol. To hear the
liberals talk, the '80s were an era of
glitz, sleaze and materialistic selfindulgence, presided over by a
half-senile ex-actor with a knack
for telling the white middle class
what it wanted to hear.
Luckily the Reagan record wiU,
in the long run, easily survive these
mud-gunners. Ronald Reagan's
main achievements - breaking the
back of America's worst inflation,
forcing through a divided Congress
the first major tax-rate reduction in
modern times, rebuilding the
nation 's defenses, launching the
longest economic boom in this century and compelling the Soviet
Union to recognize that it simply
could not compete with its American rival - together constitute the
legacy of a truly great president.

Meanwhile, I suggest that the
liberals pause and look over their
shou lder. The reputations of three
of the most imponant Democratic
presidents of modem times are disintegrating like sand castles in a
rising tide.
The one who is likeliest to hang
onto a few shreds of his vastly
exaggerated reputation is Franklin
D. Roosevelt. In his heyday Roosevelt inspired in many people
something close to idolatry; it is
only recently that the assessments
of some of his shrewder contempo·
raries have become widely known.
Keynes, for example, after a talk
with Roosevelt, privately dismissed
him as "an economic illiterate."
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. was
kinder, describing him as having
"a second-rate mind but a rust-rate
character."

It seems likely that history will
finally conclude that Roosevelt was
a clever politician with no firm
principles but a cheerful willingness to try anything that seemed
likely to work . He nevertheless
failed utterly to end the Depression,
but the war (which did) saved his

Twelv rdie in trqffic wrecks on
Ohio highways-over weekend

By William A. Rusher ·

reputation, by allowing him to preside over the successful Allied war
effon.
For Lyndon Johnson, not even
the liberals have much good to say
these days, althouJZh his Great
Society was (even more than Roosevelt's New Deal) the seed-bed of
most modem liberal policies. The
first volume of Robert Caro's
unfinished biography of Johnson
has already limned a character that
only a mother could love, and
future volumes can hardly defend a
presidential record on which not
even Johnson, for all his Just for
power, was willing to run for reelection.
But it is John F. Kennedy who,
among presidents since Roosevelt,
has been worshiped most blindly
by the liberal media, and appropriately enough it is Kennedy who is
today falling fastest in public
esteem. The latest book to evaluate
him - Thomas C. Reeves· "A
Question of Character: A Life of
John F. Kennedy" - is simply
devastating.
It wasn't ju~ the patho!ogical

womanizing. Keeves (a tormer
admirer of Kennedy, by the way) ;
demonstrates that Kennedy was a
chronic liar about everything from
his serious health problems to the
true authorship of his Pulitzer .
Prize-winning ''Profiles in :
Courage." As for his famous ·;_
exploit as aPT-boat commander, it ·
actually deserved a court-martial
rather than the mellal his managers .'
engineered.
'
Reviewing Reeves' book for ,
The American Speclator, the noted
British author Paul Johnson sums .
up John Kennedy as follows:
:.
"The truth is, President ·,
Kennedy had no moral character,
no real convictions, and no purpose .
other than the pursuit of power and '
pleasure. What he stood for was an .·.
invention, and when he fell to an
assassin's bullet, nothing of significance fell with him. We have long ::
known that, despite much conspiracy theory, his murder was purposeless and inconsequential. We now
know that his life was as meaning- "
Jess as his death."
'

By The Associated .,.._
Twelve people were killed in
weekend accidents on Obio roads
and highways, the State Highway
Patrol reported today.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNl)AY.
CINCINNATI - Michael
Daugherty, 28, of Williamsburg,
motorcyclist killed on a Hamilton
County road.
PORTSMOUTH - Francis J.
Copley, 62, of Portsmouth, passenger in a two-car crash on a city
street
WOOSTER - Robert Bowman, 44, of Creston, in an accident
on a Wayne County roacl.
COLUMBUS - Troy C. Fulkerson, 27, and Marcia D. Holcomb,
both of Columbus, in a motorcycle
accident.
NORWALK- .Halle A. Burrus, 16, of Norwalk. in an accident
on a Nortb.M001016~-.. · , -'
FREMONT- Michlel F. King,
39, of Bellevue, in an l)CCident on

Bush plays well, but only on the road

Twice in one August. President for that, Bush explained, as his
Bush had to interrupt his Kenneb- free -flying chief of staff, Air
unkport vacation to deal with emer- Sununu, nodded approvingly. And
gencies. And his handling of these anyway, his own Dr. Feclgood, Dr.
back-to-back crises tells us all we Michael Baskin, cheerleader-inneed to know about his presidency. chief of Bush's Council of EcoBush handled the international nomic Advisers, assures us that the
recession is over and recovery is at
.."emergency - the Soviet coup swiftly: He telephoned world lead- hand -so please disregard the lat·
By The Associated Press
. Today is Monday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 1991. There are 127 days ers, coordinated measured respons- est headlines about new layoffs in
es, even flew to Washington to your hometown.
left in the year.
Meanwhile, back in Washing·: Today's Highlight in History:
swear-in his new ambassador and
ton,
Bush's top Interior Department
dramatize
his
concern.
; On Aug. 26, 1920, the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guarBut Bush handled his domestic officials took the lead in the race to
anteeing American women the right to vote, was declancd in effect.
emergency- the plight of the job- cut-government spending. Er, well
&lt; On this date:
Jess middle-class victims of the actually it didn't happen in Wash;· In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius Caesar invaded Britain.
Reagan -Bush recession - even ington, it happened at a luxurious
;: In 1847, Liberia was proclaimed an independent republic.
·: In 1873, radio electronics pioneer Dr. Lee DeForest was born in Coun- faster: He simply declared that hotel overlooking the majestic
Grand Canyon. That's where InteCil Bluffs, Iowa.
there was no emergency.
rior Secretary Manuel Lujan decidPausing
between
golfing
and
;: In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa began erupting with increasingly
yachting, Bush rejected Congress' ed to convene an emergency meetfarge explOSIOnS.
;. In 1939, the fust televised major league baseball games were shown on bill to extend uncmploy~cnt bene- ing of his own top budget-trimexperimental slation. It was a double-header between the Cincinnati fits to the formerly hard-working mers. He new seven of his brightReds and the Brooklyn Dodgers ai Ebbets Field. The Reds won the fust people who once lived the Ameri- est brass out from Washington,
can dream but have now lost all but apparently secure in his belief that
game, 5-2, and the DodgeiS won the second, 6-1.
·. In 1957, the Soviet Union announced it had successfully tested an · their _hope. Can't bust the budget the El Tovar Hotel, being a threeIntercontinental ballistic missile.
;· In 1961, 30 years ago, the official International Hockey Hall of Fame
(ipened in Toronto.
'
. · In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson was nominated for a terin of
In IY'iK, Cardinal Albino Luciani of Venice was elected the 264th
&lt;ifflce in his own right at the Democratic national convention in Atlantic Pope of the Roman Catholic Church foUowing the death of Paul VI. The
new pontiff took the name Pope John Paul I.
pty,NJ.
In 1983, Soviet President Yuri V. Andropov offered to "liquidate" his
.- In 1971 , 20 years ago, New Jersey Gov. WiUiam T. Cahill announced
(he New York Giants football team had agreed to leave Yankee Stadium country's medium-range missiles as part of a superpower agreement on
arms reductions.
·
"
for a new sports complex to be built in East Rutherford.
:· In 1972, the summer OI~mpics opened in Munich, West Germany.
In 1987, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl said his country would
·: In 1974, Charles Lindbergh - the fust man to fly solo, non-stop destroy 72 Pershing rockets if Washington and Moscow were to scrap all
their intcnnediate-range nuclear weapons.
across
. the
. . .Atlantic - died at his home in Hawaii at the age of 72.

rfoday in history

.·

y

By Martin·Schram

star reson, presented just the right
ambiance for officials to figure out
how to cut 5 percent from their their jobs, lose their pensions and
own department budget, as the be at risk because they ~ave no
Office of Management and Budget health insurance. Those Have-Nots
has ordered. Surely it's better than who once thought they were living
asking our officials to try to think the American dream get little in
in their own offices in Washington; sympathy and less in substance
that, as we've seen, clearly doesn't from Bush and his fellow HaveGats (who live ~randly at our
work.
expense).
These muldle-AmericAns
Those Bush officials who
have
no
golden
parachutes to break
remained in Washington because
their
fall.
They
would
get more aid ,
they didn't merit a free-loading,
from
Bush
if
they
were
middlebudget-cutting jamboree were the
class
Kurds
or
Kuwaitis.
,
first to get the word of yet another
That
is
because
the
man
who
;
emergency: Our federal deficit has
again exploded without warning, variously promised us he would he •
the Congressional Budget Office our Education President, our Envi- :
ronmental President, our War-on-: :
announced. Our deficit will be Crime President and our Prosperity ~
$280 billion this y~, $362 billion President has turned out to be none ;
next
·
of the above.
'
Two-thirds of it is due to debt
Just I I years ago this summer, a. :
service on the whopping deficits of rather desperate presidential nomi- · '
the Reagan-Bush years of "cut- nee, Ronald Reagan, was afraid he :
our-taxes-now, you-pay-later." could never be elected on his own. :
One-third is due 10 the bailout of - and 11:0 he was ready to create a, ;
the only Have-Nots Bush doesn't · co-pres1dency, where he would 1
mind bailing out, those savings- divide the presidential duties right 1
and-loan instituti~;ns whose hard down the middle with a new vice
times were caused by their own president who would be his old
gluttony, and whose officers made adversary and our old president,
out like bandits in the '80s while Gerald Ford. At the last second,
our deregulators demurely averted hotter heads ~vailed.
their eyes.
Today we re closer than we evp
So it goes in the presidency of were to a co-presidency. George
George Herbert Walker Bush: Bush is our Intemadonal President..
Those middle-class Americans who We are still looting fa our Domesworked hard all their lives may lose tic President
.:
•
'

1

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................. .30
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 1/4
AT&amp;T................................39
· BOI)
Evins ........................18 1/2
Channing Shop..................21 1/2
City Holding ..................... l4 114
Federal Mogul... ................14 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;:R ................ .38
Key Cenwrion ................. .14 In.
Lands' End ...................... 20 l/8
Limited Inc...................... 21 3/4
Multin)edia Inc .................28 l/2
Rax Rosllurant ................ .13!32
Robbins&amp;Myer.~ .............. .32 3/4
Shoney's lnc .................... .l7 1/4
Star Bank ......................... 23 3/4
Wendy lnt'L. ....................9 l/2
Worthington Ind. ............. 27 tn.
StDclc nporiJ on till 10:30 •·"'·
fiiOits providld b1 Bl11111, Ellis
lllllll.Dtwl of Gtzlllpolif.

The Daily Sentinel
(118PIU. . .)
A IMvllloll et M•lllmotlla, Joe.
Publlob.;, every 111tern0011, ·Monday
tllrouJh Frkloy, U1 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by Ute Ohio Valley Pub-lllhlng Company!Muftbnotllo, loc..
Pomeroy, Ohlo C5789, Pb. 992·2156. s.cond cla11 P&lt;lltac• paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Membtr: Tht Alaoclated Press, Inland Dally Prets A11odat1on and the
Ohio NowapE Alooctatloll. Natloall
Mvortlllnr
,....totlve, Branltam

Newipaper
eo, 733 Tltlrd Av.. uo,
New York, New York 10017.
,I

.,-.,....-

POSI'MAS'J'ER:
Soncl · - chlltpl
1o
'llto Dally Setltlllol. 1U Cot111 St.
POmeroy, Oltlo Ciml.

OM Wl!olc ...... .......: .....................h.IIO
One Month ............ : .......................15
One YNI' .. ;........... :........... " ......liD

IINOU:·OOPY
Pilla!:

oauy ...................................

25_Ce•••

Thousands of people learn
~ow to -prepar:e rincome tax
returns
H&amp;R Block· and
' .•_..
.....:_earn money ·u iilcome tax
prepaiers. H&amp;R Block, the
: world 'a largest income tax
:\~aration
offen its
""Income 1ix Coone startiag

Su~~~er~b.rlnold•trtitalopaytltew·
remit 11 ttdvaac:e ·~ to
TbeDatlySeltlletouJ,forl2monltl
bull. Credit wtlllte ..... ...,w Mdt
No

·

, ,,

.,.....,lpt_ ~~y mall permitted 1n
,

Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will meet Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the township building.

Betty Baker and the Joyful Sounds
of Kingsport, Tenn. Servic~s will
begin at 7:30p.m. each evenmg.
CatfiSh tourliament slated
AAtomeet
The Middleport Recreation
The Pomeroy Group of AA will Department will sponsor a Catf~
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Tournament at the Rutland AmenSacred Heart Catholic Church. Fur- can Legion Pond on Saturday.
ther information may be obtained September 7 and Sunday, Septemby calling 992-5763.
ber 8. Applications and information
Garden Club to meet
are available from the deparunent
The Wildwood Garden Club office (992-6782) or from Dennis
will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. McKinney (742-2279).
at the Morning Star Church. Rev. Golf outing planned
William Middleswarth will show
The Meigs Coun!f Chamber of
slides. Everyone is to bring cook- Commen:e will hold Its annual golf
ies.
tournament at the Meigs County
Dllcher-Reeves reunion
Golf Course on Thursday at I p.m.
The Dilcher-Reeves family For information, call 992-5005.
reunion will be held Sept. 8 at I: 30
p.m. at the Pageville Town Hall.
A meeting of the Mother's
Bring a covered dish.
Against Drunk Driving will be held
Thursday at 6 p.m. at 101 In. West
Second St., Pomeroy. Additional
Revival scheduled
Revival services wiU be held at information about the organization
Full Gospel Lighthouse in Pomeroy or the upcoming meetingmay be
from September I through 7 with obtained by calling 74:2-2933.

lice prOblems provide students
with a thorough understanding
of each tax topic included in the
course. Students
I learn howI to
handle in~s ngly comp ex
income tax situations as the

also prepues them for a rewardina career
·
aiiil pnK:- ,
ar}ordable fee includes

interested in more
information about the H&amp;R
Block Income Tax _Coune may
· cootaet the H&amp;R Block offiCe at
992-6674 in Po!Moy.

couneprogreises.

·

.
Ella-,: :::=::::?::::::::::~:::~!:/::\:::;=: · •: ~~~~.;:,:,. clisCussion

.
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Ill,_.,••- ••• •""" ' '

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'

Veterans Mt~~~orlal
SA TIJRDA Y ADMISSIONS Cecil Roseberry, Jr., Pomeroy;
Glenna Ekleck, Middlepon: John
Ingels, Middlepon; Paul Landermilt, Pomeroy; and Dwayne Black,
Middlepon.
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES·
None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 13 -June
Beatty. Donna Brown, Donald
Crance, Brian Donn ally, Hailey
Ebersbach, Mrs. Donald Hall and
son, Patricia Haynes, Allie Holley, .
Janet Miller, Ruby Queen, Beverly
Schultz, Stephanie Shamblin and
Kaylin Spradling.
Births Aug. 23- Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Crabtree, daughter, Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Martin, son,
Jackson.
Discharges Aug. 14 - Mrs. ·
Mark Casey and daughter, Beatrice .
Eisnaugle, Catherine Lewis, Mrs.
Rex Phillips and son, Pamela Rhodes, Roger Ritchie, Roy Smith,
Continued from page 1
Teresa VanMeter, and Mrs. Scou
Wroblewslci and son.
bachev' s government.
Births Aug. 24- Mr. and Mrs.
-New Soviet Defense Minister
Yevgeny Shaposhnikov told Everett Bowers, son, Coolville. Mr.
reponers he would reorganize the and Mrs. Richard FeUure, daughter,
Crown City.
general staff.
Discharges Aug. 25 - Mrs.
"The most important issue fac- .
Brian
Crabtree and daughter, Krising us is what to do with the army
ten
Grimm,
Mrs. Steven Martin
in those republics which have sepaand
son,
Mrs.
David McCormick
rated from the union," he said.
and
son,
Mabel
Peterson and
On Sunday, he said he would
Amanda
Trout
seek to replace four-fifths of the
Births Aug. 25 - Mr. and Mrs.
top officer corps with younger,
Gary
Spriggs, son, Oalc Hill. Mr.
more liberal military commanders.
and
Mrs.
Roger Swann, son, Gal-The acting speaker of the
lipolis.
Supreme Soviet, Ivan Laptev,
announced that the government
newspaper Izvestia had been made
The second largest natural lake in
independent The state news agen- the United States is the Great Salt
cy Tass also said it intended to Lake in Utah, which is 1,361 square
become independent, with an elect· miles.
ed management.

Gorbachev...

__ Meigs announcements- ":~u~h~~:!atohio

_''·~,:~".~~= .... ·,. !:'oi:~~~-::~
, tosavemo!IC)'ontheirtaxe8and
~r~.=:ax~~~~~ed~~
1c

~aw.......,.:.,..'.' ..,.:.....;...........l.!!-: ·.·. area
•52 w..... ,.............,.,..,,., .......... - · ·
·,

included World War II, European
1beater and Korea. He was a member of the American Legion Post
888, Columbus.
He married Rosemarie Reg
Stover in Gallipolis, on Feb. 9,
1957 and she survives with three
brothers, Melvin and Clinton
Stover, of Bidweil,and Noel Stover
of Patriot; two sisters, Irene Wiseman of Marmet, W.Va., and Janice
Ford of Anderson, Ind.
One sister Floe Grounds, preceded him in death.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m. Wednesday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, with Rev. CJ. Lemley officiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Military
graveside rites will be conducted
by the Vinton American Legion
Post161.
Nephews will serve as pallbearers.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.

Hospital news

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA

ideal cor people who want 10

serv4ce,

•.rna._,~-- ~ c~_..,.
_. _
_.or~ce 11 _.

~.,-.~~-·(ii;;_,

Butcher Bull:
Utilities, 57.00-63.50.
Canner/Cutler, 58.00-Down.
Veal Calves:
Choice/prime, 87.00-96.00.
Medium, 82.00-90.00.
Springer Cows:
600.00 &amp; down.
Cow/Calf Com.:
850.00-down.
Baby Calves:
145.00 &amp; down.
Butcher Sows:
400-600 lbs., 38.00-43.00.
Top Hogs:
220-250 lbs., 46.00-47.00.
Butcher Boars:
34.00-36.50.
Pigs by Head:

testbooks and supplies. Graduatet receive certificates of
Achievement and continuing
education units f(CEU's).
Quaiithe
lied graduates o
coune may
be o1fered job interviews with
H&amp;R Block but are under no
obligation to accept employ-

from

r1er. iNIY

weo~~.

Gallipolis Stockyards Co.
August 17, 1991
MediWD Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
250-300 lbs., 90.00-108.00;
300-SOO Ibs., 86.00-102.00;
500-700 lbs., 72.50-95.50;
700-Up 66.00-77.00.
Medium Frame, I &amp; 2 Heifers:
~50-300 Ibs., 80.00-93.00;
300-500 lbs., 73.50-87.00:
500-700 lbs., 65.00-83.50;
700-Up 60.00-71 .50.
Butcher cows:
Utilities, 48.50-52.50.
Canner/Cuttm, 52.00-Down.
Light weight low grade cows,
47.00-Down.
Heifereues, Up to 66.00.
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
300-800 Ibs. 60.50-74.50.

H&amp;R Block Offers Income Tax
Course In Pon:teroy

8liJIIalll'ftON 8.\1'1111

~·

I

-----Livestock report----

Ohio 18 in Seneca County.
SATURDAY
RAVENNA -Joann Z. Dim·
ling, 45, of Gates Mills, in a threecar accident on Ohio 303 in
Ponage County.
XENIA - Benjamin A. Darbyshire, 22, of Da):ton, when his
motorcycle crashed on a Greene
County road.
MARIETTA- Douglas A.
Kuhn, 26, of Whipple, and Dou'las
A. Morrow, 24, of Columbus, 111 a
one-car accident on Ohio 821 in
Washington County.
FRIDAY
RAVENNA - Wanda L.
McKinley, 49, of Suffield, in a
three-vehicle accident on a Portage
Coooty road.

David Rankin, Alex Brown, and Patty Nally; second row, Rebecca
Scott, Shawn DaUey, Nancy Nally, Howard B. J, Ervin, m, LeaDDa
Rowe, Mike O'Nail, and Michelle O'Nail; and tbird row, JonatbaD
Avis. Thomas McKay, Shawn Rollins, Stephanie Hofl'man, John
Riley, Keltb Hunt, Jeremy Buckley, Toby Curtis, and Chastity
Jude.

·Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Owen (Foe) Haynes of Romance,
W.Va., Mrs. Larry (Francis)
Naaman Lewis Stapleton, 59, of Anderson of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Route I, Ewington, died Sunday, Mrs. Peter (Jo) Fitch of Marietta,
Aug. 18, 1991 at Holzer Medical Mrs. Roscoe (Hilda) Payne of Sissonville, W.Va .., and Mrs. Frank
Center, following a long illness.
He was born Aug. 28, 1931 in (Myrtle) Goble of Batavia.
He was preceded in death by
Accoville, W.Va., son of the late
Luther and Mary Wheatley Staple- one daughter, Sandra Faye; two
brothers, Charles and Edward; and
ton.
He \vas a retired bridge con- one sister, Audrey Comer.
Funeral serv1ces will -be construction worker and vice president
ducted
11 a.m. Tuesday at tbe Vinof the Raccoon Valley Sportsman
ton
Baptist
Church. Burial will be
Club, Wilkesville.
in
Vinton
Memorial
Part:.
He married Willa Dunaway StaFriends may call at the McCoy·
pleton on Dec. 10, 1955 at Diamond, W.Va., and she survives Moore Funeral Home, Vinton,
with three sons, Paul and Kenneth today from 3-9.
Stapleton of Ewington, and Jesse
Stapleton of the horne; two daugh- Ira H. Stover
ters, Mrs. Jeny (Peggy) Johnson of
Galion and Mrs. John (Tracy)
Ira H. Stover, 64, of Route I,
Herzner of Albany; seven grand- Vinton, died Saturday, Aug. 24,
children; two brother.~, Damon Sta- .1991 at Veterans Hospital, Huntpleton of Pomeroy, and Thomas ington, W.Va.
Stapleton of Londonderry; eight
He was born Feb. 18, 1927 in
sisters, Mrs. Carl (Opal) Fox of Ameagle, W.Va., son of the late
Lake City Fla., Mrs. Raymond Elijah and Minnie Peny Stover.
(Kathleen) Johnston of Accoville,
He retired from the U.S. Army
W.Va., Mrs. Darrell (Anna) Har- on July I, 1968~ following 23 years
bour of Salt Rock, W.Va., Mrs. of service. HIS tour of serv1ce

Hours of operation at the Middleport Pool will change due to the
start of school.
The pool will be open from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday and during its regular hours of operation on Saturday, Sun·
day and Monday, with Monday being the last day of operation for
the year.
Admission fees remain unchanged.

~

LARGEST SINGLE BUYER • Thlrty·ftve ammllil were purclwed by the Home National Btlllk or Racine at tbe 1991 Meip
County Junior Fair livestock sale. Here Tom Wolfe, president,
center, poses with tbe aroup of youngsters from which the bank
purchased animals after presenliDg each one witb a cbeck. They
are lett to right, front, Jeremy Smitb, Jamie Drake, Jessica Barringer, Matthew JWltke, Franklin Pierce, Jason Pulllu, (Wolfe)

Naaman L. Stapleton

Pool schedule changed

i

Shattering the myth of presidents

· EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
f~r The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than 25 years.

•

there is not a political consens~~ to
support the pain of any trans1Uon
period." Fairbanks was struck by
the lack of political leaders who
could rally public suppon to make
the dramatic changes everyone
conceded were essential.
The old communist religion was
variously referred to with scorn and
cynical humor, but the reformers
got little respect either. "Gar·
bachev and the other top leadership
are clear! y very unpopular, both
with the man-in-the-s treet and
among leading cadres," the repon
reads. "There is some understanding, however, at least among the
top officials and more informed
intellectuals, of the magnitude of
the problems facing them."
One of the hallmarks of the
Soviet's embryonic democracy was
growing freedom of religion. For
Gorbachev, religion provided a
central authority for the masses, a
glue for glasnost and perestroika.
Fairbanks noted the wide belief
that the "younger generation has
no moral authority or moral precepts upon which to fall back, and
religion is seen as filling part of
that void."

CODtllluecl from p•e I
Highway PairoJ, Johi! C. Ingels, 40, of Middleport, pulled out to '
pass a car driven by Oeorp D. Circle, 77, of Racine, and pulled
mto the left front of Circle's car.
Ingels and a JIUIIeiJ&amp;IIr, Glenna J. Bklich, 40, of Middleport, were
transporled-by the Meip County E~~~Crgency Medical Service to
Veterans MemiXillibJiill wbcR .they were lllled In good condi·
lion as·of Mooday momlng. Neither Ingels nor Eklich were wearing
a helmet at the lime of the lli:cidcnt.
· Circle was unin.llnd in die ICCidenL
The Racine ancfS~ute BMS aquads responded to the accident
Damage to Ingels 1975 Haiey Davidson Soft Tail wu reported
as modelatc. Daniage to Circle's 1987 Fonl Escort was listed as
light.
Ingels was cited by the patrol roc improper passing and failure to
prove financial responsibility.
.

.

Religion may also have been the
way Gorbachev hoped to retam
control of the rickety republics
with their breakaway visions that
made the Russian Russian overseers apoplectic. Ultimately, the
KGB 's timing was precipitated by
fast-moving and potenttally irreversible developments in the
republics.
.
What now? Even more than a
year ago, SoviCl•"" a number of
unattractive opileal. One of the
most often heard by Fairbanks was
a "devolution into 16 separ~te
countries, rather than one Sovtet
Union." The jest was that if perestroika failed, the country would
have "perestrelka" - which in
Russian means "fire fight," a reference to civil war.
.
After the coup last week, Fairbanks told our associate Michael
Binstein that the Soviet Union now
had the potential to tum into 15
Beiruts.
HERE'S THE BEEF- Cattle
prices have been plummeting at the
~~------------~~ feedlot, yet meat prices are rising at
the supermarket. Agricu_lture
Deparunent figures show that the
spread between wholesale and
retail prices for beef is so wide that
it set a record in the last six
months. Sen. Bob Kerrey, 0-Neb.,
has asked the Juslice Department to
investigate possible price fiXing in
the meat industry while there is a
surplus of cattle on the rnarlcet.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Once
again, President Bush has been rescued from the August doldrums by
an international crisis. Last year 11
was the Persian Gulf, and this year
it is the Soviet Union. Bush loves a
challenge, as long as it is an international challenge. Now he has one
more disttaction to keel,&gt; him from
coming to tetms with hu domestic
policies, or the lack thereof. Not
since the Great Depression has the
threat to the American economy
and way of life been greater. There
are troubles abroad that demand the
president's attention, but there are
troubles at home that are equally
urgent.

,.1 _

an

!

wrote, •'The feeling of coming
the edges with a weak
center is pervasive."
The report contained a warning
about the restive military, and hinted that power, perts and privilege
could be the embers of an overthrow. ''There is also widespread
fear about the military situation,
particularly with the regard to the
hordes of both officers and enlisted
men returning from Easte'rn
Europe," Fairbanks said. "There is
no housing available for them, and
no obvious jobs or other career
paths for the officer corps at middle
levels who have been Jiving by
communist standards 'high off the
hog' in Eastern Europe."
These military men were the ·
casualties of Gorbachev-engineered
reforms. They were returning in
droves to temporary tent cities
around Moscow. Their families and
children had tasted a better life,
attended better schools, enjoyed
better food and were better clad.
The Soviets were warily eying
the various experiments of Eastern
Eullope for clues to their own
future, Fairbanks wrote. "They
(Soviet leaders) are fearful that
apart around

---Local briefs•.. - - - .

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.••• &gt;'• '

'

•

.. ... . ' • • ._ . . .

~-

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
near 70. Otance of rain 20 percent.
Tuesday, partly cloudy and hazy
with a slight chance of showers or
thunderstorms. High in the upper
80s. Chance of rain 30 percent
Exteaded forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
Hot and humid with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms each
day. Highs through the period from
the upper 80s to the mid 90s. Lows
from the mid 60s to the low 70s.

SomttfU111J (jooa's ~ways Cooijng Jilt

MASON
FAMILY
1
RESTAURANT
Localld on Rt. 33 betide Mason Exxon and Muon Moll!, 1111011, WY
Sunday lhru Thunday, 6:30 ~m-10 pm; Fricllly &amp; Sllllrllly, 6:30 n-11 pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIAL"&gt;
111oncluy rriclay. 11 a.m . to 3 Jl

111.

'nJZIDAT It TIIUJI.IDA1', can DPU UIIIIER liiiAT I'IID
noll CIIILDIIU'I DJIV, (EXCWDES DRINK &amp; DESSERI')
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. • '

MONDAY· Grilled Ham &amp;Cheese, French Fries, Salad
TUESDAY ·Sloppy Joes, Cole Slaw, French Fries
WEDNESDAY • Chopped Steak, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
THURSDAY • Bacon Burger, French Fries, Salad Bar
FBIPAY - Country Fried Steak, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar

m~~ose

~

446 4524

U .DO IAIUIN *lllll[S SATUDr I SUNDAY
U .OO INI8AIN NIQtT MSMY

..

�""

. -.

~ '

-

.,

.'

·.

.

-.

·~ ·

·

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-5

Pt"meroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Purt~er

Monday, August 26, 1991

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Tom
Purtzer wasn 'I really bothered
when he blew that tournament in
Tucson.
And it bothered him that he
wasn't bothered.
"Sure, I was disappointed,"
Purtzer said of that loss eight
months ago at the start of the season. I felt like I let one ~et away.' •
And he did, maktng double
bogey on the fllJIII hole.
"But it didn't bother me like it
should have. I got to thinking about
iL I figured out I wasn't that bothered because I knew how I was
playing and I knew I'd have another chance before the year was
over."
Now, this is from a man who is
respected by his peers for owning
one of the finest swings in professional golf, but who had - at that
time - only three victories in a 17-

New York Mets edge Cincinnati 2-1
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Reds
manager Lou Piniella had no beef,
with umpire Gary Darling or anyone else.
Left fielder Kevin McReynolds
made a perfect throw and Darling
made the right call - out! - cutting down Cincinnati's big chance
in the ninth inning Sunday night
and leaving the Mets with a 2-1
victory.
The Reds, trying for their first
three-game sweep at Shea Stadium
since July 1986, missed an oppar. tunity to close to within seven
games of Los Angeles in the NL
West. The Dodgers lost earlier in
the day, but the World Series
champions could not capilalize.
"It was a tough game to lose,
but we played well and so did
they," Piniella said. "I've got no
complaints."
Pmiella, who recently charged
that Darling was biased against his
· club, did not criticize anyone after
. the loss. Piniella, Darling and the
umpires' union took their dispute
· to court, where there has been a
suit and a countersuit
There was no argument this
time after McReynolds made a
good play that made Darling's job
easy. After pinch-hitter Mariano
· · Duncan led off the ninth with a single, he tried to go to third when

I
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iust their sixth victory in 32 games.
Cone ( 11-10) gave up seven hilS,
struck out seven and left after eight
' innings. Franco took over to srart
· the ninth.
"I'm relieved. It's been a long
time," Cone said after his first victory since July 29, a span of three
losses and one no-decision . • 'I
don't consider I'm in a slump. The
last three games I've pitched have
been good."
The Reds won the first two
games of the series by a combined
score of 13- I, and the crowd
already was booing when Cone
be(!an the game by walking Herm
Wmningham and giving up a single
to Hal Morris. But Cone escaped
that flTSt-and-third, no-out jam and
allowed his only run in the second
on Glenn Braggs' double and Luis
Quinones' bloop single.
Garry Templeton, batting .201
at the srart of the game, went 3-for3 for the Mets. He tripled home the
go-ahead run off Randy Myers (5II) in the fourth inning after a twoout wallc to Gregg Jefferies.
Jefferies bit a two-out home run,
his ninth, in the second inning. It
was the first risht-handed homer
for the switch-hitter since July 23,
1990.
Myers. making his first start
since leaving a game Aug. 12 after
two innings because of soreness in
his left bicep, went six innings. He

gave up six hilS, struck out two and
wallced two.
"Both starters pitched well.
Cone has had a lot of success
against us," Piniella said after
Cone improved to S-1 lifetime
against the Reds.
The Mets went 3-3 on their
homestand against St. Louis and
Cincinnati after going 0-10 on the
worst 'road trip in team history.
New York avoided falling into fifth
place in the NL East behind
Philadelphia, and plays in Houston
toniRhL
·
• If we'd lost tonight and headed
back on the road, it would've been
bad," MeiS manager Bud Harrelson said. "Now. we can make
things happen."
One thing that will not happen is
that Dwight Gooden won't mak.e
his next scheduled start Tuesday
night at the Astrodome. He left last
Thursday's game because of a
shoulder problem, and the Mets
will hold him out for one srart for
precautionary purposes.
The MeiS said Gooden has muscle weakness in the front pan of the
shoulder. the team did not specify
when it expected Gooden to pitch
again.
"I've never had it before,"
Gooden said of the injury. "We all
feel that after missing one start, I'll
be OK."

I

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Lewis runs 'race of his life' in 'WTFC meet
By ENRICO JACOMINI
AP Sports Writer
TOKYO (AP) - Carl Lewis
knew that for all his world championships and Olympic gold medals,
he had to prove himself again.
He may have proved that he's
the best of all time.
At age 30, eight years after

'

I

Chris. Sabo_. pinch-hitting for the
ftrst ume this season, smgled to left
field with one out
McReynolds, who had moved
from center field to left at the srart
of the .inning .as part of several
defensive swuches, took a few
slow steps toward ~ ball and then
charged. He ptclced u up barehanded and his throw nailed Duncan by
a split-second.
"I just looked up and saw him
going," McRernolds said. "That's
more or less it '
. .
Both Duncan and Pmtella
thought it was worth tryinsto ~et
the potential tying run to third wtth
one out.
" We lost because I got thrown
out at third, but it wasn't a bad
play," Duncan said. "I saw him go
slowly for it, and I tried to put the
pressure on him."
Piniella agreed, saying, "It's a
heads-up play. It took a perfect
throw to get him.''
Franco retired pinch-hiller Joe
0iivc~ on a popup for the fi;Dal out
and hts 23rd save, preservmg the
victory for David Cone.
New York is S0-0 when leading
after eight innings. The Cardinals,
with the exact same record, are the
only other team in the majors not to
blow one lilce that.
Cone won for the first time in
nearly a month and sent the Mets to

I
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sprinting to his first world championship gold medal, he ran the
greatest I 00 meters in the history
of track and field on Sunday. A
crowd of 60,000 that included the
Emperor of Japan went wild and
acclaimed him as the hero of the
World Track and Field Championships.

Lewis goes into the books as the
new world record -holder in the
men's 100 meters after winning in
9.86 seconds. He's also the fust
winner of an individual gold medal
in each of the three world championships.
"It feels great to be 30 and run
the race of my life," he said.

Scoreboar(l
Tuesday•sgames

NATIONAL LEAGUE
laetem Dl•ldon

Tum
WLPcLGB
PrrTSBURGH 7.1 51 .591
SL Louil .......... (j/ 55 .S49
5

Chicoso
......... 62 61 .504
New York
....... 60 63 .481
PltiladclpiUo ...... 60 63 .488
MOIIUOOI
.........
.4IO

so n

Western Dl"illon
Twn
W L PeL
Los Anad.. .. .... 68 S5 ..153
Allanla
........... (j/ 56 .545
CINCINNATI . " 63 .411
San Fnncilco ...... 60 63 .411
San Dieso ........ 60 64 .484

Houitm

......... .St

1o.5
12S
125
22

GB
I
I
a
8.5

72 .41S

MOIIUOOI5.HOIIIl&lt;llll
SL Louit 7, 1M Anp 3

Plllladolplila (lltJIIIII t -4) at Clnclnnoll (Saolord 1-l), 7:35p.m.
San Dleao (G. Harrla ._4) at Pllubul'lh (T•H• 1-4), 7•35
Montreal (Haney 2- ) at Atluu
(Re,_o :Z.O), 7:40p.m.
Los Anp1co ~ S.2) Ol Chicogo
(Sutoillfo 4-4), !,OS p.m.

1....

Now Ycd (Fanand.e:z 1-3) at HCIJIIOO
(llamilcb 1-1), 1:35 p.m.
Son FranciJco (Biadt 9-12) II SL LouiJ
.(8. Smilh 11·7), B:lS p.m.

Tuesday's pmes
Loa An_aelca (R. Martinez I 5·8) at
o.;..1o (Sc.tlan 5-6), Z::ZO p.m.

San DittO (Boaell·l) at PUUburah
(L Smllb It-t~ 3:15 P."'Phlladclp•ll (Rutnn 3-4) al Clnc:lnnoll (S&lt;uddtl' 4-4~ 7:35p.m.
Montreal (Nabbolz 2-6) 11 Atlanta
(Leibnndl12-10), 7,40 p.m.
New York (Whilehutlt S-9) at HooMn
(Kite H); S:3S p.m.
San Franc:iaco (McOelhn 3-1) at St.
Louil (Tewlubwy 1·9), Boll p.m.

II

AMERICAN LEAGUE

I!I

W

L PeL
......... ,. 61 57 .544

Team
Dc:Uoil
Toronl&lt;&gt;

B,.,.,

r

I

Milwaukee

I''
'I

New Yc:d.
Baltimore

I '

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

CLEVELAND

Te..
Minnaou

Chi&lt;or&gt;

61
62
60
56
52
41

S7 .544
62
64
66
72

.500
.484
.459
.419
11 .333

Western Dl'lllon
.......

.........

Oaklwl
...........
T.. •
KePt Oty .......
Scaulc
...........
Califomia .........

W
75
61
68
64
63
64
61

GB

L
51
57
58
59
60
61
63

Pd.
.595
.540
.540
.520
.512
.512
.492

5.5

1.5
IO.l
15.l
Z6

GB
7
7
9.5
10.5
10.5
13

Saturday's scores
Dolroi17, Scaule

z

New Yadl6, T...,.. 5

·.'
~:

.:••·
'•

~
~

'••

'••
...,

•'

••"
•
•
•

••'
'

•

Cte.,!allli:I,Cblca&amp;O 1
MiJ,waubc 1, Oakllnd 0
~cu S, Bal&amp;imore 2
Kanau City I, Tau I
Ctlifomia 1, 8aotan 0

Sunday's scores
T...,..o ll,New Yadl7
Boltim... 7, Mim&gt;-3
[)oboit4, Scaulo 3
.
1 ...,s,K....,c;ly4, 11 mnings
Ctliftmia 9,llaolon 5
Mllw•ulteo I, !&gt;UJIIIll Z
ca..olallliJ,Citlaipt

Tonight's cames

Telll (1(. Bniwu 8-10) at New Yadl

&lt;Piu!J!'.,!.Z).; ~il-9) at BoltimOIO (D
1..,..,. 4-4), HS p.m.

Mlo- (Tapaolll·7) al Cte•elallll (OUO 1-:l)j 7-.35 p.m. v ···- Cil
CIIJ&lt;.t.. lllouiJI 7-7) ,, - - y
(SabelhaJoil 9-6), 1:35 p.m.
Bot lOll (C!emont 1:Z.I) 11 Oaklond
(MoGle !:Z.7).10:05 p.m.
·•
Milwaul:oe (lanPWl t-0) " Sutde
(KrooF IQ.6J,I0:0Sl.m.
.
.
Deuoit (Lcilcr -2) at Cahlamll
(Onho t-5),10:3Sp.m.

.727, 3.69; OuUicbon, DeU'oit, 16-6,
.727, 4.12; Stonlerayrc, Toronto, IZ-S,

.706, 3.57; Finley, Cali!omia, 15· 7, .682,
3.90; l..an&amp;•ton, Calllomia, IS -7, .682 ,

3.23.
STRIKEO!ITS - R lohn110n, Scat·
lle, 188; Clemens, Boston, 173;
Tcua, 1.53; McDowall, Chicago, 51;

Rr••·

C.ndiotti.,

Toronto, 140; Lanpton, Cali-

National League

fomia, t39;Swlndel0 Ctemand, IJS.
~AVES.- &amp;kersley, Oakland,,36;

BA1TING - T. Gwynn. San Dicto.
.32&amp;; Morrlt, Claclnnall, 323; Pcnd.l•
ton, AtJ..nt.a, .311; Bonilla, PltUbuqh,

rtia, 31; Reardon, Boaton, 31; Honlr.a,
Toronto, 29; Thipn. Chieaao. 27; Ol-

A.,uten, Minn-.., 33; !Wvcy, Califor·

.31!; Butler, l..ol Angeles, .314; JDae, St.
Louit, .313: W. Clatk. San francisco,
.310.
RUNS - 'Butler, Lot Angclca, 81;

son. Baltimore. 26.

Sandbcra, Chicaao, II; Bonilla, PlllJ-

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Atlanta, '76; J, Bell, PltUburah, 7'i
Poncllcton , Atlanta, 75; 0. Smith, St.
LoW., 75.

Tonl&amp;bt's games

Dl~ll.lon

Major league leaders

burJh, 17j Jolwon. New YOJt, 71; Gam.

Sunday's scores
Pltbburahl, Saa l'riDciKo 3
SL LoiW 5, 1M Anadco 2
s.. Die&amp;• 12, Clia.. 9
l'dclnl...14,- 0
PltiladclpiUa 6, Allanlo 5
New York 1, Cladrmatll

Eutem

Boaton (Gardtner S-6 ) at Oakland
11·8), 10:05 p..m.
Detroit (Ccnuu 2-4) n California
(llnloy !'S-7), 10,35 p.m.
Mil:waukee (Augult 9-S) It Seattle
(DW&gt;cia I(). I), 10,35 p.m.

17

Cincinnati 7, New Y ad: 0
San DicJo 4, auc..ao I
Son Froncioco 5, PllllborJh I
Plilladdpllio 6, Allama 5

•

(Aquino 6'2), 1:35 p..m.

(Welch

Saturday's scores

I

Texaa (Joac Ouunan 8-.S) It New
Yod (P. P=z 1· 1), 7:30p.m.
Tomnto (Juan Guzman 4-2) at Balti mOfti (Rhoda~ 0.0), 7:35p.m.
Mln.a~la (Morrla U -9) al C~ve­
lallll (SwtnUI 7-U), 7:35 p.m.
Chicoao (Al...,.l -1) 11 Ka:uu City

SfOLl!N BASES - R. Jlcnd....,.,
OokWtd. 48; Rainco, Chi"BO. 43; R. AI..
mar, Toronto, 4(}, Polcnia, Calilom.ia, 38;
Cuyler, Detroit,. 31; White, TOJ'OI'Ito, 30;
Fnnco, T01.u, 2.5.
PITCHING (II dcciaion&amp;) - Htnncnw:, Deln&gt;i~ 9·2. .Ill, 272; Klinll, Oatland, 9-3, .750, 4.21; EriWon, Minne&amp;..
ta, 16-6, .717, 3.22; Haaketh, Bm:tm, 8-3,

RBI - W. Clark, San Fl'l.llcilco, 96;
Bondt. Plllaburah, 91; McGriff. San
Oicao,ll ; Johnson, New York, 81;
BonUII, rtttlburall, H ; DaWIOO, Otiea·
1•· 8&amp;, Gan1, Allanla, 78.
IDTS - T. Owynn, San Di~o, 160;
Blltlcr, l..ol Anlclaa. 149; Bonilla, Pllta~urah, 141; ~aco, Chicaso. 137; ~ ­

a.m. San Fnncueo, 131; Jc.e, St Lou.il,
136; Pmdleton, Atlanta, 135; Sandbera.
Chil280, !35.

DOUBLES - loae, St Louia, 36;
BonOla, PllbburD. 3'; Morrl&amp;, Clodn·
natl, ll; Sabot CTnCinnatl, l7i Gent, Atlanta, 27; McReynolda, New Yo.rt., 27; 6
tied with 25.
TRIPLES - Lankford, St l..ouiJ, 13;
T. Gwynn, San Dieso, 11; Finley, _HOUlton, 9; L Gonzalez, Houlton, 8; Gri.,.om,
IIC

Montteal, 7; Van Slyke, PIUaburah, 7;
W. Clark, San Francisco, 6; Kruk,

Philadelphia, 6; Candacle, H~uton, 6;

Felder, San Franeilco, 6.
HOME RUNS - Gon~ AUan1a, :1.1;
Jchnaon, New York, 26; Mc;OriCC, San
Dicso. 1S; Mau Willianu, San Francisro,
24; W. Clark, San Funciaco, 24; K.
Mitchell, San Francisco, 24; O'Neill,
Cincinnati, 1J.

STOLEN BASES - Nixon, Alhn1a,
67; Griuom, Montreal, 54; DeShields,
Montreal, 46; lo1da, Pltbburah, 31;
Coleman, New YG, 37; Bullet, Loa An·
1.tea,l4; 0. Smilh, SL Louio,31.
PITCHING (II dec:iJi0111) - C.JpeD·
..,, St. LouiJ, 9·3, .750, 4.26; Do...,, San
FtanNco, 104, .714, 3.65; RIJo. Clnc:lnnatl,ll-4, .714,.2.50; Hurat, San Dieso.
14-6, .700,3.32; Dd~, Pllil.addphia, 94, .692. 3.40; MilCh William&amp;, Philoddphia, 9-4, .692, 2. IS; Tomlin, Pilllburlllo,
I...C, ·"7, 1.!,; Glavine, Atlanta , 1671,
.667,219.
STRlKEOUfS -Cone, New Yod:,
168; Olavine, Allanu, lSI; OMidduJ. ,
Chic:~go ,

151: Goodm, New Yoti., ISO;
Harniach , Houaton, 132: Rijo, Clndn natl, Ill; Cruno, Philadelphia, J 22;
Hunt, San Diego, 122.

SAVES - Lee Smilh, SL Louil, 3S;
Dibble, Clnclnn1ll, l4; Mitch Wil.liaJ1UI ,
Phillddphia, 2A; Franco, New Yod:;, 23;
Righetti, San fnnci &amp;co, 20; Lefferts, San
Dieao. 18; Berenguer, AUanLa, 17.

American League
BArnNO - franco, Texas, .339;
Doggs, D.oaton ,, .3 38; Palmeiro, Te1. u ,
.336; Molitor, Milwaukee. .333; Km Orit-

(ey Jr., Seattle, .328; Puckeu, Minnesota,
.328; C. Ripkcn, Baltimore, .327.
RUNS - Molitor. Milwaukee. 101 ;
Palmeiro, Texas, 95; C.nscco, Oakland,
90; Siem , TCJ.aa, 87; Thomas, Chicago,
85; White, Toronto, 8S; Franco, Teu s,

Bl.

RBI - Fieldcr, Detroit, Ill; Tinmu ,

O.icaso. 96; CII'IICCO, Oakland, 92; Juan
Gonulez. Tc•"· 91; Carter, TOI'Oftto, a&amp;;
Siem, Teus, 17; Joyner, California, 86.
HITS -

Molitor, Milwaukee, 170;

Palmeim. Texu, 167; Puc:keu, Minn&lt;101a,
162; C. Ripken, Baltimore, 162; Siena,
Texas, I Sf; Fr~co, Teus,. ISl; Bow,
lloo1Dn, 146.
DOUBLES - Palmeim, Tc1u, 37;
Bow, 801ton, 36; Ken Grif'f'cy Jr., Scat·
tlc, 35; R. Alcmar, Toronto, 34; Carter,
Torm10, 34; Brett., K..u City, 34; Sia-n, Tens, 33; C. Ripbn, Baltimore. 33.
11UPLF.S - Molilor, Milwaui.ae, 10;
R Alomu, TOIGIIO, 9; White, Toromo, 9;
McRae, Ka:uu City, I; Deveraux, Balumore, I; Mack, MiMesota, I; Polonia,
Califomia, 7; Gladden, Mimel«a, 7.
HOME RUNS - F'lCidcr, Danril, 36;
Cantoco, Oakland, 35; Cuter, Toronto,
21; Thomu, Cllica,o, :16; C O.via, Minneaota , 26; C. R1pkea, Btltimore, 26;
luan Gonr:alaz. Teus, ~: Tartahull,

Kana~ City,

ZS; Tou!Cial, lletmi~ 2$.

In the NFL ...
Eutcrn Dlvlllon

Team

W L T PeL PF PA
........ 3 2 0 .600 19 11
.. ....... 2 3 0 .400 92117

Miami
Buffalo

lndianapoliJ ...... I 3 0 2.50 65 78
New England
.. .! 3 0 .250 37104
N.Y. leu
........ 1 3 0 .250 43 76
Central Dlvllion

CINCINNATI
.2 2 0 .SOO 90 93
CLEVElAND
2 2 0 .SOO S7 Sl
Hru&amp;lon
.......2 2 0 .S00 82 100
PI'ITSBURGH
2 2 0 .500 16 65

Wat~rn Dlvlllon
LA. Raiden .....3 2 0 .600 II 72
Kanla1 City
.....2 2 0 .500 78 68
Scanle
DenVer
San Diego

.......... 2 2 0 .500 69 71
........ 2 3 0 .400 SO 88
...... 1 3 0 .2.50 54 94

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eulern DIYb:lon

Te.am
Phocnia

W
...... ..4
Philodelphia .. .... 4
Dallu
..........2
N.Y. Gwna ......2
!

w........., . ,.

L T Pc:L PF
0 0 1.000 123
1 0 .BOO 110
2 0 .SOO 16
Z 0 .lOO 60
3 0 .zso 64

PA
33
92
78
67
59

Central Dlvlllon
Tampo B•r
.... 3 I 0 .150
o-. Boy ...... Z 0 .500
Minne&amp;oto
......2 2 0 .soo
Chico,.
........ 2 3 0 .400

z

Deuou

..........2

l

o

68 53
99 Sl
92 76
63 59
.400 71 91

Weltern Dhillon
Sanfnnci&amp;co ....5 0 01.000121
Allanla
.........2 2 0 .lOO 98
New Orleuu
.. .. 2 2 0 .500 101
L.A. Ranu
..... ! 3 0 .ZSO 61

59
56
85
80

Saturday's games
New P.n&amp;land 24, New Yo.tk Gianta 3
New Ylllll leu 13, Wulting10n 9
Cincianlli 19, O!ml Bay 16, OT
Miami 28, New Orlean• 24
ChicaJo 30, Buffalo 13

End,_,

Transactions

BasebaU

AmericanLeaauc
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Plooed
J... Mota, pilehoo, on lhe IS-&lt;Iay diaablcd
lilt. retroactive to Auaut 21. Raeallad
Anlhony Tol/Oid, l&gt;it&lt;ha, from Rodleator
of the lnlcmatimal Lc.aua. T11dad Chria
~)'~,pi~. 10 the Montreal Expo~

for

Richio Lcw11, Ptdl.er, and lalt LCwilto
RodtCik::r of the lnlamltional J..aaue.
CAUFORNIA ANOBLS - Activated Junior FeliJt, oud'i.ddtt, hom the ISday ctia:abled lilt. P1aced Babby Rc.e infielder, lllihc1S·dly diNI&gt;lcd liaL '
Nalloaal Leaauc
ATLANTA BRAVES - ActiYOICd
Kent Mac.ker, pilehcr, from lhe I5-day
dilablad lilt. Deliautcd Mart Rou,
pildmr,for~

MONTIU!AL EXPOS - Sent C1uia
Mycn, pitcher, to lnlliaaapolit of the 1
American '•'OCi•ri"ft.

Baakelball
Nolooollllblboll"-&lt;&lt;atlon
OOLDEN STATE WARRIORS -

Sia:Jed Vidor Aleunder, forwud...,...,

to I fivo-)'tll' OOIItriCL

FoolllaU

N~IPoolba!ILeap ·

HOUSTO}Q OILERS - Aaroed 10

.......LOSwilhl~ef'"'·
li:!ebod:cr.
AN
MJ])BRS - Trod·

cd s.... - · qlWlelll&amp;dl, lO tho
J&gt;allu Cowboyo for 1ft
dnll
cboice ill 1992. Tn~t4 Newt Harrell,
auanl, 10 1111 Cllmimd BRIWIII for &amp;a

lllldilcl-

imdiv}cw!

d:oft-

Santa Monica Track Club team·
mates Leroy Burrell and Dennis
Mitchell, who took second and
third, hailed him as the best of all
time.
"He ' s probably the greatest
track athlete that ever graced the
planet," said Mitchell, who was
third in 9.91 seconds. "He is the
epitome of competitors,''
In 14 events in three World
Championships and t\vo Olympics,
Lewis has 13 gold medals and a silver. His only loss was to Joe
DeLoach in the 200-meter fmal at
the 1988 Seoul Games.
It was an incredible final - the
fastest ever, with six runners under
10 seconds. Lewis, who was fifth
halfway through the race, was so
excited after rallying to pass Burrell in the final five meters that he
nipped his arms around his head in
disbelief and looked around, deeply
moved, after realizing that he had
won.
"He passed us as if we were
standing still," said Burrell, who
surpassed his world-record time of
9.90 seconds by fmishing in 9 .88.
Lewis, wrapped in an American
flag, got a standing ovation as he
took a victory lap around the
National Stadium. Emperor Akihiko left the royal box to personally
congratulate him after the awards
ceremony.
Linford Christie of Britain, the
Olympic silver medalist, was
fourth in 9.92, the world-record
time at the start of the year. Ray
Stewart of Jamaica ran 9.95 and
Frank Fredericks of Namibia 9.96
for an African record.
In other events, Jackie JoynerKersee retained her title in the
women's long jump but gave the
crowd a scare.
She took a commanding lead
with an opening jump of 24 feet, 0
1/4 inch, which won her the gold.
Then she had a foul on a leap that
looked even better and, as she
admitted, became greedy, probably
seeking a world record.
On her fourth attempt, she
forced her jump, twisted her right
ankle and rolled into the sandpit
grimacing with pain.
She lim~ed off the track ~fter
her sixth Jump, but the tnJury
wasn't enough to keep her out of
today's heptathlon, in which she's
the defending champion.
In the opening heptathloo event,
the I 00-meter hurdles, JoynerKersee had the fastest time, 12.96
seconds. However, in addition to
the ankle injury, Joyner-Kersee
was suffering from an ailing right
hamstring, her coach and husband,
Bob Kersee said.
Joyner-Kersee conlinued to lead
the heptathlon after two events by ,
clearing 6-3 1/4 in the high jump1
tying Germany's Sabine Braun for
the best height in the evenL

..•
•,.
...
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..
..
..
'

.;

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', . .
'
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..

season career.

J

TO JOIN REDMEN - Lincoln Bossert, center, shortstop at
.Adeoa High School, will play ror the University of Rio Grande
baseball team coached by Dave Oglesby, left. At right is Bossert's
father, Tom.

Adena standout takes place
on Redmen baseball roster
Lincoln Bossert, an All-Scioto
Valley Conference team selection
as a junior and senior at Adena
High School, Frankfort, will attend
the University of Rio Grande this
fall and play baseball for the Redmen coached by Dave O(!lesby.
Bossert, whose maJOr at Rio
Grande is undecided, said he chose
Rio Grande because of its clpseness to home and its academic programs.
Bossert, a shortstop in high
school, is expected to play middle
infielder and is a right-handed hitter and
O.~~:lesby said.

"Lincoln is a good. athlete who
should do well as a middle infaclder
at the college level," Oglesby said.
"He has good speed. h1ts the ball
hard and possesses excellent agility. He has the potential to play
nght away and develop into an outstanding player."
'
He is the son of Tom and Peggy
Bossert of Frankfort.
The Redmen were 28-16 in
1991 and were top-seeded in District 22 of the NAIA at the end of
the I'Ci(!ular season. Oglesby. who is
entenng his fifth year at Rio
Grande, has a 79-70 record.

WORLD SERIES CHAMP • Tom Purtzer hefts the winner's
trophy after capturing the 1991 World Series or Golf touroamellt
in Akron Sunday in a playofl' over Dave Love m and Jim Gal·
lagber, Jr. (AP)

Kulwicki plays it safe to
win B~ud 500 race title

'

BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) - Alan
Kulwicki didn't exactly win
NASCAR 's Bud 500 by running it
slow and steady. He just stayed on
the safe side.
Kulwicki overcame a flat tire
Saturday to win his first Winston
Cup race of this season by a halflap on Bristol International Raceway's .533-mile high-banked oval.
He found himself in heavy ttaffic during the last few of the 400
laps, after talcing the lead on the
364th 1!1J1 from second-place finisher Sterling Marlin dunng a resrart
foDowing a caution period.
· "I was just playing it conservative," Kulwicki said. "There was
so much debris on the traclc.''
It was Kulwicki 's third career
WiliSUiliE UJ)''Victory.
"Three of the last four years,
I've won a race so I think I'm past
the fluke stage,' ' Kulwicki said.

.

I

•

••

....••.
'

~,

PLAYING FOR RIO GRANDE - Richard Bunner second
from left, pitcher/outfielder for Greenfield-McClain High Scbool
wiD play for the. University of Rio Grande baseball team coached
b,v Dave 02Iesby, far right. Flanking Bunner are his par~nts, GJo.
rta and Richard Bunner.

Greenfield's Bunner joins up
with Redmen baseball team
Richard Bunner, an All·Ohio
player as pitcher/outfielder for
Greenfield-McClain High School,
will attend the University of Rio
Grande and play baseball for the
Redmen of Coach Dave Oglesby.
Bunner, who plans to major in
engineering, is the recipient of a
baseball scholarship from Rio
Grande and chose the campus for
its location, people and academic
offerings.
"I am very pleased to sign
Rich," Oglesby remarked. "He is
one of the best high school players
in the state. He should be an impact
player from day one. He has
tremendous power as a hitter and
should also help quite a bit on the
pitching staff. He has exceptional
potential as a college player."
Bunner, who was named to the
All-South Central Ohio League,

was a football and basketball athlete in school. He received the Outstanding Athlete designation from
the U.S. Air Force for his athletic
endeavors.
He is the son of Richard and
Gloria Bunner of Greenfield.
The .Redll)en were 28-16 in
1991 and were top-seeded in District 22 of the NAIA at the end of
the regular season. Oglesby, who is
entering his fifth year at Rio
Grande, has a 79-70 record.

SPECIAl MEETING OF
MEIGS CO. TRASH HAULfRS
TUESDAY - 7:00 P.M.
At Manley's Recycling Cent•
503 Mil St. • Middleport
For Info Call992-3194

captures World Series of Golf

Har-rumph!

Pwtzer' s appraisal was correct,
though.
He won at Fort Worth, Texas in
the presitgious Colonial tournament four months later and then, on
Sunday, capped the best season of
his career with a playoff triumph in
the World Series of Golf.
The 39-year-old veteran beat a
field of 48 tournament winners
from the last 12 months, including
. Jim Gallagher and Davis Love lll
in a two-hole flayoff for the
biggest triumph o his career.
-His two-pull par on the second
extra hole provided him with
$216,000 from the purse of $1.2
million, pushed him to third on the
year's money-winning list with
$691,696 - more than double his
previous best for a single season.
More importantly, it provided
him with a 10-year exemption from
qualifying on the PGA Tour. In
effect, it means he can play wherever and whenever he wants
through the year 2001.
"That's big ," Purtzer said.
"That's really big. It takes me right
up until I'm on the Seniors tour. It
gives me a flexibility I never had.''
It also gives him a self-respect
he never had before.
Purtzer, besieged by personal
and family problems over the last
few years, made a tangential reference to it.
"I always thought I had the
game, but ll seemed like I just
needed something to happen.
"There's been so much talk
about my swing, and people keep
asking me why I don't win more,
and ... I don't know , maybe I
should have won more.
"It seems like I've been my
own worst enemy. It seems like I
kept getting in my own way all the

" It feels great~ "
Kulwicki, who started fifth in a
Ford Thunderbird, regained two
laps lost early because of the flat
tire. He led the last 137 laps.
"We lost two laps on a flat tire
there at the beginning, but we kept
our cool and made 'em up," said
Kulwicki, who finished a comfortable 9.4 seconds ahead of Marlin,
who started 14th in a Ford Thunderbird.
Ken Schrader fmished third in a
Chevrolet Lumina after starting
27th, Mark Martin was a lap baclc
in a Ford Thunderbird and Ricky
Rudd fmished fifth in a Lumina.
Finishin.~~: sixth in a Ford Thunderbird was Morgan Shepherd, followed by Winston Cup points leader Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip, both in Chevrolet Luminas.
Terry Labonte finished ninth in time.''
for a short time, it seemed
an Oldsmobile Cutlass and Brett lilceAnd,
it was going to happen again
Bodine rounded out the top 10 in a Sunday over the last few holes of
Buick Regal.

·Major Hoople, the Fearless Pigskin
Forecaster, observes 50th anniversary
By Maj. ADios B. Hoople
Fearless Forecaster
Egad, friends! It's good to be
back. We're about to begin a special college football season. This
year marks my 50th anniversary,
which makes your Fearless Forecaster the dean of America's grid
experts. Major Hoople's Football
Forecast has been appearing in
U.S. newspapers since 1941. Harrumphl
What about 1991? It will certainly be fun in the sun for three
foolball powers. In the Hoople preseason ratings, teams from the state
of Aorida are ranked No. I, No. 3
and No.6.
Here's our Top 20 for the coming season:
I. Florida State; 2. Michigan; 3.
Florida; 4. Penn State; S. Notre
Dame; 6. Miami (Aa.): 7. Washington: 8. Clemson; 9. Georgia
Tech; 10. Oklahoma;
II. Texas: 12. Tennessee: 13.
Houston; 14. Auburn; 15. Southern
Cal; 16. Nebraska; 17. Iowa; 18.
Brigham Young; 19. Colorado; and
20. Ohio State.
In the second of the two seasonopening bow I games, lop-ranked
· Florida State will play No. 18 BYU
at the Disneyland Pigskin Classic.
Also, college football's ninth annual Kickoff Classic pits No. 4 Penn
State against No. 9 Georgia Tech,
• which shared the 1990 national title
· with Colorado.
First, let's take a look at the
· FSU-BYU clash in the Pigskin
Classic at Anaheim, Calif., on
. Thursday, Aug. 29 (at 9 p.m. EDT,
· Raycom-TV):
In Casey Weldon, Aorida State
has one of the best passers in the
college rants. He threw for 12 TDs
in 1990, and he was intercepted
only four limes. TB Amp Lee and
•FB Edgar Bennett do the running.
. Under coach Bobby Bowden, the
. Seminoles will score and score!
. "BYU's quanerback, Ty DebOer,
last years
' ' Heisinan' wlnriH
"-,.-· will try
10 make it two in a row - a feat
accomplished only by Ohio State's
. Arcllie Griffin, who won the award
in 1974 aiJd 1975.
' But Florida State will .be more
i than ready for Ty DebOer &amp; Co.
l Look for. tbe Seminoles to open
!with a ban the Pipkin Classic•
it FS~. 38-24.
· •·· ·Now for P.enn ·State. vs. Georgia
ftcc:h jn :111e KiclcQff Classic at East ·

m

:Make

,f

·~r.

Rutherford, N.J., on Wednesday,
Aug. 28 (at 9 p.m. EDT, Raycom
TV):

Joe Paterno's Nittany Lions
return 45 letter-winners from a
Penn State team that dropped a
close 24-17 contest to Aorida State
in the 1990 Blockbuster Bowl. The
defense is super, as usual. Veteran
QB Tony Sacca is the key to the
offense. Look for him to have a big
game against Georgia Tech.
The YeUow Jackets were the big
surprise of 1990 with a 11-0-1
record. Their impressive 45-21 rout
of Nebraska in the Citrus Bowl
earned them a share of the national
crown.
Now coach Robby Ross' squad
is loaded. QB Shawn Jones, a
superb passer, is at his best in big
games. Two All-Americans, SS
Ken Swilling and OLB Marco
Coleman are back on defense.
Penn State wiD win the Kickoff
Classic in a close one, 24-2L
Let's go over the rest of the
Major Hoople Top 10 for 1991.
No. 2 Michigan has a defense
that's questionable: it has an
offense that isn't. In QB Elvis
Grbac (6-foot-S, 220 pounds) and
classy flanker Desmond Howard,
the Wolverines have one of the best
tandems around. In 1990, Grbac
tossed 21 TDs, II of them to
Howard. 'Nuf said.
Coach Steve Spurrier's No. 3
Florida Gators are enjoying the
game once again. This, after several frustrating years and a 1990
bowl ban imposed by the NCAA
for violations committed under former coach Galen Hall. Shane
Matthews, a brilliant junior QB, is

......

......
Maj.
-. Amos B. Hoople

poised to lead the Gators to the
SEC throne. RBs Willie McClendon and Errict Rhett head a sttong
infantry corps.
No . S Notre Dame suffered
some big bits at graduation. Gone
are AU-Americans Chris Zorich,
Todd Lyght and Michael Stonebreaker. Also missing is the sensational Rocket Ismail, who elected
to tum pro.
However, shed no tears for
coach Lou Holtz - the Fighting
Irish have a wealth of lalent. Back
at QB is Rick Mirer. A favorite targel of his will be TE Derek Brown,
a mere 6-foot-7, 243-pounder.
Notre Dame's biggest headache?
Another difficult schedule, which
includes seven 1990 bowl teams.
Miami, No. 6, also lost some
all-stars from last year. But Coach
Dennis Erickson is high o~~&gt; his
returning QBs Gino Torretta and
Bryan Fortay. FB Steve McGuire
will handle the running chores.
Washington, No.7 , won the
PAC-10 title and the Rose Bowl
last season. Now the Huskies are a
good bel to repeaL Don James will
field his usual well-disciplined
offense and rock-hard defense. The
Big Stopper is DT Steve Emunan
(6-4, 285), a sure-fire AII-American.
The next two spots feature a battle between ACC foes, No. 8 Clemson and No. 9 Georgia Tech. Gemson gets the Hoople nod because
the Ti.~~:ers have had a year to get
comfortable with coach Ken Hatfield 's system. When it hosts Georgia Tech on Sept. 28, look for
Oemson to avenge its 21-19 loss to
the Yellow Jackets last season.
Olclahoma's Sooners, at No. 10,
figure to rise to the top of the Big
Eight standi~s for the first time
since 1987. T)le Sooner defense,
spearheaded by LBs Joe Bowden
and Chris Wilson, will be tough .
On offense, QB Cale Gundy may
be the best in the league.
And don't forget that any of the
second 10 choices in the Major
Hoople Top 20 are also capable of
challenging for the national crown.
Har-rumph!
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

regulation play on the extremely
difficult Firestone Country Club
course.
·
Pwtzer held a three-sttoke lead
with four holes to play.
And he let it get away,
A bogey from deep rough on the
17th hole, combined with last-gasp
charges by Love and Gallagher,
sent the three into a playoff tied at
279 - 1-under par and the hi~hest

themselves in deep, deep ttouble as it turned out, inescapable ttouble
- off the tee. Galla~her was far to
the right, near an adJacent fairway.
Love was behind a tree on the left
Both played their second shots
about as well as they could, Love
hooking around the tree but
through the green into deep rough
and Gallagh er into deep rough
short and left

Seasoned Redwomen volleyball team
looks to 'enjoy the game' this year
For the University of Rio
Grande volleyball team this year,
th~ pres~ of having to defend a
Mtd-Ohto Conference title is off
and Coach Patsy Fields looks fa- a
season to "enjoy the game."
The Redwomen, who won the
MOC title in 1989 and finished last
season at 34-9 with an appearance
in the District 22 playoffs, face the
new campaign which commences
Se~L 6-7 at the Elmhurst (III.) Invitanonal with assurance and will
Fields said, remain a threat wi~
the conference and district.
Lost to graduation were two of
the team's most experienced players, Shelly Hoop and Shannon Huston, altho~gh Huston plans to stay
on as asststanl coach. Hoop, the
MOC and District Player of the
Year in 1989, capped off her career
by being the co-MOC Player of the
Year in 1990. Huston received honorable mention from the conference.
. But in .spire of these depanures,
Fields said she has every .confidence in her senior leadership, represented by Teresa Zempter of
Minford and Robin Sharp of Tarlton. Zempter was named to the
MOC second team last fall and
Sharp was All-District honorable
mention from the conference.
"Robin is one of the top setters
in the district," Fields remarkett
Along with good physical ability,
Robin has all the characteristics
needed to mak.e her team a success.
Teresa will be a key factor at the
net. Last year, she led the team in
block solos and was third in kills."
Michelle Spears, a junior from
SL Paris, lends an edge to the team
in difficult situations, Fields noted.
An effective overall player and a
potential offensive threat, Spears'
"most important contribution is her
willingness to play whenever and
wherever needed by the team," the
coach said.
LeadinR the list of sophomores

is Billina-Cooper, the cooference
rookie of the year. The Jackson
area native was second in kills and
third in block solos for the team in
ber inaugural season. Tiffany Neff
from Chillicothe should help pro·
vide the Redwomen with a strong
offensive line, Fields said.
New to the team are freshmen
Shelley Wray from Springboro, and
Andrea Hedges from Ashville .
"Shelley is expected to be a sttong
performer for the team," the coach
noted. "She has the physical tools
to be a good all-around player.
Andrea will be used primarily as
the team 's backup seaer; however,
~th are expected to see playing
ume."
Also joining the team for the
first lime will be Deidre Hamm, a
junior from Chillicothe.
"Th 1
·
e p ayers returnmg seem to
be more dedicated and have a completely different attitue than at this
time last year," Fields said. "We
will have a nice team due 10 the
fact that they communicate well
and work together."
following their debut in the
Elmhurst competition _ which
Fields called "the best small college invitational in the midwest" _
the Redwomen play at home Thursday, Sept. 12 at 7 p.m . against
Urbana. The contest will be tlie
team's fiFSt district and conference

m~~- Elmhurst tournament will

be a good test for us," Fields said.
~:~:.\lknow real quick what we
Fields said the competition, as
always, will be tough. Neither the
MOC champion, Walsh, or district
powerhouse Mount St Joseph have
lost any key personnel, while the
remammg top teams are returnmg
with basically the same rosters and
abilities. In addition, the Redwomen will panicipate in three other
tournaments besides Elmhurst. All
three invitationals are hosted by

respected WVIAC schools: Fairmont, Concord and Charleston.
"I believe we have one of the
toughest schedules in the district,"
commented Fields, the former
Kyger Creek High School teacher
and coach whose eight-season
record at Rio Grande is 181 -90 .
"We must pl~y well every game,
stay injury-free and have a great
season in order to mak.e the playoffs this year."
At the same time, Fields said
she expects the team to loosen up
some now th at the pressure of
maintaining a conference championship and hunting a possible district ntle is off.
"The team will be relieved of
that pressure and will concentrate
more on enjoying the game this
"'"~on." ~he said.
.
RIO GRANDE REDWOMEN
VOLLEYBALL SCHEDULE
Sept. 617 - Elmhurst In vitaLional, A
·
Sept 12 - Urbana, H
Sept 13/14 - Fairmont lnvitational, A
Sept. 19 - Cedarville/Concord/Alderson-Broaddus, H
Sept 21 - Tiffin, A
SepL 24 - Ohio Dominican, H
Sept 26 - Mount Vernon, A
Sept 28- Walsh/Malone, A
Oct I - Shawnee State, A
Oct 4/5 _ Concord Invitational, &amp;t 8 - Ohio Dominican, A
Oct 10 - Mount Vernon, H
Oct. 12 _ Walsh/Salem Teilcyo, H
Oct 15 - Urbana, A
Oct. 17 _ Central State/Deliance, A
Oct. 19 _ Tiffin/Shawnee
State, H
Oct. 22
Mount St.
Joseph/Midway, A
Oct 25 _ Lak.e Erie, A
Oct. 26 _ Nob'e Dame/WooslA
er, Oct 29 _ Thomas More, A
Nov. 5 - Fairmont State, A

Recruiting, experience boost Redmen
soccer team's postseason ambitions
Since assuming the coaching
duties of the University of Rio
Grande soccer team in 1989, Scott
Morrissey has been working on
making the Rio kickers a competitive force within District 22 of the
NAIA and the Mid-Ohio Conference.
Faced with a small bench in his
fiTSt season, the team went 1-11-1,
but with a nucleus of veterans and a
sttong recruiting season, the Redmen came back saonger in 1990 to
post a 10-9 season. A late season
loss to Walsh robbed them of a
chance to fill the fourth spot in the
district playoffs.
This season, again working with
the majority of the same people and
additional recruits, Morrissey
believes Rio Grande is poised to
net a berth in the postseason, win
the district and area title and compete in the NAIA Nationals in
Florida in late November.
Named the MOC Coach of the
Year for his work last year, Morrissey said he's been ready for the
new campaign since mid-summer.
The Redmen participated in two
scrimmages at home, against Capital on Aug. 22 and Kentucky Chris-

Shemaiah Hohn and Zolden Eastwood, who have come to Rio
Grande from Wolmer's Boy School
in Kingston, Jamaica, the alma
mater of O'Connor and Campbell.
"I feel that with the caliber of
recruits we have, any one of them
could have gone to different
schools and contributed, but they
chose to come here," Morrissey
remarked.
The regular season's early
schedule pits the Redmen against
strong competition in IUPUI and
Mount Vernon Nazarene College,
in addition to two saong WVIAC
schools in Alderson-Broaddus and
W11eeling Jesuit. The team to beat
within the district, the coach added,
is district and area champion Tiffm
University.
"It'll be an interesting season,"
Morrissey said. "I wanted to schedule the best competition, seeing as
we have a young team, and to see
what kind of competition we'll
have when we get out of the district."
RIO GRANDE REDMEN
1991 SOCCER SCHEDULE
Sept. I - IUPUI, H
Sept. 4 - Alderson-Broaddus,

tianseason
on Aug.
24, andSept.
openI the
lar
Sunday,
at2regup.m.
with Indiana University/Purdue
University-Indianapolis (IUPUI),

Hn
r - - : : - - - : - - -...

als?,~~erite first time rve been

in a situation where I feel I have a
great deal of talent," Morrissey
said. "I feel I have 13 bodies I can
putonthefieldandlfeelconfldent
about each one.
"There is no comparison with
last year's team -we're 100 percent better. With that in mind
there's a~ deal of potential f~
success," he added.
The key to that success lies in
the combmation of veterans and
newcomers. The returnees are led
by Barry Saunders, who will captain the team, while junior Joe
Kiley rounds out the upperclassmen. Coming back as sophomores
are Winston O'Connor, Courey
Feerer, Jim Egnor, Ricardo CampbeD, Chris Slagle; Jeff Bellar, Rich
Bitonte, Tim Smith, Trevor Raybum and Brandon Russell.
Capping off what Morrissey felt
was an outstanding recruiting year
are freshmen· Todd Koch, Roben
Stedman, Shawn Thomas, Ste.ve
Nagy, Chris Teichman and Corey
Harbor,
all froni central or south·
This year marks my 50th
westel'll
Ohio; Chris Thompson,
anniversary, wlllc• makes your
I.C.
Circle
and Michael B~, each
Fearless Forecute~ the dean ot
of
whom
bails
from the Cliarleston.
America's arid experts• .
·W.Va., area; and Earle Manley,

""'

winning score iii tournament history.
Pwtzer played the last 18 holes
in 71, Gallagher and Love in 69.
After all three made two-pull
pars on the flTSt extra hole, Purtzer
hit flTSt off the next tee, the 464yard 18th.
He was very long and down the
middle. Gallagher and Love put

Sept. 7- Mount Vernon, H
Sept. 10 - Wheeling Jesuit, H
Sept. 13 -Pittsburgh-Bradford,
A

Sept. 14 - Pittsburgh-Bradford,
A

Sept. 21 - Malone, H
Sept. 26 - Findlay, A
Sept. 28 - Tiffin, A
Oct. 4 - Salem-Teikyo, H
Oct. 5 - Ohio Dominican, A
Oct. 9 - Transylvania, A
Oct. 12 - Muskingum, A
Oct. 15 - Shawnee State A
Oct 19 - Walsh,A
'
Oct 23 - Cedarville A
OcL 26 - Ashland, H
Oct. 30- Wilmington, H

DO..,NING ·(UQC
"'
n
o~
MUWN MUSSER

INSU.RANCE .
111 S.COIICI St., P.IWoy

JOUI IIDEPENDINT
AGENTS SEIY
IIG
MIIGS COUNTY
SINCE 11168

-..-..!==========
Complete Med•'cai/S . I c
•

urg1ca are
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
ASth ma, Allergy &amp; Hear1ng
• A"d
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h
Jo n A WadeI M D
·

•

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Pt. Pleasant, WY.

o

•

Call 304·67 5·1244 for Appt or Information

WORD-EXPLOSION
An Anointed Word Seminar featuring
Evangelist•Teacher

Ii

Billy Joe Grandstaff

I

I

Billy Joe Grandstaff preaclllng the Word

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD
ST. RT. 124, RUTLAND, OH•

AUGUST 25·28
7:00P.M. NIGHTLY
John Corcoran 742·2060

I,. '

�I
I

Monda~August26,1991

Sentinel

;Terminally ill patients
like
an
outcast
feels
-

- Dear Readers: I am on vaca1io11,
:bJU I have left behilld some l( my
favoritt coiJUMS that you may lta~~t~
?FUssed the first rime arowtd.llrOpe
.)!OU t11joy tlwra. -- AM l.ai!Mrs
ANN LANDERS
. : Dear ADD Lucien: This may be
""1.1, 1M Alllol•
·one of the most Wlusuallettm you
'l1ma
IIJJdhave ever received. You see, I am . CluiGn
IIJJd_ ...
_..
ilying. But doo't become alarmed,
lind please don't feel sorry for me.
Aftc2' all, we arc all dying. From the
I. 1'Jeat me the same as a well
moment we arc born, we arc headed penon. Don\ loot at me with pity
toward incscapablc deadt.
in your eyes IIKI ask, "How II'C you
- Three yean ago, when I was 31, I doing?"
learned I have cluooic leukemia. The
2. Include me in your activilies. I
iloctor told me the truth at once need friends just as you do.
because I insisled on knowing. The
3. Stay off the subject of funenl
I)Cws came at a crisis time in my arrangemenu and insurance. (Rela: ~ife. I had just gone through a lives arc especially guilty of this.)
:divorce and had young children to
4. Forget I have a di ........ rn do
.. raise.
bctlicr if I don't know i(s on your
:. Would you believe I had to move mind.
:out of town to a larger city becanse
5. Ask me oui. Develop a relajleople would not accept me as a tionship with me. You can even
oonnal pmon? I was devaslated.not marry me. I might live another 20
:!Jy the disease, which has been years. (Today lha(s longer dJan 11101t
:controlled by drugs, but by the way couples stay together!)
people trealed me. Although I could
6. Hire me. If fm productive I
play tennis, ski, dance, hike and take will live longer. If rm forced fD go
part in community activities, the on welfare or disability, it will raiac
people at work made my life your lllles.
miserable. One woman mused to
7. Give to the American CanCer
use the same washroom! Men Society. They suwort resean:llllld
wouldn\ dale me. I was trealed like alert the public to CIIICer sips.
some son of social outcast -- a
8. Ciet a checkup this week. Many
• pathetic, hopeless case.
forms of cancer can be cured if
Aftc2' I moved to this distant city CIIJ3ht early
:· my life changed dramatically. No
9. Treat me as you would like
: one here knows of my illneas m1 I to be treated under the same
: am keeping my 'mouth shut. I circumstances.
: wart pen-time, auend college, have
IO. Love mel Enjoy mel I have
· many friends, am involved with a lot to give. -- I COULD BE
: community aclivitics and [Jirlicipare ANYBODY
in spMS. What a pity 1h8l I had 10
DEAR ANYBODY: What a
move to a town where nobody blew beautiful and courageous letter!
. me in order to live a nonnallifel
Thank you forcduclting millioosof
. Allbough I feel well, loot fine and people today. You've made an
: am managing beaulifully, llmow it enormous c:onlribulion.
· can\ last fcxever. I dread the day
Is life fJQSiillg you by? W/llll to
· my friends must be told of my improve your social skills? Wrilefor
_illness. I don't want to be pilied. And AM Lrw/ers' MW booklet, "How to
. of counc I fear that I may be Make Frie11ds alld Stop Bti11g
: desatcd as I was once before..
Lo!tely. • Send a self~ loltg,
• The pwpoae of this lcacr, Aan b!UiMss-siu tiiWI~ IJitd a clleck
: I;.anders. is to help edocall' people, or IMIU!J order for $4.15 (tltis
• should they enc:ounla" IIOIIleOIIC who illcllldes po114gt IJitd ltaNIIiltg) to:
· is in the same spot rm in right now. Fri41Uis, c/o AM Ltwlers, P.O. Box
; Yes, folks - you can help. How? Jl562, Cllicago,/U. 606IUJ562. (Ill
· Here arc the ways:
CIJIIIJda, selld $5.05.)

Correction

Ann
Landers

NEW YORK (AP) - Some arc
· bubbly, some are distilled. Some
originate hundreds of fee_t below
the earth in springs and flow lllilurally to the surface, while others
are pumped up throu$h weDs.
"The Pocket Gutde to Bottled
Water" (Contemporary Books,
$9.95 soft-cover) contains infonnation on 75 bottled waters inchidjng
minernl content and taste characteristics, a description of the water's
origin, and the processing techniques used in distilling and-or bottling.
Among the products described
in the I28-page book: Snow Valley
Mountain Spring Water, which
comes from melled snow and rainfall that filters through crystalline
rock, deep in the Appalachian
Mountains; Calistoga Sparl:lng
Mineral Water, bottled in California and available in various fruit
flavors; and Tipperary Irish Natural
Mineral Water, bottled at the
source of the spring. in County Tipperary. Ireland, and. packagCd as
carbonaled or non-carboilall'd.

..
'
•'
''

Porcupine research can
:._~ be a prickly proposition
i

By TRUDY TYNAN
Associated Press Writer
AMHERST, Mass. (AP) : How do you put a radio coUar on a
: porcupine?
• "Very carefully," said Todd
: Fuller, a University of Mas: sachusetts professor of wildlife
:· management who is using the
' devices to learn more about the
: habits of the quilled rodents.
: The porcupine was picked for
• study because it is considered a
good indicator of how other forest
. animals arc doing and how healthy
· the forest is.
: "And one of the best things
: about them is they arc easy to study
· because they don't move far and
:·can be easily caught and
: recaught," Fuller said.
Well, at least in theory.
It took two graduate students
: wearing thick barbecue gloves the
, better pan of the summer to refine
: tlieir porcupine bagging techniques.
· Along with a few scars, Molly
; .fWe and Sam Greisemer now have
· ebout two dozen porcupines broadcastinl! their whereabouts around
i Quabbm Reservoir.
: "We have been quilled quite a
· few times, but nothing serious like
:a whack from the tail," said Hale.
: "The quills relax when they are
: apesthetized so they are fairly easy
•1.0 work wtth. But there were one of
:two that got too small a dose."
i "You just have to yank them
!out as quickly as you can," she
;said of the barbs. "It does hurt, but
·if you don't do it quickly, they
:work in deeper. And then it's

:worse.''

• Initially Fuller hoped the porcu·
. pines would waddle into box traps
. baited with apples. Some did. Oth· ers were trapped in stick corrals the
; students set up under trees.
But the students have had to fol·
:low some relucrant research sub·

jects up trees.
''We have a joke about them
· lakin~ disappearing pills," Hale
said. 'You will know they arc in a
certain 1ree and yet when you look
up you can't find them. Despite
their poor eyesight they are able to
sense where you are and scrunch
around to just at the right angle
where they can't be seen."
Once a porcupine is in hand, the
researchers flip it on its back to
expose the unprotected underside
and tranquilize it with a shot in the
meaty part of a back leg, Fuller
said. The coUar goes on just behind
the head quills.
•'They have more neck than you
would think," be said. "It's just
that when they arc frightened they
hunch their shoulders and pull in
their head so they look like big
round footballs."
The researchers eventually hope
to follow about 50 porcupines for
at least two years to learn about
their mating and feeding practices.
Students will use the radio signal to
find the porcupines in the woods
and observe them.
The prickly subjects display a
lot of individuality, Hale said.
"Some are quite docile," she
said. "Others arc pretty feisty and
bang around in the cage."
The porcupine lives seven or
eight years and has few natural
enemies. Museum skeletons sugt th t
f·
·
·1
ges a one 0 Its pnme pen s
~~~~- be falling out of trees, said
Fuller brislled at suggestions the
porcupine is not the brightest of

~'~hey are slow. moving and

1 Ia 1
peop e re te s ow to stuptd, .. he
said. "But they have no reason to
move fast and they do live a long
th
• b 11 h
J:~/ 0 t ey can t e a t at

I

~ Beegle

reunion held

: The Beegle family reWiion was
: lield recenlly at Star Mill Park in
"Racine.
·• . Following the basket dinner a
!,bort meeting and program was
.:-held.
·
· Elected president of the 1993
-,family reunion was Ronal~ Beegle,
" ~ine. Cristy Beegl!! Blower, Lan.• caster, was elected vice-president,
. ~ aild Norma McKelvey Andria was
. .re-elecitd secretary-!le&amp;Suru.
·· A shon memorial for d~ased
was given by Lany Fish-

;:members

er.
-;;. Rev. Ray -Beegle, 93, Wilming-

"&lt;IOD. was given a gift for the oldest
membets presenl. Clifford (Doley)

Beegle, Dorcas, was presented a
gift for having the most family
members present, and three weekthree day old Ryan Lee Beegle, son
of Rodney and Debbie Beegle, was
given a gift for being the youngest
member present
The invocation was given by
Larry Fisher and benediction was
given by Paul Beegle.
The next Beegle reunion will be
the fll'St Sunday in August, I993.
Next year the reunion will be held
in Bedford, Pa.
A square dance for family and
friends was held the night before at
the home of Ronald and Leanna
Beegle, Hog Hollow Road.

"7 ~Jotrn

otlhatlk~

In Memorlal'n

' A cl,•s•ftccl

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Roben
Wagner and Jill St. John were hosiS
of a pany for 11000 people to raise
money for the ~106 million Smithsoniin Institution Museum of the
American Indian. '
The dinner and dance were pen
of several wi:el:end'evcnts that
together were expected to raise
f

S&amp;.OO

.42

lor eKh

d~

as

Slplfll e

4

Gtv•~•v

6

Happy Ads

advertts~munt

9

Y cud Sitlus

Gallta County

S t!lll ltHll (1111

Area

Code~614

446

Galhpobs

Area Code 614

Muon Co . WV
Area Code 304

992

175 Pt Plt•ilnt

Metgs County

COPY DEADLINE
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388

Vinton

246 Rio Grende
2!;6 Guyan O•st
643

Ar1bl1 DIS I

379 Wllnul

985 Ch•ter
843 Portllfld
247 letart fills
949 Racine
742 Rutland
66 7

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458

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576
773
882
896
937

Apple Grove
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New Haven
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Buttllo

CHESTER
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Golf
Lnsons (6) ••• sss.OO
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ '22 .00
Irons .................. $14.75
R£PAIRS
Used lrons ............ $5.00
Used Woods .........$7.00
AWARDS
8-9-1 mo. pd.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
oiUY OSILl OftADE
OPEN
Tueadlly thru Saturdoy
10:00 am-6:00pm

742-2421
21/J MI. outside
lutland on Now
Umo ld.
5-10-'91-lfn.

Reallltate General

12

Situehon Wanted

1l

lns~.n~c•

14
15o
16

Busin•tlramng
Schools &amp; lnstructmn
R1dio. TV &amp; Cl Rc:pu

Trans ortation

Room ~

46

Space for Rent

47

Wo~nted

48
49

Equ1pment lor Runt
forleMe

51

Household Goods

to Re nt

Mcrch~rulise

II

Autos l or Sal u

72
73
74
7!)
76
11
7B
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Tmc::k•IOI S&lt;1l1~
v,m~ &amp; 4 wo · ~

81
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83
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B5
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87

Home lmptOvtJilH!Oh
Plumbtng &amp; Htt•mu
E"&lt;:iNi llllg
E ltn;1r tcal &amp; Rt!htgUtatmn
Gomtlfa l Haulony
Mobt l e Home Repau
Uphuls tc ry

52 · Sporting Good•

W1nted To Do

53

AniiQU-1 1

54
55
56

M11 t MMchand•se
BUilding Supplies
Pets lor Sale

21

lu&amp;~n•s

Opp01tumtv

57

MuSicallnnrumttnt s

22
23

Mon.y to Loan
Prot•11onal Str111CM

58
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Frurll &amp; Vegtnables
For Sale Of Tr~d e

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•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
H you're in need of

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Mobile Home Parts
Or ACCIIIOrits...
SEE US FIRST!

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

992·5100
IT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

"FrH atlmatea"
PH. 949·2101
· or los. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

USED APPUANCIS

l / 11/ 1 mo. tin

toHYWUIAJm

WASIIIIS-$100 Of
IIIYIS-S•Y .,
lllfiiGIUTOU-S 100 .,
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FIIIDIS-S 125 If '

Plcll Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICI

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KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
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Acrm fr• l'8lt Olfke

992·5335 or
915-3561

Acrau ,,.. hat OHkt
2171. . . . . St.
POIIIIOT, 0110
3/1/!10/tln

••

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Don't OeiD!j ...

992-2156
Cerci of Thanks

1

Fo~rms lOt R t~ nl
Apartment lor Aunt

Want ed t o 811y
ltvuuod.,
64 Hay &amp; Gro~m
6§ S11ed &amp; Ft!rlll•lfll

Motorcycl~

Bu&lt;J!s &amp; Moton lor S.tlc
Auto Par ts. &amp; Ac cetH·Oft~
Auto Repan
Ca mptng Equtptut~nl
Clunp e r ~ &amp; Motor Humm.

Coolville

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41
44

45 Furnished

17 MllceUaniiiOUI

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Moble Homes lur Rm•l

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62
61

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in

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42

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35

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Business BUIId•nus
lots &amp; Acreage
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33

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31
32

6 lost and Found
7 'l•d Sale(patd tn adllaucel
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&amp; LtvestoGk

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1 Card of Th.,ks
2 In Memory
3 Annouc:emenh

.30

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992-2269

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UNDA'S
PAINTING

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992-2772 or
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I would like to expn111
my gratitude and
flllllkl to ell tho people
who helped during tho
lh)l!a end dlllth of
mY huiiMnd, RUSSELL RADCLIFFE. the
Recine and SviiiCU•
Emergency Squads.
Ewing Fu1181'111 Home,
Brother William Roueh
1111d ell my church
family of The Reo~gan·
ized Church of Jeaue
Chrilt. all my wonct.ful neighbol'l, friends,
lind family for the

Fire.''

FORT WORTII, Texas (AP) Former House Speaker Jim Wright.
will draw on hts experiences to
teach a political sc\ence class starting today.
Wright spent 34 years in
Congress, sezving Wider ei$1Jt presidents before resigning m 1989
after the House .Ethic~. Committee
charged him with 69 ethics violations. Wright, 68, said he mostly will
use anecdotes to teach tile class at
Texas Christian University.
The Ethics Committee accused
him of using bulk sales of his book,
"Reflections of • Public Man," to
evade limits on OUISide inCome. He
also was accused of. improperly
taking gifts from a developer
friend.

16

.20

.60
16
.06/day
16
Montnly
Rates arc lor conwcuttve runs. bfoken upd8\fswlll be ch•ged

cepl
clauthud d11play Busmuss Card .uut h.!Ujj nottcesl
wtll ,1tsu .tppe&lt;tl' '" th tl Pt Ph:o»al11 Ae 1~•stur and lht! Gall•
puhs Douty Trtbunu. ru;tclung mmr 18.000 hofl\us

Her co-star Timothy Busfield
was named best supporting dramat!c actor for h!s po!trayal of the
munature yuppie Elliot Weston.
"Cool!" said a bemused Busfield.
ABC led with 26 awards; CBS
was second with IS, followed by
NBC with 13; PBS, I2; HBO, 5;
syndicated, 2; Disney. I; Fox, I;
and TNT, I.
"Separate But Equal," a chronicle of the U.S . Supreme Court's
1955 school desegregation ruling,
won in the best drama, comedy
special or miniseries category.
Madge Sinclair won the Emmy
for best supporting actress in a
drama for her portrayal of
Josephine Austin in "Gabriel's

$50,000 to $IOO,OOO for the museum, which is to open in Washington in 1999.
Indians from IS tribes demonstrated their crafts and ceremonies.
Collectors of Indian artifacts donated pieces for a benefit auction.

3
6
10

.

lmtt type only mltd

C;nd

character."

ANNAPOUS, Md. (AP)- The
Naval Academy is thanking Bob
Hope for the memories by naming
its new performing center after
him.
TheBooHopePcrformingkU
Center, pan of the new $30 millioo
Alumni Hall, will be dedicated Ocl
5, said academy spokesman Noel
Milan.
Hope is expecled to attend.
The center was named after the
entertainer in recognition of his
many years of entertaining U.S.
troops around the world
The Hope Center can seat 1,500
when it functions as a theater or
conCert hall and 5,700 as a lecture
hall or sports facility.

$4.00

"SttnttnLol tS not nnpon~lbltt 101 t~rrun •her hrst tlory tChcc.k
fur t:nun hnt d-v ad mns "l PiiPU!I Call btJfOie 2 00 p m
dot¥ ilftm pubhcation to mak., conechtm
'Aels that mu5l be p111d •n advilnCtl ,.,.:

Comic Jonathan Winters won
his fll'St Emmy- best supponing
comedy actor for_' 'Davis Rules.··
James Earl Jones, who opened
the show with a pompous speech
that ended with a scripled pie in his
face, got two Emmys.
Along with recognition for his
role in "Gabriel's Fire," about an
ex-con who becomes a private
investi~ator, he was named best
suppornng actor in a miniseries for
"Heat Wave," a TNT miniseries
about the 1965 Ww race riots.
Ms. Wettig was honored for her
ponrayal of cancer victim Nancy
Weston. It was her second straight
Emmy for best dramatic actress
and her third for "thirtysomething," which has been canceled.
She won as best supponing actress
1988.
"It's a little sad," Wettig said,
fighting back !earS. "This is son of
my last time to say goodbye to this

People in the news

15

"Fr ee ads
G•veawav rmdfound ads undt!f l!Jwmdswtllb c
run J d.,s al no ch•ge
"Pr•ctt ol id lor all capttalleners tS double puce ot ad cost

'Cheers' the big
winner at the Emmys

ABC's Academy Awards broadcast won for best variety, music or
comedy progratn; for best writing;
and for host Billy Crystal's performance.
Home Box Office's miniseries
"7he Josephine Baker Story"
picked up statuettes for star Lynn
Whitfield and her husband, director
Brian Gibson. They met during
filming.
The drama writing award went
to David E. Kelley for "L.A.
Law ." The Em my for comedy
writing went to Gary Dontzi~ and
Steven Peterman for CBS' ' Murphy Brown."

1

15

A11 n11 un ce111 e111 s

Ov•• 15 Words

Rota

Words

Days

POUCitS
•Atls oulstdu Metgs. Gallta or Mason cou nt• ~ must be prtt
p;ud
•Rt:ttlNt: $ 50 diScount tor adf piud '" atN;:tncc

COMEDY WINNERS • Klntie Alley of "Cbeen" and Burt
ReYDolds of "EveniDII Shade," sbare a lau11b backstaae at tbe
Emmy Awards Sunday In Pasadeaa, Calif., alter both won awards
for best ac:tillg In a comedy series. (AP)

By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP)The barroom comedy "Cheers"
hoisted a leading four Emmy
Awards, including the prize for
best comedy series and trophies for
stars Kirstie Alley and Bebe
Neuwirth.
NBC;s "L.A. Law," won its
fourth Emmy for best dramatic
series at SWiday's awards ceremony.
Other major winners included:
James Earl Jones of ABC's
"Gabriel's Fire," best actor in a
dramatic series; Patricia Wettig of
ABC's "thirtysomething," best
actress ~ a dramatic series; and
Bun Reyriolds of CBS's "Evening
Shade,'' best actor in a comedy
series.
"Cheers" now has a total of 26
Emmys, pulling even with "Hill
Street Blues" for the second most
Emmys ever for a series. ''The
Mary Tyler Moore Show" has the
most, 29 . "The Carol Burnett
Show" is founh with 22.
"I said we were good, but now
we're venerable I guess," said
"Cheers" director, co-creator and
co-executive producer James Burrows, who also won the comedy
directing trophy.
Other multiple winners included
another awards program - the
63rd annual Academy Awards which picked up three starueues.
Winners and presenters at the
43rd annual Emmy Awards wore
red ribbons on the Fox broadcast in
a show of support for AIDS
research and people with AIDS.
Ms. Alley's win as best actress
in a comedy series comes four
years after she replaced Shelley
Long in "Cheers."
"I onlythank God I didn't have
to wait as long as Ted," said Ms.
Alley. who plays insecure Rebecca
Howe, manager of the Boston bar.
Co-star Ted Danson was nominated
eight times before winning last
year for best actor in a comedy.
Ms. Neuwirth captured her second consecutive Emmy for supporting actress in a comedy for her
portrayal of the cold-as-ice psychotherapist Dr. Lilith SterninCrane.
Reynolds got the comedy actor
award this year for his role as a
high school football coach.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-215b
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.~DA Y

Bottled water guide

0

0

Classifi·ed

Jayme Miller is a member of the
HiD top 4-H aub. not a ll!ember of
the Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders. She
was an outrider during Wednesday •s harness horse races at the
Meigs County Fair.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-b21S
Pom•oy, Ohio .

7-24

11-14-'90 lin

many prayen. phone

cells. carda.

vilita.

PIN down EX11{;1

II-•
and food gifta.
I will alweya remember you end be
grateful. May God
blo.. each and everyone of you.
Golda Radcliffe

ICQ1..fORT

Having enough money to ·.
A.$l.IE)==..I replace your old heating arx1
cooling system can be a problem. But with
low-interest financing from an Ohio RJwer
Comfort Assured dealer, getting a new
system just got easier.
Just~ 'Ibm Seeley from Ohio Fbwer:
"If you install an electric heat pump, one of
our Comfort Assured dealers will work
with you, setting up easy monthly paymeins
that fit your budget. You can choose a loan
period ianging from six months to ten
years, all at a very low interest rate."
Th learn more about low-interest
financing from a Comfort Assured dealer,
call Ohio RJwer or calll-800-827-6556.

•

In Memory

2

IN MEMORY OF
CHARLES E. PYLES
who paaaed away
Auguat 24, 1988
(And alto in memory
of his mother, Clara
M.. Pylea. who
puaed away Augua1
10. 19119).

The daya ara long and
lonely aince you
left,

And I find myaalf
thinking of you 10
much.
·
1'" you in the pllceal
go each day.
And long to - your
emile and fHI your
touch.
The only thing thll1
makeallfa worth ltv·
ing,
Ia knowing I will one
day be with you;
And wa will be happier
than ona can Imagine
And I can once aglin
aay, "I LOVE YOU!"
Sadly mi-d by
wife. Lontne, children
and grandchildren

01110

JIOWIR

©1991AmoriclnEioalic-

I

'

..

I

.

WE DO

CA&amp;H?!!

"BISSELL
.BUILDERS

ROOFING

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"4t Rea so noble Prien •;
PH. 949·2101
or los. 949-2160
Day or Night

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
"I WANT THIS
· Thalia what the owner is telling
·us about thla Extremely Nice Tri-lovol homo with 3
bedrooms, lamUy room, 1~ bath. basement, garage, and
storage shed Ill located on an exira large lot, close to
everywhere! Asking price Is $49,000 but owner is serious
when saying- 'MAKE AN OFFERI'
BunERNUT AYE. -Could be used an an inveetment live In It or use as a rental I This 2 IW!y home has an extra
lot. some new plumbing and several possibllilieal
ASKING $10,000
' THIS HOllE COULD BE SEAunFULI - The location is
greatl The home Ia a l'tlfo story with 3 bedrooms, full
basement, woojl floors with original wooctNork and
fireplace. With a little work this could be your dream
home. Asking $20.000 :. This home needs an
owner... make an olerl
NESTLED AIIONG THE PINES - on 9.36 acres of
ground this 1 ftoor frame home with 2 bedrooms will give
you the.relaxed l•lin~untry when actually it"s only
moments from townl
features are a 1 car garage
with atorage, oulbuildlnga, enclosed lront porch, and
FREE GASIASKING $30,000
NEW LISTING - 146.5 acres of vacant wooded land. Gas
wen on the property. FREE GAS! Immediate possession!
Aaklng $36,700
IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR VARIETY- YOU'LL FIND IT
AT CLELAND REALTY! WE HAVE EVERYTHING
FROM TKE "FIXER·UPPER'S" TO THE "PACK YOUR
CLOTHES AND IIOVE INTO" HOliES. STOP BY AND
SEE WHAT WE HAVE. IARIETY IS THE "SPICE" OF
UFEI

~TROMM
FlEE ESTIMATES

•20 Yeara Experience
•Quality Homee and
CU.tom Romocleling

111m your clutter into ctllllt,
~ it the m!.U way... by 11hone,
no need to learw your home.

Place your classified ad today!
15 words or le1111, 3 dpys,
3 pa_pers,$6.00
Call nur n!Jlcn fnr pnld In ntlwnnr.n rnlm/

1.__________
2.__________
.'l •.__________

JEAN TliUSSELL............................................M..HOO '
JO HILL............................................................885-4468

. OFFICE..- ............- ..... ...............................tlt2·2258

.'

742·2328

L

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

l•stalllla Celr.lar
Pllo•es, (• Sttt·eos~l
or Radios, CB's
0• SHe lllstalltlalt
FrMEstf.tts

742·26'56

7·25 I mo pel.

I

.

AIR CONDmONERS. HEAT PUWS and
FURNACES FOR MOillE &amp; DOUilEMDE HOMES

•••••••••••••••••••••••• t

BE.NNETT'S
Pmner••Y Unlly Seadhael

DAVE'S ·
ELECTROiiiC.
SERVICE

Rooflna, Vinyl
aiding, Ptintlna, ·
and Ho• repairs
667·6611
After 7:00 p.111.

Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
PalnJing
FREE ESTIMATES

'·'·---------~ ~------------------~--~Now 111~
'$111M/
"·-------~- ,1....,.:~~--~----_-;-1
"""'.,...,
________--(
1
I " ·----------11

-4-16·16-tln

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

7·11·11·1 mo.

11

NO SUNDAY CALLS

5/22/tfn

949~2161

HENRY E. CLELAND.-....................................992-8181

TRACV•BRINAGER. ........................................848·2430

BUILDERS

3 AnnOuncement!ll
WI ntl.. llflll rniiDliiL Cariol'o

~1::o['O.Iol-.~~.

.

•••••••••

MO.LI H.OME
Hll'IING I
COOUNG

LoclltH On Saffenl Scllool ltl. aff It, 141
1614) 446-•416 or 1·100-172-5917 .
4·21·11

"

Announc eme nts

4

Giveaway

_,....

ar.-

2 llmala
w._ 11111t •
t,.lnod, good homo ~. llaln

.

"· Loon, '"" . _ . On ,....,
.

2 """'1111: . I ..... 1 llrilalo,

,................. .uno;

trained. 114 441 Mt7.
~

. ·. ' ..

�...

The Dal

4

·,

,·

"'

. ...,.

'

.

·' ·'"

'

Monday, August 26, 1991

Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
lor
now •-Neilan on
Roybum Rood. Plvod rood,
Lola '

2 tlaer klltent to glvnwty. 114!~72.

lllngloowldo llllloro, .......
For Solo: 11 ociM trontago on
CR 21, oouth of Balhon, Call
114-84..2122.

Ma-111 a..bcllvlalon, 2.1
· mDoo out Sond Hill Rood, hot
oollrlctod building lato for ealo
ao low u SliGO, and ono aero
1oto for olnglo wldoo ovallablo
oloo, :IOW~&amp;O or 175-4100.

Found; Brown f•maM puppy.

Kantuga ...... 11~514 .

Old ochool buo body I Ira.,..
Make good oiOIIgt building.
814-:JII8.805&amp;.
Ono long hollld black and whRo
lomalo lUtton, 30W~7547.
Popor bock I hard bock booko:
214 Adcloon Pike, Golllpollo,
OH.
T.V.: WorU, bul no« good pic·
lUll. &amp;14-44&amp;-401!.

Lost &amp; Found
Faund, 1...,. lo111o1lo puppy In
lha Rulllc Hlllo aroa In
SyiiCUM, &amp;14-tn-6071.

IOIIOgo . . .. _

COU~
Wlltlr,
NMDnllble
.......lono. eorn,.toto I n lion mallod on roq...,. 304-t1552153, John 0. Gortoch, no

2·Aullllllan Shopord Callie
doal, lamale and 111o1lo, &amp;14·1m·
101o evenings.
I Mol&lt; old Springer blrddo!l
pupo to glvoawoy. 11H5f.112t.
Fomale Mini wMo Gorman
Shophord, 1 yr. old. i14-!&amp;7-1007.

44

-om

~rtmtnt
forRe~

Modem 1

•••oom

111 ... 0310.

Aplrlmlnl,

1175 Polar Boll Conv~tlonol
400 Cummlngo. 13 Spud, 411
Roar End, IM'W-111121.
1177 Ford F·150, Clood Condf.
Runo Oood, 1850. 114411-

Complotly Fumlohod mobllo

0-·

homO,
iloilo -No Polo,
- CA.
· ....
looldna1 rlvor.

448-4311.

North :lrd Ill, 111-poot, 2 n10111 unllomlohod opt, ,...,.,.
coo and dopc&gt;oM rocjulrod. 304112-a5&amp;8.
North :!rd Sl, lllckloport, Ohio, 1
bodroam h.mlohod opl, rolorwoo
coo and dopod roqulrod. 304112-a5&amp;8.

I

r.t::;.Y ..::J.';'

a:
'

fullt time auctionMr, complete
ou«lon Hnlco. Llconood Ohio,
w~

Ylrglnlo, 304·772-5785.

9 : Wanted to Buy

llualclono&lt;. drum1111r,

ball,

pllino.
YOCifl
I
mutt.
eoun~ry/Rock. e14-m.e137. ·

Rotoll Socurlty In locol otoro.

Homoo, Coil &amp;14- . Store Dettc8ve, experience
poolorrod but not nec .... ry.
Training prog11m. BonotRo InWonlod all Junk and OCIIP ,.,. cluded. Sond bockround lnlor·
al, -5-3o!l.
motion w/J&gt;hono numbor to: LP.
Manager, PoHor Ylllacto ShopWanlod lo I&gt;UJ, Slondlng timbo&lt;, Ding Cant'!' 2000 W. Stolo St,
1
8~ Wllllonuo I Sono 514-182·
~romonl, On. 4!420
5441.
Social Workor: Eliciting oppor·
Top Prien Pold: All Old U.S. tunHy lor a prolooolonil wRh a
COino Odd Ringo, Dlomondo, molllll clegrao In -lol work
5111/lr' Colno, Storllng, Gold to oonl~buto In conluctlon wllh
Co1no. M.T.S. Coin Snop, 151 our new phnical Nhab. unh.
s.-w!Avll'luo,
Galllpollo.
Elocollenl ioofory &amp; outatondlng
'
benettta P'-aM Mnd rMume
to: Roolo Ward, Otroctor of
Employmenl Serv1ces Human Rooour- HIIC, 385
Jockoon Pika, Qolllpollo, OH
45&amp;31.
814-44e.ato5,
EEO
Employer.
U~ Mobllo
~75.

,,

... 12,aoG CREDIT CARD!
Quarontood oamo day opprovoll
aooo q•~ly lor NO " - "
Vll!AiMC: ohd caoh advancoo. 1·

~EX1 . 2524.

=-

$350.0CWoy P-olng Oo'diarill P~ Call You. No Ell·
~oary. 1-iQO.:z55.
. 13N1DAY PROCESSING
~E
ORD£RSI PEOPLE
...
CALLYOU.
NO'EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-iQO.zaHa42.

AVON ; All aroaa, Call Marilyn
Wuvor 304-112·2845.
POMEROY
. 'POSTAL.JOBS•
f1UI4!4,M~ hr. No oxp. noodod.
For n•m •nd appiiCIIIon Info.,
coil 1.Z11-H7-4&amp;11l 7o.m.·10p.m.

Business
OpponunHy

SHuatlon
Wanted

Fomolo would like to ohore 3 BR
homo wllh oomo: 1225 monlhly
lncludao ulllhloo. &amp;14-448-11101.
Nood Somoono To U.a.ln And
Sharo Ront. Apply At: &amp;07
Socond Avon,., Apl 12, Go~
llpollo.

14

Business
Training
Rotllln
NowiiiSouthoolllm
Bualnno Colllgo, ~~~~. Volley
Plaza. Call Today, I
-43&amp;711
Roglllorollon 1180-GII-12711B.

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babyok In My Homo
Anr.lmo.
Rodney
Allo.
Ro oroncoo Avallllllo. CaU 11424UI87.
Buoh Hog Sorvlco. Roooonoblo
Rolli. Ni&gt; Job To Smolll &amp;14-

L9co1 V""'lna ~outo.
Ctoeop11 -IM-1&amp;111.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

H:z-7841.

VENDING ROUTE: Gat rich
qulck?No woyl But M hovo o
good, otooolv, oHordoblo, bullnno. Won't Lui. 1.-2148383.

23

=

:,.illl,:e.!:t..~ri.!S:

Professional
Services

cou

~~~no liooldo poto,
1V101Ingo
:.114-::..:.M::'"..:226=3.~----

____;;.;;,;,,;,.;.;;..;..;,___ 1

Smog tbr Stove &amp; Rolrl~11tor
=~~·· Hogo, Oaor,. 304- Furnlohod, w.- I Drvor
~.
1221/mo.
1200
!ltpooli, • llonlho Loaoo. 142
Real Eslatc
Fourlh Avo, Cllllpolla. 114-4411Cuotom Bulchoring, I dayo

0

31 Homes lor Sale
ABSOWTELY MUST · SELLII
Roducod To Soli: 2 Story ·:lbr
ear- I.GI In Chaohloo, Ohio.
Elocolllnl Condlllon. Flononclng
Avalloblo With Pay Polnto. 804'
132-41151, 1104-11!2·1'11711, 114-!17·
0141.
2-BR houoo, 3-oclll. _3-ml•.lrllm
Chootor, OH. 114-~.
24x41 doublowldo, 3 BR, 2 lull
botho, oatollho, pool, CA. wotl6
rural Wotlf. 10 OCIIO. 114-1182•

71130.

:1br Homo, 25 Acrn, 1 IIIIo From
Chy UmMo. Will Conaldor Trado.

front, cerport, 112 baHment,

hardwood llooro, 'J10 oeooo, :J.

nil lrom Holzor HoopHal, SA 180,
uklng 1!1,500, 114-1112·2728.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12ll&amp;5 3BR moblll homo on 2
ocro lot whh 111132 gorago,
ltOI'IIge bulkflng8, runl wafer,
aoklng t17,800. 114-251-1408 or
448-111181.

11170 Champion moblll homo,
304..75-3551 or &amp;711-11147.
1m Bolmood ~':..'.'"lolly
tumlohod, 2·BR, &amp;
141.
1071 14x70,

2br, Den Total

Eloctrlc, Now Carpet And Wotor
Hoator Applloncn, lx18 Porch,
18,000. 814-:188-8!81.
11178 Fllodom Mobllo Homo,
12185,_ Good CondHian, l8,ooq.
614-2....11301.
1182 Commodor Mobllo Homo 2
BR1 •Oordan Tub, 18 Poa~ Si.
Mlaolopoot
$71100. 114-11112-5030.
1184 Colonial 14170 All Eloctrlc,
3br, 1 112 Balhl, CAl Flreploco,
Porchao, And outbu ldlngL Ell·
colllnt CondHionl Quail C..oto
Moblll Home Pork. t14-246-

34

Buslnesl
Buildings

31117.

Small 2br, Z» Roar Flrll Avo,
Khchon,
Whh
Stovo,
Rolrlaorolor, l2t01mo. Pluo
UtiiRiioo, Do-'!, Rolaronco. No
Polo. 114-4.....121.

42 · Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bodroom Aohlon Upland Rd,
Hud accoplod, no polo, 3-754011.
2 be*Gom tr•IMr, HWW I w•tar
tumlahocl. Roloroncoo, Aloo
llllllr opaco. North Rt. 1 Loculi
Rood on rtghl, Point Ploooant,

wv.

2 bodroam toollar complotoly
tumlohod,.~ woohar, doyor,
304-773-11-.
Z bodroam trollar, 1250. por
month, unfwnllhed, llrepiKt,

::

614-2411-1428.

'

I

73

Vans

61 Fann Equipment

Slooplng wHh cooling.'
Aloo t11llar apoco. AI _..,,..
Call oftlf 2:00 p.m., 1104·7725&amp;51,MotonWV.

46 Space for Rent
Countrj IIObllo HOIIII Pork,
Route 33, North ol P-roy.
~nz
rontolo, parlo, ealoo. Call
•
·11171.
For Rant: OHico Spoco Within
CMy LlmRL s-od AvonuoAnd
Btato Routo 7. 114-441-1NI,

;;::'00-~I:::OO~.----=-:--:
1

Moblll opocoo, R...ao 2
ond 12 .. "Y*, 304-175o3818.

Merch andr se
51

Household
GOOds
BaoUIIIUI Ootid oak Chino
CObiM4, 1 yr. old, $150. Oak plo
..... 1 yr. old, 1350. 114-44118000 oftor 4 p.m.

Fumlahocl ElllclonaY, t175/mo.
UIUHioo Pold, 701 Fourth Avo,
CIIIHipollo. 111 441 4411 . Aftor
7p.m.

Antiques

Avlng. 1 ond 2 bod, _ oport- II Yllloao
Manor · and·
Alvartlilo
Aporliowdo In Mlcldloport. Foam
hllll. Colt 114-tm·TIIt EOH.

:

·
.

Buy or 1011. Rlvorlno Antlq1124 E. Main 111'014, P-ooy.
Houoo: M.T.W. 10:00 LIIL to'I:OO
r:~l1 :00 to 1:00 p.m.

54

Miscellaneous
Mercllandlse
In 11onoor1ot
uiiYone -:=,:~ 2 Bailie:, AH 4 g11vo f14.4ol8.1004.
Utllllloo
' $425/mo. . Dopool4 RoQutrod. No PolL 114,7-Ex.
Toning Tobloo. Topol
44to7m; 114-441o4222.
lho Uno bv Suntanol ,,.._.
30!3orMf.alll.
Concoato I ptudc ..,lc lanka,
Ron Evono ~ntiiDrloM. ~lck•
oon, OH 1-.u7..1121. .

&amp;4 WD's

1884 Jaop ChorokH, 4-WD, 114· .
182·7811.
Qood Condition,
For Pay OH, 114·256-

e:oow• (I) (J)• tm 01•
II)) NIWI
(I) And~ Griffith
(!) Club Connect
(f) Rudtng Rolnbow Q
({]) Gl Andy Griffith
IIJ Canoon Expreu
ID So1t ol SchOI11Uc &amp;pon•
America
a World Today
!Ill Rln Tin Tin, K·8 Cop
Stereo. 1;1
1:05 ()) lllwltchld
1:30 W • «JJ NBC Newe Q
(!) I Dreom of Jeonnle
(I) (J)
ABC Newo Q
(!) Wild America !;I
(f) 3-2· 1 Com.ct r:;J
OJ Ole CIS Newl 1;1
({]) • WKRP In Clnclnnotl
ID Up Clole
!Ill New Zorro Stereo. Q
1:35 ()) Andy Griffith
7:00())• @ Whoel of Fonune

I

PREAPA

. ;. ~. .:~

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1--1

J

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.
~
.
1

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4

II
~·=·==·=:·::::·~~~
5

... !

A splil in second
Is that
moment
time between
reading the freeway sign and

I

realizing

you

I

1
L ....l._ L...I..-1-....L--l
A

er

Complete ohe chuckle quolad
V' by filling in the miutng words
you develop lrom slip No. 3 bolow.

PRI NT NUMB ERE D LETTER S I
IN TH ES E SQUARES

11J Wetcome Back, Kotter
ID SportaCenter

UA504.

.

Whlto lOgger IIYina hono. .75
conto o ploco. IM-3A..252.
Zlppo Doll Plno Bar Chootnut
Maro 15 - · f1,100; Sharp
Point Maro 'i. IJ.~'!'!o....o.. $700.

Ouclul,- .,.........,1.
.

-

Transport at ron
11

Autos tor Sale

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

11178

VW

AobbR,

X CALl- l"r
&lt;~,AMAZ.ING

GllAPEf~'
0

• · ......_ T,....,A'-'E ~ "'-· 8- 'lt. "- .

gooollno,

'

I

Home
Improvements

It&amp;T Camero, 304-882-32!5.

82

OL.IVIA~ fR:)I,\ BOL..IVIA,
AND SI·II::SAN ~:;X.PERT
ON TRIVIA.

l REMEMBER TH'

l HAD TO WHACK THE

NIGHT YOU WAS
BORN, TATER!!

THUNDER OUT OF YORE
BOTIOM TO
GIT YOU
GOIN' !!

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

andHNtlng

Fou~h

and Plno
Oalllpollo, Ohio
814 446 !888
HEAT PUMP Still &amp; Barvlco,
304-87WOIIII or 114-441o13011.
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

'Your
'Birthday

Rnldonllal Of COIINIIorelol
wl~ng; noio aorvlco or .Wpolro.
Ma8ttr

UcenMd

electrlcllin.

Rldonour Eloctrlcol, 30W71·

171&amp;.

85

General Haullog

Wo Do Houll_ng' A~lmo,
Anypiooo, No Job Too 81g Or
Too Ldltlo. Boaomonl Cloaiilng,
Gonlllt WOik, An, Klnd. 114- .
3'71-2278 An;tlrno. '

87.

UPholstery
,
Mowoay'o UPhotlllrlng liriic· ..
lng UICOWIIy llot 21 JO*ro. Tho
toeilt In lumHu11 UPholollrlng.
Call 304-1711-4154 tor lroo ... ·

umat•

1

·

r

NEVeR KNOW WHEN
HE5 PUTTINEt ME CN.

BARNEY

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Ca~or·a Plumbing

84

+K 4

PHILLIP
ALDER

romanlically perlect for you. Mail $2
plus a long. sell-addressed. slamped
envelope lo Malchmakeo . c/o lhis
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101·3428.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) You have a lol
in common thai you can share with
someone you know only casually. You
may have an opportunity to get ·to know
this individual bet1er today . Capitalize
on it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Conditions
in general appear qulle promising lor
you today, primarily because ol your te·
nacily in overcoming dllllculties. You
can accomplish everything you desire.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) lndi·
viduals for whom you 're responsible

should be managed wllh a firm hand to·
day. lnstinctively, you'll know how lo as·
sert yoursell without being cold or
Aug. 27, 1e91
unkind .
Be on the lookout in lhe year ahead tor CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 1t) Your
ventures you can lranstorm lrom oul· lundamental business sense could pul
moded lo new and useful. You moghl you in the prollt cOlumn Ieday - II you
adhere to It In commercial dealings. You
uncover two or more.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopf. 22) There are ' shouldn't h•ve trouble with either lhe
some addilional benellts in work yo~ pennies or the dollars.
perlorm wen today. However, you won I AQUARIUS (Jan •. 20-Feb. 18) Assobe In a position to appreclale the re- ciates will find you an admirable indlvid·
wards unless you put lorth the effort. ual to be lnvoiVlid with today because ot
Know where to look lor romanot ·111d the way . you handle responsibilities.
Your attHude will help' elevale lheir ca·
you'll lind 11. The Aslro-Graph
maker inslantly reveals which sllll...tit pabllltles as well. ·

M··

A ~

WEST
+ 9 76 2

a

YOU
REMEMBER,

TOO tt

7h•;;.~.,..,

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Be charila·
ble and

compassionate today with

those less fortunate than you . However.

be realistic as to wh at extent you are
able to help them . Don't ge t in over your

head.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) You're lhe
dependable one that rriend s can lean

on today when lhey leel they have problems with which they can't cope . You'll
be remarkably adroit at coming up with

solutions.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You have a
slight edge over others in competitive

developments Ieday. Keep this in the
back of your mind in case a " hard nose•
starts throwing some weight around .

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Take time IO·
day to communicate In some manner
with an old lrlend who now r&lt;!sides "r
from you. This relationship Is worth
proper maintenance.
CANCER (June 21 ·~uly 22) The proba-

billlies lor achieving your objectives
look promising today. but you may not
score your victories on your initial at ..

lempl. II you are slymled, regroup and
lry again.
LEO (~uly 23-Aug. 22) Someone Who
adm ires and respectl you might make a
suggestion today that will be a iough pill
lo swallow. ll's best you blte11he bullet
and heed the advice.

EAST

+s 1

99 7 6 s
+KJ9 Z
+106 2

9AQ 2

+4

+QB 7 ~3

SOUTH

+AQJ

The appeal

9KJ4
• 8 65 3
+AJ 9

of overtricks

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder
In rubber bridge, you r primary aim
as declarer should be to make your
contract. II there is a chance lor an
overtrick or Lwo without risking the
corrtract, fair enough - go for it. Sut
tl the contract is put in jeopardy, for·
get Lhose overtricks. The value of a
game is worth more than a lot of
overtricks.
It is true that somelimes you will be
a heavy favorite to collect an over·
trick, but once in a while the cards will
kill you, dcfealing you when you had
Lhe contract locked up. It is hard to ex·
plain that sort of thing to partner, who
sees his wealth decreasong instead of
increasing.
Without glancing at the East· West
cards, decide how you would play in
three no-trump, West leading a low
club.
The careless decla rer wins the first
trick with the club jack and immedi·
ately takes a diamond finesse . loses,
a·nd back comes a club, won with dum·
my's king. Now suppose declarer cash·

n

Soulb
I NT

Wesl

2.

l!:ut

Pass

Pau

Pass

All pus

Opening lead :

+5

1.. . - ----------.J
es dummy 's dtamond ace. When West ··
discards, South has that sinking feet~ ·'
ing. He tries a heart, but both honor!! :
are offside, and West is able to -,tablish and cash his club suit.
.
The more careful declarer starla by
counling his top tricks. Here, given the
club lead, there are eight: four apedea, ·;
one diamond and three clubl. Only one .
more trick is needed, and It II guar•n· ..
teed if hearts are attacked. Just wiQ
trick one and immediately lead a low
heart from hand.
Even if West wins with the queen ·
and plays another club, you just lead a
second heart, establishing your ninth '·
trick while you have all suits under
control.
@ 111t, . .WPANR INTI. . . . Allll.

111

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle

e

All typoo ol maoonoy, brick,
block and otono. Fooo ... ·
tlmatu. 304-772-8550.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,

1811 Cotvotlo, oll-iollvor,
$015, 114-247-4111.
1177 C.nro, white with red lnlorlor. Looko I Nno roal good.
&amp;14 441 &amp;01:1.
UncondHlonal lifetime gu1r1n· . , ·
Local roloroncH tumlahod. ·
1m c~~ryo~ar Cordoba 310, · too.
F,.. HtlmiiM. C.ll coUect 1· ~ .
aulo, now ovorylhlng, f1400. 814-2!7-IMSI,
day a&lt; night.
doyo f14-lm·2115. oftar 5:30pm; RogaN BaHnwnl Wat1rproo- . ·
coll304-t75.aasa.
ling.
1m Monll Carlo, T·Topo, Complllo llobllo Homo Sot.Upo,
oruleo,ll", dotoy, :IOWl'll-4185.
Repair~; Commorlcol, RHidon1180 Flrollnl v.. onglno 81,250. tlaf lmprovomonto. Including:
Plumbing, Eioctrlcol. lnouranco
11180""""" 1500. 304-1182-2221.
Clolmo Al:coplod.I14·25&amp;·1B11.
1110 Ponllac Grand P~x. Qood
Curtla Homt lmprovementa:
Condhlon, f1,200. 114-!&amp;7·11440.
Yooro Eloporlonco On Otdor a
liM AMC Eoglo 4 WD, Air, AT, Newer Hornel. Room Addltlona,
AC, AMIFM, "EC, 711K 12,1100; Foundation Work. Roollng,
1881 Hondo Civic SW, Air, Wlndowo &amp; Sldlnf F111 Ei·
All/Fill Caoo 5opd, 40 lllloo Par tlmotHI Roloroncoo, No Job To
Gallon1 £rfglnol Ownar, 81,200. Big Or S111o1lll814-441-0325.
,
814-24....17.
'
E I R TREE SERVICE. ToDDing, '•
Trimming, Tr11 Removal, fiidge :•
1881 Monto Carlo, 304-&amp;711-1505.
Trimming. Frao Elollmotool 814· ·'
1182 Chryolor LaBaron Convor· 387·'715T.
llble, 12,000. 814-256-1778.
JET
1t83 Chovy 5-10 llozor, Tohoo Aendlon Motor~, rtJ)IIh•cl. Ntw
pkg., outo., PW, AIIIFII, Cao- &amp; r~obuiR motoro In llock, RON
aotll, 1885 _v.a ongln!, 13500. EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-80(1.
Call oftor 5, o14-38fi.IT!T.
5!7·1528.
1t85 Canuoro lrac-l, T·Topo, Ron·o TV Sorvlco, apoclollzlng
1!..~· oftor 4:00 Pll col 304In Zonlth oliO oorvlclng mool
1,....75.
oU•r brande. HouN Cllll, 1110
oppllonco 11palro. WV
1885 Nl-n 300 ZX. loodod In- oomo
cluding T·Topo, loalhor lnte~or. 304-51'11-2318 Ohio &amp;14-448-2454.
loW mliH, oxc cond, 14,11115. Sop41c Tank Pumping fg()cGalllo
304-1182·331'11.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
1815 Plymouth Horizon, 4 opd., Jackoon, OH 1-800-5!7·1521.
good cond., t1400. 814-25f.&amp;251. Oovlo
Sow·Voc · Sorvlco,
CIOOk Rd. Poot1, aup.
1118 Hondo DX. 4 door, 5 apood, GIOrgoo
plloo, pickup, ond dollvooy. 114make a good college car, 441-41284.
~.800. :J04.4115-3053 '"" 8:00
PM.
wtll build patio covtra, dlc:h,
rooma, put up vinyl ·
1118 Rod Flaro Loodod TIH, ecreened
Cruloe, Sunroof, Low Mlloo. oldlng or trallor old~lng. &amp;14- '
llof81 &amp;14-441-411&amp;7 114-4411- 245~
08$2.
Will do ramodollng, rooting,
building, 1111 trimming and
11&amp;7 Oookto 500, nlcoly oqulpo 11moval,
houoa polnllng. For
ood, goodcondRion, low mllo_o, hw Htlma1n,
1114-182·3384 dayo or 1112·30:tU 114-11112·5152. cell George at 1~
avonlngL

7:05 ()) The ~effei'Hfle
7:30 ()). «JJ Jeopordyl Q
(!) Andy Griffith
Cil Ole Entortolnment
Tonight Stereo.
(J)
M1m1'• Flmlly
ill Whllt of Fortune Q
({]) • M' A•s•H
11J Tennlo U.S . Open from
Flushing Meadow, N.Y. (LJ
121 Cookln' USA
ID lnl•fii•Honal Outboord
Orand Prix From Sl. Louis
(T)
Croa1flre
7:35 ()) Major Leogue Ba1eblll
Montreal Expos at Allanta
Braves (LI
8:00 ()) • @ Freoh Prince of
Bal Air Hilary tries 10
convince Will to date her
haughty celebrity boss. (R)
Stereo. Q
(I) Major League BaHINIII
Los Angeles Dodgers at
Chicago Cubs (L)
(I) (I)
MocGyver
MacGyver goes undercover
alter a labor organizer Is
murdered. (Rl Stereo. Q
!D lllechel Are Moving
Diverse perspectives on
coastal management are
discussed. (1 :00)
(f) Advonture Andrew
Hanley travels to Kenya·s
Lake Turkana. Q
tm tl2le Evonlng Shlde
Two lemale students ask to
join lhe al~male .football
leem. (RJ Stereo. Q
I]] • MOVIE: ISuMclln Palm
Sprlngl (2:00) Q
Q!l On 81181 Stereo.
1D AWSA Weier Skiing
Show Ski NatiOnals from
Janesville, Wis. (T)
18 PrlmeNeWI
0 Baeuty end the Blatt Q
8:30 ())
OJ) llloaaom Blossom
wants to drop out ol her
private school. (R) Stereo. Q
tm tl2le Major Oad The
Major worries when Polly's
old boytriand reiUrns . (RJ
Stereo. Q
121 On Sllge Stereo.
9:00 W 0 II)) MOVIE: 'Tum Back
the Cloek' NBC Monclly
Night II the MOVIII (2:00)
Stereo. C
Cil (I) 8 MOVIE: 'Finding
the Way Home' ABC
Monday Night Movie (2:00)
Stereo. Q
!D (f) American Motte,.
Robert Motherwell discusses
an·s abstract expressionist
movement. Q
tm tl2le Murphy Brown
Murphy uses leverage during
her contract negollations. (R)
Slereo. Q
121 Noohvlllo Now Slereo.
ID Pro Baach Volleyblll
Cuervo Gold Crown lrom
Santa Cruz, CaHI. (T)
18 LArry King Uvel
!Ill Beauty ond the Baaot 0
9:30 Ole Oe11Qnlng Women
Alter the death ol a lrlend,
Julia agrees to care lor a
child. (RJ Stereo. 0
tO:OO (!) Amerlcon Ortalnolo
(f) Chotlng • RaTnbow: Tho
Ufe ot Jonphlne S.ker
Josephine Baker's caroer Is
traced lrom dancer at the
Follies Bergere to member or
lhe French Resistance to civil
rights campaigner. (I :40)
tm 01• Northern Expoouf8
Joel reconsiders his plans to
move back to New York. (RJ
Stereo. 0
({]) .. Star Trek
ID Pro Surfing Oulksilver
Lacanau from France (T)
awo~dNeWI
I
11!1700 Club With Pot
ROblr11011
10:20 ()) MOVIE: Tho Teehoul8 of
the Auguot Moon (2:30)
I 0:30 121 Crook end Chiou
ID Surter Magulne
11:oowe ® (I) file .tm
Ole «J1 NIWI
(!) NIWIWI!Ch
({]) • Al'llltlo Hell
t!J Crime Story
Q!l On 111111 Stereo.
1D BaHblll Tonight
1por11 Tonight
!Ill 8clf8CIOW lncl Mra. King
11:30 ())
II)) Tonight Show
Stereo.
(I) Mligntlm, p.L

a

304-51'11-2101 or :JOWl'll-432!.
8udgll Tr~nomlao'- Uood I .
oobuln, olo~lng at $H; Aulo ..
Pa~L 114-245-11877, 814-379- -- •
2263.

81

1o II truo? J..P.Ior $44 t""""h
lha U.S. Golt1? CaH toll froa 1·
800-417-11185 elL SL.,17.
7 loGe ptclo-up dloc, Qlldor Station W.aoil 1m, ChoVIOiot
blodo, I 15 Inch plowo. 114-441- Malibu. LoOioo and iuno aoocl,
1004.
John Knowoczyn, 114-tm-2?17.

1

automatic, 1100. or bnt aner,

Services

910 8 3
+A Q 10 7

a

,:::;,,~::.

'

l ·l .. tl

+ K 10 8 3

a Moneyllne

~-41711-1611.

76

NORTH

BRIDGE

!Ill Sclf8CIOW and Mf8. King

~;; tu~Gl.JNPY A.N P
'A
J-!OI-Y WATffl . · .

ll·U

Golhic - Awful - Dandy - Yearly - WANT to HEAR
Tell your problems to the people who don't really like
you . They are the ones that really WANT to HEAR
them.

(I) &lt;lla lnaldl Edition Q
(!) (f) MacNeii/Lehf8r

\T) A fr"I)&lt;Tti{Cf Of

the

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1jl Night Coun Q

i'

missed

A.:..Lr.,F....:lr-.:.:.,lr,lrl
E wF
1-...;.
A
16

NewaHourQ

Farm Supplres
&amp; Lrvestock
Farm Equipment

I

tm Ole Cumont Affair Q
({]) • Night Coull r:;l

111&amp; Cavollar, 1!295; 11&amp;7 VW
Fox f!DIIII; 11N111 Chivy Novo
f1715; 1818 Ford Elocoot tl&amp;~i
1815 Oldo CaiOla 12800; ltoo
58
Fruits I
Pontiac Qron6-Am 12000; 1184
Vegetables
Ponhoc Trano-Am 125111; 11Q
Cavlillar SW f1115; 1185 Pontla~
Canning Poachoo now ovallablo, Sunblrd JIDIIII; 11111 Cavallor
oloo llli~lott P11oa and Pruno f12tl; 11114 Chrvalor Lalaron
PIUII)O lalar In AuguOL Call 1• $1400· I &amp; 0 Aulo Salol, Hwy.
800-447-3710 lor prlcoo. BOB'S 1110 N., 4 mi. N. ol lioiatr. 114MARKET, llooon or Galllpollo, 448-1115.
.
011.
11.. Font Eocort LX low
Cannl~
Tom1ton, mllilJP, $3500, &amp;14-lm·.i'225 of·
1&amp;.00/Buahol; CanninG 8eono, lor 1:oopm.
$12.00/Buohal, Wo l&gt;lck Or
18.00/Buohol, You Pick. 304-112· 1111. Morcury T-. 2 dr.,
~7.
2!,000 mlloo, ooklng 13800. 814«t-41721.
For Solo: Rod Roopbo&lt;rloo, Pick
YO\Ir OWn. 114.Z41o5084. ·
1..t Rod Barolo, Air, TIH,
Cruloe, AIIIFII st- Ca-le,
Wlntoro' canning t - . 114- 25,000 Millo. Drlalnol Ownar.
44t-14111. .
Will 8oft For Poy bill 114-4411112.

&amp;1

lllo
be-

low to form four simple words.

8

a

,·

1817' $--10 Blaur, 4x4, Tahoe ,

2142.

a....._

'

1881 Ford F150, 4z4, 8W8, XLT
Larlo~ novor uood ott road, all
John Doooo !4 Chopper. Excel· I?Ptlons, exc cond, 1acraflce tor ·
IIIII Condltlonl114-866-8732.
118,500. 304-8711-11185.
Lata Modol 135 IIF :rractor
M
lA
14,550; 118 wuh Hoovy Duty _74_,__o...,to,_rc...,y:..c_...
...,s,-::--:-:Loodor, 11,150; T030 Forguoon 1V74 Hor~ Dovloon, FLH NWRh 4 Fl. Buah Hog 52,315;
1800 011- 12,815. OWnlf Will Polnl &amp; 111. EX111 Chromal
Flnonco. 114-288-41522.
&amp;14-245-8428.
Queen elze walnYI waterbed, M18NJ Fergueon 13$ tr1ctor 1m 550·YamohoJ 4-cyt1 ohan.
drivo, runo gooo, $5011 080, •
hn ohal- and mlrra&lt;. 304-t~ wlfull hZ:':rllo end lolder, 814-182-5537.
.
1844 after I or IMve a meuage. u,ooo. 3
·2:121.
1181 Hondo Qold Wing.. lully
RocondMionod Wuho11, Dryoro. 63
Livestock
dlllood, good lhopo. 82000.
Ouo11ntood prompl oorvlci tor -.,.--....,----:--:--::- Call alter 5 p.m. 814-318..7!7.
oil mokn, modolo. Tho Woohor 2 H- Ooooanock T11llar,
Dryar Shoppo. 114-441-2844.
Ll'll• Dr-Ing Room, 12,!500; 1181 Hondo V-48 llagnll!'l. Loto
Rilla Sovar llod. 110E, 2:1-250 N- 12 R. Stock Tlllllr, f1,715; of axtraa. lDw mllug1. E.J.c.
• 74•
March 18th 1181 AOHA Sorrall cond. &amp;14-441oG11113, 446-7271 a~
collbor wll 8x ocopo, •* •· Filly With 0no Honor Point; lor5.
·
.·
222~
February 141h 11110 Chollnut
110 KIWIAkl 4 whHler, 414, l:
Twl,..lzo bod wHh hoad·boord, FIUy Sc&gt;nny D-Bar Blood Uno. 304-411'11-2708
oftor 5:COPM.
mo11101 ond box opringo wRh or :.'*::..:2111-1:.;
. ...;.;.52:.;2.;;_______
wllhoul diiUar, 114-4182-1&amp;55.
I Month old Slmmontol buill 1881 Kowoold KX·25!J Looko ,.
Nev.r
Rune ' 1k• He
Ty-ohar: oloctronlc, portable, 1~1.:.4-:.M:.:II-~282=2.~--,-::---=-:- And
Rocod, Fann Rlddonl $1,7110,
1 yr. old, owner'• manual, die~ Bayee/Dola Production S.IJ, O.B.O. 81~45-5588 .
llonary, momory, atrior lootulll. WodnHdoy,
Auguot
281h
'•
f150 ($300 now). 114-441-7218 a~ 7:30p.m.
Foyotlo
Counly
lor 8:00.
Fal'llroundo,
Woohlngton 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Cou~h.....
Soling Ouroco,
for Sale
Building
55
Yorko, Hompo And Coooo
M
'
Houooboal
WHh Low Houro,
811do, Slovo bovla London,
Supplies
Dhlo 814-852·2711g, Mlko Bayao In Qood CondHion, Price
Roducod For Oulck Salo,
Block, brick, aowor Dlpoo, Win- Orlont 514-877-a203.
f15,000. Call 514-44lo410V, B14dow., llnlalo, ole. Claude Wlnlooo, Rio Orondo, OH Call 114- Oooto: Nubllll molhlro I 3'71-2JIIO.
babiW.. all purabrad, aom1 whh
245-11121.
BIM Boat, 1S ft . tlbellJII. ., '
papoll. 114 311 854&amp;.
tnll.. r, 55 hp Yahrlm11, 28 lb troll- ·!
56 Pets lor Sale
Hatil1or oalo. Atoo, 1 goat. B14- Ina motor, llv.wen, w..l kept, t

=·

1.. .

-zo

.

,

a....... and Su~ Shop-Pal
Grooming. AN
o, llyloo.
lomo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Wobb. Ca~ 114-441.q.r31, 1 362-41231.
A.K.C. Oock1r Sponlal, I waoke
old, white I buH. 11~ 441 &amp;088.
AKC lamolo Ooldon Rll~vor
puii!Qo, f!OO. ooch. 114-441IIOihi .Wio1!17.
AKC
lllnlotuoo Schnouur
puppy. Mai11 _f150. •~o
Mobllo For Rant, quill
or 44lo080I ooforo a p.m.
locollon, ooblo TV ovolloblo,
Hud opprovod. 114 448 0508 or
AKC Pomo~~nlum pupploo,
44H:I21.
oholo I wormod. AKC Cockor
Hutch, 111o11chlng tolllo and olx Sponlolo.
PoodloL SnouJifl.
Quill -ntoy -lng cl- to
30'4..71-211!.
!Own, 2 lA, 12110, 1ri1n1 pon:h, chalro, 304-&amp;711-11!7.
AC. 1210 mo. pluo ulllhloO, Gop.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
AullroJio Shollhord Pupo.
I All. roqullld. Roody lo movo Comploto tumlohlngo. Roglot~rod, u-slld For
Into. 814-441ollll25.
Houoo: lion-Sot, 11-5. 114-448- OuaiRy.
All Shoto. 811odore
tr.l22, 3 mlloo out BuiiYUII Rd. Slni:o 1fl'll. &amp;1W78-2527.
44 Apanment
F111 Dollvory.
Cocker Spaniol pupDioo, roady
PICKENS FURNITURE
for Rent
to go, 304..e71o5412 •Iter 4:00.
NoW/Uood
1 IR par11olly tum'od. 1230/mo. ~ tumlohlng. 112 mi. Double roglotorod Auolrlllon
Dop. roq'od., utlltloo pold. 10f. Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV, ShoPIIlld puppjoo,lldo ond lid
call 30+t7S-14JO.
112 2nd Avo.IIW7f.2171.
morloio, ft&amp;O. ooch. 304·7725332.
1·1R, oorpetod, unlumlohod
RENT20WN
114-441-315&amp;
aportmont, po~lal utllhloo paid.
D11gonwynd Catlory Ponlon,
V1'111 Fumttu ...
Roloroncoa and dopooh ,..
Slamooo ond Himalayan lolttono.
Sola lo Choir, f!t10 Waok; 114-441-3144 oftor 7 p.m.
qultod, 114-802~084.
Rocllnor, U.47 Wook, Swlvol
1111' Apo~mont. Wllor, Sowogo, Rocltor, 13.13 Wook.Bunk Bod Floh Tank, 241:i Joekoon Avo.
Oooboao Pokl. Dopooll R• Complote $8.41 Woak, 4 Drowor Point ,_.... 30W75-2063,
qulrocf. Ca~ &amp;14-441-4:141 Aftor Chill, 13.21 Wolle; Poitar Bod· lUll llno Tropical lloh1 blrda,
lp.rn.
"""" Sufto, 7 pc., f1U7 Waok, omoll onlrnolland ouppl111.
Boddlng.Country Plno
2 ond 1 bodl00ft1, tumlohod lncludao
01111111 WHh BonCh I 4 Chilli, Poodlo pul&gt;l&gt;loo, 1oyo and too
apa~monto. All utllltlao pold.
JIO.IIII Waok.OPEN: Monday cupo, AKC 'ChamDioio Bloodllno,
Pomaroy 1300 and 1200, 114- Thru
Saturday, to.rn. to lp.m.1 Coolvlllo &amp;14-4417-11404.
MI.za28.
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. • Training you lo t11ln your pot.
2 BR opt., Stovo, I rolrtg. Mlln 011 Routo 7 On Route 141, Dog obOdlonco clio-. Aug. 31,
IUm'od. Wator I t11oh ptu In Cantonary.
Itt!. Sharry Roborta, Caotlllod
tum'od. 114-4411-3840.
Solo On All Carpet &amp; VInyl Floor Tral-. 114-448-11184.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Covorlng In Stockl Mollohan Whot'o oo diHeronl about tho
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Carpoto, At. 7 Nooth, 114-441- HAPPY JACK :J.X FLEA COL·
ESTATE~1 . 5!8 Jockoon Plko 114.W.
LAR? It WORKSII Conillno NO
lrom .,..,.,., Walk lo ohop &amp;
Ook dining room ouRo ayrtihotlc pyrlllvoldL For dogo
movloo. Call 114 441 251&amp;. EOH. Solid
comloto wllh Dlo oola, 1 yr. old, I Calli R &amp; Q FEED l SUPPLY
114-1112·2184.
Complotolv Fumlohod Small 12400. 114 44dlooo onor 4 p.m.
Hou11, 110 Polo, Yard, Pluo
" · SWAIN
'57
Musical
UtiiMioo. S2U/mo. fl14.44fi.O!!I.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo Sl., Oalllpollo. How lo Uood
Instruments
EHiclonoy, - · oollu both fumhure, hNt.,., Weetem &amp;
W/~~r.OIC all~ II coro Work boolo. 114-441-3151.
Blind now Bundy Trombono,
lOUD occp4od, 304-t~
1350. :J04.41f5.!41111.
Bundy Trombono, Nowl Uood 1
For rant, 1 bodR&gt;om opo~mont.
Year. 1225. 114-318-11803.
1225 uiiUtloo lncludod, dopoolt
-llld, no polo, 114.fi2·2218.
Bundy trumpet whh cue. $100.
114-256-1014.
Fumlohod ADart1111ril For Ronl
In Town. Call fl14.441o1423 Allor
Oulbronoon Pacomakor Oogon
5p.m.
.
whh chonlornotlc and Diino
kay-. Excollont Condition,
Fumlohod Alllllmont 1 Bodf1400. Call 304-882·3310 aftor
ooomJ...Wotor Po..~1 ~:i..: IIIII
4:30.
Elol.., Panar. ..,.
.
KlmboU plond and bonch, llko
Fumlahocl AHI!mont. 1br,
now, $1,300. tlrm. :IOWl'll-13!8.
lhoro Iaiit. 701 FcMih Avo, 011Npolla. 1118 Ulltlloo Pold. 114Poovoy llalno, Yo111o1ha SM15H
44H411 Atlotr 7p.tn.
Mon., JBL 15" Baoa Sino, E~
lactron 1 (dlgkol dolly). 114-DUZ·
8137.
Yomoho trumpot tzoo. 304-112·

Plid.t14 . . .

•'

$4,415. 304-175-11130.
1181 Ford Rangor PU 14815;
111g louzu PU 137151;· 1g.. Nloun 4x4 $41V5; 11&amp;7 hovy S·10
PU $2885; 1185 Chovy S.10 PU
f!tu5; 11114 Ford PU $2515; 111!
Chovy S.10 PU ~i. .1812
Chovy S.10 PU 11295; 1,_ FO&lt;d
Bronco I $3185; 1t82 Dodgo
Rompogo PU f1500. BAD Auto
S.ln, Hwy. 160 N., 4 mi. N. of
Holzor.I14-446-IU65.

'

EVENING

Woda.. -.lPJo, 1101 lurdolto S! Orooif 110¥1 lop fQii life-leo,
Polri P_,., no PI41,J and 2 s:-s~Hion, 38"121", &amp;14bedrooms, 304471o20r.. 1ftlr
5:00.
Kurl&gt;y Gono11tlon II SwHpor,
ohooripoo and all anochmonto
Furnished
1·yr old. Laid-ott, nood to ootid
114-1112-2014.
Rooms
LHtlo gl~o clolhlng, nowbom lo
Roomo lor ront • - a&lt; month. n. MalemHy cloflllng alae 10,
~=~~~ at $120/lno. Oolllo Holol. Alii lor Oorino 304-1711-3100 or
I
NIO.
8~7501.

11loronoo I .._.., roqullld,
1104-4175-121111.
Chelt frMur, 11 cu. ft., 2 bed
2 BA lftlumlohod near Holzar lromoo 2 woodlon dooke, oxor·
HoopltoL No polo. f171 mo. cloo bib, alnglo boH. maooogor,
Wotor Incl-. f100 dopoolt. woodon bar (3g lnchOo high, 72
114-448-3117.
lnchao - ) . 2 bov. blkH 25 ln.
2·1R, lumlo= woahor/doyor, Call ottor 5, 114-248-tm.
_,,., air,
pluo .._M, County Appliance,. Inc. Good
114-tm-1800.
uood appno.,..., T.v. olio.~
I a.m. to I p.m. Mon•.Sat. t14:lbl Air, t:ilile, NoW Carpet, f!lco 441o11'!,. 127 :!rd. Avo. a.~
I CJMII; leiUIItul Rlvar Vlow In Mpollo, un
Kanougo. Footor'o lloblll Homo
Pork. f1l4-441.1102.

Fumlahocl e~ w/otovo I
ootrlgorolor. lhllo both. tit 2nd
Avo. 1100 par ltiOIIIh. All Utllltloo

•·
•
•

~~2l~========:;:=======~=-l1177
Plymouth Von, Runo Good,
•
1175. 814-!711-22!3.

Sovoralopootmon4'o for
BR, Mldit'-'1. Call I
2403 or M2·ll710.

For~ ·

Avail-.

·,

11178 Font Lariat 1&amp;0, haovy
duty aulo. PSIPB 1150. 11172
FMI 314 1on. a.;;.! a ply tlroo.
1300. 814-446-8188.
1!1711 Ronchoro, Now Pain~_ !&lt;

Qoovoly . '.tractor wntlgiHow
oongo, d~haot. "ploCoo ol
aqulpmooll, good ohapo, 114-

371-2N2.
Connll'l Child Call. Now hovo
""'"~·o Counlloo.
Cartlllod In
Alhll'lo
and
Foncod~nylrd, S 7 Tuppo,. Pllllnl, &amp;141&amp;74!21.
t585.
Ounlovy Walding Shop. Will do 1D84 SchuHa 14dJ, 2 BR, all
11m11t _)obll anCI manufacture ...ctrlc, undorDin~lng, 2 pol'
Ful~Tlmo Bookkaopor Poaltlon
cltoo, outbuilding. lollull bo
Avllllble; Eloperlonco Plllarlld. omoll homo. :J04.41!7-2723.
Compoolll ' Eioporlonco Holptul. Exporloncod bobyolltar. Will movod. I14-441-122S.
Apply .~, Tuoodoy, Wodbobyoll In my homo anytime, 1D85 Rodman 14x70, 2br 2
neicfoy 10-1 At: Topo Fumhuro, lllditlapoot.
Bllho, EX1111I 11•1 Boal
c.tll 114-0112-8855.
151PAYOIIUO, Golllpollo,
f14,1100, 0.8.0. 814 ~ ~· 1805
OH.
aoo'lln Pootobll Sawmill don1 Loovolloooogo.
houiJ:: loGo to lho miu Jull
Full-Tlmo SaiM Pooltlon Aval~ coli
111111 Shull moblio homo. For
7S-1l67.
oblo. ' Eloper- P11lorood.
more Information, 304-175-~
Apply - y . Tuoodo,, Wod_ , , ,10\1, AI: Topo FumRure,
2 bodl00ft1 mobile homo 12lo&amp;O
181 e.iool!d AYonUI, Galllpollo,
ao loJ noodoloto of worto. f1,500.
ott ,.,.,.,,
304-ol'll-2808 or 304-171-4323.
Groot SolocUon Of -nod
llobllo Homoo. SmoM Down
Paymont. Flnanci!!U
F111 Sotup And Dilvoey. Call
El- Homo Cantor At 114-772·
12:10.
Now 1182 14180 lhooe bodl00ft1
Will bobyoM In my homo oH 1110 2 lull bllho, ohlngll -·· vtnYl
onulloro, corpetod
on Bullvlllo Pika. Roloronco and lldlng,
throuilhoul, all tlrywoH lnlarlor
Ellporlonco. 114-448-214&amp;.
and J.boy windoW. Jl7,117.00.
WO!IId Uko lo tatoo co11 ol ll· Call 1-iQ0.721-40Q, .
dorly mon or ...,_, In tholr
homoo, havo quollllcotlono and 33 Fanns fo~. Sale
oolr.,.., 114..112.- or lm·
507.1
SmoU farm lor- Tuppit
Plolno, coN ~~~111.

FinJncial

~

" ,,, .,.......

54

814-441-1!40.
:lbr A Fromo On 1 Acre Woodod
Lot 127,500 Will Colialdor Land
Contract Wllh Reooonoblo
Wlnlld Avon representttl¥11, Down Poymont. 114-25&amp;·118t,
cuoto...ro and holpof8. No &amp;14-2511-150&amp;.
- IIICII-ry. Frto For Soil By Ownor: Lovoly, Woll
gill. Call Ko, ot 114..112·7180.
Kopl 3 Bodroom Ranch Styli
WANTED: Pa~ .Time -hlono Houoo Wllh 2 Car Dotoohod
Avollobll At A Community Qor~go And 1 Car AtlllOhod
Qooup Homo For Poooono With Qor~go. Locolld In Choohlro.
Dovolol!flllnlll Olubllltloo In OWner Anxlouo To Solll Calll14QolllpoiiL HoUri: (1) 31 hii/Wic: 288-81141 Aftor 5p.m. Or Loavo
10::10o.m...:30p.m.,
Sot; Mo-go.
10:30o.m.-llp.m., Sun; 3::10IP"!!'' M/Tu/Wod·'r(2l 33 hii/Wk:
2:..,..:30p.rn., UIW/Th/F· 2·
ap.m., Sot; (3) 32 h~: :J.
11p.m.,
Frli
8a.m.~p.m.,
SoiiS.!'J!i._ 2:30-8:30p.m., Sun;
ALL """'oiONS: 2-Hour - l y
SIOH MNIIna; Or Ao Othorwloo
Schodulod. High School Doa11e1
Valid Drldr'o Uconoo And &lt;looa
Driving "-rd, Oood Conto
munk:iollon And Orgonlutlon
Skllle, Punctual And Alllo To
Work Ao Po~ Of A Team A•
qulood; Eloporlonco Woolllng
Wllh Poroono Wllh Montol
Rollrdatlon And Dovolopmontol
Dlooblilti.O Poolorrod. Salary: Lovoly 8 yr. old homo In Romo
$4.50/lu, To Sllot. Sond Roaumo lfU,
ProctorvUie. 2 BR, 1 both,
To Coclllo Bakor, P.O. Box 804, 2·112 cor
go11ge wtlh riYll vllw.
Jackoon, OH 45&amp;40; Pteau Eldo~y pa11ril0
nood to Mil,
Spocllv Whlclt Pooltlon Apply. mar finance. $57,000.
~»
lng tor. Doodllno For ,\f&gt;o 3757.
Dilconto: 81301e1. Equal Oppor·
lunRy Employar.
Vory nlco 3·BR Ranch, brick

12

•

•• •

41 Houses for Rent

'"==========r-=========1
21

Loot.aurgundy oyogla-• '" _11_ _H_e_ l:..p_w_a_n_t_e d
__
Bl.. coao, loll Tu~oda
on North 4th Avo. Mlddlo
.
..,... 5:00pm &amp;14-tm-55 a~
HAIRSTYUST
NEEDED:
tor 1:00pm 814-11112·7332.
Gau11mood filii WHk Pluo
~~4! . PC!i:~abll 81411o, II llo111 Paid Vacotlono. 814-448·"~'~
""'"Dt.t.,
Loading
Citlk con. 72Gl
wvancy
114-11f2·2411.
KUWAIT{ SAUDI .JOBS
$35/NOUR + MooVWomon Now
7..;,•_ _ Y•-'
Sale-·
Paid
_ .,_..,_
_ _ _ _ · ~Tranaporalion. All
For Info.C.ll
1·
102..81-2227 Ext. 2112ot.
A~
' L Yard Soloo Mull Bo Paid In
•
DE • ftLINE 2 00
KUWAIT SAUDI WORKERS
ft
anco.
""
: : p.m. NEEDED: 135.00 &amp; Up Por Hour.
lho day boforo lho od lo lo run. Tu F100. BOih Sklllld I Unokl~
odR~- ~:~ loci For Into. Call 115·77W505
p.11. Soturdoy.
Elol. K..tu.
LET THIS NEWSPAPER BE
Public Sale
YOUR
KEY
TO
HUQE
EARNINGS. No Elop. Noc-ry.
&amp; Auction
Call 1·1100-248-3131 (IO.Miinln)
Or Wrho: PASEE • 33A, 1&amp;1 UnRiC)t Peai'IOfl AucUon Compony, colnwoy,
N. Aurono, IL &amp;0842.

W· J./o

Reorrongo lottoro of
0 lour
Kromblod words

•

1887 Ford Ranger, 4 eyl, 5

and
bodroam
opallmonto for ront. ldool lor
omou lamllloo and ~loa. 304175-2053 or 1711-tlOO.

MON.. AUG. 26

.•

,.

epeecl, new topper, exc cond,

Ono

:~a~~'r.:J=:r ~"g"Yt:,;
!!_~· Call &amp;14-441o41ot, 114-m.,._.

•

.;

Breaks! Look• Good! $1,uuu. "'~

SuiHIIvlolon,
loto, Rl. z lronlogo,
~ucod, city ...... :104-

"I 'm trying to get her listed In the 'National
Registry ol Obnoxious Yacht Names'!"

::
.
,

::;';t

.

Ot;lq_

Television
Viewing

1168 Chavrolot, 3/4 ton truck, ' :
307 onglno, call &amp;14-lm·541111.

6

Faund.QII
koyo on
SR 124 near
HJHII'•
Garagt,
114·tl2·2155.

72 Trucks for Sal&amp; · ,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Mon:ar
ono
aa.

Rentals

~meroy-MiddleDort.

ACROSS
1 Whale
4 Worthies• bit
7 Optnlngl
10 Aulhor Vonntgut
12 Dloorderly
flight
14 Popoye'a
friend Olive

15 Place
16 Offlclal
recorda
17 Capture
18 Weak
20 Sta
22 Sponloh
dancao
24 Wild diiOidtr
26 Sln~tr Edith
-

31
32
33
37
39

source

(2 wdl.)

43 Become
twtated
45 Sentence
part
49 Gold (Sp.)
50 Phlloaophtr
lmmanuel52 Strb, e.g.
53 Cooking fat
54 Sea pheaoant
55 Melody
56 Turn the
page (abbr.)
57 Stela further
58 - Lingua
(airline)

DOWN

'

30 Allmtnl
Mao- tung
Vetch
Nullified
Vegetable
Gifted

Anower to Prevlouto ituute

opeaker
40 Petroleum

4 Ou1111on
antwerers
5 Mylhlcel bird
6 Ina rue!
7 lira. Charita
Choplin
8 le18boller
Nolen-

1 South of
Keno.
2 Damage
11veroly
3 American
Indian

II Prllel'l
vutment
11 Tollllll
t3 Mellclll
lllldwlch
18 Very 1111111
21

ca::n..

(abbr.)
23 hfore IIIII

lime

.

24 Tlllgr11111
_ , . . . , ... 25 Alllb'ICI

..

27=- lluvlr

.,.r-1--~-1 28 Jlcoll'1 oon · : ·

211 G-tttlll
llo
34 llullt

30 Dolorn-

.

.

35 Audlclty
38
Filially
381f.:::-Jn

41 lllltiMr
lrriiiiM"" ..
42 Ancln llllntal ··

43 Pluck

44-

contaMere
441Hewlllll1

•

food flllt
47111111111
441 AIIIIJ llnll
411 Ally- . .S 1 Actor llparta ·

•

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(I) EltfOIIIIII Joumlll

ill. Nlahlllttl r;l

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P V D 0

ZVI

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BYYSM
.. ,,.

NORVKOI

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COFXBKVDC

18 Moneyllltl

FZIOJJO .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I , _ rilly thOUgltt at lnY1tllf U I eymbol .. ..
- mort u 1 COIIIIdllllne w11o COUld diiiCI." - Alii Hlywwth.
, ... .

a • u.s. 0p1n Hllllgllal~""ollglat'-"'"
ID

,

'
12:00 llle 1mt1 1111 Night Stereo.

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11:35fl) Cllllnl r;l

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24

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.

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

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,.

.

�Page-1D-The Dally Sentinel

Community calendar Names in the news

Consider this ...

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in ad vance
to assure publication in the calendar.

By Brian J , Reed

For the record ...Ruth Powers,
Direc10r of the Meigs County Public Libraries, has asked that I clarify something.
Those inrerested in participaling
in the "Always a River" book discussion program should pre-register for that program pnor 10 the
beginning of the series. At that
time, you can pick up the books
that are necessary.
Several
distinguished
historian/teachers are on slate for
the program, which tak.es a look at
some of the classic lirerature written about the Ohio River. It begins
at the library on Seprember 9, and
runs every other Monday through
OciOber.
If you are interested in Ohio
River history. and you lill:e leading
about it, plan to participare in this
program, which is free and open to
the public.
Goal met...Thanll: you to all of
the volunteers and donors who
made Wedoesday's Meigs County
Bloodmobile successful.
Meigs County met its goal this
time, and that's not an easy task.
That can be attributed 10 the efforts
of all of the American Red Cross
personnel, the RSVP workers, all
volunteers and most importantly,
the donors. Those people know the
importance of maintaining our
community's blood supply, and to
them goes the biggest "thanks" of

I

'·

all.
On Ibis date ...Periodically in
this space, I hope to tak.e a look at
some of the stories that we read
about in past edilioos of The Daily
Sentinel , "on this dare".
So, 30 years ago this week :
Meigs County Engineer Stanley
Blazewicz reported that the U.S.
Corps of Engineers had notified
him that construction on Belleville
Locks and Dam at Reedsville was
to begin within a year. Blazewicz
was to investigare possible damage
due to water overrun at Indian Run
and Sugar Camp creeks near
Reedsville.
Work on the new Meigs Memorial Hospital (Veterans Memorial
Hospital) was progressing, with the
steel beams put into place this
week by King Construction Company.
The Bradbury Road offices of
WMPO Radio were hit by burglars,
who ran off with nearly $400 in
records, cash and checks.
And here's my favorite headline
story from late August, 1961:
Pomeroy Police Officer Jim Soulsby caught and arrested a teenaged
Lakin escapee following a highspeed chase in which the escapee
dfove a stolen vehicle.
Do you remember any of those
BIG stories?
Take Care.

Social Security

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
Currently, almost 40 million
people are receiving Social Security benefits. Another 4.4 million
people will file claims for benefits
this year.
Although almost everyone eventually goes through the process of
applying for Social Security, the
_prospect can be frightening. The
. events in people's lives that lead up
to applying for Social Security retinng, stopping work because of
disability, or the death of a family
. member - often make people feel
anxious and uncertain.
For that reason, we try 10 make
. - the application process as simple,
brief, and informalive as possible.
For most people, the claims process will begin with gathering
information. A series of free Social
Security publications, Retirenunt,
Disability, Survivors, SSI, Medicart, are written especially for peopie who want information about
these programs before they apply
for benefits.
Most claims ·are for retirement
or survivors benefits, and the process is really very simple. The
entire Social Security application
can be taken over the telephone.
1be completed application IS then
mailed to the person to be signed
and returned. A birth certificate and
~bly other documents will be
ileeded 10 complete the claim. The
oriam.I documents can be mailed
or lxOught 10 the Social Security
_office where they will be pho.IOIJIPhed and returned.

Monday, August 26, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

RACIN E - Schools in the
Southern Local School District will
open for classes on Tuesday. Classes will begin at the same time as
last year and any questions conc~ing times can be directed to the
principal of the building where the
MONDAY
student will auend. Bus routes and
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- pick-up times will remain
ty Veterans Service Commiss ion unchanged.
will meet on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
in the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

Yearning for Camelot
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) Mark Twain •s Connecticut Yankee
. wasn't the only American to have a
thing about King Arthur's court.
Arthurian lore and legend still fascinate Americans, according to a
medievalist at the University of
Rochester.
References like "Camelot" or
"Excalibur" appear in the names
of motels, restaurants and even
nursing homes, says Alan Lupack:.
Why?
"The ideals and val11es people
crave are embedded in these sto·
ries," he says. "They have helped
shape our values of honor, juslice
and charity, and our relationships
between men and women.''

MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
Burkett Barber Shop in Middlepon.
Social hour and trading session
precedes the 8 p.m. meeting .
Refreshments. New members are
welcome.

lick DOled.
It was reported that Marie Dailev is now at Westmoreland Place,

230 Cherry Street in Chilljcothe,
45601, Room 220A.·A letter from
Elizabeth Graves, Mountain Top,
Tenn., was read.
It was planned to sponsor a
bazaar during the Sternwheel Festival on Friday, Oct. ll The tables
will be at the church basement m
conjunction with the food sales that
day. The fust craft workshop will
be held at the church on Sept. 4 at 7
p.m. A church project, all are weicome.
The group voted to go on record
with an endorsement of the renewal
of the tuberculosis levy.

RU1LAND - The Rutland Garden Club will hold its open meeting
on Monday at the Rutland
Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. with
the flower show, "Salute to AmenFlora" to be judged at 7:30 p.m. by
Mrs. Joe Bolin, O.A.G.C. judge.
Those entering the invitational
class. Japanese Tea Garden. in oriental manner, can bring their
arrangments with them to the meeting. Everyone is invited to attend
and partictpate.

PLAX
ANTI-PLAQUE
DENTAL369
RINSE

master; Wallace Bradford, overseer; Muriel Bradford, lecturer;
Harley Haning, stewart; John
Pauley, assistant stewart; Bobbi

Annual Hayman
family reunion held
ne amual reunion for the fami.
ly of _the_ late George R. and Mae
CrawftJrd Hayman was held recently ll the Portland Park.
blessing was a recorded
1966 payer of George R. Hayman

Tile

befole dinller.
Several family members played
!liseball.
:· AUCndillg were Focie Hayman,
l.iUic Hart. Srcve Young, Darlene
Yo11ng and Benjamin Combs,
Desiree and Phyllis Young, Ruth
and Lewis Ours, Virgil Ours,
Michael Oun and Mau, Bill and
Terea Lawver, April and David
Cue, Bryan and Benjamin, Virilala H11ffman, Isabel and Tom
l!dwiJ'ds and Shawn, Harry and

V:cra Hayman, Sidney Hayman,
Vera Mac Mills, Donna Jean Nease
and Patrick Johnson, Waid and
Donna. Hayman, Cheryle Knight,
Becky Knight, Bradley Ashley,
Ruby and Beryl Wolfe, Rhonda,
Kindra and Jennifer Wolfe, Vicki
and Calvin Osborn and baby, Brandi and Linka Dean and Jason Brill,
Lewi and Lissa Wolfe, JCrrocl and
Jonathan Wolfe, Marge Carpenter,
Gladys Richardson, Gary. Diane
and Brian Richa{dson, Bruce
Richardson, Doris Rogers, Danny
Sayre, Dona Sayre, Danny Sayre
Jr .. Dena Sayre, Dan and Faith
Hayman and Tamara Hayman,
~ Mallory and Erin Roach and
Kim Hayman.

Pick 3:731
Pick 4: 8725
Cards : 10-H, 9-C
8-0;4-S

Page4

Lownear

Partly cloudy tonight.
70. Wednesday, high In

upper

80s.

Vol. 42, No. 80

Copyrighted 1991

10LB.

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'

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the town house . All members urged to
attend. Refreshments.

Rock Springs
Grange meets
Annual inspection was held
when the Rock Springs Grange met
recently.
County Deputy Patty Dyer conducted the inspection and gave an
excellent grade.
Lucille Potratz, past master,
gave the first degree in full form.
Opal Grueser gave a report on
legislative issues. Barbara Fry,
CW A, read a letter from the state
CW A Director concerning quilt
making. Bunny Kuhl, chairman of
the resolution committee, gave her
report
Pat Holter, lecturer, prese nted
the program on "Save the Planet.
Sacrifice the People."
Nancy Radford sang a solo,
"This Is My Father"s World ."
Words of wisdom were given by
Ervin Potratz and Bunny Kuhl.
A contest, "What Tree Am I"
was conducted by Agnes Dixon,
and "Sense of Humor, a Life Cornerstone" was presented by Helen
Blackston.
Kathryn Miller gave a reading,
"Cry and You Cry Alone, Not So
Hot." Sarah Caldwell presented
"Points to Ponder." Roy Holrer presented "Chris's Mess." Barbara Fry
spok:e on County Fair Performers.
Reported ill were Jim and Betty
Conkle, Maxine and Charlie
Aldridge.
Refreshments were se rved by
Kathryn Miller and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Aldridge.

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Maida Mora and Clarice Krautter will replant with seasonal flow ers the planters at the entrance of
the church.
Mrs. Perrin told of the volunteer
work done by her sister, Faith, and
her retired pastor husband at Cook
Indian School, Tempe, Ariz. This
school is one of Trinity's designated areas for mission support in
1991.
Mary Elizabeth Chapman and
Mrs. Perrin served a dessen course
10 14 members. Favors were miniature baskets of candy on crocheted
doilies.

Paule.y, lady assistant stewart;
Jessie White, chaplain; Leota
Smith, treasurer; Sylvia Midkiff.
secretary; Clarence Story, gatekeeper; Margaret Haning, ceres;
Midge Shumway. Pomona; Sara
Cullums, Flora; Hilber Quivey,
executive committee; Wallace
Bradford, trustee; Helen Quivey,
womens committee; Patty Smith,
youth activilies commiuee; Muriel
Bradford, junior grange committee;
Ziba Midkiff, legislative committee; Bobbi Pauley, membership;
Doris Eastman, deaf; Roland Eastman, agriculture; Leota Smith,
community service; Ann Lambert.

pianiSL

The · tub6rculosis levy was
endoned bv the JDOII1l.
The literary program was under
the direction of Rosalie Story who
used as her theme, ''Watermelon
Time," with decorations and readings in keeping with the theme.
Refreshments of watermelon and
cantaloupe were served at the conclusion of the meeting.
The September meeting will be
a wiener roast with members bnng
a covered dish.

129

SHEETS
120

OR LADY MITCHUM
1.5 OZ.

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I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A contract for reconstruction
work of Pearl Street between Laurel Street and General Hartinger
Parkway was awarded to C. J. Contracting and Trucking of Gallipolis
by Middleport Village Council
Monday nighL
C. J. Contracting's bid of
$/5,737.04 was the lowest of four
bids submitted on the project.
Other bids were $78,769.68 from
Roses; $79,159.30 from D. V.
Weber Construction, and $104.958
from Homecreck Enterprises.
The work will include general
reconstruction of the street and
sidewalk along with the drainage
system. The project is being

financed with Issue 2 funds. Local
monies going into the work: will be
$12,770.
One bid on the Middlepon levee
project was opened but rejected
during the meeting and arrangements made to rebid the project
An ordinance was
authorizing the issuance o $368,500 in
notes for the new Middlepon Fire
Department ladder truck which is
expected to arrive in mid-September. Also passed was a resolution
on the loan which is being secured
through the Farmers Home Administration.
Council gave the third reading
and adopted an ordinance providing for the discontinuance of the
tax abatement program on new

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•
•

WRECK SCENE - The drivers of these vehicles, Chery II
Miller and Dennis Hysell, miraculously escaped injury in this collision at tbe intersection of East Second and Lynn in Pomeroy Monday morning.

Fugitives are captured
after high-speed chase.
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The wife of the Meigs Counly
Sheriff and the Racine Marshall are
being credited with assisting in the
capture of two fugitives from Central Ohio on Monday afrernoon.
According to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a call was received early
yesterday afternoon from th e
Excelsior Oil Company on East
Main Street in Pomeroy, reporting
a drive-off gas theft. According to
the call, two male subjects, driving
a red and black Chevrolet with
temporary tags, drove toward Syracuse.
Susie Soulsby. the sheriff's
wife, and Cindy Fields, his daughter. were stopped at Maplewood
Lak:e ncar Syracuse in Soulsby's
private vehicle when they spotted
the Che vrolet traveling at high
speed on State Roure 124.
Racine Marshall Don Dye was
alerted of the sighting and Mrs.
Soulsby and Fields pursued the
vehicle through Syracuse and
Racine, where they were met at
Southern High School by Dye.
Dye continued the pursuit
through the Keno and Bald Knob
areas. The car struck an embank-

TEA 1. !Ill! • SOME ITEMS MAY NOT BE AVAJL.AaE IN AU STORES.

•

Rite Aid Pharmacy
accepts most major
prescription plans.

HERR'S
POTATO CHIPS
6 oz.

bat ·

Classes got underway in schools in the Easrem Local and Meigs
Local School Districts Monday.
First day enrollment in schools of the Eastern Local School District totaled 899 students, just one above last year's figure of 898.
In the junior and high school, the total enrollment was 414 while
in the elementary schools the figures were 187 at Tuppers Plains,
166 at Chester, and 132 at Riverview.
In the Meigs Local School District the total ftrst day enrollment
was 2,391 as compared to 2404 last year. At the high school 695
were enrolled, 29 less than for the 1990-91 school year, while at the
junior high school there were 371 students enrolled an increase of
52 over last year.
In the elementary schools ftrst day enrollment totaled 1325 this
year compared to 136IIast year, a decrease of 46. Of the 1325 students enrolled 214 were in kindergarten classes of Pomeroy, Middlepon, Rutland, Bradbury. and Harrisonville.
In the elementary schools, Bradbury enrolled 139, Harrisonville
137. Middleport, 223, Pomeroy. 343, Rutland, 226, Salem Cente;
108, and Salisbury, 149.
Classes in the Southern Local School District started today.

(

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
POMEROY ·
306 EAST MAl N STREET
PHONE: ·992..2586

Section of U.S. 33 closed
A section of U.S. Rourc 33 near Enterprise in Pomeroy has been
closed, and Ohio Department of Transportation officials are not cer~.

'

$3 a month reduction in the now trailer at an approxtmate cos t of
mandatory trash pickup fee of $10 $1 ,500 for use in the collection of
a month will be offered for a one the recyclables.
year period to those who sign up
Mayor Hoffman announced that
and actively participate in the curb- the Commissioners will hold a pubside collection.
lic hearing at 7 p.m on Sept. 9 at
The mayor noted that a "Sign the Meigs County Courthouse on
Up to Save And Recycle" will be the distribution of approximately
the theme of the program and at $109,500 in community developthe lime residents s1gn up they will . ment block grant monies.
be provided with
three
INCREASES VOTED DOWN
nestable/stackable collection bins
Following a lengthy disc uss ion
with preprinted labels that identi- and several amendments. the third
fi es the village's recycling pro- reading of an ordinance calling for
gram. The bins will be used to sep- an increase of 12 percent in water
arate and collect aluminum, glass and sewer rates failed by a vote of
three to one. Four afftrmati ve votes
and plastics.
According to the plan the vil - are required for passage.
Casting the "no" vote on the
lage will provide the use of a truck
two days a week and a flat bed ordinance was Paul Gerard who

has repeatedly contended that the
amount of the proposed increase is
excessive and not needed for effective operation of the two departments.
Voting in favor were Councilmen Dewey Horton, Judy Crooks,
and Jack Satrerfield. Council members James Clatworthy and William
Walters were absent.
Before the vote Mayor Hoffman
presented figures showing deficits
in both the water and sewer funds.
He said that in 1990 receipts into
the water fund totaled $170,917
while expenditures were $190,237,
a deftcit of $19,320.
In the sewer fund, the mayor
reported receipts of $148 ,226.
3
Continued on

Trooper involved
in fatal accident

~

LARGEST SINGLE BUYER • Thirty-five
animals were purchased by the Home National
Bank of Racl!Je at tbe_1991 Mell!li County JUDior
Fair, livestock sale. Here Tom Wolfe, presilleat,
center, poses with the group of youngsters from
wbicb the bank purchased animals al'ter presenting each one with a check. They are lel't to
right, front, Jeremy Smith, Jamie Drake, Jessica
Barringer, Matthew Justice, .Franklin Pierce,

Jason Pullins, (Wolfe) Uavld Rankin, Alex
Brown, and Patty Nally; second row, Rebecca
Scott, Shawn D~~~e~.· N_,ncy Nally, Howard B. J.
Ervin, II~, Leanaa Rowe, Mike O'Nall, and
Michelle 0'NaU; and third row, Jonathan Avis,
Thomas McKay, Shawn RoUins, Stephanie HolTman, John Riley, Keith Hunt, Jeremy Buckley,
Toby Curtis, and Chastity Jude.

Governor optimistic reform
proposals will be implemented
the federal, state and local levels.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) found that 75 percent of the departTh e group also said that the ment' s 499 employees are '"comGov. George Voinovich praised the
report of a task force of Ohio busi- department and schools should be pliance driven" and that local
ness leaders that recommended an freed from unnecessary mandates school officials must fill out hun overhaul of the Department of Edu- and complianc e paperwork . It dreds of forms each year.
cation.
"I'm very optimistic" it can be
implemented, he said of the report.
which was issued Monday. It called
for changes to revitalize the department from its current role of monitoring schools to one of leadership.
The five-member group. which
is part of the Governor's Education
Management Council, was appointed last May to find ways for the
department to meet changing education needs and better serve students.
Voinovich said the task force
consulted with almost 300 people
in the state· s education establishment in an effort that required
3.000 hours.
He called the report " a remarkable stride toward a collaborative
effon that is so necessary for eduELIZABETH SCHAAD
ERNIE SISSON
cation reform."
The group came up with about
CHAMBER LEADERS ACCREDITED - Meigs County
40 recommendations.
Chamber of Commerce Director Elizabeth Schaad and Ernie SisIt recommended that all segson, Area Manager or Oblo Power in Pomeroy, were recently
ments of education work together
accredited by the American Economic Development Council Proand urged collaboration on policies
gram. The accreditation followed their attendance at the weekand programs among the goverlong "Ohio Basic Economic Development" training course in
nor's office. 1he Legislature and at
Columbus. Sisson also serves as a member of the chamber's board
of directors.

Local briefs -------------.,

Classes begin at Eastern, Meigs

Rite Aid accepts all
manufacturers'
coupons.

Heavy damage was incurred to
two vehicles but there were no
injuries in an accident at the intersection of Lynn and East Second at
10:47 a.m. Monday.
Pomeroy police reported that
Cheryll Miller, Racine, was traveling east on East Second when her
vehicle was struck by a truck driven by Dennis Hysell, Pomeroy. He
made a left turn from Lynn onto
East Second into the path of the .~
drjven by Mill\lf. -:J'he-right side· of
the Miller vehicle and the right side
and the front end of the Hysell
truck were heavily damaged in the
collision.
Hysell was cited for failure to
yield.

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) A State Highway Patrol trooper
remained hospitalized today from
tum, struck the Chevrolet with his injuries he suffered when his cruisvehicle. Both subjects then fled on er struck and killed a man who had
fooL
been walking along a road.
Martin Ray Adams of ChilliMark: Thompson, 24, was in fair
cothe was tak.en into custody short- condition this morning in Grant
ly tiJereafter by Deputy Scott Medical Center in Columbus after
Trussell, who arnved on the scene the accident in Ross County. The
with Sheriff Soulsby. He was later accident killed Mika Hardesty, 31,
identified by the $85 station opera- shortly before I a.m. Saturday.
tor as being the driver of the car.
Patrol and Ross County sheriff's
It was later revealed that Adams reports said Hardesty had been
is under indictment for felony flee- drinlcing. They said he and a friend,
ing and has a lengthy criminal Rickie A. Hughes, 32, were walkrecord.
ing down Massieville Road when
At 2 a.m. on Tuesday, Victor the accident occurred.
Meno of Lancaster, the passenger
Hughes told investigators Hardin the car, was apprehended in the esty had said ''life was dealing him
Bald Knob area by Deputy Man- some hard blows" and he "didn't
ning Mohler. Mcno is wanted in care if he lived or died."
Madison County on a charge of
They saw headlights approachauempred aggravated murder. He is ing and Hughes moved off the road
expected to appear in a Rule 4 and called to Hardesty to do the
hearing sometime on Tuesday and same. Hughes said the crui ser
will transported back to Madison swerved to the left to avoid HardCounty.
esty, but Hardesty ran into its path.
Adams, meanwhile, will be The cruiser struck Hardesty, then a
charged with ~rand theft and felony tree.
fleeing in Me1gs County.
The patrol 's Portsmouth post
"Had it not been for my wife took over investigation. Post invesand Don Dye," Soulsby comment- tigators cannot investigate an accied Tuesday, "we would not have dent involving one of their own
been able to capture these crimi- officers.
nals."

~m-en_t_on_R_o_ss_R_o_ad_a_n_d_n_ye_._in_ _ _ _ _

Save on over
1,200 Rite Aid
Brand Products.

construction in the village.
RECYCLING PROGRAM
Development and implementation of a program to reduce the volume of solid waste through recycling was discussed at the meeting.
A resolution was passed authorizing the mayor to file an application
under the L(lC8I Government Recycling Grants Program for $27,830
to implement the llrogram.
The mayor pomted out that the
proposed recycling program has a
goal of encouraging residents to
become involved in recycling as a
means of reducing solid waste
mounts in landfills, as well as to
conserve energy and protect the
environment.
As an incentive to participate a

No one hurt
in two-car
accident

.I

3-SUBJECT
NOTEBOOK

MITCHUM
ROLL -ON

· 1 Socllon, 10 P1get 25 cent•
A Mulllmedlo Inc. N-ep.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, August 27, 1991

Gallipolis firm gets contract bid; water hike rejected

•RrrEAID
CHARCOAL

Hemlock Grange officers elected
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Hemlock:
Orange No. 2049.
Efected were Rosalie Story,

Reds rally to
defeat Phils
5-4 Monday

For Labor Day picnic supplies

Friendly Circle to sponsor bazaar
Mary Virginia Kautz presented
the program at the August meeting
·o f the Friendly Circle, Tripity
Church.
. Opening with prayer, Mrs.
Kautz spoke on "What It Means to
be a Servant of God." With scriptures from Paul's writings, she
broU~t out that all are called 10 be
Oocl s servants. The offertory and
closing prayer were by Mrs. Kautz.
'
Gay Perrin presided at the business meeting as officers and committee reports were heard and the

about $100,000 from Thursday ' s
auction at Christie's in London.
The couple divorced in 1968
after six years of marriage. They
had one son, Julian, now a rock
singer in his own right
" I'd had enough," she said. "I
though~ 'Do I want to be wheeled
onto television programs in a
wh eelchair at 70.- discussing the
Beatles and John?' I just can't face
that."

NEW YORK (AP) - John
Lennon ' s first wife, Cynthia, is
selling some of his belongings.
" All my memories are intact,"
Ms. Lennon, 5.1, said in the Sept. 2
issue of People. "But the -past is
over now.''
Along with some of the former
Beatie's writings and drawings,
Ms. Lennon plans to auction some
antiques from their house in Surrey, England. She expects to get

SILVER RUN - Revival at the
Silver Run Baptist Church will be
held Monday through Sunday at
7:30 p.m. nightly with Pastor Bill
Little.

I

In-a few weeks, the applicant
will get a letter with the amount of
the Social Security benefit, the
beginning date of the benefits, and
a booldet explaining how to repon
changes to Social Security.
Of course, not every claim can
be processed as quickly as this.
Disability claims, for example, tak.e
considerably longer because of the
additional time needed to obtain
medical proof of the disabling condilion.
Usually it is a good idea to call
Social Security ahead of time to get
one of the booldets listed above.
The information they provide can
save a lot of time and make the
claims process more understandable. The Athens Social Security
office is located at 221 l!l North
Columbus Road and the phone
number is 592-4448.

Ohio Lottery

tain when it will re-open.
Collapse of a culven in the roadway has deemed the roadway
unsafe for travel and forced the closing. At presstime, OOOT officials were still investigating the cause of the collapse. No detours
were announced at presstime, either, but those were expected to be
forthcoming later in the day.

Fire damages Baer residence
A Chester woman was treated for smoke inhalation during a
structure frre on Baer Road on Monday evening.
Chester Fire Chief John L. Ridenour reported Tuesday morning
that attic and roof damage were sustained to the Paul Baer residence
near Chester after a fire broke out in a summer lcitchen. The fue,
according to Ridenour, is believed to have been electrical in nature.
Syracuse squad transported Linda King to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for smoke inhalation. Pomeroy and Syracuse units assisted
the Chester department at the blaze, providing water and emergency
squad coverage.
No estimate of damage was available, and, it was reported that
Baer did have insurance on the structure.

Patrol probes bus-truck accident
Twelve children were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital
following a pickup truck-bus. accident on Scipio Township Road
Continued on page 3

'

Racine woman killed
in one-car accident
A Racine woman died Tuesday
in an early morning traffic accident
on S.R. 338 in Letart Falls.
Johnanna D. Shuler, 45. of S.R.
338, Racine, was eastbound on
S.R. 338, according to a rerort
from the Gallia-Meigs Post o the
State Highway Patrol, when she
drove off the right side of the roadway. The car, a white 1991 Honda
CRX, came back onto the roadway
and then went off the left side of
the roadway. The car then struck a
tree and rotated into a mail box and
a newspaper box.
Shuler was ejected onto the
roadway and the vehicle continued
on, striking an embanPIIenL Shuler
was not wearing a seat belt according to the reporting trooper.
A note on the report indicated

.,

the patrol was un sure of why
Shuler drove off the right side of
the road. A test for alcohol showed
no alcohol was present.
In addition to the highway
patrol, the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department and the Racine squad
q{ the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service also responded tb
the accident
The Racine squad transponcd
the body to the Ewing Funeral
Home.
Meigs County Coroner DouglaS
Hunter M.D. said Tuesday morning
that the cause of death appeared to
be multiple trauma and head injury
resulting from Shuler's ejectio~
from the vehicle.
According to the patrol,
Shuler's death makes two Meigs
County trafQI fatalities for 1991.

t

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