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Wednelday, August 12,1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AIMIIT1SIII llEII POUCT·Eich of those advertised ~ems Ia noqulrad to be
rudlly ovalloble for ult In each Kroger Star., l&gt;ctPt 11 apecNicllly nqtad in
!hill ad . II we do run out of an advertised Kern, we w'lt offer you your 9holce
of 1 """'!'J!bJe ltlm, when ov1illblo, reflecting tilt umo uvinga or 1 rtin·
clltck which w'liontltlo you to purduoae tho advortloed ~em ot lho advertlaod
pr1ct wllhln ~ dayo. Only one vendor coupon will be occoplod per ~em

COPYRIGHT 1982 • TI1E KROGER CO.lTEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
AUG. I, THROUGH SATURDAY, AUG . 15, 19112, IN POMEROY.

DEALERS.

Pick 3:
700

pu-. .

W1S RESERVE TI1E RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANnTIES. NONE SOLO TO

Ohio Lottery

Reds slip by

Pick 4:
4328
Super Lotto:
9-14-16-21-23-24
Kicker:
154878

Dodgers 3-2
Page4

Low tonight near 60. Friday,
chance or showers. High in

Vol. 43, No. 78
Copyrlghled 1112

2 Socttono, 12 Pagos
A Multlmodtolnc. Nowopoper

KROGER'S 109TH .
ANNIVERSARY_$ALE/
WALL ANNIVERSARY· People sit oa remaiDs of tbe BerUn
WaD at Potsdamer Platz Ia BerliD Wedaesday. The lflllld-paiDted
wall segmeats, which are waitiDg to be hauled away, are tbe list at
that site which recalls the former divided city. The waD was lluilt
31 years ago by East Germaa Commuaisls 011 Aug. 13, 1961, ud
divided the city for 28 years. (AP)

Serbs say they will allow
women, children to go free
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herze~ov·
ina (AP) - With the Unned
Nations about to vote on usmg
fcn:e to en~ aid gets to besieged
srnsofBosnia'sgovemment,
S military leaden are suddenly
making ooncilialllry gestures.
1bere is no indication, however,
that Serbian fcn:es intend to ease
up on their campaign of driving out
majority Muslims and Croats
through what has become known as
"ethnic cleansing."
1n fact. United Nations officials
reported Tuesday that 28,000 peo·
plo, mostly ethnic Mu~lims, were
being forced from theu homes m
nonhwestem Bosnia in the largest
such operation of the 5-month-old
civil war.
At the same time, the Serbs
besieging Sarajevo announced that
they would guarantee mothers and
children safe passage out of the
capital, which tS ringed by.snipe~
and artillery umts who datly ram
fue on iiS residents.
In addition, the self-styled par·
liament of the republic that Serbs
have proclaimed inside Bo.sni.a
pledged not 10 impede hwnanttan·
an convoys and to open detention
camps for inspection.
tntunational outrage has mount·
ed in recent weeks as the world
was exposed to images of toddlers
killed trying to Dee Sarajevo and of
emaciated inmates in Serb-run
detention camps, where torl1lfe and
executions are allegedly cOI'nmon.
· As the U.N. Security Council
prepared to v~ Thursday on ~h.e
force authorization, Western mtlt·
tary leaders cautioned that any
attempt til fcn:e an end to fighung
would require hundreds of thou·
sands of unops.
NATO contingency plans call
for at least 5,000 to 10,000 soldiers
to open a land corridor to the.~pi·
tal to truek in food and mcdicme.
But some military experiS say far
mcr:e would be required. . .
During a Senate heanng '"
Washington on Tuesday, a representative of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, U. Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey,
said 60,000 to 120,000 troops
would be needed to ensure the
delivery of aid.
And he said 400,000 troops
would be needed if the West decid·
ed to try to force an uneasy peace
- an alternative he counseled
against
. MacKenz1e
. oI
Maj. Gen. LeWIS
Canada, who led the U.N. peacekeeping force in Sarajevo for five
months ' told the heanng that mrer.
national military intervention
would only "escalate the fighting
and more people will be killed."
Nevertheless, the Senate followed the House in backing the
U.N. II'OP'JSII.
Five buses carrying about 200

children and a few mothers were to
leave Saraievo todav under the orotection of U.N. armored personnel
carriers, Said Ejub Cehic, an official with the private aid group Chil·
dren's Embassy.
The trip was made possible
under an agreement Tuesday
between a Sem officer and a repesentative of the Children's
Embassy.
The arrangement could evenwaUy provide safe passage to ltl1S of
thousands of the city's 400,000 residents.
In its statement promisin~ to
cooperated with the Umted
Nations, the self-styled Serb parliament asked for U.N. guidance on
what steps were needed to "avoid
military mtervention and the blood·
shed that would accompanr it. ..
Calls against mili..-y mtervention also carne from the government of Yugoslavia, now made up
only of Serbia and Montenegro.
The threat of fcn:e appeared be
discouraging Serb fighters from
blocking aid to Bosnia, 11 least for
the moment In Geneva, Sylvana
Foa, spokeswoman for the U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees,
said overland deliveries by U.N.
convoys were suddenly becoming
easier.
In another development, a
human rights group based in Ger·
many accused Serbs of executing
and tonuring civilians in prison
.camps in northern Bosnia.

...

Additional
ouantities

I

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Gal.

Gal. 52.09

2% Lowfat Milk

LIMIT 1 GAL. WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

11.21

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

COUPON CDOD SUN. AUG. 9-SAT. AUG. 15, 1992

JI

By BRIAN J, REED
I

'

'"

"

Although netther won the All-

Darwin grocery store
hit by armed ro~ber

SLICED
FREE

lb.

"SILVER PLATTER" FRESH WHOLE

Boston Butt Pork Roast

U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED
BEEF "UNTRIMMED
WHOLESALE CUT" (11 ·14-LB.
AVGJ

!

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH • Beth Theiss, associate director or the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter, was named Employee or
the Month for July by the
Meigs County Couacil oa
Aging. She bas been at the
Ce nter for the past three
years. Her selection to receive
the award was based on
demonstrating initiative, ere·
ativity, courtesy and consideration shown clients and the
public, and reliability.

whole
TOP Sirloin
Pound

JUMBO 5 SIZE
CAUFORNIA

Honeydew
Mefons
Each

3.25%, BUTTERMILK,
SKIM OR

Kroger 2%
Lowfat Milk

. J.S-Gal. paper carton

$
''
'"

A burglar remains at large fol·
lowing the armed robbery of Wha·
ley's Grocery in Darwin Wednesday.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the theft
took place at the store on State
Route 681 at approximately 10
a.m. yesterday. Julie Murdoch, a
cleric at the store, had just finished
waiting on a customer when the
subject entered, wearing a baseball
hat, sunglasses and bandana on his
head and face. The burglar bran·
dished a large gun, thought 10 be a
riDe, and demanded money. which
Murdoch surrendered. Soulsby said
that an estimated $400-$500 in
cash was taken.
The subject then fled the scene,
traveling west toward Albany on
State Route 681 in a red car.
The robber had been seen sitting
in his car in the store's parking lot
by the customer, Soulsby said, and
Murdoch saw the customer sitting
there as well. A second customer
was in the store's tanning bed at
the time the incident took place,
and was unaware of what had taken
place.

The thief was described as being
in his early 20's, slight in build
(approximarely 5'5"), with dark
hair.
Law enforcement teams from
Athens County, Meigs County, and
the Ohio State Highway Patrol
were alerted and quiCkly canvassed
the area, talking to several subjects
who might have seen the vehicle or
who were believed to have possibly
been involved.
According to dne witness, the
car came from U.S. Route 33 and
turned west on 681 before stopping
at the rural grocery store.
Soulsby said that he expects that
such incidents to be on the rise, and
urges other business owners to be
cautious when they suspect some·
thing amiss.
"I would urge that all shop owners use a lot of caution now,"
Soulsby said. "If they see anything
at all that could be suspicious, they
should at least get a license plate
number, or call the sheriff's oiTtce
and let us check it out, because I
don·~ think that this is going to be
the 1ah such incident•

F~EE

ASSORTED VARIETIES

Texas Gold
Ice cream

Cinnamon
Rolls
6-ct. Pkg.

RfGULARI.Y ••• $1.99

CONDmONER OR

2-Ltr.
SPRITE, CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
DIET COKE OR

coca cola Classic

Style
Shampoo
15-oz.

•2o-oz. KeHogg's
Raisin Bran
•16.7-oz. Kellogg's
edBran

,,,
''

By viriue of wtnrung the stock
car and kit car divisions at the
Meigs ~uft.ty. SOI!P Bo~ DCrby.on
July 4, banieUe'ind 'Chris ~ived
paid trips to Akron last week to
participate in the world charnpi, onships of the 5Sth race.
Chris is the nine year-old son of
Gary·Snouffer and Sarah Snouffer,
both of Pomeroy. DanieUe, 12, is
the daughter of Steve and Deborah
Peckham of Middle)lCIL
Upon their arrival in Akron,
each mcer was treated to a police
escon, a ride in a VIP car, and a
greeting from the derby's international president. Accomodations
for the week were provided to the
racers at Camp'Y -Noah, a YMCAaffiliated lodgtng facility.
Both roungsters finished second
in the stngle heat in which they
raced on Saturday, but enjoyed lots
of activities in conjunction with
their lrip. Among the souvenin that
Danielle and Chris brought back to
Meigs County were derby wrist·
watches, several t-shiriS, race jackets and helmets, a city flag and
games.
Buttons (rom racers across the
globe now adorn their Dags, which
will certalnly be a valued souvenir
as long as Cliris and DanieUe live.
The Peckham and Snouffer farn·
ilies received financial assistance
from the local derby, allowing
them to enjoy the week's activities,
as well . Meigs County Derby
Director Charles Neutzling also
traveled to Aleron last week, and
participated in a series of training
sessions for derby directors.
According to Ncutzling, plans
are now underway for next year's
Continued oa page 3

REVIEWS GRANT· Lladll Frlead, ·eaJtb·coordlaator, Melp
County CoancU oa Acini, reviews 111ateriall tor two ~elllillan 011
carealver help to be offered at the Se!llor Cltlzena Ceater Ia
~ptember, Womea'a u,aitll Month. The Couacll received a $500
graat from the Ohio Department of Health to develop tile ieml·

oars.

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The Meigs County Council on
Aging has received a $500 grant
from the Women's Health Program, Bureau of Maternal and
Child Health, Ohio: Department of
Health, to develop a program for
the ser.tember observance of
Women s Health Month.
Linda Friend, health COCI'dinator
· for .the Council; wrote the grant and
will handle implementation of a
loeal prograin. It was one of 92
projeciS funded in 50 oounlies at a
total cost of $93,514.
Meigs County's funding will be
used to provide information to
women·throush two seminars, both
geiii'Cd to the problems 9f caregivers.
The first one will emphasize
handling stress and developing
cq~ing ski1la and will be presented
by Dr. Jamea Althof, psychqlogist,
on SCpt. 3 from 1 to 3 p.m.
The second seminar has been
titled "Taking Care of You" and

system will be in place.•
No discussions have occurred
among officials regarding installittion of a '911 ~ emergency system
in the county, but surrounding
counties, such as Iackson and
Athens Counties, have either
installed or plan to install such a
response system.
In addition 10 adding 10 the in·
office equipment at the EMS head·
quarters, the package would also
add repeaters m Olive, Orange and
Columbia Townships. Such
repeaters will increase the depanment's communication abilities
while working in those more
remote areas, and access to other
agencies is expected to allow more
prompt service in emergency siwations . An antenna, but no new
tower, will be added in Pomeroy.
Byer estimates that the new
equipment will cost $45,000 to
$50,000 on a lease/purchase program. The bid specifications will
include a service contract on new
and existing equipment by a
licensed technician.
The board also approved advertisement for bids for new fuel tanks
at the county garage. The application has been made 10 the State Fire
Marshall~s office for permission to

SOUVENIRS • These nags, now adorned
with collectors buttoas from other champions,
are amoag the souvealrs brouabl back from

remove and replace the four exist·
ing tanks, which are to be replaced
by two 8,000 gallon steel tanks.
One tank will be used 10 store
gasoline, and the other for diesel
fuel.
County Engineer Phil Roberts
reported that his depanment is now
busy making preparations for the
Meigs County Fair, including
applying hot mix paving 10 a portion of the entrance roure onto the
fairgrounds.
The commissioners also:
• Approved advertisement for
paving and bridge replacement
work under round five of the isSue
2 program;
• Approved a resolution to apply
for state grant monies on behalf of
the Village of Pomeroy, 10 be used
for a sewer line exrension at Riverside Food Man:
• Approved the purchase of a
new water fountain for the Meigs
County Home.
Present were: Roberu, Highway
Superintendent Ted Warner; garage
staff member David Spencer: Commissioners Richard E. Jones, Man'
ning K. Roush and David
Koblentz, and Clerk Mary Hobstet·
ter.

Akron by Meigs County Soap.Box Derby cham-

pions Danielle Peckham, left, and Chris Snouffer. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

Merchants discuss plans for '92
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
Larry Banks, president of the
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival
Committee, discussed plans for the
1992 festival at Wednesday's regular meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
The 1992 Big Bend Stemwheel
Festival will take place the second
weekend in October and has a vari-

Meigs County Council
on Aging receives grant

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"
FRESH BAKED

$ ''

Your Bugle Boy
Back- To-School

FREE LAYAWAY

pionsbip eveat. Also showa are Daalelle Peck·
ham, center, and Chris Snouffer. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J, Reed)

American Soap Box Derby, Chris
Snouffer·anil Danielle Peckham
have returned to Meig,s.~ounty as
true champions.
.

~.. ..Sfnlinfl News Starr

Pound

Shop 'Til 8:00 P.M.

PROUD OF THEM • Mefgs C01111ty !lbOuld
be proud or Its Soap Box Derby champions.
Director Charles Neutzling, left, Is pictured with
some of their souveuirs from last week's cham·

Soap Box Derby champions
return·from ·global event

Perdue
Whole Fryers

992-3148

. ,1! Alii RICA';

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Headquarters!

The "backbone" to a 911 emergency system is on its way to
Meigs County, following action
taken on Wednesday by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
Meigs Emergency Services
Director Roben Byer received permission from the board to advertise
for bids for a communication sys·
tern to augment the existing sysrem
at the Pomeroy headquarters of the
EMS department
According to Byer, that new
equipment will allow the depanment to effectively communicate
with area police departinents, the
county sheriff's deparunent, school
buses and the county highway
garage. The system will operate on
a 450-470 UHF band, which EMS
was recently licensed to use.
"This system can serve as the
backbone to a '911' sysrem," Byer
said, "since we already have the
radios and other equipment in
place."
"When the time comes for '911 '
service installation in Meigs County," Byer said, "aU we'll need is the
telephone system, since the radio

1-

SPRINGDALE

1 KV

By BRIAN J.·REED
Seatioel News Starr

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"SILVIIR PLATTER" FRESH BONE-IN PORK STEAKS OR
WESTERN STYI.E PemK RIBS LB• •• $1.19

,.,...~ ...

Meigs EMS to get new
communications system

r-••••••KROGER COUPON ••••••1
I
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mid~

70s.

will deal with. the physical aspects
of self-care. It has not been sched·
uled.
Both seminars, open to the pub~c . wiD be held at the Senicr Citizens Center.
As explained by Friend, most
caregivers in Meigs County are
women and the person or persons
they are caring for are either their
husband or their parents. Providing
help 10 those people has been a pri·
ority of the Meigs County Council
on Aging. Several programs to
relieve caregivers for an occasional
day, to provide general chore. or
homemaker assistance, and to gtve
training on handling the incapacitated are already in place.
This is the Council's fmt time
to receive funding for a program
during Women's Health Month.
The two seminars will be video
tsped and those tapes wUI be avail·
able at no charge to caregiven who
are unable to attend.

ety of events to offer the public.
One of the activities presently
scheduled, according to Banks,
includes a dance cruise on the P.A.
Denny on Thursday, Oct. 8, from
8-11 p.m., sponsored by the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
Tickets are available at $20 for sin·
gle or S35 per couple. Music on the
dance cruise will be provided by
· on the
Crossover Ban d. A crutse
P.A. Denny will also be offered for
..
Meigs County Senior C•llzens on
Friday, Oct. 9 at 2 p.m. wtth those
tickets available through the senior
citizens cenrer. At 7 p.m. pn Oct 9
another cruise will be offered for
riders 10 see the lights of Pomeroy
at night and on Saturday, Oct. 10,
seats will be available on the P.A.
Denny during tbe stemwheel races
with boarding at I p.m. There is
limited seating on the P.A. Denny
and Banks encourages those inter·
ested to reserve their tickets in
advance.
The majority of the events will
take place Saturdsy, Oct. 10, and
will begin with a flag raising ceremont and firemen's parade followed by a 5K run-walk, ID!der the
direction of Mike Kennedy ,
between Mason, W.Va. and
Pomeroy·. The Herbal Harvesters
Society will host an herb fest in the
larger mini-park in P~eroy where
Bank One will ·again offer beans
and cornbread, and a flower and
quilt show is being planned at the
Meigs County Public Library. A
baseball card show will be held at
the office of Kenny Utt, C.P.A.,
and other entertainment during the
day will include performances by
Denver Rice on hiS toilet seat gui-

tar, the Shady River Shufflers and
Crossover Band as well as a rope
r h'td
throwing contest or c ' reo and
adults.
Plans are also being made to
hold a chili-cook off with Jay and
· h
f h
Sherry Warner ID c arge o t at
. event. Those inrerested in participaling in the cook-off arc required
to provide proof of a negative
Tuberculosis skin test. This test is
provided free of charge at the
Meigs County Health Depanrnent.
Anyone interested in participating
in the cook-off, or for further in for·
mation, should contact Mr. or Mrs.
Warner at992-2528.
According to Banks there are
presently 10 boats registered to
come to the festival and he feels
there will be several more. Banks
stated "Pomeroy's festival is the
one everyone looks forward to."
Banks expressed his appreciation for the assistance the merchants association has given the
sremwheel committee and requested that the association again prepare "welcome bags" for ench boat.
Members of the merchants association wanting to contribute to the
welcome bags should bring the
items to the September meeting.
. Volunteer llelp will be needed
during stern wheel weekend and
Banks encourages anyone who is
interested in assisting to contact
him at his oiTtee, 992-S009. ·
Other busilless
Susan Clark, president of the
association, read a letter of appreci- ·
ation from Maxine Griffith, Senior
Champs Director for Bank Onc1
thanking the group for the banner
Condnued on page 3
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Commentary
·The D8ily Sentinel
.

Ill eo.rt Btnet
,_...,,Oblo

•

DH~ilniO)'IIrii&amp;DD 10 T11B .........

or TRB MJ:W!L'tiASON AREA

aOIERT L WJNGEIT
l'llblldttr

PAT WIIITI!'.IIEAO
.411Nit~r

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genel'lll Mmagtr

LllTI1!RS OP .OPiNioN ae nlcome. They should be le11 tbiD 300
wonla. All letton 1re subject to edllin&amp; IQd must be oicnecl witb alDie;
oddmo ind t.lopbone lllliD!Mr-No llllliped lettm will be pUblished. Lettm
lllould be iii JOOd IIIIa, llildJeuiDc iAaet, DOt pmollllitiOJ.

Bush's camJM!ign strong
suit challenged by Clinton
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Specill Corn1pOIIdelat
HOUSTON - For lhe president - !IllY presideat - at re-election
time, foreign policy is a high card or die campaigQ is in uoublc. While
Republicans at worlc on President Bush's bid for a scc:ood 1er111 say lhat
remains his strong suiL Bill CliniOn may be pining onlbe issue.
A oombination of politically prime liming, a GOP misstep, and evaus
out of control have enhanced CliniOn's credibility in foreign affairs, and
!hat's whatlhe Democratic challenger .-15 mos1.
He's not making lhe calls on crises abrald, but be bas to convince vot·
ers lhat he could. And he's not likely to gain mucb headway in lhat effcn
by saying, as he did Monday,lhat be learned to mate tough calls as governor in'command of lhe Alkansas National Guard.
The plusses and minuses of lhe issue for Bush were on display Mon·
day as lhe advance guard of lhe Republican National Convention set to
work on a party platform, wilh planks applauding lhe president as an
architect of peace talks in lhe Middle EasL while denouncing lhe carnage
in old Yugoslavia. .
Clinton had said on July 261hatlhe Unired Swes shoukl take lhe lead
in pessing for world action to stop Serbian fi~ against other states
left by lhe disintegration of Yugoslavia, and · die possibility lhat
U.S. air and naval forces might have to be used to open relief supply lines.
· White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater called it reckless. But
Republicans had been saying much lhe same lhing, as did Secretary of
Defense Dick Cheney in congressional testimony two days later.
Last Tuesdar.. Clinton called for an emergency session of the U.N.
Security Council to deal wilh lhe crisis in lhe Balkans, and siid die next
da.)' lhat lhe United States might have to use mililaly force.
By lhat time, pressure was intensifying for world action.
; On Thursday, Bush urged Security Comcil action to authorize force if
necessary to deliver relief supplies. He lhen said, as Clinton had earlier,
lhat lhe Serbs must open lhe detention camps 10 international inspection.
The president also said that while a lot of voices were sugaestinJ lhe
use of foree, none of !hem have lhe responsibility for sending Americans
into danp. "And I do."
·
· That IS lhe asset and lhe risk lhat goes wilh lhe White House. Bush's
standing soared wilh lhe Persian Gulf War, slumped to its current low
point beyause of recession, unemployment and unease about lhe ecooomic
futore.
Now Bush faces lhe challenge of shaping an American response to lhe
ethnic, nationalistic strife between the states lhat used to make up
Yugoslavia, wilhouL as he put it, getting bogged down in guerrilla warfare.
At lhe same time, lhe Democrats are boasting that they got 10 lhe han!
line rust. "~ took a close look at what Governor Clinton proposed,''
said Sen. Albert Gore, Clinton's running mate. "And now lhe president of
lhe United States has, in essence, said, 'Well, be was right all along.
We're going to make lhat lhe policy of our COWltry.' "
"That's nonsense," said Charles Black, senior adviser to lhe Bush
campaign. "Evay day we spend on foreign policy and national defense is
a day CliniOn is losing ground.
: ''Even wilh lhe pres_ident in lhe doldrums, as low as he can be in the.
polls, lhe people pve him a 4 or S to I advantage in foreign policy,"
Bfack siid.
.
Howard Calloway, a former congressman leading lhe GOP platform
on foreign affairs, said Bush should be hammering lhe issue
bc~f be~ can deal from
a plank on
calling lhe Balkan
an
of

0

another matter. That's
Bush.
Foreign policy problems were a major factor in lhe tmdoing of Presi·
dent Jimmy Carter, defeated in 1980 after a year's impasse while lhe U.S.
embassy hostages were held in ban. Even a miSSIItement can be a set·
back, as it was when Gerald Ford insisled in debate with Cant.r lhat east·
em Europe was not dominared by tile Soviet Union. Beset by die war in
Vietnam, Lyndon B. Johnson opted against running in 1968.
Butlhere are dividends, too. While Clinton camplligned and Republi·
cans set up convention shop, lhe president was in KennebunkpM, Maine,
announcing lhat Mideast peace talks wiU reswne Aug. 24.
"Prospects for peace have been tiBllSformed by lhe determined stales·
mliOsltip of George Bush," tile GOP platform applauds.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Walter R. Mears, viet president and eolumnlst
for The Associated Press. has covered national political conventions
since 1964.

Letters to the editor
Event a success
Dear Editor:
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
\\1)Uid like to lhank alllhose who
helped make our Super Weekend
aid Oolf Tournament a success.
V{ilhout lhe Continued support of
t1te businesses, parents, students,
Bistetn Local School employees,
lllllhe general P.tJblic we would be
uliable to prov1de an alhletlc progtam for lhe students of Eastern.
~is program re'lu!res money

throughout the whole year and
allhough Super Weekend was very
successful we wiU continue to need
your support for lhe 1992-1993
school year.
Eastern Alhletic Boosters
Sandy Bowen &amp; Joyce Hill
Co-Presidents
Susan Pullins, Vice-President
Judy Avis, Secrerary
Roger Karr, Treasurer
Coolville. Ohio 45723

Thanks board
DCir Editor:
space was most appreciated.
I I would like to personally !hank
As eoach and spokes perron for
the Meigs County Board of the group we again extend our
MlVOD, Mr. Steve Beha and lhe thanks and hope others will check·
sdiJ for lhe use of their facility on outlhe facility use and have a great
~ s, 1992, and also tlt8nk lhe time as Our group had.
fU)ilies of die playcn ~or provid·
Again, thank you 10 all those
iJt lhe aood and entenammenL
involved and to lhe team you did
We liad over SO in attendance "A swell job' Ibis season"... and
and everyone seemed to enjoy parents thanks for lhe support. .. to
~ves. The pleasant and clean
Dan's of Middleport thanks for
surroundings added to the picnic ~nsoring such a great bunch of
.00 It was a nice place for folks to kids...
Mony Wood-Coach
, gCiher, it is very hard to find a
Syracuse T-Ball Team
fadlity for families for banquets
Syracuse League
ari"d outings. and the offer of the
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, Auguet 13, 1992
Page , 2:-The Dally ~ntlnel
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, A~guat 13, 1992

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Fair skies predicted for Ohio Sunday

OHIO Wea th er
Friday, Auc. 14
forecast for

This is no jive I moderate
'
'
It is a heavy burden: Pundits
must help all those·in need. Having
offered advice 10 wiseguy
Democrats, I now proffer guidance
to boring Republicans:
- Of course, be negative. Stress
the values issues, attack the
Democrats as "L-Word" liberals.
Force Clinton to prove he's not
one. Ignore lhose who say ''labels
don't matter." They do. Labels
stand for ideas. Only about 20 percent of Americans call lhemsclves
"liberal." 30 pen;ent say " conservative" and 40 percent " moder-

ate. ' '

- Add "ic" to your vocabu·
lary . It is juvenile to call your
opponents 'lhe Democrat Pany."
They are " lhe Democratic Pany.''
You need Democratic voters; pay
lhem respect Perhaps lhey should
call your party "the Publican
Party. " Or "the Pubic Party."
Message to GOP: Grow up!
- Of course. be positive. It's
uue: George Bush must define

Ben Wattenberg
himself. Put him in an isolation
booth until he produces a short
staiement about !)is political philos·
ophy. (Everyone bas one; it's about
as common as a nose.)
Bush should start wilh an obvi·
ous fact: He is not Ronald Reagan.
He is a " moderate conservative."
Now, not many _People have
mounred barricades m lhe cause of
moderate conservativism. No one
bas
!aimed "Give Me Liberty
or ~Me Moderate Conserva·
tivisml" Nor "F'lfty-Four Forty or
Moderate Conservativism!" Too
bad, Publicans.
But polls do show lhat a plurali·
ty of Americans regaid lhemselves
as moderale conservatives. That is
important when the votes are
counred.
Moderate conservative might he
defined lhusly: following cbnserva·
tive market precepts, amending

"Non-smoking.'

lhem when ioverninent action is When it touches public policy, as
needed, and uying to make !hose wilh gays in lhe m~itary, it.is a fair
actions conform to American val· issue. But R.epubhcans w1ll ltann ·
ues, whiCh bpnor personal respon- themselves jf they countenance
sibility. The menu ipcludlls public· gay-bashing. The moderate, partiprivate school choice, wodd'are not san. GOP formulation should be:
welfare, enterprise zones 8ncl 1018 "There are lhree positions, ga&gt;:· .
more. ·
bashing, civil rights and gay glori·
MC is good.Stuff: Bill Clinton fication. We Republicans,lhe party
calls it "The New CovenanL" In of Lincoln, are pro-civil rights.
Bush's adminisiratioq ~ James What happened at lhc Democrat-IC
Pinkerton calls it '' 'T~e New ' Convention in New YOJk was gay
Paradigm ... The saindy Jlck Kemp glorification."
cal~s i~,"bleeding hear! ,l:onserModeration about abortion
vatism.
seems impossible. Neilher party
- l'ut a label on it, 'no more has accepted lhe position that most
than three ·words. Sol'l)', "New Americans want: legal abortion
Deal,'' "Square Deal" and "New wilh an option for reasonable state
Frontier'/ have been usetl. Run a restrictions. If Repub.licans can
contest within lhe campaign staff. control their pro-life and proAt worst. use "Moderate Conser· choice activisiS, lhey can make a
vative;" Or try a jingle: •"Live, mild case that lhey allowed a ·rea·
live, live I Be a moderate eonserva· sonable debate, while the
Democrats - pressured by fern!·
tive."
- Modenition iLsclf is not i bad nists- muzzlecl discussion.
- Use lhe jlluase "New World
·define. RepubliCans wili use lhe
Order,"
even if it's hard to define.
£:-button isSue o( hQmosexuality.
It's Bush's.lt's visionary. It's true.
- Use foreign policy. Voters
want to ~iv bow a ~t. and
a party, willltanclle big issuea, even
lhose lhat aren't yet visible. The
cenual issue of our era was the
Cold War. America won it. Bolh
parties deserve crediL But in lhe
last 25 years a key part of the
Democratic pany was laggard in
some important aspects of the
effcrt That is fair game.
- Bash Congress. Also bash
lhe press. They bought lhe Clintoit·
Gore case, whoJe.ho~. Press-bash·
ing makes lhem relhmk. Stay off
the Clinton personal stuff. The
press will do iL Unleash QUayle; an
ongoin$ Quayle-Gore debate a~t
lhe envaonment may yield a bonus.
- Blame lhe economy on a) lhe
Congress, b) lhc business cycle, c)
the global slump and d) Geor'e
Bush. A "Wfto.me?" position will
not be credible.
One Republican problem
remains. ~ are seen as boring. I
have no solution.
.
Ben Walltnberc, 1 stalor ftl·
low at tbe A111erkan Eaterprlse
Institute, ill autbor of "T• First
UDivmal Nation," pnlllis~Md by
Tbe Free Press and a syndicated
writer for N~per Eattrp. .
Assoclatioa.

pe~ce

Baker will be back after
•

WASHINGTON (NEA) Sometime after Secrerary of State
James Baker brings Arab and
Israeli negotiators together for
renewed peace talks in Washington
on Aug. 24, it will be formally
announced lhat be is taking a leave
of absence to run lhe Bush-Quayle
re-election effort.
Baker has repeatedly resisted
the move, but the recent fiasco
involving the Bush camp's
"attack" faxes is said to have con·
vinced him lhat lhe campaign is out
of control. Reportedly, Baker still
believes he must wait to make lhe
move until the next mund pf peace
talks begins in onlet to deflect criti·
cism that be is leaving at a critical
juncture for partisan reasons.
To recap lhe fax fiasco: Mary
Matalin, deputy campaign manager
and lhe highest-ranking woman on
lhe Bush-Quayle team, began what
she called her "lie-a-day" faxes.
These consisted of daily releases
exposing " lies" being advanced by
the Clinton campaign or questioning some aspect of Clinton' s
reeord.
However, in last Sunday's faxed
broadside, Matalin launched an
attack on Clinton in exuaordinarily
personal terms. Headed "Sniveling
Hypocritical Democrats - stand
up and be counted; on second

Robert}. Wagman

~~nservative

talks

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ness." Tlte statement add~d lhat is launched, lhe Clinton campllign
"lhe president has accepted her can oome back wilh a "lhere lhey
(Matalin's) apology and that be bas goagain'' response,
The last straw occwred later in
full confidence in her."
lhe
day when two new Bush cam·
SimullanCOusly, in Washington,
Matalin issued a statement dtat was paign ads had 10 be wilhdrawn and
equivocal at best. It never used lhe re-edired to remove lhe presidential
word apology, and it was clear lhat seal: Its use in political commer·
simif she was apologizing, it was to cials is illegal. This latest
ply
reinforced
lhe
percepuon
Bush for die embamtssmenL not to
now
rampant
even
among
high·
CliniOn.
"It would appear to some lhatl ranking Republicans - lhat the
might have violated, at least in campaign is leaderless and drifting.
spirit, lhe fRSident's cfictate, io lhe
campaiP,t that we avoid personal
Wbelher that perception is ttue
attacks, ' read Malalin's statement or not, it is very pervasive that
"I regret if lhe tone of mf'state· Baker must take over the cainmeni lafllhe wrong impress1011.'' - paisn, .if.only. fll~,lbo ~ .
The "furor over the fax codiplete- troops that help ' hU ' aiTf\/~4:
ly sidetracked lhe campaign for . Whclher he can aclllally make any
two important days. Headlines and gJeat difference in lhe campaign is
nightly television coverage were no longer the issue. So many
about lhe memo and its afttrmatlt, Republicans have .lost failh in lhe
not about several of lhe president's re-election effort that- if Baker
strongest camplign llflllCIII3IICC so did not take over - eome Septcmfar.
·
ber you might see Republicans run·
The memo also gave Clinton lhe ~ing Cor: office by desperately try·
chance to slough off lhe memo in a 1ng to distance themselves from lhe
very statesmanlike .way. "Aw, it's Bush~ylecamplign.
nothing," he told reporters. " I
As J1mmy Carter can testify
don't want to get involved in Ibis from 1980, lhat is lhe dealh kne.ll
nickel-and-dime stuff. " Tbe inci· for a presidential C81l)paign.
dent will undoubtedly make future . Robert WJIIIIIal ls.a syndkat·
attacks on Clinton's record"more ed writer for Newspaper Enter· .
diffiCult;
every time such an llttack
prist Asaoclatlon.
.
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Doctors with AIDS keep lethal secret
As she lay dying last fall, Kim·
berly Bergalis made a poignant last

~

Joseph Perkins

request of federal lawmakers:
Require lhat physicians and dentists regularly test for AIDS, and down guidelines for medical work·
restrict !hose who are infecred from ers wilh AIDS, ralher than more
performing invasive medical proce· suingent recommendations that
dures.
· previously have been developed by
If such a law had been in place, the federal Centers for Disease
lhe 23-year-old F1orida woman tes· Control. Congress bas required lhat
tilied during a congressional hear· states develop policies by Oct 28
ing, she would not have contracted to continue receiving.federal funds
lhe deadly disease frqm her denilst. for public heallh p~. ·
The National Commission on
Wbile lhe eomlDISSlon 's reeom·
AIDS apparendy wu unmoved by mendations were greeted favorably
Kimberly's bean-rending plea. It by lhe AIDS lobby, it almost ctr·
declared recently that it sees no tainly did not sit wcll wilh much of
reason why AIDS-infecred medical lhe American public. A Gallup sur·
professionals - like the dentist vey last year revealed lhat 94 per·
who gave young Kimberly AIDS cent of Am~cans feel 'lhat HIV'
- should restrict lhelr practice. It infected doclors and dentists should
also said lhat AIDS-infected physi• be required to disclose lheit condicians and dentists need not inform tion.
What we have here is a clash
lheir patients.
.
The commission's advisory is between lhe privacy rights of medi·
importaqt because it is expected cal professionals afflicted with
tlt8t stateS wili chaw upon it to set AIDS and lhe right of patients to be
Ten years ago: Negoilations aimed at e\o11CU81ini Palcstinillt guerrjllas
from well Beirut resumed, one day after an U ·hour bombenlritent of lhe
Lebanese capital by Israeli jets.
.
Five years ago: A rented Piper Cherokee airplane new cloile to Presi·
dent Reagan's belicoplcr in rci8tricled ainplce over Soulhem California;
the pilot and fliiSSCIIger of die plane wall arreoed. On ·lhe fifth anniver·
sary of a bull · market,~~~~ Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at
2,691.49 a£terbrieny sut]II5Sinc2,700.
·
:

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I

confident that they will not be
unknowingly exposed to infectious
diseases while receiving merucal
.treatment.
In similar oonflicts, lhe rights of
patients usually take prec~ence.
For instaDCe, doctors 111d dentists
are ~uired in most Slates to stop
practicmg if lhey are infected Wilh,
say, tubeztulosis or Hepatitis B or a
venereal disease Yet, lhey face no
such restriction if lhey test mvpositive, or even if lhey have fullblown AIDS.
The commission rationalizes
Ibis perverse medical double stan·
dard by saying lhat patients ·are at
minimal risk of contracting AIDS.
from a meclical worker. Thlt con·
elusion is· based in part &lt;in the
reae8lcb d Dr. Albert l.oYielllell ot
NeYi York Medica! Colfese. In an
article published last year :1n The
New ~ JDIIIIIII d Mcllicine,
he calculated lhat pitientl&lt;.have
· only a one in 48,000 chance Cif con·
tracling HIY from dociCIS. 4
Thfs risk - which probably
does not srrike most ~ u
minimal, nO matter what the 00111 ·
mission says - will get proares·
sively greater as more medical
workers are infecled with die virus
and more patients are expoled. It
hardly is eomfortinc to ltnow that
lurking in America's medical COlli·

munity are an estimated 360 surgeons, s,ooo doctors, 1.200 dentists
and 3S,OOO other health care wort- :
ers who 11e infected with lhe AIDS ·
yirlll, wilhout lhcir patients being ·
lhe wiser. .
•
It truly is unfortunate thallhcre
remains much prejudiJ;e and dis·
criminatio~ a~ainst people wilh
AIDS. And illS. somewhat under·
standable dtiu HIY·infected physicians and dentists mlaht be wary or
informing patients Of !heir condition for feat lhat lhey would lose
much of their medical IDCtice.
. But ~ most sacrosanct princiole or the physician's oatb is
r'FU11, do no harin."
And mv·infected doctors !llld
dentists place patients in hanD •s
way; hoWever neglipDie lhe risk.
· Kimberly Bergalis probably
would be alive today if ihe law
required thai medical ·WO!kers wilh
AlbS eilher inform patients or
refJain ·from surgtty or otber illvasive medical procedures that
expose patients to lhe virus. The
National Commission on AIDS
wiU share lhc blame if aily future
patient sUffers her n,ic fate.
J~~~~pll Perkliu Is a eolllllllst
for Tile San Dle1o Ualo•· Trl·
bone and asyadlcated wrller for
Newspaper Eaterprlse Aaaocla·
lion"
I
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The Dally Senllnei-Page-3•

conditions and

MICH.

•

IToledo 1119" I
PA.

By Tbe Asaoclated Press
Rain eould mar lhe early part of
lhe weekend, llut things look better
for Sunday, f~ siid.
Rain is likely statewide on Fri·
day, according to the National
Wealher Service, and lhe chances
of showers will diminish .somewhat
on Saturday. By Sunday, fair skies
will return to Ohio and tempera·
lures will continue to be pleasantly
· cool.
4
The reconl-higlt temperalllle for
this date at lhe Columbus wealher
station was 98 degrees in 1936
wbile the record low was 48 in

1967. Sunset tonight will be at 8:32
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:42
a.m.
Around lite nation
Rain SOIIked several cities from
Ohio to Norlh Carolina early today
as a cool air mass pushed southward into lhe region.
Forecasts called for scattered
showers along Ike Atlantic coast
today and unswonably cool tern•
peratures in the East, especially
northern New England.
More dry, 1DO-degree wealher
was expected in lhe West
Scattered showers also were

forecast along lhe noJ!hern Gulf of
Mexico coast and in Texas.
Wednesday evening, showers
and thunderstorms prevailed across
lhe Mississippi Valley, lhe Soulh·
west, the nonhero Rockies, the
PacifiC Norlhwcst and txirts of lhe
Midwest
In Norlh Carolina, 3.6 inches of
rain fell in six hours near Raleigh,
and strong thunderstorm winds
clowned ttees in. lhe eastern pan of
lhe state.
Focecasters today ca)led for tern·
peratures in lhe 60s in northern
New England, Michigan, Wiseon·

sin and Minnesota; lhe 70s in lhe
rest of lhe Northeast, lhe Midwest
and lhe northern half of lhe Plains;
lhe 80s in most of lhe Southeast,
the MississiJ?pi Valley and the
southern Plams; ant•lhe 90s in
8oulhem Florida, soulh Texas, lhe
Rockies and lhe Norlhwest.
Temperatures in lhe IOOs were
forecast for lhe rest of lhe West,
with highs reaching lhe II Os in lhe
Soolhwest
The high for lhe nation Wednes·
day was 115 degrees at China
Lake, Calif., and Bullhead City,
Ariz•

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--Local briefs--..
·EMS units answer calls
W.VA.

Meigs Emergency Services units answered lhree calls for assis·
tance on Wednesday. At 10:07 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to
Mount Olive Road. Ada Bliss Hensley was taken to SL Jospeh Hospital
At 12:28 p.m., Racine unit to Front SIIW. Shirley Williams was
transported to Ho,lzer Medical Center. At 11:04 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Walnut Sueet for Grace Call, who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Reward offered in vandalism
------Weather----Exteaded forecast:
Saturilay tbrough Monday:
Chance of showers Saturday.
Fair on Sunday and Monday. Lows
in the low to mid·SOs. Highs in lhe
low to mid·70s Saturday and Sun·
day and in lhe upper 70s Monday.

Soutb-Central Olllo
Tonight, cloudy wilh a chance
9f showers. Low around 60.
Chance of rain SO percenL Friday,
cloudy wilh a chance of showers.
High in lhe mid· 70s. Chance of
~40percenL

A $500 reward is now being .offered to anyone aiding in the
arrest of local mailbox vandals.

Vandalism 10 mailboxes continues to plague Meigs County.
according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, and the
department, through a special fund, will offer lhe reward to anyone
providing information leading to lhe arrest and conviction of lhe
vandals.
Soulsby said that vandalism is a fourlh-degree misdemeanor,
punishable by a jail term of 18 monlhs and a $1,000 fine. It coold
also be a federal offense, Soulsby said.

--Area deaths.--

CRASH SCENE • Customers aDd employees at tbe Subway . ·,
restaurant in Pomeroy got a surprise on Tuaday, wbea a frame ,
trailer, drive a by Danny Hagu of Pomeroy came unhitched from :
bis truck and struck a plate glass window 011 tbe building's facade. ··
Minor damage also tonk place on tbe laterior or tbe restaurant,
but ao injuries were reported.
··

Ada Hensley
Ada Bliss Leona Hensley.
seven-month-old daughter of
Charles E. Hensley and Laura
Brawley Hensley or Long Bottom, .
died Thursday, Aue. 12, 1992, 11 .
St. Joseph Hospitalm Parkersburg,
W. VL
She was born on Jan. 17, 1992
in Columbus. The family attends
lhc Grace Gospel Church at Long
Bouom.
,.
Besides her parents she is sur·
vived by a brother, awtea M., and
a sister, December Hensley, bolh at
home; patemai1P811dllarents, Jobn
C. and Barbara-S. Hensley, Tup·
pen Plains, and matema111181K1Par·
ents, Walter and Linda llrawley,
Beaver Creek, Ohio, and Carolyn
Huffman, Springfield, and several
aunts and uncles.
She was preceded in death by a
1ister, C'vnlh;A Marie Hensley.
''Ora~&amp;ser'vices will be held
at I p.m. Friday, 11 lhe Reedsville
Ceinetery. The Rev. George Hll'IICT
.will o!Th:iate. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home tonight
(Thursday) rrom 6 to 8 p.m.

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-Meigs announcements
·'

Bookmobile at fair
.
The Meigs County Bookmobile
will be atlhe Meigs County Fair all
week. Due to this no regular stops
will be made. The public is invited
to visitlhe bookmobile at lhe fair. ·
FootbaU practice
Meigs Junior High football
practice will begin Monday, 3-S
p.m.
Revival
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ Church, Route 338, Antiquity, will hold revival tonight lhrough
Saturday at 7 p.m. nighdy featuring
Rev. Hurst Pratter, Jackson. The
Headed Home Singers will perform. Public invited.

MATIHEW SNYDER

Matthew Snyder

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Batey makes televisloa debut .,
Kim Batey, R!lynoldsburg, for-merly of Meigs County, daughte~ :
of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Batey, Mid: .
dleporL will be featured on TNN's
"Be A Star" (Channel 20) tonight
at 7:30p.m. and tomorrow at 2 .
p.m. '
:;
Legion to meet
··
Regular meeting ofDrew ":eb: _
.
ster Post No. 39, Amencan Legioil,.
will be held Tuesday wilh dinner af .
7 p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m.
.,
Board to meet
, .
Regular meeting of Southern .:
Local School Board will be Tues- ·
day at7p.m.

Funotal services for Matlhew
Lynn Snyder, c;, of Pomeroy, wlio
died Monday of injuries suffered
when be wu struck by a car, will
be bekl'at 2 p.m. Friday at lhe Wal· .
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) of a nearby creek. The board says it :;
ter-Sch6edmger Funeral Home,
- Police were called into a meet· is not.
Urbana.' The Rev. DaVid Ridenour
Last week, the .commission, .
will officiare and burial will be in
ing between the Cabell County
lhe Oak Hill Cemetery at Urbana.
Commission and school board as concerned about problems with. .
inswance, orderecllhe board to halt
Friends may call at the funeral
tempers flared, officials siid.
Contlaued from page 1
home today from 3 10 S and 7 to 9
The commission and school conslnlction. This week, the board .
race. The dedly will have a· booth p.m.
board have been feuding over a filed suit in circuit coon seeking ~ :i
at the Meigs County Fair next
consolidated high school, Cabell start building again.
'wccll:, and a potluck picnic is set
The two sides met Wednesday .
Midland High, which the board is
·for Au~ 23 at lhe Syracuse home
to
try to smoolh out their differ. &gt;
·
co!llnlled from page 1
The Ohio State Highway Palnll only motorcycles) to be properly building in Ona.
of Aasistant Director Jim Pape.
ences,
wilh about IS onlookers also ·
The commission has contended
As for our champions, bolh plan and pc&lt;?ple at lhe levee when lhe will stricdy enforce motorcyclists' licensed.
To be properly licensed, 16 and that lhe school is in lhe flood plain in attendance.
to compete again next year. Chris MiSSISiippi Queen traveled by car- violations Ibis summer, especially 17-year-olds
show proof of
will enter lhe kit car division from rying ...vcral Meigs County resi- those operators not properly completing .must
Middleport Court news: .~
a
driver
education
'""
licensed
who
are
driving
illegally.
the stock car division, while
and
a
motorcycle
safety
course
den:;,.''
c
!ark
expressed
her
lppll·
Out
of
166
motorcyclists
Six people were fined and
Daniclle will enter the master's
Divorces, dissolutions processed
education
course
before
lhey
are
ciation
to
Pomeroy
Mayor
Bruce
involved
in
fatal
crashes
in
Ohio
in
division. Since IIIey won lbeir divi·
Divorce actions have been filed forfeited a bond in Tuesday's coon
to take lhe on-cycle test at
sions locally, both will have to Reed and village council members 1991, only 53 were proP.erly aeligible
in
Meigs County Common Pleas of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff• .
driver's exumination station. For
man.
·
· build new cars, but they won't for their support of lhe revitaliza· licensed. Latest figures avadable people
18 or older, they are not Court by Bonnie Gene Pierce,
show lhat in 1990 lhcre were 12.62
Jennie
Charlene
Hall,
Gallipolis.,
:
mind.
lion ~roJect now underway by lhe fatalities per 100 million vehicle· · required to complete eilher course, Langsville, against Carol Franklin
After all,lhey're "pros" now.
a $50 bond on speed.
BSSOCllllon.
' miles· uaveled for motorcyclists but completion.of lhe motorcycle Pierce, Langsville; and by Leslie forfeited
Fined
were Larry J. Mitch Jr.: :
Speaking about revitalization, ~ompared 10 1.86 fatalities for rider course will provide lhem wilh Teaford, Racine, against Steve
Middleport, $25 and costs, con- ·
Mrs. Clark stated die initial survey automobiles per 100 million vehi· the skills to pass lhe motorcycle Teaford, Laurel Bay, S.C.
by Mike Stroth of SBA Consultants
1-~ 1 addi1100
· last license test at lhe licensing exami·
An action for dissolution of suming alcohol under age 21 and
has bee a completed. She said cle-miles lnlve ""· n
•
marriage has been granted to $25 and costs, disorderly; Patricia :
Stroth bas done an ~cellentjob for year lhere were 224,282 re~stered nation station.
L. Grimm, Middleport, $25 and·
The motorcycle rider course is Rebecca S. Jeffers and James J. costs, disorderly; John E. Lyons,
lhe association in lhat he lias visit· motorcyCles in Ohio, which IS close
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .ed lhe ~on several occasions, to 4,000 more motorc~cl~s than free to Ohio residents reganllcss of Jeffers.
A decree of legal separation has Middleport, $10 fine, passing in a ·
age; however, some motorcycle
were registered in 1990 (220,462).
Discharl~i Aug. 12 • Mrs.
Lt. Woodford of the Gallia· rider course sponsors collect a been granted to Jeffrey C. Harris no-passing zone; Melinda M. Price,
George Brie
and son, Bradford has crea an idea for lhe riverRudand, $10 fmed, no registration; •
Clark, Mrs. Mark Fields and son, front sign to be installed near lhe Meigs Post said motorcyclists refundable registration fee which is from Deborah M. Harris.
Wayne D. Runyon, Pomeroy, $10 ·:
Daniel Gamble, Jessie Garber, levee, and developed a suggested should realize if lhey are not prop- returned after attending the first
and
costs, running a red light; and
Marriage
licenses
logo for the Pomeroy Merchants erly licerised and are stopped by class session.
Marie Roush, and lsiah Simmons.
Charles
M. Walker, Middlepon,
Marriage
licenses
have
been
any law enfmtement agency, lhey
Birtlts, Aug. 12 • Mr. and Mrs. Associalioo.
Gallia and Meigs county resi·
$25
and
costs,
disorderly, and jail
granted
in
Meigs
County
Probate
Kathy HyseU, Pomeroy Village may imJ?Ound lhe vehicle and tow dents may take the motorcycle
Greg Ha1fhill, daughter, Bidwell. .
on
a
contempt
charge
b : not payClerk, stated payment had been it ~-an !l'l~d lot s~ they are rider courses al Ohio Univef$ity , Court to Benton Cornelius Phillips,
ing
old
fines.
·
28, Rutland, and Rhonda Gale
received from lhe association for drivmg 111ue~y and will not be Alhens, by calling.l-593-0434.
renewal of tbc mini·plllt lease for. allowed to drive it away from lhe
Motorcycles, helmets and text- McGrath, 33, Long Bottom; Dennis
lhe coming lease year.
site of lhe traffiC violation.
books are provided, but class par· Wayne Harris, Jr., 21, Pomeroy,
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Sandee Mills, wbo owns
Motorcyclists need 10 have ticipants must have a motorcycle and Bobbie Jo Huffman , 19,
446 4524
Pomeroy;
Paul
Earl
Dailey,
23,
,,. .
McDonald's of Pomeroy wilh her eilher a 1emporary motorCycle per· temporary permit or motorcycle
Middlepon,
and
Kathryn
Elizabelh
,_. ,,
husband, Roscoe, staled her desire mit. a motorcycle endorsement on endorsement before lhc. flrSI riding
-----.~y
for some ~ of signage at Kerr's lheir driver's license, or 1 motorcy· session. Each motorcycle rider Thomas, 21, Middleport; and to
Stanley Eugene BennetL 21 , Long
Run to bnng·I·77 traffic into lhe cle license (for those who drive course is scheduled for 22 hours.
downtown area. Mrs. Mills stated .
For more information on the Bouom, and Nancy Elizabelh Hunt,
McDonald's
is
presently
taking
motorcycle
rider course, lhe public 19. Portland.
M..-..r. n.t t
diW PNM, aM 11M ,
srepa
to.
IlliCit
an
addition
to
lheir
may call lhe above-listed humber
. OhW Hex 1
'etlm, Natl.al
~
111'11.ft, . . . . . . . . extsting sign in tbat area in an
or lhe Ohio Motorcyclist Enrich· Judgment sou1bt
7SS Tld..t Ana"'
A judgment action has been
allempl to alert traveling 111otorists
Am Ele Power ...................33 1(2
ment Program at 1-800-83RIDER.
,Now
~ ..... 10017.
filed in Meigs County Common
of tbc alternative route to 1-77 by Ash)and Oil........................ 25 1/8
Pleas Court by Home National
way o( Route 33 whicb would , AT&amp;T........... .....................43 S/8
ftt DaiiJ' loalillol , Ill Cou\ 81.•
.
Bank, Racine, against Dwight Stur·
brin&amp; uaffic lhrouth Pomeroy's
_ . , OJBo tii'NI.
Bank One.............. .'............44 1/4
geon,
Racine, and others, in lhe
businell dlsaicL
Bob Evans ........................ .19 1(1.
l111111C81P'110M IATIII
'
amount of $4,102.60. The suit
A clean-up day for flower beds Charming Shop..................31 1/4
alleges default on a promissory
a.. w.t....."''"'""'"-"'''""''-"''"••.eo on lhe patitg.lot in Pomeroy was City Holding ..................... .l9 1(1.
' OM M.lb.·--·····-·-··········--······.811
note.
set for . ~u1. 29 with local Boy Federal Mogul..............:.... 17 3/4
- "- - ·
Olio -····-····
· ··-···--·········-··.10
Scouu to lend auistance.
liiiiOUI
COPr
3/42 Goodyear T&amp;R .........67 .
FRI
..
SAT
..
SUN.
.
PUCI
Mcmben wa11 reminded of lhe Key Centurion ............ ....... 19 1/l
DID,)t........................................ -15 0...
next promotion, "~· to School Lands End ......................... .33 1/8
'-"' ,I I r'llon oatdlllrtl!llo PQ" lbt aoniWeekend Sav.lng•." on Sept. 4·5
Limited Inc ....................... 20
,• ....I Ia ....... «roollo,.
wilh
a
~
advcrtilcment
to
run
Multimedia Inc..................26 1/4
TONIGHT .ONLY. ·
Dolly lltallaol oa a limo. lis or 11
Sept.
2
ill
11)e
Dilly
Sc:atincl.
Rax
ReatauranL
...................
9/16
-~~~ boolt. OIMII will bo J11oM The next . associadon meeting
Reliance Electric................18
•No nbooripMGU bJ 1111111 ponalllod Ia
will be held Sept. 9 II 8:30 Lm. iii
Robbins&amp;Myers ................17
.... wMn h.DJM carri• •rri• II , lhe conf~ room of Bank One.
Shoney's Inc......................21 7!8
STARnNG
FRIDAY
'
Star
Bank
..........................
.30
llalht•aal=
'
Wendy lnt'l. ....................... ll 3/4
11 w-....... . ...-..... . . ...........
Veterans
Memorial
·
Worlhington Ind ...;............23 5!8
• w.......- ........-...................... .11
WEDNESDAY
ADMISSIONS
Stock reports are lbe 10:30 ~
. . ...........,........- ..................... 71
o.IIWt.....,o.av
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
•Nooe.
HIIIKGI fOlD
II Wtob. ...........•.•.••..........•..•........ =
.~
WEDNESDAY
DISCHARGES
Ellis and Loewl of Gallipolis.
•w..ta. .........................................
OlliE ~ 1110W 7:10
aw.-.. ............................ -.......... .
• Edward Whitlatch, Stella
Mud II PR 11.10
IMIC "
Thomal. and Ketdlel Hatrteld.

Police called into Huntington
board meeting as tempers flare ·:

Soap...

Merchants...

Motorcyclists encouraged
to obtain proper license

...

Court news

ooe'

Hospital news

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

li•

Stocks

Ntwcc; ,..,

l'OimiAI'IU:a.ot..._..._ ..

.,.

___ ..
....,

.

COLONY THEATRE

-.

UNLAWFUL ENTRY

.-..

_.....,

''

ELN

Hospital news

.

PATRIOT

GAMES •

7

�-

...

Sports
. .

Thursday, August 13, 1992

. The Daily Sentinel~

'

Page •

By The Associated Press
cen1er Jay Hilgenberg against Jriiss..
. Win~ing isn't everything 10 ing too much training lime during
Mike Dllb. At least 110110 lraining his contract dispute, wariting him
camp.
the missed worltouiS could affect
. "I don't.~ what people lhink his performance throughout the
nght now, the Chicago Bears season.
head coach said after practice
"When you've been in the
Wl:dnesdax. ,'.'The coaches have league for 9, 10 or 11 Years. you
the playen on ~ule. The coach- · need training camp more than
·
es know whal lhey are doing and ever,'' Ditlal said.
'Raiders
il's a good schl:dule. ·
"I lhink we're making progress.
Running 1lack Mrucus Allen and
If people can'tlive wilh that; thai's defensive b&amp;ct Terry McDaniel
ended salarY holdouts llld reported
not m~ problem." ·
~~~~.Bears play their second to the training camp in time for
exhibition game Saturday night practice Wednesday. Contract
against the Phoenix Cardinals fol- lt.I'IIIS were not disclosed.
GlaDIS
lowing a 34-31 loss to New
New
Yo,rk
fmally JOt ·its quarOrleans in lhCir preseason OJ?.I:ner.
This week, the Bears will con- rerback of the future mto training
camp, sigping Dave Brown of
tinue to ~ on !heir stamina.
"I just tliinl: we have IIi be bet· Duke to a four-year contracL
Sources close to the negotiatioos
1t.r in the fourth quarter than .we are
·
said
Brown will receive $4.6 milin the first quaner. We're going to
get a good sweat up - we're going lion, including a $1.6 miUion signlo be fit for the whole season,' • ing bonus.
ColiS ·
Dilka said.
Defensive back Ashley
Ditka also cauiioned holdout

Oliver's tbree~run homer gives Cincinnati 3-2 win over L.A.
gave the t~e sign, said he then
yeUI:d to OliVCJ: to swing if be got a
good piu:h to hiL But Oliver said
he didn't hear PinieUa;
The victory moved the Reds
within 3 lfl games of fJrSt·place
Atlanta in the Na1ional League
West. The Braves' game with San
Diego was rained out.
Oliver said his adrenaline was
flowing and be got the fastball he
expected after Gross (S-12) had
thrown him three consecutive curve

. Cleveland hands Boston 8-5 defeat
CLEVELAND (AP) - Pinch
hitter Brook Jacoby hasn't been
playin~ a lot Jarely, but dill didn't
stop h1m from hitting a two-run
siogle to help the Cleveland Indians to an. 8-S victory over the
BOston l!.ed Sox,
The Wednesday night victory
was the third in a row for the last·
place Indians, who have won 16 of
23. Boston lost its fourth sttaight
game
.Jaeoby, 32, is billing .210 in a
part-time. role after being a regullr
lt:i eight seasons. He got a lot of
playing time II third base early . in
the season when prospect Jim
Thome was out with an mjury but
has playl:d sparingly since Thome
returned to the team on tune 2S.
: "I think this was the first big hit
I've had in the second half of the
seison," said Jaroby. "Early in the
se8son I was playing almost every
day and I seeml:d to get more of
lhcm."
"Jake is a professional," Indi·
aJis manager Mike Hargrove said.
•'The role he is in is not an easy
role to fill, but he bas done it very
~-"

.

. ~;

:In the majors...

--

Clli&lt;oa0-.............. ..5! 5I .417

St. ...... ........... ..5! 60 .&lt;469
. lin Ycllll.-........ .52 61 .~
.. pt.Q·deJphi· --·---" 6J •• 12

93
IU

115
II

w-................67 .. .604

Sao-.. . .

: C~NC~NNAn.

"' .571
. Soo Dlop ............. 63 ll .5l3
.&lt;16!

.439
.42!

!3

l3

ll.l
Ill

:zo

Wedatlday'IIICOrU

l'tlllllulb 7, Now YaoU, I0 ianiop

- . ; ! 3. CJii&lt;oto I
-5.Sool'rinciloa4, 10 .......
&lt;DICINNAn " Lot AqoJ., 2
St. ~ !, Plliladolpl1ia 2. 10 ......
S..J!ioF II Atloou. ppd., u

· Today'saames

Lol Aaploo (AalaQo 1· 1) .. CJNClK.
••NAn
(Jija P.ll. 12:!5 '""
s.. ....
((Amicr 3-9) at ptr1·delphb
1-2), 1:!5 , ....
~
Saa Di.-,o (Beau 9-10) at Atla1111

:(Ill.-

·o··~
49-4~7&gt;tOp.m.
(1. Joao1 4-5) at Chicaao
(Cudllio 6-IU:Ol P"'·

Friday's pmes

(lilo i-6) .. aw:a., (llmey
U},l:20p.m.
S. 01op (S"'"""' 6-3) "CINCN·

· NAn(Jii 'HJ,7:3le_.m.
: St. Looico (f-bwy ll·l) 111&gt;1......
, oJ(D. -1:1-10), 7:35p.m.

· A- ((lniael7-l) a1 PiUiboqb
• ( Z . - ..'1), 7:!l p.m.
•

Phjl ''¢ ' • (Aihby l -0) at Nn Yad.

(Ooodeo 6-9), 7:AO1-"'
Socl Fnnc:ioao (Swill I·! ) " .... AnptaOJenbi*l-10~ 10:35 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EuhnDiTW L Pd.
T-o ..................66 .U .l79
a . -...............6! 49 .57o
Mn ...................60 13 .531
DoooiL .................. .S4 62 .&lt;66
BCII10CI.................. .l2 61 .&lt;60
cu;vELAND ..... ..52 62 .4S6
New Vadl ..............l 2 62 .456

Gl

1
l.5
I!
13.5

14
14

w..... DJo"'
l4
l9
63
63
71

.l79
.lll
.496
.452

!
10
115
IU

.447

II

.311

:tl

Wedaesdoy'ssrores
N.., Yad: 10, Docmit 0

.3:b; VaSlyb.

~Pin'

~61.

RBI - Dailhoa, Ptlilldelpll.i1, 10;

sa.t'&amp;ld., Sm Di.ep, 79; Mc&lt;Jrill', Sm
Diqo, 7 6 ; - .......... 74; X...
ray,ll• Yadt, 69; Bopell, Hoaocoo, 65;

I

cp~

1111'S - Sbolliold, S.. Ditp, 140;
Delbiolclo, Mooaool, 139; l'ald10c4a, At·

1..,., 1!9; VeSlyke, Piuabaqh, 1!5;
0wyo., S.. Diooo. Ill; 0...,
I~ I.Aakfanl, ft. Loui.s, 121; S.n I z;.
Cbi&lt;oJGo_l21: a...... ~.oa-.121.
DOUBLES - o.-.l'!Waci~.
!2; Llllklood, SC. Loola, 29; W. C\ui;,

ow...,

~i:' ~;;:~~:SO!::
M..,...._ 26; Oncoa. •
26; Boll,

....., Atluta, 26;

~~!:~

1lUPIJi3 - D. - . ........._ I!;
Ploler, lloaocoo, II; Alicoa, SL Lcaia, 9;
Butlar,t.n. ~. 9; OfflmSll'l, L.r:1t

ADaoloo. I; VaS1J~· Piouloo!Jh, I;
Moiudiai. ftiled:lplllil, 7: J)e.Slliclda,

.......... ,,_'--'·
Sao D1eoo.
110MB 11\JNS - lloaoil;

s.. Di-,:;,:;;.oaa,;
............. ». Doo1roo,
. ' ».
26; Sllle:ffi.a41

L Wattra-, -.11: ' -

An·

...... 16;P " w _ l ,
srot.I!N BASES - oa...c., M.,..
·b'ell, 51.; nt•• 'dt, Mordll. •t; Laak·
food, St. Lcaia, 3!; B'*, Loa AD.-,
31; Fial•y, Hauat~a, 30; R.obtlr\1,
CINCINNATI.
30; Bigio, - · 29;
O. SaUIII,SL ...... ,29.

Clla'""-

PITCIDNO (13 dao:iliau) ,._17·3. .150, 2.60; K.llill. - ....
II, l~l • .722, 2.90; c-,Nn Yad:,l~
5, .'721. 2.U; Lcibnndt. Atlantt, 9-4,
.6'12,!.21; S........_CINCINNA11, 11 -5,
.617, 2.69; Towtabury, SL Louia, ll ·l ,
.617, 1.95; Smoltz. A......_ 14-7, .667,
2.10: B. H...., Su llio1o, 12-6, .667,
!.ll.
STRJIIiOUTS - Caac, N,.. Yod,
206; Scoollz, Atllnla, ll7; S. F New YOIII, J•S: G. Mlidd~;~z , OW:aan,
140; Dnb*, - I l l; a-S..
lli-. I :lll;llijo, Clllt!NNATI, 120.
fA VBS - Lot Smia, St. Louia, 21;
W................... 26; D.

-.lbco·
a.mao.

ClNCINNATl, 24; Mhch William•,
l'l&gt;iladolohUI. 21 ; lldiodo, l'illobwp. ll;
J);bble, tlllaNNATI,Il.

Allltl'lun Lape
BAntNO - E. Manina, Suttl~.
.33&lt;t; Mack, MinD•IKI, .Ul; Puctcu,
.329; ..-... Clcicqo, .!26;
Ha~1 ~.!_nneaota, .320; llaeraa,
CLil\'EL\ND, .!17: a. AJomar, r .....,.
.!17.
RUNS - ~. J)ec.,;~ 1!; Plod&lt;·

'"·
· 79:
Soocll~
71; Erdlli\aCh,
I&amp; E. Muoin&lt;:o,
I 76; Thomu,
Qicqo, 74; M1ct. K
1, 74; )kQ.
wile, Ooklon&lt;l, 7!; Cut«, T - 73.
RBI - Fioldoo:,llllnlil, 91; MoOwt.,
Ooklaod,l6; Boll,~ 14; Cuta:,

o.

Qok1111C12, Qli:opl
lll1timOA 11, t otDnto 4
QJlVI!IAND I, B'"""'l

Moc:k. -.146: a,..•. ClJM!.

Tau., 77. .

HffJ - Puckett, MiMcaottl ISO;

LAND, 14.1;

Bahbnare (1lhodca4·1) at Toronto

~o.~.:;:p.m.
,._
9-9) " MiMcloaU (1!1'
, -1-l),l:l lp.m.

ca.ut....U (Abbou. 4-11) at Oakland

(Moen 11-'l. 4:0l p.m.

• ...... (Clem"" 13· 7) " CLEVB·
' LAND (Naul:l-7), 7:!l pm.
-

Frlday'•t6- ond 0... HUO.
(lloPIII!

llllil-""'"' l o-5

~

Upa
. (l'lkllclll:l-2), 7:35p.m.

..a PJclnocl

~~·~

-(WoiiiHJ•~·~~

(2-2) was brought up from Class
AAA Pswtucl:ct on June 30.
Tony Fossas relieved Irvine and
Jacoby grounded the second pitch
into left field.
Cleveland added a run in the
eighth when cen1er fielder Bob
Zgpcic and left f~elder BiUy Hatcher allowed Howard's fly ball to
drop bel ween 1hem, allowing
Lewis to scOre. Zgpcic was cbargl:d
with an eiiOI'.
Eric Plunk (3-2) allowed one
run in two innings. Sieve Olin
pitcbl:d the ninth for his 20th save.
Zgpcic hit an RBI single for a 32 lead iii the sevenlh, Tom Brunansl:y followed with a sacrifice flv
and Mo Vaughn doubled home a
run.
The Red Sox scOicd in the sec·
ond and third innings on RBI singles by Luis Rivera and Jody Reed.
Paul Sonen10 hil his 14dl horne
run in the Cleveland second inning
and HiU singll:d home a run in the

e. ......,.., r.ut., 142:

Jall'cn., ' - ' C&amp;y, 1:!5;- Call·
fomia, 132: Maumpy, New Yod, Il l ;
Moliloc, Mnw...UO,I 31.
DOUBLES - B. MU\incz , Suu.le,
30: hffari•, K..,... .C'ti~
, !I; lo,...,
Xaan1 City, 30; Mattin y, New Yod:,
!0; lloll, N• Yocll, !0;
'"l'• S•uto.

29: Sierra, T11111, 21: Youat. Milwaukee.
21.
'l1liPLES - O.V..UJ, Bahioocn. 9;
L 1 - . QUeaao, 7; I.ilrac:b, M!lwa ..
u., 6: 11. Aloma, r .....,. 6: - .
Balolm011, 6; Sima, Tllu, 6; While,
TOIOIUo, 6; Jlaiael, t'hkql. 6: Maliw,
M;iwUeo,6.
HOME RUNS - McOwile, OU!to&lt;l,

Steve Finley led off the lOth
with a double orr reliever Jeff
Brandey (3-6), went to lhird 011
Ken Caminiti's grounder and
SCMd the liebreal:ing IUD 011 Bagwell's single.
Xavier Hc:mandcz (7-1) held the
Giants scoreless in the eighth and
ninth for the victory. Doug Jooes
worked the lOth for his 2Sih SIVC.
C.-clbulll3, PbiU.Ies 2
Ray Lankford's RBI single
snapped a tie in the lOth.
Mnch-hiuer Rex Hudler swted
the Cardinals' lOth agamq reliever
Mitch Williams (3-6) with a sinJle
but was picked orr fJrSL Bernard
Gill:cy, whose fifth-iming. two-run
homer gave SL Louis a 2-1 lead,
singled 10 left and then IDOt second
without a throw. One out later,
Lankford singled to score Gilkey
with the game-winning run.
Todd Wcxrell (S-3) pitched twothirds of an inning, &amp;flowing two
hits, and was crediled wilh the vic·

Marshall taking.low-key
~pp~oach to No.1 ranking

tory.

· ·· - --

I

About his team's loss, oulfielder
Brunansl:y said. "We're just playing lousy. That's the bottom line
rigN there.''

35; J11ut Oolwla, Tau, 21: FieJ.Rr,
Deal*, 26; Cut«, T....... !l; Toalecoa,
Dolool~ 24; Bolle. CLEYEUND, 23;
Deer, Deal*, 2l

'609

-.:~._t~·~

Nt lldllll WI Hlrl
,._, I'C ,_. IW

~

STOIJlN BASES - - . . . , Balli·

.... 411- Califocoia, 411 Uocac:b,

MilwaW:01, !9; l.oftoa, CLEVI!l.AND,
31; Raiala, Odcap. 36: I. H=d=m,
Oakloa4, !5; L , _ , Qioqo, 33.
PITCIUNO (13 OocitiCIIll) -Juan .
Guzman, Tor01uo, 12.·3, .100, 2.35;
~. Mi
10.3. .769, !31: Ar
po.,l:aoaa CiiJ,ll-4, .76!. 2.!7;,.,..,
T - l~l• .711, 4.54; Flaoiq.Seaale,l~5, .122. !.27: La....,
Tau,l6-7, .696, S.! 9 ; - Balli·
tiiiD, 11·5, .611,1.?9.
S11IIII!OUTS - Paa, New Yadl,
U3t
lama, 147; Juan Ouz·
man. TOl'OIICO. 131; ll. Joboi&lt;Ja, S•tlle.
1:14; K. B.,.., loaaa, I:M; R,....·r.,..,
126; 14dlowoll, CJoiAav, 122. .
SAVES -:- l!drenley, Oakland, 37;
Apileta, .... 31; M'"''l"""'l'·
Kaaua City, 29; Ollao, Baldmo.._ 27;
ltlrR....U. r...., :1'1:-. Boatan.
24; ll&gt;lluy,llilwaukoo, 23.

K,eiser recalls
Jfin over Hogan
'46 Mas#e•s
l·n
'•
r.1 • '

• Tandy 1000 RLX-FD PC • VGM-220 VGA color monitor
• 2400·bps modem • DeskMate" Oudiner
• DeskMate Thesaurus Companion
125·145211044no371138411365

SM ASI-'IIIdy . . RU·FD s,st.11
with -I'I!A
prmr,
coblo
:1111 J.Pak3\1"·_
, . Plll'f, prinlec
All·
1210.2a. t2S-145214044. '26 ·130t~t28156

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Add I 40MB llll'd drive 112S-1CM8l I~ tlllltr lpltlllor tilly szt1

iof'..tdcr, lrom

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CAUFORNIA ANOilLS - Ploc:od
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~pbeU

aland.trans .. AWFM 11818011tpe,
l'lldall, 112ton,ahonwheelbut,
shOrt wida bed.

Ranu

The Rams have avoided any

season-ending injuries lhrough four .
wcel:s of camp, but the bumps and
bruises are adding up.
The Rams had to practice
WedneSday with just two heallhy
lllilbacl:s, Marcus Dupree and Joe
Campbell, and two healthy full·
backs, Tim Lester and Ernie
Thompson.

1988DODGE
SHADOW

1988 PLYMOUTH
RELIANT
STATION WAGON

1986FORD
F·1504x4

1985 FORD T·BIRD

said.

Flanking Psyton in the bacl:f~eld
are veterans Orlando Hatchett and
Glenn Pedro, but two newcomen
will also see time, Donnan said:
Chris Parker, a 5-10, 182-pound
freshman from Lynchburg, Va.,
and Chris Grose, a 5-10, 220·

por.Y~~~cC::

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CATCH OF THE DAY-,._ Wea• otPomer, Cllllpt Ibis
:z4.incli lonl catfllb from tile Oblo River lleWDd FIDl ly Do1ar Ia
Mlddlep~t. Weaver says ·IJe thinks be'll release llle flail, wllkl
welahs about 15·11,C.:da, back IIIIo t1ae river. Weaver'• llablq
pole broke Ill' lbne
wblle -.aiDt llae bli cata.

lOW

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PRICES APPLY AT

"

I J.:

.Bomc

,WASHINGTON (AP) - Inlt.l'·
na'tional Boxing Pedention pre&amp;i·
d~nt Bob Lee invoked tho llifth
Aqlaldmen~ refusing 10 testify to a
SCIIIIC p~RI illlout alleplions that
he took a payoff to ~ IPJli'OYil
of a boxiQg proiiiOit.l' I license.
During a liearing on alleaed
orpnized crime tiel to professional
boxinJ, Lee refused to discuts
BSierllOnl he had been a "bag•
man" for Jeaer Joe Walcott. the
f()!I'DCI: heavyweight champion. and
once head of lbe New Jeney box·
in&amp; enmmissioo. · .
Testimony alleged that sporu
jiiOIIIOUir Don King had done boxmg business with organized cpme
olcimenll.
.

•

.''

NOW BY
CALLING:
.
.
.

992-2156
ASK
FOR 'DAVE
or P. J.
.
.
AD DEADLINE .WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1991

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•

1985 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

1988 PONTIAC

''

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SKY HAWK

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TRACER

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Irani wheel diM, 4eyl.,ltir, tum.,
PS, PB, tit wheel, ,_win. citlog., cruise, Al.tRhlnollpe.

ASpecial,Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Monday, August 31, 1992
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT

..

S4 995

$

--ilaLooob,lftll ....

C11Y 1Aoo1or 11-4),1:!5 p.m.

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"We hOpe he'll move up anoth·
er notch and avoid the ~ and
va_Ueys be bad last year, • DonDan

-!""_Sports shorts:--

Sylvain r.r-, Wt ..-.: ld. 116oiph7,

p.m.
:'-(J!eo-~'I),I:Ol
a.wi= 11M (Salctile II~
11) It lulu

1986 CHEVROLET
S-10

Safety Jesse
was held
out of workouts because of an
inflaml:d kidney. The second-year
player from North Carolina Slate
was hit in the back by a teammate
durinJ practice Tuesday, acconling
to tnuner Otho Davis. .

~beaiHopn.

Nomecl

NtwYOit(E •' ' rl'l-9)at0Uca·

· bioOI&amp; (IIMII-G) 11T- ~

BPJ:IteC:iaticln of lhe game, but he
made much money 11 it.
."I won $2,500 for the Masters, .. be said.
,Keiser later became the pro a1
F'uestooe Country Oub,llld be and
a partner owned Loyal Oak Golf
Course. After lhat was sold, he
lxiugbt a driving range in suburban
Akron. . .
.
'The 1'IDgO still is there, although
Kolser.no longer runs it. But 6e
does live lbove die place..
Keiser and his !are wife, Doris,
raised four children in the CopleyNorton area.
Despite their Masters battle,
Keiser and Ho~an were good
friends. Once. Kc:tser said. be needed:Sl.OOO.
~"When do you need it?" Keiser
sail Hopn asl:ed him.
:"'Soon as possible, • I said. He
reached into his pocket and said,

'llezt.'''
:.Ceiser said aging bas affected ·
his(~ory. but not his spiriL
~ 'Heck, I can't remember anythillg,'' be said. "But 'I'm in good

DIPJJI,_
• Du81 powered

PHILADBLPIIIA EAOLES WliYicll.• Allta, ,dlltali'to back.
l'loc:od ltd&lt; Bn4food. ~-. '"' let·
jured - . SIDad Olio Smilb, dden·

omorr UD Wllfos -

Steelen

Free safety Gary Jones sprained
his left knee during a drill Wednes·
day and rookie Darren Perry remporarily filled the No. 1 spot as
starter Thomas Everett remained
out of camp.

last. But officials penciled in
Htgan IS last to tee off, givinl him
th~ advantage of knowing what
K~iiser was doing ahead of him .
officials • generosity a: ave
an enormous IICtical edge.
told lhose SOBs I knew what
did," Keiser said
!k11iser came to Ohio from
·in
be the .

BOSI'ON lU!D SOX - Opcionod Pllll
Pla.tlliM, eas.fillMr, 10 Plwaicbt of ••
ln="ie~tll I...-~ the CICIO-

mohol'lc:ifio tao..~,oopo.

interceptions.

:Keiser, now 77, had a five- .

B•blll
_._

_

with the Cincinnati Rockers of the
Arena Football League this spring.
Allen opened 1as1 season 'in the
Kansas Ci!}' auers· training camp
after spending seven years with the
Houston Oilen. He was a starter
from 1985-89 and has seven career

sl(oke lead going into the fmal day.
T~tioo is that the leader rces off

Transactions

..."'" wTonunr lllmiC.

5

26touchddwns.

s

Gel Lcilus 1·2·3(125-1918) lor only 99.95 .,.

Ambrose, lhe top pick in lhe sec·
ond round of the NFL drafl, ended
a..26-daY boldoul, signing a lbree·
year contract worth a reported $2.3
million.
The former Mississippi Valley
StateJlroduct has been projected as
a starting eOrnerbaclt: lhis season.
Packers
Green Say signed one of its 10
conlract holdouts Wednesday as
new coach Mike Holmgren said lhe
absences jeopardized the team's
development. · .·
Third-year defensive end Lester
Archambeau ended an 18-day holdout by joining training camp where
Holmgren has been shuffiin~ the
line's persoilnel because of inJuries
and holdoulll.
Archambeau, 25, bad a $90,000
base salarY last year in a pass-rush
role. He had 4 1/2 sacks and was
involved in 20 tackles in 16 games.
BllCCillfti'S
Tampa Bay signed defensive
backs Chris Barber and Patrick
Allen on Wednesday to help bol·
ster the club's injury-riddled secondary.
Barber spent three years with
the Cincinnati Bengals before
being released in 1990. He played

ence, and lost to Youngstovin State
in lhe Division I-AA championship
game.
"We're encouraged by our
physical condition. We feel ~
about it," Donnan said. ' We
should be in good shape health·
wise, the best that we've been since
I've been here.
"We have~ size and speed,
Basically, we re going to be 1wo
deep," be said.
The brightest spot is Psyton, a
6-foot-1, 220-pound seni&lt;;~r who
completed 64.2 pcltCIIt of his JIMS·
cs last SCISOil for 3,392 yards and

wide receiver Troy Brown. a 5-9
speedster who also returns punts
:AKRON. Ohio {AP) _Herman and kickoffs, and tight end Mike
:.- still
bcrs the
Bartrum, a 6-4. 240-pound senior.
remcm
lftSSUl'e
The offensive line is anchored
Kt o · competing against the best by John McKee, a 6-1, 330-pound
golfer of ·his day during the 1946 senior who was movl:d from the
~T()J!l1UI!IICJ!LI,
defensive line.
~~I'S'er ; a liule-~:nown Ohio
Marshall opens at horne sept.
~fer, beat Ben Hogan to win the against Mlrebead St.

•

flog.8 1 --IZII.75

.

'HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
_.....' .Marshall is ranked No. 1 in
NCAA Division I-AA· in most prese)lsoaipolls, butcoacbJim DonDan
is~g a low-ICcy JIPimliiCh to the
nllll4ering Herd's chances for a
nauonal title.
.
: '·'If I SlY we'te not going to be
8l(y good. you'D say I'm crazy. But
I can't SlY we're going to win
e..lery game either," Donnan said.
IBut 11 strong defense, an offense
led by 1991 Southern Conference
p~yer of .the year Michael Psyton ·
and six home games give Donnan
cOnfidence in a squad 'that returns
14 startm from the 1991 national
rujmer-up.'
' "I feel 'good about our cha!lces,
esPecially since we play so many
games at home,'' Donnan said
~edncsday at Marshall's annual
mt:dia day.
•Marshall was 11-4 overall last
se8son, 5·2 in the Southern Confer'

third.

25; M,..., s.. Dleoo. !l;

TorGGto, 10; Pucbtt, Mrnncaata, 79;
Tbom11, Cllic•ao. 11: Juu GM.talez,

Today'scames

'

..

Sooalo 6,' - Ci'Y!
Califomil 2, Mi.lw-.ik• 1

TllU l , Minn- 3

,

I

ttie.-.

IIIII,

• Ookllncl ................6'1 45 .605
• ~ ..............66
O!ioop................ .ll
r ... ...................ll
c.tifamil ............. 3 2
1Ce1u Cily ......... .l l
s..ale .................... 45

1

Qicqo. .JU; o= h\ ........ .313.
liJNS ~ Dolbielclo, MCXIInal, 74;
0..,.., SaCIDilto, 71: Hallioo, - phil, 7(1 B'
'!(IBwt., Lot
Aaa•l•, ~1om, Muau.al, 61;

~PI

......64

33 61
..............30 64
LooAft...............u 65

I

I

WLPd.GI
l'!luh&gt;rlh ··--..•..6! o!9 .570
Moolno1 .... ........63 52 .s.a 15

.-

Emt, PHI

~ • .329; ....... 1M,.,......
.!19; Owyao, Su Di..., .!II; Oriel,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

Jacoby said he is enjoying play·
ing with the young players on this
year's team.
"This is a new breed of
ballplayer here," he said. "They're
loose, relaxl:d and having fun. All
of the work they did early in the
season is paying off for them, and
it's fun to watch them."
Jacoby's two-run sillgle capped
a five-run rally in the seventh and
added another comeback victory
for the Indians.
The Indians bounced back in the
bottom of the seventh after the Red
Sox had scored three times in that
inning fore S-21ead.
Marl: Whiten led off with a
triple and scored on Jim Thome's
groundout. Mark Lewis singled,
fmisbing starter John Dopson, and
Daryl Irvine (2·2) gave up RBI singles to pinch hiaer Carlos Martinez
and Thomas Howard.
With two outs, Irvine hit Carlos
Baerp and Albert Bellc with pitch·
es, fmcing home the tying run.
"My last couple of outings
haven't been too good. I want to do
weU up here, and maybe I'm tryiDg
. too bard," Irvine said lala'. Irvine

another player. Second baseman
Willie Randolph suffered a fraclured left wrisl when be was hit by
a pitch in the seventh inninJ. .
Denny Ne~~Ie (4·S) pttched 2
1/3 hidcss innings for the victory.
·The Mots loaded the bases in the
lOth, but Eddie Murray flied to
season.
That provided the margin of vic· cenlt.l' for the third oul, giving Bob
tory for SwindeU (li·S), who need· PslleiSOII his eighth save. Franco's
ed Rob&lt; Dibble's relief help in the record dropped to 6-2.
ninth. SwindeU scattered six bits in
Expos 3, C•bs 1
eight-plus innings before Dibble
Chris
Nabholz allowed three
finished up for his 15111 save.
hits
over
8 2/3 innings and Gary
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Carter
hit
a
two-run homer.
Piltsburgh 7, New York 6 in 10
Nabholz
(8-8) struck oul five.
innings; Montreal 3, Chicago I;
Houston 5, San Francisco 4 in 10 wall:ed one and relired 15 batters in
innings, and SL Louis 3, Philadel· a row before Ryne Sandberg singled in the ninth. Mel Rojas got the
phia 2 in 10. .
final out for his ninlh SIVC.
Pirates 7, Mets 6
Mike Morgan (10-~. scattered
(10 innings)
10
hits and lOOk the loss.
Jay Bell tripll:d home the go.AIItnll S, Gluts 4
ahead run off ·John Franco in the
Jeff
Bagwell's
run-scoring sinlOth inning.
The Mets lost for the eighth gle with one oilt in the lOll) inning
time in nine games, and W.SO 1~.1 ll:d HOUSioll put Sill Francisco.

balls.
Gross bad a no-bitter with one
out in the fifth before GleM Bran·
son singll:d. Dave Martinez also
singled prior to Oliver's 3~foot
homer oVCJ: lhe left field fence at
Riverfront Stadium, his eighlh this

Paa•

Getting'-players on schedule tops agenda

Thurada~Auguat13,1912

er's wife Kim gave birth 10 daugb- .
ter Karrab Layne a1 a Cincinnati
hospilal. 'The Olivers also have a
son, Dejai, nearly two years old. .
"I wasn't up there trying to hit
one ouL It wllS three-and-Db. You
can afford to be overly aggressive," said Oliver, who admitted
.lhat he missed the take sign frQm
lhird base coach Sam Perlozzo on
lhe 3-0 pirch from Kevin Gross in
the fifth inning.
Reds manager Lou PinieUa. who

The Dilly Sentinel

In the Bears' camp,

' ' ',

BJ Tile ~iated Pret111
, T~e ta_ke s1gn ~as on for ~e
CinciDD81i Reds. Its a good lhing
thai Joe Oliver didn'ISee iL
OliVCJ: missed the sign, lhen hit
a:three-:run !Jomer to give the Reds
•·,3·2 VICtory over the .Los Angeles
DOdgersWedllesdaymgbt.
. · ~'It was a good day for him,''
winning pitcher Greg SwindeU said
of his teammate.
Indeed. Earlier in the day, Oliv·

·'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

iN....'.-.

$

995

B~EVILLE

lOW

$

995

•

'''

�Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 13,

·-.

. tht ttam may leave the Bay,

-...
~

· ts fans can buy piece of proposed downtown stadi~m
By RICHARD LOitANT

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- San
~!IIICilco Qlmlts fans Will be llble
to buy a piece of a JlRIII(lSCd down-

a

toW!) ballpark und« plan to be
released today. Only the Gients
miahtnct be lbc:le.
~upervisor Angela Alioto's plan
to coDect SS and $10 conlribulicns
via a taU-flee relepb(lle.number Js
jQSI one of severallasl-diu:b effcns
to SlOp OWiltl Bob LuriC £rom following lhrough m an agreemena to
scJJ the team.
While Alioto focuses m a new
stadium, Mayor Frank M. Jordan is
working to put togc:Wz a local bid
to counter the team's recent sale in
principle to a group of investors
wbo Wllnt to move the ream to SL
Petersburg, Fla.
City officials bope to present
major league owners next month
with a viable stadium plan and an
alternative to the $111 million
Florida offer for the team.
The owners and ·commissioner
Fay Vince~t will disi:IISS ~ ~c
during theu quarterly meeungs m

St. Louis Sept.' 9-IO. In addition,
ba$eball's executive council will
talk about the situation during a
confereacc call Friday, IIIII Amc:rican ~ Ollllcts will start discussions dut'ln' tbeir meeting
Wednesday in Chicago.
Alioto, said Wednesday she has
already worked out financina and
consiiUCiion details for a $110 million, 43,000-seat ballpark.
"The money is there." she told
a mejCiing c#. the Nmbml California Chapter of Radio and Television News Direcrors.
Alioto said her plan is diff=nt
because it is privately financed,
except for the money that comes
from the toll-flee number, which
she i111cssed would be in addilim to
the $110 million needed to build
the part.
·
Givin&amp; Giants' fans a chance to
chip in toward the planned downtown parlt will add steam to the
city's efforts to keep the team,

and in tile Bay Area. Those arc the
people we desperalely need to hear
from," she said prior to her talk.

Alioto said she got the idea from
Jerry Brown, who plugged his tollfree eonlribotion number at every
appearance during his unsuccessful
campaign to win the Democratic
presidential nomination. Alioto
· coordinalcd the Brown campaian in
Northern caiifornia.
Jordan reportedly has lined up
twa posstble I~ investors for lhe
team, allhough he refuses 10 release
their names.
The focus is on privare investors
because in recent years San Franc~ Bay area vorers have rejecltd
four taxpsyer-involved plans for a
new stadiwp_.Lurie has been ttying
to move ille team from cold,
windswept Candlestick Park. ever
since he bouaht the ballclub in
1976.
The mayor also said he had an
"upbeat'·' meeting Wednesday
Alioto said.
with representatives of San Fran"The Giants have hundreds of cisco-based companies, including
thousands of fans in San Franc~ clothing retailer The Gap, discount

brokers Charles Schwab &amp; Co.,
Pacific Gas .&amp; Eleclric and the publi~ of the San Francisco Olronicle 8Dd the San Francisco Examiner.
Jordan urged business leaders
on Wednesday to boy a share in the
team - or at least season tickets.
Spans agent Leigh Steinberg,
who signed on to Jordan's campaian Ibis week, has said San Francisco needs to match the 20,000
season ticket bolders guaranreed in
St. PelerSburg if it hoped to compete.
. The Giants hedged their bet,
saying in a swement lhat any sea-

"a'
~

scn.ticket deposits would be placed sion of a cable lelevision financier:!
in a special account "pending a considered a possible lead investor:% .
resolution .of the team's plans to to drop out. H. Irving Grousbec:"!
said an estimaled $10 million
move to Tamps Bay next season.''
·losses
by 1994 was too much for•
The effon to put toaethc:J alocal
bid was hun Tuesday by the deci- him"'-~·
':

m: ·

--Sports shortsAuto racing
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Rick
Mears underwent surgery on his
injured right wrist and will probably miss the rest of the lndyCar

season.

The four-time Indy 500 winner
injured the wrist May 6 in a practice accident at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway

...

By The Bend
.

Happenings reported in Chester
Prayer and pledge to the flaa.
led by president Erma Cleland,
opened the meeting of the Ladies
· Auxiliary of the Chester Fire
llepsnnlenL Opal Holloo pve the
treasurer's report .and Betty
Newell, the secretary's report.
Committee reports were gaven,
card money and dues colleclf;d.
Leonard Koenig, president of the
fire department, met with the auxiliary to discus:~ plans for lhe food
booth at tbe fair. Erma Cleland
served ice cream to those named
and Ethel Orr, Lora Damewood,
Dorothy Hawk, Inzy Newell, Elsie
Folmer, Clara Conroy, Clarice
Allen and Becky Edwsrds.
Mrs. Alice Hill, New Waterford,
' spent three weeks with her sister,
Ethel Orr. Other visitors were Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Theiss and two children, Mrs. Laura Hupp and two
children, and Mrs. Joy Morarity,
Racine. Sunday dinner guests were

PGA Championship's 74th edition now in full swing
B1 DENNE H. FitEEMAN

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) Defendin&amp; champion John Daly's
cross-counii'Y drives draw lbe gal!cries, bu~ strai~ht-bitting Nick
Faldo and Tom Kite were the players to watch in the 74th PGA
Championship today at Bellerive
Countty Club:
"I don't care if you bit it 350
yards or 2SO yards, you better hit
the ball in the fairway or you arc
dead," said U.S. Open champion
Kite.
"Driving is the key," said
British Open champion Faldo. "If
you drive~. rou are off and running. If you htt tbe ball into lhe
rough here, Ill you can hope is to
wedge it out and lfV to make par.

He's won three British Opens and
two Maslas. If be wins tliis week,
he would be the first British golfer
since Tommy Armour in 1930 to
capture the PGA.
"It's become a very important
toumamcnt to me," he said. "The
PGA and U.S. Open are ones to tty
IIIII win."

Dalysaidhewasn'tafraidoflhc
biJ. bad rough because he'll be
usmg a new weapm.
His instrument of destruction
last year at Crooked Stick Country
Club was a whire Cobra (Kcvlar)
driver. Daly will auack Bellcrive
with a Killer Wbale featuring an
oversized head.
"I don't hit it much farther, but
· I hit it a lot more strai&amp;hter, a lot
· more solid," Daly said. "I started
The tOUBII iJ sev=-.1•
Gary Player won the 1965 U.S. usin4 it at tbe British Open and
Open at Bellerive by li:eepina the didn t miss many fairways over
ball in pliy while .the powu hltters til= and made the CUL ''
fell vicli\i!' to the dangers off the
Daly said he will have to be
fairway., ·i ·
straighter because the Bellerive
Four:i)lcll high Kentucky blue- fairways narrow the farther the ball
grass will'c:laim errant drives over travels.
, BciJeri~'~ "'"'""ding 7,148 yards.
"At Crooked Stick, they (the
Balls lanilii:l1~"ibe fairway will be fairways) opened up tbe further
greeted 1i)rl rorgiving zoysia grass, you hit it," Daly said. "There's no
proclaimect'a ~ect hitttng surface tellin&amp; where my drives will go
by the profasionals
hm. I'll still hit my driver and see
"If you miss a fairway in the · what happc:ns."
British Ooen, you can still move
ThcJe has never been a .bact-to- ·
the ball torward,'' said Faldo. back champion in the PGA since it
"You mi&amp;ht chop it eight yards went to medal play in 19S8.
forward here."
Daly bas practiced bard at his
Faldo is on a majors crusade. new borne at Castle Pines. Colo.

Stegall contending for place
in Bengals' receiver corps
WU..MINGTON, Ohio (AP)Free apnt wide reccivcr Milt Sregall, who ran a kickoff back 100

I

yards Sunday against the New
York Giants, has moved into contention for a spot on tile Cincinnati
Bengals' roster.
Even though the kickoff was
called back because of a peaalty,
Srep!I Silid' he 80t more attention
for doing lhat lhan for any play in
high schOol or college.
"It's kind of nice," said Stegall,
who played at Miami University.
"My chances look a lot better now.
But I still have a long way 10 80 to
malce Ibis ream."
When training camp opened, it
looked lilce Stegall had no chance
of making the cuL

'

Veterans Tim McGee, Eddie
Brown, Reggie Rembert, Brian
Brennsn, Mike Barber, Shane Garrett and second-round draft cho~
Carl Pickens were Ill abcad of him
on the depdJ chan.
Srepll was also canpeling with
five other rookie flee aaents·
Benpls bead coach Dave Shula
said be overcame similar odds
when he made therosiCI' of the Baltimore Colts in 1981.
"I was in the exact same situalion, so I can speak tnowledgcllbly
a~t .it." Shula said. "The biggest
thin&amp; IS to aet reps. Then once you
do, to tala: advanlaBe of them. And
he'~ .taten,advan~e of the opporturubCS he s had.

How far did he hit the ball in lhe
mountain air?
"Sometimes 400 yards," he
said.
Daly leads the PGA tour wilh
an avcraac of 283 yards per drive.
He said he doesn't hit his driver
just because it's a crowd-pleasing
sideshow.
"I love 10 hit it," he said. "It's
fun for me. If people want to call it

a sideshow, let lhem.''
Daly will have played Bellerive
mlly twice before stepping to the
firSt tee today with Hal Sutton and
Corey Pavin.
"That's more than I had last
year," Daly said. "I was the last
altemare and got to the tournament
after an all-night drive. I j'ust hope I
play half as good as did last

SUPPORTING THE NAIA . .:_ State Faria :his.iriace C0111Males :
are contluulna their support of postseason toaraameats Ia tbe::=
National Assocladon of Intercollegiate Atbletk:s, ~ wldcb tbe Uai""H
versity of Rio Grande Is a member. Rio Grande atbletle director"::
Tom Perdue (above) accepts a check rrom Galllpolll State Farm .:;
agent CaroU Suowdeo to assist witb postseason atbletlc actlvk)o at ::
the school. Not present for pboto was .Rick Perdue, also a State •
Farm agent in GaiHpolls.
::

year."

...•

Dale Hill, New Waterford, Blylhe
Theiss and Sara Voss. Racine.
Afternoon callers were Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter, Albany, and
Martha Lee and twO arandchildren,
Racine.
Verne Weber and son, Paul,
McAUin, Texas, and Chicago,
spent a few days with Clara Conroy. Joining lhem Friday evening
for dinner were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Wolfe, Belpre, and Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Hartman, local. On
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
HutchisOn, Bellview, Neb., anived
for a week's visit with her molher,
Clara Conroy.
Sunday dinner guests of Opal

Ohio University has announced
the names of students from the
Athcqs campus who were candidates for degrees at the end of
spring quarter.
Area students who were candidates are:
Jeffrey Lynn Fields, Middleport,
a master of ans; James Alan Bach,
Pomeroy, a master of education;
Lesley Janet Cowling, Shade, a
master of arts; Rhonda Jo Meeks,
Shade, a master of educatim.
Emilie Ann Sisson, Cheshire, a
bachelor of business administr,ation; Amy Joanne Penick,
' Coolville, bachelor of science in
education; Kevin Donald King,
Pomeroy, bachelor of arts; Larissa
Lee Long, bachelor of science in

Completes training
Pvt. Kevin L. Grady has compleltd basic training at Fort Jack-

son, S.C.
He gradualtd as squad leader for
his unit and earned a ~ sbooter
badge with an M-16 nne and
expect p:lllllc badge.
He as currently stationed in
Abunleen, Md., for his AlT school
on small weapon repair.
He is with the 3664th Mant.
Battallion in POint Plea&lt;lant, W.Va
He will enter Hocldng College
iD January for police-science.
He is the aon of Paul and Cathy

111

...

r

495

...

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

95~~

X

81 ..

po;o

Open door p~licy isn't working

Eichinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Dear Ann Landers: My boy- .
Dwayne Fisher, Virginia Beach, friend and I are middlo-aaed and ·
Va, Miss Suzannab Eichinger, Mr. livingjogc:Wz. 'Billy' believes his
and Mrs. Jeff Horton and Eliza- parentS should have open access to
beth, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. our home. I do not agree and we've
Donald .Eichinger, Tiffany and had some unpleasant words about
Justin, VincenL
ANN !ANDERS
"1992, Lao ADell•
Mr. and Mrs. Bill· Allen, Katie Ibis.
His folks laloct on our door at
and Bobby, Greenwood. Ind., were
CrellonS,..._..
least
twice every weekend. A while
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
bact they took a key to our house
Clayton Allen.
without
pennission and now they
Mr. lind Mrs. Tom Johnson,
come
in
whenever
they feellilce iL I where the parents dominale and lreat
Phoenix, Ariz., were recent visitors
wouldn't
mind
them
having the key their grown sons and daughters
of Mrs. Helen Will.
if they'd just let us know when like children. The fact that your
1 Mr. and Mrs. Larry Roush, Winboyfriend doesn't resent Ibis and
ter Haven, Fla., spent two weeks they're planning to come over.
wilh Mrs. Jean Frederick and Mr.
In addition to this, Ann, his feels that it's 'normal" says someand Mrs. Virgil Roush.
parents expect to be included in thing about his inability 10 cut the
our plans every weekend. I feel apron slrings. This is a subject that
lhat I have no privacy anymore. needs exploring before you consider
Billy insists that everybody he marriage. I see red lights flashing
knows sees their parents every all over the place.
Dear Ann Landers: My sisrerweelccnd and that his relationship
health; Sandra L. Carleton Needs, with his folks is not unusual. I in-law, "Carol; hasn't been able 10
Pomeroy, bachelor of science in come from an independent family face going into a funeral home or
education; Jennifer Leigh Swartz, and I'm not accustomed to the visiting a bereaved family since her
Pomeroy, bachelor of in physical way these people clin&amp; together father died IS years ago.
therapy; Ellen Rulh Waugh, Shade, and have no interests that don't
On lhree different occasions, the
bachelor of science.
funerals
of two relatives and one
include
each
other.
My
family
is
Ronald R. Fowler, Coolville,
close
friend,
Carol couldn't bear to
very
caring,
but
we
give
one
bachelor of general studies; Paul
Bryan Harris, Racine, bachelor of another space to live our own go, so my brolher aucnded alone.
My grandmother died recently
science in physical therapy; Kirk lives.
and
I telephoned Carol to see what
I'm
reslly
not
asking
for
advice
Dean Reed, Reedsville, bachelor of
science in education; Kevin Victor because I know what I have to do, time she and my brother were
King, s'hade, bachelor of science; and rm going to do iL Whall reslly leaving for the fWJeral home. I had
Marjorie Alice Padgett, Shade, want to know, Ann, is how typical a strong suspicion that she wasn't
bachelor of criminal justice; Denzil Ibis behavior is. Please spell it out planning to go. Sure enough, my
Lee Welsh Jr., Middleport, bache- for me. - OPEN DOOR POLICY brother said he'd be attending, but
lor of science in electrical engi- IN GREENWOOD, MISS.
not his wife.
neering; and Shawn William
DEAR OPEN OOOR: The kind
When I asked Carol why she
Arnott. Syracuse, bachelor of busi- of behavi&lt;I you describe is not at couldn't manage to go and provide
ness administration.
all typical. It exists only in families support for her husband and my

Ailn
Landers
n...s,._.,.

Terry Soulsby welcomed
as new Willing Worker
A new member, Tcrry Soulsby,
was
welcomed into membership.
United Methodist Church in TupA
get well card was siped for
pers Plains met Tuesday at the
Doris Koenig.
church.
Cake and ice cream were served
Mildred Caldwell, vice-president, conducled the meeting and to celehrare the binhday of Mildred
Mildred Brooks gave the opening Caldwell and Hazel Barnhill's
anniversary.
pra~ ptoBtam on "Daily Living"
Quilting will begin in Septemwas presented by Edna Harmon, ber.
The group will meet Sept. 8 at
Hazel Barnhill, Joanna Weaver,
Mae Vineyard, Mildred Brooks and the church.
Mildred caidwell.
The Willing Workers of SL Paul

Today's Binhdays:..Television evangelist Rex Humbard is 73. Cuban
President
Fidel Castro is 66, Actor Pat Harrinp is 63. Singer Don Ho is
Grad • Racine.
Hfs address is Pvt: Kevin L, 62. Singer Pan Fogelberg is 41. Actress Quinn Cumminu is 25.
Thooght for Today: ''You should avoid malcirig yOilrsC!f too clear even
·' ' Orady 0685, Bravo Co. l6ih 0\'d.
Battalion, Third Platoon, Aburdeen in your explanations."- Baltasar Gracian. Spanish philosopher (1601 Approving Ground, Md., 21005.
1658).
.
.

1&amp;
II

Thursday, August 13, 1992:
Page-7

Ohio U. graduates named

KEVIN L. GRADY

v

The Daily S·entineJ

Celebrates first birthday
James .M. Cunningham, son of
Michael and Billee Cunningham
celebrated his f1tst binhday recently wilh a dinner at lhe borne of his
grandparents, Bill and Sue Rice.
Attending were his great-grandmother, Velma Winland, Edna
Hunnell and Jordan, S1eve and
Teresa Pullins, Stephanie, Stacy
and Sarah, Donna Rice, Todd Rice
and Donna SIOban.
Another pany was held at the
home of his grandmolher, Imogene
Cunningham.
Attending were Virginia Lee,
Jenny Lee, and Tyler, Tommy Lee,
and Kelly, Bob Smith, Jamie and
Andy, Mary Wolfe and Jeremy,
Peggy Ervin, Stacy and Dustin and

FURNITURE,
FLOOR COVERING

99

111111ft;C11

.....

li..
'?

I

lie

DOWNTOWN POMEROY • 992·3671

•
lliiC..

IFI •

tMtP-7000.
IS,_,.

22

$619°

0

.....
....
1111111'

97 I I
IAH·20t.
IAH-5(U

·DINING 'ROOM SALE
TABLES, CHAIRS, HUTCHES, BUFFETS
and CORNER CHINAS

. Pomeroy

992-2955

Sale Good Throu hMond , Au 17th
JEWELRY COMPLETE STOCL....... , .._lftPRICE

COLD POP.
C.CI:C. COMPLETE

27CCAN

Famous Makes IJ1e
CHROMECRAFT, .KELlER and
. FRANKLIN

25%

Fill

18!~

I
ktlYIII
CIIID A I I' I
Prlcl good wtlh

••cNnga

Off

LIHTIMI WARRANTV

STOCL.lft PRICE

BACK BOOKS._30°/o OFF
ES..................1ft PRICE
CLOCKS.................30o/o OFF

lltll lMI WAR RA NIV

17&amp;

...

~-. . ..13•

UP TO

......
-·1

A=··

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
SIOIO

hOuoo: 1:00 o.m. to 8 p.m. llondoy tlltough F~doy,

8:30 e.m. IO 7 p.m. Satun:IIY, and t 1.m, to a p.m. Su~

GAWPOUS
Prien

20tl UpperRiwrRoad
446-3107
Willdnltdly, AUQU~ttfl, 1112.

'Eddie Munster'
sues radio station

JAMEs CUNNtNGHAM

Steve Allison, lhe station's president and genernl manager, defended the station's right to parody TV
characters. "If you can do this,
then you can sue 'Saturday Night
Live,"' he said.

Tuesday-Saturday

Buy The Pair For Only
I

CQIIQda, und $6.)

Monday 9:3D-8:00

WHIRLPOOL LAUNDRY SPECIAL

-

DEAR KALAMAZOO: Obviously Carol cannoi handle going
into a funel111 home because of the
painful memories rel~ling to her
father's-dealh.
You should respect Ibis and not
uy to "sll'3ighten her out" It's her
problem and her business. And yes,
I do believe you owe Carol an
apology. In lhe future, you ought
toM.Y.O.B.
Gem of lhe ~y: Some nights lhe
only good lhings on television arc
the vase and t1ie clock.
Ann Landers' lare:rr booklet,
"Nuggets and Doozies," has
eYerything from rhe outrageou:;ly
funny to the poignantly in:righlfid.
Send a self-addressed, long,
bu:;ine:rs-siu en~~tlope IJIId a check
or nwney ordlr for $5 (this inclutks
poslfJge IJIId handling) ro: Nuggets.
clo Ann IAntkrs, P.O. Box 11562,'
Chicago , /11. 60611 -0562 . (In

STORE HOURS

APPLIANCES, TV'S
Free Delivery .

KALAMAZOO

DALLAS (AP) - Butch
Patrick, who played Eddie Munstei
on television, has sued a Dallas
radio station for doing a parody of
him in its T-shirt commercials.
.
The $50,000 lawsuit fil e&lt;!
against rock station KDGE in fedel111 court on Friday claims the par~
ody caused Patrick "embarrass•
ment and fear."

Harry CWlni~ham.

All the children received a gift
bag.

mother, she jumped down my throat.
She lOki me that she had talked this :
over with my brother and if I couldn't
accept her decision, that was my ;
problem. I told her it was hu·
problem and that she was selfish.·
She hung up on me.
Was I out of line to confront her?
I lhink she needs professional help.
I can't imagine what wiU happen to
Carol if anyone really close to her
should die, such as her mother or
one.of her children.
It's been almost two weeks now
and Carol hasn't spoken to me. I
don't feellhatl owe her an apology.
What do you lhink? -- KRAZY IN

9:30·5:00

�.

' .a Tht Dilly SenUnel
P.eg•

Pomeroy.-Middleport, Ohio

ThurwdaY, AugUit 13, 1992

Community calendar

Beat .of the Bend...

Coml!lnnity CalencJir Items
appear two daJI before u e.ent
and tbe day of tbat neat. Item
must he received weD • adftll«
to usure pnb~don ID tbe cal·
endar.

··by Bob Hoejlich
:. : Isn~ullat special?
John- fprmer ~~~~~~~1
· The Ohio State Fair is now · teaeller~ Vi were
offering free amusement rides each taken by surprise when a
day lian 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. a&amp;r an limo arrived at their home
igreement was reached between Uniontown on Aug. 2 to piclr:: diem
the ride company and fair officials. up to take them 70 miles to Lake
It stems that the midway was not Clendenillg for a family picnic at
attracting crowdS since this year the
of their son, Kenneth, on
additional tickets- at 75 cents the
. Mildred and Linley Han
each-were ~uired to go on the of Racine--Mildred and Vi are sis·
rides. This, in IUrn, cut·down on the ters-had gone to Uniontown to
customers at food stands near the help celebrate lhe anniversary so
rides and vendors began moving they, of course, enjoyed the limo
out So now, the rides are free fll" trip also with the .honored couple.
the two hours each day. The state By the way, the limo was
!'lir 's problems this year .started "equipped" with a bastct of beverwlth the cola situation and there ages as well as a basket of cheeses,
cOOid be more.
fruits and other goodies. Best of all,
the whole thing-canged by John
Last month was the coldest July and Vi's four sons, their wives, and
since 1895 but it didn't slow down the couple's grandchildren-is on
the work of Meigs County's Emer- video so that everyone involved
gency Medical Services.
has the captured "moments to
According to Bob Byers, direc- remember". By the way, the limo
tor of the serviCes, units answered did return the Fishm and Harts to
197 calls last month, taking 83 the Fisher home in the evening.
' patients to Veterans MemOOal HosPresent for the family cookout
piral; 32 to Holzer Medical Center; besides lhe honored guests and the
23 to Pleasant Valley Hospital and Hans were the four sons and their
17 tootherinsliwlions.
wives, Jack and Glenda Fisher,
Calls answered by units include Mike and Melda Fisher, Don and
Columbia, three; Middleport, 51: Sandy Fisher and Kenneth and Pam
Pomeroy, 46; Racine, 25; Rutland, Fisher, and grandchildren, Sam
37; Syracuse, 21, and Tuppers Fisher, Johnny and Laura Fisher,
Plains, 14. In addition to the 197 Danny Fisher, Mark and Holly
runs, units made 56 transfer runs Fisher. Also guests were family
during lhe month. Miles driven for friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
the 197 calls totaled 5,357.8 while Flounders.
ti11DSfermileage tolaled 2,116.8.
- -And we're now advised that
Nothing like doing it in style.
somehow Ross Perot is still dabThat's the way it was for John bling around in the Presidential
and Vi Fisher, former Meigs Coun- race. Not by my vote, he isn't Do
ty n:sideniS who observed that 57th l:eep smiling.
Wedding anniversary on Aug. 2.

.

r=

'

:
'

'

Jacks and Aleshire are 'TOPS'
Donna Jacks and Linnie
Aleshire were best w~y 106ers at
the recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
Club No. 570. Calista Searls was
runner-up.

Teni Hill won the fruit basket
and Phyliss McMillan won the gad·
get gift
.
. A new contest, "Up, Up and
Aweigh," was started with members forming teams of two to compete with hot air balloons.
Winnc:n of the Summer Slimin'
Contest will be announced nei t
week.
KOPS will be hoft(J"ed Aug. 25.
Virginia Dean read a poem
about "dreams" telling members to
"think thin at Ill times..
Nancy Manley had a cassette
1ape about ''Eating Places."

..

The group meets every Tuesday
from 5-7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Car·

penter's Hall. Call 992-2234 or
992-5638Tor information.

Zion homecoming
slated Sunday
The annual homecomillg of the
Zion Church of Christ will be held

Sunday with a potluck dinner at
noon followed by program at 2
p.m.
Art Bush will highlight the
afternoon program as he presents
"Christ Throu~h the Word and
Song." The public is illvited.
The c!\un:~ is located on Route
143 approximately five miles.north
of Route 7. Roger Watson is the ·
minister.

NbT TOO MUCH : Just ne people, lionel pttblnty after a

bard workout, but Roger Speacer, speed auperlatellde•• for tbe
harness horse races at the Meip C011nty Fair, k - driuln&amp; too
mncb too quickly would be harmful for Colleen Falaln. (Sentinel
photo by Julie E. DUlon)

-People in the newsLONDON (AP) - DaVid Hack-

tAi:~
111111

ART BUSH

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

POMEROY • Hymn sing, Hillside Baptist Churtb, Pomeroy. the
Conquerors Quartet. Public invited.

SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM • SmorgasLONG BOTIOM • Evangelist
bord dinner sawrday, ~~f~·· Long
Bill
Villars, Anamoriah, W.Va.,
Bottom Community B · .· J.· Cost
is $5 for adults, $2.50 for chlldren. will !X'CICII • Mt Olive Community C6urch1, Long Bottom, Sunday. 7
POMEROY • Sign·ul!,for Big p.m. I'IIIDr Lawn:ncc Bush invites
Bend Youlh Football, Salllrday and the public.

'

•Cuts Heating
Bills 50%
•Heats &amp; Cools
i

(No Suntl•r C•lbl

Call992-2156
MoN. thro FRI. 8.\.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12
CLO SED SUNDAY

POLICIES

·

This Is your Invitation to HI any Item for $100 or lela and advertise It FREE. Simply clip this
.coupon (photo copies not accaptld), fill In your ad and mall It to ua or ctop Roff at our
office. Your ad will run for 1 week.

•Ultra Quiet
-Qopper Coils
•1 0 Year Warranty
On Compressor

• Price of ad for all capitalleuen il .douhie prW:e of ad t:Mt

• 7 point line type o•ly uMCI
• Sentinel it not r•po•ible for enoora after fint day (chetk
for erron fnt day ad ruM in paper). Call k:fo ~ 2:00 P·"'·

,_w

C.rd of Thaab
Happy Ado
In MemoriaM
Yard Sala
• A elauifted .dvertieetncnt pl.eed in the Gallipolil Daily
T.;bune (excepl Clauifoed Oiop1oy, 8,..;..,. C.nlor Lopl
Noticca ) will alto appear ill the Poinl P'ltuant R.Uter aJWI
lhe DaUy Sentinel . rMehins over 18,000 home.

Days

Words

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3

6
10
Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

·CWSifiUnOII
(Note: 16 Word Limit 1ncl Your SeHing Price Must Be In Your FREE Ad)
(Sorry, this doN not apply to Yard Sllu)
•

N.ne::________________~-----------------Phone I : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mail To:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St..
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(offer txplrlll/31182)

I

(

Matthew, Care, Either, Sandra, David Lennox uya about thla family, NA superior
level of quality perlormance.'' Your home Ia
too Important Call the one Lennox uya Ia the

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Aug. 11, 1191.

Aug.13,1986.

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Employment Serv 1ces

• .

FRESH SWEET CQRN
Now

$1 50 doz
1

•

Of Sweet Corti, String Beans,
'l
nd N8W pOfGfotS, EfC.
10mai08S,G

Classes in: Ballet &amp; Tap.
Toe, Jazz, Baton Twirling.

Regi:~~~~-3 PM

For....,.lntormationc.~l2&lt;15·9eeo

....... fwnlly.

=======-~======~::======+======~

5

woono:s

Klllono,

Tralnod,
4
:30p.m.

~-

Llllor 11

Help Wlntad

Aftor 'AVIlii"AU.AIIEAit-.,...

Y~a~'l

-

=~:-"...=

.

~k.':l'"~m:= 'i: =•.-••·1.. 112"1

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES

PAm FEUURE

'

Co1no, II.T.S. Coin Shop,
ClollpoiiL

GALUA PEAFOAMING·AATS

~;o~by

Rontll

Wantod: -

EVERYTHURS. NITE
DANCE WITH THE SOUND OF D.J.
RAHDYSMITH
Fl!llll e:30 pm 1o 2:00 lim

~"::!,not

151n. ....... hub - ....
. . -.... brOcbllor 01:11 ·
11,11U12-3230.

-

Get Ready for the Weekend

memory of
SHnEwRMsAN

Dolo Worio, . . . _ , - Ph. IIW31-4a1.

...., .............. ~par...... buy 11011' nice ..... "" 3~ ..... In
bldg. .
COI814-8112-71041or

.

For

!1111 Priolo Pol:l: AI 01:1 U.S.

- .. 411R,31Nb,2-o,rw:tod1
BR l!li.J ' - ' Y - ~,800 o:q. ft. 1ann

In loving

And . .nln Gullo,. And Wlll'of
~...J: 810,0011
C:lrlaln
p - Clll Cro-

Soull:an ..... CanHmllon
WNio1~·--.
And ~nd. 171.011 A Ooy. TN.
'

4

ARNIE'SS~::LOUNGE

WIWAM (BILL)
WILL who
paaudaway

chlldNn •
gl'lllldchlldNn.

liiSUWD PIIQS
h7-S275.00 16117-$450.00
OPENERS IIISTllLED-Y. HP-$200.00

DUCEDI
- 1 0 MUOO and
"' af up to 10% al pun:hMe

-

In Memory

For

tlono), Rlci!Au-...,., !IN!ooh; .

n. p:1oa ... ~•

CLASSD'IEDS
GET BEstJLTS • .FAST!

$10,0011 Rrnrd I An: .-.g
Ol:lor Fonda, Ill-., N:i'"

[)lo.

PRICE

Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

---- .... a...ldul. u - . IDD ...,_

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR lEW l':'!IIIM nmo , ..,. Unfta And
Comrr.".:,tCI:Mpll
lla-lpo.
Wort:lwldo
·sTEEL INSULATED lliii!Iil 1,_
Soloollono. can v...tton Nat·
RAISED PDEL GAUGE DOOR -731-1250u.s.orAnd305 -Ill 2203. Free

IUW111 IOAID DEADUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUILICI1101 .

$.30
$ .42

-

Tri~l Tl:lnl Avo-. Qol.
"Dill~-~am.... ~ o..::
sto!"i".,-Mooei, Kiid- stn~

FlobOIIa. Hlmpll.... 11f.245-

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IEIJ':ms.~ Typo ~- 1;;;. ·•
POMEROY IY·PAIS
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992•5114
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Fllll ...... COiiLMMikli~ ••

Floglolman
SMpherd.
1yr.- DW, -wrr
frllndly, - . . - .

KEVIl'S LAWI

•lleadlnen
• Convtltlbll '(opa

·~ CudomCtii'PID

er
1401-137•1460
l..nn Mowing,
Fet1111zlng, w-tlng,

QniiiJ

· • CullOm Sell

Stone Co.

eo-•Allo 8oltb

SIZED LIMESTONE .

Ill

FOR SALE

Call614·992·
6637

IIIII l11dlng.
Shrub •nciT-

-&amp;I-

Trlmmlng&amp; Removal

St. Rt. 7
Cllu.in,OH.

.. 11 ...... CofnRIM:llal

Downapoulll

Gutter Clllnlng

Pllntfn11

949·2168
71211'1211fn.

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

liD ......,

IIIW. .... JIMit
4576t

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Frelbt lh·Ltw
latn fir S11i11n

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61

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IIN'S~I
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EXCAVAnNG

Ail. ...u

-,:..

BIJI' noaa IIACICHOI
... iiiiCiifcii WORK

AYAI!..AitL

IEPTIC

.SIIYICI

992·5335 or

915·3561

LINDA'S
PAINnNG

::. :
IS !

I&amp;C EICIYITING
BULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

HAULING: Un1tone,
Dllt. Gm.l end CCIIII
LicENsED ond BONDED

PH. 614-992·5591

Approved Townahlp
Road (bllcktop), 1/4
mile lrDm Rt. 7,
lociiiii'*Chester •ncl Tupperw
Plllne.
Each lot II pllltlally
wooded with uc.llenl
dntlnage.. 8ervlc:e by:
tP.C. Wlller Co.;

&amp; co•

-

to _..
~

~ ..... In ..... ..... ••
glvoo-. . . 111·11U.l

..., .,.. """-....-~.~~

.,.._, ~ l::v . . . . . . ...
llloot ~
'"'"" Cll J.l. 1
..
HUH1' - . . . 10 liNg .

'
EASY AllliEIIILY.., 1w 1311 ·
wL FREE Into • :M 1:r hoclno. .

LOTS FROM $3,600
end up
Owner Fln.nc:lld

16141915·3594 or

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

~~~
CUSTER'S
STUCCO
&amp;
PWIEI .

l.olt • Found

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
RAOII,OHIO
1"'--J hsla IWp W

IIPttl
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Gail Saws
•Weedeaten

"'-·With- Color, COl A~
,• .• P.M. 11t ttl lt17.

lor _... pot:
"SuoooO" - - l o M o t
$1011 -

...G...

wh.~A.~==Aupl

FEDERAL OO¥E-Nf 18 '

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No Cooli - - - No .......
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Ancl .
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1110 a..,..·CIII 1:;;••
Ani:

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1
TI:M, " " ' A nd0
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MUnh n'lol-. .,.,_.., FtMc .

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c.o..:

AU. Ylinl lo Pol:lln IIIN'J:';."'!:'If :s'bM Home ·
,....
... r r1Gr eon.·loaloNiho
IIEADUIIl:
1:00
1.. do~
IIIIo
lo ......
MI.
Sun:loj - . . . • 1:00 ,....
Frldor. llondoy • 2:00

p.:o.Sotunl::r.

wnUonlll ' • t
..... Cilll Pul 'four

c.r..

•=•· 1luch'
In

Todoy, Ar:cl '

Mallein.

1· :

IOII-42S-'1121 ...._, T.._. •
lallon"""inl ........ l'lroi,ECJE. ,

'

llal:a~lnA--01 .

Your 01111. 01 Vory '
- A n d L,ogll- Ptoni. .
MeN•; l1ck o. • .._ M- "
HIM' A .W M I
--Dopl101.

114- :
Old ;

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F - 1:10 To J:OO lily -

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Molal
•7-i::i •
- la4.
Ower
Clll
collet;
11t ..,
2310,- ... 4111.
:
112-fin.ot-OOV£AIIENT JOIISI H1rtna •
In - . llolh Slcllod
--1uo:1.
A eurn.. llll 01 ·
.- ........!on. Coli 1· .

614·949·2804
•

t '

F....,: S,... WI«• I Ton Malo 1mm MattA 1 - .

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

6

Youfa.l111.

1111.

Or ;

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~~
For--=
a.
~:
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&amp; VIcinity

100

11a11ua 01 01:1o. -

... :
All •

W11kttdl And ._. WMII •

a
- lalo, - - - NiahiL No 1-'IIL~-"
Ave, .... lug 11, 1:110 1111 1:110, :ri:IJ, lolo D:lvlnt ... •

____ ...._

_ _,..,.,_

Announcemenls

_,.,. AvalioiM C1111- :

Yard - · 1111 ........, Ave. 111U1110.
Wad, 1:00 1111 t ....... 1 -

···-c...·

1300:YIH SlrMt

JM
. •
614-"2·2212

12-5-tfn

'·

caprfttiC

~

For

Columbue • Southern
Elactrlc: Co.

•UGHT HAUUNG

31904 Ltal11
Creal! Road i
Midlleport, Clio j

-

WVIOYLH.

SHRUB &amp; TIEE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

;tJ!

-. 1,..... ' ,...

-

KENNY'S AUTo CENTER

... 194-Wtl•...,

n~~~ng

COIIPI.ITE

,

· HOUSE
PAINTING

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

CHARLIE'S

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)

2-7·92·111

71211r211

RfHOOI'I.NIIERVICEa

36970111 ......

.

614·992·6949

.,.., ......

19•95 A DAY AND UP

985·4473
667·6179

CAll

NoJNTetW

8

FUI ISTIMIJES

1te1rior • bterlor
Spray
• ·· ··- IriS~
FREE ESTIMATES

W!.lews

' New Homll, Roofing,
Rooni AddJIIOIII,
Klt;hena, Parclllllllld
8ldlle.

WICI'S
HAUUNG SERVICE

..ewHOIMI
eGo rat••
.Complete
ReincHieliag
Stop &amp; Com111re

OffiCE .IYICI

1011011
CONTUCnNG

......

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTIUCTJOH

~..... -~ •• . . . . .

- • · , Pay.
........
_ :·
Lu;GJaA
~
MilT: I L I Yau 1Y•r•
01111 I I .... a.n IIYR • •

AUTO RENTAL, INC. ~..~,;;:.·- Ea::!:J~::
'1':

773•5614or
992-5249
7_ _ ,..

DAVID WHITE S~RVICES, INC.

s:l ,

1391 Salford Sdtool R..
Gtlp•s. OW.
c.III6141« ..94"•1-IOH72-5967

Bl LLET I\ BO.\Ril

F- lEaL ·10 YNIEip.

beat.

Bennetts Mobile Home

882- New linen

Wamedto Buy

9

6 67 -CoolviUe

Over 15 Words
$ .20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

FRH ESTIMATES

..

992-Middlepo"'

256-Gvyan Dill.
643-Arahia D....
379-'I'.J..t

RATES

Gutters

OILY DULIIII All
SOUIHUST OHIO 10
AITAIITIIS

446-GoiGpoGo

Qvality HI Effidellcy
Air Co1diliOHrs, Heat
Pumps, F1naces &amp;
Now Water Heaten.

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

NEW-REPAIR
l~crrur•u••~ e

Gallia Co11111y Melgo County Ma&amp;On Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

day after pubhcatioo lo make correction
• Ad. that m~o~~t be
m.dvanee .,.e:

ROOFING

l.evel4,r Qu•lil)'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Morday
,
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedn ~ay
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Clouijied pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges••.

• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 worda will be
run 3 day. al no cbarp.

HownLWrhsel

f::t..in~•IHm fur a Sttlteriur

COPY DEAD!.lNE
Monday Paper
Tueodoy Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ad1 outaide the e&lt;nanty you r ad ruu 1111•t be prepaid
• Rec: tiYe ditcouat for ada paid i.n advanee.

wlfe,JUinb,

Dimension Heat Pump - The most efficient ···
single speed heat pump available.

=~=.=·~

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

Sadly milled by

Cut Up To 50% Off Your
Home Comfort Bills.

-.-."-tknick Ill nct"

Ciothle.

FREE ESTIMATI'S

SUNDAY
No. 9053, meets Thursday, 7:30
LANCASTER • Dorst reunion, :
p.m. All members attend
Lancaster Fair groundS, Sunday, ·
basket dinner at noon. Relatives
RUTLAND • Rutland Village and friends invi!ed.
Council, Thursday, 7 p.m., Rutland
Civic Center.
RACINE . - Sellers family .
reunion, Sunday, Star Miii'Part,
CHESTER • Shade River Lodge Racine. B•sJret lunch, noon. Family
No. 4S3 meets Thursday, 8 p.m. and friends welcome. ·
Refreshments served.
DEXTER • Preaching at Old
MIDDLEPORT· Meigs Local Dexrer OIUrtll, Slllday, 9:4S a.m.,
· seventh grade football players meet David Garbutt, Columbus. Public
Thursday at the junior high foothall illvited.
field at S p.m. to get additional
forms 10 be completed in order to
RACINE - Martin and Emma
play football. Anyone nOt getting
RoUih
Sayre mmion, Sunday, Star
the forms may obtain the forms on
Mill
·Part,
Racine. Relatives and
Friday at .Meigs Junior High during
friends
invited.
regular office boors.

POMEROY • Zion Church of
Christ, Harrisonville Road, homecomillg, Slllday. Art Bush will JR·
sent the I)IOIDIIJI at 10:30 a.m. tmd
2 p.m. Potluck at noon. Public
illvi!ed.

l'lrolllmo-~JIInl·ll,

431111 Hart.._ Roi::l, FIW:

tOMMERCtu. and RF.SmENTLU

To place an ad ·

Yll'd Sale
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

New Homes • Vi•rl Sidiag
New Gar•a•• • Replace••t Wiadows
Root~lddit••• • Roofi••

ltU'll.AND • DIIICC at the Rutland ~ Legion, Saturday 9
p.m. to midllighL Music by White's
Hill Band. ~ invi!ed. .
.

BEllE VAi.LEY • Barnhouse
family reunion, Sunday, East Central Extension Center, southeast of
Beile Valley, Noble County.

7

tlASSIFID ADS
8... market
tor lftlytlilg,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

TUPPERS PLAINS · VFWPost

for which he drew his northern
ney, among Britain's most po~ England hometown of Bradfmd on
artists, has designed a Bntish the cover quickly became a rarity.
postage stamp 10 mark the start of
the European Community becomSAUNA, Kan. (AP) - On his
ing a border-free single market on trips 10 Las Vegas, Waytrp Newton
Dec. 31.
regularly refuels in the central
The stamp, which shows a yel- Kansas town of Salina. When he
low star on a blue background, finally stayed long enough to put
reflects the community's flag on a show,bis aircraft tank was
showing 12 stars for the 12 mem- overflowing.
ber stateS on a blue field.
"We left him all kindS of flowThe 24-pence (46-cent) stamp. ers, T-shirts, a teddy bear, a fruit
which goes on sale Oct. 13, 1s tray, boutonnieres, and a Kansas
Hackney's fii'SI for the Royal Mail. tornado - one of tiJose things ill
He lives in Los Angeles.
·
the little jar," said Salina native
In 1989, a telephone dii:ectory Linda Wendlandt, president of the
Kansas chapter of the Wayne New·
ton International Fan Club.,
FRIDAY
Fans left the gifls at his dressing
REEDSVn.LE • Special meetroom at the Salina Bicentennial
Center, where Newton performed in$ of Olive Township Trustees,
Fnda~7:30 p.m., Shade River
Tuesday night
.
Building, to receive
"You wouldn't believe it," State
applications
or
trustee~
Newton said of the welcome. "It's
phenomenal."
COOL VILLE • Hunter safety
Newton said he stops at the Sali- courses by Coolville VFW Post
na airport more than a dozen limes 3418 will be Friday, Monday and
a year on Dips back to Las Vegas, Wednesday at the Lions Club
but had never performed here building. Call 667-6348, 667-3831
before Tuesday.
or 667-6657 for information.

.The Dally Sentlnei-.Page-9_

Business.Services

Aug. 22, Big Bend Youlh and Fitness Center , Mechanic Street, ·
Pomeroy, 9 a.m. to noon.

THURSDAY
• PomCIOy Church
of the Nazarene, Vacation Bible
· SALEM CENTER • Star
School, through Friday, 6-8:30 Grange fun night and potluc:k supp.m. nifhtly. "Set Sail with the per Salurda,Y. 6:30 p.m. All memSavior! Classes for participants bers, po~a~tial members and friellds
ages three and over.
'
invited.
'
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
MIDDLEPORT • All parents
Springs Grange meeiS Thursday, 8 and players, or an~ intcmled in
p.m., election of officen. Group Meigs Junior High Volleybell will
will be movillg out of the hall for meet ll 1 p.m., at the juni(J" high.
the fair,
I
RACINE • F.ntertlinment at Star
POMEROY • DinQCr at Senior Mill Part on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Citizens Center, Thursday, S-6:30 will be t11e Mone Chapel sinsers,
p.m., $3 per person. .Music by The Country Sweethearts, Ivan and
Classics. Free will offering for Friendl. Public inviled.
musicians. Public invited.
KANAUGA • Square dancing
POMEROY • AA meeting at and clogging ll tbe DAV building
Sacred Heart Catholic.Church, lian 8-11 p.m•.Music by Kanawha
Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
Valley Rambltn. Public is invited.
PO~OY

-

Pomeroy......,Middleport, Ohki

13, 1992

'

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•

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··

--. -

10--Tllt Dlllly Sentinel

1~~~i'iA~~-ffiui~~1~3,~1~~-~------~--~------------~~~~~~?:0~h~lo~~--~~~--~;;~;;;;~~n.g;~~;;~:;;;~: .

Thursday,
'

SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUle

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54

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

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FIIIOII C R... And Loob
Groat, 11.i71 Firm; 55 HP Co•
!lido !nd~ PTO Loob
And RIN,Good, fM 24i: IIIIo

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tlon,-.tM-illk
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Ill. (I) • Wlno'l . .
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mecldlng In Slmlnthe lnd

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lor , _ An Individual
brlnge ltrength and
atgnlflcanl Chlnge to the
Sovlal Union. (1:00)
ae 11• Top Copa A pit
bull an1111 our drugs 111 X"'y

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machlnl~ nolllnd. (A)
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Vulnerable: Neither

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Dealer: South
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Opening lead: + 8

North denied the top diamond honors,
South settled lor six spades.
Rather than run bis spadea and hope· ::
for a squeeze (which doesn't material, .
ize),South cashed !be diamond acto, led .:
a diamond to the kine and lnaocently _
ruffed a diamond with the spade two. ·
Delightedly West overrulled with the :. ·
spade seven. But his joy was short, lived as the declarer promptly ·
claimed. South could wtn any return,
cross to dummy with a trump and dlsr
card -his heart losers on dummy's dla,
mond winners.
·
Would you have found the wlnninc
defense of refusing to overruff?
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you Pn the year iliead. Send for Leo's . rrlstance Isn't numbered among your
Astro-Gr.ptr precflctlonatoday by mal!, strong suits today, so try to avoid high,
~=-cate. (A)
lng S1.25 plua a long, oelfreddreued, ~ed tales representall- wlio are
stamped lnvalope to AslrOrOraph, c/o capable of talldng you Into buying
this~. P.O. Box 91428, ere.. _something you really don't need.
Lift
rand,
OH 44101r3428. Be sure to state PIICEI (Feb. :.Mircl! 201 Pn a o""'
BERNICE
your zodiac llgn.
- to-one relationship today, give •'lOtliel• 1
rJJ To line Cooawr Stereo.
BEDEOSOL VIRGO
IAutl, 23-hpt. 221 Regardleu -1!he benefit olthe doubt. There';~ DOl• • • • llodlwrol
o! how hard you try today, It wtll be tm- ., alblllty you might jump to conclusions
poaaib!e to preue everyone. Pn fact, you end misjudge the Intentions or your
might become c!O&amp;IIy lnvotvad with one · companion.
, ·
1D '11111 Club W7lli Pat
who hu a thorny attitude.
: ARIES (llafcll 21· April11) This might
llallu1un
.
UIIIA (~ 23-0ct. :DJ Use your best not be one of your more lndullrlous
judgment today when partaking 'of the · diYt. If you choose to goof on,
·
10:30 Ill Allw TV
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good thlnga Pile hu to offer, Overln- . one thing, butlf you Induce COrworkars .
rJJ ._.. '1111 ......"lround
. du!glng Pn anY manner could cause you to do Plk&amp;WII8,_the bali may come down
...... tiC CJ Sl8nlo.
· to P'IY a penallY Pallf on.
on you.
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. ual who Ia very fond of you won't appf'&amp;r who :.Ck good taste or aodal griCII
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elate It today H you devote too rnucli atln'P the typet Of people you'PP foal
Alllr 14, 1la
· tlmt and attention to someone ..... · comfortable witH today, Poor 11111nnara
. ~:.,_,.,:
IAQITTAJIIUI (Nov, 23-Dto. 21) Thote wll- you.
"'"'*'IIIII s-.
n... GOuld. be &amp;ubstentlal! · you'll be, lnvOtvad with outtlde your. ~·II (MIJ 11,_ 217) Strt"" to be
dW LMinyouriiYie of living In 'not"" year1 hOml lod&amp;y wtH Phlnk you're pretty nifty. llnclere When l?d&lt;nrrWtedgtng the IC·
ii'Ntw.all ....
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per.. -Howevtf, !Ia. poll-• taken or your · compllthrnents or others today. u111ng .;
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c1o err don't, IIIey shoukllliD work out runner.
·
: done lor you wtn Produce !he opposite
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UO(.I!rlf:Do'• 12) Bemlndlulollhe1_ n\lght be I bit P-re today and bad!yl CANciR (,.,_ 21,.., 22) Unlortur tloualilyourcomnw-. lnrreedolpraitlandl?d&lt;no:Aadgment. _ rw.~y, not-ronerou'N be lnvoMrd l 11:30 (I)
(!) Jolin I
r gtlllla'• One
c1a1 r , ..,. ...-,, 1 you're not alert, or· A mantputator who· Is _,. of thhl with today will have your a-ru: dlapor i
tiil&lt;lne
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mlallt do· might IPin l7owwy ptw- to I ·alllorr end Outlook. Don't ret a negatlvt·
a.....,., 011 you. Bit • jump on Mr. "Y;: lwtal you around hra finger. .
1 thinker cut a cloud on your hsppy:
. l8idw...idtr'llthe~a&lt;MII'nlng . ACIIfAIIIUI (,_ 217-Feb,tt) Sa7ea re- ' thoughll.
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Jorge Lull Roman (16--5rl, 9
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Today's deal is based on one in the
enjoyable "Kosher Bridge" by Roo
Klincer and David Bird (GollaiiCll,
'11.95, 21H6&amp;r5860). The book c6n,
tains amusing stories built around the
bridge games of a rabbi, wbicb were
inspired by Rabbi Leonard Helman of
McKeesport, Penn.
Perhaps West should have risked a
heart lead, . but he cbose the spade
eight: four, nine, queen. With only one
dummy entry, declarer seemed des,
tined to lose two heart tricks. But be
found a clever play that would be
overlooked by many. Can you see it?
The bidding has a modern ring to it.
After South opened with a strong, arti,
ficial and forcing two clubs, North
made the waiting response of two dia,
monds. Then his three.!iamond rebid
promised some values. He would have
used a "double negative" of three
clubs with a complete buSt. Now South
used the Grand Slam Foree. He want,
ed to be in seven spades opposite the
K,Q of diamonds. However, when

of i~J,Stw.o. C

dm

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By Pbllllp Alder

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Tricky play
and defense

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Dwayne getS the ccld
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SCII•M lETS ANSWEIIS
Obtuse , Mecca Htlath , Untold , ABOUT THEM
"II you' want your children to improve,' granny tells all
mothers, "let them over hear the nice things you say ABOUT
THEM".

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