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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

---Weather--~ . Showers
South Central Obio .
Fair Thunday and Friday, with
Var iable cloudiness Tuesday a chance of showers and thundernight, with a chance of showers _ srorms on Slllllnlay. Highs will be
and thunderstorms early, and a low range.from the SOs to the lower 60s
near 50, Chance of rain is 50 per- Thursday and Friday, and from tbe
cent. Mostly S!Jnny and windy 60s to the lower 'lOs Saturday.
_Wednesday, with highs in the low Ovemigbtlows wiD range from tbe
60s.
.
it)id 20s to mid 30s Thursday and
Ohio extended forecast
Fri~y mcrning, and from the mid
Thursday through Saturday
30s to mid 40s early Saturday.
•

·'

Hartinger

~

-

Tuesday, April 9, ~ 991
.

expected to 'end in Buckeye State ..I

By UDited Press 1Dte111lltiollal
thC northeast to mostly sunny in the
The National Weather Service south.
says showers, thunderstorms and
·Much cooler conditions are .
the tbreat of severe weather should soing to .move into Ohio startins
end over OhiO from the west Tues- Tuesday night. Overnisbt lows
day niBhL
· sllould be mainly in lhc 40s. lfi&amp;bs
By late Tuesday night, variable Wednesday ought to ranso from
cloudiness is ex~ted to prevail. the upper 40s ill the cloudy DOrthWednosday is. forecast to be a dry · 'east to about 60 in the sunnier
day statewide, but sky conditions extreme south.
should vary from mostly cloudy in
The temperatures rorecut for

Metsedge

.

Wednesday are about S degrees
below namal. Besides the cooling,
Wednesday will also bring a rathet
strong west ·to northwest wind.
Monday niabt and Monday
morninJ in Ohio was characterized
by vanable cloudiness, 5cattered
'showers and thunderstorms and
very mild temperatures. .
. Where precipitation. occurred
amounts .were mainly less tban a

Phils; Cubs

quarter of an incb . Predawn tern-:
peratures were generally between,
60 and 65. Normal lows at this time:
of ~ are from the mid 30s to the,
lower40s.
:
On the 1\iesday momins weath-·
· er map, a cold front and a low ~- :
sure region went from Illmou to:
lower Michigan. Bodt these systenl•
wiD move to the east of Ohio early!
Wednesday.
J

Council also approved the temporary use of viUage council chambers eight times a month for the
Job Opportunities and Basic Skills
. Program of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
Spring clean-uo anll the village's role was-discussed atlengtb.
Councilman Paul Gerard proposed
that something on a lesser scale
than has been done in the tJ&amp;Sl be
carried out in tbe village. He said
that reside'nts have been storing
things up in their basements all
winter in anticipation of the pickup.
Mayor Hoffman agreed that some
free pickup should be carried out
but that witb tbe landfill poblem it
should be with some limitations.
He advised that he plans to talk .
with Roger Manley of Manley's
,Trash Service to see if the village
and that firm can work out some
agreement on speciaLhauling. ·- '
A drainage problem on Grant
Street was discussed by Gerard,
with no action being taken. It was
decided that Roger WiUilims, recreation director, would be asked to
meet with council following the
April 22 meeting to detail plans for
the summer program.
·
Councihnan Jack Satterfield
asked about the carpeting at the
. FIERY PROTEST '- These South Korean policemen IIDd out them durin&amp; 1 student demonstration OD the Seoul Ulliversity cammini-golf course at Hartinger Park
the bard way bow bot tbl11p cail get, as they abate off tle lire orr pus earlier today. Approdllately 1,000 studellts demoutrated outside the campus against the rule ol Presldeat Rob Tae-woo. (UPI)
and was advised that the work
should be completed ·this week alid
the course opened soon.
Attending were Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
Contiuaed fi-om page 1
·
and Council members, Dewey Horton , James Clatworthy, Judy
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A son
Jeffrey A. . Celebrezze,. 30,
The membership of Carpenters Local #fi50 in Pomeroy voted last
Crooks, Gerard, William Walters
·of
former
Ohio
Supreme
Court
Parma,
allegedly
raped
the
llirl
week
to stand in favor of installation of scrubbing equipment at the
and Satterfield. AI HartsOn, pastor
Chief
Justice
Frank
Celeblezze
has
Dec.
21-22
when
she
was
visiting
General James M. Gavin PlaiiL
of the Middleport Church of Christ,
According to Dave Gregg of the union, the membership voted on
had tbe opening prayer represent- been indicted on charges of raping bim.
Frank Gasper, aD assistant
a resolution regarding The "Clean Air Act on April I.
ing the Middleport Ministerial a 5-year-old girl.
Cuyahoga County p10sec11tor, said
"We encollfl&amp;e American .Electric Power to expedite tbe pursuit
Association.
·
.
the
girl's
brother
brought
tbe
,inci•
of
the Pressurized Fluidized ·Bed Combustion process at all Ioca- ·
Hospital news
dent to the a~te~~tion of.their mothlions," a statement from the Carpenters says. 'ln the interim, we
er, who contacted the county
will support a rate il!crease for AEP if the Meigs mine remains in ,
_c;;..:.oo;;..;.;tiu=ued~rro~m""'p=..o.:..e.;;_1_ _ _ __
Vererans Memorial Hospital
DepariiiiCIIt of Human Services,
orod~~~;;tion at current levels ~d ~bbers are instaUed in tbe Gav~
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Celebrezze, a grand jury clerk
company would have difficulty · The anal~t said. "It would take
~l
.
Frank
Lakin, W.Va., Eleanor for Cuyahoga County Common
"We
do
not
supPort
tbe
option
of
closing
tbe
Meigs
mine
and
the
. doing business witb the .~enta11on ·a managerial miracle ... If they do Werry,Kidd,
Pomeroy; John Chaney, Pleas Coun. turned h1mself in to
under current rules reqUiflng h1gh it, it wiD be studied by the Harvard
usage
of
Westtm
coal," tbe stalement continues. "We will not supRacine; and Brandon Kimes, Parma police Monday afternoon
investment in a high risk climate.
port any rate increase-precipita11Cd by this option."
Business School."
Racine.
No direct comment could be
and was later released on $10,000
Aseritis said he had advised
MONDAY DISCHARGES - bond. If con¥icted, he could be senobtained from Anders, who his First Boston 's clients that GepEdith
Edwards, EmC~~t Wells, and tenced to 25 years in prison.
office said was unreachable aboard dyn's stock was ''a speculative
.
Arthur
Petrie. .
a submarine until Thursday.
· hold" He estimated that the comThree teenage girls were located near the Sou~em Ohio Coal
General Dynamics 1ssued a pany would report first-quarter
Meigs Mine operation on Monday morning after being lost for sevstatement in which Anders said: earnings of $1:15 a share .and have
eral hours.
·
·"We are strongly committed for profits for all of 1991 of abOut $48
Open House
iary 9053 will have a spaghetti dinAccording to f,feigs County Sheriff J3lfles M. Soulsby, tbe juvethe long term as a premier defense million.
The Rock Springs Grange will ner Salllrday beginning at 4 p.m.
niles, aged 13, 14 and 17, are belieyed to have gone for a walk in
contractor. We intend to vigorously
Company executives are' saying have
the Dexter area on Sunday and become disoriented.
compete for new defense busi- yeatly profits will be closer to $50 7p.m.an open meeting Thursday at Cost is $3.50 for adults and $1.50
for children undei-12.
A search party was fonned late on Sunday by family members
ness.' '
millioP, or about $5.50 a share, tbe
Workshop
pl1111Ded
·
and friends, and according to Soulsby, the subjects were located
Molly Sallcy, Gendyn's director analyst said.
The Meigs Genealogical Society .
Cemetery clean-up planned
near the sOCCO belt line by Deputies Manning Mohler and Mark
of investor relations who was at the
In 1990; General Dynamics lost wiD. hold a workshop for beginning
The Tuppers Plains Church of
Boyd.
Wednesday night get-together, said $577:9 minion as a result of writeNisbet's report was "probably offs on v&amp;rious programs, including genealogists on Sunday 812 p.m. at Christ will be cleaning the cemethe Meigs County Museum in tery after today. Those wanting to
truncated and taken out of con- the Navy's A-12 Avenger lisht Pomeroy.
save nowers or otber items should
tel'L" She said there was no tran- bomber, which was canceled by
EMS
SJ1111hettl
dbmer
·
have them removed. It bas been
script of_tbe meeting.
Defense Secretary ·Dick Cheney.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Auxil- requested that flowers be purchased
In his Thursday letter to PrildenFour caDs for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Counwhich can be bun' on the monutial clients, Nisbet said:. "GO's
ty Emergency Medical Services on Monday.
ments 10 that mowmg can be done
management is dramatically changAt 9:18 a.m., Rutland squad went to College Street for Anthony
more efficiently.
ing the direction of the company,
Perry, who was transported tO Veterans. At 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Mulberry Heights for James DiU. He was taken ·to
shedding its defense exposure in
Cecil (Mary) Jewell Qf Hilliard:
DAR to meet
the 1990s ... We believe GD's new Christine Kuether
Veterans Memorial Hospital and later to Holzer Medical Center. At
two sisters, Anestine Frazier of
The Return Jonathan Meigs
plan will seriously jeopardize-the
12:38 p.m., Middleport squad went 10 Oliver Street and transported
Word has .been received here of Columbus, and Irene Burrell of Chapter, Daughters of tbe Amencompany's chances of winning
James Pelegrino to Holzer Medical Center. At 8:54 p.m., Rutland
the death of Christine Kuether, 82, Albany; 32 grandchildren and 11 can Revolution, will meet Friday at
weapons systems comJlCtitions."
squad went to Main Street Robert ~nowden was ta!cen from there to
·
·
' 1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. VerThe analyst added, "We believe at her home in Tryon, N. C. Feb. great-grlllllk;hildren.
Holzer.
Besides his pare~ts; he, was pre-· non Weber in Rutland. ·
·
· the GD plan to substantiaUy reduce 14, 1991.
in death by his brother, RayA program on "The Early HistoThe Rev. Ralph and Christine ceded
future (military) investments could
mond;
his
fu:st
wife,
Doris
and
his
ry
of
ZOAR" will he presented by
have an influence on the Air Kuether served Trinity Church
Mrs. Carl Horky. Reports on the
Revival services are in progress at Eden United Brethren in
Force's selection process" for the from Jan. 1937 to Oct._l946. The second w1fe, E~lyn. .
Funeral
semces
wiD
be
held.
OR·
•
'92 state confeienoo will be given.
Christ Church near Reedsville. Services begin each evening at7
Kuethers moved to Tryon, ill 1981,
ATF.
Hostesses are Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
p.m. with Rev. Bob Wiseman offiCiating. and will continue through
Nisbet said he still believed the to live near their son, the Rev. Wednesday at 1 P:m. at Ewmg
Fun~ral
Ho"!e.
w1th
~ar11are1
Virgil
Aikins, Mn . .Cecil BlackSunday. The dates for the revival services wQre printed incorrectly
team of General Dynamics, Lock- David Kuether. Their elder son, the
in The Daily Stlllinel.
heed Corp. and Boeing Co. would Rev. Gustav Kuether of ~obmson off'lcl8ung. B~ w1D be wood, Mrs. Steven Jenkins, Mrs.
Cemetery. Mihtary ntes Robert Jewell and Mrs. Dayton
win the ATF competition over the Edwardsville, Ill. and six grand- '"·Wells
w1ll w11l be conducted by the Parsons
competing .team ·of McDonnell · children, also survive.
·
Mason VFW, of which Mr. Jewell
·
Douglas Corp. and Northrop Corp.
was a member.
Revival planllfd
but lowered his probability from 60 Pearlk JeweU
Friends may call at the funeral
The
Harrisonville · Holiness
The Pomeroy Alumni Association has announced it has available
percent to 55 percent.
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 Chapel, off Route 684, will hold ·
two
Bob RobertS Scholarships in the amount of $600 each.
He reemphasized his recommenPearlic F. Jewell, 72, .of 301 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
revival
Friday
tbrough
Sunday
at
Applications
for the schqlarships may be made by sending a picdation to sell General Dynamics' . Wright Street in Pomeroy, died
7:30p.m.
ilighlly.
Rev.
Robert
Wil.
ture,
transcript
of
grades, reSume and name of relative(s) who gradstock, which has soared in recent Silnday, April 7, 1991 at Veterans
son,
district
superintendent
of
Wesuated
from
Pomeroy
High School. Applications are awarded on the
weeks along with other defense Memorial Hospital following a
.
!cyan
Holiness
Association
of
basis
of
grade
point
average.
stocks since tbe quick end of the short illness.
Churches, will be tbe speaker and
To apply for tbe scholarships contact the Pomeroy Alumni Asso·Persian Gulf War.
He was a declduuld for tbe Ohio
Rev.
John
Neville
is
the
supply
ciation
at P.O. Box 202, Pomeroy, 45769.
The stock, which traded at . River Company.
Aprill7
Jlll'ler.
Public
is
invited.
He was born on October 25, ·
$23.625 a share March 13, had sold
as high as $38.25 a share but last 1918 in Downinston, Ohio, the son
"Night of a Thousand Stars", the
Weekend aerviees
.
week dropped $1.50 after the of the late· Leonard and Goldie
The Red Brush Church of Christ
Wednesday meeting to $32 a share ·Green Jewell. He was a veteran of Great American Read Aloud will
on the New Yotk Stock Exchange.
the U.S. Navy duriug World War be held at the Meigs' Countr. Public . on Bashan R'?ad will have special
· Library in Pomeroy on Aprill7,
weetend SCI'VIces Salurday at -7:30
Nisbet said General Dynamics II:
.
This
celebration
of
reading
and
p.m.
and SundaY. at 10 a.m. and 6
planS to cut back its research and
He is survived by his wife, Cora
· development by 30 pm:ent and its Robinson; 11 daushters: Cora libraries will talte place at 7 p.m. P·!"· Denver. H11l, Foster, W.Va.,
investment in plant Mid equipment ~y_nn, at home, Mrs. Charles that day and will offer patrons an will be speaking.
·' ·
by 50 percent over the next four (Wilma) Fridley, Wesrtrville, Mrs. opportunity to hear Senator Jan
Michael
Long
reid
aloud.
Garden
Club
In meet
years. One-fourth of its R&amp;D will ThOmu (Wanda) Seley, Gallipolis;
(
The
event
falls
in
the
middle
Tho
Middleport
Amateur Gar0
be devoted to the commercial non- Mrs. Bdwlld (Marilyn) Pllbr, Tell
National
Library
Week,
April
14deners
Oub
will
meet
Wednesday
defense sector; tbe analyst said. .
Ind., Mrs. John (Candice)
20.
and
focuses
attention
on
the
at
6:30
p.m.
at
the
home
of Jean
He said new bonus incentives
, Hurricane, W. VL, Mrs. Jlllles
link
betw111111
I'CIIdlq
111c1
succeedMoo~
..
A
flower
display
·will
be
for m~~~a~~ement aJso, are likely to ·(Tammy) Terrell. Pomeroy, Mn.
ing.
Ruth
Powers,
libllry
director,
viewed
at
the
Pomeroy
Library
ll!ld
. lead to short-term financitl Louia (Linda) Harper, Pomeroy,
.-.~~~n~ thllt tile;..,__,.. of par- a meetins will follow at Mrs.
improvements rather than the long- Mrs. Joe (Joan) Smith, Tuppers ....,.
-...--Moore's horne.
·
term planning required for defense Plaina. Mrs. Alhd (Kilby) a - . enta llld children rcldilll together
at a very early age is immeasurMiddleport. and Connio Orimm
conaacts.
·
Aseritis forecast the company's Woodstock, ID; live 10111: Pearlie ·able. It is~::fed tbat the Great
Dance to be ~ld
revenue would decliue 21 ~~~ JeweD, Jr., Rutland, Raymond F.
The
SeniOr Citizens Dance Oub
over the next three yean, even if II Jewell, Pomeroy, Williim Keith
will
sponsor
a round and square
wins the ATF competition, and he Jewell, Tucson, Ariz., Parlin theme for Nalional Library Week, dance on Friday
Clam 8-11 p.m. at
.
~.aid Gendyn executives do not Edward Jewell, Pomeroy, and "Read, Succeed."
the
center
in
Ponlaoy.
Music will
The Meigs County Librarian
Harold Corbin Hlrman, Stoullville;
6hallenge this eslimato. .
be
provided
by
the
Happy
Hollow
. 'Andeli told the 8llllys1S General five brothers, Leonard (Norma) invites local resideiiiS to join witb Boys or Athens. Those auadina
tile country in
Dynamics plans to iuciUIC prof- Jewell, Pomeroy, George (Lois) other libnries iulbility in face thllllllieipated Jewell, Paul (Carol) Jewell, and promolina pro-lilttacy ill the com- bri'!l snacks for the siiiCit table.
decline in sales. he said.
Richant Jewell, all of Columbus, munity.
·Public is invited:
I
I
I

Pick~:

249
Pick 4:0546

Jose 4-1

Cards ; A•H, S.C

Q-D; 7-S

lUDDY- High ID 60s.

Page3

•

e
.. .

VoL 41, No. 247

.

,..---- State official hears both sides of issue--------......_

I.

Former Ohio chiefjustice's ...---Local briefs... ~--i·,.·
so, is accused of rape
Carpenters support scrubbers

Meigs announcements

. '
•'

I

~·.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Ravenswood Aluminum Cotp. on
Tuesday flied a civil lawsuit accusing a United Steelworkers local of
coordinating violence against the
company during a 5-month-old ·
labor dispute.
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District
Court in Charleston charges Local
5668 and 47 union members with
racl&lt;eteering.

_;..._-Area deaths---

Library event set

i ..
l

of

I

'.

It said the defendants have used
firearms, explosives, baseliaU bats,
rocks and otber weapons to altaCk
employees and propeny.
''The union seems more interested now in destroying this conipany
than bargaining with i~" WorUedge
said.
Those named by RAC in this
suit include the United Steelworkers of America Local 5668; Curtis
R. Pancake, Phillip M. Jarvis,
Sammy F. Gregorich, Kenneth L.
Cozart, Bob J. Good, Gary L.
Good, Chatlie E. MeDoweD, W.S.
Boyle, C.W. Garrett, Gerry
Holloverey, Eli P. Morris, Marge

Several areas in rural Meigs Wednesday morning.
County are still reeling from strucScattered customers 1n the
tural damage susl!lined from hi~h Buckeye Rural Electric, Columbus
winds and rain lare Tuesday, while Southern Power aqd Ohio Power
other areas continue to deal with experienced blackouts on Tuesday
power outages.
· due to wires downed by winds and
The Meigs CountySheriff's trees.
DeJllrt1nent reported this morning
Customers in Eastern Meigs
that tbe heavy winda and rain tbat County served by Monongehela
pelted the area last night tore roofs Power Company were not effected
from buildings, ovenumed mobile by power outages.
homes, and downed trees and
According to Ohio Power's
power,lines, witb most.of the struc- Pomeroy manager Ernie Sisson,
tural damage taking place in the 195 ofOhio Power's residential
Reedsville and Rae~ areas.
.- customers were without power
Some of the most dramatic dam- after Tuesday's stonn. The first call
age could be seen ou Cool ville . of a power outage came into the
Road between Reedsville and Tup- company at 6:20p.m.
pers Plains, where the roofs wete
A Columbus
Southern ·
ripped from a double-wide mobile spokesperson was unable .to estihome and another mobile home mate the number of customers
was completely demolished.
without power on TUesday night,
Property owner Roger Westfall however, she did Slate that aU custeported Wednesday moraing that torners with the exception of a few
he had just moved one of the trail- iri the Leadins Creek Road area
ers onto the lot earlier this week for should have power restored by
use as a rental.
noon on Wednesday.
The roof was also torn from tbe
Ohio Power and Columbus
former Meigs County Courthouse Southern. "'!orkers 'f".ere on the
in Chester, though no estimates of scene overn~ght repllflng ~wned
damage were available at press - lines, IWIOVDIJ trees. ·llld·· •n some
time. "'
' . 'ea.r-rvdna broken poles.
Residents throughout the greater
By 9:30a.m., Stsson reported
patl of Meigs County SP.ffered th~t only two .c~stomers ~f!l still
power outages throughout the w1tb0u1 eiec~1C1ty. He anuc1pated
evening on Tuesday, and many all power bemg restored by noon
areas were without power on on Tuesday.
'

Flanigan, Michael R. Bailes, James
C. Piccarella, Lorena Adkins, Earl
C. Adkins, Paul R. Wines, Judy
Brown, Jack L. Roush, Larry A.
Lanham, Paul R. Wines, Jr., Junior
Melhorn, Frank E. Wine, Carroll D.
Moore, Ronald L. Wickline 11,
Johit Whisman. Ronald G. Dixon,
Darlene Garrett, Vernon L. Smith,
James L. Oliver, Elden R. Chase,
Robert H. Buck, n, John W, Cleodenio, JohMy A. Lynch, Larry V.
Chambers, Ronald A. Hinzman,
Keith H. Du{st, Candy Good, Gary
W. ·McCue, 'leff Hersman, Gamet
Hersman. H.L. Smith, Kevin S.
Continued on p11ge 10

TAM Construction
awarded major
contract for prf!ject

By Charlene Hoefticb
SeotiDel News Starr
Contracts on the Rutland waste
water collection ancl sewage treatment system were awarded by Rutland Villa~e Council at a meeting
Tuesday rughl
The major contract of
$1,605,761 went to T.A.M. Construction, Inc. of Westerville for
education assistance plan and a installation of the grinder pumps
401Kplan.
and all the lines to handle the waste
"This is a desperation tactic," . water and sewage.
.
Bowen added. "There's little subContract for the construction of
siBilces to the charges. The resl vio- the waste water treatment plant on
lence is being perpetrated by the the 26 acres behind the Rutland
company as it makes a mockery of Civic Center and ball fields went to
the labor laws "and the collective Mack Industries, Inc., VaUey City,
bargaining process, hiring scabs Ohio. The contract figure was .
and thugs disguised as security $330.811.50.
guards, installing barbed wire
The electrical contra~! was;
around tbe plant, refusing to bar- awarded to West End Electnc, Inc.f
gain," he said. .
Portsmouth in the amount o
"All of the company actions are $38,750.
In announcing the awarding of
intended to intimidate the workers
and deprive them of their right to the contracts, Mayor Jame ~ M.
picket peacefully.and baigain col- Fink noted that tbe bids accepted
lectively," Bowen stated.
'

Suit a public relations ploy: USWA

Scholarships available

:=k/:"of famil~= .=::·

ligation into the labor dispute.
About 1,700 union workers have
been off the job at tbe plant since
Nov. 1, when their contract ·
expired. The company says they
are on strike, but the union says
they were locked out.
· · The company aUeged the defendants have bombed two employees'
houses, shot at six ·more and damaged 27 Qthers; committed arson or
attenipted arson six times; shot out .
windows 37 times; assaulted 29
employees; made 43 deatb threats
and 86 threatening or harassing
phone calls: and damaged more
than 1,700 vehicles.

Company· officials cited 2,000
alleged acts of violence ranging
from attempted .murder through
house bombings to tossing jackrocks, or nails wielded together, on
roads in order to puncture tires.
'
Union members and others
"have continued a pattern of violence" amounting to a "criminal
conspiracy," said Donald Wor. Hedge, presiden! of Ravenswood
"It's a smokescreen, a-common
Aluminum.
tactic routinely used by union-bustHe said the defendants ~ave vio- ing companies," said Jim Bowen,
lated a federal judge's March Director of District 23 of tbe Unitinjunction barring tbe union and its ed Steelworkers o(America. in refmembers from harassing or tbreat- erence to the lawsuit flied Tuesday
ening workers at the Jackson Coun- by Ravenswood Aluminum CorpotyplanL
·
ration against a group of union
Local 5668 President Dan Slid- workers.
bam did not immediately return a
According to a release from the
telephone messages Tuesday.
Steelworkers, Bowen said tbe suit
- Among those named in the suit . is a public rel.ations jlloy by .the
wu Robert H. Buck II, a union · company, consistent w1th Its ongomember who last month was indict- ing auempt to break the union at
ed by a federal grand jury on the Ravenswood facility .
~Jwges he made two fragmentation
"Instead of wasting time and
. · grenades.
·
money ori frivolous lawsuits, the
· ' It was the only indictment stem - company shOuld be concentrating
ming from a u.s. auorney's inves- on reaching an agreement witb its

·Co"ection

of

lo Department
Liquor Co11trol lleard both sides
or tbt controversial "Smitty' s"
liquor Dcense transfer proposal
at a publk: llearlog at Pomeroy
Vi.Uaae Hall Tuesday. (Below) Robert aDd Carolyn Smitb have
requelted a transfer of tbe former Melp IDD license to an East
MaiD Street storefront; wbere
they pliD to open a ''sports" bar.
Rev. Roland WUdm1111 of 1'rillity
COJIII'eational Cbureh and Rev.
Dna Meadows of the Pomeroy
· United Methodist Cburcb spoke
out against the license transfer,
both churches having filed tbeir
opposition to tbe transfer witb
lbe Department of Liquor Control Their testimonies were augmented by tbat of Rev. Andy
M~ of the Pomeroy Cburcb or
Cbrlst. The Smiths were represented by attorney JobD R.
Lentes. Evideace was beard by
Hearing Officer Domlaic Pauz'era: A decision will be made by
Departlant Director John Hall
in approximately 8 weeks. (Top)
Interested dtlzens also listened to

RAC .accuses USWA ofracket~ering

units respond to four calls ·

&amp;:l•

Storm _·slams,.
Meigs County
late Tuesday ·

Juveniles located
after search
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2 Secllono, 14 Pogeo 25 oenla
A Multlmedi&lt;l Inc. -paper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll10, 1991 ·

Copyrighted 1991

Generat...

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Low toaigbl 1!1 JOs. Thursday,

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Coiltinued from page 1

funding for that project through the
- Ohio Department of Development.
. A second reading was given the
new Income Tax ordinance which
requires that each new resident register with the Income Tax Administrator within 30 days of establishing residency in the .village, and
that beginning on sept I, 1991 1!11
landlords who rent property 10
Middleport submit an up-to-date
J is1 of their tenants to the tax
administrator.
Again discussed w·as tbe accumulation of tires in lower Middleport Mayor Hoffman reported that
he had again brought tbe maiter to
the attention of tbe Meigs County
Health Department and that he had
spoken to the owner who assured
him that the tire situation will be
taken care within the next few
weeks.
Council passed ·a· resolution
·approving the specifications and
bid on the new fire truck which has
already been: ordered, and heard a
report from the mayor on Fire
Chief 1eff Darst's contact with
·state officials on what ean be done
about burned-out houses in the
community.
The mayor reported that the
closing date on the Meigs County
Department of Human Services'
new construction is April 17 and
that construCtion is expected to get
underway the end of April. The village also· signed a lease with the
Department for tbe use of the old
Nicholson house next to village
haD for offices during the construc•
tion period. All expenses of !enovation to make the house sullable
for the Department's use will be
assumed by that agency, it was
reported.

Ohio Lottery

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workers. We know tbat if the com- pany was interested in reaching an
. agreement, a deal co~ld get done
very quickly," Bowen stated in the
release.
Bowen said the company recently resched an agreement with Steelworkers at Vialco (Virgin Islands
Alumina Co.). The statement said
the plant is ·managed by Oral co
· Management Services and the
. USWA organized the wc;uk force
when the plant was raken over by
Oralco.
A company release stated the
agreement was a three-year con. tract which included a signing
bonus, hourly wage increases, an

were $119,678 under the anticipated figure which means that the village will have less to pay than had
originally been anticipated.
Meeting with Council last night
was Kent Baker and Art Carpenter,
Engineering Associates, and Pat
O'Brien, project attoraey. Carpenter will be tbe resident engineer for
the project which is expcct'!d to get
·underway sometime later this
spring.
The bids now must go to the
EPA for final approval, according
to Mayer Fink.
~ $2.1 million project is being
funded through grants from the
Environmental ProteCtion Agency
of $1.5 miUion, and Federal Issue
11. $617,000. The balance of about
$180,000 will be borrowed from
the Ohio Water Development
Authority at a low interest rate to
be repaid over a 15 year period
from the monthly u5et fees paid by
the propeny owners.

;...----Local briefs--- Personnel contracts awarded by M~igs B·oflrd
open Grange meeting scheduled

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The Rock Springs Granse will hold an open meeting on Thurs-

day. A potluck dinner wiD be$in at 7 p.m. with an auction to follow.
Fnends and neighbors are inVIted.·

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Scholarship applications availtible
Applications are now being accepted for the Charles S. Gibbs
Scholarship, which is administered by the Pomeroy A1110ni Association.
.
The scholarship is available to a jlladUSie liviD&amp; in Pomeroy who
plans to ente( tbe field of edacauon. The student receivinl the
scholarship mllst al10 plan to auend Ohio UnlvC:!:r': the University of Rio Grande and be an average aU-8IIJUJid
L ·
Those interested ill ajlplyina should laid an academic transcript,
resume, Jlhotl! and tell whicb college he or she planlto attend. The
informauon should be 10111 to AF.Il Smitb, in Cll'C of the Pomeroy
· Alumni Association, Lincoln Heighll, Pomeroy, Obio45769.
• According to Smith, the scholarship will be awarded by the
Pomeroy Alumni Association in accordance with guidelinea set
forth by the ~ehollnbip's originiiOr, Maripne Hartline.

By Cbarleae Hoeftlch
George Nagielslti, Kevin Sheppard, supervisor.
Also hired on supplemental con· Sendnel News Starr .
Jack Slavin, Linda Stanley. Becky
tracts
were Earl Young, assistant
Numerous ~t~~Cher and non-cer- Trent. and Nancy White. ·
high
school
principal, part-time;
tified personnel contracts for the
The board also voted to employ
and
head
teachers,
Becky Zurcher
1991-92 sehoollear wert awarded ·David Kucsma•as a teacher on a
for Middle~ Julie Hubbard for
at a meeting o the Meias Local continuing conbBCt.
"orie Feuy for RutB·oard of Education Tuesday night
Employed on supplemental con- Pomeroy,
land,
Mary
0'
rien for Salem CenGiven OI)C year contracts were tr11Cts for the next school year were
ter,
Ed
Bartels
for Salisbury, and
Cindy Allen, Marjorie Blake, Mike Stagp, hesd fOO!ball coach;
John
Amott
for
Meigs Junior High
Tammy Chapman, Donna Clark, ·Daryl Owens, assistant varsity
Christine Dowler, Tim Dunn, Rick footbaU; Jim Oliphant, cross coun- School.
The supplemental contracts
Edwards, Darla Kennedy, Lynll try; _Kevi~ Shepp~rd, head
were
awarded by a vote of four to
McCarley, Daryl Owens Linda wresdms; Rick Ash, gu-ls; volleyone
with
Board Mem bcr Robert
Smith, Mike Staggs, Shirl~y Van ball; Dale Harrisonville, sirls'
Snowden
casting
the "no" vote on
Meter, John Van Reeih, and Sandra assi•IBilt vollcyblll; Rldt Edwards.
Wallcer.
1irls' junior hish v~; John the basil that no ftlC()IIIIIIend
the ~tal contriCt
Awarded three year contracts Arnott, Jirls' junid.~ buket·
•
were Rick Ash, Paula Chancey, ball; Mike S~
f'acWdel Ients CIIIIO froQI the county
inrendenL
Snowden
stated
that
be
Teresa Davis, Tqnil)'_Dingess, J o care; El e 101'
yeedloolt;
Dunn, Vicki Haley, Miry O'Brien, • taao~ '*14 -lOr, John hu been advised by the school's
and Ann Van Maire. Five year con- Vlln
, M'V..t bind clirec:tar. 1epl COIIilel tbaiiUCb -.nen.
aac11 were PveiiiO s~ Ash Jolin Arnott, John Redovian and dldonl n Jeqllbocl
John
AmoU
awlrded
a supKennetb Eblin. Jon! Jefth. alrfi Mllte Wllfoaa, J'lid'-: B\eanor
plcmental
contniCt
for
the
posltilln
Mathews Crow, Dcborlh Muuer, Blaett~r, librarian and library

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of junior high athletic director by a
vote of three to two. Casting the
"no" votes were Snowden and
Larry Rupe.
Non-certified J!er59nneJ hired on
two year contracts beginning witb
the 1991-92 school year were Bernice Garnes, Ruth Pearson, and
Kathryn Powell, cooks, and Donna
Grueser, aide. all part-time positians.•Given continuing conuacts
were Katherine Desldas, bus driv. er; Joe Anthony, Tun Kauff, custodians;, Cathy Edward$, Yvonne
Youna. secretaries• and Denise
WUiilms, tilde.
_
'The boud voted to non-renew a
number of supplemental tonlrlets
for the 1991-!12 achool year on the
bull that 111011 are not cerlified and
by law mull be noa-renewed in
order to lllow cerdfiad penonnel.
to apply for the politiolll
Continued oo paae 10
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Commentary

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Pag8-2-The Dl,llly sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Wednesday, Aprll10, 1991

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By TOM WITHERS
(Jp(
Writer

The · Daily Sentinel :·Frozen assets hurt American businesses
Jack Anderson
lll Couri S&amp;ree&amp;

PomeroJ, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTEKESTII
OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher ·

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HOEFl-ICH
. General Mauacer .

.CHARLENE

PAT WHITEHEAD .
Aulllanl Publllber/Conlroller
·A MEMBER.of The\]nlied Press International, Inland Dally Press
ASIOCiatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers ASIOCiatiQn,
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to edltlne and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unslgnec!' letters wUI bepub115hed. Letters should beln good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

. ties.

Security precautions being
lifted, but not all of them

WASIDNGTON • The embar~o
· on trade between Iraq and the Umt·
ed Stares was designed to put the
squeeze on Iraq, but some Ameri·
can companies say they are the
· ones feeljng the pinch. They're
happy 10 oblige current foreign pol·
icy, but it may cost them their businesses.
.
Joseph Kilani, export manager
for Top Value Auto Exports of Mt.
Vernon, N.Y., has had a particular·
ly lOugh eight months. His company exports parts for General
Motors cars, and he lost $3 million
because Saddam Hussein decided
10 invade KuwaiL
Top Value once concentrated its
business in Saudi Arabika, but in
1985, the company began sending
auto parts to Iraq too. By 199(),
Iraqi purchases made up half t6he ·
company's business. That was

because the Iraqi government·
bought 30,000 GM cars in the
1980s from GM Canada. Malibus,
Celebrities and Cullasses. GM
Canada' even sent technicians to
Iraq to train Iraqi mechanics. and
the company drew up plans to build
a plant in Iraq. Top Value kept the
spare pans coming.
Kilani was paid through an
American bank thai held accounts
for IraQ. But when President aush
onlered a freeze on Iraqi assets
after the invasion, Top Value's .
'money for pans already delivered
was frozen 100• Kilani couldn't col·
lect.on what he had already shipped
to Iraq and he lost his best cus·

authorize payment 10 Kiiani, but
the bankers were prohibited from
having such a meeting under
Bush's executive order mandating
the freeze.
Th e Trea s ury De par t me·nl •
which is enforcing the freeze, final·
ly agreed that Kllani should get hi!;
•-re. Iraq's
money, but 1't was roo "'
letter of credit with the American
banlc exp~ two months af~Cr the
invasion.
-Kllani is loolcing forward 10 the
day when the United Nations
embargo against' trade with Iraq is
lifted so he can~ back to business
as usual. Kllan1 told our reporter·
Jonathan Ullman, "If we have to
close the· business, who will win?
~.ff~ics after the invasion, the The Japanesed or the Germans
Iraqi Embassy, .in washington will.~
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offered to meet with the 'liank and '
The compames are looJcing to
• · Kuwait to take up lhe slack as that

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINOTON (UPI} - Wilb the terrorist threat receding in tile
postwar period, many of the security precautioos thai were rushed into
effect in Washington are being lifted. But 1101 all.
,\ · . -~
No one probably will ever know the extent of pmenual terronsm that
existed during lhe Persian Gulf War. There wei'C scattered attacks around
the world that can be attributed direct!)' to the war, bul none occum:d in
the United States. How many were mpped by the FBI, Secret Service,
Customs Service and police is not known.
.
·
With the end of the war and a diminished lhreat of r.errorism, the Slrin·
gent security was eased: A good example was the resumption of the White
House toun. A bad example is the Capitol.
For some reason, Congress cannot get enough security, so as soon as
the war began, new measures were promptly !nstitufCII.
. .
Big, ugly concrete lUllS now rim the Cap110l coowlex; large, ID8J6SUC
dogs {rolic in search of bombs; some new, ~-~nSitive detectors guard
the entrances. Much mm-e might be out of public sight.
·
these most recent innovations 10 what is corulidered the peoples'
building are pennanenl Once Congress got,rolling, it has refused 10 dismantle any security precaution.
·
While other branches of government are easing off, Congress wants
even more. In the recent so-called dire emergency appropriations bill,
Congress beefed up security.
·
The CapitOl Police had requested 10 more positions to check freight
that is brought into the builtlin~. Pi!IS I:Z additional K·9 dog teams.
The House felt that five more freight-handlers were adequale and did
not sec the need for any more dogs hanging around The Senate said the
10 positions were .warranted, as well as another dozen dogs.
. The final compromise provided money ftr 10 freight handlen and six
of the K·9 reams. The dogs can be new but the bandlers are supposed to
be palrolmen with lrainq and a raise.
The SeDate-House negotiators said they would re-evaluate the needs of
the hounds when considering the fiscal 1m IIP.propriation bill 10 run
Con~. Chances are good that the dog lovers will prevail.
Little by liule, the security incn:ases and the proposal to ring the entire
Capitol ~ wilb a fence, seriously suggested, seems to be gelling
closer and clos«.
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True, the Capitol haS been bombed twice, certainly a letiiiisr&amp;!fac"i:7"
Both, however, came 100 late at nighl to injure anyone.
·
By contrast, airports, considered a far mm appealing ~et for terror·
ists arc relaxing some of their security. For inslance, airlmes are now
all~wed to resume curbside check-ins, although parking within a 100 feel
is prohibited.
· ·
When Saddam Hussein and his
The·strangest Gulf War security s10ry beloogs to the State Departmenl Republican Guard ovemm Kuwait
Last January, it requested the elimination of four nearby bus stops, saying last August, we were compelled to
that bus traffic could pose a threat.
take a quick and firm stand. We
Ten weeks after the .request, the slOps were eliminated -a month after were comp~lled 10 make it
the end or th'e war.
·
( lll!equiVOCally clear to the govern·
~---------------------., men1
of Iraq that its aggression
,.
would not stand and that the rightI
.
ful borders of Kuwait would be

·M~

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ATKLETE
YOU PROFESSOR!
BY

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I T\-\ll'lK 1-\E'S

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J"OVE,

GOT IT!

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GO\ IT!

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Meu

sniaflt Ill dlo eiJblh 'tar tbo wiD'
IDd IW l..ladna!l pitcbecl die ninlh
for lbe 11ft.

"to7,Giatl4

Qa1p 1, Bnva raiDid Old !

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OPEN· HOUSE BIG SUCCESS· Arouad
300 people atteaded the open bo. . 011 SundaJ .
. lfterDOOD 'a t tbe MelliS Golf Club. Golfers were ·

able lll .eatoY tree pll ID perfect wutller. Pailll
Slm011lllll Pat O'Briea are the new OWDers aad
opentors the~·

or

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Con. Clarence' :
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Miller
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pie fleeing their homeland in fear not ease lbe suffering for thos~ ~:
11'8qis who want 10 see Saddam ::
for their lives. .
But we must remember that the Hussein removed from power and ·.
U.N sanctioned green light 10 use who have put their lives and lh~ , ·
force, and the subsequent approval lives of theu families on lhe line to :•
given 10 such actions by the United accomplish that end.
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Furthermore, in that the Iraqi ..;
Stales Congress were predicated on
the condition that once the rightful military is in violation of lite tenns ··
borders of Kuwait were restored of the cease fire with respect to the ,
intended use of military heli: ::
that military actions would cease.
Now lbat he has survived that copters, 1 think we should shoot out·· ,
war, we still hope that events with- of the sky any Iraqi helicopters thai ·· ,
in Iraq's borders "'!ill lead to his are being used in an offC!JSiv,e mill- ·
overthrow, but agli.in we have no tary manner against Kurdish and
mandate or authority to become Shiite rebels or to shoot upon
directly involved •in IJialdng lliat defenseless refugees streaming
toward the Tllrlcish and Iranian bor·
happen.
•
· The realization of having a total· de~.
Admittedly, we don't want our
itarian regime remain jn place is
not a pleasant one, but at the same troops to become embroiled, in an
time one should remember that Iraq open-ended war in _Iraq, nor do we
rem11ins isolaied from the world ' hav.e any authority 10 commitlbeni:
community; one should remember to such an undertaking, but al th~·
same time, I think we owe it 10
that Iraq will be Shorn pf any capabil ily 10 wage war and mass those that have courageously stood
up in defiance to Saddam to pro·.,
destruction outside its borders.
This realization of course does · vide lhelil a means for sun ivai.
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funds _disappea~ at alaroiing rate

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (NBA) the previously identitied loss- vari·
. Auditors dispatChed 10 the Bureau ously estimated at $200 billion 10
of Indian Affairs financial center $500 billion • resulting from the
here are attem,Pting lri locate $95 widely publicized insolvency of the
milliOn in missmg BIA money • but Federal Savings and Loan Insur·
that's only a modest example or ancc Corporation.
what one official describes as "a
very scary situati011 for lhe federal
Criminals may have absconded
'government and the American tax· with the BIA's missing money · or
payer."
the funds may be intact bul improp·
U.S. Comptrol'ler General erly accounted for by employees of
Charles A. Bowsher says inade· . ·an Interior Department agency
qwue controls on public funds and · notorious for its sloppy fmancial
other management deficiencies practices and other haphazard man·
within numerous government agemenl procedures.
depanments and agencies may be
A team of investigators has dis·
responsible for more than $100 bil- covered that some BlA employees
lion wonh of additionallo~.
atiempl to balance agency accounts
Moreover, !hat ~~'.tmclude by constantly shifting money from

recora

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Robert Walters.
. Agency's acc6unling pracliees are:i
.

so inaccurate and unreliable that40 ,
percent of its accounts receivable·:
don't balance
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.• The Defense Department'·s.;
procurement practices are so slop-:;
py that it routinely pays for goods.1
never ,received and can't locate ..
some of the items in its inventay. ··
·
The ielltedy for those problems •
d~ 't require lhe passage of new :
laws. Indeed, numerous staiUtes :;
including the Budget and Account: .
ing i\ct of 1921, lbe Budget ani!';
Accounting Procedures Act of ·
• 1950 and lbe Federal Managers' :
Financial Integrity Act of 1982 • :
already mandate fiScal responsibili~ .•
.ty.
,.
AICPA says the nation needs a ;
chief financ~ officer who has gov· ·
emme~ll·w•de ~esponsibilily for .
recording, mon1tonng and report· · ·
i~the public on the status of all :
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ICCOWIIS.

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In 1802, President Thomas Jefferson call~ for the overbaul and •
simplificati011 of the federal gov- ·

emmenl' s f111811CCs 10 make the111
"clear and intelligible as a merchant's books, 10 that every member of 'C011gress .00 every mali
any mind in the Union should be .
able 10 comprehend them, 10 investigate abuses and consequently lQ .
conlrollhcm."
. ·,
. Almost two centuries later, that·
goal remains unall8ined
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1111 to Neal Ia the elahth laalag or TueadaJ •.
ulpt's Nadollal League pme apinlt~
In tbe C.ba' home opener, whldi the
· ·won ~1. (UPJ)

· OUT AT SECOND _ After CbleaiO Cubs
sbartltop Slulwon DllllllOIIIallel tile ~brow from
catdler Dallloa Berrybill, tile St. Loall Cardl·
nail' Rex Hudler II out at ~ bale after try·

,Aroun d 300
on hand for Nicklaus deserves.shot
0£!~m~?~~~eople

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:Connon

proved

Burke "!liked Mike La Vallier~
wilb die ...,IOided 10 fom: in a
run IDd dim bit Glry lteiU 011dle
elbow, ecorin&amp; lbe e-IUII piiiOwinner. Bob Kipper retired tluee
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one account 10 another. In other
cases, inexplicably delayed entries
are posted weeks after transactions
•
occur.
''
But Bowsher, who heads the
'·•
General AccountiJg Office in
Washington, D.C., suggests that the
lack of adequate fiscal conttols
here is matched on a far larger
scale throughout lhe country.
Among the losses he believes have
~ '
been S\lftained llY the federal gov·
ernment's insurance,•credit and
other programs:
Fanners Home Administration,
$26 billion; Commodity Credit
(!J 199 1 by NEA. Inc ttr .
Corporation, $12 billion; ExponImport Bank, $6 billion; Depart·
ment of Education, $5 billion;
Dopanment of Housing and Urban
Development, $S billion; Depart·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - menlofDofense, $10billioo.to $20
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billion.
By Uliited Prnslnterutional
Sharif in 1932 (age 59); and sports commentator John Madden in 1936
In many instances, the problems
,
(age 55}.
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are well known. At HtJD, for
: Today iS Wednesday, AJril 10, lhe I DOth day of199l with 265 to
instance, the estimated losses arc
;follow.
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On this date in history:
.
liilked 10 a scandal involving far·
· The moon II Wllllllg, mO\'IIlg toward 118 new phase.
In 1864, Austrian Archduke Maximilian became emperor of Meximer senior officials tltat received
: The IIIOIIIini sun are Venus, Mm and Salllm.
co.
considemble (IUbHcity in !he put
· The~ are Merclll')' llldJupiter.
In-1945, the Nazi coni:entrati011 camp at Buchenwald was liberated
butlw remuaed unresolved for
: Tbole .,._..-oillhl.s elite arc under the slln of Aries. They include U.
by the U.S.80th Division.
.
several years.
Adm. Malihew Pary, who COIICluded die firlt treaty between Japan
In 1963, lbe U.S. nuclear submarine "Thresher" sank in the
· The White House Office of
· ·~the United S111181, in 1794; BOldier, ~1011111 and novelisl Lewis
Atllmtic Ocean 220 miles east of Boston. AII129 men on board were
Management and'Budaet maintains
:walllce. aulbar of "Bell Hur,'' in'l827; William Booth, founder of the · losL
·
··
·
of "hlgh risk list" ldentifying
:salvation Almy, in 1829; journalist .00 pbblishcr Joseph Pulitzer in
In 1971, the U.S. table tennis ican! arrived in China,lhC first Ameri·
scores of government programs
iJ847· F I - Plltdnl, lhc first woman Cabinet llleDiber, in-1882; poet
can group 10 penetrate the so-called ·'Bamboo .Curtain •• since the
that could ccist taxpayers billions of
•and Ptuii»&gt;P Kablil Giblin in 1883; journalistllld diplomat Clare
19SOs.
dollln if management weakne11es
;Booih LaCe in 1903; 11C10n Harry Morpn in 191S (age 76), Chuck
In 1987,the SIBle of Utah began pumping water from the Great Salt
remain unresolved. Some examin 1!121 (qe 70), Max Vllll Sydow in 1929 (age 62) and Omar
Lake 10 reduce damaging
water levels. The pumping created a
pies:
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500- square-mile late on lhe Bonneville salt flats.
.
• The Envirollmenlsl Protec:tion

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0 day zn

:f.;

rally r~r tile victorJ' 111 a 1ame
delayed mont lbaa two boun by
111n. RBII:ialllllln die lleVIIIIb by
JOIIOUndancfJayBellbelpedPiiUbargb cl01e10 3·21Dd in dleeighlh ·
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your directi011 you doii 't have a lot
of time for deep and deliberate.
lhoughl
You have to react and react
quickly and hope lbat the action
you take is appropriate. Iraq's military annexation of Kuwait demand·
ed in j mmediate response. It
demanded positive action not soul
restored.
searching vacillation. Thanlt good·
At the time, we dido 't have the n~ss our President, our military,
option 10 weigh the ramifications and the majority of lhe members of
_, of our actions; we dido 't ,have the the U.S. Congress along .with the
option to go_through a series of full cooperation and suppOrt of the
"what if' type scenarios. World members of the allied coalition
order demanded a firm and w,ere able to provide for such ·
' forthright pronouncement on the action.
pan of lhe international community
One cannot debate that the after·
that Saddam Hussein's outlaw math of our swift success in carryactions would not be tblerated.
'ing out the mandate of the U.N.
. There are some Mooday morn- Security. Coun_cil resolutions 10 lib·
ing quarterbacks now contending erate Kuwait is causing peace-lovthat our government was short- ing peoples everywhere considersighted in committing American able anguish and disttess. No one
troopS to the Persian Gulf wilboul a
likes to see innocent people
well thought out and thoroughly maimed and killed; no one lilres to
planned policy. Unfortunate!¥, , sec hundreds of thousandS.of peowhen someone has a gun aimed m

Publ~c

·
T~'• win.
It's only lWO pmea iDio die Bell· ·
Two .OUII away hal a 1.0 loas,
son but ~y Huble Brooks is RickCetolle,a.edbytboMelaiD
!JclpiQa Now Ycct MeiB fau ...__. ihe winter alta''be MB ~J:qsd by
DalryfSiniWbeny.
·-.- the New ~act Yankees, bolllerDd
Broab, re-acquired by the Mels to send the pme IIIIo anlnoillgs
in the olf·11e81Cl111n a trade with the IIDd reliovec Doug SiDions pitched
Los Aqelel Dcidaal, ,_ the hero tw~ scoroloaa ian logs in his first
far tbo leCCIIId aa.iabt game Tues- - major-lcque appearance for !he
day, bolting a two-0111 bomor in lhe wiD.
10111 innina 10 give Now York a 2·1
"This is one of !bote ·aames
·victory over the Philadelphia where we'll look .'blck later and
Phillies.
.
.
remember that we were not
. In lbe Motssoason opener on posed 10 will' tbe blllpmc,"
Monday B!Wb' delayed sleal of Ceroae, whOle hoi.- iD biJ
home
lirlle~the lame-win- fim •·l!ltU a MeL "'Ibis II aolng
net iD a2-llriumpb.
.
to pay oft later."
"Doing Uoetbing positive and
Cerone hit a 1·1 pitch from
havina it como back 10 you - . Ropr McDowell IIIIo dlo left-anthat's imporllllt," said Brooks lelficldblschmiOiiclhcgame.
who ~ly played for the
"I'm 11ot a home-run hiller," he
in 1984 bclm bein&amp; dealt 10 Mon· said. "I just. tried io hit the ball
tn:a1. "I've come to a JOOd place, bard and mlll!lged 10 gel one up
so 10 win a eouple of games right there."
off lbe bat really makes me f~l
In lhe 10111, Brooks hit a high 2good.."
·
1 delivery from Joe Boever into the
.. The Mell promised a new look second deck just inaide lbe left.·
this 8CIIOII and two odJa' new ros· field pole.

... I was just bopina it stayed ·
fair,",Broob llid.
Elsewhere in tile Natioaal
Leape, SL Louil roppeclChlol&amp;o
4·1, Pil&amp;lblqb llipped Manllal43, Sin DitiO doWIIed San Fllllc:il·
co 7-4 and Los ADJOies and
' Allanta were ~aed b)' l'lin.
.
·.
~-- ., Cullll
AI Chu:qo, two rua-scoriq
fielder's cbaice plays and • inflold
RBI sin&amp;lo -~ Cnli&amp; y.'ilul keyocl
a dlree-run ejplb lnn•a1, wtlni lhe
Cardinllls and spoiling tile Cubs
.homo opoaer. Brrn Smilb, 1·0,
scauored fopr hils over seven
innlnp, fur the win and Leo Smidt
pitched lhe ninth for a save. Daallv
Jactson, wu !he loser. CoiJ!m~·
sioner Fay V1ncent and Illillo•s
Gov. Jim B~ were among a
crowd of 31
wbo braved ICifD·
~in tbo low 40s. .
·
Plrlttl., bJI!Ii 3 ,_;
· Al .Pltuburgh, MIJ!drell re.....er
Tim Bura gave up a bues-lolded
walk and bit a baner with lhe baleS
loaded in lh~ eiahth i~nlnJ to
enable lbe Putsburgh .Puates 10

'

I

I THINK 1-\ES

''

.
nation begins shopping around for_
the thin~s il needs 10 rebuild
.• .
Whi e few high-tech f11111s put
most of their eggs in the Iraqi bas• •
ket, American fanners arc a differ.· "
ent story. Before the invasion, IraQ ··
was the lOib largest recipient of
.U.S. food ex)Xl'IS. It was the eij!htli :
largest consumer of AmertcaJI' ..
wheal in the year before the inva• ·
sion.Irail also bought20 J1CfCCDl of '
aU American rice exports.
·
· The loss of Iraq as a.customer-· ·
won't cripple the American wheat' ··
· industry, according to the National ".•
Association of Wheat Growers, but
it doesn't help a market that is :•
already flooded with too m\Jci)
wheat.
·

Nldidnn• played a !up 1*1 iD

.

I

STUDENT·

and Dale Van Attli :

1e1

..
...., .

We owe them -their survival

Berry s World

Brooks' lOth~inning homer gives Mets 2-ltwin over Phils · :~

.

at Ryder Cup tea~ slot

r--T-he-D-.n-yS-en-tin-el-. .:_
"
Pulllllhed OYOI'Y . - - , Monday
throuab Friday, U1 Court It, Pomeroy, Obla, Ill' 1M Olllo Valle)' l'llblllhtq ComDanJ:altlmlllla, tne..

•

'•

auended Sunday's open house of
BJ MIKE RABUN
one, 811d maybe two, players to be
' the Molal Golf Course. The course 1
on his team. Teri players will quali·
· UPI Sports Wrlltr
was formally called Jaymar Golf
AUGUSTA, Ga. CUPI)- Dave fy for the tt.8m through a two-year Pomeroy. Ohio'' , PIJ, 112-21!11. Be- '• ·
Club ,and is located off State Route Stockton has won a Couple or PGA . points race and this y~ar's PGf. cond elaot pootqt paid al Poinoroy, •
·ohio.
' '
.
., ·
7, oorth of
championships and' bu been a pro- winner willl110 qualify. .
•· Pat O'Brien · Paul Simon arv:: fessiOIIII golfer Cor 27 ,ears so he
If the PGA Winner bas already
the a6w ownon and operators of has been around the bloCk a tilne or qualified, or if he is a DOD·Ameri·
die caunc. Wodt c:rewa bave been two.
~
·
· •
can and ahua ,not eligible for lbe
busy aU wl!lltr IDd spring making o..
That means he probably nocds Ryder Cup ~m. Stockton will
impJOVCIIIeDIIIO lhe courre.
. no advice when it comes to this have two wild-ca'd picks.
. · A~onatho aclivlties taking Seplem!)or~s Ryder Cup ma~hes. .
And lhe advice .here Is that
- IU Oluit
&lt;banal
ID Tbe Dally -IDol,
!k., ., '
p~ Sunday wu 11 ~ble and
in which he will play a pronunent StockiOn 1110 a pick, even if il i.s his I'08'I_'MAS'I'I
~.Oblo...
pulllllg COIIIeiL Oolfen were able role. Some advice, however, is onl.r,:e,tochoole1aclcNicklaus.
to play the coune 011 Sllllday free rorthcomlng. .
.
silullion could chango, or
IHJ. . . . IIGN M'1'11
of Cluqe,lherc Wlllllo free enter·
StoctiOII will C111J11in the Ameri· course. Stock!On does not bave 10
o..wtlk
...................................a• •.
-~----tainment and free fo~. for the can team that wilf try 10 win the make his decision until after the , Olio....................,..............
gueaL ..
· cup from lbe :s~ squad for PGA in August and by then Nick· ODe y...- ,................................ 111.10
·
the·rltSt time sux:e f983!
laus might have other lhlng~ to '!a .
IINOL&amp;OOn
.As captain, Stockton will have like building a golf course 1.n llaily ...........\ ...................../ :. 21 C.ata
BuebaU
the opponunity 10 choose at least Surma or the Lesser Antilles.
Arizona State outfielder Mike ·
Kelly was rated lbe top college
prospect for the 1unc amateur draft
by Baseball America. Kelly is hil·
No oubloriPIIona Ill' IUD porm- Ill
ting .373 wilb 9 homers and 32
._, whm hclml .,...,MI' III'Vloe 11
· : PlJTfiNG CONTEST • LIIII·Woods or Mlddleporllllkes part
avaUable.
·
·
far ASU. lie M1 followed 011
Ia !he pultlna COIIte&amp;t durin&amp; tbe Suday allemoon open boa1e at . RBI
the list by Penn outf'10lder Doug
tile Melp Golf Coune. Tile eourse - ronu111 tile Ja)'llar Golf ' Glaaville,
and pitchen John Burke
Clab, jut off ol Stale Route 7 aartb ol Pomero7. ·
o( Fldridl, Tyler Green of Wichila
Stale and Fnnkie Rodripoz of .
Howard (Toxu) Junior Col!.
The &amp;o,ton Red Sox own lbe • 11
to Rodriauez, and he can •I gn
. bef&lt;R lhe draft.
. .
Colleae .
.
_. Former NBA star Nate "Tmy"
Stanley,
Tara Archibald is a candidate for lhe
- The Meigs Marauda' girls soft• Compston,
ball team op.ened their season Humphreys, Taylor, Gerlach each a head basketball coacbina job at ·
rccenlly by wiDnilil tw'o of tbeir single.
Norfolk State UniYIIftlty. School
In lbe win over Federal Hoclc· officials plan to ' Interview
first three games.
'
· The La&lt;ly Marauder's began ing, tho Lady Mara11dera scored Archibald on Thursday and Frida.Y· ·
with a S·2 loa 10 Gallipolla, and nine runs in the fint innlna and Albletic Director Dick Price says ·
came back 'to pick up wins over wai never headed, Taylor and Archibald is one of the fmal four
Federal Hocldng (19·2) and Missy Sisson tripled 10 lead lbe candidates to be Interviewed ....
Meigs attack, Stanley doubled, Michigan SIIIC University basket·
Alexander (12-7).
.Ia the first game apin• Gallia whife Compston, Baer, Yvette ba~\:t Parish Hickman was
Academy,
tiiC Bluc 1:Jels Young, Sara Pullins and Mary sc
far arraipunent TIICiday
. jumped out 10 111 early 1~
in Compston each linlded. Gerlach in U.S. District Court in Grand
. . thlllirst inning. Holildren reached wu the Yfinnlna' pitdier for Meias. Rapids, Mich.,' after &lt;being arrested
In IIIIi wiD over Alexander, lbe on campus while allopdl)' trying
· on a Marauder error adYaDced 10
Marauden
ICOied iD every inning to sell coclllno to an aaden:over
second on a fielder choice and
acoml 011 a lingle by Wlllller. The bul the firsl emoute 10 the 12·7 win
from lhe U.S. Drug Baf'orce·
muc Angles acored two 11110ar11ed over lhe Lady Spartans, Siason, agent
ment Administration. Assistant
runs in tfJc second inniag without Baer and Weaver led the Maralcr U.S. Attorney James Radford in '
· thll benefit of a base bit 10 mak'e it hiiJ*ade wilb a double and a sin~ Grand Rapids said Hickman, 21,
gle eacb, wbile Compston and would lle charged wiih auempted
3.0 iD favor of Oallipolili. .
The Lady Marauders cut the PullinJ added slnaJe ·each. GerlaCh delivery of a conuolled lllbllance
lead 10 one by picking up aingle Wlllhe winnln&amp; pitcher.
.
with iniODIIO deliver ~cs.
in the fourth and fifth iDnings.
~he fourth, Ginger Findley
reached 011 an error, allvanced on a
single by Tara Gerlach and rode
honie .on a single by Trica Bacr. In
Wt are proud Ia amounct le our
the fifth inning Kristen Stanley led
.FarJiotrs lar* rutlllllltn that ••
· olf the Malauder half of the iMillg
haft Clnc!N.II ltrlt ilaNINIH
wfth a single, after Stanley stole
lichtt
.,..._.. fer lht •lire
•
second Chrissy Taylor singled to
.
. ....... ,.., • ,....... ,... ill lha
make ita 3-2 game. ·
ttatiMn. let us htlp with , _
. . 'The Blue Anales scored two
ni•t
trip It ClnclnnMI te '" lha
runs in the seventh to rowid out the
Ill· latl Mlclllllt Ill IICiillll C-'1
scoring. Adims led off the inning
•
tNey ,. . .tells.
by reaching on ari error and
I
advanced on a single by Houldren ·
..... .
t..
J
•
where they both sccnd 011 a double
' .
- ~--""·'.
WITH . .
st.09
0111 Walker.
l..
and .
Harmon was tne starter
wm•
. nor far the Blue Devils. Walter had
lhe bi1 bat for the winnen with a
'
I
Ill" II
double and a single and Houlchen ·
"It
w t1• • • ruuey
•••• .
bad a sinale, Betz 18d a Games ·
c PO.IOY, OM
PIL HI-tiS.
cblp)led iD with alliDIJe eacll.
'
911·1111 .
•Garlach wa lhe.IOIOt for lbe
PIII ..... J
• • 1
Mal•4'n. BMrlod . . Mlrllldm
......~........... f11K:
aJ Jllildllywilla
a:Ji1,
had !WO
.. , V11111

Pom:J'.

.

...

Sports briefs

~eigs

softball team off
to a good start thus far

Special of the Week!.

LET US HELP
TAKE YOU TO TH

.

CHICKEN PAniE · ·

S1.39

BALL.!i-!••!••••

a-"..

Your

ADOLPH'S DAllY YIUJY ·,

.·-

- ~ :Farmers "...,
Bank

n.

die~-

IIIII=•• ·

J' .

l

•

.

·-

•1\

..

.•, ,....,_

�.

.
Ohio

10,1811

I

,

Oakland tops Minnesota 7~2

WEDNESDAY
. School/Meigs Induslries.
PORTLAND - the Freedom
Gospel Mission Church will have
. ,REEDSVILLE • Revival
revival Tuelda~ through Saturday throu h S nda t Ed U · ed
11 7 p.m. ni
y with Rev. Juruor
'
. Brethien
g inu Christ
y aChurch.
en 7mt
p.m.
Conger from Sandyville, W.Va. each evening. Bob Wisemaa 'will
: : : .R.G. Willford Sr. invites the be the speaker.

a.

.

POMEROY ·, T_he Pomeroy
Mercliants AssociatiOn will meet
Wednesday at noon in the conference of Bank One in Pomemy. AU
membersareurgedtoattend
·
REEDSVILLE • Revival at
Eden United Brethren in Christ
Church through Sunday at 7 p.m.
eac!he·bspc;aker
nlg
. hll.
h ·Bob Wiseman wiU ho

a:::r;

==~:.:!~W:::::

GOOD JOB, DAVE- Oaldaad's Da~e Hen·
de...- -who moments earlier got extension
or Ills at-bat after Minnesota's Kirby Puckett
: dropped a foal ny baU - aets blab nves from

•n

•

~ashington, Buffalo, New
Bt;;~~d~;n Rockets 103_93
Jersey, Hartford NHL victors

ByDEANSCHABNER
straight win. Dominique Wilkins scored 31 points, including a pair
.
.
.
11PI SJII!l'IS Writer '
led the Hawks witll 25 points to of three-poillt baskets in the final
E By BaL TAGGART · dangerous Ciccarelli. TiWen, Cic- Rangers 10 a 1-0 lead 4:o4 inm the
When Hilkeem Olajuwon weni help end the Cavaliers' three-game two minUies 10 lift the Magic.
~
UPJ Sports WrUer
carelli and tough-guy center Dale gam~. ICOl'ing his fourth goal ofthe · down with an eye injury midway 'winning streak. Larry Nance .Jed loss offiCially elimina!ed die Clip.
;.: After being shut out for nearly . Hunter were grouped or\ the line as series aflor taking a centering pass through the season, the· HoustOn Clevelalld with 2A points. ·
pers from playoff cOIItenlicia. T&amp;c
ifive IJilriDda over three games. .tile a shakeup on Murray's pan.
from Darren Turcotte . .Jt was Rockets regrouped and started.a
Paeen 12:Z, Hornets 120
· . Clippers have not- post eN 111
.~ashiDgton Capitals got their
"You try to look for a little · NichoUa' 1811! goal in his last 25 stretch drive thai haS them in the . In Charlotte, Reggie Miller's play since 1!17~. when they were
flffenae Tuesday from unlikely ma~ic when you pul lines wgeth· p'Tt:pmee.
·
thick of the race for the. Midwest · Jumper with 7.2 secODds gave the stiU known u the Buffalo Bnives.
...._
er • said Murray who is more
appeared N' ,,_
Division championship.
Pacers their Olliy leld of the second a.lel SmidiiCOied 27 points far
f'Cbe'cter Dave Tippett and prOne 10 changing lines thali some aga~n · 86 seco.:':t':&gt;iat~,:~
When Olajuwon sat down witll . half. Dctlef Schlemp( led the Pac- Loll Anples.
~OICCI' Alan May sco1cc1 to boost . of his colleagues. •''J,'he comple· , wraparound gila!, but Joe Kocur four fouls Tuesday nigllt, lbe Rock· ers wilb 23 Poinu and Miller finKJap 113, MaftrieU 104
(lie Capitals 10 a 3·2 victory over ment was tllere, so I thought I'd was called for interference as ets packed it in.
. ished witlllO. Rex Chapman led
At SacramentO, Calif., Li011el
Jbe New Yodc Raagers in Game 4 give it a try." ·
Nicholls.wu1lkllll his sbot. ncgat·
Clyde Drelt!er scored .nine seven Oaarloue double-figure scor-. Simmons scored·3S points 10 lead
'/Jf tbe first-roand playoff series,
Said Tippett "Dine and Hunter· ing the ICOre. The ruling raised no JlOints a~d Terry PC?rter add~d ers w.llh 20. Tyrone Bogues missed the Kings and put himself in the
~vening the best-of-seven Patrick attract a crowd. Sometimes that objection flan the Rangers.
seven dunng ~~ s 29·9 third a dnve through ~he lane at the league lead for scoring among
;pivilioa semifinal at 2-2. Game s leaves an opening for me. Dine
The CapiiBls Imotted the score :huaner run while c;&gt;~won was .on ~that could have forced over·. rookies. He now averages 18.1
1s Thurscllly in New York.
made a great pass and I KOt my · atl-1 just 2S
into the sec·
e ~ench, era.siDg a l~·pomt time.
points per game, just higher than
, "When your back Is against the stick on it and just got it by. ' .
ond period. Kevin Hatcher tOOk a deficn and Sl*lciDa the Trail Blaz·
Tlmberl!Olves 109, Nets 99
the 17.9 average for New Jersey
,...aU, you're going 10 do whatever
The Capitals made it 3-1 mid· pass from Tippett, and after I ali ers to a Ig3-93 v1ctory over the
At , Mtni!C.apohs, . Tony rookie Derrict ColemaD. Simmons
!5'ou can to win the gsme,'' said way tllrough the third period when Erixon lmockcd .hiDi off his skates Rockets.
.
Campell 8 24 pomts led Minnesota bmiecl' 14-of-27 liom the field and
J:apitals head coach :rmy Murray, May jammed in a rebound' for his he backhanded the puck
t Miki
. "Unfonuniltely for them, they and extel!ded the N~ road losing grabbed 11 rebounds 10 lead the
~hose team avoided heading intO first career. goal in 19 pll!yoff ·Richter from less dian S~t The ' di«!n't stop us durinl that stretc~," s~ak to 19. feltOn Spencer con· /,. Kings. Rolando BlaCbnan led Dal~cw Yortfacins elimination.
games: May had only four goals CapiiBls had not sc:O'Cd on R; hter . sa1d Portland head coach it1ck ~buted 17 points, 13 rebounds and las with 26 points
~ ·Tippett's go-ahead goal with this regular
in the
·ous 95 minutes
one AdelfW!ll. "We got some of their f1ye blocked shots .and Pooh
·
;!1:291eft in the second period made
The Rangers narrowed the seconf:rplay going back to the people m foul trouble and we were R1~hardaon had 15 pomts and. 10
,,t 2·1 and lll8lbd the first tilne in deficit to 3·2 with S:28 10 go iD the third period, f 0
able tO take advanlage of il" ·
' ass1sts. Sam Bowte bad 17 potnts
II
2
jhe series a tmiling team rallied for third periodoo Mark Janssens' secDan-~~· R
N il
Drexler f10isbed with 26 points, and 10 rebounds for New Jersey.
Olympia
·
-.lead. .
oad goal of the series.
~,.-.
,
~~er . e · Porter 19 and Buck Williams 18 for
Bulls 108, Kakb 1~
· Olympic gold medii winner and
Ciccarelli set up the score
.. "We lccpt playing \Uid dam near ~~d Haleher s goal revived Port_Iand, which won its eighth
In Ch_icago, I~ Paxson hit an I!JIIIIlimO OCiorlillrlek CDIICii Far·
a centering pass 10 Tippett, tied it at ihe end,' • said Ranger
•'Thoy oil~Piayed us in lhe sec: straight, road game a~d ended 18-foot JWI!per WI.th 22.2 seconds rest "Spec" TOWill di!:d of bNrt
~ho fended off~ Mark Hardy _goalie MikeRichter, wbo left the ond (period) Tho were more des· HoustOn s four-game wm streak. lefl and B!'lan Qui~ threw llie failure, less than 8 ~ after the
.chedt befare IICCll'jng just his fourth net for an extra atlacker with 36 perate ariel it ·shoJed "
The Blazers also ended the Rock- l1aU aw~ 10 the closing IWO'IIls 10 unlvenily'slllclt was named iD his
loa~ in 36 llla,off Pmes. Tippeu, seconds left, but tO ·no avail. "We
However, Neils~ said there is ets'vl)·gamMehomeUwifinn!'Jg SUNi..th
-~!or281ho .Bulllland
•.Mis'c~I . honor. He Wll 77. T~-~ the
~ fQr hii checkiiJg, ~Only played two good games in this no need for desperation amon 11 ·
e!'lon axwe . ms.hed w
.
....,._ po1DIS
cotue
~ld in tho 1~ Berl,llfOlympiC$
'!i~ times lit 61 regular-season building (including !I 6-0 win Sun~ Rangers, panicularl consid!i~s 26 pomts, Buck Johnson scored ,18, Pippen added 27 Cor the Bulls, ~ho m the IIO.IIICier hiP hurdlel,llel·
JBII!N.
_
day). We are still confident going the series is now
down t~ and Kenny_ Smith added 17 pol!'ts sn~pped a cwo-~e home losmg tin a new record of l4.liJOCOIICls.
Tippett 101 free · after three into the next game."
tho best two out of three 11111 New and 14 assJsts.for HoUstOn, which sk~d.. Patrick ~wmg scored 21
. RllllfiiUWoopedinGDihnlwaysBernie Nicholls staked tbe Yorkholdsthehome-iceedge
haswon29ofttslast3S .games. .
po10tsfortlleKnic:bwhohavelost
.
"It's goillg 10 be a ciose senes
The Rockets held their bluest IOslralghutChlcaaoSIIIdium,
. · lead of the game, 66-S4, when-Ola·
w
·
Bueb 105, Jllat.. !15
.
In Milwaukee, 1ay Hum pries'
e w~ expecung a,,1ong senes. juwon went out with seven minuteS
pro::,rhe~..::~~esday night, left in the third. Ptxtland then ~ two flee thro~ with 48 ~n~· '
Buffalo beai Montreal 6-4, New on a 2?-9 run !he rest of !he ~ left helped Milwa~ pull within
N!f da at lllaJI. 3:3)
.
Jersey
blew by Piasburglr-&gt;1· 1 ·anct" mcluding sconng 10 straight m ·C?'IC one~ of Deaoll ~ ihe IICC for
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Milwaube • TararfD, 7:V,.m.
Hartford
held off Boston 4-3
stretch, for an 83·75 lead entering the lhird playoff SIX!' m the Eastern •.
By U.lted " - lllll!mllllonal
Sabres
6,
Caudleos
.j
the fourth quarter,
Conference. Hurnpnes scored 19 of
NATIONAL
EAST
BASKETBALL
·
W L N. GB
Iii ·Buffalo, N.y., three Sabres
:Portland pu~hed its lend to 13 his 23 po~u in tho second half.Joe
Now Yadl
........2 0 1.000
ASSOCIATION
by Ohio SHd Co.
recorded
a
oa1
and
assist
ieee
w1tll
7:30 left 10 the game before Dwnars hll !9 of 24 fteld goal b'Jes
811
SL Lcuio
...........1 0 1.0011
1/2I
.
. 10 lead B:Jfalo in evening uf. this ~oustO~ made one~! run, aeoring an~ tied a career high with 42
.!00
......... .1 I
Eutern Cootennce.
.J
,....,..,.
......... .1 I
.!00
Adams Division semifmal series at SIX Slralght to get w1thill ~en. The pomts.
Atlantic DlviiiOn
Chloqo
... ....... .0 1 .000 I 1/2
W
L
Plt.
GB
2·2.
The Sabres scored five stllii ht Rockets had ~vera! opponunities
Suns 1~, Warriors 106
•2
.0011
JIIIIJooloJPUa .........0 l
1·80110n
......... s. 21
.'720
l!oais
after
faDing
behind
2-0
e!1y
,
!0
get
closer,
but
could
not
capiiBl'
.
At
Plloe~Jx, Jeff H_ornac.ek
.West
'y ·Phi'·dtlpblt ...... .42 33
.560
'12
Cindnnlli
.......... 1 0 1.000
1n
the
flfSt
period.
Pittre
Turgeon's
1ze;,
,
sco.red
31 pomts and roolrie Negele
y.N..,
Vail&lt;
......
36
40
.479
18
1/2
Sill DMp
0 1.000
:rl 41 ,)60
7:1
centering
pass
was
tipped
in
b
a
We
ve
been
able
10
come
back
Kn1ght
added 27 to lead lhe short·
,...........0 0 .000
1/2
Now 1...., ...... 23 53 .!03 31 Ill
.... .,.,.... ........0 0 . ,000
1/2
Montreal
defenseman
Jllll
B::lfa.
~use
we
believe
in
ourselves,"
handed
Suns, who were without
Miami
..........:12 53 .293
32
10
s.a ,. diM .......0 1 .000
l
Jo
ahead
for~
Tho
fifth
game
sa1d
Adelman.
"We
didn't
rotate
starters
Kevin Iohnson ail.d Tom
Central
DIYIIIoa
..........0 I
.000
I
Y~
.......
.56
:w
.m
in
the
series
in
'Mootreal
Thurs·
well
in
,lhe
firSt
half.
Their
guards
Ch~mbers,
and. sixth man Dan
Tlltlday'a Results
15
y·n..,.il . ......... A7 29 .618
9
day
·
were
wide
open
early.
We
finally
Majerlc.
The
victory snapped a
ill. Louio 4, Chloqo I
.
y-Mil- ......46 30 .60:5
10
N.w Yodl: 2. Phi'·
y 1; 10 in·
· Devils 4 Pequins 1
made the conect adjustments.''
three-game slrid for the Suns. Tim .
y·A- ..........41 35 .539
IS
r·lr141aru ,........31 31 .500 I&amp;
.l
In East Ru~onl, NJ Oaude
Four !I'Chnicals, three by referee Hardaway scored 22 points and
Pilloburtb 4. •. • - .. ..21 .a
CICI-l•od4
.361
·21
Son IM&amp;• 7, s.. 4
Lemieux
and
Pe'ra
Stastny
scored
J.ack
Mailde~, and one Dagrant fOI!I Chris Mullin adde~ 16, b~t they
CltuiMM
..........23 ~
.299
33
Ill
'
Lol Anal* at Atlara, niaai oUt
Weslenl
C011feren&lt;e
53 seconds apart in the litst period · ~ called m the game. .
'7~ the 011Iy Wamors to h1t dou·
, WeiiiiOiday'a G8Dies
Mldwelt Division ·
1&amp;: Lcuil (IW..eon 1·19)•t0licaao
to
help
New
Jersey
tie
up
tlie
Portland
P\&amp;Yed
very
physical
be IgUreS.
•
WLP&lt;LGI
(0.- JS.IS),2,:Wp.m.
·Patrick
Division
semifmal
series
af!d
we
we~~n
t.
allo~ed
to
play
Magic
110,
Clipptn
1011 .
y.Su
AniOrlio
....
.!1
1
24
.680
(Jood I~) t1 Plllli&gt;lqll
MASON, WV.
.49
26
.613
2
two
games
api~e.
Lemieux
beat'
With
them,
Slid
HoustOn~ead
At
Los
Angeles,
Scott
Skiles
(lmldl 12-9), 3:0S p.m.
Mlllh
...........49 26 .613
2
Hoaltan (Hamiacb 11-11) atCineinTom Barrasso 011 1 blast through coach Don Chaney, who w~ given
Odan4o
.... ,...&gt;21 47 .:m
23
. . Cillo 1...,, 7&lt;35 p.m. .
.
OoJJu
............26 49 .347•
2S
the pads and Statsny followed up ~technical by ¥addef!. There.
IMAI9* ~ :Z0.6) it At·
-(IIDGII&amp; 14-11). HOp.m.
.......24 51 ' .320 7:1
by deflecting a centefing pass
ere a l~t of quick whistles. We
~)on.......... 19 S7 .2SO 37 1/2
· Jllll1ldeblhil (DoleN 7-1) •• New
·
b
etween
Barrasso
and
the
naer
·
need
to nse above thaL We need tO
Yadi(C-14- HI), 7,00p.m.
Pac:lllc Dlvlilon
Son l'nDcilc:o (Iliaci&lt; 13· 11) ll Son
y·Portlwl .........51 II .763
post. The best-of-seven series 'shifts control ~urselves. Y(e ~II igOt
Dill• (Hun&amp; 11-9). 1Ck05_p.m.
y-LA J.Uaoa .....Jl ll .7l4
3
10 Pittsburgh's Civic Arena Thurs· caught up m the frustrabon . .
1"~
........51 23
.671
7
Tbunday•a Games
day night for Games.
In other games, Atlanta. beat
L~ ...,. ......39 31
.506 1911l
Lao~ at_Ailalu, ~IOp.m.
............37 31 .""3 20 Ill
SL Lcuio ll(],joqo, 2::1! p.nt.
Wbalen
4, Bl'llins 3
Cleveland
104-98, lndiif!ll n1pped
LA C1lppon .......30 46 .:IU
2J
Son"' . .. ., Cia oqo, 4:05
In Hartford Conn John. Cullen Charloue 122-120, Mmnesota
SW
I" ...... .22 53 . .293 36 1/2
....._
.. 0" 1 d,7&lt;3Sp.on.
spafked a ~nbtg lhfee.aoal PO!inded New Jersey 109-89,
yodiMW_plor&lt;lraa NowY... 71'10 p.m.
lianford surae with a goal and two pucago held off New York 10~·
l'Hid8y R-lts
assists
on power-play tallies by 06, Mllwau~ee slopped DetrOit
Jn4llalll2. a...- 120
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Adattu 104, Clooolond 91
Mark Hunter to even up the Adams IOS·9S, Phocmx overcame Golden
-J09,Nowl-19 .
Eut
Division semifinal series at two State 120..106, Orland_o knocked
CJtU:aaolllt Now Yadl106
WLP&lt;LGI
·
C
off the Los.Angeles Clippen 11 ()..
M1J,,w... lOS,
95
g~s a PJCCe. ullen scored 00 a I00 and SacramentO clipped DaUas
Pottllnd 103,-"
.
1.000
l'!o....U J20,0olftn s-106
·. wnstshotiiiii!HunterOII.arebound , )1 3.104
•
1.000'
ro~v1unow Y
.uu "!'u yuu• ua1w"uu•~ w1u1m8J101y, sinety•
Orlando ItO, LAC'-' 100
.!00
1/2
I~
than
a
mmute
apart
m
~
lirst
Hawks
104,"CaYI
!18
,
Stcramno 113, thOU 104
.500 ' 1/2
.consc1ous·propane service is a Ferrellgas commitment.
.500
1/2
WodHiday Games
penod 10 start the Whalers . ear~y
At Richfteld; Ohlo, MoSes Mal·
.0011
I
New Yea 11 PbU t 'pH• 1 p.m.
For 50 years, we've handled the everyday and emergency
burst. G~me S of the senes IS one scored six points in a 14·3
.000
I
Wuhlopn R Mloati, 7:30p.m.
needs of families like yours.
·
Thursday m Boston.
spun at the beliMing of the fourth
a-lalldiiDouoil. 7:30p.m.
.·
Chiapllbtdiano.l:30p.m.
quarter
to
lead
Atlanta
10
ils
third
Ferrellgas ... the folks to rely on whether it's the
~at San AnleOio,I:JO p.m.

I

.'

ne

'

·

.

and

"'jtll

=

JJned

"NOW IN -

STOCK•••

.

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

oooO.No .J

-

•BULK GARDEN
SEED

•GRASS SEED ·
•FERTILIZER

I

L

•LIME
See Us Today!

I

y- . .

....

PICKENS
HARDWARE

at

POMEROY • An evening diner
will be held at the senior citizens
center in Pomeroy .on Thursday
from 5·6:30 p.m. Cost is $~
penon. Menu Includes oven
chicken, ma,shed potatoes and
gravy, green beans, cole slaw, bis·
· ouit aild beverage. Pie is 1S cents a
slice. Entertainmeot by Junior and
Rita White, AI Windon and Ray
Ward.~blic
· 'ted.
n
mYI

First, coating ofihe mouth along
with soreness of the tongue and
other mouth tissues is often seen in
people with diabetes. Sometimes
the symptoms result directly from
changes in the tissue of lhe mouth
caused by the disease, but the coat·
ing and mouth soreness can also
result from a thrush infection that
often accompanies diabetes. These
infections - caused by the fungus
Candida alblciJill • produce the
film and bad taste you describe
along with white patches 011 the
inside of the cheek. When these
patches - that look like cottal!e
cheese • ~ I!Cf~ off, the skin
underneath •s red, irritated and ten·
dec. Obviously, acid foods would
ca_use dis;c~fort 10 a person with
this con~uc:m.
,·
. A ~efJcJency 1n any of the B
':ltamlns can alB? cause SY"!Pton_IS
hk~ ~our~. Whde most Vll!lmiD
deftci~ncJes are due to eatmg a
~r diet, they can result from an
mability 10 absorb vitamins from
food because of previous intestinal
surgery, or from alcohol abuse.
r eDCoyt111!1l you to return tO see
your doctor. _There are many things
that need tO be eolisidered as possl·
ble causes of your symptOms flfSt
aild order tests to confum or refute

Kindeigart(m
reg1strat10n set

RUTLAND • The Return
Jonathan Meil!~ Chapter, DAR,
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. 11 the
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber in
Rutland. A program, ''The Early . Kindergarten registration for
HisiOty of ZOAR~ will be present· students entering the Southern
ed by Mn. Carl Horky. Hostesses Local kindergarten next faU wiU be
are Mrs. Weber, Mrs . Virgil · held April 26 at the kindergarten
Atkins, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood, building in Racine from 8:15-11:15
Mn. Steven Jenkins, Mrs. Rohort a.m. and 12:30-2:30 p.m.
I eweU and Mrs. DaytOn ParsOIIS. . . Ohio law requires children to
successfully complete kindergarten
SATURDAY
before enterinl! the first grade.
POMEROY • A bake sale will Children who w1U be five years old
be held Saturday beginning at 9:30 on or before SepL 30, 1991, are eli·
a,m. at J!I.!B Wheel)!}' thC!_.UnJted gible tO \WOII in kindergarten this
Methodtst Women oTilie RoC£ · fall. ·
·
Springs United Methodist Church. . To enroll their child, parents
n~ tO b~g a copy of lhe. chi\d 's
POMEROY • The Grubb Fami- buth certificate, uilmumzauon
ly Singers will appear at the l.awel lectlrd and social security number.
Cliff Free Methodist Church at 7 Immunizations required include
p.m. on Sarurday.
~ polio and booster, three DPT
and booster, MMR, and a tubercu,. RUI'LAND • Tho Rutland BIISC- losis skin test within the past year.
· There will be no regular kinderbaU League will have a fmal sign·
up Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. garten classes that -day. If there are
at tile Rutland Civic Center. There, further questions about registration,
wiU also be a sign up for junior and eall the kindergarten at 949-2664
during regular school hours.
senior girls.
· .
\

TUPPERS PLAINS • The TOP.·
MIDDLEPORT · The Middle- pers Plains 'vFW Post 9053 w1II
port Amateur-Gardeners will meet meet Thursday at 8 p.m. (Note the
Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the time change).
home of Jean Moore. A flower dis~~the Pomeroy Library will be
ROCKSPRINGS . The Rock
Spring
_ s G!IDge will hold an open
meeting on Thursday. Potluck din·
THURSDAY
ner will begin at 7 p.m. with an
· POMEROY • The Preceptor auction following the dinner. ·
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Friends and neighbm are invited.
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
' FRIDAY
Church. Officers will he elected.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Hostesses are Charlone Elberfeld Gospel Church in Long Bottom
and Roberta O'Brien.
will hold a hymn sing on Friday at
7 p.m. featuring tile Aroup, "TravSYRACUSE • The April meetc e!JR' On ." Pastor Steve Reed
ins of the Meigs &lt;:;ounty Board of invites lhe public.
.Men181 Retardation and Develop·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
mental Disabilities will be held
ThursdaY. at 7 p.m. at Carleton SeniQr Citizens. Dance Club will
sponsor a round and Square dance .

Question ·I have an old, sticky,
nasty-tasting film covering my
mouth. It is worse in the morning.
I've gargled with all tile mouth·
washes without relief. Acid foods
bum my mouth and I feel sick aU '
the time. I've seen several doctors.
none helped. Any ideas?
Answer • A filmy, nasty-taSting
coating in the mouth can be caused
by a varietY of conditions. Normal
mouth bacteria can produce this
effect in a healthy penon - as lhe
manufacturers of mouthwash glad·
Iy remilid us in TV commercials.
Theu Jllqlluets .do belp rinse away .
!.he b~ 'ta~Je !nd the comm'?n, ·
garden·v81'1e!Y bad breath which
goes along with it. Whother or not
you eat or m,-ink afte~ using the
mo!lthwas~. m a relauve!y short
pc;nod of tune the bad·tasung mm
will ~tum as the no_rmal m~uth
bactena acc.umulate m suf~c1ent
numbers aglllll. Perhaps that IS why
you feel that the mouthwashes have
been ineffective.
·
I get the feeling from your letter,
thougll, that the problems you are
t!xperiencins; are somewhat greater
than the simple, everyday bad
breath I've been discussing. Therefare, I'll tell you about a few oflhe
other more serious potential cause.

Sports brt"e"'s

f-Dino

on Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music by
the liapw Hollow Boys of Alhens.
Tho public II Invited. 1bose attending bring snacks for the snack
table.

Bad breath and
burning mouth may
be due to diabetes .

secoau

season.

•

Community calendar

Stewart said. "We bad a lot .or ropped 80111)0 4-3, .Clewl1Dd~t
great at-bats against (TwillS
Kanw City 2-1, 111d Cal
ia
•
I ack) Monil, who pilched better defelted s "'e 3·2.
IIIOillb.
. tllm his 11-. which wu ~
Blue .11,. 4, led Scm 3
Oakland apjditid in mid-IICIIOD millcacliol.
·
At TOIOIIID, Joe Caner drove iD
fonn Tuelday ll"i111l a out-poW·
· "I.Iriec110 lab advan!IF of lit· a pair of rans and Devon White
creel Minnesota squad, defeating ullioaa tonigllt aad being at tile collected tllreo biu and ICored
tile Twins 7-2.
.
start of tile 1eason gives me an twice for tbe Blaejays. WinaiDJ
Rickey Henderson, the most advantqe over the llillln."
pitcher Jimmy Key worked six
dangerous leadoff maa 1n profes·
Catcflor Terry Sleinbcb went 10nings llldlllowed a plir of IIIII
sional baseball, stOle his 937tb tine fOI' five wi1b two RBI, driving on six biu. Du.o Ward allowed
career base for Oakland 10 move home Rickey Henderson iD tbe first · one run on tine hits in two lnnlnp
intO a tie with turn.of-tlle-century and Dave Hendetsoo· iD the third and Tom Helke worked thC ninth
player Billy HamiltOn for second for a 2·0 lead. Kll:by Puckett for his first save.
·
on the all-time UsL Although !Wart· dropped a Dave Henderson foul in
bdlallll, Royals 1
ed on three more on-base opportu' the 'fourth Inning and Henderson
At Kanras City, Mo., Tom Cannities, Henderson •s ilext steal will foUwed with a 3·2 COUIIt lbree-run
=.,an:~O:.~IeJt
tie him with Lou Brock for the all· hOmer and fcir a ~-0 lead.
time record.
Morris, 0..1, was pulled in the .and die l'ndians posiCd ~tliePCiiriCJII!.Ifint:a
•'Rickey is incredible, two base fifth innins after sloppy throwing win of the
aa. Caadioai, 1-0,
hits and a steal. JuSt like alwily1." ~ score two more A's runs.
s1rudt oat the and walbd one In .
A's manager Tony LaRussa said.
'I think the flllle was preny
Another attention-goner on the simple, •• said TwillS manager Tom
night was pitcher Dave Stewart KcUy. "We didn't Dlay very weU. ninlb far thnave.
who entertained the crowd of · Jack made a couple of crummy
Aapll3, MM-ineis 2
44,373 with a masterful perfor- pirclles that Stelnbacb knocked the
At Seattle, Dave Palter scored
mance. Stewan. who won his 20th hell out of. Then ho 1101 a bill up in two runs, belting a homer and a
straight April decision, held the the suite zone and lie (Dave Hen· triple, .to power the Angels. Cali·
' Twins to three hits in hi~ seven derson) hit il ouL
fomia left-bander Chuck Finley
sevn-~ ol Ills teamm• after erac:klag.a tllree· · innings of work, walked two _and
"You can't give the defending retired the first 14 Mariners and .
run homer Ia the fourth l_a alag or Tuesday
struck out four for lhe vic101y. ·
American ~ue champions that had a IIJree.bit shutout after Jfven
"We
were
ready
10
play
like
it
many
thances.' · . . ·
. innltlp. Eric Hanson rook the lOIS.
;~~~~me apinsl tile viii lint TWlas, .wbo reo
was a game in June tonight,"
In other AL games Tprontil
By UDlted Prest Iuterudollal
The Oakland Athlelica lllven 't
· forgotten mucil over tbe past six

.-

.. .-"'f'"

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Reedsville; Christina Cool!er,
Racine; George Cooper, Racme;
Derek A. Cremeans, Rutland;
Michael Deem, RICine; Diane S.
Det(y, Radcliff; Jean A. Durst,
Pomeroy: Glennis M. Erickson,
Radcliff; Shawn Fetty, Rutland;
Ruth Foley, Reedsville; Kimberly
J. Follrod, Racine; Angela M.
Grueser, Racine; D.iana K. Harri·
son, Pomeroy.
Debra Honaker, Middleport;
Emily Hudok, Wellsville; Glenda
K. Hunt, long Bottom: Penni Jef·
fer~. Pomeroy; James Jones ,
Ppm.~r~y; Crystal D. Kayl~r 1
Reedsville; Angela M. Kelly, Mid.
dleport; Thomas L. Kf:Uy, Jr .• Mid·
dlepon; Rhonda K. Koehler, Mid·
· dlepon; DoMa LaComb, Tuppers
Plains: Howard .M. Lawrence,
Long.Bottom.
·
Barbara A. Lisle, Syracuse;
Peggy J. Marcinko, long Bottom;
. Jodi L. Brown Manin, Pomeroy:

Lori Mayna(d,
Murphy, Racine; '""'"
Pomemy; TcJti L.
Middleport;
Rutland; Katl)y Phalin, Micldlc!
Lisa K. Pooler, Pomeroy; Cora
nam, Reedsville; Arthur D. llouslt,
Racine: Barbara A. Rupe, Syra~
·cuse; Rodoey Salidy, Lancaster.
Laurie Shenefield, Langsvill!!:
Thomas Simmons, Reedsville;
Amanda Sis\on, Pomeroy,
Pom~roy; Tina Sloter. Racin~'&gt;'
Dorothy A. Smith, Pomeroy,
Donene R. Tal1)ott, Racine: Cindy
Sarden, Dexter; Judy WeU, Shade:
Wendolyn Windon, Pomeroy;_,
Anthony Wolfe, Syracuae; Dana
. Fick, 46339 Loy's ~n Road, Lon$
Bottom;
Patricia
Hetzer,
Reedsville; Dana Fick, 46339
Scout Camp Road, Long Bottolll:
Donald K. Lewis, Pomeroy: Brian
• Porter, Racine, and Debbie Sii,
Pomeroy.
•

SPRINQ SALE
-APRIL 11 thru .APRIL 1 5

.

·,

"LOWEST CHEMICAL PRICING OF THE 1991 SEASON"

Buy any above-ground pool and receive mainte· .
nancl! equipment and your choice of solar·cover ··.
or chemical pack FREE of charge.
·•

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family ·
Medicine

"UP TO A S400 VALUF'

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

of Family Medicine ·

HQURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
.
9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M .

that initial ~s. When the flfSt them an opportunity 10 investigate
round of tests IS ~. it becomes beyond "first base".
. "Ftullily Medieine" Is a weekly
necessary 10 look for less commoo
column.
To sub~r~it questions,
causes of the trouble. You may
wrlt1
to
John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
· need to see the same doctor several ·
Uni~mlty
Collllfl
of Ostio/Hllhlc
times to
the answers you seek.
Medicine,
Grosrenor
Hall,
Be patienL Perhaps you have seen
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
·
several doctors without satisfaction
because you haven't given any of

aet

Sentinel Calendar
REEDSVILLE . The Eastern
High School Class of 1992 will
present "Skinned Alive" a comedy
dinner theatre. Dinner, 6i30..7 p.m.,
· consists of barbecued chicl:en,
potatOes, vegetable, roll, cake and
drink. Play hogins at 8 .m. The
dinner costs $8 and ticke~ for the
play only will be sold at the door
for $3
· ·
BAS HAN • The Red Brush
Church of Christ 011 Bashan Road
will have special services on Satur.
,day at 7:30p.m. and Sunday" at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. with Denver Hill of
Foster, W.Va. Public is invited.
TUPPERS PI,AINS • The Tup·

1

. 253 WIST lAIII ST.

pers Plains Ladies Auxili
90.53
wiU·have a spaghetti dinn'!'lsatur·
day beginnipg at 4 p.m. Cost is
$3.50 for adults and $1.50 for children under 12.

I'OMEIOJ, OliO 45769
614-992-5724

392 1'111 ST.
GAWI'OUS, OliO 45631
614-446·3051

~

•

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Thursday Games
Ba~umat Mil-*-. 1:30 p.m.

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Allanta • Minn.ota, 8 pm.
Utah •LA La.,, I0:30p.m.
- . . . .. OoldonSwo, JOolOp.m.
Orlando,llS-.IO:lOp.m.

I

Tlltlday Sports TraiiiiiCIIolll

-gas;-----,.
· Colleae

~..-... - A.n.......s....,.s

.

.....
-·

.....1~:..~

-AIIM-M.ood1'117-

•

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.......

._a.r-......
, I*
Pil·~·=e~·~ ..--

--·§:
....,_,.__ ..,._ ...
NRL-1 F 1 1

1500 fcrlooloo ...

.

lo•wilb Sl
· dr'4hlr·

I,.,...,..,.....

t.o.~~ptndrVfalal

Ina I
.

. fannrd

Sports briefs

.~

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•

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9'{1u 're Invitea

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l

!

,.•

••
'~
•.,

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Cefebrate Spring

•
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at tne

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l

. ltiiJDfultHJisCIIJ

''• •

JhOfne·

PCea.sant o/affey /}fospitaC !Jlu#iary

Charity 13a{[

I

• 24 Hour Emet"qency Service
• Level Payment Plan • Ferrellgas Instillation Review

"J·SM1

w.-s,·IIYIIS,

PO•OY, _a•a

. . . . . . . . tv..
GAS
&amp;RIC.
UNGES
•
•

CIIITY

_,for,..../
HOURI: Mon.lllruFrl. tam-Bpm
·

111. tem·l pm

PDMiEIIOY

...... u .......

I

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Saturiay, f1lprif 13
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......
9 p.m. to l .a.m.
Point PCeasant Moose Lotfge

)
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•

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$46 C11Upfe;
. .$23 Singfe .

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Citiuns ?{ptiqna[, 1rut6 ~
an4 Peopfu '.Bantin Point .Pkasant

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The family of professionals
2&amp;20 Vallly Drive, Point PleMant, WY 215650 (3Q4) 875 4340, 1111. 253

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Bank One, )00 can boniJo.v against the
equilyin &gt;till' )nne b-all kiri:ls of
impcnarl purchases.
. 'bJ can zld a1 to yc:ur lxm:.
Fmao::e a wcada!.Or pay for~
tuJllal. Best all, you·can use a
mme equity lam tb save a1 taxeS.
&amp;cluse in rmst cases, the interest
you pay is tax deductil*.

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APPLIANCES
627 Jrtl Ave., Gallptllls

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·featuring Myron ![wren ant£ j{'zs Orc!Ustra

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Call about our special Customer Programs:

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coldest day of the year, weekends, evenings, even
. holidays.

Hockey
The Soviet Union ice hockey
team defeated Germany for the
72nd time in 73 meetinls with a 9·
2 vicUKy Monday night in ,Weiden,
Germany.

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OoJJu 11 ULib, 9:30p.m.
I.A CU.,.. II S.ul&amp;, 10:30 p.m.

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a~~110 .

And it ~·una1ter ifyou

have alot of equity in yc:ur lxim:, or
jusl a little, becal 1se !lank O!Y! will
work with yru 10 desi.l?,n a]Qm !hat's
jus\ iiglt for yc:ur rudS k's ...mt v.e
rmm mm v.esayat&amp;rlk Ore we'll
do~it takrs."
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lxm: equity lcm . ml Dr canplete
lnkmnarion, visit Bank One.

mdu Gpp:ftttill . Col'll"l! JOII' hU acMw jo' sprc!JU
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C 1991 8ANC ONE

CO~RATION

1n Pomeroy. call MU!ie Midkiff ilt
992-2133. in Rutlan::l, call Joan
May al 742 -2888.
With rur 1-t:lp, yrur lure will
have tl!Ver 1ookfd better.
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-S4NKEONE
. ~it taht:s:
JN.Ir(CH,AMM ~ '*"*"Ilk

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-"f"'-Pomeroy-Uidcll8port, Ohio

!Wedntldly, Aprll10, 1891

Wednesday, Aprll10, 1&amp;t!1

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Pol,neroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally 8entlnel

·Plans for lhe annual Eastern

HisH School Alumni Allocialion

· Reunion have been reviled a bit
this year. This year. only members
=n:.;eaJ!:.wiD~::::
••_....._of
al ........,uet
--.
.._.,_.
otber claues are on their own in
gdtins the details.
set~
:O:i::O:e
scrved at 6:30p.m. Dinner lk:bll
have been placed on· sale at Reed's
Store in R~ville; Hawb Service
Station, the Keebaugh Shake
Shoppes ill bolh Tuppers Plains
and Chester and at Baum's Lumber
in Chester.
.
Alumni having any questions
about the annual event mav call the
--;-,
president, Jo Ann FmnciS II 6673785 in the evenil)l or the treasur·
ei, Carol Erwin at 985-3958.

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.lib. Pkg.

Jumbo
·Roll
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Bunsize .
or Light

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4 to 8 oz. Bags
Your Choice of Cheese Puffs,
Cheese Corn, Corn Chips
Mix Or Match
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Vlasic Hamburger

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Mueller's Elbo Macaroni Or

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9 oz.

Shedds Country Crock--·

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Sargento Regular

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eese

NEW YORK (UPI) -.A prece-

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~ deilt·settinBstory that broke: a Ions·

Pkg. of6

held media taboo by rcvtlaling the .
name of a rape victim - wilh her
consent - won the Dea MoineS
Relister the coveted Pulitzer Prize
, fot Public Service.
In announcin1 the award, the·
. prize commitlee iaid the I!IPDftinlby the Register's Jane Schorer

.. ".,.-omiJted ~ -.Icier-

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,anon olthe IJllditional medii J118C·
. tice of concealinl the Identity of
rape victims."
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"For far too Ions the story of
, rape victims had been IIIICfCI." said
• Geneva Overholser, editor of lhe

Borden's
Jce c.-e~
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Sandwiches·~
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ared.

dealwith~~bul~l lhopem~CJtperieilc:ewjUJiveher ~c~.- ~!ly~nd-lrM_•_

Experts say women would :
change 'VM/experience' '
1984-87 he· noticed lhe training
.. was no where near as rigorous";
as in his student days.
·
Ripley said aU physicll training~
runs and exercise at the Naval·
Academy had been "ratcheted
down" so that the maximum:
expected was based on the strerigtll.
and endurance of women Middies. :
"The VMI system today relatea
to lhe system under which I trained
at the Naval Academy," Ripley,
said. "The Naval Academy today
docs not rciiiiC to VMI..''
:
The Justice Department, afte(
proddins from a youns Northem
Virsinia woman interested 'iri
attending VMI. sued to halt the
policr. that has ~ in effect since
VMI s founding 152 YC1KS.
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Because VMI accepts state
funds, lhe government argued, it
may not dlscriminate on sex, cree4
orgender.
·
· Lawyers for VMI counter·!hat
any -discrimilll&amp;ion that. is carried
out by the aU-male policy is based
on practical, lef.itimate reasons.
such as the military's ban on
women in combat.

Register.

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&amp;IKnr was "flabberBested" by

·· the victory fot her work recounting

lhe personal trauma of a rape vii;'lim. · ,
.
"We've been tryins to figure
.. out for a year why Ibis had such an
· effect on people. It seemed to be a
.. human story that people could
·understand. It's a subject that
.. hasn't been tallted about a lot," She
said.
Child abuse and tile way it is
, covered by the media - liiOlher
subject !hat was the focus of an
award-wlnnlns efforc in the 75th
annual Pulitzer ~-. Mf;C4!n.,..S
Tuesdly the &lt;:a!umbil Univenlty School ofioumallam.
David Shaw of the LGa Anplel
Timea, who W1S IIOIIlinated In the
explanatory jountalllln Cit~,
wplked off lilltead with the Prilo
for criticism for piecaltllljiiiJ
lhe way the medii, lnoludil&amp; Ilia
own paper, nDGI1Id lbe Mt:MirliR
Prc·School ddld IDDII I, Let-. '

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Marjie Lundstrom and Roc:helle
Sharpe of lhe Gannett News Service won the prize for national
reporting for sories that disclOied
that bUIIItcds of cbild abulo-rclated
deaths 10 uncletected ea:h Y* ••
result of errors medic:al CXIIIlin·

en.

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4 4 [ 111( 1

.:.oz;;

'Newspaper's ID of rape ·victim wins it coveted Pulitzer

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8 oz. Pkg. · Four Varieties

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:'V:::L:;Cilby :C

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Top CHsp Snacks

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the Bend..

. Dear Ana
Lui .
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sumJnci- my:molher•io-law, •Alice,• friends from the Alzheimer's Stltiislh lwn!!lll) she will .-1 iL
club. believe most women who
w.S dialftO!I'd with Alzbelmer'a Assoc:lltioll, P.O. Box 5675-AL,
When I met my· hust.ldJ WIS slay married to homosexuals are
ROANOKE, Va. (UPI)- An
. diseaic If this Ilea' lady hid died. ChiciiO. Jll, 60QJ().5675. You need ~wled over because he wu Iii convinced that they Clll lllllilhten education expert testifyins on
the C111in1 commllllity would 111ve a Mj!p'llt IP'CIIlP _. IIIey will help dilfercat from any man I had ever them ouL Big mistake. Thanks for behalf of emblltled VlrJIInia MiJi.
grieved wilh us, bat u It Ia, ,au find iL Oood lack.
daled. He behaved like a perf~t sharing your story and 10011 luck to tary lllltilllte aid women could be
well-meaaint friends, "'bo
Dear "•• l.aeden: My Bid· scntlemlll durinB our c:ourtship llld you, delr.
intepUd into Its all-male environ·
lmow~eboutAJrL:i;e'nnd friead lnd I have I !Iaiiie&gt;
.
m
IIIII
I
never
once
J11111e
M aaempt·to _..
Dear ADD LanA-· The WOIIIM lllllll,but the cost would be the loss
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of
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of•l.- UVMI
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.......... to vilil Alice on one her ldnit it's my fluJL Mally (not her me i~ bed. H!&amp; sen~eneu was . whole retired husband had liOthinB
u"'
cxpenence.
10011 days, lhiak we 1re ~ble Nil
hla dept with ICVCI1I charm101• 1 enjoyed his COIDJIIIIY . to do except interfere wilh her cook·
~ic~d Richardson Jr. of the
people.
Olber men, 11111 111011 of them II'C and loved being showered with · needs to hear
..,.....
UD!vcmty of Arizona countered
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··"-~wily . frommyllona:Jwn. .
· attc1111011.
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1118Before Jaclc llld
my-,.
.. eget.......,IOne...u
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I married, his Justice~tc:ontenlionslhal
the admissions lie of the state·
we haven't bllcn to villi
· in
WJienever MoiJy .and 1 'aaend .1
After. we ~~1ed !here was ex-sirlfrien!l warned me: "Don't . SuJIPQrled schoof?. ~several ~ when, in r.:t. we 10 ...._,. or •. durity event, .._ Is a h~l and killin~ but .no a. I marry Jact. He11 try to run .your
lnstead, Richardson sstd ·Tuesto see her every day. She pill on tile JIOOd chance that II lelit one of ~ec1d~ he was ~u•t. shy ~nd tiu:hen and drive you nuts." ,Well, I day that wbile women could be
'phone IIIII tells people she Is in We fQI'IIII!r bed jllllllell wiD be mexperienced and. Ill timC tlnnss married Jack and for . many years accommodated at the Lexington
terrible plio llld tbll we 1Uu. to the&amp; Wlal tills hljpN I cu lhiDt would dJanF. Alta several months while he was busy teachinl chemis- school, their presence would forcvspend_ money on a doelor~ Bad out of nothinl bill that BU'f in bed when they didn't c:han&amp;e. I became try llld doins rcaean:h, he came into er alter the institute's harsh, sparwhat IS WIOIII· Tile lnllh IS we haw with her . and my evenln&amp; is CJt!I'Cmely fruslriiiCCI Me! decided it my Jdll:hm only when 1 u1ret1 for lan, esalitarian system. Females
spent$8,000oniUpollic '. _.lnd wra:tecL
·
was OK 10 have •llfllr. Soon af· . !lis help. He llllde the world's best who wanted. ''the VMI experithe JaUJts show th1UIIe Ia in excel~ · Molly IIOlioes my IIIOOd c:bansc ter,l found myaclf wilh a king-iize pavy. Olher thin that, 1 did all the ence" still would min out because
lent heallb. The ~uninl bomc we and aats, "WWill's the 11111111'1" When Cllll) ol tbe pilts. At the time, it conking and lllllbting.
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it no lonpr would exist.
.
have pllced her m COlli $3,100 a 1 tell her, she aays I'm beia 1 didn't dawn on me thai my husband
Now Jack 1s imd and claims
"I c:111 ~¥ conceive 1hc en:ea
month. .
juvenile and we end up in alelrible wu a bo-xual. The thought that cooking 1s 1hc Ideal outlet for 1 .of that (dnllllDB women) u 1 kind
Yeatenlay a friend of Alice's ..,.. 'IL Wlaa we Pl inlinwe, 1 never ente~ my mi.nd. In former chemist. He t.s taken ovet of.levelins d.o~~::' Richards_on
~ to pleld IIIII we lib her ~ 1 10Qb ,dille biocidal out retiOipeet, I ~'I !mow how I could my kW:hen COIIlpletely and even said. VMI 11 11 IS wonld JIIOY"Ie
Q\lt ~~$liD llld.·::tJII.-poot. •·dnwhll at&lt;llla 'OIMr IUYI ...u bivebilen so biind.
.
" insilts on dOina 1hc marli:elills. The ~- .w ldu IOIIIIy_~
dear IS SO loaely and bllel beilla in nlalll'f IIIOOd.
.
' ~~y. I dilcovcred '!JC lnllh. loan is 10 CI'CIIive lhll we Ii:ave ·andRj==·:'C::y came
,aninstillllion."ltrlediDexplliatbll
Howl*llaetridoltbeaelbcJuBhls _lllaycd m.~ llllll'il&amp;e m_ytan wondcrfullllCIIII every day. What short1 lftertheJUIIiceDepartment
wecannotkeepberahomeber*• lllllnwrecldn&amp;owrelltionlhlp?l anyway, lhinkinsl could lll'liBbten joy! I am now relieved of aU cook· rest!'! ID cuund US District
she needs IIIIUIId·tbe-cloct CII'C. I n1111y 1eec1 ~ belp, Ami. 'Thinp him out.. Meanwhile I~ uk:en ~ ing duties and love it, .
Iudp JaclfD! Klier runied dow
didn't WMt to mendun her .-iudni - ~ fro111 11111 to worse. .. llll1led b1tter. Finllly I divon:ed h1m .
Please teD the women who read .· VMI's motion 10 diwiu
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~~-~our'
theor.-Jfiveto"~•dahery, MA .
OVBI MIND IN MAS· We~ •1 lot ~d..~
your QOJumn ID fmd • chemist who
In rejeclint lhe motion, Kiser
"""w"""'"
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SACHUSB1TS
_._ w • ~
likes to coot and, 11111TY him. •• said bia "onepldiqlight" in the
her swinsin1 a broom II Myone
DEAR MIND! One I# the most the r.:t lhll he. had tried to hide HAPPY IN nJCS0N
conJtillltional CUD - 10 mate oo
who comes close. or 1hc timea she ~ ru1e1 ol clevelopbw a new behind me in Cider ID hide ~he ·
DEAR 1UCSON: Lucky Bid! . I decisions without fully hearing
has wandered outside totally rclaliolll•ip: Never divuiJe ·lhe was. TodaY. ~ sci=.,·~ ~m, . had 1 letter just last week from a from both sides. All involved
unclothed. .
.ne.lndDIIIIIbcrsoipleviousplay- altbMP he_livea
Y· -•lh alive woman in Pennsylvania who expect the matter to go to the
Wilh the grief of Alice's illness en.
·
11ii)Cd for him~ I Wllll w;
. mljrried a chemist. She didn't · Supreme Coon.
1
and dealinB daily wilh berjlloblems,
Try 1 few sessions wilh a ~Y. be1rt fm: him 10 have IIIJOCl mention ,anythins abou&amp; his pavy,
"I. want to,,de~lop ~full,, rec~
the added llnlll ol tJ.e "frielldl" is mWNkv You may then be abJo to life. He Ia Still a wonderful ~· but she did say he lllllde ·p11asc out on dus case, Kiser said. I think
morelhanwec:.lllte.Do;.ouba1e ICCCpt MOuy for what she Is llld tindand~butlhopclhat ofher$400,0001nheriiiiiCC.
thls~isjustlbefuststepinlhis
lllllutionl for lwdlnt tllelo people?
~ lbe pt111, If Ibis .- -.'1 WOit, he doelll'l marry 1p1n.
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All alcohol pro/1Uirl? Hqw CQ/1 you C&amp;11:.
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Why Clll'l they ancla-.t our )llln1 1e11 her auodbye bilc•IIC·)'Ou'D.nover
My ~ a few. I only wish . help yoNrsel/ or , _ you love?
Also Tuesday. Col. John Ripley •
· Sbe ia my hu....nc!'s JIIC)IIw, our . mate It IOpther. P.S. Don'fuk Your thlll w ~ 11101e tnowledF about •l.lcoltotum: Huw 10 Rtcoglliu II, · a Naval Acadcm~uate who
children's p.tJootber. Pleue pw ' next PI&amp; I «My IUIIOY)'6fbizniz· .,._xuality IIC!~~ipcouldoponl~ How to' Dal Wilhll, How lo Con· ~.:~the
:C
me some advice. .. C.H. IN type queatlalll. =
. , di'l"mrd our rc--~· been Y· qiiQ 11~ wiU gillt you the CIIISWtl'~. woaien 11 Annapolis chlnsect cOn·
· .s~::::roKANB: It is dif6cult
Dell' " - ' • · ' a: A Willi,~· thll ~ ;..;.w••
·Soul a stlf-adllruud. long, busi· ditions. He said that when he
m:endy MOle lhllllle Wll c:onluiDd ~ Wllh me. ~=-~
IIUNUe e~~vcfopf tllld a check. or returned to Annapolis to work in
for thole who haven't had pPeri-. and concerned abollt w••t she I drink he lnlly u.._..
. marand mDMY orderfor $3.65 (lllis illclll.lks
ence with AllJieimer's to lllodea-.1 tlloqbt mlaht be ller h,.lbend'• rilge wo,ld work IOiliC lllql!:.
postage ~ lltwllbtg) 10: Alcohol,
the heartbRik. It kills twice. Pint, preference for - . She - the llllke him ."one of the boys. .. c/o AM~~. P.O. Box 11561,
the mind, then the body. ·
1110111cr of 1 2-ye.r-old cllild IIIII had DEBBY IN SAN BERNARDINO
Cltica,o, IU, 6061 UJ561. (In Can·
You CM set pidlnce on bow to .no idea how to handle die sin 1don.
DEAR IJ!iBBY: WelcOme to the ada, ~eNd $4.45.)

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16 oz. Jar

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:Don't let ignorant friends add
A~n
:· to the heartbreak of Alzhehiter's ~~~?1.

1eners

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Umlt I Free Per Family wllll any llddlllonol purchue ("'"'ladlntl Items. prohlbllecl by taw)

:C:

Jqe and Caryl Cook. for1ner rei·
idents of Lincoln Terrace in
Pomeroy, will be observilis their
70th weddins tlllnivmary 01) April
14. cants 'niay be sent to them II
. lhe PieJCC Baplisc Home. P.O•.Box
· 325 -Brookl COOn ·06234
' · · yn,
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A long-time friend and a for·
" mer co-worker 11 The Sentinel,

Kahn's.

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, By CLARICE ALLEN
IeffHorton'and new blby dagp:
The ~adies Auxiliary met ter, Rliza!wh Diane, on Man:h 19
Katie Crow, bu undeiJtjDe Jlllljor
Wedneaday evenins at the fire- at Rivcnldo Methodist Hospital:
...., albe lw. •1¢lcll CeD·
boule wilh Bec:ky EciWIIds
'd· They a l l - Butt.r dianer ~~~
ter. T1ae - a IIIIIJIC• bu&amp; all II
. inK· Prayer IIIII pledae to
of Mt. IIIII Mrs. Chlrlea Bil:~
opened the mcelinJ. The aecre- ~
•
o.k. llllllllle 1111 belli
10
tary's rC#Ort- pven by Paula
Bonnie 1M.dmspent die. weet;
5
. ~-;,
Charmull PiUieile"iliirison •
Childs is m·~st ,Proud of ~is
, _ she's the smiling leader of the development of JUDIOI' and bepn· Wood and treasurer's report by- end with her brolher and~-~
diJI rA con· Shady River Shufflen whom you · n!nl ~ but is belt kDown for Opel lfa!Jon lllzy Newell reponed law, Mr. and Mrs. Homer BIUS at
!1-•••-IGICII!UII she '1 lllllklnbcodly chew- see in 10 many public lljlpCilr8IICCI Jns te~~ehmg of lhe mental pme.
~"!~:!ftye Unionport.
ins at the lliiiO be on the Ill·
. uys it's BOinl to be a srcat swn- He has conducted his mind COIIIIOI savice committee. Olhcr toll!mit·
Frida evening dinner gucats of:
s._.
my ~ou"ft-· - ·llmited ma- for cJoacrs. Beaidci the usual · IClllinars allhe Florida club silq lee repous were Biven, bills were Enna cfeland were Mr. and Mrs~
..,....
loc:alllld area appearances that the '1987 and hu had over 200 partlci- · paid and money for cards wu col- Leonard Myers and Chris, Keno;:
tbeae days. It - quite c:oinciden· · Shuffters will malce Ibis summer, pants.
Greg Hibbs, Columbus: alld Mr,
tal that one on Saturdly pamitted they will be playing Dollywood, . When asked how be 101 ~ lected. RoD call was answered
those named and Elsie Folmer, and Mrs. Larry Cleland
·:
me time 10 ..y fiila1 JeljleCIIto two that's Dolly Pelon's park in Ten· m tl_le ?,!ental game, C.~_I lids Man:ia
Keller, Lora Damewood, , Easter dinner guests of Opat
lifelongPooMroyleiidlinta.
·
neasce, and in WashiniiOD. D. C. ~xplains, You know. afterbeinp Ethel Orr, Cleo Smilh, Erma Cle- Hollon were Mr. and Mrs . James. ,,
~.l~eBy'-~~-1ohn Terrell lind The Shade River sroup must at life-long student of the solf sw~g land, Icanill Newell, Clarice Allen, Hollon,. Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Ger~
,.,.1... -had-b ee' ffilla ed . h times Fl exhausted • their appear- and after many years of teac:hlDI Dorolhy Hawt and~ Wood. aid HoDon and family. Lancaster: · . ,
obn
na
t wu
.~.. do !Ike a lot of enerorv not tbe game, 1 was ~azed why so
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gillilan were Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hollon and famEpple's Grocery mllly years ago "''
f
1
1 d h 1 th
1ild Epple's for aome reason or C:oomling all of the effm Md lime ew peop e app •e w a _ey called to CaniQII on Sunday by lhe ily, local. and Kellie Parlcer, Mari_,_
1 ,..,_
involved in rchcarsa1s and prcpar. learned on die lesson, lee ':" pla)'UII dealh of bia biotber, Wilbur.
etta.
- - was a pop1 •, - z apotevco ing costumes
on. the course. 1 ""hzcd 11 wu the
Mrs.
Ethel
Orr,
Martha
Lee,
Mrs. Jeanna My~ and !laughthoash it was not Ioe1ted In
·
five and one-half inch course
Bentz
and
children
were
ter,
Jenna, Columbus, were
Becky
!'omeroy'l business aection but
u..- Coon • BiD Childs has betwecrlthe ellS that was the pollEisler day pes15 of Mr. and Mrs. ovemight guests of her grandmolh·
,•.._,
~- 8
1
B ·
··
f
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.. lllil'tld was on E. Mlin SL, iiOIIIC"
0
er. Ethel Orr.
_ :Wiae near the Cleland Realty eo. . , been named to ~m Jeff~ u . :'~:S~W:'::e 1 ~j Roger Gruoaer, Lopn.
Easter dinllcr peats of. Mr. and
Esther S~ith, Erma ~leland,
Marie, Ill ~ ICIIII~U. was GolfS~ TCIIChln~-.wnat ~I started sniiiymg ·jjjj(f" ply'mg' tti·
affiliated with .the !ted ,Anchor th6 Bonua.Bay
Club 10 Flori· milld . states which
to my Mrs. Hobart NeweD were Mt. ind · Jean Fredenck, ani! Elizabeth
Oeplant~ent ·Store whicJI once 'fii!S da. . . . •
.
.
staff becoming a professional hypnotist Mrs. John Newell and family, Hayes attended a Daughters of
a popular shoppins .JPOii . Both · Bill JOined !be professional . · ·.and then a certified hypnolhcra- Keno; and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Americarillly meeting jn Cleveland
Newell and family. Reedsville.
on Saturday.
John and Marie were Jmowledse· of the club on a seasonal bas~:B m Jll'IL..
.
.
· Dr. and Mrs. Billy R. Allen,
Easter dinner guests of Mr. and
alllelboutall sortaofhlstorical bits January, 1986. He has now pven
concem:lns Pomeroy and loved to up operation .of the club near
Katie and Bobby, ~wood. Ind., Mrs. Robert V(oOd were Mr. and·
Wow! Aren't those spring flow- . were Butt.r weekend~ of Mr. Mrs. Bill Beegle and family and .
recall10111e of the old SIOriea about Pomeroy which he has kept mov- .
Clll
something! Do keep smilins.
and Mr.s OaytDD ~
. friend, Gunnar, Gallipolis; Sandy
the towll.
ins for some 12 years.
Opal Ei:':ct:' has returned Wood, NashYille, Tn.; Robert Lynn
bomc lfter
· 1 two weeks in Wood and daughter of Racine, and
the WonhingtOn with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chris!}'.

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7

.,Cheshire happenings

Alumni
·
p
lanning_
Beat· of
.

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·
inp!n Post won ooe of two prizes Gerrruur . ·
.1warded for international rcportins
Jim ~ of The Washingfor her dispall:hea from occupied .ton Post won ~ prize for comKuwait, some of which were filed mentary for "sean:hins and pre·
while hiding from Iraqi authoritiea.
scient columns on events leading
Murphy spent 26 days as the up 10 the Gulf Wa" lis weU as on
· only American rePorter in Kuwait the Jl!lliticiiJ problems of Soviet
before and during the invasion by PreSident Mikhail Oorblchev•
Iraq before she managed to escape
The Miami Herald slaff gar:
to Saudi Arabia on Aug. 27.
· nered the spot !epOrlins prize
The other prize for international for stories profilinB' 1 local cult
reportins went to Serge Schme- leader, Yllhweh Ben Ylhweh, and
mann of The New York Times for the lllfCSt of.17 Yahweh sect memcoverase of th~ reunification of bers linked ID 14 mlliders.

·And Sheryl James of the St.
PetenbarrTimea too1c the prize for
feature wrilinl for • "compollins
seiiea" that foDowed the story of
an emotionally troubled niQther
from the lime she left her newbonl
baby in a cardboartl b,ox, tlJroush
her arrest and triaL
"I'm absolutely thrilled," said
James, who newrtbelels pamitted
1 liD of champl&amp;ne u
coceielnled liOuJid her.
''I'm two moadll jlftlJIIIIII, 10 I ·
CM't driak." she explejM!
The prize ror fiction went to
Iobn Updllr.o for "Rabbit • Real",
the Jut in the "ltlbbit" aerie~ b)'
the S9-ye_.--old 1uthor. U~ke
won in 1982 for a pievioul 'Ribbit" book, "Ribblt is Rich."
Prolific pllywript Neil Simon
won hii fiilt Puliaer b' bia CUJmlt
Broadway bit, "LoeUn YoaUrs."
Althoa1h tho ~zes are IU~­
pcllld ID be 1 IICbC - . Sinon 1
publicist jaml*l t••
ud
w.o• -Jd Ills win ea r,tanclly.
Simoe, who hu writ"n 27
pia,., 1114, "I WOIIId bave been
ilillppciiM if I ..... up 11~
wldialt Mr Jl"'nn one. ...
I
11apt1 D J1J CliO OWl)' 30· ~;;
IIJanJtd.WOIL"
Tile Parlin Gall W• 1110 •
lftd llllldl ,w'1
c.yJe MUiplly.of The WIIII-

-::!.!:

.· On~BestSilver StmAoots.
Alblons,"Opui:,llcx:( ~a ..••·..u.ustrmx~
Aprill51h to May 3151
Come In todly and uv(, ilvt, llvt on Mannlnaton's
tlecluslvt Silver Stties noors. look Jl all .YOU 8ft II I big lftt OIT!

• Betutt(ul amy or colorful plttemst
' a Unique. thlckjT.er Pf&lt;!l&lt;etlon Ioyer
ror lona&lt;r _,,
• Rallll com11on holl!&lt;hold slllml

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INGELS CARPET

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Page 8 Ttie Dally Sentinel

Victim describes Baker brings Israeli peace plan to Cairo
rape, urges G:ction

. .

~~·.!=~:==~~~mingsexcrimesasf~eral

uN

bors -;-:and eventually wlrh \he

l'llesliniJm. ·

Atu:t meetilewith .Biter Tucs-

dsy, Levy said was hopeful that
the postwar diplomacy could lead
to a "1Ribluoaab" in the Arab~ coo11ict.
Those obsUII:les that were in
th~ w,I!Y, we. have removed," he
Slid· We~ now have to work
!0~ gell!ng ~e ~sides to
JOIR as wen m this big effort. ... If
we IIUCCleed, it will be~·" . .
Baker also was opllmistac,
though Sl)mewhat less CJtuberarit.
"I think we did n\ake some
progress,': Baker said. "Tbtze is of
course a di~ .to go."
. ·.
'
Levy said the Busb adminislralion believes ~~ It is possible .to
~nvene a meeung of Alab states
w•th Israel. In. such a meet~ng,
under the ausp1ces of the Unued
States. Wasbmgton·believcs the
U.S.S.R. should be included, he
lsnJel willllll( OJIPOICl the par- .
ticipelion of the Soviet Unioo.
. Baker also warmly welcomed
the announce.ment by Israel on
Monday that Jt woul~ .rei~ as
many as 1.20Q PalestuUao pnsoners as a gesture toward peace and
Slid he would talk to neigbboring
Alabs states aboul ~procal measures.
~

' 'lam 'Yei'Y hopeful dw I will be Liberation~
.
in a position to leave tomorrow,
The l'aleainilm nealher ICCOpt- _
journey to some Arab capil8ls aild ed nor rcjecled 1be rcJio!W c:on&amp;move furward wilb 10111e progress encc coocep1 and saidb::, would
tonnfpeace," Bater said.
consuk witll the PLO
1llllln
A Fcmgn Mi!lislry otficia1 ho in Tunis Tuaisia.
spoke oo condition of anony.:ity · But ~ talb with Palellini- .•
seid the pupiiiCd regional confer- ans, even diose who don't publicly ,
ence must lead to dlrect, one-on- · identify with the PLO, wu abbor- • ·
one talks with the Arabs. "We rent to several memben of :
don't want~ in~
. 'onal peace Shanlir's risJ!t-wing ~jljon, who .
coofm:nce m which we ere being · wsmed that at could Iced to form.dic:laled to,'' the official iaid.
iDJ a hostile Amb state on Isreel's ,' ·
Officials at the pime minisltr's eastern bader.
·
:
off'JCe said they hoped the soviet
••Anyone who 'talks .with a •
Union would I'CSIOII: full diplomat- ' Palestinian delegation ... is creating
'
ic relations witb hrael 'before a new polilical entity, thlt is to say
aaending sucb -a regional meeting. a basis for a second Palestinian
The Soviets cut the ties in 1967 stste over and above that already
after the Alab-Isreeli Six-Day war, exists in Jordan," said hard-line
but have recently warmed to the · Housing Minister Ariel Sharon.
Jewish stste.
Baker's visit prompted extraorAvi
Pazner,
Shamir's . dioary sec11rity measores acros~
spokesman called·the talks good lsrael-.including sealing off
and s8id
is "mutual willing- Jenasalem to Arab resideiJ11 of lbe
ne8S both Israeli and Amaican to oe&lt;:upied territories - that were
overcome the difficulties and' to meant to ~vent the .violence that
(malre) progress on the way 10 a BCCorilpaniedhi5March trip• . ~
pesc:e prlli:CSS."
.
· J'roJ'IIpting the heavy se~urity .
The secretary also met with a presence were ·fresh memones of
group of Palestinian aqneaentalives the four womeil who .lllllbbed
from the occupied West Bank and to death near a Jerusalem playGaza Sbip at the u.s. Consulate iii ground by a Palestinian man from
Jerusalem. a meeting that was sane- the Gam Strip just before Baker's
tioned in advance by the Palestine last visit March 12. .
·
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Wtdneeday, April 10, 1991

wectne~Jay. Aprtl10, 1811 . •

CAIRO, Egypt (UPl) - .~ tary of Sllle JIIIICS Biter 1mved.m
Cairo Wecbodly from ~ wttb ·
an ~~.from Jewish ~
to panicipllc !'\~J!3ti Bed ~WASHINGTON (UPI) - An Ohio college student provided a haral cmfereac:e m
lbe ~lis,
rowing, detailed account of Jw rape and resiJlling fear, nightmares ~
the
~
MeSIIft!llbe
Palestim•s
flasbbacks in testimony' before a Senare panel considering leg;.)latioo
to diacuas lbe Middle E¥t peace
to combat the nation's escalating :violence agaiilst women. ·
pm.
.
In an appearance before the Judiciary CommiUee Tuesday, Amy
Baker had JIII!WIIg~ sc:hedu~
\ Kaylor. a 21·year-old pre-med student at the University of Toledo,
. descri~ lw 1988 attack and urg¢ CongleSI to take action to belp
:~•lb.:""' with Emciln
r .
. ~ tdlit the
.rape YlCIJJIIS.
brealriDg of the Muslim Ramadan
,. Driving home alone from a coocert on her 19th birthday, Kaylor
fast aniJ was to fly Thursday .to
said liJJOther car tailpred, then collided with her car on a rwa1 bjghDu,nucus
.for a conference Wlth
way. After she stopped to examine the damage, she Slid her assailant, .
Synan~ Hafez ~
who she did not know, pulled a knife, sprayed her in the face with
Befllre ~ for ~yna, ~~
mace1 forced lw into the passenger's side seat of ber own car. drove a
W~!Jto meet Saudi.~~
short disJance and raped her.
" I thought my life was over," KayiO( told the commiUee. " As I · Prince Sltud AI Faisal UJ Cairo.
B~;~ter ~et in Je.rusalem with
prepared to die, I looked out the window at the familiar houses we
IsJ:ae1i ~dent~ Ha7.oJ and
passed. This was the area in which I grew up and we drove past the
Prime MinJSia' Y1~ S~ll and
houses of many of my childbood friends . I kept looking for some help
~en r~ to the~ WJth Forin those houses.. I desperately wanted one of my friends to come
eagnMimsterDav•dl.evy.
stroBing out of her house to save me.''
·
''C?f cou~se, wbat we arc all
"Needless to say,'' she added, "no one came to my rescue."
.workmg
for lS to create a ~s
She said the rape "bas drastically altered every IIS)JjlCt of my life,l'
whereby
we can ~ negoUatrons
adding that ''because of my assailant's threats to my life, fear, i~~JCCUfor
a
coml!~!'hens•ve
settlement
. rity and nightnJ.8fCS beca1!Je part of my everyday exislence.'' She said
based
o~.
(U.N.
re,
s
olutions)
~2
s~ ~ flashbilcb and otbeJ ''t.onnenting repercussions.''
~
3~-Baker
said
aft«
meeting
Kaylor also faulted her treatment by police and prosecutoJs. Her
WI ·-!""!~·
aaackec plea-bargained with prosecutors and was sentenced to 30-90
Officaals tra_vehn~ wath Baker
· years in prison. .
.
.
and
the Isra~lu sa•d t!'ey were
" I hope that by ellpessing l)Je incredible imJ!Il:t that this act of viohopeful
a reP,Onal ~g would
lence bas had on my life ... you will aaree to .aucate police fon:es.
pave
the
way · Co~ d1rect t~lks
~uton, judges and attorneys about the plight of t11e rape survivor,
between
Israel
and ats.~bneagh' Kaylor told the cornmiUee. ·
Sen. 1oseph Biden, D·Del., panel chairman, praised Kaylor for her.

... .....

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&lt;r, .---.· .... . . , .... , ........ ........, ..

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'"111"1 ........ ..

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Pomeroy--lllc:ldllpACI.Dblo

WASHINGTO~ ~I) _; ~b
year, ~Y, on~ m m Amencans
- 41 ma!lion •• 1~89 - suffer
some aome C!COoom~ .loss f~ '8
aonfatal accideutal DIJtp:y, WJth a
~ ID the ICOIIOJl!Y of $176 bil-

.

lioa,.a new~~ W~.

~study,. C~salion_lor

Acc•dental InJuries m the Umted
Sta.tes;" ~as cond.u~ted .bY
~ a Institute fO( Civil JUSllce,
..was baaed on a S~!fVeY. of 26,000
bousebol~ and pves OJ)C •of the
m'!st ,detailed 1~~ at acc•!lental
inJurtes and thcu 1mpact m the .
.
· Unilcd Stales,
Tbe studY, "!a~ requ~st~d .bY
Congress to aid m Its consideration

of cbFge&amp;iD liahl'ily law.
The llUd)' IIIII tbal of.the acci·
dents caus•na ecoaomic 1~11 in
198~. 7S ptlrCC!Il occurred 10 the
~ 12..,.., ..S 2S percent
mc:arli«yean.
, : .
. About~ quarter of all IDJUI1CS
occur while people~ around
the hiluie, IIIOlher qa11111 happen

industrial band tools and equip.-

lilent.

•

-· ----

..

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onthejoborc:om•'linl~aod
~e 3l&gt; ~..,.._a while peopie an: relaxing.
.

Almost 40 percent of all acc1~nts result from !'ails· 20 peroent
JD\'Oive motor velticles and 30 per,
cent. involve other p.OOuc,ta, JOOst
often toys, sports oq!i•pment,
household and ~ ttems IQld

Of the $176 billion cost to the
economy - about ~ percent of
GNP- the ·study SBid S6 pen:ent
was in dj rect co~ts, mostly for
health care, wh1le ~ork loss
JICCOWlted for44 ~L
.
Employees mJSI about 200 million days of . work eacb year
~ause of ~cidents, almost one~of an Sick leave. Another 22
. mill.Jon days of work are lost by
farm~y . ~mbers who must care fO(
the YlCI;Ims. ·
• .
,
Tbe study ~xcluded fatal..acc1dents, occu~nal and othet~uct- retaled diseases ancJ non~JIIld

produe~ve labor sucb u iboUJ&amp;.

for .victims of motor vehicle ao.11 ''bllloo •
.
work, thua understatina overall otlltzercidenll
etllef
of injuries while
COBII, it said.
. · _ MlldU!oostsare reimbur!cd at
: urt"" '(iQ
t of iu acci. It allo fouad !1111 tile 111111111'1 ~ .a lirlfic:aatiY. blgber rate llbP ::.., 0
of 10181
patebwodl. ~ pnvaiD 11114 ~blk: wor lOll the ropon sai4 u.S CD!&amp; •
cC'mponY!""! IJ'II!ell.l 7 ~- _olf..-,daeilfwnmq-. : 1
_ CliiiiPGI'dered
aace.
. ~ ,.., I 110!1, tick · esieciilly tow iDCOIIlCI w~ • •
u d by oaly
:
leave, 4iUbillr;y pay,~~ wiio nffOr lilng-llena disabllDJ . . l$. ,_ :TdiUiore thin
J&amp;Oil- IIIII tfle 1111t ~ Jrl· iJijalias. 'lboy recouer oaly 20 pa:- .• tt-m&amp; ~ • ', , w!Jo.-receive .
tem -.allkOIIlJII)'IIICIItlb~- ceni~oftheitlost _ ___iQq 1u 7 r•a~lllll :
62 percent or the coiiU wliilo ings
•.
~ . . . Gllll iD 10
·
vic:- •
. bouiebold 'IIICIIIben tbouldv die '·
Costa a ao fluctuate widely
~n i:peai4er triogins a
rest of the buRien ~ $67 biBion Ill ~ 10 the kind of injury, lhc' 'tlalm. • .
·
1989. .
·
. st111tnaill. wort injuries ~unt- . B.aeemln1Jlt11J that findina ere ·
1'bose burt an the job have tile ed for ~ billion of tbe $17~ ~U- aiiiG atiW.~ victima wJ1o....,. a"' .
loytes,t rate of recovenng 1~, · Hon iJJ 1989, while nonfatal ·motor to coiieet trom 811011ier partyYlat a ,
w1t!J, JUS&amp; 54 porcent recovenn1 ,~ accl,..ls IJIIIOUIItcd ID 537 :!iOlJCIIliDl.
·
!lleir costs, 1;0111pared to 70 peltCilt
.
·
i1llnw • reouno to oe

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WI !IEIIIIVE TMI RIGHT '1'0 UMIT QUAM.

TTTI£$. NOI!II SOLO TO OMLIRS.

Eow·Priees. And
*
.,
-,
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~or
;. l \

.

--

COIIV~KiH,.. 1111 • THE KJIOCIIII CQ .. I1'EM&amp;
•
AND lllllce5 GOOO SUNDAY, AIIIIIL 7.
·THROUGH SATUIIDAV. AI'IIL 13. lin, IN- ""_.

.

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-tl11teiCI;;·pnce-30~.()nlv-......
-'f pun::naa.:l.
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AllftiTISID lftM POUCY·Eic:n tJt ~ "'- .... 11

•

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. ,.......,
-~'at ~ lfl ....:l't l(roglll ..... - · IWCifl ... notta '"
thie .a. :f W4lt do :"l.in out or .'lt\ ...........e.n. • WIM aH1t WlfVOUt diDICe

postpone's lOrmal end to Gulf War

0.

Accidents coSt 41 rilillion Americans economic loss .yearly'1

mere

..
.• . . •
bias or hate Crimes and extending Civil ri¥hts protections to an g~·
motivared crimes, thereby anowing vicums to sue their assailants in
B;r THOMAS FERRARO
White House offlciil said the plan are just over the border in Iraq·and raise funds.to hefp the Kurdish
federal courts for fmancial damages using the lower burden of proof
United Press IDienJatlooal
was "'"oing nowhere."
700,000 have gone to lrari.
· ina! nrnt'Hmn
Tbe U.N. Security Council has
" House press secretary
ssid
the Unired
Swes
· required in civ'il rather than cnm
r~·gs.
. ·
'
White
The refugees ' plight bas refugees.
has Jllll upHe$35
million
in cash
and
· The measure also doubles penalues for rapists, extends courtroom
delayed ratifying a permanent Per- Marlin FitzwJlter said Bush had prompt¢ WesterJ~oealls for a U.N... material to U.N. and Red Cross
protections 'lfor rape
creates
sian· Gulf
while it " significant reS&lt;:rvations" about s-"-"
............,.zone in north
. •
th victims,
· · $300
'11'new• protections for battered
·
Iraq'cease-fire
·
"~""' ·~ J " V - C
agenctes,
and · is seeking other
women, wh1 e au onzmg
ma aon .or state rape prevenllon
rev1ews ms ~ s wntten acceptance the proposal, which would offer em Iraq. Tbe European ommunity sowcea of funding.
·
efforts and funding college campus rape prevenlion programs.
· of the terms 0( fonnaDy ending the U.N. proteCtion for Kurds in north- has agrc¢ to bankroll the project
He said u .S. military forces
The Justice Department bas expessed reservations about the legiswar.
em Iraq.
but Baghdad rejected the idea out- conu'nue relief s ppl operati' .
Jatioa. Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas bas introduced
The cease-fire, 'which was to
Meanwhile, the United States right.
,
u ~
ons,
his own, more nlirrow GOP alternative.
have gone into effect Tuesday continued its efforts to provide
The off'acial Iraqi News Agency ~~~~ in the lllll two days,
"We must all take responsibility for these crimes - men and afternoon, was put on bold at the humaoiiarian aid to the hundreds of quoted Iraqi Prime Minister
8Jf uWIOIOIIS have mopped 172,
women alike,'' BideD said. "Survivors' plights are not only individual
last moment when tbe council thousands of Kurds fleeing Sad- Saadouo Hamadi as saying his 000 pounds of supplies.
tragedies. These are crimes of tmor. They instill fear not only in t11e
asked for a copy .of lbe document dsm's anny.
.
"
country rejected the "suspicious
Perez de ~uelliJr aeot two U.N.
. actual survivors, but in every woman in America."
·
in which Iraq's National Assembly
On the diplomatic front, Secre- proposal to establish a wne to tack- missions 10 'lbe gulf to assess the
The hearing CJIJIIC two weeks afltJ' the committee released a report
BCCepted the conditions, diplomatic tary of Slate James Baker met with · le die so-called refugee problem."
n~ ~d 4wnch a Jll!lior hwn.anishoWing the United StaleS leading the world in both the nwnber and
sources said.
'
Israeli leaders in Jerusalem, and he
''Ir~ will sp,are no means tci
~vd
IS
rate of rapes - one rape every six minutes - and that 1990 set a
The council could l8k!: up the was told that Israel agrees in princi- resist thlS plan, ' INA, monitored
S
opmen :
record for rapes.
.
·
.
matltl' SllDICtime Wednesday. .
pie. to participate in a "regional in Beirut, quoted Hamadi as say- ~::.£e:;:ngroundent
off=
The attorneys general from Dlin9is, RolaiJd Burris, and Iowa, BonThe Security Council did. haw- conference" with the Arabs, the ing. The newly apppinted premier . b
.
c
nie Campbell, iJiso testified in favor of the Bielen legislation.
ever, approve creating 1 1,440- United States and the Soviet Onion · did not say how IraQ would resist
etween aovemment troops and
Burris Praised the civil rights aspect of the measure, saying, ~'Many
member peacekee{&gt;ing force once on Middle East peace. More meet- the pllin.if it gained the approval of ~'!'~thets in ~ and northern
acts of violence 8$ainst women are motivated by hatred of women as a
tbe cease-fire aoes llllO effect.
ings were scheduled Wednesdsy.
, the U.N. Secority Council.
u""IR
~ 24 hours. ·
class. This rccogmtion is of utmost importance. '' ·
·
.
While diplOmats pondered the
Once tl)e war is fonnaDy .ended
Hamadi said the initiative was
-The orld Health Organizaofficial end of the war, tens of and the U.N. peacelreeping force in WlllCCCSS8I'y because Iraq had talten tion, sayi~g Kuwait's health care
thousands of fraai refugees contin- place, the United States plans to "all the practical mc;asures" to ~~~u~~:r;! 'fma:dia~~
ued to struggle (or survival in the remove .its troops from the region solve the Kurdish problem, includP.
•
. ' .
war's aftermath and Iraqi leader in lll'ge numbers.
ing declaring a general amnesty. million three· month emergency
Saddam HUssein's fien:e repression
Fitzwaltl'_said be expected 'the and thallarge numbers had aJmuly effort to help rebuild the system
,
o
OfhisTbe'~
. US.hiCJ1admiS, m'.lS'-u ........
· · - A-'adfuD withdnwal Of 350,000 Ameri- returned totheirbonies,
an~ appealed. for aid
'frOm Other
.
: Busl
-.
can troops in the gulf will begin as
In Lqndon, an elliled Kurdis,h lllllOns.
.
.
.
·
• ed Tuesday lg&amp;lnst a plan for early as Friday when the U.N. leader backed the enclave proposal . -'"!eimqal'lewsAgency~a
·
·
·
. . establishing a safe haven inside observer force is ex~ted to be and said "any delay will cause delega~on from the Internataonal
BBIRUT, Lebanon (U_.I) .hostsges were kept at the Sb1ekh Iraq for Kurdish refpgees. Btitish deployed.
thousands of more casualties." ··· -· ComnuUeeofthe~edCrossv!sired
The commander of t~e Irao1an AbduDab ~ks.
.
Prime Minister John Major hall
Iraq's borders are be~gflooded .
Moshin Dizayee, an elliled leud- th~ north!lfll Ira.q• c1~ o~ Karkuk
Revolutionllry G~ m Lebanon . . ~stan saad Iran, as ~ell !IS pushed ihe proposal,
with Kurdish and Shiite Muslim · . er of ·the Kurdistan Front, Slid the T~esday, mspectmg extenS!ve .damsald, .Wednesday b•~ c~try was Syna, was concerne~. wnh the . Lawmakers wbo . attended a refugees Oeeing Saddam's repros- mQvc would not be intervention in ~ge a~ government b'!Jidmgs,
motiYitiDd by h1lllllllllllrll ~ reJeasc: 0~ all hostages . Le~cse, White House session Slid President sion. .Ac:cording to U.N. eStimates, Iraq's internal affairs, arguing, mcludmg ~hools, hosp1.tals and
to~ free lZ W~ believed Pa!esunams and ,A,men~s. He Bush did not believe sJJCh a Jan
~ ha
"I •
t · · te a1 aff ·
de telccommunlcation networks
b~ hostage by S~te fundanten- Slid l~an. .was mouvate~ by could win U.N. s u - A slruor as many as 270 '000 re ees ve .
t s no an •n m
Bll un r
Th Se
Fen' R iati
talist poups.
.
humanatarian norms and dullCI in
"""'~
crossed into Turkey, 2SO,
more the U.N. Convention oo Genocide" ~ .. e ::r:tnare ..~- e 'ons
. R'da
k'
·
A
o
nassed in 1948, which says th·e
!"!l!e&amp; .
. """""'$&amp; on the
But HadJ' I Askari denied___seoking to, ;hberate hostages, 1'1.J..V'
lS
f'suppre~sion '!f CU!tu.ral. ethnic possabality 0 ~g Iraqi ~eaders
any link to Iran with kidnappers or lqaldlcasOf'tbeirnationality," ,
.
.
~
groups" as a cnme undermtema- forwarcnmes.WitneSSCS.said~adsill U.S. nationals, three Britons,
Asbri, the sixth commander of
JOHANNESBURG, South was inviting •'civil war" with his tiona! law.
.
dsn!.should be ~harged v.:•th cnmes
two Germans and an Italian. •
~ ~?tionary Guards to serve. Africa (UPI) - Tbe African ultimatom and allegations.
FitzwBitl' said the Unired States &amp;gf!lnst h~anllY; and tned before
"This if' a Lebanese issue with in LoCIJIIIOII since they came shortly National Congress, facing accusa-·
"This haS all been blown out of
as continuing to press efforts to an mtemauonal tnbunal.
which w~ have no connection or after the Israeli invasion in 1982, lions it is inviting civil conflict and pro~ortion,"
ANC senior
relation whatsoever,'' said Askari, lillked the withdrawal of some
G'
·
speaking at the Sbiekb Abdullah . 2,000 guardt believed present in tbe breakdown of talks on ending spo eswoman 111 Marcus sa1d
Hezbollab-held barracks. in the Lebanon to the withdrawal of all apartheid, said Wednesday its ulti- Wednesday. "The ANC said when
ancient city of Baalbeclt in easltl'n Israeli troops rflll!l the south.
malum to .the go':'emmen~ to end it gave i.ts ultimatum that. we WB:D~Lebanon. •
"We came to Lebanon
the black facuonal violence as nego- ed a sausfectory reSponse. lmplicll
•
.
••
upon
liable.
·
in that was not necessarily fun and
"If MUSlims who have relation request of the MUSlim Lebanese
The ANC, blaming the govern- total compliance with · our
with us bad to take hostages for people, by orders form (lale) Imam m~nt for yean of interneCine coo- demands."
catain re&amp;IOIIS,Ihat does not imply (Ayatollah Ruhallah Kbomeini) n· th has ...,11 tboa
M
d · · •f
h
!bat we have a hand in hostase· and in coordination with Syria ..
act . at
'" ed
sands of
, arcus, evJallng rom t e
said Aslcari.
.
•
blacks, said Friday President Fred- seemingly unequivocal stance of
taking,' • he said.
• • L • ..:
'd
holdin
"Wh
erik de Klerk had until May 9 to the ultimatum, said in a statement ·
"""""'' SBJ 8J'OOPS
g capen we first arrived in sack his Defense and Law and the ANC "is prepared to be Oellitives got in tiluc:b with the Revolu- Lebanon, it was partly occupied by Order minisltl'S and "'""e the secu- ble if a convincing response is
tionay Guards after· the wave of Israel and our role was to train the ·
..-.
kidnapping. He asserted that the Lebanese 00 fighting Israel ... after rity forces or ·it would suspend all forthcomina." She did not define
guards "do not know these groups Israel's Withdrawal (from the 6ullc tallcs on a post- apartheid constitu- the type of reJponse the ANC
&amp;ut soomeumes
·
the y get m
· touc h of Lebanese IA!Iritories) the guards lio!t·
• ignorec! the ultimatum would
acceptable.
De Klerk
Thefmd
ANC
ha!l also insisred the
with us."
kept their training mission butlllso and Cabinet ministen accused the government ban the carryin~ of
1ft denied t1!at any of the Islam· introduced CI!Ucational and services
ic fundamentalist groups ill P""""'ms, inelu";n• the foundation ~C of P.la~~g down its .own role tribal- style weapons in b ack
L b
· 1 d · H b 11 h
·~.--..
.._
ID the strife Jri order, to score a boltownships, dismantle covat police
;U.:::nw~~·Th: J~ ~'e;.'f!&lt;:ti hospital in Baale- low political viciGry and opening and military units, suspend and
99Z•Z111
446·5137
are sman poaps who ha 00
A ...
. ,the way for more confrontation.
~ute police officen JDiplialled
ptrS
.
'til maia
. ~
s.ari said the suards will
Zulu leader Mangosuthu an abootinp of ANC mcmbeia-and
connecuo~ wt . IDIJOI' ~·
remain in Lebanon as long as Israel Buthelczi; whose lnkatha Freedom assure that security f01te1 employ But at as w1dely, beheved that remained • 'and our pullout fr!J111 Party was al.ao blamed by the ANC "civilized" methods of crowd con- ,.a..aii'·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
~ezbollah is ~ umbrella or&amp;aniza· · here wiD be decided by those who r, the fift"
said Monda
lion under whach all fundamnetalast have invited us. Tbe Islamic
or
....uDJ, 1
YANC trol.
groups ID Lebanon operate. There Republic of Iran wlll ·coordinate · Deputy President Nelson Mandel&amp;
w~re even reports that some this issue with Syria"
llft&amp;~iiii!lii&amp;&amp;!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!ll!!!!ii§&amp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;liii!iiiiiii!il
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••

Says Iran helpmg hos'tages

•'

ATC says ultzmatum
· .
. negotza
· ...le

LET OUR FAMILY

.

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GRADE A

farms

fryen

..

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Stra:r{ia~

FA.ILY PRACJICE

Most of Minsk on strike
. . MOSCOW (iJPI) - Thousands
o{ worker~ .from more than SO fac.
tories and . cancerns in the
Byelorussiao capital of Minsk went
on strike Wednesdav in deflBni:e of
Mikbail Gorbl!chev's proposed ban
on wort: stopplges.
~t i~ tbe biJge~t singl,e \York
actiOn m one Clly smce Gotbachev
came to power six years ago and
launched his peiestroika reforms to
give people a voice in their affairs.
The Ide appeared set to engulf
the entire "'JUbllc. The Literatiunaya Gueta weekly newspaper
, said llrikllll committee~ were also
8e1 up in the cities of Zbodill, Brest,
Gomellllll Borilov.
Tho Min* wqlbn. wbo initial·
ly struck last w~. bad warned
they would inlpleT nt their dJnat.
enec1 s.-.1 strlb throulhout ·the
republic Wednesday if their
demandJ fot waae Increases to
compensate .for price increases
were not met.
"The workers DOl sadlfied
· · with the decilions of the CotJ!JCil of
. Minlsten who setistpl only-)JIIt of

"

their demands;" the offic'ial Tass
agen~y said.
It wai not clear if the sbike was
general. The official news service
Tass said parts of some large factories continued til function, while
the independent lnterfax News
A~ency said 1 "feneral strike is
bcmg ciJI'ried ouL'
' 'Witnesses in Minsk describe
tbe situation in the Byelorussian
capilli as tense and dangerous,' '
lnterfax said.
The strikers also apparently
broadened their demands, calling
for the resignation of the president .
of the republic, Nikolai Dementei,
and the premier, Vyacheslav
Kebich, Tass Slid.
· ~ Men than SO enterprises ere
lllfticipating in the JCIICfalllrike,''
lnterlla said, quoting its reporter
stationed with lbe w~rs· strike
committee.
Interfu alw said coal miners
from Soligonk, who have been 011
strike for more then • month, wen~
arriving in the Byelorussian capilal
in S~Jiidarity with the MinJk work-

ers.

··

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�Page -10-The Dlllly Sentinel ~~---

WedneSday, Aprt110, 18811

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Six.cows killed during stor~ near Canton
By Un~ Preas lllter.aatloul
·Funnel clouds were re_IIO.rted
Sill cows were lriUed and sevaal . near Colunlbus and in Muatinlum

others injured Tuesday nlflht when
high winda tqJpled two blms near
West Lafayeac 40 miles 1011thwcst
ofCanton.
:
Coshocton €ounty Sheriff' s
Deputy John F'teldon said the dama~e was caused by straight Iine
winds rather than a tomado as initially reported to the sherlfr: s
department. ·
I

· WEATHER MAP- Saow lbowen are Qkely Ia the Dortben
aad ceatnl Roekla, u a low-pranre l)llteii moves aeroa t•e
c:ouDti'J. Ia nowen wil deorelop willa tile ••e system, as It
DIOVtl lato tile aortHn Plaia T•udentonDI are JIOIIillle ID
ICIIdberD ud cntnl T-. Skit~ wiD 1M! -tiD tile Great L8llel
and tile Nurthe•t Tile West wiD be mOldy IUDJIDd mOd. (UPI)

.

------Weather----Soutla C•tnl Ohio
A freeze waming is in effect for
WeciiiC:Iday night.
Mlllllly clelr Wednesday Jiisbt,
wilh a lOw near ·30; Sunny nursday, with highs neer60.
Oillo nlellded rorccut
·Friday tbroap Sllllday
A chinc:e of showen and thun-

derstorms each day. Highs will
range from the m1d 50s to the
UpPer 60s Friday, in the 70s Satur·
. day, and in the .60s Sunday.
Overnight lows wiD range from the
mid 30s to the mid 40s early Friday, and from the mid 40s to the
mid 50s Saturday and Sunday
manings.

·

Pomeroy mayor court news
Nine individuals forfeited bonds
and six were fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on
Tuesday evening.
· · . Forfeitins bonds were Carol
Johnson, Ponland, $48, _speed;
Kimberly Roush, Letan, W.Va.,
$63,. no valid driver's license and
$43, r.i• . . tO yield right-of-way;
John Corcoran, · Dayton, $46,
speed; Minerva Zimmerman,
Athens, $51, speed; Rosa" Stewan.
Middlepon, $48, speed; Sharon
Russell, Pomeroy, $48, speed;
Joaeph Oiltey Jr.,_Middlepa'l, $63,
squealing tires; Chrisroplier Stewan, Middleport, SS4, speed; and

John Freeman, Middleport, $88,
open container.
Fined were Michael Trainer,
Middleport. $20 and COSts, seal belt
violation; Wanda Riffle, Racine,
$SO and costs, driving under suspension; Mite Slllllp, Pomeroy,
$63 and costs, fictitious license
plate and SSO and costs, no financialreapo~!libility; Timothy Coates,
Pomeroy, $213 and COliS, trespassing; Pegay Davis, Long Bottom, .
$63 llld 001111, permiuing an unlicensed driver to drive a car; and
Michi!el Mullen, Pomeroy. $43 and
costs, left of center.
.

c.

Middleport mayor court news
Seven individuals forfeited
· bonds and four were fined in the
. coun of Middlepon Mayor Fred
Hoffman on Tuesday evenmg_
. Forfeiting bonds were Audrey
L. Wilscln, Athens, $460, ~ysical
control: Matthew R. Willis, Gallipolis, SS1, speed; Dennis W. Tolley, Albany, $460; physical conttol; Billy W. Ward, New Haven,
W.Va .. $54, speed; George 0.
Wender, Poc:a, W.Va., $60, expired

tap and SS3, speed; Wayne Robert

Jewell, MaSon, W.Va., $50, speed;
and Paul R. Stewart, Cheshire,
$110, clisorderly maqw,
Fined were John W. Kloes,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, expired
repstration; K;evin Sranely, Middlepon, ·$10 and costs, squealing
tires; Rick Hawley, Middleport;
$25 and costs, diwrderly manner;
and IWl E. Stewart, Cheshire, $2S
and costs, disaderly manner.

1

boys' assistlnt vnay btrkelllall,
Rick Edwanls, boys' reaerve .__
ketball; Gene Wbe, boys' ninth
grade b=ketbell; Cllris Stout, boys'
eighth gr1de basketball; Pat
O'Brien, boys' seventb pade .__
ketball.
Fred Baloy, boys' head track;
Mike Kennedy, usistant hish
school tract; Bob Ashley, Jr.,
junior hip trll:k; Bryan Swann,
assistant junior hip triCk, Zane
BeeJie, ileld baiebilf; KimAcflnns, Jid,l' tell q llllkellllll;
Jodi lflrri-. ~· ren Y"C soft·
bill; Clllly Edw1tds, Pia' junior
bi&amp;b lllm"•U: Fred a.~oy. bigll
JCiionl newJIIIIPIII, lt8y Doidp,
high school cheerleaclers; 1nd
J)wma B •dey, junior hi&amp;b JChool
d

1ew'nl.

Abo --n:aewed were volun-

teer coiChes, Dennis McGuire,
assi•et boys' ninth II* bulret·
ball, and Katily Wilfong, junior
bigh clteerles tea.
ne raipation of Roser Foster
as 1irls' basketball coach was
accepted a the~.
Pamillion- pw~tecl 10 Oary
Wlfuz lnd Fmf Ba1oy 10 hold an
introducfoly level COIIlplllel ella 11
the hilh school. The telchill

At N reque11 of 0on1on Fisbtr,

~ bolnl WIIIJd to pay lrllllpOIIa·
uon e")) DDII'II for spnns lpOIU in

.,.iii

Meigs County Court Judge

Pattick H. O'Brien fined 22 during
couri hours last week, while one

Clilford Allen Lambert

•

Ci:lifford Allen Lambert, 38, .of
106 Brick SL, Polncroy, died Tuesday, A~l 9, 1990, It Veterans
Memorill Hospibl, Pomeroy.
He wu born JUDe 21, 1952 in
Columllas, son of Ethel Russell
Lambert of Pomeroy IJid the late
Odie McOnlw Lambert.
In lddiioo to his IIICIIII«. he is
surviwld by one - . Cliffanl Lamlien of PL
W.VL; tbree
Patricia ud Rbocla
111 McArtbur IIIII T 1 MDIIM 111 PL PI
at; !U lllothen, Stlllley I MUllen of Pomeroy,
Chlrlea ~t.t111~ Hlrvey 1 . . . . t111 Jill oy, Howad
I ...... 111 M ~- Tail Lltabai
of v.....; .,...
hn 111011lipOIII ud RoBie Lllllber of
- Pomauy, 11ft Ill I 1, .r. . Swlabcr of (Jdipolla, S.. Do ....,..
or Pom~Terry 81rntt of
LanpviJ1e,
I
'wt111 Dater lid c J LaiiHn or
WUkesville; fa. lji CCIII 6f I 1B,
Glil, Jaiaifer, Jeae, I fadl, liD
and Daa.
Twin brodaen. IYDD aacll!ria

,.._t.
t:::,C:n,

i.

·'

$45,581.7211alance.

Dlnaer pltnllled
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
are hsvinl a bilked steak dinner at
the Tuppers Plains Firehouse on
April 20 at 5 _p.m. Cost is $4 for
adults and $2.50 for children.

ed.

.-

•

-

will

Hospital new$

A divorce bu 11eeu pw~ted in
Meigs County Common ,Pleu
· Court 10 Gloril Di.- Robertson
fnllt Ric:lllrd a Rollenlon.
The coun ._ 1 •*d 1 diaolulion of mmilp 10 Dilne HariiOil
and Don Harrison..

INSURANCE
JOUIIIDIPIII•tn

AGIIIIS SIIYIIG
.. . .GS COUfiTJ

i

t:OO e.m. • 10:00 a.m.

I WHI SfSSIOft- $3600
'

••IIIIPOII OliO

, . . . , . . . . • • • • • , . . .,

Ghoe~t

11.1, AT 11 :00 A.M.• e
11711 N.....,. Mobile Homo.
belngthe JlniPO~ oft... Jete
Jlllll II. Miller. of llutlend,
Olllo. will be oold et the
Cou" Hou• ~~- Second
ltNet. Po-oy, Ohio, for
t.,. belt obtelneble price.
Calli on delllltrt of lllle.
I,!ICiulrlllo Nil be mede II
· 814·742·2103. .
Keren Thi!Ckar.
Admlnlltrator of t.,.
Eotale of JI!Ck II. Millar,
dec•Md, Melt• County
l'rGIIIIe Cou"
Ca• No. 28,411 .
141 '10. 1 1. 12. 3tc

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OFFICE 992-2881

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205 NORTH SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTflE.S. TURNER, BROKER
POMEROY- IT. 7- Approx. 18 acres of land,LCCO waier
&amp; electric available. WILL SELL ON lAND CONTRACT.
$20.000
LANGSVIllE - ST. IT. 124 - A2 story, 4 bedroom house
w~h a 1 car pra&amp;e and a cellar. Nice s~e yard. Comes wHh
above ground pool thai is still in craie.
SIUOO
MIDDLEPORT - lain St11tt - This home has nice size
rooms, 4 bedroom, 2 storr home wlh wrap-around po~ch ,
full basement. S1tting on a 501100 lot.
$21.000

FIYE·PONlS _ Beaulilul brick Mme w~h lull basem~t..
How olten have you said "Thlt's whatl want"' WE HAVE IT .
This home has been well taken care of. Three bedrooms, 2
baths and gorgeous yard. ·
$69.500.00

..........

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.- Appx. 60 acres olncant land w~h 28 titllble
· ! and balance in limber.
$24,000.00

1 If• Gltit

HENRY E. CLELAND ....... .............. 112-111\
JEAN TRUSSELl .. ................. ....... 141·2880

JO HtU .............;.......................... t•-4411

OFFICI ............... .......... ............ '... , 112·21,1

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MIDDLEPOIT - 2 lots, and a one story home wrth seven
r00111$. Has 3 to 4 bedrooms. huae livina room, big dinina
room, newer one car prage, and tour llreplaca. Alsoalar&amp;e
floored attic, Iron! porch and 1 partly lenced large lOt.

o·us1ness
• .· ·.servtc.
• es
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

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-~~ It ltlentlflld In the re·
aordt of the Moltlt County
Auditor by Porcel No. 20·
00241.

IOWIIAII'S RUN lOAD - Aloa home ·~ Alts - Bi&amp; open
kitchen and livin• room with cathedral ceiling. Abal~ony
bedroom overlooluna hvina room. 2 other bi.l bedrooms. Has
a full basement with utility room and workshop. Approx. 10
acres of land with 2 caves and an above 11011nd pool .

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BISSEU
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EMILEE MERINAR .

JAIIIS IIISIE

In ..... hit

· "fl'll Eotlmltll"

992·2772 or
742·2251

PH. 949·1101
ar les. 949~11.0
NO SUIIOAY CAllS .

3-11-lflt

SPEEDY VAC
. Quality
Sweeper
.
Repair

Campl1tt GroOming
For All lr-..
nu s

Windows

•Roofing
eln1u'-tlon

131 Bry•n Pile• ·
Mldclleport, Ohio

614-992-6820

MICiow•vr

i;

OVEN .;All

.;,:

BISSiLL
'BUILD II$

II~ELL I

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At lea10na~l• Pri1t1"

4-1

-lleom · ddltion1

--,...,... .
- 0---rll

- E I - end Plullil&gt;lrig
-ConONM lli!'Ortl

....

- 1-loir. btlrior

IFIIEE ElnMATESI

v. c. YOUNG Ill

,_.,,Ohio
992-6215

CEDAR
CONSTiumON

ttl-SUS • t15·U61
Acre. fl'llll hit Oflke

992-6641 or
691-6164

1H1 ·110-""

IH4·'90 tfn

COUiilfiY CWB

'

IOOFING

UPHOI.STDY

NEW- IEPAII

Hind Tufting
Cllltom DraP.1

Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning

36 \'"" Expwlnee

Painting

614-9t2-2321

FR£E ESTIMATES

Wo ley Whet W. Do.
WeDoWhltWeley.
90.91-9 ••.

Slit
GOI.F U~S ... SlO ...
6 ... .sss

NEW~ ................ S4

lnlttn Cl•• lepoirlll
TIOPIIES - PlAQUES
IADGU

JO . . ftAFOID

s-tC.. ... Ot

949-2168

•

•

r:!

WHALiY'S
AUTO PAITS

&amp; TIEl

TIIMand
HS I. Sac... Streot
-*IPOIIf,011045760
Office 61 4·ftJ.IW
. 111111 "4.ftJ.56tt

IEMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

11'e

Sptelall... In
(tllfiM f r - IHalr
lliEW a UIEO liAIIITfl
. FOit ALL MAKES •
MODELl

BILL SLACK

992·7013
or 992-SSU

'992-2269

1-100-IU·0070

01 rou IIU

USED RAILIOAD TIES

II. 1, ltltlootl. 011.

r--------·
;
LINDA'S
·PAINTING

~ ·

.
"''
-~:
)

FIIE! 'EinMATES

Toke the pain 1111t of

..

.

. ••/1

Let me • It for rou.

~

VEIY IEASONAIU
HAVE IEFEIENCES

:

·• '"
-;..'

(614) 915-4110 ,;

=-=·p:d!. ..-~;.

'===3=·8:·:'1:1:
· :1

FOIIYD IIOIIIZE .J:
PROM TANNING
-,
SPECIAL
•
1st 50 High School
·Studtnt1

Call 949·2126
for Appt.
FOIIYD 11011111
IAIUNit., uc•

3-4-'91-1 1110.

r-~~~~...

fii·COUm

IECYCUNG

DAIWII. OliO

.

"

.~

-'
'
·1
'

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TlL 7 P.M.
HJeu dtH up your

-'tands.... WI

;.

llu.I_an wHbnth.

Til-COUNTY
RICYCUNG
LecMtM Off tho lpou 0.

Tho c... tl
II. 7 lit. 143
P-oy, Olio · .
tt-wlfta e~Nh f8r .tumlnum.

--m.-..

~
':

'

~

· i&gt;ru., ltOloloo ototl•
otan· ...
- -.-....,.........
- ·CAll.
-FOI
·· I'IIClS
614.ttJ.s114
. 'All-7 1'11-7 .... a ....

-~·

·.'"

:~;;;;~,,~,~··~·~~~~..~·~~~~;'·;';':;••IJ~..;::: .,"'
1

IELLD'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Haft OtlllUI. Ow l.ewtien f1
1'h Mlllt East • lt. 2U tlirfiUIIt
a..t•. Oh.

~:

. ,.
~

.~·

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cultorn Bent Exhault lyJBteof&lt;•
•Complete Une of Exhi!UII8upp...
eH1ndlt and lnltall M0111'0t Shoeltt
CGme ud !lee U1 For A Freelmpectlo•
.
Pl. 614·tl5·1t4t IOIIIY-

~

• .,;. .•

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

m.too

•nDA JEFFm............................................. .
DAILIIE ITEWAIT ........................................ lllaS
SIIEIY~ WALRIS ...............................: ...,.,••"'-.7-oqJ

..

•rL~Owlltl'

,... Ill

IIOUll 241- A~ecluded cabin witlii ppmT iCrls ind'"il"'
on one fl001. Has 1 wrap-around porch, 2 bedrooms,lorlt
flllllllivinl room and k~chen with knotty pine on WINs and
ctllma. Apptox. 10 yrs. old.

.

••

41311 ...

4-5-11-1 ... pd.

114,500

home.

..

10 SESSIONS - $1 0 ::~

IHE

laward L Wrltllll

111-•. Sm11• ·
lllliplrt

•RN'oonoble Ret11
•Ouoll\y Worlt.
•FrWE.IImotu
•Corgot Haa Ftiet Dry
Tlm11
atjlgh OloN on Tile '
Floor Flnlah

1111111011 • UIIWOi

FREE ESTIMATES

POMDOY, OliO

,, .,,,,

CUPncw•a

3-14-'11-tftl '·'

•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERYKE .

....·

oM '11&amp;1 flOOil CAIE .•

•Remodeling and '
Home Repairo ·
•Roofing

Drfi!S-Ut.,
.,_IIATOIS--5 leo o;
IIMIIS-..,._-$1 ts
i&amp;UIS-St2S ., .
IICIO IIVIII$-179 .,.

:
11

r-~=~~

• 1-,
paint
...

I&amp;IIIIIS-$111.,

.

...........

L-----'=-'.::".:IO:::,I;olf•:a

S.ll-'10 lfn

·lflt

tOIAYWUUm

'CARPENTER SERVICE

915·3561

Ainu p,_ htt Office
tU 1. s.c-1 St.
·•
POMIIOY, 0110

915-4473
667-6179 "

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

••

7ct-2CS1

itCt111pl1tt

Step I Co111ptr1
fne Elfllllat11

... 949-2101
or ~· 949·1160

USII APPUAICIS

YOUNG'S

SEnla

992-5335 or

......o- ,,·,

CUSTOM IIILT

•.

lEN'S APPLIAIICE

IUID
CONSTIUCnON ·

.•.........
,....

·

Iring~-=-=~
•. ~
, . . u,.

P-oy,

J.J ..

IACIIIE - ACIES - Actuee - Artlll - AiJI!rox. 26
acres of land. Has approx. &amp;acres tNiable. Great place to DUI

.

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

OW111r &amp; 0pll'ator

$71.-

'

1

GROOM
ROOM

IMSULATION
.
n

U6.000

I

County Deed 11-rda.

"--------....L---------..1..--------+--------·'

4·1·'•0·1 mo.

TUPPEitS PLAIIIS - ll"'btrpr Rldlt - Newer rmh trpe
home with 6 bedrooms. family room, 2 kitchl!!1s, dmlng area:
2 car garage, enclosed porch. and 1 nice biQ 1.85 acre lot.
HasasoteRrte dish, atrium door, lsets olsliding doors, and a
lront deck.
lAKE YOUR APPOIIITIEIIT TO SEE TODAY $61,900

.

Further EXCEPTING on
the - " aide of tho dNorlbed lond ., ••mont
11 h11otolore glvMto Glenn
Cundiff, Jr. ond Carol Cun·

;·

698-6591

EASY LIVING- In th1s 4 rearolill4x60 Sunnybrook mobile
home. It has a calhedral ceiling fr dimension and a laundry
room witll shelves lor storage, ~uirped k1tc~en, two bed·
rooms and I ~ baths. It is beaut1fu and in new condition.
price was $14,000.

.

northoe-•dly continuing

,,..""' .......t .... 111e1r

POMEROY - This home is just wailing tor you. lll·level in
good cond~1on 2 car garage, 3-4 bedrooms, equtpped
k~chen central heat and A/C. Has rts own basketball court.
3\! acres ot beautilulland that can be all yours. Close to town
in i very desirable area.
$69.900.00.

IUTIAIID - ~e story ranch Slllina on 6 ICfes. ~nels
nice? Let us·sh~ you what this proPerlY. hiS to ofler. Mas
carpO!Iand prate plus exiiJ storaje bu11d1na.•••

PubliC Notice

220, Dlld
ltooorda. Metga. ~------....,~~-------r--------1
County,
Ollie.

-=

.

. PubliC Notice

Public Notice
along told line and wllh the
an: o f . - to the left ......
lng a rldlua of 711.71 fNt a

".

. 86 Mobile Hom B Rv pan
.87 Uphol1tery

lulljoot to 111 logo! hltlh- r
gl-.dlurv-IIIIH.
woyo, - - of -OI'd .
..drltlh•of-of,_,..,.

SYRACUSE -ITS ADOG NO LOIGERIIII hiS been reduced
so low that now 11 is a real jewel. Nice level lot and close to
wade school. Atlhis price you c1n hx 11 up or tear 1t down .
ONLY $9,900.00

DEXTEII - Ill story older home in town. Has ntce lren~h
·doclrs and loads o1 polenlial. 3 bedrooms and bath. lllr Jllll·
dow in living room.
.
· · $19.500.00

B.t EleCtric: .. &amp; Re lr.giWII tlon
86 G un • •' H1uhng

c-·.

Tlton, lno.

a......, tc. wrtaht. lie-

tot

-=

r

81 Homelmprovem.nt s. .
8 2 -- Piumbtng&amp; He•u1g
8 3 Eac.,at ino

Nne of One Hundred dl•-of141;Mfeeltoo
...,.,.e ..... north ::t Weot
AcN Lot Nu....., 213 end point, the long cliord ofoeld dltf; their helrw ..d .........
........ 41 ' 27" . Nil the •lttJng tltilllerllne of ore --.a North Ill lor ... ol\d wat• lin" and
' lllkl rell eltlte WII IP• '":
32).14 - to en Iron pin, Welnut llrlll, 178.00 felt Hgr~aa 4&amp;• 11'' !aft. 'the right to.,.., and melnl· preloed II. 123,000.00.
1
petting .. Iron pin 1147. II to the ,..1 pillnl of beginning 141.30 felt to tlld point: tin Mme.
Termt of lola: Clth.
felt: thenoe •uth 10 for the lind herein de· ........ North DO cleg· Tile rto1 ....~ abOve do·
Ileal ettote 01nnot be told 1
tltgtMI 10' 33" Well I!Crtbld: theriOI Iouth 87 41' II" lett .continuing oort..._ Ia oubjeot to all for llu lhen two·thlrdo of ..;
141 .10 felt to .... point of . tlep- 11' 33'' Eott olong etono aeld nne 141.12 fNt lee•o. ••-nil end rltlhl• tho oppraloed value. ·
;
beglnnlnt and oontolnlnt the -Jno of the Ohio to a point In the trillion' of wey of ri!COrd.
Jomot M. Soulab~. ~
o.1771ooreo.
DIED IIEFEIIENCE: Vo•
Sherllf of Melge ·.
illvw ... . _ , and p - 1111 praperty II'"' an.l there
to
mmJnot•
end
contolnlng
Ju,.
31 o. Pea• 1143. Melga
County, Ohio · ~
TheebOve~lon­
of woy. 0.10110-.
perld by lv•o. Mooh-rt. 311.00felttorlghl·
t4)3.10.
'J7.
3tc
,:..
a point: thenc,

LETART - lalntsnance frH htstlor - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 slttma porches, and 1 dinina room. Nice big level
yud. fenced area wnh barn tor anima~1 .and a little house
for childrl!!1. Price was $42,500. IEuuCED TO SH.too

$56,00.00

Well along the lllntOr't
w..t PI'OPirtY Nne 1nd tM

77.22 fHt: -ce loovlnt

lillro .,d llligna. hereby
gr..t to the ........ h•
lillltlnd ·elllfna. oh HNmont In
In.,. on
lhl ebOvedeoorlbldpleOI"'
pei'OII of lend • 1 -n• of
"'-111t1
northN-rdly lnt- to •d . . - from
continuing along oeld line
edlollllno reol-e.
..dwtththe...,ofaourveto theEJCCII'TING
the Dhlo lllvthe lett .,.vlng e ,...ua of. • ......., end P - com712.71 filet e · - - ·• itaht of woy being
Ill 1.11 - to on l!'on pin, -fWtlrlwldlh.-en
tlil polnl of ............. of feltonlltheroltleolthefoJ.
tlil treat ........ -lbetl:
-ce oouth 3 tie. . . . 311' ~=~":'="r~
the tntoreootton ollhe'ellltt14" .... 111.11
IIi.,.. north "" tltgroea 00' lng -therlr rflllt of way
27" 1111 27.21 fNt to on line of ltole llouto Nu .......
Iron pin, pOlling en lion Dlrl 124oncilheWeot ... oftold
II 1.21 fMI: lhlnoe _.to 4 One Hundred Aan Lot Num........ 10' 40" Nat ber 211. llkl point eliO ....
20'1.10 felt to the ldt!e of lng the . .- · nortllwen

Food

•

5 9 .-For S.la or Tr•de

the

.

••

23 Prol• llonal Servittti

PfDIIIrtw corner; thence
a-t. 2 dogreea 41 • 27"

at 11'1.71 fMt:

...................
r.__
71 . .,.. 44' 21" ....

pin lrl the lntot-lkwl of the
ulotJnt eouthlrlv right of
Wrty JIM of · - lloute No,
124 ont1 the- lneofOne
Hun41'1d A- Lot No. 213:
thonao toulh 2 . . . .0 41'
17"-a!Ortalhl-ttllne .
of oeld One llundred ACN
Lot No. 213 .,d the oolotlng
centerline of Walnut ltreot a
IOUI] dllllnCI of 182.00
felt: thenoo eoulli 17 do·
• -· 11' 33" o toto!
.......e of 311.00

9t2-6910
We Accept

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

22 Monav ta l oan

Pe"n tor Salt
Mu lie.. Instrumen ts
Fru111 &amp; Veget1bt ..

the Ohio lllv•. Pllllnl on

H o~tun

Services

56
57
58

'1'""'41''

Public NotiCe

.

·

·

Hou•hold Gooda
Sporlint Goo•
AnHques
Mist. M..- chl0d11e
Building Suppli•

Wantad To Do

PWIIC NotiCe
Iran pin

Fo1 Le•e

79 Campar s • Motor

21 Busin•• Opport unaty

895 Lee••
137 Butlllo

·

4H - Equipment tor Rttn l

.t9

51
6 251
54 -5.6

1~

7 3 Vans . 4 WO "s
Motorcv ch•
7 5 80111 a. Motors tor Siill e
7 6 Aula Pw 11 lo Ace:• SOt lot
77 · Auto Rep•w
· 78 C• mp.ng Equtpment

7..

SPICt tOf At nt
W1nltd to Rtnl

46
_4 7

17 Mttcellan..ou s

175 Pt. Pt...,t
418 Leon
576 A,.,.eGrow
773 Mnon
liZ New Hew e n

Portland
Letlrl Fills

The t t - Nttlonll lank,
Plelntlft, ........ WHom .J.
Halle¥, It ol., Defenclentt.
upon a judgment thel'elrl
renderld. belng Cooe No.
10-C¥·274 In told Coul1. I
wHI ofler lor tile, et the
front door of the Court
II_. In Pomeroy, Metgo
County, Ohio, on· the 13th
dey of May, 1111,.~~ 1 1:00
o'clock A.M. the ""l-Ing
Jerida, tonemontt al!d peroonel property, to-wit:
llluatod In leotlon 311.
!Ionge 12. Iutton Town·
oh]p, Ylllege of lyreouoe,
MolgoCounty,ltoleofOhlo
..d llelnl o pen of One
ll..,dred - Lot No. 213

c-notng

Mai on Co .• WY
AN• Cod a JO•

ANI Code 114

' PubliC NotiCe

FOODS

DOOER - Have you ever been in a BARN STYLE HOME?
Now's your chlnc:e. Sits on three secluded 1cres, b~t ~ly ~
minutes to Athens, 30 minutes to Pomeroy or GallipoliS. II s
two story with a basement and loads of wood decktng to
watch the appr()l(h ol summer. Only 2 years old.

••

ttl ...... _ .

. 378 Wilnul

Rtll EltMt General

...""'~&gt;

{

446 Oatl.,_.,.
ll7 Ch...... •

HOURS: Monday thru S1turday, 9 to 6

FEATURED DAILY SNCUIILI c.ny Out A '5 "

110 ltiSJEIIVAT!Oid . . CUI M Y

MhgaCoutNy

Stt·Ups

a..• .,, ••.,

GILMORE'S
112 EM . .
r .

-. ..

A•••

71 • 'Aut os for Slle
7 2 Tru ck s to r Sill•

•s ... Furnithed Rooms

11 ·· Help Wnld
' 12 Sil t~~~lion Want.t
\. 13 lnsoranu
14 ~ Butin • s Trlmtng
1 S School$ • lnstructton
1 I Rldio, TV &amp; C8 R ~tp tltr .

••xd;trr;J{I'S ...

Glllia Count¥
Coda 114

843
247

fill'

l'lll'l' r

CHEESE TRAYS for Racaptioni
Wt Rent Cake Pans lind

IACIIE- Vacant lot w~h city sewer. electric, water and ps
available.1lreat for home or trailer. No messing w1th septic
tanks or drilling wells.
110.000.00

'

(.'/a~sifw•l flOJW·~

WEDDING MINTS • NUTS • TABlE
'CLOTHS and SKIRTS • DECORATING
SUPPUES (lags, Tips, Food Coloring)

I

Transportation

Houses-tor Rent

Mal:lfle Hom.. lor R 11n t
4 l F·arml tor R• nl
•• ~ Ap.lftmtnl for Re n t _\1

Sr:·"·''"

coordinated) • ASSORTED

OHIO VALLEY

1;1411"'

E'Ill! II\ ill t·Jt I

completeaPNI&amp;.IIont811d
bid lnformetlon conteot:
Devld Loc*a
Tr.,IIIOfiMion Director
P. ·o. lo• 307
lyri!CUM, Ohio 411779
lf141912·HI1 ,
lnltllll Inquiry mutt be
II!He prior t.o al- of butl·
-·on Aprl211, 1111.
lido ~I be -ned on
Aprllll. 1111 ttli:OO p.m. .
at the Meltlt County loerd
of Mll/00 offta...
:,~• Caunty lioerd of
M
ltttardatlon/Developmentel dlllbllltleo re....,.. the right to _ , . "'
.....,.enyorellbldo.
and ....... fuly tie14) 3, 10, 17, 24. 4to
IOitllldlllollowO:

•l

•SDV~tl DINMO
WB.Illltlly &amp; "-••i-:-5... I ..
. frWey I S.....f-5 IJliD"'f ,_

•
•
•

with whHiclwllr 1111. FOI'

54 Ml1C41111ntoul
Merchlndl..

o•

~

5 tt.pp., ·A411
6 Lo,l 1nd found
1 V•d SlleliNid •n • dw• ncet

6 1 -- Fa rm E.qVtPmen t
62 W ant ed to Bu y
8 3 Ltvei i Odl.
6 4 11-r &amp; Gt~in
65 - S e.-d .. F.rt • i1er

42

2.00 ~ M MONOAV
2.00 ~ M TU ESDAY
2 .00 P M, WE DNESDAV
2;00 P,M IHUASOAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

PUILIC NOTICE
Public Notice
liD IIEQUEIT
The Melti County loard
NOTICE OF IALI
of Mentolllet.rdtllon De¥e•
ly VIIIUe of ., Order .J1/f
lopmental Dlllblllllet will lele ~-- out of t!Wc:--ecoepl oMled bldt for the
Pleat Court of Melge
following vehicle!:,:---~~!!:.!!!!!!!!:.In the 0111 of

,_,, s.. 1·5

'

.06/ dey

·8 Publi c l lle • Aucuott
· 9 W~~tted to BMW

fullowi"J{ ll•l••t,h•im•

!~Wile Notice
ONE 114 - g e r but

Hom • lew S lit
Mobile Homwfo r S&lt;t111
F•rm 1 lor S.t e
Busin•s luMdlnQl
35 Lot• • . Acreage
3 6 -Ru l Ealete W~nt ed

41

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM . SAIUADAV

NOTICE OF IALI

992-5776

•SEIVING WNOI: r-. tin ' Frj.- 11 •-3 ,_

.

·y w d Sillt'S

On the 1'7111 dey of Aprl,

•s

s•tr 11161

In Mum ortam

Public Notice

Slinh, AI. . .,
.........,.•••lid
lely ,,....
H..bard's Gr. .houH

..

.60

&amp; Llir:slrrck

31 ·
32
33
3l

2 In Memorw
3 AftnoucMnMII
4 Give.-"'

.42

. ,3.00
• n .30t dey

F ii'lll ~.lli.!IIP.S

Rea l fstale

c.• at Ttt.,.kt

1

.30

16.00 .
19.00

·

Hi!ppy Ads

WlDNf.SDAV PAP E ~
THURSDAY PAP ER
fHIDAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

WEDNESDAY - TUllEY &amp; DlfSSING
lH..SDAY -r- U ,Q, CHKIEN
f.AY - IIOII.ED AlASKAN POUOC:I
I.I.Q. OIKIIN 1ntll DEEP FIIID Sll.llf
SATUIIDA y - ,._ ... IIIOIUD AlASIAN POUOCI
AND I.I.Q.

111 S.lllll St., '-•••Y

Of•

lUESDA'f' PAPER

•.

II•• .......

.20

tor ..t h d., H MP•••• Mil.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS

,..................
....................
'"'............... ,.....,

.

.4.00

AMn • ••Ot ~•cut;,. runa. llrolllllnupd.,a wtiiNch•Q.t

\

Card ollh anlu;

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAV PAPER

.

C.q ..ttU..ef

SIIACISI,

be pre·

'*'"

A marriage license has been i
granted in Meigs County Probate
Coun to Donald Oene Jones, Jr.,
27, Reedsville, and Susan Gale
Richuds, 16. also of Reedsville;
and 10 John David Spriggs, 19, and
Monica Fay nurman, 16, both of
Columbus.

••••• ; ltl

10
Monthly '

•A t t • .. f•OCf a dY e~r u "ununl ploH:ud tn Hut Dally Sunlttt MI IP.
CIIPI
cl•111hud dll pt ~ . Bulln Uiit Card ;md h..iJ .. nottc" J
;~It o iiPfllll• • • lh u Pt Phht..l11 A egt~olur 11nd the G11H1
pul•• Da•y lr•bl.mv, uuu:hmu ovUf 18.000 honuts

!

flOW or• FOR TNE
IPRIIIt SEMOfll
1

mu~ol

3
6

•Snen _, tt Ml 'espon•lbiii iOf err
,.bur hr1 t tt.., ICh et.:k
lor • nors Uu t d., • d runt'" p fPtH J. Call b.tore 2 .00 p '"
d., •htrr P'fbltcadon fo motktt COHIIC UUII
"Adt lh .. must be p1rd •n advan cu otu i

A judgment has been granted in j'
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Bank One, Athens, N.A.,
against Wesley M. Smidt and Olh- i
ers in tbe amount of$7,747.69.
1
I

Licenses issued

Ma.un co11 n11 •

-

•7 point ttne '"" ontv ulfld

l

•

•

Df

1

o.,., 15 wor•

R•t•

Wonts
1li
15
15
15
15

•Pfiw of tel 10tl •II CIP" IIIt n ttts '' doubt a puat o l ad cost

I

Judgment granted

G•ll• a

o•.,.

•f r.. .ells . G•we,.-•y M d f o'fnd 11dt ur)dl!f 15 WOfd l w•lt b v
~" l d., ., • t no t hage.

. MUWIMUSSER

NEW CUSS MONDAY, APRil 1S

•

, ..d

Me. g~ ,

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

RATES

•Aa.tllf¥'1! I 60 cklcount:J6r 11 df f*•d ·•n J i1Y OI•II;e.

City Holding ......................... l4 l/2 • .
Federal Moaul ...................... l61!8''•'
Goodyear ~&amp;R ...................,.22 3/8 .
Key Centwlon ...................... 12 l/2
I:.ands' End ...........................22 3/4
Limited Inc...........................26 3/4 , ,
Multimedia lnc... ;.................76 1/4
Rax Rettaurant ..................... l 1/16
Robblns.tMyers .................. .26 1/2
Shoney'slnc.........................16 7/8
Star Bant ............................. .22 l/4 j
Wendy lnt'l. ........................ 10 1/4
WOI1hingtoo Ind. ..................24 .1/4

DINNER
SPECIALS .•.•

DOWNING CHILDS

LOW IMPACT AEROBICS by Joy King

271'/J . .II Reo•

POLICIES
"Ads ouiHfll'

Cbmning SbcJ))........................... 14 . .

speeding, costs. only; James E.
Hawkins, Richmond, Ind., speed·
ing, $23 and costs; Eric Mitchell,
Rutland, speed, $27 and costs;
Claudio Kruslaunp, Cheshire, passing bad checks, $25 and costs, 10
days in jail, suspended. one year
probation (five counts), passing
bad checks, $100 and costs, 30
days in jail suspended, one year
probation (one count); Crystal
WinebreMer, Pomeroy, OWl, $450
and costs; six months in jail suspended to· 10 days, probation of
one rear, alcohol assess.ment
ordered; Lona M. Monison, Middleport,
speeding, $20-and costs;
--Christopher W. Hutton, Rutland,
Dan~ to be held
There will be a round and window tint violation, costs only;
iquare dance friday from 8-11:30 Tammy Bush, Pomeroy, pass ina
p.m. at tlte Tuppers Plains VFW bad cbecks, $SO, costs, and restituBuilding featurinl the F~y tion; Johnny Sellers; Long Boaom,
Mountain Drifters. Ronnie W
is DWI, $300 and costs, three days in
the caller. Public is invited to jail, operator's license suspended
for 60 days, upon enrollment of
aiiCnd.
RTP school, $150 Qf fine and jail
Country music nlabt
time will be suspended, left of ceoCountry Music Night will be ter, .costs ontr,: S • E11Jle, Midheld at the Lottridge Community dleport, falstfication, 30 days in
Centct on Salur\lay from 6 p.m. to jail, suspended 10 five days, credit
midnilthL AU bands are welcome for time served, costs, one year
and tt1resbmenta wiD be available. ~robation; Thomas R. Stcvers,
ne public is invited.
Pomeroy, drivinf under suspenBillelllle pltumed
sion, 1o. days in Jail and $75 and
A bake ss1e will be held Situr- 1 cos~ fmlure ~con~, costs on!Y:
day • Big Wbed lqinning ll9:30 Melissa Downmg. Middlepon. dis·
a.m . by the United Methodist orderly conduct, c~sts ~n1y;
Women of the Rock Springs . Sa!ft~el McCloud, Ml.dd.J~rort,
Chwch
.
restSOng arrest. 90 days m J11 1111. RevlvaiiCheduled
pended to 10 days, costs only, six
The South Bethel New Testa- months~·
meni Church at "Silver R~
' e will
. PoSting bond was Deborah K.
hold ttvival • services• A · 18-20 Cooke, ~OJ, speed, $60.
at 7 p.m. each evening. The Rev.
·Bud Hatfield will be the speaker
and there wiD be special singen. At
the Thursday service featured
speaker will be Travelinf On, a
quaner at the Friday serv•ce, the
South Bethel Choir on Saturday,
and Russ Spencer and ne Southem Hi Us QUartet, on Slllilrday. The
~
public is invited to attend.

· "OVERJOYED

Divorce, dissolution
granted couples

EMS responds r
to ten calls
::

con-

preceded him in death.

Funeral services will be con- Police collections
ducted 1 p.m. Thursday at the
~-MOore Funela1 Home, Vin- total $681.50 in March
ton, with Rev. Marvin SaJ1ec offiCiatinl. Burial
be in R8dcliff
Parking meter collections for
. Canc:u:ry.
March totaled $681.50, according
Friellds may call at the funenl to the repon of the Middleport
bome IOday from 710 9 p.m.
Police Depanment.
•)
The report also indicated that
there was m1 additional CQ)Icction
of $81 by the merchant police, a
VE'rEitANs MIMORIAL H~ total of420 parking tickets wriacn,
PITAL
75 arrests made and seven acciADMISSIONS- None.
dents being investigated.
DISCHARGES - William
Graeser, Tracy Simpkins, Mill
Folmer, William Huahes, Ruth
Bennealftd Iobn u.c..

'

Stocks

Mason, W.Va., eriminal ~g.
10 days in jail suspended to e~ght,
credit for two days served, costs, criminal ~g. 10 days in jail
suspended to eight, credit for two
days served, costs: Martin Fuller·
ton, Little Hocking, expired ttgistration, $10 and eosts. seat belt violalion, costs only; :Madt 0. BIU'IOII,
Shade, DWI, $300 and costs; upon
enrollment and completion or RTP
sc!Jool. $ISO of fmc and jail till!e
wtll be suspended. operator s
license suspended for 60 days,

·-classifie

10 PlACE AN AD CAll 992· 2156
II!ONDAY thru FIIIOAY I A.M. to S P,M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SU.NDAY

RAC...

Meigs announcements ,

the
of $1,620. In his 1eaer
to the bollnt, Fisher, athletic director, said that tit is. will allow the
Atbletic Department to end the
yur "in the black."
Voluateer tutor tralainl
· ne maaer of new instruments
A vcol•mtrer ruui training workforthebandwltagaindiseussedat shop_on the Laubach method of
the meeting and the board on the teacllini reading wiD be held II the
recommendation of Supt. James Mei1s Count~ blic Library in
Carpenter voted to "lease 10 pur- Pomaoy on
16 and 18, and
cliMe" the needed inStruments It a · April23 llld 2 from 6-9 p.m. The
cost of $2,471.72 a year for five four three-hour sessions ue co,... At that time the inslnunents sponsored by Grace Episcopal
would become IChool owned ne Chun:ll and the Meigs County .Publife of instruments is 10 ~ lie Library. Registration may be
yem, acconfins 10 Toney ~ done at the library or by contact
ditector.
Leesa Murphey at 992·3643.
Supt. Calpenter pointed out that·
Loclle to meet
Ifill' cbecting the price of the new .•
The
Shade
River Masonic
math books and supplemental
Lodse
No.
453,
Chester,
wiU meet
materials there is adequate money
Thur,
s
day
at
8
p.m.
All
master
in the limd of IOIIC!y monies for the
masons
are
invited
10
attend
and
athletic department and babd
refreshments
will
be
served.
reqUCits.
Aaendintl WCJe Supt. Carpenter,
Revival
, Treuurer 1ane Fry. and boud
The Mt. Herman U.B. Church
members, Jeff Werry, Robert
Snow• • Richard Vaughan, Larry will hsve ~evival Monday lhroup
Rape, ud Roben Barton, presi- April 21 with Rev. Joe Leishton,
Logan, as evqelisL nere will be
dent.
,
.
special singing also. Public is invit-

---Area deaths· ~-

month of $191 .95 and ·disbursements of$818.93.
In the public tran~on fund
there is a balance of $29,456.20.
!::fts into that fund in March
$11,279 with disbursements
of $12,888.55. Balance in the water
improvement fund is $37,209.55
with disbursements during the
mon!h of$6,837.74 ..
0~ fund activity was as follows:
·
Water: $12,438.54, receipts;
$13,169.41, disbursements; and
$1,331.33, balance,
·
Sanitary Sewer: $11,900.73,
receipts; $10,977 disbursements;
and$2,123.42 balance.
Swimming pool: no receipts,
$990.35 disbursements; defteit balance $3,741.61.
Cemetery: $1,319.92 receipts;
$4,428.59, disbursements; deficit
balance s1,.502.17.
Water Meter Trusts: $795,
receipts; SS05, disbursements; and
$20,591.63, balance.
. .
Arts Council: $93 receipts;
$207.34, disbursements; deficit
balance, $462.49.
ARC Housing: $7,318 .50
receipts; $1,733.03. disbursements;
and $2,730.32 balance.
Issue 2: $1,086.75 balance, no
receipts, no disbursements.
Revolving Loan: $917.45 ,
receipts; no disbursements ;

-

A rteeze warning was issued for ' •
Wednesday nipt llecauoe .tempers- \
tures ue expected to cool to the • ,
mid 20s in the north and buround •:
30 in the far south.
·
;'
The Nalional Westher Service . •
advised laking action 10 liVe OUt- .;;
door plants th1t need protection .;
from the cokl.
·

Units of the Meigs County,:;
Emergency Medical Service :
responded to ten calls for assis:.
tance on Tuesday.
.
,•
At 3:42 p.m. the Pomeroy unit:
went to Laurel Cliff for Norman ;
Kempter who wu taken to Veteri •
ans Mcmorill lfoiP!al·
::
. The S)'IIICUJC 111111. II 6:14 p.m. ·
was called to Water Str~t for a
report of downed power linea and :
trees. At 6:35 p.m. the unil •
responded to ~oute 124 for •·;
repOrted gas J.esk.
••
Contl..ued from.page 1
· At 6:28 p.m. the Racine unit '
Barker, Noble L . Adkins, Jerry
went to Antiquity for downe~ .·
Spradling, Ji'aul N. Stark, Jesse A. power lines atld trees. . .
. '•
McClure and an unkDown number
The Pomeroy unit, 116:SO p.m;; ·
or John Does and Jane Docs.
responded to downed power lines ·
According to a company state· on Forest Rtin ROlli. At 6:55 p.m.
ment, following the receipt of the another. unit ~t to Pomeroy Pike
summonses, the individuals and the on a report of downed power lines
union have 20 days to respond.
and at '7:08 p.m. the unit went 10
~ a period of discovery bqins,
Pomeroy Pike, again for downed
duri!lg which the parties will be
power lines.
required to provide information
At 7: ~8 p.m. the Chester unit ··
request to each otlter. After this responded to Chester Hill for :
period, a ttia1 wiD be held in feder·
downed_power lines thele.
al COilrL
The PomerOy unit. at 8:03 p.m ..
According to Worlledge, this was caUed 10 Peach Forie Road on a
suit was filed under the Racketeer report or downed power lines.
·· •
lnflue!ICed Corrupt Organizations ·
Finally, at 10:36 p.m. the
Act. Under tit is fedel'll law,.RAC Pomeroy unit lreated but did not
has ~barged that USW A Local ~:;rtt Wilma Klein, Locusv,
5668 and the individual defendants
have conducted their affairs
throu,Bb a pattern of racteteerinJ
actiVIties tncluding violence and
Am Ele Power ...................... 29 3/4.
harassment against the ~on Ashland Oil ..~..... .. . ............. 31 3/4
and the employees of R~~
AT&amp;T ................................... 34 1/8
tractors, the company statemen~ Bob
Bvans ............................19 1/8,
said.
.

Twenty-·two people.fined in Meigs
County Court; one bond forfeited

f~~~~=~es~~ifW!rfs!~ . ~~:,:ro:by~~o=
diDta tbe IIIIIIIIICr.

·

The Nllional-w.tber SesviCe
·
.
m
Columbus reported tltundentonns
that · moved through the •rca
~~ rsin 80 heavy at times that
vilibility was reduced to near zero.

The village of Middleport had a
balance of $252,707.98 in all viilase funda at the end of Marth, Jon
Buck, clerk-treasurer, reported at
Monday night's meeting or Middleport Couilcil. .
keceipts for the month totaled
$79,'848 and disbursements,
$93,490.74. Tbe seneral fund
showed a deficit balance of
$7,401.77 with receipts of
$25,026.83 and disbursements of
$8,714.56.
· ~ only activity in the safety
(police) funds and income tu fund
were disbursements or $18,008.64
and $2,216.08 respectively. The
street maintenance fund showed a
deficit balance .o f $4,840.83 with
receipts of $6,543.08 and disbursements of $8,621.25.
With
disbursements
of
$1 ,347.62 and no receipts, there
was also a deficit balance in the
mini-golf fund or $1,977.22. ne
fue truck fund shows a balimce of
$91,642.67 with no receipts nor ·
disbursements. while the fire
equipment fund had receipts of
$225, disbunementa of $1,026.65,
and a balance of $33,093.58.
The Oltio Dqlaibnent of Natural
ResOurcel Waterw1ys Safety fund
showed a $3,000 balance with
receipts during the month of
$2,000. Currently the economic
development fund has a bllancc of .
$4,1149.90 with receipu dining the

• ••

boys' varsity ba........l; Rick Ash,

no damaae was rqxwted.

MidtJleport finance report .
released by village officials

other defendant forfeited bond.
Fined were: Oeorge K. Ostermeyer, Middleport, domestic vioJence, 10 days in jail suspended,
con11n!led~rom JNI&amp;t
· 1
•
' "· _ SsS. and. costs, one year p!llbltion,
C
counsebng ordered; Sue Maison,
Those contiacts include John . salaries of $750 would come from Reednille, speeding, $25 and
Amott. Joe Johnson, Bill Ross,llld . the billion paid by those CIHOIIing costs; Dallas Sayre, Middleport,
Bob Werry, assistant varsity root- in the cia. ·
·
·
speed, $20 and costs; Danny Westball aa:1tes; Dennis Booth, Carson
The 1101n1 granted a dock day to moreland, Mason, W.Va., speed,
Crow, Tony Miller, and Bryan J~ Doney for May 3, and J.l!:l· $22 and costs; James M. Cutlip,

Der.'S·onnel ·

County about 60 miles east of
Columbus as thtmdentomll mcived
through central Ohio. ne clouds
aPJllrelldy did not IOUCh down~ and

ne storms· were ac:companied by
stnxta ..... and hsil.
A ,Columbus Southern Power
spotewan IBid about 7,000 cus·
1on1«1 were without power foDowing Tueeday's storms.
Two people were trapped for
about 45 minutes when winds lllew
live J111W« lines onto their car near
Obelz lOUth of Columbus. An electric t11mpany crew removed the
wires, enablin4 th~ couple to
escape without inJUI')'.
Thunderstonns that produced!
damaging winds and lalle haiU
moved out or the Buckeye State
before midn ight and all that
ttmained Wedne$day morning was
some scattered light rain in the
northwest.
Winds, however, were strong
Wednesday morning at 20 mph to
30 mph . Temperatures were
expected to fall into the 30s in
IIOIIhcm Ohio.

"

!;J

Lui.. 0. WI. l .. nl

••

•m• St. 11. 141

. "·

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mu

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Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Uidd·~· Oh~ _

BORN LOSER .
o,; ...

lOW W'ST611

cmRlU..'i...

.ai!C$

M

OO't)u
Buoboi ... Trtp ............
14, Bravw .t ~ 110.
Clft . . . .

.

WID.. APBIL 10 •

MlF , • •

euto, 304-71111•..,..

1n-"'
or tlato -~--­
. . no ....., be
ohonmy_,,
Noponoiblo ""'
· - .

42 Mobile Home8
for Rent

REDUCE: lum off 1M whllo ,..U
~L Awollolllo

FRIIh-cy. ·

REDUCE: bum off lot wtolo rou
sloop, loU OPAL. Ani- t1

·

-~

121110, 2llr ... Clorll Chopol
Flold, 114 111 ••...., 4p.m.

.......

-m-,!f!lllle
=~
Pll.-,...,1.

4

I

~·

~. :

TilE WAR DRA6S

··= .... _ .... .

Chovy,11an,llol.=.· .

...=.::

18tl .... ~ 1llO!I, IIIII
dor

.

mallr,

--.-.

101•

.,. - . . . . E.ii-it .

r--~~~--. low mileage btit mott of that.

.

"Remember ... if at fnst y.ou
don't succeed, that's it!"

I- I I

·1

=._-. 1100. oeo......,.. , .
.,. -

114 1011 ............... ::

e

Complete .... chuckle quotocl
by lillinv In lila milling
you dovelop lrOill *P No. 3 bolow. ·

•

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQ ,t,R S

-d•

I I . I I I· I

UNSCR.\M8LE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET. ANSWER

By r.llllp Alder

1171,--- --·
~

__

GOVIR*IHT HOMI8- 11

(U~ta

c::
_..,l'l~&amp;.
.... '&amp;:
•- II.-Col omoe.
101-411-2111
114- - -ar """·

-

•• Illlo"-rlpm

-

nllhld.l14

' Pomeroy,

14

t• MM

Butllllll

n81nlng

llddlepOn
' &amp; VIcinity . ·.
Yonl --~-., . _

Alia oil 11M ~
Woil, Tllur. lloll\ ........ - 7111t.

18

Wana.d to Do

111100 1111 .........

-hop."'""'

·~--~-·~~~·-

...,lor ..... -

32 Mobile Homel .

for Sllll

__
_
.............

Ron-

_...,...

-

611n1Mioro

In tho l'lold. -

:Ill·-

....,. 111111: ""'· -

. WIITI'S.IIETAL DETECTORS
1210 locond A¥0,
PCJta... OHI14-MI-tlll.

...,~.
11!10'1 - ·
o!Jor I:IID

~~· IOM7MIII

, PubliC Salt

8

toed,

-

.. -

..

no liN to DOinl8. Iacko •·

..

-·
................
.
=•-rr

•'t

,..

·· Hf~t-+

..

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1

--

•

-

...,, good -

71

Autos tor'SIIe

••

Chowy

WI

Chollor

lid, nino JJOOd -

~.

-

$AVE J'OMI-TffiNG foil A

".4 y.,};{JI

flAINY PAY, .
THIJ' $TO/tM
f/tOHr /VJCVff

.."

l('ol

,.

f~OM

'Tl'lt /~f.'

.,

Ito • II -~~ ohol :: ,
.._, • ·Rani ooncl. wt •
.·
.
. ,·.
·1117· KXIO mal ·c) ale, nry- ~ •
~\

75

Bo8tt &amp; Motors

' :; :

· :.' •

•
u
....._ ...... ......--2
fOr Sale

•

•

Croft TlH4ull
~;
Goad CoiMIIIoiL ...... 114 . . I,

~ ~.

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it~

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, . . . . ''aldll

..,.tif:.;

....

....
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--~.............
....._ 1111 ~~.::··
1ft
...... 1111;
- o f . . . . . _IIIJI .... •.

.....
good

..
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114.
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...... 11112-.- 11' ...., .,

...... . _ .._ IIIII ·'

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171 IIJioogr CNIII IIMII,• 1
lllla.OIIIo.
'

b'

ACROSS

AIR IJJAR IIJ 1J.It
""""'.r ..._,,.._, lHt MOST . ·
IWif~£11\JI~ 11-lfiJG 'I'D

Wlniod To Buy: ~~~~~~~ Au1o1
with
ar w
l -, .
Col
....., Llvlly
....
Emp :oyi'"'P·~· c (''
.

~~'(1-

--~

'IIIII ........ On ~
Ulllr:lmd I Pille Polled. _,.
.., - " "
.... lei
•ICioiJ
YaiW
IAI ~ d
jJI
7

,.,,.... "-" ,....,. Rlnl.

THI: FIRe&gt;r THI~\~6- .r'M
cSOIN19-10.MAKe lelA

::::=v.,==-~
- - ........ Olllo. .....

N6W C1Q R::IR MY DAO

1111.

-

Blr.cllls. ,_... I Gotamu•
lum
l ADDIIcollono I n - In
th... ~ Call , 400 44411 ., ,,
Ext. 11112 ea.....ap.m. 7 doro.
Jo111 Avolloblo. For -

.,......

poo.n&gt;ay Pro ~I
on1or1 11 homo.

to ardor. Far Into.
EXT 1822.

phone.
ooH rou

731-1117

..·-!4::_
-w-·---.,.......................
with 12,110.

I -

~ 1'1

11om, pond,
rt 0- 104-

Woni 10 bw -

Of -

-~,_,

34

' SOOTH
.AQ742
.IOHU -

...

.AKJ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

·

Bulllllll
BUildings

Eut

Pus 2t
Pau 3NT
Pau 5.
All pass

Pus
Pus
Pus

Opening lead:. • K

1--- ---- - - - - -'
to the dummy, trumpecl a tblrtl ella·
mond, and crossed to dummy bY over-

takitll the ~lub jack with the q -.
The last trump wa drawn llJd the dJa..
monel ace taken, Bell dlKardiJII the A·
K of clubs from bil baDII. Dummy'1
winnin1 clubs were cubed, a IIJIIde
wu led back to the ace, aDd the Jut
Irick wu CCIIICflded.
«) 1111 ........... 1WrHr F II..._

auto

event
4bOdkins
5 MortiSI's
partner .

14 OCI~en-

I North or

arian a
age

Twill
7 Fork part

15 Sawbuck

I Serving

Yeallfclly'e 411...,
21 Merrl1111nt 34 Calllo tha
22 Funda·
phone

mental•
23 Beget

AN' HE UP AN'

SALLS tJ' FIRE II ·

FLIW
TH' CtXJP II

! •HAD SNUFFY '
UlcKEO UP FER
CHICICIN

31 Marathon,

16 Arm ol
feat
.
. the aea
I kln•ac:t · ·· 25 Russiln
17Lazy bee 10 Pig'• digs
river

e.g.
37 Yoked
111m

18 Stint

38 Actor

211 Bible

11 Swlndla

,Btany

,31 Slngltton
,40 U11 a
rec:tinll'
41"~"

spin,off

27 Fury
28 like lresh
celery
30 Indian's

clog

For Sale
or Tracie

~ Norl~

WHI

22 Ski reaort 11 Ohio team
eonge
24 From the 11 Bridge or 30 Rotaling
country
ba11baH
j)llrt
26 East·
, leal
33 Sparta
wood·
200lhello's
shoe
directed
undoer
feature
film

Helpwantld
ta,'IOO PER YEAR To--

.

•11u:l

1 Alaiat
2 Velocity
3 Famed

. vowels

...........

•

tKQ7

DOWN

1 Jason's .
boat
5 Com·
plelely
wrecks
11 Poet
12 Evoke
13 Greek

- ,.,... 1aa1 to 1M iio1li lull
aoii10H114187.

'I

.3

by THOMAS JOSEPH

wantldtoluy
21 . . Port

•••
•u
tauz

·CROSSWORD

a 11. IMRor~•
.r.o.
~i·
Clllrlft. Pull
.
.fl '

.

EAST

.J73

·aecoad diamond, played another heart

-~~Jri"i:

tonn..::z

WEST

• KJ9863

take oeveral columns, and he is still

·accumulalinl tropbies. Here Is a hand
he · played some yean ago that lea·
lura the unusual dummy reversal.
North did well to raile to live
hearts, and Bell raced on to sill with
his 10011 controls, confident he would
see Stl'l)ll&amp; hearts in the dummy.
With his powerful spade, holding,
West should have led a trump. But if
he llad, u the sayina1oes. there would
bave been no story. Alter West's actual diamond lead, Bell.spotted the best
line or play. · ·
He ruffed the .diamond lead, played
1 trump to dummy'• queen. ruffed a

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104-

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Oolglnll ..... Uiold ltiJo. :.

• PAY

4-M-tt

.QJOU

The second penon to receive the
Most Excellent Order of the British
.Empire (M.B.E.) lor services to bridlt
was Bruce Bell in JJ7ll. A resident of
Auckland. New Zealand, Bell has been
the leading promoter of bridge in his
homeland lor 50 years. He began playinl duplicate in 193'1, a year after the
(ormation of the New Zealand Con·
trJiet Bridle Aaocialion. Today that
beautiful country, with a population of
some tbree-and-o-quarter million, has
almost 20.000 re&amp;IJtered playen, a
pera~nr.a&amp;e that . makes all o~her
bridae federatioos ~with envy.
To liat all of Bell's victories would

IT $ffM$ 1-1/C.E- e11E!ZY ttMf I .

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gilod,$4110.010............ ..
11112
Hondo
81.-1100
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· BRIDGE

WAHTID:

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ICIIlM Lm ANIWIII
•·"
Canary- Weaty- Soapy- Wildly -DO ANYWAY
Boas to worklra, • It li a wlae man that doel_wlth a
emile what he would have to Do ANYWAY." .

sale

Horne~ for

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was while It was being - r

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SORRV: SIR .. I DIDN'T MEAN
TO SET TI-lE ROOT SEER
DOWN Or.IVOUR J.IAND..

ON .. I-IE IS LONELV
AND DEPRESSED...

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72 1Ncka lOr sale

or...,, Tau

Fnllh Drug.

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or
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1hl o.tly StnU

Television
View.i ng

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WAidnHday, Aprll10, 1991
•

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LAFF·A·DAY
................. _..,. . _

·~ill'· -,.

cralt
31 G110der
32 Burnwhh
hot water

STEALIN'••

34 Lileline
sile

35 Hit show

· sign

38 Old cash
ragisler

reading
4Hinen

-.a,_.. . . •-·..:-=;1• ..,
81 · Fann EqulpiMIII
l'onl ....... ..

source

Hoa
1110

. 42 Puzzle

~ WWP'INII•.114-

. 43 Dolly stull

BERNICE
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Plwnblnc.-&amp;
Htetlng
Cortlr'l Pumlllng

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April,,,..,~.

B. preparlid tor unique dl\ilaprnents

In tho year alolld - •·your - I a
concerned. In geo)lrll, they oiiOUid
pr- ucllinQ, .. Wen .. ,_..obly.
· benetlclol.
Alllll ....... 21•April 1t) V0111 bell

-bllillel tor ICIIII-nl todoy
COUld be u-.1 In by 0111 or two proQfMIIVI _ , - . IIIOUIIh lhoJ'N
- trldltiOMI pooo111urt1. frytng to
Pllcll up 1 llrOkwl r - ? ThiA~o-

Grapll Matchmaker can help vou .under- t&lt;vily can lie &lt;ncreesed now - II you put
stond Whit to do to m11&lt;1 the relatiOn- into play Ideas you hove tor bettw
ohlp wOitl. Mail $2 to Mllcllmlker, cto methods and ptoc,clurn.' Don't be
this n-aper. P.O. Box 91428, c - alrald to experiment.
land. OH 44101 -3428.
.ICORPIO (Oct. :M-Ncow. 2;1)11 you get
TAUIIUS (April 20-May 201 You're · strong hunches today pertaining to
pr-ntly In a cycre where You could be games ol chance, try to lind on outlet
lortunale clelling with lorelgners or where thev can be expressed. Be sure,
people born tar lrom your birthplace. howevlf. Ihat It is intuition and not
Chance moy play a ror..
·
wlahiUIIhinklng.
8 1 - (IIIJ 21-.luM 20) Thla 11 a IAGmAIIIUI ( - . D-Dec. 21) Both
good lime lor you to locua on arrange- your financial .and material pr~ll
menlo that could produc:e a second look encouraging todoy. Some 1«1 ot .
source ot Income. You might be able to prollt Ia postlble. plul you may also plcl&lt;
opt111 up more lhon.,.. cllannel.
up an Item ot value that hu ....,. ovet·
CAIIICIII(oltJnel1......, II) II pl-.1 in looked by otllera.
a po1111on.,...... )'011 have to m1ke onap CAPIIICDIIN (Dec. 12-.IM. 11) You
deolllono lodoy. don't gel raHiod. Your have the obUIIy to spoedlly onllya In·
judgment II k.,. ond ycu obllly to formation puled to )'011 by otheta ond
OMJiuate . . . . , . _ 11 good.
· · l~rn lito your edvontoge tocloy. Thllll
LIO (.luiJ . . . . . 21) In regord to bjleauoo you'N know - t o otop talk·
commeo c181 InvaMIIIII'III loclly, you lng and when to IIIII lletenlng.
IIIOuld be able to enllyze thlngo rather AQUAIIIUB (an. 20 !'ell. 111 Timing
quiCkly coming up with ttoe right an- ond pceltlonlng II lmporlllll toclay.
- . WMe ycu peera ore otlli lrylng to T - 'qUIIItla moy be lll&lt;wo oviir tor
define thii dilemma.
you by Lldy LUCk. oo be .ter1 lor opporYIIQO (Aug. Dolept. 12)11 lOOks like lunllln ot on unUIUBI nature.
c:lrcllmltlncet ore going to bring you · PISCO (fill. •1'11•nrh •1 Be hopeful
, _ c1011r to a trlend with whom you today regarding the OUICOI'no ol..,.nt1;
lhldV llaveltrong bondl. Tllllle del- yoli '*' Ill ext1'811111y ,.--..whorl
ttneclto be one o1 )'OUr belllllllnCM.
_..ly require~ . H'l ycu lnQIIIUIIY
~ (llpl. 21-011. D) Your prOduc· that will give you an ldgl.

44Abhor
45 Sign

llAII.V CRVPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:
AXYDL8AAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
'

One lell~r stands for another. In this sample A15 used
fcir the three L's, X for the two 0'5, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of.the words are
all hlnh. F.ach day the code letters are different.
4- Hl

CRVPTOQUOTE

USCAGJ

WIJSAU

EZAIOSU,

. J I.

I

VWA

IJt Z A

ljlUSTV

VWA

E Z G S U

H' S Y Q C P Z Y

· VACYFTZY
,
· Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: THERE IS DIGNITY IN
WORK ONI.YWHiN ITIS WORK FREElY ACCEPTED.
·- .AJ.BERT CAMUS

,.

••

'

,.

�/. • Page 14-TheDallySentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

,. I

17th Anniferctrf Sale

.,

Reds down
Houston for
win number2

HEINER'S OLD FASIIONED

BREAD

e Appraelata Our Caatomare

20 OZ. LdAF

...... .
STORE HOURS ,

· Pick3: 651
Pick 4:0047
· Cards : K-H, 2-C
10-D; 2-S
Super Lotto:
17-43-47-14·13-5
Kicker: 603978

Page3

Monday ., bq, Sunday.
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
• · POME·ROY, OH.

.PRICn EFFECTIVE APR. :7 THRU APR.

13, l

'

',..
r

FRITO~s •

'

·'

~meroy-MJddleport,

~ . Cop)ilglta.d 1111

Ohio, llnnday, Apr1111, 1991

BANQUET
FRIED CHICKfN.

" ·,

28-OZ. BOX
I

GRADE A

I.

I

. !
... '

·

_

._

(

Whole Chicken ••. :~. 49.
CHIC_KEN

·'

,

,

·

(

Leg Quarters ......'!. 49
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
. L•. $ ,
q·
7
BUCKET
.
.
Chuck
Roast
•••••.••
;1 ·
49 USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
52
·
·
Cube Steak ••••••• ~·•.
9
9
'
·
R
ibeye
Steak
.....
o:.
SiJ
LOUIS RICH POUND ROLL
.La. $
l9
:Ground Turkey •••• 1

_

STAR KIST TUNA ·
6112 OZ. CAN
•

2/S.l
· 24 PACK CASE

ROYAL'
.
PRODUCT$ .
12 OZ. CANS

MR. TURKEY

BUN SIZE or REGULAR

.

· .

~

Wieners ••••••••••••L:~ ••
OSCAR MAYER .
.
. $ ~
79
. Bologna ••••••••••.•••~ 1

j.

'

$499'i

·
.

'

.. .

,.

GOLD MEDAl·

FLOUR .

. KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIP
32 OZ. JAR \

·Bananas •••••••••• !~ .... 39(
FlAVORITE
2°/o Milk ••••••••• ::L... $149
.,

BORDEN'S

·orange Juice .•• :~:~L. $129

''

·
.
.
.
9
9
(
•
I.
.Pr•ng es·...............•.
. oz.
$249
Cream
Ice
••••••••••••
STOKELY'S
BANQUET
Tomato·· Juice •••;:::. 59 (· yy· Dinners •••• !~!~:~ ..
KEMPS

.

6-7.5

5 QUART PAIL

'

·'

CLOROX BLEACH·

7
'
9(
GNII eAt ,_..,
~
-.
GAL

I'

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Gold

· ·

S... hlu
7 "'"' • • 1), 1991

t I Per (UJtom•

' 32

MT. OUVE

CHARMIN

DILL CHIPS

CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE

oz.

JAR

Gold Only

89(
At ,_..,

S... Valu

n.

GoM AarU 1 ttoru April
1991
Unit 1 ,.,. em·

12 lOLL

PIG.

$249

G6lil eAt ,•••.• Sopor v...
GotNI

·

. 7 thru AprN 13,1991

It I rtf Cult.....

.

DOMINO SUGAR· -

SLa.$169
BAG

Good
Good

Oft=I At7 thru
Powlll's Super Valu
April 13, 1991
it I Ptr Customer

INTERSTATE FROZEN

FRENCH
FRIES

3/Sl
RUMP ROAST

29

LB.

' USDA CHOICE

BEEF ROUND
ROAST

$229

~ Storni

.~ ;. eo~rth~use·· esti,m~~~-~-'-at,:$7,],00::

'

were

briefs-----.

LB.

deputies

see

.
Rutland man held on charge

,,

'

damage to former Meigs

Cable theft probed

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

2'

By MELINDA POWERS '
ing SCS the additional money.
Roxanoe Groff, Athens County
OVP News Staff
•
"I believe th81 we could do the member. "I am opposed to giving
An .emergency extension to revisions internally and ariate these people anymore money."
expand the daily waste intake of · some money ·for a consu tant for
"I think thev have a lot of 281110
the Gallia County landfill for 90 the director 10 work with," said
Continued on paae 12
days stili. has not been granted by a
S18te agency, a G~a County ofli·
cial said Wednesday.
·
Gallia CBunty Solid Waste
Director Doug Briggs told the poli·
. 'cy committee of the Athens..QalliaHocking-Jackson·Meigs· Vinton '
solid waste district 81 their regular
. meeting that his request for· the
extension from the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency has, so
far, been denied. .
"I submitted a letter to lhe·9.hio
EPA on Mareb 28 and have had no
decision back from them." Briggs
said at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. ''They hive told
me, however, that they would
review the request in a better light
if the Gallia County Health Department would draft a 1eaer of support
to be sent with the requesL"
emergenc;r project, and IIJ'Hd to speDd more
LANDMARK DAMAGED • This bulldlug
Briggs told ~ committee that
tbaa $7,000. to repair the damaxe (see related
Ia Qhester, wbieb served as a former Meigs .
he expected to meet \Yith the health
story oalhls page). The buDding, wblcb Is recog-,
Coultty CourtbOUM, nstaiDed seveu11hoUSIDds
department
this week to discuss
Dl2ed as the oldest staDdiDI courtbouse In Oblo,
of dollan In damace ddriag Tuesday aight's
such
a
letter.
DOW serves as a meet1n11 place for the Daupten
windstorm. Tbe Metas County CommiasiODers
In other business, the committee
or the American Revolution.
.
.voted 011 Wednesday to declare the buDdiDg an
agreed to pay SCS Engineers
$15,397 to adl,t Ohio EPA-suggest·
ed revisicns to the district's waste
GETS I'{E IN IIACE • Fermaa Moore, director of .., Melf
mana~ement plan. Although SCS
Unit
ottbe A111erlcau C•cer Society, ROIIDYIIIvecUD Wedrelllay I
· !lad Signed a contract to complete
Cancer
Day ,at Bll Bead FoOdlaDd Ia POmeroy, ulle !Uew a pili In
the plan and add the revisions, the
tbe
fau
or John Mauer, lasurauu 811Dlclll'itb.!Jae PoWJiiDt·
c'ol)lpany stated as early :as Ju_ne
a•lldi-MQJiea·Maaer
luearauee Co.;:•Y· S.yii'IJ ietiYitlel
1990 that lt-:llad•w- ·oMr tts
I
l
,
CODdueted
tllrougllout
lbe day tO
laoney tor tlae.tlllei"Iappwximate $170,000 budgeL
. By BRIAN J. REED
to apwove rmancing through bonds .
Meigs County Engineer Phil
CID
Cancer
Sodety.
Fqodlalld
doaated
nve
perceut ollhe day's
A few members of the commit·
-: . Seatlnel Ne'lfll Stair
.
of the new addition to the, Depart- Roberts reported t,hat Tuesday's
total
sales
to
the
American
Cancer
Society.
. ·
tee were staunchly qpPosed to giv·
•'
'
the Meiss County Commis- me~! of Human Services Buifding storm had left Meiss County's
sion~rs took emergency ~lion on in Middleport. The proposal of rural roads covered with debris,
repam1 of the foriner Meigs County Cential Trust in Middleport was and that county crews spent the
Courthouse in Chester during accepted. Central Trust agreed to · pmter part of Tuesday night clean·
Wednesday's regular meeting. ·
finance the cost of tho project, mg the roads.
I
•
Roberts also discussed a propos·
••
The building, now used as a ex~ to total $1.2 millton, at a
al from the Ohio Department of
. !l!ee~ place for, community orga· rate of5.52 percent.
m~uons such as the Daughters of
Ptl&gt;posed · financing was Transportation to repair a bridge
, the American R~volution, sustained received by the board from two near Carpenter in Columbia Town·
. roof damage during Tuesday other banks, as well. Bank One, ship. The state requires execution.
The Chamber's resolution states
as the lighted candy canes. to
By' JULIE E. DILLON
night's wind BDd rain storm.
Athens, N.A. submitted a proposal of paperwork on the part of the
the failure of American Electric
accent
the
business
district
during
Sentinel
News
Staff
James Kessce, a local contrac· of 5.85 percent on the total amount county and that. paperwork was the
Power (AEP) to install llerubbers at
the holiday season.
tor, was authorize(lro complete the and TbC Farmers Bank and Savings subject of discussicn.
the Gavin Plant in Cheshire would
No
action
was
taken
during
Bill
Sullivan
of
Sullivan
Dis·
No action was taken on the
, roof repair, replace the existing Company of Pomeroy agreed to
result in the loss. of the Southern
Wednesday's
meeting
!Qward
the
plays,
Louisville,
Ky
.•
explained
roof and repair a dama~ed ceiling finance up to $500,000 at a rate of request pending further r:eview of
Ohio Coal Company's operation in
purchase
of
the
banners,
or
any
1
terns
available
from
his
company
': in one of the roonis mside the 7.45 pcrccnL Home National Bank the document by the engmeer and pertaining to the purchase of addir other Chrisunas decorations, due to Meigs County. The resolution goes
: ~ding. Kess~ esilmated that the of Ra~in.e did not respond to the the commissioners.
tional Christmas banners for the lack of attendance by Association on to say that legislation is needed
•projCCt would cost $7,200.
·
commt~toners request for proposContinued on page 12
Pomeroy business district at members. Merchants Association which will not only allow AEP to
.: the commissioners also voted . als.
Wednesday's regular meeting of President Susan Ciarlc set a special recover the costs incurred in
the "P.,neroy Merchants Associa· meeting date of April 24 at noon in_ installing scrubbers but also to
the conference room of Bank One recover costs incurred by Southefll
tion.
at
which time a· decision will be Ohio Coal Company in. providing
The Merchants, along with
coal 10 the Gavin Plant once it is
made
on the purchase.
Bank One, pun:IIased 12 fiV.e-foot
installed. The resolution encour·
In
other
matters,
the
Merchants
Christmas banners last year for
ages
consideration of the human
voted
to
adopt
a
resolution
set
forth
Pomeroy and plalls this year to pureffect
of the closing of the mines as
chase additional banners for Court, by the Meigs County Chamber of
·
Jy BRIAN J. REED
de~elopnient practitioners" for · Kellogg -Foundation of Battle
well
as
the financial consequences
Comme~
regarding
the
potential
Second and Lynn Stteets. In addi·
~en tine! News Staff
Me1gs County.
.,
Creek Mich.
which
would
result.
Entitled "Leaders~ip 2000: ~
The session's three speakers tion to purchasin&amp; some additional effects of the '1990 amendments of
Mrs.
Clark
feported on the
banners.
Merchanu will the Clean Air Act as they relate to
, • Staff from _Ohio State Universi· Search for Excellence m the Public were all·associated with the OCES.
annual
fashio11
show to be held
Prior to· the speakers' presenta~~~IUCh
' ty's Coopemtive Extensicn Service Sector," 'the semiilar was sponsored
tomorrow
(Friday)
at Pomeroy Ele~
·· spoke 81 a WCllnesday seminar for by the Meigs County ~hamber of lion, each of the estimated 40 peomentary.
The
show.
"Heartland of
community leaders at Overbrook CoJ!Imerce, The _Metgs Cou~ty pie in attendance were _asked to
America, 1991 Fashion and Musi·
Center. The seminar is aimed at Offtce of the Oh1o Coopcrattve voice their wishes for Mef$S Coun·
cal
Revue." will begin at 7t30 p.m.
, developing a team of "economic Extension Service and the W.K. ty for the year 2000. Answers that
Those attending the show witt
were given reflected common goals
receive
a coupon package containand a wide variety of issues.
in&amp;
a
minimum
ol' $100 worth ol
Many of the participants were
discount
coupons
from panicipa •
concerned about education, reert·
ing
merchants
in
the
AssoqatiiJII. •
ational and vocational opportuni·
This
year's
show,
which carries
by
tics for the area's youns people,
a
patriotic
theme,
will
take on 0
while some showed an interest in
sltghtly
different
style
as more
development of the county's river·
The Meigs C9unty Sheriff's Depanment is investigating the theft
encertalnmm-t
will
be·
o(fertil
front resogn;es. Others stated that
of 1.000 ~ of three-inch diameter cable from Southern Ohio Coal •
throughout
the
evenin$..
:
the.y would like 10
an increase
· • Company. A.ccordinsto Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
Over
70
models
wtU
lake
to
th~
in both small businesses and larger
. · the cable is valued at $17,000.
\
.'
runway as they present what is
industries in the-county.
A report was n:ceived from Sandra Little of Middleport on Tues·
available
locally 10 garments and
Meigs Count)r Home Economies
day. who told the department that her residenCe luld been entered
accessories
selected from local
Extension Agent Cindy Oliveri, the
- and money had been stolen. Entry was made through the front doQ(. .
stores
or
created
from materials
fir.st speaker for the session,
. The department is also looking Into an incident on Tuesday
available
locally.
•
addressed the group 011 the subject
where a Columbus Southern Power Company transformer in
The
·show
will
open
with
the
of "The Nine F.orces Reshaping
, Pomeroy was shot at least three times,
presentation of the . colors by
America".
Pomeroy
Cub Scout Pack 2497
AccOI'ding to Oliveri,' the world
Sandy
Butcher
of Crossover Band
society in ihe 1990's must deal
will
sing
"Qod
Bless the U.S .A.
.
I
with an entirely new set of issues •
and
the
Trinity
Church
Choir wiU
John David Sj)rins. 19, Rutland, was arrested by the Mei¥s
including the rapid asing of the
~rform
a
beautiful
rendition
of
County Slteriff's Dep~Wnent on Wednesday evening on chalges m
population, the introduction of
Tl)is
Is
My
Country."
featuring
. Franklin County. He has been charged with breaking and entering,
technology into our homes and
Dixie Sayre, under the direction of
theft and failure to appear. Spriggs will a~ in Meigs County
society's new concern for ·public
LoisBurt.
&gt;
Court for a Rule 4 Hearing since he is wanted in a ll!ln-adjoinlng
and environmental bealth and oilier ·
Perfonnina
durinl
the
evcnins·
county. •
social issues. Oliveri's information
will be an ensemble from the
Also arrested on Wednesday evening was 20 year old Johnny
was culled from a study conducted
Shady
River Shufflorl and Ashley
Litlle of Middleport. Litde wu chlltjled with failure to control,
by United Way of America.
Hannahl
will be featured u a part,
improper handling or a loaded fimmlm a motor vehicle and reslstDavid Bootbe, 111 Associate
BANNERS DISCUSSED • BIB Slllllna of Salllv• DllplaJI,
of
the
xroup
when she performs alnglmst.
~
.
Professor at Ohio State University
LouisvUie, Ky., atte•ded Wedaesda:r'• re11ular meetiDI of tbe
solo
routine
to
"Y8llkee boodle." :
The c~ followc4 an incident 011 Wednesday when Little lost
Pomeroy Men:h•ll AIIOCiatlou to aplala hems available from
and Director of the OCES program
Other
performances
will b(
contrOl of his care on TIIUI Road and the v~icle skidded off the
"EXCEL", spoke to the community
bls COlBpiiiY perWDIII to the purcbase or addiUollll Cbrlstmas
made
by
Jean
TruslleU
who
wW do
baanen for the Pomeroy bualne11 dlltrlct. Here, SuDivu dlsDiaya
roadway. ·
.
leaders on some rl the critical f~·
a
special
musical
nwnber,
'and
also
• Little. ·who then ran fiOm the sheriff's cruiser, is now lodged in
tors fm successful development.
one of the nve-loot bullln available from the COIIIPIDY. Tile MerShirley Quickel and 1ulie Buck ot
Boothe's presentation brought ., cballti purcbued U live-loot buaen ft om tile compuy Iut year
the county jail.
.
.The
Dance Company who wiiJ.
out
the
imPOrtance
of
a
communi.
and
plaDJ
are
nDderway
to
pnrcbaddltlollll
ba·uen
for
tile
Collllnud on pagt 11
•
·
Condoued 011 pallf i:!
Continued on pallf 12
1991 bollday - ·
......... ....._'
·- ·-·-·- - · - - -+·-.-..---- ,. . ~ --.-·~-

~-Local

200Z. BAG

$_

landfill .limit request

-.

, Wishes, goals of leaders sought for
;future development of Meigs County

.$169
I.

....

Merchants view Christmas
ban·ne_rs; no action taken

5 LB. BAG

'·

.

·-

WATER or -OIL

1

..

''

$219,

p•per

No response to Gallia

. '.

.·

A Multimedia lno. New

I

'

I

· 2 s.cUono, 1e P•llft 2s ......

.

:, Vol. 41, No. 241

79(

(

at

i

'

.

•

•

•

REGULAR S1.39 PKG.

.

Low toalgbt ill mid-JOs,
Friday, dwlce or rain 70 per·
(tDL Pardy doudy.
'.

_,._ _

' 1,'(

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