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Poineroy Mlclclleport, Ohio

Wtdneedly, Aprll17,

J••• t 7ih ·An•iversary.Sale

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.We App1e~llfl
0111

•

Pick 3:122
Pkk4: 2147
Cards : 5-H, 4-C
K·D; 2-S

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Culfllfllll/11 ·

STORE HOURS .
Mondayfttq, Sunday

Ohio Lottery

Reds top SD
for second win
·in a row, 2.. 1
Page4

8 AM-10 PM

•

SIGN UP TO
WIN DAILY

298 SECOND ST.

POME·ROY,
OH. .
.
EFFECTIVE APR. 14 THRU APR. 20, 1991 .

at
Ashland firm purchases Jaymar ·, Coal

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GROCERIES

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Val. 41, No. 253 ·
CopyrlgiiW111111

SIGN UP TO
WIN
A COMPLETE
SET OF GOLF
CLUBS

·

PORK BUTT

Steak/·Roast •••••••
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CUBED

· Ll.

$1 .39

The purchase of Jaymar Coal Jackson and Meigs Counties and
Company by Addington Inc. of employees of the company as
Ashland. Ky. will terminate · required by The Worker Adjustapproximately 100 jobs, according ment and Retraining Act, which
to a docume'nt released by the requires 'all employees and certain
Meigs County Commi~sioners at former employees be notified 60
!heir Wednesday meeting. Jaymar, days prior to the closing.
Jaymar operates a tipple operahowever, anticipates some jobs
remaining in place.
tion 10 Cheshire, a wash plant in
The notices were sent to the Hamden and strip pits in McAnhur
county commissioners of Vinton,

and in rural Vinton County.
The jobs, consisting of accoun·
tants and other clerical workers,
tipple, plant and equipment opera·
tors and skilled laborers. will terminate on June 21, although at least
46 of !hose employees have already
been laid off.
''The loss of these jobs, if per·
manent, will result in another crip-

piing blow to· the tri-county area,"
Meigs -County Commissioner
Richard Jones said Wednesday.
"Jaymar Coal Company has been a
long-time successful operation, ont;
which was beneficial to Meigs
County and its economy."
"I hope," Jones said, "that the
new owners of the company will
return many of those who apparent-

CRISCO

By BRIAN J, REED
SeDtinel News Staff
.

The Meigs County' Commis·
sioneci closed a $1.2 million fmandal deal Wednesday which will
result in a new headquarters for the
Meigs County Dep'artment of
Human Services in Middleport.
Dennis Schawllie, an attorney
representing the county's bonding
company, was on hand for the clos·
ing along with Central Trust Vice
President James Reed and Central
Trust's Middleport Branch. Manager Einma Jane Paugh.
Central Trust handled the
financing for the project through
the issuance of bonds. The money,
which is expected to be repaid in a
year, will be reimbursed through
the State of Ohio. The money will
provide a three-story addition to
the existing Race Street DHS
offices.
In other business, commiS,!iion- ·
'et!i fCiiit:wed a.letlC~ from the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
regarding the new Rutland sewer
project.

.3 LB. CAN

La

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BUCKET BEEF

.ea
.
k·
.
L.
·
$
259
Cubed St •••••••

WHITE CLOUD

BATHROOM

TISSUE
.4 ROLl PAK

LOUIS RICH G.ROUND.

Turkey .......... ~~=~~ .. 99.(

CAMPBELL'S.

EHI.CKEN .
NOODLE
SOUP
U.S. #1 RUSSET

, · ·

·Potatoes·•••••••• !~~~~
•

FLAVORITE

$

10.7 S OZ. CAN

199

$

39
2% Milk ...~ ••• ~:!~.. ·1
•

BORDEN'S

GAL~O~ 99(
Orange Juice •••••••
JENO'S
.
.
.
oz.
PIZZO ••••••••••••••••••••
'

·

'h

ZEST A.
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Crockers ••••••••••l:·.a~~.

•I

MT. OLIVE HAMBURGER

'

7.4-1.1

Dill Chips ••••• ;!~;~~.. 89&lt; Ice· Cteam
$2
49
•••••••••••
KEMP'S

5 QUART ;AIL

s $2

BEAUTIFICATlON PROJECT UNDERWAY • Racine is participating hi a beautification program again this spring. State Represen·
tatlve Mary Abel visited the vUlage on recently
to kick-orr the program. Pictured are, Jeff
Thornton, kneeling, villal!e council member.

Racine will panicipate in a vii·
lage beautification program again
this spring.
State Representative Mary Abel
visited the village recen11y to help
kick:-off the program. Several pink
and white dogwood$ and rhododen-

MASTEl ILEND

3U .OZ.

COFFEE

$399

...,aa· ,. ,. . -.. v• -

•

....

14....

IFir

I to, 1..1

.

TIDE DETERGENT

DOG FOOD
20LI.
lAG

$299

GeM Gilly At ...... - - v.
W Aprl 14 .... Afr11 Ill, '"'
1111111 I r.r Csilt-

136

••

$689

a

oz.

• 8eo11
At ,_••, llptr Vllv
. . . , 14 ..... Apr120, , .. ,
• .
I I Per C.t1111• .

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NINE

U~ES CAT. FOOD;.

, .•.s oz.

4./ s1·

GeM ORiy At ....., llptr Valu
11H11 . . 14 tin A.... !0, IHI
111111 I Per c.t-

dron as well as flowers were plant·
cd around the village last year.
Additional' individuals have
been added to the beautification
committee, but more are needed.
Racine residents are being asked

,---- Local .briefs -~....,
Mowing bids being accepted
The Greenwood Cemetery Trustees will accept bids on mowing
the cemetery through April 26. They should be sent to Jane Beegle,
Racine Village Cleric, Box 375, Racine. The trustceS.arc now in the
process of cleanins off the grave~ ·.and remind residents that the
annual lot care fee 1s $10.00 per year is now due. Check should be
made out to the Greenwood Cemetery Trustees and mailed to Mrs.
Beegle.
.

Road closed for bridge replacement
a.m. for a bridge replacement

SUNSHINE .

Standlng,l·r, Mary Ball, beautlfieatlon commit·
tee member; State Representative Mary Abel;
Kathryn Crist, beautification committee mem·
ber;' and Racine Mayor Frank Cleland. Not pictured ·Marilyn Powell and Scott Hill, members
of the beautification committee. .

Racine is participating in v_illage
beautification project again this spring ·"

State Route 338, just south of

MAXWELL HOUSE

Ra~ine,

closed this morning at 9

John D. Dowler, District 10 Deputy -Director for The Ohio
Department of Transportation, advised that crews from the Alan
Stone ComJl811r win replace the bridge over Yellow Bush C~k at
a cost of $624,055. ·
During the construction time, motorists will have to take Slate
Route 124 to Stale Route 338.
.
Dowler said tbal the expected completion date is Aug. 31, and
· that damages will be assessed at $300 per day to the contractor if
the project is not finished by that date.
CoDtinued on ~age 12
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ly have lost their jobs _to employ·
ment under the new ownership."
Jaymar Coal Company owner
Jay Hall Jr., stated that while the
reports that jobs would be lost is a
proper inference from the notices,
that there is, in fact, expected to be
some continuation of employment.
"It is possible," Hall said, "that
employment will increase in the

event that Addington has more
matkel for coal than Jaymar had."
Han also explained he expected
to continue operation of his lime·
stone business in Vinton County.
According to Bernard Fultz.
attorney for Jay mar Coal Company, the Addington operation purchased minil!g property in the Dark
Hollow area some time ago. .

"It has recently come to our
attention," the letter states, "that
some residents near the Village of
Rutland stre1JuOusly oppose connection to the Village's proposed
sewage collection and treatment
system."
The letter suggested to the com-.
missioners that residents there real'·
ize the consequences of failure to
connect to the system.
"Rutland has been extremely
fonunate to obtain one of tile last
construction grants available to
Ohio communities," lhe letter con·
tinued. "Failure to incorporate the
homes of these protesting residents
within the sewer district may result
in the loss of grant monies, result·
ing in higher user fees, as future
monies will only be available as
loans."
"If residents fail to connect to
the sewage collection and treatment
works under this program," the let·
ter stated, "they are likely to be
subjectw enforcement l!C:tio!! Wider
the proVisions of the Ohio Revised
Code."
'"Tiie. Ohio EPA," the letter

warned, "may take action to com·
pel connection under the provisions
of (the Ohio Revised Code)."
The board slated Wednesday
that the letter was the result of a
communication from Meigs Coonty Prosecutor Steven L. Story
regarding .the controversy surrounding the new system.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts discussed the Ohio Depattment of Transportation closing of
State Route 338. The road was
scheduled to close early Thursday
to replace a bridge across Yetlow. bush Creek.
Residents in the area have been
· vocal in opposition to the closing
of the road, and the detour of State
Route 338 traffic onto State Route
124. Roberts indicated that he was
concerned about damage which
will be sustained by Apple GroveDorcas Road, East Letart Road and
Manuel Road, which he believes
will be used as detours by local residcnts.
..
,
. Discussion was also held on the
possibility of erecting a temporary
Continued on page 11

Meigs Countians donate
54 units of blood Thursday·

99&lt;
I

A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Commissioners complete $1.2
million deal for DHS project

.

$ 99 P.ork.... Steak ••••••~·••.$239 ..
R1beye Steak ...... 4 : COLBY LONGHORN. .
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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM
heese •••••••••••••.•••• $1 _89·
79
Round Steak•.••• :. $2
US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .

2 Section a, 12 Pogea 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 18, 1991

GRADE A

Whole

Low tonight In mid-50s•
High Friday in mid 60s. •
Chance of rain 90 percent.

Super Lotto:
39-28-37·44·20-4
Kicker:4-8-2·2·7·1

Flfty-four units ot btooa were
received at Wednesday's visit of
the American Red Cross' Bloodmo·
bile to the Meigs County Senior
CitizensCenter,Pomeroy.
Beulah Ward and Lenora
Leifheit were the local nurses in
charge and were assisted b[
Edward Cozart and Tmcey O'Del .
RSVP workers at the visit were
Dorothy Long, Helen Bodimer,
Mary Nease, Emma Clatworthy,
Peggy Harris, Jean Nease; Joan
Tuttle, Florence Richards, Evelyn
Gilmore. Genrude Robipson, Gcr·
aid· Wildermuth,
Jeanette
Lawrence, William and Joyce
Hoback. The canteen was served
by the Middleport Child Conserva·
lion League.
Four gallon donors were Kathy
J. Cummings anti Janet M. :
Ambrose, while Betty J. Spencer
was an eight gallon donor. First

time donois were Rhonda Hoover
and Charles Meadows.
Donating blood were:
Pomeroy: Brenda S. Cunning·
ham, Billy J. Spencer, Mary K.
Spencer, Harry L. Leffle, Walter R.
Couch, Lenora J. McKnight. Debra
D. Mora, Janet M. Ambrose, Janet
K. Peavley, Tracey L. O'Dell,
Rhonda Hoover, Bracy A. Korn,
Lawrence Leonard, Nancy S. Brod·
erick, Joan L. Tuttle, Patricia Barton, Timothy Hall, Gerald E.
Rought, Loretta A. Brown, Dan
Follrod, Betty J. Lowe, Donald R.
Smith, Edward M. Cozart. Virgil
K. Windon, Carolyn A. Charles,
Celia R. McCoy, Geoffrey A. Wil·
son. Paul F. Marr, and William M.
Radford.
Racine: Virginia Bland, Betty
Sayre, Larry D. Circle, Mary E.
Curtis, William H. Hoback, Fredcr·
ick Thompson, A. Marie Bush. ·

Middlcpor1; Rhonda R. Rath burn, Tamora J. Nelson, Jan A.
Durst, Sarah Fowler, Charles P.
Gerard, Gloria J. Peavley, Judith K.
Hunter, Ronald L. Diles, Sr.,
Dorothy C. McCloud.
Long Bottom: Laura L. Hawley,
Bruce Hawley, Kathy S. McDaniel.
Reedsville: Joseph D. Marcinko.
Syracuse: Kathy J. Cwnings.
Mason, W. Va.: Brian E. John·
son. Charles Meadows, Brenda
Johnson.
New Haven, W. Va,: Diana Farley.
Ponland: Stephen H. Nease.
Coolville: Elton A. Riu:hie and ·
Sam Alexander.
Rutland: Mary E. Davidson,
Donnie R. Laudermilt, Marta
Blackwood, and Donna M. Davison.
Coolville: Elton A. Rill:hie and .
Sam Alexander.

to "adopt a sidewalk," prefembly in
front residents' homes.
Thirty pink dogwoods and 10
other trees will be planted. In addition to these trees, 100 white dog·
woods have been obtained .through
the Meigs Soil and Water Con.ser·
vation District. The trees will be
started this year and planied 10 the
next couple of years when they
larger and stronger.
Girl scouts are planning to help
plant flowers and pick up litter durmg the week of April 21 which is .
Meigs County's clean-up wee~.
·
Individuals wishing to partici·
pate should conlact Jeff Thorton at
949:2476.
..

Water restored to .
Meigs households
Water has been restored to most
of the n~rly 400 families on the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis·
trict who have either been without
water or had very low pressure fat
the past several days.
A slip which caused the water
lines to pull apart was located
Wednesday and repaired. Again
users are reminded that all drinking
water should be boiled for the fust
48 hours.

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art of the blpr~ment work underwa7 at U.e
Cntel'l!eCtloal
of Slate Route 124 lnd U.S. Route

WATERWORKS DEMOLISHED· Tile
former Po•ero7 waterworks, located In tile
Mlnenvllle area, bu raileD to the Oblo Depll't·
ment or TransportatloD'I wreckln1 ball as a

. II

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33. Tbe bulldln1 II eliJitcled to be completely
lODe by Tbundayal'ltrDoon.

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Thu~,AprU18,1991

:c ommentary

Pag~2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thureday, Apr1118, 1991
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Czech leader's death in '48 leaves doubts

The Daily Sen'linel

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Ill Court Street

l'omi!I'IIJ', Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'l'IIB IN'I'EitESTB OF TilE MEIGS'-MASON AREA

Afh

M'riit::i!

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ROBERT L. WING;ETT

Publisher

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CRARLEN"E BOEFl.ICB,

General Mana(er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstanl Publllber/Cenlroller
A MEMBER o!The United Preos International, Inland Dally Press
":: Asaoclatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
, ·~· words lone. AU letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wit~
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be p!lb- ·
i : ' llshed . Letters should be In good II!Ste, addressing Issues, not personall" ; ties.
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PRAGUE, CzechoslovakiaTomas Masaryk was Slovak
Czechoslovakian President Vaclav himself, but was born in CzechHavel is haunled by the ghost of a speaking Moravia. He was.a black:· nationalist leader who died myste- smith's apprentice before intensive
riously not far from Havel's office schooling that led to a professor·
in the old Hradcany Castle, now a ship of philosophy in Prague .
government office building.
Havel, a playwright and philospber,
Havel believes Jan Masaryk was is often compared to Tomas
murdered.
Masaryk.'
Mas..rk was lhe son of Tomas
With his American wife, CharMasaryk,. the Czechoslovakians' lotte Garrigue, Tomas Masaryk
answer to Thomas Jefferson. The spent a good part of 1918 in the
elder Masaryk became the coun- United States prevailing upon Prestry's first democratic leader in ident Woodrow Wilson to allow an
1918 and kept the Czechs and the independent democratic state for
Slovaks united until Adolf Hitler the Czechoslovakian people in the
rolled into the country: Considering wake of World War I. The land had
the animosity today between the been divided between Austria and
,
two groups, thin was no small Hungary for hundreds ofyears.
accomplishment.
Wilson granled Masaryk's wish,

By Jack Ande.rson ·and D_a_le VanAtta
and Masaryk became· the first
Czechoslovakian president For the
next 20 yearS, Czechoslovakia was
the only East European country
wi.th a surviving parliamentary
democracy. ~k died in 1937,
and some, includang his son Jan,
tried to .keep the country independent. .
Jan Masaryk was always the target of Soviet and Czeeh security
police. His name stirred nationalist
feelings. Even worse for the Communists. his father had authored
some of the most brilliant critical
essays on MarXism. Streets named
after Tomas Masaryk ·were
renamed, and all but one of the

t 't; ,
~·~...

;\ What is wrong with cu"ent system?
• ;'

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::Dear Editor. •·
agers who are the foundation Of
~ · The Ohio Legislature is now Ohio's extremely effective control
'4ebating Senate Bill 101 which system. At a time when industrial
::would put into motion Governor employment opportunities continue
:~eorge Voinovich's plan to decon- to decline these well-paying, fully·
:~1 hard liquor sales by destroying benefited service sector jobs are
•)he state-controlled liquor stores. more ,viJa11han ever to &lt;;~ur state's
•
:..While the 'issue, on its face, may econom~. .
;~m quite complicated, in reality~~
By disposmg of the state.. st~re
'ls very simple. Simply tragic for clerks who serve as o~·sate
;'(he hundreds of thousands of ' e~foreementagents Senate BiiiiOI
· ·:Chioans who will be forced to deal· w11l, effecnvely, destror.the syslem
iliri)h the effects of the increased . ' de8cri~ above. It ~Ill place the
~l'Cohol consumption that will sure- · young people '!f th1s state, wlio
,... Jy.JUUit from decontrol, anZ sim- c_annot ~ow easal y pure~ h~d
, ply devaslaling for li)e 1,450 dedi· hquor, m Jeop~dy. W.e m OhiO
~ C8led union and non-union employ- should_ not, !J a ume ~hen alcohol
·· ces who will Jose their jobs should a~ IS alreidy exacbng much 100
: t~~..Qovernor's ill-advised and h_tgh a toll from _our stale, add hard
~ ~nljally disastrous scheme be l1quor to !he last of s\lbstances
" eaacled.
. endangering 9ur sons and daugh·
"
·Any discussion of deco11trol ters.
.
~ must· be based on the following
Why does the Govemor.want to
,. premise: Ohio's retail liquor store destroy a system . that works so
;: sYJctln works. Experts in the fielc) well? Good questiOn. He· cla1ms
;~ r¢~. it J1S the best in the United . d~ntrol will ease ~e state budget
•' StateS .•When it was established by cnslS, but Jll~ tt;uth ts S.J}.. 101 Will
~ aii "ovenvlielming vote of ·the peo· have· h~tle if any effect on the bud" pie in 1933 the system was given , get dunng the next two fiscal years.
~~ lessly
threetaslcs allofwhichithastlaw- Some say Ohio wilt be able to
perf~rmed for 58 years. First, recapture ~ales lost to n~ighboring
.
,.. and most importantly, the state states where hard liquor 1s cheaper,
~ stores. were given the dUty of main- but e~en_ ~e ~roponents of ~.B .. ,
The long .awailed military base
;. taining strict conlrol o~er hard JOi .adm1t 11 w11l not lower pnces - ~losing recommendations were
~ liquor sales in the stale. They have
~d 1ts effect on cross-~~der sales
released this past Friday by Secre~ done this job so well that Oh10 now
wtll, therefore be neghg1blc. The tary of Defense Dick Cheney, and
~ boasts the 48th lowest rale of per sad fact is that S.~. 101 is nothing depending on what member of
·* capita hard liquor consumption in more than a cymcal attempt to Congress you listen to, one can
~ the~divert..mill.ions of dollars in p_rofits interpret the news as either very
~
Second, the system was estab· to the retail merchants and VOCC.B ' posidve or bordering on the ·Machi· .
:; lished 10 generate a profit for the who wall, mouths watenng 10 avellian.
~ state from selling hanlliquor wl;lile
anticipation, to peddle hard liquor
Nothing annoys me more than
~ at the ~e tirrie discouraging its to tbe citizens of this state. The to hear members 6f Congress
; conaumpllon. a koal foreign to the mF.rcltll!lt$ ~ fhe only group thai charging that the list of bases to be
-: groeers )'iho ·would assume conii'OI wlll tienefit frmi1 decontrol.
.
closed or consolidated is arrived at
~ of retail sales if the state stores are .
We at the UFCW, along wath more on political grOunds than on a
~ · destroyed. The system. has consishundreds of thousands of other need to eliminate those facilities
• lently accomplished thiS goal, even concerned Oh10ans are commttted that have either grown obsolete or
~ in the face of an average annual
to doing ~verything possible to stop are no longer needed by the mili.; sales decline of 4%. In fact, the Senate Btll 101 and avert the dan- tary.
:· system lait year poured a total of gers it holds for us ail. We~ urge
Admitledly no one likes to lose
&lt; more than $10 million in profits every~ne to join us by contacting · jobs in their state or district, but
;. into the General Revenue Fund, an their stale legislator and registering ironically it seems that those that
:: economic development fund, and opposition to this ill-conceived pro- yell the loudest are 'normally those
:: into alcoholism awareness and posal.
that have the longest and most con·: u-eaunent programs.
·
James B. Jerele Pr"esident, sistelll records of opposing defense
~·
Third, the stale stores p~o:vide
Local 880 Ohio State related expenditures. Senator John
·: good jobs, at no cost to th¢ taxpayCouncil of the UFCW Kerry of Massachusetts is calling
:• ers, for the 1,450 clerks and manthe rec.ommendations an act of
,;
.
treachery in that the list of closings
~
includes Fort Devens, an antiquated Army post in his home stale.·
Frankly, Fort Devens -was
•
y·
targeted for elimination years ago,
:,
but because of repealed efforts by

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statues of him were torn down. The
remaining one was moved from the
town square of V yskov in Moravla
to the grounds of a nearby castle
where it was planted without a
name plate. But Czechoslovakians
knew who the man on the .blank
stone cube was.
On Feb. 20,1948, all non-Communist members of the Czech cabinet resigned in protest ·over the
overt Communist control of the
police. The one who refused to
resign was Jan Masaryk, then foreign minister of Czechoslovakia.
Three weeks later he was dead.
Police said he had jumped out of a
bathroOm" window in the Foreign
Ministty section of HraiiCllllY Cas.
tie.
The police kept records of the
incident under wraps. During the
brief revolutionary period ill 1968,
known as .the Praque Spring, a
committee was allowed ' to investigate Masaryk's death. They
couldn't conclude if it was murder
or suicide because too much key
evidence had been destroyed. The
committee's report disappeared
during the crackdQwn that followed
the Prsgue Spring. Masaryk's doc·
tor always maintained that Jan was
not in a -frame of mind to llilc:e his
oWII life.
Havel told us that Masaryk's
death will always be a mystery
because any proof of murder or sui·
cide is gone. "Tbere i!rll many people who believe that it was murder," he said. ''There are very certain and direct evidences of this,
but it has not really been proved.
There are just as many peOple who
believe that it was suicide. I'm·
afraid that we shall never know the
truth.
"And, if you ask rriy personal
opinion, I tend to believe that it
was murder."
..

I t aII .d epen d s on h ose ox IS
• .getting
• gore
' d

3 Gasoii··ne .suppii·es

fall to
·.:· lowest poi•nt I·n 16 ears
.••"'

then Speaker of the House Tip
O'Neill of Massachusetts; it has
been kept open long past its useful·
ness.
If one wants to suBI!est that the
Administration is playmg politics,
how can they explain that the three
biggest closings, that of the Orlando Naval Training Center in Florida and the closings of Fan Ord and
the Lonf1 Beach Nav111 Station in
Califomta (which will mean a loss
of 16,882, 16,452, and 10,352 jobs
respectively) are in states repre·
senled by such hjghly visible and
highly vulnerable Republican Senators as Connie Mack of Florida
and newly appoinled John Seymour
or California who recently filled
the Senate seat vacated by Republi:
can Pele Wilson uhen he assumed
California s governorship earlier
this yeatl
.,
-. How can one explain the closing
of lndi~~J~a s Fort Benjamin Harrison and the loss of 4,540 jobs in a
state repre·sented by the highly
influential Se~tor. Richard Lugar,
and by Vice-President Dan
Quayle:s replacement. Republican
Senator Dan Coats?
I think it's the height of political
irresponsibility and tor many of

-n.e

•

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_

• u•e fior .
. E a_U lett.es·ga'ln

:_ first ,after 'J.-2 -victory ·

:~~J~~~ghsec~tc:

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· Robert Walters
But when the time came to pay, the
J apanesc said the commitment was
actually denominated in yen and
constantly changing currency
exchange rates had reduced its
value to $8.6 billion.
• · Washington political consultant
Mark A. Siegel is among those
especially bitter about the art'lii)F·
ment: "No Japanese or German
mothers and fathers mourned for
their,sons- only Americans.
"No Japanese or German young·
sters faced Saddam's II'OopS on the
front lines. Still another generation
of young Americans risked their,
livcs.for their nation's political
mtcrcsts and other nations' economic interests."

.

Today in history

In the iecond Eastern scored
tJuee runs on a walk 10 Amy Well,
an Cll'QC, a siolen bue by
and
an RBi ·sacrifice fly by Penny

wen.

Aeiker. ·

Lisa Golden delivered an RBI
single, and Lorrie.Baker slammed a
run-ICOring double for a 4..0 EHS
lead.
SV scored once in the third
EHS got ....
bac1c ·
f{lme, but
""' run:
m
the fourth. The lady Bag~ then
scored two insurance runs 1n the
bottom of the sixth. when Golden
~...... for the _.,..,d time. Carrie
""'
.....ed
· G' 'Jan walked, Nld Reed slamJII
a tWIHWl.dotlble.
. SV added a run in the -seven!h.
but CQuld not over~ome the 7-2
EHS lead.
Eastern hitters wae Lee Gillilan
a single, Jaime Wilson a
singte,R.eed a double, Michelle
Donovan a double,Lisa Golden
lhree singles, and Lorrie Baker a
double.
For SV, Trilla SchneidCI' had a
single, Adkins a single, Owens a
double, Freeman two singles,
Smith a double and single, and
Conley a single.
Edna Henslt11, picked up the win
witb three strikeouts and three
walks, while BlankeiiShip and
McGuire suffered the loss with
tluee strikeouts and six walks.
Eastern hosts Waterfom tonighL

sv

Eastern. Eastern tied the ~e in
the third at 2-2, much in
·same
fashion as in Eastern's earlier 5•3
will over the Viltes in the season's
. fii'S{-e:ma~sellled off with a walk,
Jeff Durst doubled, and with two
outs, hard hitting senior Jcrrod Bar·
·ber slammed 1 Jwo-run double to
· fiield' 2 2 ·
deep nght
.ora • ue.
fn
many
ways
thefourth.
bottomSV
caved
ill 011 Eastern ill the
raJ.
lied for 6 runs off Eastern's ace
Durst for an g. 2 score, while Ren·
froe struck out the side in the
fourth for the Viltes.
sv went on to the 18-2 win.
Eastern hillerS were Jed by Jeff
Durst and Jenod Barber with i

is Thursday, Apru 18, the J08th day,of 1991 with 257 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving towan:I its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and lialmn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
~ born on this date are under tho sign of Aries. They include !tal·
ian duchess Lucrezia Borgia in 1480; la'W)'er Clarence Darrow in 1857:
symphony conductor Leopold Stokowslci in 1882; actresseS Barbanl Hale
in 1~22 (age 69) and Hayley Mills in 1946. (age 45): and actor James
Woods in 1947 (age 44}.
r
On this date in history:
.
In 1775, American patriot Paul Revere began his' famed ride through
the Massachuseus counttyside, crying out "The British .are coming!" to
J1111y the Minulemen.
In 1906, an earthquake struck San F~, collapsing buildings and
i~ling fires thaJ!(Icsb'oyed mucb of what temained of the city. By the
nme it was over three days later, almost 500 people were dead and more
lh8n a quarter of a Million were homeless.

"

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'

~

Effective pitching in the final
The Redmen advanced on 12
innings of Tuesday's doubleheader hits and limiled their emn to two,
in Columbus with Ohio Dominican while OD, led in hittin11 bv Swethelped the University · of Rio land at two for three, had six hilS
Grande baseball team on to twin 110d one enor. Losing pitcher was
victories over the Panihers, S-4 and And Becker. ··
·
3-2.
.
~e pace slowed somewhat in
. The ~edmen advanced to 18-9 the second game as the J:tedmen
on the season and improved their scored the conteSt's lint run in the
standins in the MOC, which has fourth inning and held on to score
been led this season by the Pan· Jwo more runs at the top of the sevthers, to 5-1. Within ·District 22, enth.
Rio Grande remains poised for a
Brad Roser (5·1) slowed the
playoff btnh with a 9-1 slate.
Panthers' offense down to live hits,
bave Oglesby's Rio men but stepped down in the seventh
opened the twin biU in robUst fash· illning fcir Camill, who in spite of
ion by, scoring three J'UIIll in the rant · OD's two additional runs at the
inning, thanks in pan to hitting by . bottom of the seventh, maDIIIed to
Jason .Wright, wllo was ' three for strike out the hosts' last two hitters
four, and Danell Marcull), who · and allow the Redallen to escape '
went iwo .for ·four aDd posled the , with a win.
· The Redmen netted eight hits
game-winning RB~.
The Panthers answered with two , and, h'ad two errors with James
runs at the bottom of the fii'SJ and Lewis scoring on two of his four at·
tl\e game settled into tedium until . bats with an RBI and Gibson also
the sixth; when the Redmen went to going two for four with an RBI.
4-2. The rejuvenation also affected
Lance Balcer, who also hit two
the hosts, who lied up the game at for four, led OD's offense, which
the bottom of the sixth with two commiued no errors. Craig Brown
took the losa as pitcher.
·
additional llU)S.
The Redmen continue their
But the Redmen, who. also drew
Jwo for four fmisbes at bat by Jon march through the district and ponGibson and Ted Thompson, ference in a makeup doubleheader
snapped the deadlock at the top of with Tiffin, set for Thursday at 1
p.m. at Cedarville. The game was
t~e seventh when Marcum's hit
brought a Rio Grande player across originally scheduled to be played at
home plate.
Rio Grande last Saturday, but was
Marcum also took the win from postpOned due to Olin. Following
.the pitcher's ,mound and improved that contest, Rio Grande travels to
his season performance to .!i-2. Malone on Saturday .and to Central
Chad Carroll stepped in at the bot- State on Sunday. Both are I p.m.
. tom or the seventh in relief and had doubleheaders.
the save.

Pennzoll

10W30, 10W40
or5W30
MoaOII
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6!!

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Raltole

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Meigs thumps Miller 15-1

· Meigs pounded out 15 hits off
Mike Vance (wp),Iason Wright
of two Miller pitchers, and scored (S), Jeremy Phalin (6) and Joe
'in every inning but the fifth as the McElroy, John Hanison (7)
l'ofarauders rolled over the Falcons
Smith (lp), Warren (5) and Cain
I S-5 in Tri-Valley Conference
baseball action Wednesday
, evening.
The Daily Sentinel
:
Meigs came out of the blocks
with two first inning runs and
(UIPIIII. . .)
increased its lead to 11-1 at the end
A DIY . . . ef )lwljtzffl• lae.
of fourth inning. Smith tried to
Publtabld every a!ltraoon, Monday
bring the Falcons baclc with a two
thr'"'lb Friday, Ill Court St., Porun home run in the fifth inning,
meroy, Oblo, by tllo Oblo Valley PubJtahlq ~/Multtmldla, Inc..
but it was to little to late.
PumerGY, Olllo lillll, Pb. 112-21!16. seThree l'ofarauders had three hits
cond ela11 poatqe pold at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
each to lead the Meigs hit parade.
Kevin Taylor slammed a double
~ber: United Pret1 International,
and two smgle$, Jason Wright and , lnlalld DaUy Prell A•octatlon aad the
Ohio Newi)NIG,r!::"latlOII. Nallonal
Eric Heck had three singles each.
AdYI!rUslq
tattve, Branham
Terry Reuter and Randy Corsi
NewJIIOpor
... 733 11drd Avenue,
NO!' Yort, New Yoric 10011.
ad'ded a sing!~ and a double each
while Terry McGuire and Shawn
POS'I'MASTER:
·Ill
-Court
..._ St.,
Hamon added a double each. War·
to 'l1lt DollY Po.-oy,Obloe'NI.
• ren added single and a double to
go along with Smith's home run to
~NIIATII
lead the Falcons.
OIIe w-.............. ..... ............... ,1.60
Sophomore Mike Vance was the
Olle'MODlll ................................. N-110
starter and winner for the MaraudOIJe y... ................................. 113. :Ill
ers. Jason Wright and Jeremy
liNG... COPY
.
Phalin also saw action on the hill
Dildy
...................................
25
C.ntl
for Meigs as coach Zane Beegle
SU~DOI-rlqtopaytbecar­
tried to give his pitchers SQI!Ie work
rlar may 1'111111 Ill adYan"" diNe! to
bec1nse of recent rainouts . .The trio
Tbe Datty tlelltblol OD a 3, 8 or 12 mCIItb
c:ombined 10 strike out 11 and walk
bull. Credit will be stwa C11rrler eodl
four. Miller had six hits.
Smith was the starter and Joaer
No IUblcrtpl- by maU pormllted In
areu bamo carra. .-vice II
for the Falcons with relief help
available.
from Wanen, they combined to
strike out three and walk four.
Meigs with the win nises it's
UWeolrl ............................... ... nt.ll
· - OaaiJ
record to 5-4 overaD and 5·2' ill the
:till WMU...........................
....... NU&amp; '
'PIC, Meigs will b'lvel to Fedenll 12W-...... ,........................... MI.11
OllioMellalpOaa!J
. Hocking Friday aflemoon.
.
u w-.................................. nuo
.......................... ............ . M&amp;.IO
MILLER 000 140 0-S 6
5I weob ......... ........:....... ... .,.... aao
MEIGS 234 403 x-15 IS .

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. OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
~

~Dileo

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llloll-..-.-

ap.kl'lugl
\ml6

•
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Wall 2-S,
each by

For
· Dining and Entertaining - why not a wrought iron umbrella table with
four stacking chairs available in suntm1r shades that art bound to plta11 Mom.

.,c:.na.. .. - -

T~y

etCh 3•5, Renfroe
Edmunds 2·5, and
Shepplld, Dillon,

0011000-2 8 3
EastCI'II 13.0 I 0 2 x·7 7 4

a

By United l'ress International

''

EDNA HENSLEY

lr

Symmes Valley had, a 1'9 hit
auack led
Coburn with a 4-5
and Lester were

· Redmen down.OD

those traditionally opposed to mili·
tary defense spending, Jlle hei(!hl of
hyprocrisy, to be crying foul an the
wake of the proposed closings
announced by the DefellSj: Depart· .

dusted off an 1875 law, ihe' Feed
ani! Forage Act, that allows it to
spend fun~ to support troops in the
f1eld w1thout congressional
approval . (The statute was enacted
to provide subsistence for troops on
the western frontie~ at a time when
Congress didn't meet all year.)
Although Japan and Germany
made generous financial commit·
ments to support the war effort,
both subsequently engaged in
tawdry acts. Noting that the groWid
. war against lnlq was much shorter ·
than e~pecled, Germany suggesled
that a recalculation of the costsand a refund of some of its
money-might be in order.
Japan made what Bush thought
was a $9 billion pledge for 1991.

r
~

· · The Eastern Eaglettcs of Coach'
•. Pam Douthitt gained a lie for farit
• place' in~ SVAC by aven&amp;ing 10
::. :earlier losa to Symmes Valley by
~ defeating the Lady Nonemen 7·2
• Thursday night in SVAC softball
• action.
.
Eastern is 4-1 overall and 3-1
: In the SVAC. Symmes Valley
~ .owns the salne mark.
• , Af ter pitcher Edna Hensley
retir~d the side in the first, her
Eastern teammates rallied for one
run in the bottom haH of the frame.
Lee Gillilan led the EHS fii'St off
·
with a single, stole second, arid
went to third on a sacrifice by
• Jamie Wilson, Mary Jo Reed lheri
• threaded a run-scoring grounder
through the infield for a 1·0 EHS
· : lead.
•'

.

ings of $850 million. On top of the
five year opemting cost savings it
is estimated that the sale of land at
the bases being YliCIIled could bring
another $1.9 billion, while the
ment
operating savings for 1998 and
Because of changing national beyond will lllllount to some $1.7
security needs, by 1995, the num- billion annually. ·
.
ber of.people in the Upited States
Actually the recommendations
military is scheduled to be reduced put forth' this past week by DOD ,
by 25%. When the ranks of our constitute only the first step in a
military are substantially reduced it long process. The recommenda·
is only logical to assume that th~ tions must go now to an indepen·
facilities used to house and train dent eight-member panel called the
theS'e troops will have to be Base Closing Commission.
.
reduced as well.
The Commission in turn is to
In total, the Department of review' the proposed closings and
Defense (DOD) is recommending make its recommendations to the
the closing of 31 major defense President by July I. If the President
posts and facilities, 12 minor ones, · accepts the Commission's list in its
and reducing or consolidating 28 entirety, he in turn will send it to ·
others. The closings are scheduled Capitol Hill, after which Congress
to be carried out over a period of · will have 45 working days to veto
five years starting in f\scal year the package. If no action is taken
199i. The costof closing the bases by Congress, the proposed closin&amp;s.
on DOD's list is estimated to tolal will take place as scheduled.
$5.7 billion over the five year periPersonally,! feel the list put forad.
war&lt;l by DOD is a sound one', one
Savings from reduced operating based on practicality not politics.
costs for the same period a.e esti- and one which should go forward
mated at $6.5 billion, for a net sav- as·proposed.

ping 111-2 acore. Went drops to
S·l ill the league; and 5·2 overall,
while it was reponed Jbat Symmes
Valley was llso.S·l in the SVAC,
7-3 overaD.
After a scouless first inning,

Symmes Valley broke the ice with double 1111d single each, Bialell two
two runs in the second inning. 1 sin&amp;Jes. and singles by Randy Kay·
Chad Renfroe Jed off the frame ~ lor, MattFilllaw, and Quia Adami.
with a home run over the left f~eld
fence, then Coburn doubled and
advanced on an error in the out·
field. After Durst ICCO~ to fan
two bauers Edmunds doubled
horne Cobum with the second run,

BY SCOTT WOLFE
Avenging a season-opening loss
~ to Eastern. the Symmes Valley
~ Vikings unleashed their frustration
in a 6is way by defeating the
' league leading Eagles by a whop-

:

. Con. Clarence.Miller

I

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.Vikings hand E~gles first conference defeat of season, 18-2

~

By WALTER ANDREWS
•
.
Uniled l'ress lntemational ·
::
NEW YORK - U.S. gasoline supplies have fallen to their lowest point
: in nearly 16 years, Wednesday raising some government concern
WASHINUTON (NEA} - For- it wasn't so serious. The extraordi·
: although the oil industry said supplies were adequale to prevent shortages. get everything you've been inces- nary manner in which the war
~
''There's a bit of anxiety and mild concern at this point. We're making ·santly told about the federal gov' against iraq was financed presents
, phone calls to the oil companies," said an official at the Depanment of ernment's chronic budget deficits, at least two very serious issues:
~ Enetgy in Washington, who asked to remain unidentified.
.
fiscal shortfalls and other fmancial
• Are the contributions from
~
A spokesman for the oil industry's American Petroleum Institute said: woes. This month's problem is that other countries being handled with
ir "We believe that there will be ll!dequate suppli~s of gasoline throughout there's too much cash-and in a degree of fiscal integrity that
~ the summer driving season barring unforeseen events."
.
Washington that means a multibil- guarantees there will be no replica: . The inventory decline evidently has affecled the wholesale price of lion-dollar windfall.
tion of the Iran-contra scandal?
•. gasoline in trading on' the New York Mercantile exchange where May
The federal treasury is always
• Were this counlry's troops
:. delivery contracts have risen 8 cents in the last two weeks to nearly 74 bulging with cash in April, because deployed as mercenaries while
~ cents a gallon.
.
.
that's the month when both person- other countries were allowed to
:"
Unless there is an increase in supplies soon, this increase can be al and corporate incoine taxes not make cash contributions in lieu of
~ expecled to be reflected in retail prices at the pump.
withheld at other tlljles during the . commining their young men and
~
The trade group lale Tuesday reported that U.S. gasoline stocks fell year must be remitted to the lnter· women to battle?
•; 2.3 million barrels last week to 204.2 million barrels, the lowest level nal Revenue Service.
For those with very short mem. ·, since July 4, 1975. Each barrel contains 42 gallons.
•But the Treasury Department (of ories,the Iran-contra scandal of the
~ The eighth straight weekly decli!IC brought inventories below the 205 which the IRS is a unit) has late 1980s involved the abuse of
~ million barrels the Energy Department considers the minimum operating
devised various cash management millions of dollars in funds secured
:: level for the nation and below which spot shortages could theoretically techniques to handle ihe $50 billion through clandestine anns sales to
~develop.
in cash typically in its coffers by Iran and from secret contributions
,• The DOE official said the government agency would report a similar · the end of the month.
·
made by Saudi Arabiil, Brunei and
: decline late Wednesday to slightly above the minimum operational invenThe siwation is complicaled this other oil-producing nations. The
.; tory level.
·
·
year, however, by the $40 billioo in money was used by the White
:~
The API spokesman said that minimum level was several years old and additional payments recently remit· House to covertly fmance the activ·
~ added: "I don't know how valid it is."
ted· or ex peeled to arrive in April ities of the insurgent contra forces
•: Llst-weok, Charles Heath,.the Energy Department's director of from vanous nations around the seeking to topple Nicaragua's gov:petrOleum supply toJd U~iled Plus ln~onal that the minimu~ oper- world committed to financing the ernment.
• lling level was provided m 1989 by the Nanonal Petroleum Qluncll.
President Bush has proposed to
war against Iraq.
: The council IS an advisory sroup to the secre1ary of energy made up of
The $53.5 b111ion in war contri- chapnel other nations • contribu·
; JllliQIII, Slate and: local government group as oil indusuy and environ· butions consists of $16.8 billion lions ~ the Iraqi war effort through
• ~ lepi 11 ntalives.
from Saudi Arabia, $16 billion a "working capital account" under
: The API Industry spokesman said the decline was "primarily the from Kuwait, $10.7 billion from the eonii'Ol of the Defense Depart·
~ teSUit" rllhodrawing down of stocks of more vaporous gasoline, which
Japan, $6.6 biUion from· Germany, ment and the White House Office
• cannot be 110ld in many pans of the country during warm weather because $3 billion from the United Arab of Mansgement Budget.
: of pollution regulllions.
·
Emirates and $0.4 billion from var·
That has provoked concern on
• ltellneries are in the proc:ess of switehing over 19 the production of ious other countries.
Capitol Hill that some of the
:•lower vapor pressure gasoline.
With the $40 billion or so money could be ck\erted to a new
• He also slid inventories have provided only I percent of the nation's scheduled to arrive in April, the "slush fund" for other clandes:;psoline in ftiCCIIt yws with 95 percent coming directly from refmeries Treasury Department expects to tine-and possibly illegal- opera{and 1 percent supplied by inventories.
have an unmanageable cash bal- tions if constitutional procedures
l
"At p aiCIII, dim is ample spare capacily in U.S. refineries. If needed, ance of $90 billion by the end of (requiring congressional authoriza·
~c:omp!!lllel also c:111 take stepS to increase impoos," the API spokesman the month. Unlike the rest of m, it tioo and app10p1iation of all funds
• said.: •
.
c:111'1 invest exb'l money in a bank spent by the federal government)
~
~ Department ofl!cial said, "The oil compan~s seem to CD or mutual fWid.
are cin:umvenled.
~inkdlere's not an illventay p10blem because demand is not thai high."
The situation would be funny if
Indeed, the Defense Department
..4.
,1 .

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U. S. coffers swell with war payments

5

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The oaur s.ntll1ei-Ps• 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GAUIPOUS

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Page-4-The Dally Sentinel

- -~ -

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In Reds' 5-I win over Padres Wednesday,

,__..,..

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Thura~,

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Aprll18, 1991

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going !0 be awlul tougb 10 beat." .
So Smiley, fresh from an atti- the lower and faster his Wtbal1 and Montreal on June J; 1988, retired
"He popPed some real good,"
Hal Morris and Paul O' Neill tude-adjustmentiCSSion in spring the more upbeat his atlilllde.
23 straight after McReynolds said PiusburJh maJIII« Jim Ley·
provided Cincinnati with a 2-llead training, stitched together his secThus far, everything seems to Ieaehed base. He waiJccd none.
land "He used Ill his pilehes, and •
through six imings by hitting solo ond imp~ive Ollli:"f in ll!l many have worked. In Chicago April 12,
"Everything I left go tonight he used his fastball quite a bit.' :
home runs. The Reds added three starts Wednesdsy ~~by lOSsing he gave up four hilS, one run and had some pop on it," Smiley said.
which I was glad 10 see. '
runs in the eiRhth off Wes Gardner, a masterful one-huter tn Pitts· two walks over eight innings in a
" He: worked the comers well
"I aot out.pitched," Darling .
who was una6le 10 record an out in burgh's 4-0 silencing of the New · 3-1 victory over the Cubs.
With sl9w ~tuff and busted u5 inside said.. "Xudo&amp; to S~y. This was
relief of loser Greg Harris, I-I.
York Mets.
Smiley, 26, who pitched his first with tbc faslball. He was just wry one of those games where you ,
"(Last season) I ll:inda went out one-hitter in a 2-1 victory over consistent and in charge,-~· said can't afford 10 make mi•akes and I~ :
Chris Sabo led off the eighth
with a single ~ainst Gardner and there with the wrong attitude,"
•-"" f'
Mcll J1IIIIIICf Bud Hamllson.
did• ..
· advanced to thtrd on a double by Smiley said, refering to bis ret~
•
O'Neill. Sabo scored 1111d O'Neill last July 1 after s~nding six weeks
'
SIOirPed at third when Barry Larkin on the disabled liSL "I was trying
singled to center, and Larkin took to pitch no-hitters; I was ttying: to
second on a throw to the infield.
strike everybody .out; I wasn't pay, Eric Davis was then walked ing any attention 10 my game."
intentionally, loading the bases. Pat
In 1990, Smiley rerumed with a
Clements came on in relief of 3-3 record and firusbed up tbc sea·
Gardner and allowed consec:utive · son with an uninspiring record of
sacrifice flies to Bill Doran and 9-10. But in Man:h, he concentrat·
Benzinger.
,
ed· on develqping a new mental
O'Neill broke a 1-1 tie with a approach while tbc coaches helped
leadoff homer in the sixth off' Har· fmc-tune his pirchins mechanics.
ris, who gave up two r\ms on five . . ''I: m _just. ! earmg ~act a.nd
hilS in seven inrungs.
,
!hrowmg 1! ~w•.and ~~ s keepmg
San Die'o had tied the score · 11 down, sa1d Smtley, who
with a run m the third. With one allowed a lone double to Kevin
out Darrin Jackson singled, was McReynolds in the second inning.
sactifrced 10 second by Harris and ~· Everything came around late in
scored on a Bjp Roberts double.
!he ~pn~g. 11J1d I want 10 stay w1th,
Moms provided Cincinnati with 11. I m m a groove, and I want to
the game's first run' on a leadoff stay that way."
homer in the second.
Jeff King smacked a two-run
Tony Fernandez of San Diego , homer of~ loser Ron Darling, 0:1.
extended his season-long hitting --:ho contnbuted an error and a wild
streak 10 nine games with a single p1tch that helped lead 10 two more
10centerin thee!ghth.
uneamed_runs.
.
, Elsewhere 10 the National
The Puates went to work on hiS
League, Pit1Sburgh shut out New delivery problems during spring
York 4-0, .Montreal blanked St. training, assigning Class Double A
Louis 1-0, Houston nipped Atlanta pitching coach Spin Williams to
4-3. Los Angeles tOJ!Ped San Fran- · speed up Smiley's deli\'ery 10 both
Salisbury Blue
cisco 6-2, and Ch1cago dropped the plate and. first base. Willia_ms
Buketlllall Team Cl!'tured
Philadelphia4,1.
'·
shortened Smiley's trademark high
nnt pl~~Ce in the Meigs
BasketbaU Tour·
Pirates 4, Mets 0
·
kick~
,
nament held recently at tlie blab sc:bool. Pic·
Yogi Berra; the Hall-of-Fame·
The faster and lower the kick,
tured are memben or the team, l·r, troat, VIa·
catcher and legendary phrase mas·
ter, once said that baseball is 90
percem physical and the ot11er half
mental.
After two recent successes,
Pittsburgh's John Smiley couldn't
agree more.
By United Press International
with an RBI double. Mau Noll:e~··
· · The Pir~ites left bander who
If Chuck Cary 'was a car, he'd RBI single wu (ollowed ~Y Hensfractured his pitchinS hand' when
ley Meulens' base hit.
.
he ~lammed it in a tweab door last know how to change his own tires.
Cary, 1-1, tossed a lhiee-hiuer
season, disc:overed that a h~lihy
Fernandez walked Jim Leyritz
and productive return to tbc pitch· over 'eight innings and the New 10 load the bases and Espinoza sining mf:Btlon in 1991 was c:mltingent York Yailkees tised a si".run Sec· gled to s'core Nokes with MeulenS
upon -more than just an effective ond Wednesd,9.y 10 hammer Chica· holding third. Sax delivered a rungo 10-1, and hand the White Sox scoring single and Mattingly' drew
physical reluibilitation,
their first Joss in seven games this a walk to fon:e In I.eyri!Z with the
SCII!lon.
· inning's fifth run 10 chase Feman,
Credit for the victory ·partially dez.
,,))')'IJ"r
·
.
• \... ~- .' 1 \..... l . \ , ~ : 1 \
went to some black-and-white
Wayne Edwards came on and
Polaroids lining Cary's locker in Kelly lifted his first pitch 10 deep
the Yankee clubhouse.
center, and the sacrifice fly gave
'
NATIONAL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
"(Yaoll:ee pitching coach) Mark the Yaoll:ees a 6-1 lead. Shortstop
BASKETBALL
Eaot
W L Pd. Gl
Connor put those ur for me to Ozzie Guillen avoided further damASSOC.
•
study," Cary said o the photos age by knocking down Hall's
a.-c..,._
Chiooao
., ..•.....6 3 .666 I ' I
A
a
.
l
l
c
"
marked "Yes" and "No" that grounder through the middle and
•
Nowt'* ......,.6 4 .600 ITJ
w L " Ptt. • Gl
•
~
....•...J 4 .556
I
show differences in the 1eft~han · turning a doullle play. ,
2
SL Ladi · ......•... .4 5 .444
• ........
....... ..5~ 23 .709
der's deliverr in both a good and
In other American League
• ....•.. .4 . 6 .-400 2 lfl
• J-JIWiedtlphi• ......AJ 36 ,SW
J3
l'biJadolpUI
•.
,
•..
,.3
6
.333
'
3
bad
outing. 'I wasn't doin~ too action, Boston defeated Kansas
~: Y-11• Yoa ..•..31 42 ,~, 11 11;
\' • ' . ' ~ ·
"'~ Welt
,..an .......30 .., .31o IXJ
' Sut O..o
.........6 3 .667 - ' '' · much wrong but it's like drivmg a · City 6:3, Dettoit st~ped Toronto '
.24 55 ,304
32
car with three good tires and one . in 10 .innings 5-4, Milwaukee beat
"-""'
....•...J 4 .556
I
• Miami,
••..•....23 57 .2118 33 lfl
Cincinnlli
..........
4
4
.500
'
I
lfl
bald one.''
~
Cenlral Dhillon
Baltimore 7-3, Seattle overcame
Lao AnFeo ........4 4 .500 I lfl
.59 21 ,731
Cary juggled his fastball and Minnesota in 11 innings 4-3 and
Adu11a
............
3
4
.429
2
• y-Douail
..........49 31 .613
10
SanPnacioco .......! 6 .333
3
slider, with a hard-breaking screw- Oaldand topped California 3-1.
• y·M i l - ......47 33 .SII
12
w........., •• ulll
• J·AW...
..........42 31 .S25
17
ball 10 strike out five and walk just
a.icoao 4, Phila4olpiUa 1
Mariners 4, Twills 3 (lllnn.)
AD 40 .500
19
Lao ...._
6, Son l'ronci.co 2
, two in helping the Yankees snap a
.•......31 49 .311 21 lfl
At Seattle, Scou Bradley drove
Mcmoiii,SLLAIWO
' .,,._ . •.•••• ..26 54 .325
)3
three-game losing skid.
Pi1
........
4,
NowY
.
.
0
in
pinch
runner }{enry Cotto with a
w..... Conferace
· "That w_as nice;'' New York one-out single
a-...4.AIIuu3
Mldw•IOhiliaR
the 11th inning.
Cioo:ianlli 5, Son Die&amp;• 1'
manager Stump Merrill said after Bradley, pinchinhitting
W L PeL GB
•
ThundaJ Cam•
for Dave
the Yankees posled their firSt home Valle, rapped a 2·2 pitch from
Lao .......... (0... ~I) " Son IJie&amp;o
~ y-San AIICIIio .~ ..53 26 .671
(Nohol.O), 4,ol p.m.
win in three tries. "It shows me the Aguilera, .0-1, between thirdRick
J·Uiah
..•...•..52 27 ,6SI
I
lEG.
and
QUcuo (SUICiilfo 0-4) tt Pi!llbwaJI
. Available
Air Jordan~
,.u...- ........51 21 .646 2
way that Chuck Cary is going 10
(Ddbol&lt;
~'l).
7:]!1
P.ll!·
short
and
Cotto
dashed
in
from
secOduulo
..........29 Sl .363 2A lfl
SAVE
110.00
pitch Ibis year. He established the
l'hillddphio (ldulholluld 1·1) " SL
In Black ·
~
........27 53 .m 261/l
ond, sliding under left fielder Dan
Louia (1'""""""~1). 103!5 p.m.
DoDu
........•...27 S3 .331 26 1/l
fact that he was going 10 use his Gladden's
FridaJOameo
to home. Mike '
o.m. ..........19 60 .2Al 34
lhis WHk
screwball and hC did it effectively. Jackson, 1· 1,throw
Now Ycd u ~ niaht
Plldllc Dl*lcMI
'
-··
got
the
win
wit11
three
It (the screwball) gives' him a
x·l'wllan4 .........62 11 .77S
~~~
hitless in!lingS.
,.u. l.alun ......57 23 .713 s
whole different perspective. It adds and two-third
;.- . .......54 26 .675
I
A
•s
3,
Aagels 1
lllnoionO&amp;i
.....
~.
'""''
Lao.......,." Soallieao. ni&amp;h'
-to his fastball and gives him a third
J-Ooldeo SUte ......42 31 .525
211
.
.
,
otS..I'nndooo,
nip
At
Anaheim,
Calif., Mike
• ,_._ ...........40 39 .506 21 lfl
pitch...
I"
' LA C1ifpon .......31 49 .311
31
Moore
and
Joe
Klink
on
Wednesday
Cary's potential is no surprise to a three·hiuer and Jose combined
S.. r
.......23 S6 .291 !llfl
Canseco
and
Sports TrlllS8CIIorui
his coaches. Connor made a presea.... ~- ... lido
JIMeball,
J-ell I I pla:nlf llorth
992-5623
son
prediction of 20 wins for the Dave Henderson hit solo home
B - - Sip&lt;! outfidd010dd·
WlllModaJRaolll
runs
to
power
the
Athletics.
Moore,
ibl
MeDoweU
w
aatinCI'-lapeCOIIUKL
lefthander.
Oiclao 11 1, Miami 101
Cbicqo(NL) - Piooo4calchol1oe
O.rJonel%1, Atlan&amp;l l ll
"It's like teUing a bauer he'll 2-0, scattered three singles and
• Oidrditm MIS-dly dillbJod lia; acliClooollnd 11'2, Orlando I02
hit' SO bomers," 'said the 31-yearnted pddw Jlidl Sa&amp;ctift'e.
Dolllo 102. ... 100
•
-10!,1.\ Clooen 100
, old,' who added he hadn't been
" " "dloablod
" " " -1111;-.,...
- pildw MikeSoou
ooiS·..,
Oaldon s-III.Ul..otealll
sleeping very well. "I do feel
tnc1 of 1111\ Colli from t'UCIIOn « Pacifie
c.ut Loop (AM~
B.caa 11 Nd lflciJ, 7:30_p.m.
added pressure, especially after a
--~pildwrBill
7:30p.m.
rougb outing in my last start."
X..,. to lndlono
of tho.........., Ao·
S..An.n.ot-.I:!Op.m.
•oc:!itloo (AM
Seaale IL thlh,l0:30 p.m.
Cary allowed a bloop double in
National Leap - Suapc~tdod pitchDerlvaatS•~.JO :JOp.m.
the
second, and singles in the
er Reb Dibble mCincinnati fOI' lhrce
FrJUyGt ....
fourtli and fifth before giving way
ChiciJ.OitQwkae, 7:30p_
.m,
...... ""'•hortolop Eric; y e!ctinf of
wm...,...., Odoado. 7:30p.m.
Houi1U1 Cor c.~c JmtC. e«ecti.ve immed.i·
to Eric Plunk, who worked the
Oldy.
Jlhi'·clelp"Y 11 Milmi, 7:30p.m.
ninth.
Son Fnncioeo - s...t ohortolop Millo
DmailuAI!.u.lp.m.
Bmjamin 10 Phoenix d !he Pacific Co.t
llalkn • a.w•.t. I p.m.
Alvaro. Espinoza had three hilS
Now Yod&lt; ot!a&amp;na. a,...._
"""~~''(AM); ....n.d ohorutop ~­
and
Steve Sax, Don Mattingly,
MU,..._uiS
, , lp.m.
Uribo r.im'l5-doy diublod lilt.
Roberto
Kelly and Mel Hall had
l•llelball
-S. AIHdiDD
"Dolloo.l
p.m.
11 Dmvw, 9:30p.m.
Columhua (CBA)- Nomod Vince
two
RBI
apiece for the Yankees,
Goldfa S~tt lA. Clippn. IO:lO
Chidc...U. coocb.
who
sent
11 baum to the plllle in
Florida (WBL) - Slpod farwud
Swes MolllPGr\Land., 10:30 p.m.
Eric Brown.
.
the
second
Inning, scoring Sill times
•
l'h..u11Sooalo,IOp.m.
Pllikdolj&gt;ltia - Sipd forwud
off Chicago starter Alex FernanRobat Reid. few the rat cl \he ICUOI);
·AMERICAN LEAGUE
Naoed. fcwwatd Xena1 Payne on tho in., dez, 1-1.
.
E11t
~lilt.
Kevin Maas opened the inning
W ·L Pd. GB
_Colleao
1--NomodMauKilby
dropping a ~t single do\Yn the
...........6 4 .Q)()
c:un. b±st 11 ODICb:
Tthird-base
line and Hall followed
.......... 4 " .SOD I
Clooollnd

~

Yanks hand White Sox . ,
first loss of s~ason, 10-1

S('' ,..

I

•.
.

w•· . . .
" ' Now...,.
.•-011.., . . . .

Thursday, April 18, 1991

Page 5_

Middleport Literary Club meets
f

Keepon r
reading .
State Seaator Jaa Michael
Loaa (D.Circlevllle) participated
In "Niaht or a TboiiSIDd Stan,"
the Great American Read Aloud,
at the Meigs Cnuaty Public
Library Ia PDmeroy on Wednes·
day evenlar. Tbose atteadlag
were alvea the opportunity to
bear Sen. Long read aloud. The
event was beld In conjunctloa
with Nltioul Library Week aad
roc:uses attention betweea read·
IDI and succeeding.

Mrs. Robert Fisher reviewed the
book "Greelc City States" by Kath·
leen Freeman at lhe recent meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club
helil at the home of Mrs. James

L1•brary .1'lfle8 ·

New officers were elected when
the Return I onathan Meigs Chap, ter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, met at the home of
Margaret Belle Weber for the April
meeting. .
,
· New officers are: Anna Circle,
Atgent; Eleanor Smith, vice regent;
Eileen Buck, chaplain; Francis
Roberts, recording secreiary; Mary
Yost, assistant secretary; Maye
Mora, corresponding secretary;
Phyllis Skinner, treasurer; Pat
Holter. assistant treasurer; Rae
Reynolds, registrar; Alice Struble,
historian; and Pauline Atkins,
librarian.
The meeting opened with Maye
Mbra acting as chaplain. Members
were urged to tell some of the
many projects the DAR has been
involved with as it celebrates its
centennial year.
'
: The NSDAR sponsors special
sehools for the underprivileged and
the handicapped; have many educational progrtll)ls in schools; scholarship programs in nursing, medical
and occupational therapy; American histOry and national good citi·
zenship essay contes1S with over
800 youth par-ticipating this past
year; NSDAR strives to improve
the lifestyle and preserve the her·
itage of the Amencan .Indian. They
• wprk witll veterans in VA )lospitals
, and nursing homes: sponsor and
encourage literacy programs and
have ~iven 12 million copies of
Amencan citizenship ,booklets' 10
immigrants and they have many

more local, state and national programs.
,
The NSDAR owns and maintain
the largest complell of land and
buildings in Washington D.C. ever
managed anywhere by women.
Rae Reynolds, regent, gave the
national defense report from the
Nation,al Defense Committee,
NSDAR _on the importance of protection for the United States. Mrs.
Reynolds stated that the dominant
theories of arms control tell that the
United States should not be pro·
teeted by Patriot type safeguards.
For years it has been the view of
arms control enthusiasts that work·
able anti-missile defenses are unde·
sirable. As a result the people of
the U.S. are being denied the type
·of protection that has been elltend·
ed to Riyadh, Jerusalem and Tel
Aviv.
Some Strategi~ Defense Initia·
live (SDI) opponents have argued
that defenses lilce the Patriot are all
that is needed. Mrs. Reynolds feels
this is wrong. She stated that the
Patriot's capabilities are not
enough to protect a large area or
against ICMB 's (.a ballistic missile
far beyond the capabilities of
Scuds).
A combined system should be
deployed in the United States, the
article -stated. Interceptors .on the
8round and in a spa~ satellite net·
· work are now being developed and
should have the funding to be completed.

.,....

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loll-

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........... ,4 .

........4

.........3
.......
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4

5
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Cly ......,A 4
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1

SI'RINli VIH IH CINEMA
Hf, ·1~'1''

..
'f

I

!

o

•

~

'0

We are proud Ia omounce to our
Farmers Ia'* customtn that wt,
han (incinnsttl 114ft la.._ll
fitktta awailaltlt fer tht tntiro
ltDton plu1 a parking pa11 in tht
st!MIIum. lei us htlp with your
we1t trlfl to Clncinnt~tl Ia '" the
Iii lttl Mad1ioot In action! Call
. todoy far dttails. ,

LET US HELP }
TAKE YOU TOT
BALLGAME~..~.~ •••

t

·(Fn)
t •

•

.'

}\

.

'

• •

Farmers
. nk

B8

"'·'"'

IIIWIIIIIC. .
ro &amp;AI, . . . ...,,.,. fl)ll:

tiS-3315

RAil lOIII r
""ns PlAIIS, 111110

I••••JII!IIIII!••••••••-----..
(c;!t;"?

~U

JOIN OUR CELEBRATION
DOOR PRIZES • BALLOONS • REFRESHME,.TS

Most
Hatchback, UL SOHC engine, ~

opeed, AMIFM otol'80, tinted glaao.
_36 miles par glllon. 13114.

t~OO lb. paylf:lad, 1#34 1 o

o~\.'(

..

S13889 ::_

COUPONS DISTRIBUTED • Several area
busiDesses dooated coupon to be distributed to
the walkers that participated in the 1991 Resi'·' dential Drive or the Meigs County Division of
·• the American Heart Association. They are, 1-r, ·

~
~

ot'\.'(

S14220 :~~

REGISTER TO WIN THIS CAR

Automatic, llr, atel'80, rear wiper
and defroat, light peckege, power
steering &amp; !nba.
AMERICA '8 11 SEWHG MINIVAN!

front, KJ!tbl BOllS or Subway; Vera Crow or .
Crow's Family Res.taurant; and Deana Larkins
or McDonald's. Back, Jim Hut or Pleuer's, aod
Chuck Kitc:hen or Dairy Queen Brazier.

Automatic, air, slereo casselle, lilt

w'heel, cruise control, rear defroster,

.....

tinted glasa, floor mats, split btnch
.

S1Q,499

$11,999

tu &amp; IIIIa. P~ymenta wllh StOOD down plua

'poMER'OY, . The Belles and
Beaus ;western_ Square Dance Club
wiJ!J:ulld a dance Saturday from 8· .
11 p.m. at the senior citizens center. Kent Hall will be the caller. ,

:

class - 134 MP.

5 speed, tinted glasa, dual mirrors.
cloth Interior, carpal, power brakes.

calendar

POMEROY • "Tin Balls" and
"Hammerman's After You" wiD be
shown at the Meigs County Public
Library on Saturday at 2 p.m. and
at the Middleport Library on Monday at 7 p.m.

•"

.. . ...

.......

~l/:
----· __ . . : ' . . .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Athletic Boosters are having a'
baked steak dinner on Saturday
begi11nin8 at 5 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plai"ns firehouse. Cost is $4 for
adui1S and $2.50 for children. Public invited.

"\

'

I ...-·....

~~

..

'

. ...~.

~-1 - ~-

I

•

,.
•

Beart Fund drive nets $3,951
• The American Heart AssocialiOn, Meigs County Division, r~l ~
ized over $3,951 in income from tiS
1991 Residential Drive. The results
were announced today by. Donna
Carr, 1991 chairman of the Ameri·
can Heart Association campaign in
Meigs County.
• "We're proud of the contribu·
tion of so many of our county's cit·
lzens and the dedication of our
campaign volunteers involved in
the drive," Carr said. More than
180 people went door-to-door d!s·

Heart Association invests over 75
percent of its income in research,
community service and education
programs . In Meigs County the
AHA offers programs such as
''Heart Treasure Chest" and "Get·
ling To Know Your Heart." Also in
199()..91 in the neighboring county
of Athens, two researcher~ were
funded over $40,000 for their work
on cardiovascular disease. 'This will
directly affect the lives of people in
Meigs County. Over the past years
research funded by the AHA has

developed such things as bean bypass surgery and the heart lung
machine. "Knowing the contributions you give to the AHA will
help save the lives of family and
friends is what the residential drive
is all about," commenled Carr.
Anyone not reached lhrough the
drive but slill wanting to donate
may do so by sending a ~h~ck !O
the American Heart Assoc:1atlon m
care of Millie Midkiff, treasurer, at
Bank One in Pomeroy.

••
CABBAGE •

• CAUUFLOWER • BRUSSEL SPROUlS
iED CABilGE • HEAD LEnUCE • BIBB LmUCE

REG.

MIX OIIUTCH

suo PACK

DOliN

-110.00 FLAT

$7.49 FUT
01994 PAl

JUST

lributing
about
c~o- , • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - ,
vascularinformation
disease and
coll~ctmg
contributions for much needed
Pomerey
research.
To show their appreciation of
Houra:
WI NOW
the volunteer effort in Meigs Coun·
U ain to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
HAVE
ty 10 fi~ht heart .disease, several
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.
DIET
PEPSI
~ busmesses donated coupons to
ti'c distribUied to the walkers. These
LAIGE
businesses include Pleaser's,
Craw's Steak House. Mci&gt;onal;d's,
Subway, and Da!rY Queen B~ter.
Helping to fmd walkers m the '
neighborhoods were Kathy Hood,
211015
I:ois McElhinny, Susie Soulsby,
Dee BroWn, Martha McPhail, Jcan
Pickup
Alkire, Millie Midkiff, Becky
Nankin, Terri Shain, Grace Weber,
Karen Baker, Janet Bolin, Linda
Montgomery, Cathy cooper, Pew
Harris, Eva Howard and Rhonda
Uilley. .
.
: Carr noted that the Amencan

992-2124

PEPPERONI
PIZZA

$5·99

' \bur BankfnJ#...

neers to form new settlements called colonies. These colonies ···
were supposed to 'help their mother ·
city but sometimes they would
revolt and become independent,
lhus many colonies were started
along the. Mediterranean Sea , ·
islands in the Aegean ,Sea, in 'Asia •
Minor, the part that is now Turkey.
.Mrs. Phyllis Haclcett presided at ··
· the meeting where Mrs. Richard
Owen and Mrs. Carl Horky gave
brief insiahts of .their lives. Members answered roll call by naming a
famous American of Greek extraclion.
'·
The hostess served refreshmen1S.

Community

S7995

--·w......,

By Ruth Powers . .
The Meigs County Library is

, striving !0 improve &amp;: upgrade their
genealogy section _a nd as a SWI
toward this, they have purchased a
microfibn reader and also started a
. collection of old newspapers on
microfilm. The reels the library has
thus far, are:
Pomeroy Democrat
1/3/1889
• 2/26/1891
' ., .. 3/12/1891
6/29/1893
Pomeroy Independent 7/3/1908
. 8/31/1909.... 9(3{19(1}- 10/4/1910
10/12/1910 . 12/2111910
Racine Tribune 4/13/1887 ... ...817/1889
7/31/1889
11/S/1890
Pomeroy Leader
8/1/1895 I
8126/1897......9(1J1897 • 9(l8/1899
10/5/1899 • 11/28/1901
The Meigs Chapter receivet..
Meigs County News/Meigs
honors from the state conference. It County Republican 1/1/- 12/31/
won second place in the state for 1873.... 1/26 - 3/8/1876 3/15/ 1876
publicity (the most inches pub- ' . 12/26/1877. .... 1/1/1879 •
lished), and also outstandin$ for 12/29/1880...1/5/1881 - 12/27/1882
program books; and a certificate 1!2/1884 - 12/29/1886... 1/4/1888 •
for outstanding programs.
12/28/1892.
. Mrs. Reynolds, Mrs. Circle and
On Arrii 16, 18, 23, and ~5.
June Ashley gave reports on the there wil be Laubach Tu10r Train.·
conference held in Dayton and read ing classes, held at the Library.
the resolutions that wiU be sent to There will be 4 • 3 hour sessions 6
Continental Congress.
to 9 p.m.. These classes are coMajor General Richard Scofield sponsored by the Grace Episc:opal
. was the principle speaker. There Church and the library. Registra·
were over 300 members attending tion is required. For more informawith 43 junior members acting as tion call the library, 992-5813 or
pages.
.
Leesa Murphy, 992-36430
At the March meeting six
The "Night of a Thousand
women were granted the right to Stars", the Great American Read
file their papers for induction into Aloud, will be celebrated a' the
the USDAR: Pam Diddle, junior; Meigs County Library, April 17th
Abbey Stratton, Opal Grueser, at7:30 p.m. , with Sen. Jan Michael
Lynn Crow, June Circle Gray, Lbng, as the reader:
Reynoldsburg; and Anna Ruth Cir..T-he tags of the Meigs County .
cle EUiott, Canfield.
rServiccmen and women, that
Instead of a picnic in June, a 1 appeared on the tree in the library'
tour of Marietta and a luncheon on can be picked up by relatives anythe Becky Thatcher is planlll;d. The time.
committee needs to lcnow the number of members planning to attend
in order to make reservations.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner announced
the Ma,: 10 meeting will be held at
the Meigs County Library in
Pomeroy.
·
'
After the meeting was adjourned.
.the hostesses served an afternoon
high tea . Hostesses were Mrs.
SATUaDAY
Weber,'Pauline Atkins, Clotine
SALEM CENTER • · Star
Blackwood, Donna Jeoll:ins, Sharbn Gfllllge and Sw Junior Grange will
Jewell and Margaret Parsons.
hold fun night and potluck supper
Saturday at 6:30p.m. at the grange
hall.

•aus ·

. . .......,c,_

Diehl.
.
. During her review, Mrs. Fisher
stated the earliest recorded history
ofGn!ece dates to 776 B.C. and the
highest point in ancient Greece civilizalion star1S in 450 B.C. At about
that time Greece did not have a sin·
gle goveniment, instead the people
lived in separate pity states. A city
state was like a little counlry ~ontroUed by one powerful city. Each
city state had i1S own kind of gov- .
emment, its own kind of laws and
its own army. Sometimes a city
state would make· war on another,
conquering its peuple and therefore
become larger and more powerf~l.
They also sent out groups of p10-

Meigs DAR elects officers~

: tl:!i::.d .-.,. .

...

The Daily. Sentinel

By The Bend

Hammond get~ first major ·league hit, posts first victory
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Cincin·
nati left-hander Chris Hammond
had a choice of two baseballs to
tuc~ away afte~ earning 'his first
ma)Or·league VICtOry Wednesday
night. One was the ball in play
when the last out was made in tbc
Reds' 5-l triumph over the Padres:
the other represented his first
major-league hit, a single in the
fifth inning.
" The !tit was nice, ·but the win
means a lot more to me,'' said
Hammond, who went sill innings,
allowing one run on five hilS.
Scott Scudder, who Reds manager Lou Piniella origin~l!Y had
tabbed to stan before dec1ding on
Hammond Tuesday, went the final
three innings for the save, his fmt
in the majors.
That caused a bit of a' conflict
after the last out of the game was
recor~ed by first .basel!lan Todd
Benzmger. Sc~dder wanted the
ball, but Benzmger already had
PrOmised Hammonil the ball that
-·aealed tlie vic10ry.
• Scudder didn't min~. lcnowing
dtat he had done the JOb he was
· asked to do.
: "It's great to get a save," he
laid. "In the minors I never
~lieved and up here last year I
110ver stayed amund long enough 10
earn a save." ·
' Hammo,nd, ~ho was 15-1 f!&gt;r
~e Reds Tnple-A team m
t(ashVille last )'ear but 0-2 in three
111arts for Cincinnati, used a change
6l speeds to keep San Diego hitters
Ruessing. ,
, ·
.; "The first two !JC three innings I
fet them up w1th curves and
lhange-ups, and a 101 of them were
lOOking for it the second and third
lime around," he said. "But I was
pleased wilh my fastball and went
1"ilh it more ll!l the i,l!llle went on to
gee a lot of my ours.
: Padres manager Greg Riddoch
Utes the~· chances of repeat·
ing in the National League WesL
: "Out of the ~ three teams that
~vezybody is picking to baUie ~~out
- the Reds, Dodgers and G1an1S
""7 I think they're, the best," said
Ruldoch, wbose team hu already
faced all ~ "They're well· baJ.
anced, w1th good offense, good
*fense and goo,d pitching. They're

•

'·

fWY

. ' ,,

2 MEDIUM
PIZZAS

$ 99

•

''
'
'

,I

t

'

�•

Thuradayi April 18, 1991
Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday,April18,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community.calendar
Commulty Calendar Item•
1111 eveat
md the day of that eveaL Items
malt be received weD Ia advance
to - r e publication ID tbe cal•
elldar.

appear two days before

THURSDAY
ADDISON • The Meigs-Ga!JiaMeigs Crusade for Christ will be
held through Saturday at the Faith
Valley Christian Union Church
located on Addison and Bulahville
· Road. Special ministers and singers
nightly at 7 p.m. Crusade president
Rev. Clyde Henderson invites the
public.

Travelin' On Quartet; Friday,
South Bethel Choir; Saturday, Russ
Spencer and the Southern Hills
Quartet. Public inviled..
.'

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church on Thursday
at 7 p.m. Rosalee Story will speak
on the changes in schools in the
past 30 years.
POMEROY • The Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
in the Carpenter's Hall . Public
invited.

SILVER RIDGE • The South
Bethel New Testament Church at
FRIDAY
Silver Ridge will hold revival
LONG BOTTOM - Faith
Thursday through Saturday at .7 GOSJlcl Church will hold a service
p.m. nightly with Rev . .Bud Hat· on llriday night beginning at 7 p.m.
field. Spec1al singers Thursday, with ~ng and singing by The

•
•

Dailey Family and others. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public.

' Gal~ MeiJ.s
CHESHIRE - The
Community Action Agency wdl
bold a free clothing day on Friday
from 9 a.m. to nooo at the old high
school building in Cheshite.
ROCK SPRINGS • The South
Central District of the Ohio,Child
Conservation League will be held
at tbe Rock Springs United
Methodist Church on Friday with
registration ai 6 p.m. Hosts for the
conference are the Middleport
Child Conservation League.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance the Tuppers
Plains VFW Building on Fnday
from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring Ramblin' Countty. Melvin Cross will be
the caller. Public invited.

RUTLAND • The regular
monthly meeting for Leading •Creek Conservancy District was :
canceled for Wednesday and ;
rescheduled for Friday at 9 a.m. at ;
the office.
HENDERSON, W.Va. · Square .
dbce and clogging at the Render- ~
son Community Center from 8 to ·
11 p.m., featuring music group •
Counlry Grass. Everyone welcome. ~

Reunion planning
meeting set
••
y

There will be a planning session
for the lOth class reunion of the •
1981 Class of Eastern lfigh School
on April 26 at 7:30p.m. at· the ~
home of Rodney Keller on Route 1
248, one and a quarter miles east of
Chester. All 1981 graduates 'are '
urged to aaend.
~

STUDENT OF THE WEEK • James CouniS was selected as Student of tbe Week at Meigs Junior Hi&amp;b Scllool for bls work in ma~
and spelling. Presenting bis certificate. is Mrs. Vicki Hughes..
..

Youth bowling league
awards presentation held
The Youth Bowling League,
sponsored by the Middleport
Recreation Department, held its
awards banquet recently at Pleasers
Restaurant The bowling is open to
all area youth, a11es 6-12. All
league bowlers rece1ved certirJCateS
of participation aQd league metals.
S~ial uopbies were awarded
to B11ly Kennedy, most improved
male player, .and Amanda Neece,

most improved female player.
.
Trophies were also awarded to
the bowlers with the llighest averages of the season: Billy Kennedy, ·
third place male; Amanda Neece,
third place female; Joshua Price,
second place male; Ginger Darst,
second place female; David
Heighton, first place male; and
Bethany McMillin, first place
female.

Star Grange meeting held
''The True Meaning of Grange"
Neva Nicholson, deaf chairman,
was the theme of the progran1 con- ieponed tllat~ will have~~­
ducted by Norma Lee, when Har- er for the program next month.
risonville Grange visited Star
Ray Midkiff, legislative chairGrange recently.
·'
man, repomd'on legislation In
Readings included "The Light Congress and House at the present
of the World" by Allegria Will; "I lime to do away with opening
Am The Grange" by Pauline prayers. He also discussed ibe local
Atkins; "April, Month of Surpris- roads and bridges project and the
es" by Ctiarloue Erlewine; "The grange voted 10 sign the resolution
Pastor' s Delima" by Rosemary supporting the program.
Neese; "Johnny Appleseed" by
Discussion was held on the
Freda Smith; ''Out Brothers Keep- events at the Masters, Secretary's,
er" by Catherine Colwell; "Candid Women's Activities Conference
Comments" by Pauline Rife; ''The held recently at Friendly Hills
Seasons" by Dorothy Bolin; · Grange Camp. Those anending
"Jokes" l)y Norman Will; "Wild- were Catherine Colwell, Maxine
flowers" by Maxine Dyer; "Life is Dyer, Patty Dyc:z and Opal Dyer.
Hard by the Yard" by Katherine
Fo(ly-seven members, visitors
Riley; "Wildflower Game" by all and juniors enjoyed potluck
with Pauline Atkins the winner. !'Cfre8hmenis following the meet.
Norma Lee gave the closing prayer. mg.
Catherine Colwell, Women's
The next meeting will be Satur- 1
Activities Chairman, discussed day at 6:30 p.m. at the grange hall.
being aware of what you gel in the It will be a potluck supper followed
by fun ni.ghL.
.
mail.

Rock Springs Grange
holds-recent m~eting
A potluck dinner preceded the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange.
The chartcl: was draped in memory of Homer Radford and Don
Betzing. Both were golden sheaf
members. ·
The county baking contest was
held and Frances Geoglein placed
rmt and Barbara Fry second
Pomona Grange will have a
bake sale May 3 at Kro~ers.
Rock Springs will v1si1 Hemlock
Grove Grange on May 18 and

Racine Gran$e will be asked to
visit Rock Spnngs on May 9.
Members will meet at the spring
to mow on Thursday.
It was reported that William
Grueser is ill. Sympathy was
extended 10 William Radford and
family, Rollin Radford and family,
and Grace Whaley. A birthday card
was signed by members for
William Grueser who IUmed 96 on
Friday.
.
A successful auction was held
following the meeting.

Baby shower given
A baby shower was given Stewart, Cathy Stacy and Ellen
recently honoring Kellie Snider at Rought.
the Pomeroy Municipal Building
Sending gifts · were Susan
by her mother Ellen Rought
Sandy, Billy Jones,. Tina Reeves,
Servin$ the cake, which was Becky Smith, Cindy Fields, Suzie
decorated m "Sweet Dreams" with Soulsby, Belva Miller, Helen Fmda bllloon arrangement held in sus- lin~, Jane Walton, Maxie Hannahs,
pension by streamers, were Pat Ornha Snider, Shelly Fortune,
Tbolna and Gerri Miller.
Brenda Morris and Beatrice RairdThe gift table was decorated en.
with crocheted dolls made by her · Games were played ·with
mother and given for gifu and door Angelia Sellers and Karen Birchprizes.
.
field winning the prizes. Kathy
Attending were Becky Ander- Stacy won the door prize.
son, Oerri Miller and daughters,
Ashley and Jessica Hamilton, Ruth
Koen11, Janet Reeves, Marjorie
Snider, Brllldi Snider, Carol Dye,
Terri Long, Anita WCI;fl, Vickie
Ward, Sandra Bell, ·Pat Thoma, · The open church wedding of
Carolyn Birchfield. Terry Hagger- Christine Bus and Eric Walker
ty, Denise Miller! Ida Martin, will be ·Jtetd Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
Angelia Sellers, D11nna Sellers, at the Rutland Church of Ood. A
Rhea and Tresa Deen, Joyta Shah, reception will follow in the cllwch
Crystal Hood, Betty Reed, Judy social room.

Wedding planned

•
••

Cindy S. Oliveri
beneriCial result.
popular fast food restaurants.
County Extension Agent
Instead of using drastic and perAnother section contains easy to
Several weeks ago this column haps danllflliPUS methods such as read charts that summarize many
add.res~ the dietary gui~eline of
fasting or liquid diets "A Weigh other weight reduction programs,
Maintammg an IdeaJ We1ght, and We Go" combines practical nulri- addressing· their good and bad
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the fact that swiJllsuit season is just tion with exercise to achieve points.
Sentintl News Stair
· around the corner. Losing unwanl- weight loss goals. The program ~- The workbooks also provides
Charloue Lambert, placement
.ed pounds is never easy. The Ohio contains infon:aation abo~c
~uidelines on portion ~izes '!sing . C?Ordinator for the H~king Tech· Cooperative Extension Service has
.... Assess1ng hablls and 1Uustrations of servm~ s1zes. meal College, Nelsonville, recently
develOiled a program " . Weigh We lifestyles
Learning to visualae poruons and returned from Jamaica where she
Go" which may be just the answer
.... Setting goals
calorie counts is more practical · .• along with two other staff members
for you.
....Figuring caloric needs
than depending on a scale. Using and five siudents Participated in a
"A Weigh We Go" is a self- ·
....Weighing and measuring - the workbook, dieters can see just training partnership with Superguided weight loss program devel- foods
·
. · what three ounces of meat looks Clubs of Jamaica.
oped by- the Extension Service.
.... Improving figure problems like, including thickness and size.
Miss Lambert is the daughter of
The program consists of a cassette with slenderizing fashions
A section tilled "Modify Your . Gene and Ann Lambert, Pomeroy,
tape and workbook designed to .
... .Incorpomting the benefits of Recipes" offers some easy loW• and since 1970 has been employed
help the dieter learn how to lose exercise
calorie recipes and provides sug- with Hocking Tech.
weight while maintaining a normal
The 92 page workbook provides geslions on how to prepare com,
The group from Hocking Tech ·
lifestyle.
. easy-to-use charts and records to mon foods while cutting calories. spent five days in Jamaica, courThis program would appeal to keep track of weight loss, food take Some ideas including substituting tesy of two resorts , Jamaica
those who don't want to be part of intake and other information buuermilk for sour cream , using Jamaica at Ocho Rios and Hedoa group but need encouragement. importanLIO losing weight in a non-slick pans ui decrease the use . nism ll at Negril, Both resorts have
The support of the tape and the healthy way.
.
of oil and buller and using less personnel in management positions
,. workbook helps individuals
One us?f~.' re~erence IS the fatty meaL
who were trained in the hospitality
through the program .
· ~orkb~ok . s Ea~mg qut NutnThe price of the program is are~s of hotel restaurant mana~e. The entire program is aimed uously g01de. Th1s secuon breaks $20.00. There are no registration ment and culmary arl5 by Hocking
&lt;toward achieving a healthy down the amounts of fat, calor1~s fees or long term contracts. One College.
.
·
;·. lifestY,le, height
loss is merely a and cholesterol of foods found m benefit of the program is that a perIn the group .were Carmeri
'
son can just put it on a shelf if Eddlebutte, Jena Kistler~ Darc1e
they're not ready to diet, and pull it Wolfe, all tr~vel and tounsm stuback out later when they are ready dents; Chns Fulop and Tom
to make the commitment. The pro- Labadie, hotel-restaurant manage.
gram is an inve~tmenttowards a mem students, along with Janey
healthier lifestyle.
Boullear, Ms. Lamben, and Judy
To order the program, or to pre- Sinnott, Hocking staff. .
view a copy, contact the Meigs·
In addition to visiting 'tile allCounty Extension Office at 992- inclusive resorts where. students
6696.
were treated to firsthand ~serva'

OAGC Region 11 spring
me.eting scheduled April 27

UPHOLSTERY

'
WAS
NOW
Blue Floral Early American Sofa &amp; Chair ..................... $795.95 S498
O'Henry Hi-Back Colonial Sofa I Chair ........................ 1999.00 :;:;
Craftmaster Colonial with Wood Trim .....;..................S119.5.00
Corsair Contemporary, Blue Stripe ...............................,$995.00 S588
National Pillow Arm Floral ........................................... .$799.95 S499
Traditional Style Qu1111 Sofa Sleeper ............................S649.95 S488
Bassett Multi-Color QuHn Sofa Sleeper........................ S799.95 S529
Lancer 7-lnch Mattress QuHn Sofa SIMper.................. SB99.95 S649
Jackson' 3 pc. Incliner Sofa, Love I RtcUner ..............S1799.00 S1088
Deville 3 pc. Early American, lrown/Biue Check ...;... S1295.00 SS799
Schweiger 3 pc. Country Blue/Mauve, Oak Trim .......s1 899.00 1299
Bushlint 3 pc. Traditional, Choice of Fabrics ..............$1699.00 S988

RECLINERS

WAS
Caryl• Hooter-Vibrator Recliner .................................;...S299.95
Catnapper Two Position Beige Recliner .............~...........$329.95
Fltxstetl Rocker Recliner, Brown or Beige ....................S562.00
ll'irby Blue Print or lrown Velvet Rocker Recliner ....... S469.00
Berkline Rocker Recliner ~ue/Mauve Print ................... S539.00
England Chaise locke{ lecliner ....:........................;:;...... s649,,5
La·Z·Boy Traditional Rocker Recliner .........t.................,$449.00
la·Z·Boy llue Stripe Wall Recliller ........... -.......,...·...... 1529.00

The Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs Region II spring meeting

HATS ON PARADE • Audrie Glover participated in tbe reeent
Easter Bonnet Parade al Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center for ils residents, employees' children and grandchildren.
Many participating in the parade made their own hats.

-Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab
:Center
celebrates Easter
.
: An Easter party was held recentAuending the eg.g hunt were
· ly for the restdents and employees Christina Eynon, Don Eynon, Janie
: children and grandchildren of the Hill, Autumn HiU, Jerry Hill, John
: Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita- Barton, Adam Barton, Briuany Jef·
. lion Center.
fers, ·Amy Smith.• Ian Robinson,
. . Participating the Easler Bonnet Emily Robinson, Nicholas Barton,
· Parade ·and making their own haiS !wtY Barr, Mick Barr, Mark Barr,
' : were Marie Michael, Betty' Morris- S~ Jeffers, Rainy Walker, Jamie
sey, Elvira Barr, Oneida Ward, Davis, Aaron Davis, B.J. Davis,
Edna Swick, Etoilla Cassell, Jenna Simpson, A.J. Simpsof! and
Audrey Glover, Sybyl Russell and Codie Rae Turner.
Glenna Soulsby.. Also participating ... ' Refreshments of punch and cake
in the parade were Hazel Baxter, . were served to all. The cake was
Tina Whiuington, Mary Jones and baked by Ruby Eynon.
·
Marie Handy . . ·.
Edna Swick won the prize for
the prettiest hat; Mary Jones lhe
·
.
funniest an4 Tina Whiltington the
Mr. and MJs. John Bailey, Mr.
mosl original.
and Mrs. Greg Bailey, Juli and
After the hat ju~ging the chil- Kelli, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Buckley,
dren hunted Easter eggs and all Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buck!ey,
were awarded prizes.
· Michelle, and Mr. and Mrs. Bryce
.Buckley were in Lancaster on Saturday attending funeral services for
Max
Robinette who died at Grant .
Spring
Medical Center in Columbus. Mrs.
Robinette is the former Joyce BaiThe Spring meeting of Meigs ley of Chester.
County Garden .Clubs will be held
Services were held at Avalon
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs United Brethren In Christ Church
County Extension Office. The Fer- of which Mr. Robineue was an
nwood Garden Club will have the active member.
program and Winding Trails GarMrs. John Bailey remained with
den Club will be hosL All members her daughter, Joyce, for ihe weekare invited 10 attend.
end.

NOW

S188
S249
S298
S339
$358
S429
S279
S349

WAS · NOW
H~rden 4 pc. Maple finish Suite ...................................... S449.00 S269
Progressive 4 pc. Bookcaie Bed Suite ............................. ~799.9S S577
lanett 4 pc. Oak Contemparary Suite, free stand ....,$1295.00 1699
Sherwood 5 pc. Pint Solid Wood Set ............................SJ199.00 S699
Bassett 4 pc. Oak or Pine Suites...~..............................,SI299.00 S799
Bassett 5 pc. Oriental Design, Pecan/Biack ...........;......sl699.00 S888
. ..................................................... S99.95 S59
Har•n· 4 Drawer Chest
3 pc.
5 pc.
S pc.
7 pc.
7 pc.
7 pc.
9 pc.

WAS
Droploof iable, Oak Bowback Chairs ........................ I299.9S
Oak Wood Set, Extension Table ................................. I369.9S
Glass Top ·Table, 4 live Velnt Chairs................ ;...... S469.9S
Solid Oak Chair, 42" Ext. Table................................ S629.9S
Maple Wood Dinette, Spindle Back Chairs ................. S799.95
Oak Finish Wood Set, built strong ............................$699. 95
Bassett Oak Dining Suite..........................................SI699.00

OCCASIONAL

WAS
'ound Ira•~ End Table, smoke glass top, two only ..... 1199.95 ea.
Ashley Oak or Pine Cocktail, lax End Table ................. 1129.95 ea.
Harden 3 pc. Pecan Table Set.;............................................SI99.9S
Baisett 3 pc. Oak Table Sets, choice 3 styles ....................S469.95
Dark Oak Six Gun 'Callinet................................................... S299.95
Ashley Oak Finish Curio ..........................................1•••.••••••••••• S2 19.95
Howard Miller Grandfather Clock .....................................SI050.00

BEDDING

WAS
Hotel/Motel Twin Mattress or Box Spring.........................,S129.00
Therapedic Sovereign Full Mattress or Box Spring ..........;..$189.00
Sirta Premier Comfort Full Mattriu or Box Spring ..;.......$199.00
"Bed Roses" Qu";: Mattress or Box Spring .....................$249.00
"Pillow Top Magic" Queen Mattress or Box Spring .......... S399.00
Serta. Perfect SIMper Queen Mattress or Box Spring ........,S549.00

HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES

trees •.

Marian Hendricks will have an
inspirational afternoon program
entitled "The Life of Christ in
Flowers." Mrs. Hendricks is an
Ohio Association Floral Judge who
has been in~ area many timek.

lions of the facility's opc:ralion, the now available 10 talk with groups
group toured HEART Academy, a .who would like to know more
training facility much like the about Jamaica and what it has to
Quality Inn Hocking Valley where offer tourists.
.
srudents' preparation includes work
Jamaica is one of several counexperience at Runaway Bay tries in \he Caribbean basin taking
~TClub. ·
· advantage of ~ocking ' s hospitality
,-l&amp;:ceptions were held for the programs, Tmmmg occurs noi only
Hocking group at. two locations on campus but at various sites in
while they were on the island. They those countries.
also visited Wyndham Rose Hall, a · According to Miss Lambert, the
resort which gets ils name from· trip to Jamaica had a three-fold
Rose Hall, where the White Witch, purpose. II gave the Hocking Tech
a Jamaican legend, is ·believed to representatives to visit alumni, it
have once live.
provided a cultural e~periencc, and
The students and teachers also ilserved as an opportunity for
visited tourist attractions such as informal recruitment.
Dunn's River Falls, shopped the
Miss Lambert said that the colopen-air crafts markets, saw ·the lege has graduates from several
Pacific Princess dock at Montego countries. Those who come 10 the
Bay and toured the Jamaican coun~ Nelsonville school from Jamaica ·
tryside through areas ravaged by are usually there to gel training
Hurricane Gil hen in 1989.
which will enhalice their position
A diary was kept by each stu- with their current employer, or in
dent and photo~hs documented some cases 10 train for an entry
the experience. The studems are l,evel position in the hospitality
area, she said.

meeting set
all

NOW

S219 .
S249
1298
S379
S439
S469
1999

REG.
•
8 .99
TURF BUILDER'"

99

10.99 f,E~~~

10.000 SO. FT.

10,000 SQ. FT.

REO. 11.18...........14.89
1
SQ. FT.

REO. 2Ut.......... 21 .99

REG.
15.

TURF BUILDER•• PLUS 2

1

TURF BUILDERTM
PLUS HALTS
Lawn fertilizer plus
. spurge.

SQ. FT.

PINE BARK NUGGETS

PINE BARK MULCH

rt. Gives well·groomed look to

or MINI NUGGETS

3 cu.

3 cu. ft . Helps retard weeds .
prevents soil erosion.

reduces so11 compaction.

landscapin~ . Cons erv ~s soil moisture,

...

TOPICS

BY YOOR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

S99
f79

S98
S299
S165-

New gallltone treatment tested et the Unlveralty of Utah in·
troducea a tiny rotor through a needle puncture to grind up the
1ton... which arathen sucked out by 1 tube. Procedure work•
'f Mtor and more thoroughly then llthotrlpey,whlch us11 ultraIonic shock wav11 to sma1h the atones.

S16-

S629

****

When impotence Ia caused by physical problema. • new nonInvasive vacuum device may be helpful, reaaarcher• at C81a
Wtltllrn Reaerve School of Medicine found.

NOW

S78
S99
S118
S149
S219
S299

LAWN SEED

FERTILIZER
5.000

3 lb.

SQ .

II. For

I

****

The bumlng foot pain of diet neuropathy can be relieved with hot
pepperl Non-prMCrlptlon cr88m containing cepuic:ln. uaect four
tl,_ a day, offered gr- improvamant in a study at Scrlpp1
Clinic end R•eerch Fo.undatlon in La Jolla. ,C.IIfornla.

****

.

JUST A PARTIAL USTING OF
ITEMS ON .SALE.

50°/o
&amp; MOREl
•Most Items OM of a Kind
. SAVE

.

Whether children with diarrhea are fed clear liquid a or their regular diet doe1n't -in to make much dlffarance, ,....rchall
found at the Unlve;alty of North Carolina and Rochester, New
York. Whet waa Important: giving oral electrolyte aolutiona.
available in pharmeciH.

****

2 GALLON

1 GALLON

2 GALLON ASST.

1 GALLON ASST.

AZALEAS

AZA'LE~S

EVERGREENS

REG. 9.99

lEG. 4.99

EVERGREENS

7.50

3.50

Your child'• health deaervea the bttt- end ycu'llalwaya find
top namealn baby-cart naecla 111 ...

tion

ilit4111... 1.1'11.

Clo_.ell'"'- II. I'll.

-·"·"'·

-· . .. 1:00 ........ 8,00 p.m.
......_ 10:00 - · .. 4:00 .......
PIIIICR.rlOIII
Ptl. HHIII
I . MMt
' • ....., lentlel
PIRI ••• · OH.

-

RIG.
29.99

REG. 3.99

6.77

2.99

ASSOUED

5"GALLON

RHODODENDRONS

•Subject to ,Prior Salt
•Step in ·Today for the 1tst Stltc-

REG. 7.99

·1999

ALL TREE$

EVERGREENS
IEG.,1l.99
&amp; 10.99

988

Choost fr• AriNir•lt•,

Yaws, .llnlptn

25°/o OFF

UIGI SILICTION OF
SHAlE &amp; FIUR TIRS

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA-GALLIPOLIS; OHIO
\

'

3.29 .

3.49aAG

PHA ACY

NOW

'
WAS
NOW
O'Keefe &amp; Merritt 14.5 cu. ft. Frost Fr• Rtfrigtrator ..... l639.95 S489
Kelvinator 16.0 cu. ft; Frost FrH Refngerotor ................,S679.95 S499
Gibson 18.6.cu. ft. Frost Fr• Rtfrigerator;.....................,S799.95' S569
Sunray 30" Gas
1479.95 S299
Kelvinator 30"
1429.95 SJ29
Gibson Htewy Du.Jwr'\aundry
Maytag

will be held at Salisbury Elementary on April 27 with Meigs County Garden Clubs as hosts.
For the morning session, Mike
Duhl, Meigs County Soil Conservation, will speak about Ohio' s

Eva Robson is in charge of the
sales table and wants to remind
members to bring plants and ani·
cles to sell to help with the day's
expenses.
The new regional director elect,
Freda McGirr, Washington County,
will be introduced.
·Reservations should be made by
April 23 to Dorothy Woodard,
32675 Dexter Road, Langsville •.
45741, or by calling 742-2141.
Cost is $8.50 and includes lunch ,
door prizes and program. Registration begins at 8:30a.m.

BACK FROM JAMAICA • Jamaican Percy Rose, wbo rtceived
his hospitality"training at Hocking Technical College and is now .
employed in a SuperClub, Jamaica Jamaica at Ocho Rlos, talks
with Charlotte Lambert, placement coordinator for Hocking
Tet:h., dpring ber rec:ent visit there. Miss.Lambert is the daughter
of Gene and Ann Lambert, Pomeroy.

AtfendfiUnera /

BEDROOM

DINING ROOM

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

Ohio

A_weigh we-go~ .. ··Jamaica training partnership
includes several local students·

Contemporary Living

~

D of A holds ·meeting
The Chester Council No. 323, · · Mary Holier won the door-prize
Daughters of America, met recent- and refreshments were served at
ly at the Chester Fire House with the close of the meeting.
Attending were Mary Barringer,
JoAnn Baum, councilor.
Helen
Wolf, Charlotte Grant,
The pledge to the American flag
Pauline
Ridenour, Jean Fredrick,
was given and Psalm 119 was read.
Elizabeth
Hayes, Sadie ·Trussell,
It was announced that the
Mary
Holter,
Erma Cleland. Marcia
. annivetsary party will be held.dur·
Keller,
Doris
Grueser, Thelma
ing the last meeting in May. A
White,
Lora
Damewood,
JoAnn
Suinley party will also be held.
Baum,
Betty
Roush,
Esther
Smilh,
Esther Smit!l gave a report on
Mae
McPeek,
Ada
Bissell,
Marthe rally and read .literature about
Amberger,
Goldie
Fredrick,
garet
State Session in Marietta on Aug.
18-21. She also thanked the mem- Inzy Newell, ()pal Hollon, Sandy
White and Faye kirkhart.
bers who helped with the rally.

.

Pomeroy~lddleport,

'

.

�-'
Page 8 Tbe Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Forty-four ca~es pr?ce~sed
bY.
Judge p atri~~. 0~~
' JJ14n~
n
. ~etgs C~unty court Judge vabd
days, S.50 of
ltaense

Thursday, Aprii1S, 1991,

.

Rain he.aded for Ohio Friday, Saturday
Interu~llonal

By l.Jnltec! Prtss
OhiO ts m store for ramy ~ys
Fri~y and S~turday.
.
o~ds Will be on lb~ mcrease
statewtde Thursday mgh~ as a
weathet:_system over the Midwest
and Plains mo.ves east..Some showers and pos.stbly thunderstorms
c~d.move mto ~ Ol.uo after
midntghl. Lows will. nmge oom 45
to 55.

~uered

Showe!'S and
lhunderstorms wtll be. wtde~read across
th~ state ~nday. and mto.Saturday. .
Highs ~n~y will be mainly 55 10
65 and m the 60s Saturday.
· Dry wealhcr should return SIJild~y as ~igh pressure moves in.
Highs.WJU be m the 60s.
Sktes were clear during the
night. Temperatures were in the
30s north, 40s central and aroiJild

50 extreme soulb. Winds were generally li~ . ·
.
·
. On the Thursday morning
weather map, high pressure extended [rom lbe upper Plains into New
York state and 'tow pressure was
over the southern Plains. .
A front extended from North
·

Carolina across Oklahoma '10 lbe:
low. The high pressure area wilt: ;
weaken Friday night .The low will· :
continue 10 develop and remain ~ ·
over the southern Plains and the: :
front will begin moving slowly ··
north as a warm fr!Jilt.
,;
'

Patrtck H. 0 Bnen processed 44 lb.e fmc· and Jail ~~e. wtll be
~last week.
.
suspended; no regtstrabon_. SIS and
Ftned were: ~I Dangerfield, costs; John C. Ingels, Mtdd!e~~·.
C!lb On:hard. W.Va., safety viola- DWI, $35 and COSts, 10 days mjail,
tion; S'fS and costs; ltoliert LIIC8S, 120 days license suspension; ClinCheshtre, speed, .$22 and ·costs; - ton S. Brown, McArthut, overload,
Emma Curry, Belpre, speed, SZI $127111d cosu, hllf oflbe fine susNAhDIIAL WEAtHER FORECAST FRCII'l M1 ~IHIIO 7 All ..»ll
and costs; Roy L. Han, Jr., Bloom- pended, insecure cargo, $50 and
inglon, safety violation, SSO and · costs·llld Jobn F. Aeiker,l'omeroy;
costs; Marshall W. Wooten, possession of a wild turkey (,2
Cheshire,speed,$20andcosts; counts)~SlOO~~.comm~tRlndy L. Sheen, Kenna, W.Va., no ty servtce, resutuuon, all huntillg
.
.
·
highway use ta:x, $20 and costs; privile$es suspended for a year,
Seven were fmed and five.others public intoxication; Thurman Han- ·
..
. Beryl A; Wilson, Jr., Reedsville, possesstng a deer or pans of a deer, forfeited bonds in the. court of mg, Pomeroy, $11l and costs, pub- ·
speed, $20 and costs; Jeffrey $150 and costs, !Ill huntin~ privi- Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler lie intoxication; Samantha Lee,
Horner, Tuppers Plains, speed, $27 . leges suspended for one year, Tuesday night.
Pomeroy, $213 and costs for IreS·
.
and costs; Lorraine P. Aeiker, stream litterinR. $250 and costs,
Fined were William Van Meter, passing, $313 .and costs, destrucPomeroy, illegal deer, $150 .and · community service, 20 days 'in jail, · Mason, w . Va., SIB and costs, · lion of property, and $213 and; ·
. costs .and MichaelS. Heriry, Pon- suspeitded upon restoration of lit'
costs, assault; and Debra Arthur,'
land, petty.theft, costs, six monlhs tered si,te within 30 days.
t
t. · · Elsie Arthur, Shirley Kerns, and
in jail, suSpended, Qne year proba- ·
William H. Keel, Rutland, .
Mert Kerns, all of Pomeroy,. $63
ti&lt;IR, restiiUtion,
.
·
))WI•.$300 and costs, tliree days in .
GaDipoiis Stockyards Co.
· and costs each on charges of disOr''
Leroy G. Lambert, Worthing- · Jail, license suspended for 60 days,
. 13
derly manner.
ton, log book violation, $25 and upon enrollment and completion o( Med'
April s' 1991
.···
· Forfeiting bonds were John
,
costs; Willis D. Wilson, Caldwell, Residential Trea!inent Program
tum Frame, teers: · ·
·'"~e Peters, iackson, $46, speeding; ,:. .... "j;"';l; _
77771 _
;.};.1 ,_ ®•.::::.... ·
1
speed, $21 and costs; Leonard E. . school, $150 of fine and jail sus2S0-300 lbs., 95.00· 123-'JO; ·
Sherri Bobb, McArthur,. $63
..,_,_..
- !Zl4::l
..., irLLZl
_
_.., _
© ....
300•500 lbs., 77.00-l02.00;
Koe 0 ig, Pomeroy, no safety belt, pended and Roger Dowell, Long
expired registration; Stephen B.ails,
' AA , . . ,.,.. • ' - ,.- · S20.and costs; Johns. Custer, Mid" Bottom, discarded trash along .
500-700 lbs., 67.00-84.50;
New Marshfield, $46, speed~; ·
· WEATHER MAP • Snow showers are likely in tile northern ';
dleport, speed, $26 and costs; · roadway, $50 and costs, 10 days in Me~~.!;'~;~,-~;We'rs:
EDen Green. Pomeroy, $375, D . ;
Plains. Rain sb~rs and •hundel'litorms are likely witb.l.low pres· ·
MU;hael Parker, Pomeroy, speed- jail silspended upon completion or
0-JOO lb
· Everett Caldwell, Rutland, $88,
sure system as it moves slowly eastward through the ·Teuessee ,,
25
ing, $20 and costs; John 1. Proffitt; . 80 hours of community servi~e
s., 85 ·00-I 06·00;
cOn!;uriling alcohol under the age of
VaUey. Stron1 thundel'liturms ~II develop in the Southeast. Tbe ~ ·
3
500
Pomeroy, speed, $20 and costs; willi li~r con(!Ol, littered sites to
00- lbs., ?9.00-93.50;
of21.
·
·west wiD be stlnny and mild. (UPI).
·
· ·
Robert Richardson, Reedsville, be restored within one wecli:. .
500-700 lbs., 75.00-87.50;
r-::===========~~~~~......;;
~......,~~~~~~~~~~~~~
700 -Up 60.00-74.00.
failure to control; $20 and costs;
Jeffrey W. Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
cows: ·
·Butcher
Rodney A. Carl, Belpre, seal belt reckless operation, $100 and costs;
5•
· viol~tion, co.sts only; Beverly A. Robe~t Johnson, Jr., Pomemy,
CanUtilities/C,48.50- 5473·200Perkins, GallipoliS, speed, $23 and speedmg, $20 and costs; Paula
. net ~;~ners. · .53 ·00·
costs; Terry E. Hysell, Pomeroy, Brewer, Reedsville, passing bad
Ltght wetghtlow grade cows,
speed, $25 and costs; Denise Kern- · ch\l(:ks (five couniS), $25 and costs '14.00-Down.
·
r
Rutland
seat
belt
violation·
on
four
charges
restitution
on
·
Hel!'erettes,
Up
to
70.00.
pe •
•
.
· · •
•
·
· Holstetn Steel'li and Bulls:
Allen Easter, Ractne, no muffler, each, on. fif~ charge, $75,-costs
300•800 lbs 72 00_95 00
$5 and costs; James Wooten, Mid- and restitutiOn; Toddy D. Eads, B 1 h B 11 • · ·
· ·
dlepon, seat belt violation, costs Rutland, using weaJ)ons while
uUtil~ti
·
u
9
001
only; Earl Phelps, Pomeroy, seat intoxicated, six months in jail sus- , .
es, 5 · . · 66·00·
belt violation costs only·· Earl pended to 10 days $500 and costs
Canner/Cuner, 5UJ0-58.00.
'
'
.
'
.
·
•.
.
•
Veal
Calves:
·Pbelps, Pomeroy, seat belt v.tola- tfiree years probauon, cou.nselmg
Cho·
e/p ·
9500_107 00
bon, costs only; Raymond Priddy, · ordel:ed; aggravated menactlig, six
~ nme, ·
· ·
Middleport, improper handling of months in jail, suspended, $500
' ll;iedium, 85.?0-94.00.
firearms in a motor vehicle, $50 fine cllncunent with other charge, Springer Cows.
costs;
Arnold W, Curtiss, costs,~ years of probation.
775.00 &amp; do';n.
Olfii!O~·P--netp
Cheshire, passing bad cheeks, $25
Posting bonds were: Charles D. Cow/Calf Com ..
E
- CooOh Clooa. -you Fly _ o 'lb Mloml o SMIHoao o.LM 1logoo o - ·
and costs, restitution and Reva Lawrence, Milford, Ohio, failure.to
950.00-down.
- ' - - - " ' - - .Eoglo" .. , ar Any-InitiO ~41!-fusser~ Pomeroy, improper back- d~splay .valid re~istration, $40; Ba~~sc&lt;X:&amp;~own
. Radio Shack Makes It Easy to Fly Ame.rlcan ..• and Savel
mg, costs only;
.
Lmda Diane Robte, Pomeroy, two B 1 h • Sows: · •
· Michael ~· Randolph, Pas- charges of speeiUng, $60 each;
u400~6oo Ib 47 ~a- 51 00
1. ltrl QIIEAT- VACA111)11C:.M · d -liM~
! . Ali! ... 1 IIIEAT " - VIII:ATIOII- -lhllflll. ~~ ou1
1111ct ,... ' Ontw one certifbte may be used pei tictit. TraVel
IPfooiiOiiuo&lt;, onclose and moil your ""'lois l o r , _ ,
· ·
taskala, speedmg, $27 and costs; Kenneth E, Green, Shade, OWl, , To Hogs· · s.. ·•
!llflll91 Aj&gt;lill, liti! bch Co-;, good lor: .
llllf a"""*"' llllf !landlif\o 11e of $1 .75 1o&lt; Old! GREAT Amo&lt;ican
Danny C. Buffmgton, Pomeroy, no $350 and costs, 30 days in jail, .. 2P
•
VACATlONCeilficale oodeNd,
S30 ott any roundtrip e)I:CtlrsiOn 'of $179 or more
operator's license, $75 and costs; license suspended for six months,
20-250 lbs.: 45.5046.50.
$50 oH any roundtrip excursion of S279 or more
4. DIIIAT , . _ - - - .... lit- IIIII oftiolll rolls 1111f 11$70 on any roond1rillll&lt;tvrsion of $379 or """
...-., . . - trnm-aJ pat1icipallng Aodio Shack """'· dNiels
three days in jail, upon proof of, alcohol.counseling, ~y~ng under : Bu~9b~!f~~·
""'Racllo SII!Cfc Compuler Comors.. Cir1Jin"""'
applf.
: 2. ....... - ......·-....... Ceniftcl1os1orpulthlses '
suspenSion, l() days m jail concur·
. ·
· ·. . ·
lolllinii $100 or"""' tam four Ceo1lllca1es lor jporetosio -.g 1200
'Mustl&gt;odatJc!--28. 1991 and~y18, 1991 .
mn'IOOJ : or earn six Certificates tor purchases to111i1Q $300 or more.
0 ODe WI~S. .
rent wilh o.wichl!"ge, costs only Ptg~s~&amp;~~~.
28, 1991 ""'May 18, 19111
.
and Edwarll J. Ktng~ Pomeror~ 1"'~-=-i-:~~~~~~
,.
OWl, $350 and costs, stx months tn
N ·
$8Ve Yair Ricalpts from Th.- •d Ot!ler Incredible Vllues to Earn AA Certificates!
jail s"'spended 10 to days, license
OW OPEN FOR THE
.
suspended for 120 days, probation
SPRINO SEASON
· CLEVELAND{UPI)-No'one or. o~e year, alcohol co~nselin~. ,
C 1 line
clain\ed 1be $4 million jackpot in drtVln&amp;, u.n~er SUSpensiOn, SI:X ·
V~~=.:~ncl
,
Ohio ' s Super Lotto drawing monthsmJail.suspended 10 IOdays .
-... Wednesday night, boosting the concurren.t wtth _DWI charge, $75
l'lants,.lloolliint a . .
prize to $8 million for Saturday's and COSU. probatton of one year.
Folioge llanglngladcets,
.......,.
,
. .
Christine Smith, Pomeroy, seat
F...lt and ...... __ _. 1
•
o;o-NOne of t1ie tickets SOld fot' lhC' ·belt, costs only; Johnny Little,
n• ...ng
•'
..:·:.::. .- - - · __ _;..
midweek drawing. listed the six . Middlepon. ~we to conlrol, $25
, . ..:~:.~drAzoaln"•.~ ..
winning numbers - 4 20 28 37
and costs, restSUng arrest, $200 and
,..
39 and 44, a lottery spokestrum 'smd costs, 60 days in j~l suspended to
Holy lrees.
Thursday.
.
· three dars, credtt f?r one day
Hubbard's Gr-..house
However, 56 players picked five ~erved, epncu~nt wtth fire8f"'S
SYUCUS.E, OHIO
Phone Answerer
of-the numbers 10 win $1 418 each . charge. fueanns m a motor vellicle, .
992·5776
•
Rtg.79.95
and 3,165 players chose iour o( th~ 60. days suspended to three, credit ,,
OH
~~-~8
numbers, good for payoffs of $78 for one dar• $200 and costs, one a.....;;~=:...=::L~9,;:·5::.1.:S::un.:::...;1:.:·:S...J
apiece.
· year probation.
• Easy Remote 111m-On
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled r------~~~~:-:------..;;·:·:.
• One-lbuch
PillyNck
s2,s81.to8 and the prize payout
total was $326,278.
·
• ,.
·The s1oo,ooo grand prize in me.
accompanying Klcker game also
WIL HOlD A
went unclaimed. The winning
Kiclcer combinalion was 48227t.
None of ll)e ti~ listed the six .
winning numbers in exact order.
p
Ho"!ever, four had the first flve
'
•
' •
numbers, which pays $5;000; 37
;Diftlilll - $2.00 hlc...s leans, Corn..,_, Drink ·
had the first four, which pays
Sl.IS For lid.s 12 and Un"'-r
NEW! The Home
$1,000; 446 had the first three,
Computer That
which pays $100; a~d 4,284 had
IIONMADIIa CIEAII, PIES I .CAlES 4LSO AVAIUILE
Means Business!
LowAo137
the ftrSt two, which pars SI0.
• 10Mitz 216l'nlc IF, 1MB RAM - ~ -IIIDiioo·

Classifi

·Pomeroy· ' S ·M
·. . ayor
. 'S C0Uf·t

Paid

•ftetHN4~

. . ; ,

_. . .be---

$4

mi'IJI'on OhiO
'ackpot
'
J

and...-.

TAND~ .

~__'.."'.!

lOOORlX
Computer

SCIPIO.TOWNSHIP
:VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT

Lovely Is The ' ight ...

•.

1 Ha~kins-Tanner's

·
la,rge selection of the
latest styles and ·
complimentary
. acc~ssories. Expert
fitting and ht choice
guaranteed.

Powerful Pocket
SPELL CHECKER.

...
=

24-Watt Car Cassette

PIIQS STAn AI

-

S2995

i83-676

ftftQ!i
.~
~;;;:1912

• CMcka SpeiHng of

80,000 WOi'ds
• S1udeilts Love h

..
'

PRICE REDUCED -..:...
PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

••
•'

..

~

yar

•

~~-~

181!!75
Reg. 24.95·

Till-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

,_.,, Ohl~
Poying ooah lor of...,"""in,
00...... brtea. Mnl• ICIII,
raciiMDrt. "-'·

''

.,.....lum.
.tt.netore and ell ftDn·

.errou.........

'

•

Gro.~P DiscusSion Will Be

WI
I'IICiS
'UI•H:t-51 14

Held

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM •nd
· REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

5

BIU SLACK ·.
. 992-2269
USED RAilROAD TIES

Sentinel

Classified&amp;

.........:....

n... SIT.
'Tlli:30PA

Oa* ... "

I

,,

-·
'

"'

......

'

EMILEE ,MERINAR .

j

' u...!~

Ow-.r &amp; Operotor
-614~992-6.820

,_oy,

...•

..!..S.Jl

54

•

Miscellaneous

GOlF lESSONS ... s10 oo •
6 fer ISS

..

Merchandlee

;SWEET

;VIDALIA ONIONS .....~·. 48,

~ ;SEEDLESS NAVEL

.

$ 49 ·

·

;ORANGES ............ lO/ 1
·.J RESH BROCCOLI ... ~.~· 59¢
'

f14.1042
~.

u

~~ FRESH

·

~

·

.

.

.

TOMATO PLANTS
. BULK SEED...:. BLUE 'LAKE

LB.

·BUSH BEANS ••• ...........

'

'

lrobn cj• IIJICiirlll
TROPHIES • PLAQUES ,
IADGES

JOHN IIAFOID •
s.tC..,M.Osllw
413/1110.

$ sg

1

.:MEIGS FARM MAIKO
300 ........
,
, Ohio

•,

C11tehGreat
B11ye In The
Claaaified•l ·

Public
PUILIC NOTICE '
OF IALE

· ~~~~a~ooory

T-Miolp .Tru•

- ... oflar for . . . . l'ublla
•• IE 1111 One 1173 a.aty
T-ltoiiiiiii11Z.
. . . to 1111 lield II 1111•
bury Townololp llllldlng,

Rtck lprlnga. on the 27th
:.t,~ April, 1111 et 10~

...... OIIIIIJ.Cie!k
14041 Ill flu~ "d.
,_row. Ohio 41711
Ph. 112'7011
141 11. 11.11. 31C

,,

'

iu~··· Op~lunity .

22 Mon.w co l!oen
· · 23 Prol•lilm•l Services

Hou•hold Ooocta

53

Antiquea

S1~rv11:Ps
81

•

16 Mobile Homo R1pak
8.7 Upholltery

.•. ·'

. Public NotiCe
tlontl tu of 4.0 ltaurl miHo
to Nn· for lh- .,...i. ot 'it
,rata IM!t ••CI\Idlno 4.0 milo
tot ...... - do... of ""IUO·
tlon •.whlch omcunto to forty
conten (t0.401 for-hone .
hundred olol._ of valuatlrln '·
fur lh- (31 v-o.
. The ..... "" taldllaotlon
Will 1111 opeo\ ot 1:30 o'clock
1.m. •nd nmeln opin untl'
7:30 o'clock p.m. of tald
cia ' '
of t1oa loerd of
Electlono, of Malgo County,
Ohio.
Evelyn Clerk. Choir.....,
JaM M. Frymyer, Director
O.led Meroh 21. 1111
(4) 11. 11.21: (112. 41C

IJ

·

Evelyn Cllrk, Chairman
Jane' M. Frymyer. Dlnctar
D - March
1111
14)11,11, 21: (1)2. 41C '

:n.

.

'•

a

84 Electric .. &amp; Rehigeriuktn
· 85 Gun••• H•uling
· , ·

.
Order of ttoe loorll of
Eiaationo, of Mllp County/

. Uceldlng
dolllr

lmprovemlnt

13 htfiW'atiog

cia •

Ohio.

H~me

1!!'2 - Plumbing • He lliny

.7:30 o'aladc p.m: of Olid

· I;,

NOTICE OF ELEC'I'ION
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCI!81
OF THE TIN MILL
LIMITATION
Notloa llherlbyo,._, tloat

In' punuonoe of a R-lutlon
of tloa l01nl. Of E-tloft •.

o•

WHAIIY'S · ·
AUTO PAllS

CARPfNRI SERVICE

Specilllbllle In . .

-ftoom·Addltlon•

-ou.., worll

-Ef.......,. and

-ConedM wort:

•Contplete
. _. .lng
Stop I, Campara
Fr" Estlnlates .

Cntou f..- llaalr

Plu••lrotal

NEW. UIED PAATI
FOR All MAKES •

-~ooflng

-•nt-·Ex,_lnt

MODELl

V. C. YOUNG II

s

992·62

667·617

1·100·141-0070
OAIWII, OliO
·

/1mo.

11111101 • DIIIIDI
FREE ESTIMATES

•Pelntlng
NO J08 TOO SMALL
. FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI
CONSTIUCnGN
992·6641 or
691-6164

ltJ.•susd

Takt tht pcin out of
painting.
Let me do it for yfiu.

·~·····rt

. Hend Tufting
Cu.t9m Dl'lpea

VEIY 1050NAILE

S6Y..,.Ea,..._oo

HAVE IIFEIENCU

W. a.., What W. Oo.
W.DoWhot

614·9t2-JJ21

(614) 915·4110
3· I· '91· 1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

"FrM EltlmltiS" .

mo. pd.

•ciOWAYE
OYII IIPAII

CONMI'S
OliO IIVD .liS

AU IWIS "-- -

and EYiaASIINGS

lrllll It .. Or ••

Now Open For !!prln1!

Plclllp.

•Herb Planto •Pe.. n181o

•Everlootlngo
iiHad motorlllo.

FOIEYII IIONll

4-ll·M·

IAMIS 111511·

131 8ry111 Pl-

.Middleport.

aMI Ill ROOI

ca•

•R.UOJi8bl• R -

Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

47269 St. lt. 241 ·

lt. I, lut_., OM.

3/15/tl/1 flO,

ROOFING

TROMM

110111614-9ft-J6t2
DOTTII S. l1llllll, 1101111
HOUIEI•LOTIIPAIIMI
COMMIRCIAI.
We Need liollll I

Fill EmMATES

t

"

•Kitch- • lithe
Siding

•RHtllrltlon ·
•R~t~llr Work · .

MOIRE tiOIIE FUINACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU MNAU P•m
-

•LandiCIJIInl •G!Wina

R. L MASII
CARPENTRY
POMIIOY, MIG

4-fi:Jif.Jaa.

.

IIINin'S MOIILI IOMI .

IIU1'IIII I ·cOOUIIO
,............... s....... tff lt. ,., . '

.
'

'i

""*

111.7
llloldl SUI. ·,"
tn 1 WID toollla lid. Fnl .~
._.. . . . Mil riM• ~
I

~

I

""""*

AND ·EVERYTHING UNDER.ATH

205 N. fer_.Sir.t

....uPOIT, OliO U760
Office 614·992-11..

4-1·'90·1 -·

-on
....

.............
Clolln IUo •
DIMIIIW11.14lfiU.

.... lllttlll\ OIL U74J

4-i·tl·l ... ,;.

99t.sst6

-.~

'IP

-

.

•

•
•

...
•.....J.., _
.......
, .'
...........
Leal In .... lllomlt. ... .... •

II tound ar- ,_ -IIW

...... 01111 1M_,... ..: ,.
-~--.

•
'

.

'.

PH. 614·915·3949 HIIIIY DUD

949·2168

•VI~I

T

•Ouellty Work

3/1/10/tf\1

WE DO

Quality
Sweeper
Repair
698-6591

.....

11111111 ............... ...... '

•Cu.tom Bent Exhtu.t SVtt-ma
•Complete Une of Exhouat Suppllel .
•Hendlt •nd ln.t•ll Monroe Shoclta·
Come and See U1 FDr A Free .lnlpedlon
andiWbrulto

Dowhlpouts :

•RoomAd•n•
-o.~ .

.....

•F- EatlmltH

SPECIALIZING IN ....

· Gutters

SPEEDY VA(

Jll!l(f'!ll!'llh

' 991·2772 or
742-2251

We Howe ~getl Our Llmtloft To
1'It Milas East on lt. 241 throuth
(hlttw, 011.

BISSELL
.UILDEIS

PH. 949·2101
or ••· 949·2160
•. Day or Night
·NO SUNDAY CAllS

c.u)!,

Wlndowt
•Roo~'::; ·
•lneu
n

KELLER'S CUSTOM .BENDING

lEW- IIPAII

. CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Point Plniant -11H92~ ! -

UHI Cllloo fino. 1117. •
01111 ........,. ft4 ...... .

ROOFING

3;4-'91-1 mo.

~UALITY ,

•!'1....--t·.

POIIIIOY, 01110

.

HowardL wnt.sel

uc•

t

B,ufrby

"2-5315 .. '915-3561
Acrea Frt111 .... Offkt
I'OIIIIOY, OMO
' 10/30fll till

•Higlo Olou on .Tile
Floor Flnleh .
-~ liWIS. ......

ti7L.._.St.

4/U/'11!1 mo.

Students
I 0 SESSIONS - $1 0
Cell 949-1126
Far Appt.

r

by tick moltl'ltl(

.atO OYIIIS-$79 .,.

991-SJIJ .,
915·3561
U...
OHice

,,..l'llf

10-11; Sun. 12·1

247-4035
5!100 S. I. SSI,
....... 011.

FOIEYII IIONZI
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL

SIGNS .

UIIIIIS-e.-...-$125 .,
riiUiii-S 115 ., . ·

·c-.r,.:•• F11t Dry

SIIYICI

Open Thu,.. thru Sit.

NO SUNDAY

'

WAIIIIIS-SIOO .,
DIYIS"-S"., ·
.I,IIAfOIS-SIGq .,

!UN'S AI'PUANCI

Cr1fter1, Grow you own

PH. 949·2101
or In: 949·2160

c:tMtlllt
' .

H DAY Wlllllm

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

LINDA'S
PAINTING

•Romo.dellng end
Hom• Repair•
•Rooting
•Siding

lilliAN II.,

·I

ilsiD APPUAIIaS

KEN'S APPliANCE
. SERVKE

992·7013 .
... 992' 5553
01 TOll. Fill

(FREE EITIMATEI)

. 915·4473

.

'

YOUNG'S

, "At l••n•blt PrieM"

-- · ·

.rPOLE ·BEANS; .......... ~!; 79¢
~ ·HARDY AZALEA·....... ~;. $444
~

4U5

yOU""---................._

•

.

'

51

NEW GIIPS ..-.-........ S4

'

Tonelpolle dialing

18 Camp!rH~ £qutpn~"'t
'79 C.tnpera • Motor Hoftln

Mota~cyct•

16 . 801t1 &amp; Moton tor Sale
76 ·· Auto P•t• &amp; ~·c••••
J7 ;· Auto,._,.w

54 · MIIC.,.Mitrchenclle ,
&amp;&amp; luildinil S~ppli•
56 ht1 tor Sale
'57 Mu,lc.. lnstrumtntS
51 Fniits • V•u••bl•
.r ·61 ' For Sal• Or Triide '

'

lit 50 High School

IHE '
COINOY (WI

.,., .....!

SWI10M.
ETQJQI·1...,411)
TONliPUUE----tn--lfld--"""""'
1ft··
_ _ ..,""'
....

•

.
.

Nifty, Nlftyl

~

PRICES APPLY Ill' PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

.•

.

Complete Gr«M?mlng
For All lrllds

The ·Whole

.• • On-1\lp . _ a.r

IllS. Wll,.

GROOM
'
·ROOM

49 For L•••

1•

&amp;2 - Spotling,Goodt .

•FIREWOOD

HappyAd,l

Turned 601
Love,

3388

.

' -·' " Off lito .,,... ·a..
1'l1t Conw of
II. 7 &amp; lt. 143

Cherleslhle

• o.e· LED tMipl~y

. OPEN ~~
•. _ I Fll. 11 I P.&amp;

on wttkttllls-,wt

bu1_'"' wltkends. .

AREA OSTOMY MEETING
SUNDAY, APRIL 21-,2:30 P.M.
&lt;'PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
· Downstiirs Gonfererice Room

'

'

rour

71 - AUIO.I ,fOr &amp;Me
72 Trucks fof Sale'
73 V1n1 • . 4 WD ' t

BU.s iness ·s ervices. ,.
.....
H•-·
OGa•a••

en.

-'

•

• 21

Mobil.e Hom• for A•tnt
' l F•rme io• Reni
111:• - Apattment. for Rvnt
~5 -·. Fu~nithed Rooms
•• s.,.c, tor Rent
47 Wlftted to Rent
.~8 ~ Equipm~t tor Rent

.

"

l ' I·''
1•1 '"
I ~
" '

Tr dllSpur IJ!IUP

Hou•• lor Rent

Public Nc!tlce

.SSEU &amp; ·BUIU
CONSTlUCnON

TRI·COUNIY
IECYCLING

If r:u. riHn ..

•I .

Phone Bargain

'

1

'
.lnl otox.ln iMoeoaoftMton
m I llmilltlon. far tM 1111n•
fit of Meioo Locel School
l)lllrlct fur tho p u - of

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK .
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

Call 614·992·7104-for Appt.

.·' .;.,t ' ., •' ·"

Off

HtiDW~I ..

&amp;itualton WMtlld

Public Notice

'

The prrce has been reduced to
$81,900 and ownerfinanc~ngof up .
to 80% of purchase amount;may be
PG§.ible for qualifying person. to
.buy' very nice laflll home on 3\1
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages, rented I Bl! apt. Prt!perly
includes 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home. ·
. ·

'

,..._ ..

3~

.··~

1

oento for
dollllra of
far a ooiitlnulng
tlml,
The polio IGr oeid Election
will be open ot 1:30 o'clock
a.m. •nd remein OHn untl

'

Mlcroc...aette
Recorder

SleekAM/FM
CIQCk Radio

992 Muktlepor1
&amp;15 Pt. Pl•••nt
Pomer&amp;;
· •&amp;:a Leon
·
318 Vini:On
986 Ch ...er
&amp;76 Apple Grove ·
246 . ~io Gran.te. 843 Porta.nd
773 M••on
~
256 GUY.n Dist . . 247 Letart FalllJ II~ New Hlwen
643 · Arabi• Diu 141 "lctne
815 ' Letan
379 Wllnul ·
742 Rutl.nd·
; 937 Butt•o
66 7 Coalville

'·

Great Desk/Well

Keypecl

· Miaon Co., WV
Ate• Code 304

446. · Galhpohs
367 Ch•hit•

.

.,

(125-41-4) 10r Only 3H.n

Lighted.

M.igs C01o1nty
Area COdo.614

SATURDAY~ APRIL 20, .9 A.M.
.. PlEASEK'S PARKING LOT
FLATS, HANGING BASKETS $7.00.
GERANIUMS $1.50.
'" R'in Cam:ells.

.,;:.~.-:

:.15

, Gallia Count~
Area ~ode 614

'1.'

13 Insurance
14 - _,usl,n lfs Trainm9
15 Schoots • lnstruc:lion
16 A.edto, TV • Cl A·IINIII
· 1'7 Miscen.,.eous
' 1,8 Winted To Do

fullowllll{ l'l'lt•l'hmll' t•xdtaiiK•·.~ .•.

992"2156

·--'

12

MEtG&amp;-~~ ~~\,ERS

-oVGIIH0~­

Reg.3U5

11 -·

of
to

.......

2415

1!J95

S1:r

It

'

'41 .

friiiJIII'IIIiltl

time
1 :0

Cut
29'4

Off

'

lliidl11

.

Sold ... 11111ng ..., lddl•
tlontl t•• of .1.0 (five) mills
fur 1
period of

Buy~:'::==~~':'::"~or'\: :;95)

With a tuxedo
selected from
.

•

. • U tton.-Dr'..*'l SIIIIIIINta

f

-.

)

'CUrfent ...........

,..,

125·1453 -

•

llu~ ·

t

61 - hrm EQuipment
62 Wanted to 8uy
63 LNestodl
64 Hay· &amp; Grain
66 - Saed .. F.rtilit••

llutin•s Buildings'
l,9t1 • Aue.a•
3&amp; ·R ..l hWt• W.-ntec:f

Happy ...,
Loat aftd Fe_wnd.
.
Y •d &amp;aleiiNiid in achancel
Pultlic Sale II Auelion

't

c. '- I • I!·, I II,,~

Homn lof, Sal a ·
Mobile Hom" lot Sllle .
FJJtnls IOf Sale ~ ..

'2

'

.119995__

• as HD • VGA GIIPhlcl

,.

.

BOARD.·

..

lEAN D.INNER
SATURDAY APRIL 20
16 M

5·
.&amp;
7
8

/lai{C'N cm~c·r 1l11•

- - -. i- "

·-

-

----....

'

31 ·
· 32
l3
l ·1
35

3 Annouc:em. .ts
4 Gin.way

,,

r

2 '00 P.M .,MONDAV '
· 2'00 P.fl'l . TUESDAY
.
200P.M , WEDNESDAY
~ :Oo P.M . TH\IRSOAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

· THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAY PAPER
' SUNDAY PAPER

.

9 w.,tM tp

.· (laNltific•cl

Happy Ads•
Vatd ,SaiM ·

WEDNESDAY PAPER

._!,!1111

r•••

.

o "Av B.EFOAE PUBLICATIOIIL ,.
11 00 ~ . M . &amp;ATIIADAY, ·

COPY DE I&gt;DLINE
M.ONQAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

' .42
.60

$9.00
• 131111)

,I,.

"A Ct~a~l•od adwerlisenltllll P,hw:ttd ;~The Oo1ly St~nllnidlell:
Cttpl
clasi'hud d•spl..,.. Businuu C•d and lug.t notictrt)
w•l also iiP .. •• M1 lht! Pt "Phu•Mli fi"1Jrster and the Gath
, pull• Douty Tri.b unu.. fUitC:heng o~r 18,000 hQrmrs ·
)./

Save Up to '420

.•

Thank~

In Mv.mouam

...

N•

ot

1 C•doflh.nlll
' l · In M-....y

.30

' 16.111) '

IOf IICh d-r II HPirlll Ids .

t .ftO diSC:ounllor ildl ptid in advance

Ca~d

3
·.. 6
10 '

f

A1111 111111 CLlll •: 'I Is

ov,r .15 Worl!t'
.
.20

.05/ doy
$1 .30/ dav
Moo!hly
R•tnlfo t01 con•CI:ltiwe runL brohln ~o~p d.,.sWtll be ch•ged '

•frH 'I dS ' GNe'.-way and Found ads under 1 &amp;~ords will be
'"" 3 dllf• al no ch•g•. - ·
·.
. ..
"Priat ot ~d. for ... CIPitatl•t«ra is doubht pnc. 01 ad cost
•7 point'line type only u ....
•Stt~ltin~ t1 not r•pctnaibJe tor errorsahur tiru d.., . !Chock
tor enoft first d~ ad Jflns in papurl . Call before 2 :00 p.nt.
d"ff att8f publec.ion to maktt conecUo1\.
·
• Adl t'ha&amp; must \1• paid in advanc:u ilf•'

L•
k.·
IVeS 0C rep0r

·I

\ '

15
15 '
15
15
16

1

·

R•••
$4.00

words

Doys ·

~~"
. ·
.
"Ads ou1s.ido Me1Ql. Glllia or M.. un ~unties nu1s1 bo·pre, ·'

.

.=

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
(IM)NDAY thru FRIDAY a A.M. to S P.M.
a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSE!) SU.NDAY ·

•
•

fltoM!al.
=..=............
-. •:
111111 lrlltonY

7

~

Ylt'd S.lo

OIIHpolll
'VIcinity

'

•

'"

�--.. . .n-·----.. . -·-

..

o.:-The Dally Sentinel

18, 1991

Ohio

.............
--.,:.. --

LAFF-A-DAY

Pt. Plrrrr.&amp; VICinity

42 Mllblle HomM
for Rent

~ _..,.

1-

=--·. . . . . -

: ..

....
lit I-.." IWIUI
2
-

-... ,..--=
_--. . . . . . . . . . . . . 111

9

Wentld to Buy

•

·"'
"

~=---

=

114 4tl ......

loll! AM
I IN TilE

'""'--·
·
-••"'- --·I -======~=====:::===J

I.-.-._...,.
a.m.

..., ...... -Ant......

1a.

lla!lnl: II.T.W. 10:00
10 1:110
p.m., _ , 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
114 . . 1111

..,.._: 1-

54 WICellanloUa

3Z Mobile Homes
for Sail

_____
1

1171Fonl4--truall

...........

...... - , IIIIIIf a'fa, Olllo.

,.--~,. ,_.

=-:.·.
c;'.::.':.·
J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~---.XLT,Iolded,
:::'1 c.-Ilion
~
-

-

•

Building
SUpplies,

....

84

Hay &amp; Gl'llln

pw-......

111111
Ill ociildllon,
IUO ot ""'' 1113-1.
' ' '

---~-­
ctto.ltuoll ....... aarty -

___,.,. .

2-

~tilly -

2411411.
·
- Ill ....... -'· -

P3- al Paint PI

plloC 41o.

-

*.r..:: ....

12hrdaya,holldar!, Alltllr lo P.O. ...
lion, Holp!lallallon and ......

..
. . . ·-paid .....-. . . .

7114~-· EOE. wv _ ,
304·
CocMII ' gJif needlcll OUira,...

-.. . . =. . . . ,. .

•

I

I 111 t411Dt.

n-u a •

eltllnlila. 11

lltt

1U2711.

or 1*
1117 14172

hilt

~p.

Ctort• ,_.,
UlljC!IIII'Ir ; fu,..

Ftnondal lrlatl.. lon with oHioo
' In Point
hu NtiMI dl...
-'nt lor 111lctAtural to.n
oktcorltinlncli
- -""'
·&lt;• .. ........
condldoto
bo

,..._.nt

=-~~~

--- -=douoiODing now ......,.. ond
molntalntng • ,...mr loon
poo11otlo• . _... ~

-..........

....

-For-= In llg

:ttU after 1:00 p.m. .

.,..-~~~:,!!!..

__

=-~rs=-~~~::
,llndlrig
. .,. b.......• !!•• "'
alill lie ' · a

'

qn

wit" 1 ""t:c~u:ft.~nn
llnonol
or
Ia , . red. lallry wll lilt -IMIIIIF

Dleptor
~
_,.

=

:.:
='l::
a -h
-·Ohio.=:r:;

MaMgor Wlnlod For FIIIOII

~-·hall
IIIIa oil
bom,a.,.bldp,

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

car....-

-

T1"!&lt;18 At&gt;tollcallona at

___ .........

DOmino'• Plizl, oempo~~~.
Retail Socurttr lri atora. Ex·
porta- ~ but not -114-lU-1002.

-ton

i:l.'"'::'rn..="L.:"::::
cal, llti - .
- --....
-40111
.........
........
lind

bMII

~

lnlom &amp;I an wfth

.,._ no. to L.P. - . p , Pat,
t.mll It ,.,.,,._ C.rHr 2100
Well ..., It, -FIIIMIPI, .OH
'

-

, ,

ill=::,:. ~~0~

•

biloN 12:00,

-= ..,.

...,., ....;11NM 41
For

IIIMia ...

::::::::-.::::~

Ba.OL I lp.m. Alar lp.m.:
114 ttl 2JII.

-lloiPfllo!l

...........

-~

.

By i'bliilp

~

•

:;:;.m.-· ... -··304-

....
-t:

75 Boats &amp; Motors
· for Sale

.- . . .-. . . .""
titW,"""'
111111
34111
rumlng
1111Ca...., . - . -

1244,

eNTf~tN6

Hlc1H

WA~ #{INtiTD/'1

!QJAP .
OP.fN AfVP

..

-t

tlin,. ............

....... ~

Pta,. ........

....

Allpan Ilbll ,_, to
rnttloe
tow
aplnal- I
Can on
bo

"

fMpT'( ··

-

__,...__

·' .

·- ....

...

--

_........

+

'::

'

lavtl- Capri 14ft
10 liir ingn, walk

N...-,

---·
-

=CaFliJ:.i"'•rta
II

1?11

1171 CWnotro. -VI, .........

MUsical
lllllnlmtntl

1111 -.......
· 11 304
tr.l..1!..
....,_
,...~
.... 115

••

,,

1117 , _ SAX 210 atlool,
"""' - · 1,400 ....... llko

Pertan,

AII-FJII

=·~

1•11' larA- floh Iaiii __

.

........ ,.............. 2
blltiWIII, ...Nitl 11e, CB,

.....

-11!11!:
.While It 1•
100 I2NMI 011. ...

ftiiiRalilllf, 2 ......., 114-fU·

-n.

CROSSWORD

'

-, .•.....
l!oVII•ord
aII It'll
, ...... llrillh,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS . DOWN
1 Olympus
1 Streit mob
dwellers
2 Bread
5 Mall
spread
busi·
3 Grime
nesses
4 Comady'a
10 Stepped
Threedown
5 Dick's

... -:~t1-lon,
..... nqltidk ... - · -

58

Fruits&amp;

'

1 DIDU1 WE'-! .

i

Vtgttabltl
78

Auto Pens &amp;

TNJc:IIJG ~
MARRIAGE.

KIJOYJ c,oo URE.
/IJ 11-1£ S~I(E.

;

Acceuorln 'i

.

---·
-Fonl---· "'- .............. .
INll 1w1 r.... ""'· ~
til ~mllao,

.......

.....'

.

11 Helix
12 Pianist
Pater

~·

'

11101.

'\

..._ Vol :101 and llralahl .1

ROP

- . -1117 ..... 1:311.

I 1D STILL. AMNA15E 1'0
RU6 SCW.EEIOD"'( 1HE
Wi&lt;ON&amp; WAY.

PERBON IN THE v.HOL.E
'NORL.D .. .

Connnlont ..., RL Z,
~~WY.NwGa~
IIPOUo toako I dam prajoot,
L.Oo\NIIY IIIAIL
frlott
l!ldl. -1,100 aq .. 4,..
Up to ...ooo latlltlctlon
. . ...~
Gaurlntlld. ......... llrYJce. old. Hili . . 1-IOO:ItiiiiOIM.M..._
11'11, . .
lftoll
did. ,..
lolnifta rl
llfOPiM1J lniiY did
For ...._lon ... Donna
23 Profta1lonal
-..._IRA r - a Coutlllr

=··

-.-.--

===r.:...

1,1100.
attar lp.m.
'

- $1

PI
II, 'lfll, ~
OI'PICII Rei FOil LIA8E on
2nd - · Gatllpotle.
to
Cautt_1
__ ~
2_

Lllarron
loadad.
ao. 31,000
CIOIId.
'*2M 1:121

ICIUII
114 21

.

·-Old&amp; t •••• a... A1 eondillon.-. 11WG4114,

1_4_AI~

daaara
d._air
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81

BARNEY

ltqmt

lmprov11118nts

"'*

THANKY,

......... -~180. .

THill

FIFTIIN II

PARSON

Filii STARS,
LOWEEZY!!

HILI'IN'S II

=:-

42Cooper
fHm role

,.!::1 :::!X

0I

==-.. . .

43Toboggan

ASTRO-GRAPH

~:

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

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BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

........... QuJrwrhgll
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1119!ittwW.SI,IOO.Intt.For
= I t &amp;tllo_lhll_
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- ............ -

Apr1111, 1881

. . . . . . . . . . . lito ....

*..............

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••

It 'behooves you to contlnYously trona
your skillS aPd talenta In the year ahead,
especially thOIII ol a managerial nature.
Tliare are strong poaatbHitleB that they

..' _

could be put to good - ·
a•a
(MIIrcli 21·April 111 Falling to

II~ productlwi expralllons lor your

"I haven'tloat a t!ltng to 11urg1ara

l

sloce this was Instilled!"

I

1

9

mental and phyelcal anorglel today
could put you In an irritable mood. Try
to avoid lnvotvernentsth~~en'1 mean. lngtul. Gat a lump on IHe uy understand·

DAilY CRYPTOQUOTES- Hele's how to wolk It 4118

lng the lnlluences that are governing· too ctosery with thiS individual tOday.
you in the year ahead. Send lor Aries' LIBRA (lepl.
D) Be very careAstra-Graph predictions today by mall· lui today that you dO notallenete othors
lng $1.25 to Astro·Graph, Clo this in your allempta to grallly your peroonal
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , internts. Being percatwd 11 too 0811·
OH 44 101·3428. Be sure to stale your serving won't help your image.
zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Strlwi to
TAUAUB (April :ZO.Mayo 20) Something evaluate critical conditions lrom a logi·
or someone may Inspire your creativity cal perspective today rattier than from
today, Igniting a brilliant new Idea or an emotional one. II your feelinG• con·
concept. Its posslbllilleafor SUC(:eSI will trol your Intellect, you're not apt to per·
be enhanced - II you act immediately. torm ellectively.
GEMINI (11111 21.Juno20) It you ha"""'l SAGmARIUS (Now. 23-0.C. 21) Your
beM pleased with your llnanclal status management ol a slluallon might ahlft
quo, 1hls Is a good day to tlke'posltlve to another today. Try to accept , rathor
measures to try to Improve things, Yoo than reslot, the change.
might be surprised a1 what yoor actiOns CAPRICORN (Owl. :12.,_, 11) It you're
generate.
,. operatinG In • - proxlrnlty to astrongCANCIR (Juno 2t.July :12) There's a wtlled companion, don'11etlhlalndlvid·
possibility that . you may become In· ,uel meka d41CIIi0ne lor you tha1 do not
valved in an arrengamenl today - e • your bell lnleratll.
.
·
II'S ll8CtiMIIry lor you to IIIArl yourooll AQUARIUS (.lett. 21'-F.._ 11) Your
as a Ieeder. Don't tat usocietn do mentllf attitude cen 'etther make lhlnga
something you know you can do better. much easler Df mo,. dllltcullthan .-c1
LEO (.Italy D-Atlg. :121 Try not to de- be today ..II you have to do aomethlng
pend too heavily upon others to help you raart, don't blow It out or
pr0110f11on .
•
1you fulfill your lftlblllons tOday. II you
fall to gel their euppor1, you may dltCide PISCIS (Feb. 20 Mei'IIIIIO) Don't take
not to even try on your own. ,
ChiiiCeltoday on thinga lhlt COUld turn
YIIGO (A... 21-lepl.liZ) An acquaint· out to be expentlve mllealculallont.
ance of youro haa a laculty lor stirring Even Hthe Odele ..,_. to be In your Ia·
things up '!~~thin your peer group. For vor, play It ctoae to the_..
harmony's aake, 11;s best not to Identity

n.oc1.

•
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-~ Ia. .Ol!'!)'!d
I I
. . . . . . .- . AJI.PII

.....

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order

1171 ..... RX·7:::"'oil..

42 Mobile Homll
· forRMI
,_ ._"rri'....
Cal,.
1 n t irw n.

'

.neck
29 Monopoly
card
lnslruelion

YOU HAD

lha
eutawnll~ Will III ..,
M ' I I I IRf&amp; . . .Jo. Jhlil

-.......:==--~17:--

IICC88&amp;0·

rles

38 Archaic .
37 OIMI of 4
Down
. 38 December
31, e.g.

28 Strelchad .
one's

,

· ~G~~~J

Til Hfl

I GOT TO GIVE
THAT DINNER

COLIICTIILE CLUIIICI No1

32 Mobile Homtl
for Sale

equine

34 Telagram
35 Requisite

.••

B7 lulok Conlury ona - .
/lol;, PI, PI, Auto, Col - ·
1781.

,..

25 Singing·
group
~ Some

Rosin ale
25 This, this,
and lhis
27- glance 1.....4-1-+--

32 Celebrate
38 Brunch
diah
311 Bullalo
like
40 Beaulilul
41 Steak

='·ld) ::

type
30 Gawked
211939 dog 31 McCrea
22 Part of
~nd Grey
OED
33 Spoken ·

oltoan
20 Carpet
28 Spiteful
24 Citation or ,-..,.....;....--.r-..-.,..-w-ilr-~

SI,OOO. .,.._ AI
of II II . ~ briok,
blooli and · - ,._ . .

em.

Answer

.
'

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=v.;;:;:~

8 Rubes
7 Mine

outpul
Tyson
8 Crony
14 Get
II Cunning
cracking 1t 'Kih
16 Fall
wearers
apart
15 Eroded
20 Takas the 17 Bllselul
·helm
place
23 ~ludson's 18 Relieve
ce&gt;slar,
111 Colored

q. II

IF ! WA5 THE ONLY

Bullnea
Buildings

veep

.13 Actress

A

'

Claan_Md_.-.

Ll&amp;art INI II b4 RaM, n1c8
-..bam, w i t h - . 171-7711.
--

+AKB

...

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-with - . 30M71-

-...........-;
liMe ... _

'

IABHS2
Remember, when defending, that
declarer is human; he is prone tQ er· WEST
EAST
ror. But you need to give him a chance • Q 10 7 2
to go wrong.
.KJ1052
•.r.QT643
On today's hand from a team game, IJ9T
effective · pre-emptive bidding by +5
+JIOH .
· East-West drove the auction to the
SOUTH
live-level. East's two-heart overcall
IAK985
looks dangerous, but his opponents
were playing a modern tournament
tQJ0532 ·
style in wbich North's two-over-one
+KQ
response was game-forcing. So East
Vulnerable: North-South
wu In a defensive, not a~ve, poDealer: South
sitioo.
At the lint table, West led the club Soil"
W..t
live, an obvious singleton. Declarer · 1 •
Pass
won In hand SDd cubed his two top s +
trumps, revealing the H break. Now
~·
he turned to the diamond suit, and
Opening lead; 5
luckily be found West with three. What
·could West do on the fourth round of L--::-:-:-:---.:-:-;-:---,j
diamonds? Whether he · ruffed low,
This defense sfiould have made
ruffed hlgb or discarded, South would South suspicious of a bad spade break.
lose only two tricks, either two spades He should bave ruffed in band and im·
or else one spade and one heart. Plus mediately led a low trump toward the
6&amp;0.
• · jack. But actually he ruffed in hand
At the other table, West led a heart an.ll cashed his two top tramps. He was
to his partner's ace, Seeing no future banking everytlllliJ on a S.Z division of
in the mlnon, East made the exellent the advene spades, but the actual 4-1
play of returninc a aecond heart. This split defeated blm. He had to 1o1e 'one
conceded a ruff and discard, but put· heart and two spade trlcb. The swi1111
declarer in danger of losing trump wu 13 IMPs .
control.
(l» . . . . . . .APIII&amp;II I

•

FRANK AND ERNF.!iiT

ilonda GL.-1;oo Ooldwlna,
Wk'IIIIIHW, utra,l4200. 11+112·
7714.

• FllliniiHIIIIIIII,..Idlt-.
114 t • . . . . . . 1 p.IIL

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f /11

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22 Money to Loan

'SarviCN

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IHS

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33 Fenns for Slle

SiyH"' s.tan Salory Pll!l
Comm. Paid Vacation. 114-441rmz Ilk tar Carol.

"" Ctwn City,
- ..._Lilta InTntt..,
Prlol:
130.000. 1171 Olda ~ Good

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Smollw. Call oftw 4p.m. 1142.W331.

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to
ti)4·
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plclluo.
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BIH.
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- .TrapiDol
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tloh, ........
c--o a ptaatlc oot&gt;llc tantoo,
--•ndaupplloe.
Ron Enno 11111-. Jacl&lt;·
45
Fumlshld
oon,OH 1~S7.tal.
Rooms
~

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......... r'JMIIt&amp; ..... ..... 1111 I - • t1
.... . . ... oond., -.dry PI a)Iclor.II0.11t

I

11

SCUM LITS ANIWIIS
q-t~
Frugal·- Milky- Ditto - Lesson - YOUR DESK
One co-worker to another, The most dangerous pos·
ition In which you can sleep ia with y&lt;iur leet up on

.

'

11 ,..

CA.I1t
.... ••• , ••• ....--...... tor

· t , ~"'""·

EARN -

·-ton. --

··=·

- . ...... ilollooC Drop-Ina

441-7:111

PER WEEK
~FA!!Nl IOOKI AT HOllE.
. CALL 1-411-41So- EXT. Bllll.
· Elar _ , locotlont P.,l ~
. ' ....blo ............ Call

below..,..

MWII 'hg rlvw',
llol lt4ttlt ... Clllldrlri, .......

'1

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. •
74 ...........
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-

ltl&lt;W _,. Rail Ru, ~ old,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
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::::--$4,

·bar

f!Od lllipholtl .....
._., 101. lind ,.... to lo1

AVON I . AN - · I Slllrlor
llpoon, :104-tlS--.
'

=~~ TV..VC:R,
000 CB,
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miiM,
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UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO

GET ANSWER .

r r r I'

YOUR DESK."

1Aga.I141MI?M.

MIIIOte.
~ ~ •• Paint PI•
M,

•

Altro

1171 ~~~~ ICZ No BR, Ex·
IIIIWII Ccatttl • 1I,DOO actual
. . . . . .. ., .... '?¥.

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m ...

i9 ~~1~E~M~~E~UIERS I' .

:I1WIOt.

1170
~ GriH,
~,, I ' ··~,..... . . .
loll,_ ... .....,.., .....
,,.., Old kel aI a1 " Cook

------

~

with 1111' truck aa':f:o Qood
Alldng_ •
• .....

lftr.i1
;.mh;,;;itt;ja=-;o;-u;ua;a_dfmiii~--;;;;ni;;Qhl; .,,.

E.np loyment Srr v1crs

11uat 1111 1n

RI61H
Pt:ACE?

SI,III.IM-317-

MerchandiN

114

~' ehlnae;.

PRESIDENT WILSON !
SoRR'(, NO
WllAT ARE '(()U.DOIN6 TIMETOTALK! .
OVER HERE ?HAVE TIIE't' · M't' SQUADRON
516NEDTHEARfr\15nce? ~~- TAKES OFF
1~=---..
· -..-,.-·'1· AT DAWN!

53

Wonl• .. ..., ... ...... lim.....

~·· -

•

!VINING

..

::.\n

!H\1.. APRIL 11

=.,
v.;:=·~ ~.:J:
Atlot !IILOL • on -\oOiidl;

-77W711.

'llrllftla,

;

73 · Vanslt4 WD's

7eii1Q.Dopaell .........

1141-ML

t

-

"
Plalou&amp; 71,000

IMI....u7l'"
· aaldna ......... - ·
Ponl l'o2IG Llrlol, DIIUI,

1 'I I IIF,4111 doullll wlcll WI"
_
.. JIII&amp;I/4-oiiRI.

Public Sale
&amp;.AUcllon

..,_

Television
Viewing

''

ttwu;lulcn.

...... ,.11.

- ~-~~~().~~ ­

Thursday, Aprll18, 1991

BORN LOSER

l2 'hucb tor Bill .
-ale .... 4 C1J1, tuo1 ER, 4

5I

7

8

,

•

'·-'

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One leuer stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lenath and formation of the: words arc
all hint~. Each day the code letters are different.
4-18
CRYPTOQUOTE

X

MI'QMF ·

OIIFPTBFG
VXB

YDBM

YQEF ' ?(L

X

CDPG

QB

X I. .

QMB

CVQZV )
•
QGFLMQMA

DYG

ZDXM

C D ·P G

•

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R F .z D L G - V X L G

- XLXQB LQL
· Yestenlly'aCryptoquote:ANGERREPRI!SSEDCAN
. POISON A RELA11l&gt;NS'HIP AS SURELY AS rnE CRU.

!:LEST WORDS. - DR. JOVCE l,'ROTHERS
I•

·I

'

�Poineroy-Middlepcirt, ·Ohio

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

---Local briefs...- - Driver cited after wreck
Two vehicles were damage4 and one dnver cited for failure to
maintain assured clear distance in an accident on Nye Ave. Tuesday
afternoon.•
·
Pom~y Police reported that William Norto
. n, Pomeroy, was
stopped m southbound trsflic on Nye Ave., when his vehicle was
hit in the rear by a car driven by Christl!(&gt;her Carleton Coolville
There was light damage to the rear of the Norton car, and modersre
damage to lhe front of the Carleton vehicle. Carleton was cited.
Neilher ~as injured, police said.
·

Dinner to honor veterans
The Modem Woodmell of America, Camp 7230, will host a dinner on Saturday, April 27, at the Burlingham Modem Woodmen
Hall at Burlingham, honoring lhe service men and women or Desert
Storm.
·
All Modem Woodmen and their families ate invited to attend. A
short~ will foUow. SmaU flags will be presented to each of
the families of servicemen and women, and there will be drawing
fo.r a family door prize.
.
Mildred ~ Ziegl~. Secretary of the Camp, says guests ate also
welcome. Dinner will be served at 6:30p.m. ·

· IRS lists new 0'JJ.
mce hours

· With the hustle and'bustle of another tax seasOn over, the Inter·
nai Revenue Se_rvice has announc;ed that their offices and telephone
system are returning to normal hours and days of service.
·
That Athens office at 1005 East State St., which serves Meigs
County is open Monday from 9 a.m. to noon and 12:45 p.m. to 3:45
p.m. only.
' ·
However, toll-free telephone assistance is available Monday
through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30p.m. The telephone number iS 1800-829-1040. ·
,
. IRS Spo~swoman Teri Dixon _noteS lhat ihousands of people
sull need ass1stsnce from the IRS w1thout even realizing they do.
"We had calls this P.ast filing season from individuals who
rec:cived lump sum distributions in 1990," Dixon said. "They either
failed 10 ~eeognize lhe tax implications or received faulty advice. 'As
a result, may taxpayers paid more tax than !hey would. have wilh
gOOd tax planning."
.
Dixon said IRS can also help tsxpayers who received large
refun~ and want to reduc.e their withholding, or persons who ha~e

Thursday by units of Meip County
Emergency Medical
At 6:37 p.m. on Wednesday
T~ Plains squad went 10
Route 7 and .transported Mark ·
Edm unds and Michael Criswell to

m9~~:.~oo:o~:=t~

---Area deaths--Laura B. Scott

Weather

·"'

bond
in
Middleport
court
;
were fined

Main Sttcct for Sbawntay Games,

swe

·

· ·· . ·

Tues-

•

Ohio Lottery

Padres hand
Dodgers 10-5
setback

Cards : 3·H, 8-C

Low tonight near SO.
Saturday, bigh in mid 50s.
Chance or rain 60 per·
cent.

Q·D; 2-S .

Page4

•

Hospital news

su

highway funding ·
system changed

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Aru Ele Power
Ashland Oil .
AT&amp;T 33518
Bob Evans
Charming Shop
C~lding

S131
SJ 53
S289
S312

Lo-back Spring Base Chair .•••Sale S79
Hi-back Spring Base Chair ••••Sale S89
Spring Base Lounger ·.•• ~ •••.•• Sale S179
2-Seat Glider ...................... Sale S189
LAYAWAY AND SAVE!

.

•18 Colora •100% Olefin •FHA Approved

SALE

' 28 5/8
33 3/4

$959
.•.
·
sa.YD• .
IISTAIUD - .ECT GlUE ·

.

SCHOLARS RECOGNIZED • These top studeDts in the
SoutberD School District's elementary schools were presented
!lledalllons durlnt the Southern Local Academic Banquet held
Tllursday night at Southern Hlgb School. They are, left to right,
. rront, Amy Rizer, Ashley McKinney, Patty Lawrence, Joseph
McKinDey, Brandl Coc!ner, or the Portland Elementary School,
Vanessa Shuler, Jessica Sayre, Jennifer Roush, Harmony Jane

HU~ Bran HetiiUIII, and Katie Cummins, or tile Letart Elementary School; second row, Jesse Maynard, Bobby Wrltesel
Stephanie Stemple, Ryan Grac:e, Jessie&amp; Tbelss, Jesse Little, Kyl~
Norris, Braadon Wolre, Maeya Ervin, and Jonathan Evans,
Racine ElemeDtary; and third row, Amber Thomas, Jason
Law;renee, Cynthia Cal4well, Evan Struble, Kim Sayre, Asbli
DaviS, Autu!lln Thomas, Josllua Lanen, and Sarah BaD, S.yracuse
. EleJDentary.
·

~oody~ i~

I

By' LEE ANN THOMPSON
OVP News Staff "

SALE

Sl 379

IN Slotl
.

-SO. YD.

INSTAllED WITH 9/16 PAD

PORCH &amp; PATIO

TURF SALE

•Extlo HMVY Gracia
•1 2 Ft. Wldtl! oO_,, Bra-.

BERBER CARPET

mel.

•Medium Gauge Loopa •18 Colors •Scotchgard

SALE

Sl 299

o..y •1 oo" Olefin Pile •3tl
Month No-Foda Wononty

REG.

suo SQ.YD.

$695

SQ. YD.

PLUSH CARPET

•Deep Rich Sexony •100" Nylon •St•ln Rei....,
•12 Colora

SALE

S189 9

SQ. YD.
INSTAUEO wmt " " PADtltHG

SERTA MATTRESS SALEI

PRESENTED MEDALL~ONS • Gary D. Evans, president or
the Southern Local B!'3rd or Education, presented medallions to
!be junior high ,nd senior high scholars at Thursday nlgiWs
Southern Academic Banquet held at Southern Hltb School. In the
group recognized were rrom ten to right, rront row, Paullhle, Nick
Smith, Rochelle Jenkins, Rayan Young, Jennirer Lawrence, MilSOn

LINOLEUM.
SALE
•In Stock
•Many Pettlll'nS to
Chooee F·ram
, •12 Ft. Wide

$549SQ.YD..
SALE

'

TWIN ...........

sa a
EA. PC.

FULL.........

$1. 08
EA. PC.

SERTA SUPREME ULTRA
Pillow Top • Dttp Quilting • I 0 ,_ Warranty

OU LDE

WOR

TWIN, each piece ............................. s10'
FULL, each piece............................... SJ 54
QUEEN SE.T••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S354

METAL
STORAGE
CABINETS·
or almond

' White

flnlah

metal chin• ceblnte, utility
ceblnta. bile cabinet• end
werdrob... Perfect for
extr• otorege In kitchen.

bllementa end gereg•.

••ea. $159 ••• SALE S129

SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER

Reg. S169 .... SALE S139

·.ott•mpto.n Coqn • Firm Support • 20 Year Wer,.nty

Rag. 5209 .... SALES 169

FULL SET ••••• S369

QUEEN SET ... S479

Reg. $229 .... SALES 189

PREPARING FOR CLEAN-VP • 'Employees of Bank One in
Pomeroy kicked-off t•elr part or the Clea11 Up Oblo prOIP'am on
Thursday evmln1 when ..ey cleared trash from a section of Route
33 near the roadside parks. Pictured, 1-r, are, Joan Wolle and Des
Jetren, kneellnt. StaldiDI, Barbara Dugan, Dianna Lawson, MOlle MidkiiY, Doris Snowden, Geri Walton, Marilyn Wolre and AprU
Harmon. Not pictured • Maryln Wilcox.
·

r---Local briefs ...........-.
Pomeroy police probe accident
~o ci~tions were issued and no injuries reponed in a Thursday

•
'I"
'

Fisher, .G rant Circle, Matt Morrow, Kendra Norris, Courtney
Roush, Southern Jualor High; second row, James Smith,
. Stephanie Sayre, Michael McKe.lvey, Trenton Cleland, Ryan
Adams, trt$11men; Micllele Stobart, Ray Proffitt, Julie Hill, Todd
Grace, sophomores; and third row, Jenny Varney, David Ihle, Kellie Ervin, Sanh Duhl, juniors; and Jenairer Smith, Cheryl Pape,
Jarrod Circle, aud Jason Cirde, seniors.

Rift between
Riffe and
state cabinet

SERTA PREMIER COMFORT
Quilted Top • Firm Support • 10 Year Warranty

"If ,you want to make a difference, you must develop the courage
to accept responsibility, the
strenglh to'say ' no' and the grace
to accept defeat and start over,"
~aid Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones, speaker at the
Southern Local Academic Banquet
held Thursday night at Southern
High School.
Using (he banquet theme "Make
a Difference· Let Your Star Shine"
as his topic, Jones said that too
often the emphasis is on the short·
comings of today's young people,
and seldom on their accomplish, ments.
Jones told the 56 honor students
attending that being at the top of

the class means that they liave
begun the process of preparing
themselves for "life a(ter scboof. "
"It's a real world out !here," Jones
said, as be challenged the students
to do their best now in order to be
prepared for that "life after school"
"If you truly want to be an
important part of the future, and if "
you truly want to m~e a difference, you must be willing to give
something back to your communi·
ty. You must be wiUing to become
involved, willing to participate,
willing to assist your fellow neighbOr," he co~tinued.
·
The speaker also talked about
appreciation to teachers and parents, and to the taxpayers who pay
the bills for operating the school
district. He said that the students
Continued on page 10

.John Glenn to address
leader.ship seminar

SCULPTURED CARPET

1/4
Key Centurian 11
Lands' End
18 5/8
Limited Inc.
23 3/4
Multimedia Inc. 71112
Rax Restaurant I 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers 26 1/2
Sboney's Inc.
14 3/4
Star Bank
1/4
Wendy lnt'l.
.
Worthington
. 2 3/4

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

'

•Excitllent Color Selection •Nylon Pile ·
•12 Ft. Wide

'

s·o uthern
student's
recognized

H...ecltafPattltDI.
Molt are prt·paltld,
washable and scrubllnllll.

LEVEL LOOP CARPET

18 1/8
13 7/8
'14 112

· Fifty~six

WALLPAPER
.SALE

CARPET SAYINGS

Stock report

A Muldmedla Inc. Newap•per

ER F:URNITURE

.

MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE

·

2 Soctlo11a, 14 P•oe• 25 cent.

LLOYD /FLANDERS
.

IISTAilEO - DIIECT GlUE

•

/

Pick3:4S7
Pick 4:7323

Com. mz"ssz•on...• _;;.;.;. .; . ;.; . :. :. :.:. :.;:;. :;. : : .;_____

McGraw of Gallij&gt;Oiis; three
daughters, Mn.John (Shirley) Park
WA~HINGTON (UP!) - Ohio
' of Bidwell, Ms. Sharon Turner of
Gov.
GeorgeVoinovich, noting
Bidwell and Mrs. Pat (Linda)
that
the
Buckeye State is one of 19
Tilley of Red Oak, Texas; 10 greatthat
sends
more in federal'highway
grandchildren; two brothers,
taxes
to
the
federal government
Norvel McGraw of Adrian, Mich., .
in return , wants to
than
it
gets
and Woodrow McGraw of Detroit,
change
the
funding
system.
Mich.; and one sister, Zelma
Voinovich
inet
with the Ohio
Munch of Plyri!Oulh, Mi.ch.
He was preceded in death by congressional delegation and top
four brothers and one sister.
· officials from lhe House Public
Funeral services will be con- Works and Transportation Com.
ducted I p.m. Saturday at the mittee Tuesday to urge a change in
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vin: the distribution of federal highway
ton. Burial will be in Vinton monies.
The formula currently calls for
Memorial Part.
Friends may call at the flineral each state to get back at least 85
percent of what it sends to the fed·
home on .friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
eral governmenL

Laura B. Scott, 90, of Middleport, died Wednesday, April 17,
1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
Born in Gallia County on Oct 5,
1900, she was the daughter of the
late Winfi~ld and Sarah Phillips
Scou. She wss a homeinalc:er. · ·
Sh.e is survived by a sister, Mary
Ann Gries. Columbus; two nieces,
Lorena Pierce of Middleport, with
whom Mrs. Scott made her home,
and Sarah McCarty of Vincent.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by two 'sisters,
Nellie Dunn and Tillie Scott; and
four brothers,] acob, George, Char·
lie and Bennie Scott.
.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at.l p.m . at the Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport. BuriSouth Centrat'Obln
al will be in Gravel Hill .Cemetery.
Becoming cloudy Thursday
Friends may call at the funeral
home 10 a.m. Friday until the time night, with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms by da)'brealc:,
of service.
and a low in the mid SOs. Chance
of rain is 30 percent. Showers and a
Chester J. McGraw
chance
of thunderstorms Friday,
Chester 1'. McGraw, 80, of Bidwith
highs
between 65 and 70.
well. died at his residence Wednes- Chance of rain
is 90 percent.
day, April17, .991.
Extended
roreaut
He was a retired employee of
Saturday tllrougb Monday
the Chrysler Corporation, Detroit,
A chance of rain Saturday, with
Mich.
He was born March 10, 19,11 in fair weather Sunday and Monday.
Clay County, W.Va., son oflhe late Highs will range from 60 to 70 Saturday, in the 60s Sunday, and
Robert and Viola Workman between
SS and 65 'Monday.
McGraw.
Overnight
lows
will range from 4S
Survivors include his wife, Miltq
55
Saturday
morning,
lhe 40s
cjred B'!}'er McGraw; two sons, early Sunday, and 11111ginginfrom
35
Pstriek (Tom and Bev) McGraw of
to
45
Monday
morning.
Bidwell and Larry (Jo Ann)

•

Eigb.t
and two others 0
&lt;,
who was taken to Vetmans.
. , forfeited bonds in lhe cowt of Mid· Thom
n conastemSeaptvofersco,~~~unknown:o"
On Thursday at 7·42 am Mid
..... .,..
•
~
d1epon Mayor Fred Hoffman
$100 and costs for leaving the'.
dleport squad wen to South FllSI · day night,
scene·of an accident.
~
for Wllliam Ault.
was tsken to
Fined wete Connard Stepp Jr
P .J • • bo d
Sh' I
Ve.terans. At 9: a.m., Syracuse Lakewood, $425 and·costs 'and
ouellmg n s were lr ey
ro.~rans ~moria! ~pitsl. ~ urut went to State Route 124 for three days in jail on a charge of ~~;~~~~~~~~ =~:~~~
we"nt rJ':~·~ Addi~~:Od ~~=tf'Ji~ ~~as taken to ph&gt;:sical control _of motor vehicle under lhe influence of alcohol o~
·
while under the mfluence of alco- drugs; and Mike Pierce, PQIIIrroy,'
hoi or drugs; Dewayne ·R. Fisher, · $210, leaving lhe scene of an acci-~
ContiDued from page 1
Middleport, $425 and costs and den~ $60 for failure to contrOl his,
lhree days in jail on physical con- vehicle, .and $110, contempt of
•
pedestrian bridge across Yellow- slips have been reported county- trol of a motor vehicle while under coon.
bush Creek, but no official action wide due to recent wet weather, . the it\fluence of alcohol, and $50
and many of those, according to and costs, driVing with &amp;qspended
•
was taken.
·
Robens,
'faD under the jurisdiction insurance; Philip 1. Fry, Point
Roberts announced $245,()21 in
Veterans Memorial Hospital ..
!'leasant, $17 fme only on speed·
Issue Two road projects for this · of the state.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS:
summer at yesterday's meeting.
In other action Wednesday, mg.
Also fined were Donnie Storie, - None.
Bald Knob-Stiversville Road, commissioners:
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
·
•
Aproved
an
agreement
with
Middleport,
$25 and costs, l!isorWhipple Road and Hysell Run
John
Chaney, Wilbur Ord, Debbie
regarding
the
repair
of
a
derly
manner,
$2S·and
costs
and
10
ODOT
Road will all be repaved with hot
Cutlip
and Burwell McKinney.
bridge
in
Columbia
Township;
days
in
Jail
for
disorderly
conduct
milt this summer, fUnded by Issue
•
ApJXoved
interdepartmentsl
after
bemg
warned,
and
$SO
and
Two money. Bids on the projects
are expected to be accepled in May funds transfers for the County costs, open container; Randy D.
and the County Home;
Smith, Middleport, $25 and costs,
and work will commence shortly . Garage
•
Voted
to
allow
the
DHS
to
open container; Charles McCloud,
thereafter.
advertise
for
bids
for
temporary
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorIn addition, Story's Run Road
will be · repaved at a cost of prefabricated office space for use de~ly manner; David E. Watkins, ,
$18,538 . According to. Roberts, while the new DHS building ·is Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly manner, and $100 and .costs.
funds for the Story's Run Road under construction. ·
project are derived froin the Local
Transportstion Improvement Program, which collects one cent from ·
esch .gallon of gasoline sold in tile
State.•
Roberts also indicated the county would again Operate its own hot
mix paving program this summer,
and that lhe department was evaluating which county roads were
. most in need of paving wodc.
Roberts'reported the County
.
Highway DeJ)anment wss repairing
slips in the county. A total of ~00

Services:

-------...J Voinovich wants

L...._ques_u_ons_abo_u_tIR~S_com:_spondc;._...;n_ce_.

Aprll18, 1991

EMS answers five c-alls Eight fined, two forfeit
an:!~~::~~~:0w-:J~~~~~~e:~

coatiDued from page 1

Thun~day,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Spealc:er of the House Vern Riffe
D-New Boston, sharply criticized
members of Gov. George
Voinovich's cabinet Thursday for
keeping him and the Legislature in
the dark on key decisions.
Adjutant General Richard
Alexander announced Wednesday
mght before the House Finance
Subcommitte that 12 out of a possi·
ble 18 Ohio National Guard
armories could be closed because
of budget restrictions. One of the
armories wgeted for closing is in ·
Portsmouth, Riffe's home district.
Most of the armories on lhe list
wi~ be closed becau~ of mounting
mamtenence costs, according to
public affairs officer CapL Jim Botmg. Many of these armories were
built around the 1930s. The armory
at Eaton is the oldest on lhe list and
dates from the late 1920s.
Boling said lhe gloomy budget
outlook means there will be a general belt-tightenin~ process .
throughout the state s National
Guard.
Riffe said he was never consult-.
ed or informed of lhe planned closings. '.' I resent the fact that when
they're closing someihing in my
district or anyone's district" that
lhey didn't tell us about their plans
he said.
'
"Some cabinet members are
overlooking the fact that there •s a
Legislature ... We're not being
infdormed on these things," Riffe

accident m Pomeroy.
According to a ~y f&gt;?Iice Department spokesperson, Teresa Marie Gray of Lmcoln He~ghts was e.~lbound on Martin Street
in a Ford Thunderbird when she met Christine McGhee, in a ·
Chevrolet, heading west in a sharp curve.
Both cars, aceordiDg to the accident ~ were too far left in
S8i The speaker said be plans 10
their lanes and struck head-on.
look into why the Portsmouth
"':"'------:--C-on_tl_a_ued
__
CIII_pa;....;.ge_l_O_ _...;;;__ _ _J . arm.ory is being considered for
L. ,
. closmg. .
. ~~
l\
'

Everybody • even today' s
teeilagers ·can make a difference
in their surroundings, and a twoday workshop at Canter's Cave in
· Jackson, is geared to help them
realize just that.
Citizenship: Preparing Leaders
for the 21st Century will be heldSaturday and Sunday, and will f.:ature speakers from county, state
· and national offices, according to
co-ordinator Fred Deel. Deel is the
Gallia County Extension Agent for
4-H programs. •
The keynote address for the
workshopwiU be delivered by U.S.

Sen. John GleM, D·Ohio, at I p.m.
on Saturday , Deel said. Other
speakers will include two-time
Hcisman Trophy winner Archie
Griffin, State Sen. Jan Michael
Long, D-Circlcville and Marilyn
Byers, past president of the 0hio
County Commissioners Association.
·
Dec! hopes this becomes an
annual event, and hopes young
people see· they can make a differ-.
ence in today's world, and have
influence,evenattheiragesnow.
At the ouiSet, Deel's goal was to
have a training workshop showing
leadership at all levels · local, state
and national.
· Continued on page 10

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

Litter group plans special evenis .
during
Clean-Up Rural.Ohio Week
.

.

The Meigs County Litter Control Program will be
conducting special activities for Clean Up Rural
Ohio Week, Sunday through April 27. .
Sunday is Earth Day and the program has a limited ntitnber of white pine seedlings for distribution 10
groups and organizations, for as long as they are
available. These trees were provided by Jim Milliron,
Manager of Shade River State Forest.
.
Throughout the week, the collection crew will be
picking up litter along the streeiS of the five villages.
They will work Monday in Middlepor~ Tuesday in

.

Pomeroy, Wednesday in Racine, Thursday in Rutland and Friday in Syracuse.
. ·
All volunteer groups, such as 4-H. scouts, garden
clubs and individuals as well, are encouraged to join
in the effort toward making a cleaner, healthier
Meigs County. Trash bags will be provided.
·
The Thir'd Annual Ohio River Sweep will be held
June IS. This event is sponsored by the Ohio River
Sanitation Commission and covers the entire length
of the Ohio River throug!J six states totaling ~81
Continued on pase 10 .

Mayor Seyler tells why he reduced
charge against D. Michael Mullen
charge did not also appear on the
front page.
.
The Daily Sentinel routinely
Charges of driving under the prints lhe resuiiS of mayor's courts
influence of alcohol filed against and \'deigs County Court on inSide
D. Michael Mullen, Pomeroy, fol- pages except when the case
lowing an accident on Lincoln Hill · mvolves an unusual circumstance
Sunday, April 7, were reduced by or charge. It was felt that the
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler to · Mullen bearing did nol fit into that
driving left of center when Mullen category.
.
appeared in his court April 9.
However, investigation into the
Information regarding the situation yesterday afternoon
reduced charge carry in~ a fine of reveals that the incident did contain
$43 and costs appeared m the April some unusual circumstances.
I 0 issue of The Daily Sentinel
In a letter dated April 16 which
along with other court cases hanMullen
diteeted to Robert Wingett,
dled that night. 'The infonnation on
publisher
of The Daily Sentinel,
Mullen also appeared the following
Mullen
said
that all he was asking
day, April II, as a separate article
for
was
''fairness"
in his situation.
at lhe request of Mullen. Neither
Mullen
requested
that
it be printed
article was printed on the front
on
the
front
page
of
the
Sel)tinelpage. The original material perts!n·
the
DUI
charges
against
me
"that
mg to the accident and statma that
were
dismissed
and
lhat
I
pled
no
Mullen was charged with DUI did
contest
to
driving
left
of
center."
appear on the front page.
Pomeroy Chief of Police Gerald
At that time Mullen exptessed
Rought
Thursday afternoon, ststed
his dissatisfaction that lhe hearing
lhat
following
the accident, Mullen
information with the reduf ed
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

was tested for alcohol level and "he
tested at .14, slightly above the
lcgallimit to operate a motor vchi·
cle."
·
After MuUcn, a Pomeroy attorney, appeared in 'mayor's court on
April 9 and the charge was reduced
to left of center, the accident report
at the Police Department which
.originally listed DUI as lhe charge
was changed to reflect the lesser
charge.
Mayor Seyler in discussing the
situation yes1erday said that he
"probably made a wrong decision
in reducing the charge."
He did point out, however, lhat
he can legally reduce a charge in
his court for any one of several reasons, mentioning that there is
always a possibility of some slight
error in test results and ~•
He went on to explatn that he
had been contacted by a .family
member after the accident and out
of consideration for the family
made the deci sion to reduce the
charge Ibis time.

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