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                  <text>.... 10-lhe Daly Sentinel

Mor"·d ,. lbdl 18. 1810

.Flood waters recede in parts of South
Br Ulllted Preu btenaUoal

Tile South bellan drying out
early Monday· fo Dowlng a weekend or torrential rains and
flooding that !ll!nt thousands
scrambling for shelter, while a
cold front swept Into the mid·
Atlantic states and wet snow fell
In the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
said flood waters were receding
In parts of . the Deep South that
were deluged by the heavy rain
being blamed lor at least 11
deaths. River levels In some
areas were nearing their peak.
The Pea River crested In
Elba, Ala., SUnday morning but
officials said It likely would be
several days before most of the
3,000 evacuees would be able to
return. Water reached the
rooftops of some buildings at
the height of the flondlng.
Flond water-s were still rising
Monday along the Alabama
River In Montgomery and Selma.
At least 500 people have been
evacuated from Montgomery;
Autauga and Elmore counties,
and the river was expected to
crest Monday In Montgomery.
The flondlng across the south·
ern part of the Alabama was
blamed for eight deaths, result·
lng from two accidents In which
motorists bypassed barricades
and had their cars swept Into
··• floocled creeks.
North Georgia was mopping up
from the second flondlng rain·
storm In a month. The Chatta·
)loochee River crested Saturday
at Its highest level In « years,
flondlng homes In several parts
of the metropolitan Atlanta area,
closing roads and forcing the city
to dump untreated sewage into
the river.
More than 60 families were
evacuated from threatened
homes. The storm was being
blamed lor three deaths, all in
traffic accidents on rain-slick
roads.
Rivers across the Florida
Panhandle overran their banks
Sunday, forcing residents in
several counties to seek shelter
on higher gwund. Between 800
and 1,000 reslilents were ordered
to evacuate low-lying areas near
Caryvi!Je because of rising wa·
,ters along the Choctawhatchee
River, officials said.
·
Residents In 12 neighboring
counties were warned to prepare
for the same as Georgia and
Alabama llondwaters flowed
downstream. swelling Florida

Hospital news

Teachers ... ccrrerr • ,.,_...,. •&gt;

46 co de tor ,..,.,. than a week
ua
·-·,
rivers.
8CI'OIS the Panbandle, the NWS
light rain cowred much of andprumptedac:ompletecloltng
The river In Caryville stond at · said.
northern Arkansas. Most of Loul· by the atate aebooll auperlnlendeat last~ and l'rlday u
14 feet 6 IDChel late Sullday, or
u,llt rain was falling over stana was under cloudy skies.
an official cooH•a off period.
about2 ~teet above flond level;
parts of southern Oklahoma. and
Teachers Ia - r a l coundes
officials .said. The river was
had
been wll'IIICI thet they faced
expected·. to crest at 23 feet
dlsmlsaal
by Jtaylaa off the job.
sometime Tuesday.
NATKIIW. WIA"!MIII FOIIICAST TO 7 All liT WHO
The
walkout
. bad been setded
County commissioners mer In
before
Saturday
on the localleirel
. special session and voted to
In some countlell, Including Jack·
di;!Ciare a lilcal state of emer·
son and Greenbrier.
gency and . evacuate residents
An agreement calls for House
along the rain-swollen water·
Speaker Cbuck Chambers and
way, said Richard Morgan. a
Senate President keith Burdette .
spokesman lor the Florida Dlv·
to start work Immediately with
lslon of Emergency Services.
education leaders on a longterm
A cold front moving toward the
plan to enhance teacher pay and
· South early Monday spread
benefits.
cloudiness over much of the
Chambers and Burdette said
. region and brought the chance of
they
would recommend a special
showers. but not the
legislative
session once the pack·
driving rains that caused the
age was complete.
flondlng, forecasters said.
The WVEA, which represents
Tempetat ures turned brisk.
16,000 teachers, led the walkout
ranging from 49 In Jacksonville•.
after accusing Caperton of renegFla., to521n Knoxville. Tenn., 54
Ing on a plan to provide · $35
In Charleston, S.C., 56 in Atlanta
million for a 5 percent pay raise
and 70 in Miami.
and an extra $6.5 mllllori for
The recQrd·settlng , warmth
MAP - .A piea&amp;ul weather palera will prevail over moat
heal tli insurance.
that spread · throughout New
EdUCilliOD Department figures
of
tbe
Ualled
!Ma&amp;ellaa
Sprln&amp;
malu!llla
arrival
Tuesday
location
England lor much of th.e weekend
showed
at
4:
U
EST.
The
onbr
exceplloa
will
be
found
over
14.746 public school
afternoon
. was gO!JI! Monday morning, with
teachers
had honored · picket
porlloas
of
New
En&amp;land
a&amp;he
Mid
Atlantic.
·
.
temperatures dipping lnl!l the30s
at
some
point during the
lines
under clear skies in most areas.
238,000
of the state's
strike.
Some
Scattered showers moved out
340,000 students were not report·
of the region late Sunday, and
- Extended forecast
Soutll Ceatral Ohio
lng to scbool.
.
some snow was possible Monday
Fair
Wednesday.
Chance
of
Tonight, snow likely. mainly
Chambers said negotiations
night as a low-pressure system
rain
Thursday
and
Friday.
Highs
early. Low In the mid 20s. North
developed along the East Coast.
winds less than 10 mph. Chance , In the upper 40s or '!the 50s
Cloudy skies covered the Mid·
of .snow 60 percent. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, and
die Atlantic states, wh~re
mostly sunny. High In the mid from the mid 50s to the mid 60s
temperatures ranged In the 20s
Friday. Lows In the 20s Wednes·
40s.
(Contlaued From Pace 1)
and 3Qs from New Jersey to
day and from 35 to 40 Thursday
Maryland. West VIrginia reand Friday.
No particular group was In
ported scattered light rain and
'-mtarge of the dlnlc demonstrasnow.
tion, said Mary Ann Mosack,
An approaching cold front
for the '• anti··
spokeswoman
threatened to bring snow back to
abortion
group
Operation
A.
"II~
d
lford,
Rutland;
and
four
grand·
•
Pennsylvania and Maryland,
Will •am
Rescue.
I
1.0r
children,
Josh.
Jamltha.
CI!S·
where temperatures reached re"What's s)gnlltcant Is that
· sady and Austln.
cord highs last week.
WllllamA. Willford, 56,of36790 ·. Mr. Willford served with the
children
are killed In this abor·
rn the Midwest, scattered snow
State Route 124, Rutland, died u.s. Army In the Korean Con·
mill."
she said ou tslde the
lion
and rain was reported ln"l!Unols.
Sunday at Veterans Memorial filet. He was a member of the Ell
Founder's
clinic.
Michigan and Indiana, making
Hospital following ·a n extended Denison Post 467. American
''The attitude of Operation
roads slick and driving dl!tlcult
Illness.
.
Legion
the
Meigs
Athletic
Boos·
Rescue
Is not to be punitive
In some areas. Wet snow fell over
Born on Sept. 27, 1933 at . ters, a'tormer Rutland firemen.
toward
the
pollee officers." MoOhio and Kentucky, while skies
Marietta, he was the son of and a member of the Laborers
sack said. "Our Intent Is notto be·
were clear to partly cloudy over
Bernice Burke WIUford, Middle- Local 83, Portsmouih.
arrested, but II we have to rtsk
Wisconsin.
·
Funeral services will be held at
port, and the late · Herbert
arrest.
It Is something we are
Temperatures In the Midwest
Willford.
1
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
Ewing
willing
to
accept."
ranged from 12 In Wausau. Wis.,
Besides his mother he Is Funeral Home. Bt~d Herdman
nouglas
Sapp, a leader of the
to 28 degrees at Chicago, and 36
survived by his wi(e, Cbarlotte will olllclaie and burial wUI be ln
rescue
operation,
said last week
' at Joplin, Mo.
Willford, Rutland;, three sons, Riverview Cemetery. Friends
the
group
plans
demonstrations
A cold front was moving
Ray (Kimberly) Wlllford, Ru· may call at the funeral home 2 to at two more Ohio clinics this
southward across Texas early
!land; Van (VIckie) WiUiord, ~ and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the year. He did noi disclose the
Monday. Cold rushed .Into the
Crown City; Mike (Cheryl) WI!· , funeral holne.
·
locatloils.
state behind the front, sending
the mercury Into the 30s and 405

more

------Weather----,---

Protesters...

--...Area .deaths-..........
w
··

Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, will meet .
Tuesday. 7: 30 p.m.. at the lodge
hall. The Charter will be draped
In memory of Nettle Hayes.
Members are asked to· wear
White. Quarterly birthdays will
be observed and potluck refresh·
ments will be serilt!d.

.

EMS responds to 12 calls
ix&gt;uce

department "to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 2: 46 p.m .• Syracuse went to
College Road lor Elizabeth
Bright to. Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 3: 04 p.m. was
called to Forest Run Road for
George Folmer Sr. w)lo was
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 6:23 p.m., Middleport went
to the Stonewond Apartments for
Allee Plants to Veterans MemorIal' Hospital.
·
Pomeroy at ~: 40 p.m. was
called to the sheriff sdepartment
lor James Hayl!tl to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Fire Department at
8: lf p.m: was called to a minor
structure tire at the Doug Burns'
'residence on Ebenezer Street.
Rutland at 8:23p.m. was called
to M~lgs Mine No. 31for Grover
Workman to Holzer Medical
Center.

__ Announcements.__
Dance &amp;o he held
·Or theCbesterTownshlpTrustees
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
on ~a)' at 7:30p.m. at the
Dance Club will havz a round and town hall.
square dance on Friday from 8-11
Music wlll be by the Happy Colllervancy dlalrlcl to meet
Hollow Boys from Athens. Ad·
The Leading Creek Consermission Is S2 and those attending , vancy District will hold its
are to bring snacks for the snack monthly meeting on Wednesday
table. The caller will be Jim at 9 a .m.
Carnahan.
RabN&amp;meeelq
Famll)o propam .
The Southeastern Ohio Rabbit
The Modern Woodxen Youth
Breeden 'Auoclatlon will meet
Club 7230 will sponsor a family Tuesdat at 7; 30 p.m. at the Melga
pJ'OIII"am on Friday at 7 p.m.
, Co,unty Extension O~l Anyone
Members will diiCuss the lmpor·
Interested In ralalng rabbits Is .
tance of their families and
Invited to attend. The meeting Is
certpflcates will be presented to openejl to the public. ·
· the families. Mualc 'will be
&lt;
: : , provided by Denver Rice.

p.m.

IMfeedoa

1'he Bedford Townahlp HlatorJ.
cal Society will be there to
dllcUII blaUII'y.
Refrellullftlla will be lei'Wd·
by tile youdl. 1'he public Is Invited
to atllltd.

a.

In lr trtr • a.me.t
'l1lere will be a special meeting

court procHdlnp,

"I suapect tllat wlMa tbe COI!11
actions came. lthlak laaJJs r Of
both unloDI felt tbey ftl'e ibout
to barrel over a cliff with tbe1r
members," Chambers raid.
··we felt It wasjuat a matter of
eoverybody beln(r unwllllq to
make that final plqe. And
trankly.rthlnkthedeciJioaofthe&lt;
courts made tile WVEA and
others realize there lulotat risk
In co"ntlnutag the strike."

Hobbs promoted ··

Spring, Summer

Daily· Number

car care
issue included

060
Pick-4

1721

.

Vot.40, No.219

.

Cop\f&lt;lghted 1180

David A. Hobbs, son of Jimmie
L. ancl· Evelyn L. Hobbs, of ...,
Dexler. has ~n promoted to ·
Specialist 4.
, ·
SP4 Hobbs Is currently as·
signed with D Co. 317 Eugr. BD., .
at Camp Eschbom, In Eshliom,
Germany. He works as a .power
gen.e ratton equlp'ment
repalrmwn.
'
Hobbs, who attended Meigs , ,,
High School Is married to the
former Mary E. Brainard, .
daughter of Una Mae Brainard,·
Middleport.

Stocks·
Dally stock JRicea
&lt;As or 1e:ao a.m.&gt; .
Beyce and Mark SmKh
of Blunt, Ellis Loewi
.
Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ............................... ..41'llo
Ashland Oil ...... ,.: ............ ~ .. ;36
Bob Evans .......................... 12~
Charming Shoppes ............... 9%
City Holding Co ........... ........ 13
Federal Mogul. ...................18%
Goodyear Toll:R .................. .37%
Heck's ......... :....................... 3%
Key Centurion ..... .......... ,.... 13~
Lands' End .. ,; ............. ........ 18~
Limited rr.c. ····· .......... ...... 40%
Multimedia Inc............. c••••• BOY,
Rax Restaurants .................. 2% ··
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... :....... 16 ·
Shoney's lnc . ........ ........ ..... .12¥,
Star Bank ......... ................... 19
Wendy's Int'l ............. , ......... 4%
Worthington Ind .. ............... :21% '

.r.
'

The Evan~~tllae Chapter No.
172 Order ol tile E ..tern Star will
have Ita annual IDipedloa on
Thursday at.7: 30p.m.Jnapectlne
ofllcer will be Deputy Grand
Matron Juae lleott. Home cltapter JI'Ud orpnllt II Beatrice
Kulia. All member&amp; are U!'led to
attend.

Ton~Pt, elearla&amp; wltll a low
28 to 2$. Ll&amp;ht lVindl. Wednesday, lncreulag clotldll and
warmer with a hlgb 5110 5$,

•
..

..
..
.' . '·
'
~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, March 20, 1990

.

.

1 Section, 10 Pogn

-

26 Cento

• -· A Multlmodlo Inc. Newopoper
~

'

Waste district .chairman responds tO veto
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SenHnel News Staff
Last week's action by Mlddl.eport VIllage
.Council to veto both a resolutlonrestrlctlngwhere
local haulers can dump trash and the surcharge
on landfill dumping fees, brought a response from
Sarah Hendrlcker, chairman of the AGHJMV
Solid Waste Management Polley Committee
-today. ·
.
Hendricker, in a letter to The Dally Sentinel,
charges that the action by Middleport Council
"lmplles that the legislation curre.ntly pending In
the Ohio .Legislature would strip the solid waste
cjlstrlcts of local control over t!le planning

J)rocess.·:

Her legislation ·reference was to a blll
Introduced last month by Rep. Mary Abel,
ID·Athens), which would require that the
management plan and accompanying surcharges
be approved only by the commissioners of the
counties In the district, and the councils in the
,. ~argest municipalities of the counties in the
dis trlct by a majority.
Currently such decisions must be approved by
the county commissioners in all of the counties In
the district and by the councils of the la·rgest

municipality in each participating county.
Since the bill takes approval from "all'.' to a
"majority", Middleport VIllage Council contends
tiJat passage of Abel's bill would diminish local
(county and municipality) authority over
decisions.
Action to exercise Its veto power at this time on
both the surcharge and . the dumping location
restriction was taken by Middleport VIllage
Coul)cll at Its meeting la~t week after a discussion
on the diminishing effect of local control If the
Abel bUlls passed.
Hendricker, in her letter, states that "If the
district Is unable to agree on a draft plan during
the legally allotted time under H:B. 592. then the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency will
develop. a -plan for our 'd istrict. We thus lose our
local (district.) control over decisions regarding
the contents of the plan."
·
She ·further pointed out that the pending
legislation was Introduced at the urging of the
solid waste district and that lt was '·'overwhelmlngly" approved by the District's Polley
Committee.
Middleport VIllage Council, however, in the
action taken at the March 12 meeting was not

making reference to control by the multi-county
district as lhe Issue of "local control", but to
control maintained by the counties and the ,
municipalities within the district.
The village's major concern as expressed by
rouncllmen at that meeting was about the
restriction In the management plan which would
require haulers to use the district landflll.
In Meigs County, most haulers now dump just
across the river In Mason County. Being required
to use the district facility would· mean that they
would probably have to travel many more miles
and pay large surcharges on the tipping fees.
In her letter to this newspaper, the policy
committee chairman continued:
·
"It Is h.lghly unlikely that ·all members of the
District's policy committee and the legislative
.a uthorities of all the poUtlcal subdivlsions 'in the .
six counties are golngtoagreeoneveryltem In the
plan.
"Compromise will be essential In framing a
plan that Is relevant to the needs of our District.
Even with compromise and majority rule within
the committee Itself, there Is still the possibility
that a very small minority of the population within
the District will scuttle the process by vetoing the

Southern Board
•
All principals In the Southern
Local School District had their
contracts renewed for three year
terms at Monday night's meeting
of the Southern Local School
Board of Education.
Renewed were the contracts of
James Adams. Southern High
ScbOOI principal, and teaching
principals, Jennings Beegit&gt;,
Southern Junior High; Robert
Beegle, Mickey Kucsma, James
Lawrence and Roger Roush ,
elementary school principals.
·The board hired Charles A.
Riley u a' s"uli&amp;tll'lteleaCher and ·
accepted the resignation of Darla
Kennedy as a subs tltute tel!cher.
Mileage payment was approved for Rebecca South to

PRICES GOOD
MONDAY, MAR.tt
THAUSUNDAY
MAACH25,1t80

plan.
"The District will have expended several
hundred thousand dollars and have little or
nothing to show for its efforts. The State
Legislature intended for us to act as a district to
solve a regional problem. ·we must put aside
particular interests in order to come up with a
waste management plan that will work for all of
us.
"It should also be pointed out that failure to
ratify the surcharge fees will result In the county
taxpayers paying to subsidize the private haulers.
Regardless of whether there is a fee or not, the
District Is obl~ated to pay lor a management
plan, whether that plan ls done by us as a district
or for us by the EPA.
"There will also be on-going costs associated
with lmplemerning the plan and those expenses
must be met. Should the Pt-rsons who generate or
Import the waste pay a proportionate share of the
cost of disposal, or shduld our local taxpayers foot
the entire bill? I don't know of any county In our
district that has enough money to meet all Its
other service obligations. let alone the cost of
subsiding solid waste management," Hendrlcker
concluded.

appr~es

transport her daughter to the
Gingerbread House ln Middle·
port for the remainder of the
school year.
Receipt of $24,165 in lottery
monies was reported at the
meeting. The board also agree to
furnish lunches to lhe Carleton
School lor the remainder of the
school year .
It was noted that Maine South·
shore Construction, Inc. has
offered to come Into the district
· to look over storage tanks containing diesel fuel, fuel oil and
gasoline ·a nd to make recommen·
datlons and cost estimates on
what has to be done to bring the
storage facilities Into ccom-

contracts

pllance with I he law.
Arrangements were made to
purchase a new school bus.
Approved at the meeting was a
resolution to accept amounts and
rates as determined by the
budget commission and to authorize I he necessary tax levies and
certify them to lhe county
auditor. This action is a prcltml·
nary to putting a school tax levy
on tlje ballot, possibly In the fall.
Wttendlng lht&gt; meeting were
Charles Norris, president;
Denny Evans. vice president:
Susie Grueser .and Scott WOlfe,
board members, Dennie Hill,
t.reasurer, and Bobby Ord, superIntendent.

Pomeroy to .update wastewater
,plant; council names ·architect

UMIII

Sports banquet

·

metlt · · - · - t ,. bllt that
--talkl Lpeelled up after Frlt!IY'•

Chester Council to meet

•
VMII
Saturday·admtsslons - ·James
Werry Yr .• Racine; Ancll .Bur·
bridge, Albany; William (Foster) Wells, Tuppers Plains.
Saturday discharges - None.
Sullday admissions - Henry
Carsey, Middleport; Ha!Ue Zer· ·
The 1989-90 sports banquet will
kle, Middleport.
Sunday discharges - Marie be held at Rutland Elementary
on Tuesday at 6: 30 p.m.
Thomas. James Werry Sr.

Meigs Emergency Medical
Services responded to 12 calls
over the weekend; four on
Saturday. and eight on Sunday.
At 12:57 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy went to Mulberry Ave. tor
Eloise Adams who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 2:25p.m. was called
to Route 684 tor Ancll Burbridge
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 6: 05 p.m.. Mlddleporl was
cal~ to Story's Run Road for
Myrtle Fife to ijolzer Medical
Center.
Pomeroy at 8: 53 p.m. transported Hoster Wells from an auto
accident on ROute 7 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 2:07 a.m .., Middleport went to County Road 5 lor
Henry Carsey who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 10:37 a.m. transPOrted Lona Riffle from the

had aone oa witb teacilerl "for
le'leral days be~ tbe uttJe.

Ohio Lottery

WEREIPIVITI4l-

TOUIITQUAN1!TIU

By NANCY YOACHAM
SenUnel News Staff
LAST RESORT' WIUI!un Sweeney, Chief Justice
J. Moyer
The
·Initial step In updating
Mfmbers·of lhe ·Ohlo Supreme Court will be In
and J~ce Robert E. Hobnes; standln&amp; are, from
Pomeroy
Village's wastewater
GaiHpoUs on WednesCiay, Aprll18 for a one-day
left, Ju ces Craig Wright, Allee Roble Resnick,
treatment
plant took place Mon·
high court session In Gallla County Common
Andy uglas artd Herbert R. Brown.
day
night
when
Pomeroy Village
Pleas Court. Sealed are, from left, JusHce A.
Council approved a resolution to
enter into a contract with Bur·
gess and Nlp!e Ltd., Parkers·
burg, w.va .. forengtneerlngand
architectural plans on the pro·
Advanced seating tickets for doubt that tne weapon. allegedly. lord is appealing a Civil Service ject. Contract costs are not to
the viewing of the proceedings of used in the Incident was operable
Commission ruling supporting exceed $8,500.
·
the Ohio Supreme Court visit on
or could be made operable.
his dismissal as a Portsmouth
Council approved last night's
April 18 are now available
-stale vs. Jerry Whor141n, 9: 35 pollee officer in 1984.
resolutlom based upon a report
through the Gallia Countv Com·
a.m. - Whorton, convicted on
-Herman G. GrOSllman, et.
from VIllage Administrator John
nion Pleas Court.
·
two counts of aggravated al., vs. HawkesHospllal of Mount Anderson that the Stale of Ohio
The Supreme Court will be
robbery with a firearms specifl·
Carmel, 11:20 a.m. - The court has committed approximately
reviewing· the appeals of five
cation, Is appealing the firearm
will consider an appellate court $1.2 million In Issue II funds to ·
cases. three civil and twQ crlml·
con.victlon. Whorton's attorney
reversal of a trial court finding ' the Pomeroy project. It is necesnat. A brief description of each
claims the prosecution could not
for the hospital. absolving it of a sary for the village to upgrade
case and the scheduled lime to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt
negligence allegation by Gross- the wastewater treatment plant
l?egin ls listed below.
.
thar.rhe firearm was operable or
man, a former patient.
by expanding the plant's capac·
-state vs. David Parker, 9 could have been made operable·.
All advanced seating is guatty before the Ohio Envlronmen;
a.m. ~Highland· County Prosec-Fraternal Order of PoHce,
ranteed, with a limited number tal Association will .approve
utor Rocky Coss is appealing an Ohio Labor Council Inc., vs. lhe
available. In the event that all extension of sewage lines to
appellate court ruling which
City of Hillsboro, 10: 05 a.m. reserved seats are filled, viewing unsewered areas. of the village,
threw our a firearms specifica·
The FOP Is appealing a common ' of the proceedings can be seen on for example, Monkey Run.
tlon against Parker, who was
pleas decision favoring Hlllsbo·
live television In the Probate
Although Council several
convicted of aggrav.ated robbery to's payment of overtime for
Courtroom.
months ago Instructed Anderson
and rape.' The appellate court hours work~ by pollee dis·
Tickets may be obtained by
to prepare the necessary forms
ruled that the prosecution l)ad
patcl!er Betty Griffith in 1985."
contacting Thelma Elliott at the
not proven beyond a reasonable
-Gary Bashford vs. theCIIyol
Common Pleas Court. 4461612.
Portsmouth, 10:45 a.m, - Bash·

Court·· visit tickets available

Council estimated what the
to .obtain Issue II funds for the
treatment plant, Mayor Richard · resulting monthly increase lo
Seyler last nlght •questloned the sewage customers might be, and
wisdom · of acc~ptlqg the funds . determined that the increase to
and entering Into the engineering customers would be minimal
compared to the money that the
contract for project designs.
Mayor Seyler · believes thai state grant will save the village
In the long run. If Pomeroy does
Pomeroy has more serious probnot go ahead with the treatment
lems than Its treatment plarit,
such as poor water quality, the plant update. It's likely that
need for additional wells, and OEPA will Initiate a law sull
recurring water leaks on the against the village to force the
lines. Seyler feels the treatment upgrading (which Is necessary
plant update "is the last thing we before new customers can be
need. Why update a sewage plan I added to the system) and evlmtu·
ally force the addition of the
that"s noi polluting?"
unsewered
areas, such a forced
He also feels that the resulting
increase in sewage rates to Issue would likely be at the t\)tal
Pomeroy residents (.which wlll expense of the village, although
be necessary to cover the 10 Mayor Seyler doubts whether or
percent match which the village not OEPA would Ioree the village
must come up with In order to ·into a situation that it could not
receive the Issue II monies l may . possibly afford.
Councilmembers however,
he more than some residents on
feel
It Is In the·besrlnterest of the
fixed Incomes can afford.
village
to accept the Issue II
Council wlll have to borrow the
10 percent match of about funding, .and move forward as
$120,000 from a lending facility , quickly as possible with updating
but Anderson believes the village the treatment plant.
As explained by Anderson,
will he able to secure a low
Conun'ued on page 10
interest rate.

'

Waste commission warned .nuclear
dump sel~ction may be delayed

Controlling Board .approves
..em·.ploy·ees'. mental health plan .;;;!~!~=~a~~~~~:: ~~~:t~~=
BLOOMINGToN.Minn. (UPl)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPll - .
Assured that the state will save
money In the long run, the state
· Controlling Board Monday ap- ·
proved a $6.9 million one-year
contract with a California firm to
manage Its state employees'
Insurance program lor mentai
health and drug and alcohOl
abuse care.
.
The board also, approved nine
~mergency school loans, bring· •
lng to 45 the number of districts
that have borrowed money this
IChool year the highest
aumber since 1982.
. American Blodyne Inc., San
· Francisco, won the contract for
manaelng the health care plan
. for mental health and drug and
alcohol abuse aad assuming all
costs for patient care, which will
be contracted out to various

providers.
·
employees. .
·
Scott Solsman, benefits admln·
About 5,000 state employees or
lstrator lor the Ohio Department
their families mel!lbers use these
Of Administrative Services, said . types of services each year. said ,
American BIOdyne. wl)h an Ohio Salsman, and In 1988 the cost or
office In Cleveland, offered su· mental health services alone was .
perlot service to two other estimated at $7.6 million.
bidders.
Solsman said the company
Solsman said the company would pay lor training seminars
would be able to save the state for participating mental health
between U mDllon and SU •. profesaloula to give cost effecmUllon during the life of the · tlve service and that costs would
contract, and $6 million to $9 betrlmmedbyeltmlnatlngholpl·
mUllon a year II allowed to
tallzatlon In favor or outpatient
continue during two more option service.
. ·
.
yean.
Sen. William Bowen, D·
Scott ·Fruchter of Costelfex, a
ClnciiUiatl, one of the opponents
Cleveland consu!Ung ,f irm, said
of the contract, said he· was
under Its current open ·en~ol- ·concerned about the quality of
lment plan the state would spend
care for the employees, and the
$11 million to $12 mllUon In 1991 lack of choice they would have.In
for mental health and drug and who treats them.
alcohol abuse services for Its
Contlr)ued on page 10

Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Commission Mollday that final
selection for a site for a nuclear
waste dump In Michigan could he
delayed for years.
Bob Knoblauch, Riga Town·
ship supervisor, told the panel an
llldeflnlte delay In site selection
Is pol&amp;lble II state officials
continue to IJIIIOre their own
site-selection criteria. .
Riga TOWDihlp In southeast
Michigan's Ll!nawee Couaty Is
the prime rite llllder consldera·
!loa fora dump that would haadle
low·level radioactive waste from
Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana,
Wlrconsla, Iowa, Ohio aDd
Missouri.
Knoblauch urged Midwest
commluloners and the lr
member stales "to take strong
and quick action, to tile full

extent of their authority. to
assure that the host state main·
talns compliance wlth Its own
announced policies, procedures
and criteria, . as well as the
applicable law."
,
.
. Riga Township officials have
sued the state over the dump
Issue. The suit claims, among
other things, that Riga Town·
ship's high water table and
proximity to the densely populated Toledo, Ohio, area should
rule It out as a site for the dump.
Knoblauch charged that t}\e
Mlchlpn Low-Level Radioactive Waste Aulborlty, which lr
rerponalble for plclclq a site, has
admitted It did not consider tile
major _poplliatlon centers south
of Rip Township In Ohio when
Identifying the area as a posalble
site for the dump.
"A review of the facta will
clearly Indicate deficiencies and
errors In the host state's pro-

cess," he said.
Last week the seven-~tate
commission asked a federal
judge to allow It to become a
defendant In a sutl Ohio's Lucas
County has flied against the
Michigan waste authority over
the proposed , locatjon of the
dump In Riga Township.
The cbmmlsslon said It flied Its
modon Ia U.S. District Court In
Toledo as a way to "promote an
equitable and swlfl resolution to
tht! matter." '·
Tbe request flied by the Mldw·
est compact said tlwaeency may
not ''enttrely embrace the actioa
of the Michigan defendants nor
entirely oppose the efforta of the
Ohio plalntlffs."
.. the Mldwes t compact hu been
at odds with Mlcblpn officials
over money the authority Mid It
muat have to continue the lite
selection process.

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Tusrlkv. M-.:11 20. 1990
•

Commentary
111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, Ohio

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WASHINGTON - A United
Nations team just back from Iran
has produced a report on human
rights there that reads like a sick
joke. If the United Nations had a
hall of shame, team leader
Reynaldo Galindo Pohl would be
In lt.
Pohl had tile unique opportunIty of being the first U.N. human
rights Investigator allowed Into
fran since the overthrow of the
Shah. He was so -flattered bY the
Invitation, he forgot who his hosts
were - rabid fundamentalists
who beat, torture and kUl their
opponents and then ·cover up the
truth.
For eight years, the /U.N.
Human Rights Commission condemned Iran for Its abuses, and
the U.N, General Assembly con·
curred with the last _five annual
reports. All of those reports were
made without benefit of an
on·slte Investigation because the
I&lt;hometnl regime wouldn't allow

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~v

·R OI'ERT L. WINGETT
PubliSher
·

B7 G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP ll&amp;aff Writer
With dectalons of 2.0 and 32
llOints, respectively, tbe District
13 DivisiOn HI aU•star etrls' and
boys' baslletball squads claimed
victory over the Division m.Jv·
teams In tbe seniors-only doubleheader Monday night at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center. ·
In the girls' _game, the big.
school stars, who Included GalUa
Academy scoring machines
KrlsU Thomas (13 points) and
Lori Hamilton (three) In their ·
ranks, used their Inside g11111e to
step away from a lf-14 tie in the
last three minutes of the first
quarter to take a five-point lead
at the end of the frame.
'
Though the In· IV stars had
only three players - Chesa· ·
peake's Ten1 Brown, Coal
Grove's Shannon - Smith and
·Feder&amp;! Hocking's Christi Tate
- who stood 5-10 and had no one
taller (compared with six for the
I· II•squad, an of whom stood at
least 5·10, with the 6·0 Hamilton
. the tallest of the crew), It was
·Logan's Lori Brown, a 5·5 guard,
w.ho stole the show by collecting ,
passes Inside and scoring on
layups en route to a team·hlgh 19
points.
Symmes Valley point · guard
Brooke Smith, who won her
sharpshooter'• crown with a
game·hlgh 20 points, used her
characteristic. deep-strike capa·
biUty to nail four of the contest's
seven three-pointers. The others
were. canned by Coal ·Grove's
Christl Clay, Wellston's Kara
Ervlri'and Thomas.
Though having bOosted their
lead to 15 at· halftime, the I·II
squad refused to let up on their
small·school opponents, .espe· .
clally hislde. Everi without Ha·
milton, who left with Thomas at
the start of the fourth quarter to
receive their awards at the
GAHS winter sports banquet at
Buckeye Hills Career Center, the
1·11 girls continued to rule in the
paint, while Smith's long·r.ange
offense kept the J,II squad's lead
·under the 20·potnt mar,k until the
game's 'last minute, when Well·
ston front·llne~ Michelle Sims
sank two one-and-ones to create
the final.
·;
Quarter totals
Dlv. I·II............:2.5 17 16 14.:...73
Dlv.Ill·IV .......... 20 7 719-53
Division l-11 ('13) -Lori Brown
(Logan) 9·0·1·19: Krllltl Thomas
(Gallipolis) 4-1-2-13; Tammy
Mullens · (Rock Hlll) 2·0·4·8:

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Investigator overlooked ~~k Anderson and Dal£ VanAtt~.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
'

Division 1-11 all-sta•·s sweep hardwood doubleheader
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The Daily Sentinel

· CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher(Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Ama-lcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be s!gnedw!th
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Why Bush may like
Rosty's deficit plan

it.
him so.
.The current leader of Iran, · The opener of Pohl' s report
Hashemi Rafsahjanl, underexposes his naivete. He gushes
stands the. value of public relaabout the wonderful opportunity
tions. Just as the U.N. was about
to be admitted to Iran:
to Issue yet another scathing
"The Special Representative
report, Rafsanjanl beaded It off wishes to place on record his
by inviting U.N . repre5enflltlves gratitude to the GQvernment of
to Iran ·to see lor themselves.
the Islamic Republic of Iran for
Instead of passing a re~olutlon its cooperation In the course of ·
condemning Iran for continued the visit, the facilities afforded to
abuses, the U.N. demurred and him In his task and Its readiness
thanked Rafsanjanl for the to extend the visit. :."
Invite.
Miss Manners would · be
It appears to us that Pohl, ·a
Salvadoran who Is the U.N,'s pleased with Pohl'setlquette, but
special representative, Pill on his his lnsighi leaves a lot to be
blinders and stumblecl Into the . desired. It Is puzzle how Pohl
Iranian equivalent of a Potemkln could let himself be led around by
the nose bY a repressive govern·
vUlage.
ment
steeped in medieval tor·
If the same Pohl who went to
tures
and
executions.
Tehran had. been dispatched to
He missed even the abuses that
his owli country to Investigate
death squads, we think hi! would the Iranians boast of. Pohl
have solemnly reported that no reported that there had been no
deaths had occurred, simply public executions for ttve
because the government had told
.

· months. Even a cursory exam!·
nation of fran's government
press reveals 87 executions-an·
nouoced between Jan. 3 and Feb.
19 alone.
Six of those people were stoned
to death for . prostitution. Two
others were executed for sex
crimes, one of them for "!arnica·
tlon with a close relative."
'
'
Of the.alleged murderers put to
death, this Is the way tbe
government of Iran chose to send
some of them to their maker. A , .
27·year:old man wu whipped 92 ,
times and then bellf!aded "with
the just sword of AU." A ·
28-year-old man was whipped 148
times, stabbed three times and
tben beheaded. A 23-year-old
man was whipped 124 times, then ,,
hls hand was amputated ~hlle he
was stU! alive, and then he was
hanged.

a

Another 62 were beheaded,
hanged or otherwise executed In
public for drug trafficking. Our
own Intelligence sources have
proved to our satisfaction that
many of the prisoners Irl\11
charges with drug trafficking are .
actually pout teal prisoners, often
members of the largest opposl· ·
tton group, the People's
Mojahedln.
Incredibly, PohJ· dl!counted
"the allegation that political .
prisoners had beeit executed
under false charges of drug
trafflcklng" because three Iran·
ian officials told him so. "In all
honesty," Pohl blllously re·
ported, "the Special Representa· .
live considers that, unless spe.
clflc proof Is su_b mltted to hlni In ..
this regard, this allegation In"
volves elements of speculation,
and he ru:es it out."
If Pohl had bothered to speak to
just a tew of the ·hundredS o~
dissidents who were brave
enough to stand ou tslde his hotel,
he would have had proof enough.
But he didn't. He was too busy
being told who to talk to by
rrantan officials.

~--------------------··

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
.
• UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Current talk about a post·Cold Waro. "peace
dividend" recalls the verse, "Last night I saw upon the stair a little
man who wasn't there. He wasn ' t there again today, Oh, how I wish
he'd go away."
As of now, there isn't a ny peace dividend and in the best of all
possible worlds there Isn't likely to be substantial defense spending
savings for several years.
·
The simple reason for thatis that cutting military spending Is like
stopping an ocean liner- it takes a long time after you decide to dolt .
This makes folks who have big plans for spending the peace
dividend unhappy, but even If the administration decided to send half
the men and women In uniform back to civilian life this afternoon, the
savings would be months, perhaps years, down the line.
The peace dividend, when it does arrive, also might turn out to be a
lot smaller than expected by people who look at the $300 billion
defense budget and think It ought to be possible to save a third or more
of that total now that peace Is breaking out all over.
But II doesn't do President Bush much good to explain all that. For
purely poUt! cal reasons, he has to have a plan for the peace dividend,
no matter when it arrives and how big it Is.
' The president has had a huge polltlcal advantage ever since he
declared, "Read my !Ips. No new taxes." -His position left opponents
to play the unenviable role of candidates who Insist taxes have to be
raised to finance Important social programs. And, as the returns of
the 1988 presidential election demonstrated, that argument was about
as popular as cockroaches.
But that now the decline of Soviet Influence has raised the
possibility of cutting U.S. military spending, the Democrats have
rushed to propose ways to use the savings on education, child care,
environment and other domestic programs that were blocked by the
conservative tide and the huge deficits of the 1980s, which continue
h\to the 1990s.
This Idea may have some appeal. A slza ble portion oft he public has
told pollsters it believes domestic problems have been Ignored by the
government and the peace dividend seems to hold forth the prospect
of trying to deal with some of those social Ills withOut raising taxes.
. That may be 'why Bush surprised most everyone In Washington by
expressing interest In, rather than condemning, Democratic Rep.
Dan Rostenkowskl' s recent deficlt·cuttlng plan last week.
·
:It Is true that Rostenkowski, chairman of the powerful House Ways
and Means Committee, wants to raise taxes on some higher Income
people and opposes Bush 's capital gains tax cut, but he proposes no
general tax Increase or retreat from the tax structure adopted In 1986.
But perhaps most Important, the Illinois Democrat proposes to
spend the enttre peace dividend to reduce the federal budget deficit.
That probably sounds good ~ Bush, and he might even be willing to
agree to some tax table adjustments In order to keep the money saved
in defense cuts out of new federal social programs.
Rostenkowsk! stuck out his neck In making his proposal, although it
probably does not endanger his political position at home. Gettlng an
influential Democrat to offer controversial Items such as a freeze on
Social Security cost-of-living increases and a ban on new s)iendlng '
probably is the best opening offer Bush can expect, and he appears
ready to seize it as a starting point for negotiations.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Tuesda~·. March 20, the 79th day of1990 with 286 to follow .
Today is the first day of spring tvernal equinox at 4:19p.m. EST).
The moon Is waning, moving toward its new phase.
The 'morning s tars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn .·
The evening star is Juptter.

Berry's World

FeeDING TiMe FoR

THe Ne.W PeMOCRZCieS

Tricky underestimaies Senate lead~r ·
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]o8eph Spear

From beneath a banyan tree In
served as an Army counter In tel- during the Iran-contra hearings
chen delcared: "There are times
Saddle River, N.J ., come these
llgence officer, as a trail lawyer of July 1987- a dauntless David
when what America stands for
thoughts of the great BUddha for the Justice Departml!nt, and
against the congressional Goll·
and believes In is more Important
Nixon:
as an assistant to Sen. Edmund . ath, champion of God and flag
than economic and geopolltcal
The Democratic leadership In
Muskle D·Malne. He tolled In
and all things pure. Then Sen.
considerations. This Is one of
Congress is " the weakest in 50
Democ~allc Party ranks at state Mitchell addressed him: "Please thoSe times."
years." House Speaker Thomas
and national levels. -H e was
remember ... that It is possible for
When Bush lald siege to the·
Foley, D-Wash., "while highly
named the U.S. attontey for
an American to disagree with
Senate In an effort to win a
Maine In 1977 and was appoint a
intelligent and a much nicer man
you on aid to the contras and still
capital gains tax cut that would
than · (former . Speaker) Jim
federal judge In 1979.
love God and still love this
favor the rich, an angry Mitchell,
Wright, lacks Wright'S jugular
A year later he ·was chosen 'to ·country just as much as you do.
son of laborers, caustically obInstinct." Senate Majority
finish the t~rm of Edmund
Although he's regularly asked to
served : "Capital gains has 'beLeader Ge.?rge Mitchell,
Muskie, who had resigned to dp so, God does no't take sides In
come the Holy Gran of this
D-Malne, is Intelligent enough
become secretary of state. Mit· · American politics."
administration. It has cast a&amp;lde
and mean enough to be an
chell was expected to lose badly
George Bush has slowly and
any CODcerri fOr the defiC(I. It has
when he ran In his own right In
etfectlve partisan leader, but has
painfully learned It Is not smart
cast asl\le · any concern for the
not yet demonstra.t ed that he has
1982, but he campaigned smartly
to underestimate Mitchell. The . budget process. It has cast aside
the political smarts to play In the
and won handily with 61 percent senator took the administration
any concern ·for fairness. It has
of the vote. With the Republlcans to task for Its abysmal failure to
big leagl!es."
now cast aside any concern for
The former president recently
riding high after the 1984 elec- act promptly to contain the
relations with this Congress."
clrculated these observations In
!Ions, he assumed the chairman·
Alaskan all spill. 'He engineered
·As to the Wise One's doubts
a memorandum tp friends. He is
ship of the Democratic Senator- the defeat of John Tower's
about Mitchell's "political
an Jntemgent man -living pr.oof, · Ia! Campaign Committee and
nomination as defense secretary
smarts," let them be answered
In fact, . that mean·as·heU and
helped thepartyregalncontrolof and the president's scheme to
with tnis story: Sen. Mitchell's ·
smart·as·a·whtp are not mutu·
the Senate. In 1988, he buried his thwart flagburners with a constl·
late father, a registered Republl·
ally exclusive. But on the ques- challenger with 81 percent of th tutional amendment. He cen·
can, could not stoach Richard
tlon of George Mitchell's compevotes cast.
·
sured Blish's tentative reaction
Nixon and would leave the room
tence, the Great Teacher hasn't
Lt. Col. Ollver North discoto the turbulence In Easten
when his visage ap~~eared on
done his homework.
vered the hard way that It' s not Europe.
television.
A r~vlew of the record suggests
wise to underestimate the genial
When Bush bowed to the
So you see, .Great Trickster, er,
It lsn t wise to underestimate the
Sen. Mitchell. North was the . Chinese despots who had murTeacher, political smarts sort of
soft.spoken Mitchell. Before
toast of afternoon television ·dered hundreds of p'ro·
run in the Mitchell family.
coming on the national scene, he
democracy demonstrators, Mit·

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"Book me on one of the 1 percent of the
nights on which smoking isn't bsnnsd."

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an understanding that California
would take avantage of the
t'llling, changing state Jaw t6
move Its,primary from last in the
nominating process to what
would beCome an exclusfve "first ,
big primary" slot.
Who gains? Theories abound.
.It's said California Is great for
deep-pocket candidates like Ma·
rio Cuomo, Bill Bradley and
Lloyd Bentsen ·- folks who can
raise money to buy expensive
California television commercials. It could happen.
But one candidate doesn't need
early big money. Jackson. He Is
already a super·duper-star and
will get his media coverage for
free.
The California-first rule also
puts Jackson Into the blgg(!st
state prior to the beginning oi
what ill now called the Last White
Guy Standlne Syndrome. Jack·
son, It ill believed, tends to lose to
a white candidate when matched
one-an·one ·after the winnowing
of early primaries. The LWGS
wins. But In a spilt field, Jackson
does well. California, If It eoes
first - before the winnowing -

\;;o..,,.·

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A iopelded affair
If the girls' game proved to be a
sleeper after the first quarter,
the nightcap, which turned out io
be an even more lopsided affair
than the opener, should have
been a sleeper, but from tipoffto
final buzzer the action was
nonstop. especially In the paint.

SIUDOWS SMITH - Gallla Academy forward Krisll Thomas
(left) shadows Symmes Valley pard Brooke Smith (30) as Smltb
makes a move toward the baseline dut;ng the girls' District 13
~klar 1ame at the University of -Rio Grand~'s Lyne Cen.ter.
· 'Thougli Smith outscored Thomas 20· i3, the Division HI girls won
73-33. ( OVP. photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

..3,. .
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A thought for the day: The Roman poet Ovid wrote, "Nothing Is ' -'
moJ;'(! powerful than habit."

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WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

BOMBS AWAY- Eastern 1fWU"d Shaun Savoy (24) tallesasbot
from the top of the key as South Point's Randall Pennington
(center) and Chesapeake's Ron Henson (right) look on during the
boys' District IS all-star game at Lyne Center. Savoy tied Athens
guard Scott Stricklin for. game honors with 19 points, but the
Division I· II squad re1lstered ·a 12'7·85 knockout over the ID·IV
team. (OVP. photo by G. Spencer Osbomel

(players) have been doing a
"By STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI
reached tate Sunday, represen ta·
certain
amount of work during
:UPI SpoJ18 Writer
Uves from union and managment
NEW YORK (UPH -With the the winter and the·sprlng. And so
met Monday afternoon a nd
lockout ended, the question now hopefully when April 9th rolls
agreed to a rule change that wlll
facing baseball fans Is If three around, we will have a decent
benefit starting pitchers.
weeks present enough time for product -and I think we will.''
For the first 14 days of the
Incavlglia said in response:
players to be effective at the start
regular season, starters who last
· "Well I think· this Is a different
of the season. '
three innings Instead of five ca n
"Oh, I expect to be ready, " class of athlete that comes to the
be credited · with a victory .
said Texas Rangers outfielder park now. The . players lift
Between three and five Innings,
Pete lncavlglia . "I think a lot of (weights). run all winter, . and
the official scorer wi II decide who
people expect to be re.a dy. We've ' keep themselves In great shape.
Is awarded the victory.
always s.ald that' spring training
"I think its going to have some: · ."Three weeks Is about the
~as · too tong. -For a position
effect on the 'game; but I don't -minimum necessary to allow the
player, It will be a lot easier for us think you are going to see very
starting pitchers to be reasona·
to get ready."
much drop·off in the quality of
bly certain they are going to
play."
Inc&lt;~vlglla made his commen.t s
avoid Injury," union chief Don
aner he and six other players
Paul Molitor. the Milwaukee
Fehr said. "Even after 'that, they
stayed around unitl 5:30 a.m. Brewers player representative,
are not going to be going as long
EST Monday to waltfor the union said fans can expect some good
as they otherwise would:"
.
and management briefing about performances when the season
Oakland Athletics pitcher
the end of the 32·day spring begins on Aprll 9.
Scott Sanderson said: "We are
"No •doubt about It," he said. just going to-do the best. we can.
training lockout.
''Most guys have had the lu)\ury (The fans) can expect our very
"The three weeks we feel Is
of not having to go through this best effort, every ounce of lt."
going to be adequate," American
(represent the . players In the
League President Dr·. Bobby
But Incavlglia realized the
negollatlons
In New York). They extra pressure put on pitchers.
Brown said. ''We recognize that
have been doing th.lngs . Theywlll
perhaps all the pitchers and ali
"We will have to·see what kind
be ready."
the players may not be in as good
of condition the pitchers come
Some spring training camps in," he salti. "The pitchers just
as shape ·as they usually would
opened Monday afternoon. take a l!ttle bit longer. They need
be.
Teams
were expected to. begin
"But we are counting on the
practice
Tuesday or Wednesday.
fact that we think that 'they
. .
'Exhibition games are tentatively
set to start March 26.
Incavlglla tried to riet a routine
for the abbreviated practice
'time.
Baseball
"I think that we will have three
A lO·year·old boy died of
cardiac arrest after being hit in or four days Of batting practice
!he chest by a 'pitch during a and getting ready," he said.
Little League game In Tampa, ," (We) will probably play some
Fla. Ryan Wojick went into inter·squad games. And proba·
card'tac arrest when the baseball bly wtthln a seven-day span, we
struck blm In the chest near his will probably start to play two
left armpit during a· game weeks of exhibition games."
Pitchers need more time to
Sunday; . said Hillsborough
County . Sheriff's Department.- prepare for , the regular season.
So after the agreement was
Sgt. Gordon Davis.

eo..._._.

When you quolify n 1 prefon-ed
rlok for BUtUt Auto
opeclot Modllllll Auto Polley, yaur
r•t• won't go up with your firlt
eccidont.

the time on the mound - they
need the live Innings here and the
three innings there. They rieed to
be broken In slowly,
"You can't just go in and say
'go out there and take the ball and
go seven innings ', it's tough ."
lncavlglia and other players
may finally get their chance to
prove they do not need six weeks
to get .ready for the season.

Unlike olmHor polloi• !hilt require
lhr• yOOfl of policy ow-ohlp.
the Modollot ollowo the •-ption
lmmodlototy.
The Modollot recognll11 the older.
Iller driver with oubtUtntlol roUt

and reduction• •nd br011der cover~

oge. Rote roductiono begin n N&lt;ly
• 001 2&amp; ond ore .,.rticulorty ot·
tractive lor tho 45 to 14 y - old.
If you hove • Mfo driving
• • jult how low your c1r 'in.ur·
ance premium c.n bll with the Me·
dollot Auto Polley from Stot&lt;o Auto
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ENTI0N'
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SOllY FOR ANY IICONVENIENCE
1HIS MAY HAVI.

1::"'
IIi

,

Can baseball players be ready ·in three weeks?

· IN TODAY'S DAILY SEt«INEL, ·THE
t:ARIER
SALE HAS BEEN
FRIDAY,
-CH 23, 1990, NOT MAREH~
20 AS STATED ON THE AD.
'

...

Shaun Savoy for game honon
with 19 points, found blmself ln.
fast company In the deep-1trlke
department. as Savoy nailed four
and Logan guard SllawnAilellder
rJiled from beyond the arc with
11ve. On the other hand. Southw·
estern missile launcher John
Ehman, whose accurate touch
from long range made him one of
the most. dangerous offensive
threats Jn the SVAC, scored hill
points on a trlfecta In the first
half, whlchcame26secondsafter
Stri~klln's pivotal ,t rey and
closed the 1-11 squad's lead to
21-20. Fairland three-point ace
Steve Pay, wito scored 16 on the
night, had none.
Halftime score- Dlv. 1·1162.
Olv. Ill- IV 41
DMSION 1·11 (12'7) ...... Scott
Stricklin (Athens) 5-3·0·19; Jim "
Redd (Loga n) 8-0-2-18; Shawn
Allender (J,.oganl H-2·17: Steve
Pay (Fairland) 8·0-0·16; Randall
Pennington (South Potntl 8-0.0·
16; Eric Barnes (Ironton) 4·2·0·
14; Rob Hardee (Wellston) 6·0-0·
12; Scott Decamlliada (Athens)
2·0·2·6: Brock Zornes (Rock Hllll
2·0·1·5; Chris Graham (Wellston)
1·0·0·2: Mike Hopper (Ironton)
1-0·0·2. TOTALS- 46-11·11-12'7
DMSION ID·IV (85) - Sllun
• Savoy (Eastern) 3-4:-1·18; Ron
Henson (Chesapeake) 8-0.0·16;
Ryan McClelland (Trimble) J.4.
0·14; Dave Lucas (Coal Grove)
4-1-0-11; Chad Smith (Oak Hllll
2-0·3-7; Kevin Vanderhoof tCoal
Grove) 2·0-1-7; ScottFIIch(East·
ern) 2-0.2-6; Jeff Holbert (Trim·
ble) 0·1·3-6; D.J. Hammel (North
Gallla) 2-0.0-4; ' John Ehman
.
(Southwestern) · 0·!...,3: Brad
Mayl!ard (Southern) 1-8·..2. TO1 TALS - 25-12-&amp;-95

arc, and after a three·polnter
from the right wing by Athens
guard Scott Stricklin at the 13:10
mark In the first half, which
produced. thl! game's only leaad
change and ·gave the previously
Jn.the-red I·ll team a 19-17 lead,
the combination of deadly threepoint shooting and strong Inside
play by the btg-scl)ool st.ars gave
them the contest.
Stricklin, whose three trifectas
helped him tie Eastern guard

I

l

'"·

But the game wasn't totally
decided there, even though I-II's
primary frlmtmen - Jim Redd
(Logan 1, Randall Pennington
(South Point), Rob Hardee (Well·
ston) and Scott Decamlnada
(Atbens) - outscored Ill·IV's
prtmary front·Une corps of Rob
Henson (Chesapeake). RY.an
McClelland (Trimble) , Kevin
Vanderhoof (Coal Grove) and
D.J. Hamme!' (North Gallla 1
52-41. It was decided beyond the

'

POISON PREENTION
WEEK

26 Weeks ............ , .... ,. ............... $10.30
52 Weeks ............................. ..... $7MO

j-

tie (Miller) 1·0·0·2: Christl Tate
(Federal Hocklng)l-0-0·2. Totals
- 11-J-6.53

Sports briefs

rll!l" may remit In advance direct to
The Dailv sentinel on a 3. 6or 12 month

l'

.

Michelle Sims ~Wellston) 2.0·4·8;
Bllllna Cooper ~Jackllon) 3·0·1·7;
Kara Ervin (Wellston) 2·1·0·7:
Pam KirbY (Wellston) 2·0.0·4;
Lori HamUioll (Gallpolllll 1-tJ..l·
3. Totala....: !'1-t-U-13
DIYialOIIID·IV (53) -Brooke
SmlQs (S)'IIIIIIea·Valley) 4+0-2.0;
Christi Clay (Coal Grove) 5-1·0·
13; Shannon Smith (Coal Grove)
4-0-4-12; Angie Battista (Chesa·
peakel 1·0-0-2; Terri Brown
(Chesapeake) 0-0·2-2; LesUe Ly·

.

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

would guarantee a split field, . ,•,
probably a large one. It could : •~
catapult Jacskson to a plurality · :-··
victory. .
'
: :.
Jacksonltes like lt. We know: i:'
that because they haven't ·com· :;
plalned. When they don't like
rules changes, they say it's · ~'
racism.
1,
This ill no Jackson conspiracy • '::
Californians dldn' t like being last !'
In the process, reduced to appar- •
ent Irrelevance· by the LWGSS.
But non-conspiracies have ; '
. been the root of much Democratic madness. Things happen ,,
randomly, and If they end up ~
helping liberals, then liberal "iDNC members, who control tb ~
DNC, see to It that the Item In ~
question becmes .untouchable. "'That happened With Iowa. II was t;
once a gimmick caucus. But !:
hec!!Uie It serves lettwiR&amp; ape!- · I'!
cal Interests, It now can't be ~
budeed from Ita auperlor atatus.
Unless there is a lawsuit."
Which mlaht properly be expanded to challenee the wbole
nature . of the hlli"dly-natlonal,
non·democratlc, quasi committee.

- ·----..----·-~-

... •\"

A Dlvloloa of Mdlmedlo, lac.

,.

With Bulgaria moving towrd
democracy-lnclu'dtng such subversive devices as elections and
secret ballots - perhaps the
Democrats of Iowa, and the
Democratic ·Party, should con·
slder tl!e same Ideas ln"chooslng
a presidential nominee.
What exists now Is a scam. The
presidential nominating rules of
the Democratic Party - whatever that maybe -are made by
a fascinating body called the
Democratic National Commit·
tee. It's not democratic. It's
barely a committee. If It's
national, why do.S It always
harm Democrats trying to win
nationally?
There are 406 DNC members.
There are quotas· for blacks,
Hispanics and women, but no one
else. DNCmembersaretypkally
self-perpetuating chlphen from
state parties; sometimes they
are appointed or muscled Into
their jobs; occasionally they are ·
publicly elected, barely noticeable on tbe ballot. Thirteen
members were handpicked by
Jesse Jackson. No other current
potential candidate piCked any . .
One DNC rule dictates that
Iowa, and only Iowa, can have
the first presldent!al releciion
event If it JO chooses, and If lt
does, It ihust ..be done through
caucuses. Under Iowa caucus

~:;•...,).!'

The Daily entinel

Voters, why .n ot sue the DNC?--:--B_en_~_a_tte_nb_er....:::.g

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DO YOU KNOW TO
,•keep .all medicines out of the reach of chil·
dren
'
"•never assume 1that child-resistant contain·
ers are child-proof containers .
•carefully store drain openers, solvents, an·
tifrHze, kerosene, gasoline, pesticides or
any other toxic material well out of a
· child's reach.

POISOI
PREVEmOI
WEEK
MARCH

1 8-2 4

IN CASE OF ACCIDENTAL POISONING, KNOW WHAT TO
DOl TIME IS VITAL. QUICK ACTION CAN SAVE A LIFEII
Bring in'any bottle of an old prescription you're no longer usi..
or household cleaner that c:ould 'be poisonous. We wiH ditcard
this for you and give you a bottle of IPECAC SYRUP "FIEE"II

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�•

4 The o.ily Sentinel

Peg I

TundiJY, Ms Uh 20, 1110

Pomeroy-Midd'aport. Ohio

TUJ let. Mado 20, 1990

Birtningham-Southem pos~s 88-80 victory. over Wisconsin-Eau C~&amp;ire
wlnnlng a cbB.mplonshlp. ended
71·65' with 8:07 to go.
Its season 30-4. •
Tim Blair made a free throws .
Eau Qalre came back from
for Eau Qalre - the Blugolds'
14-polnt llrst·half deficit and !led only point over a 4 12 minute
the score at 65-65 when Lanse
si&gt;an. jack Skipper was fouled
Carter forced In a shot with 8: 56 · and missed a one-and-one for
left. He was fouled on the play bY
Blrmlngham·Southern; .but even
Butler butmlssed the free throw.
that- worked out as the ball was
Butler, who already had 30
tipped beyond the arc where
points, had to he pulled from the
Brent Carter shot for a threegame because the call was Ills
point ~asket and 74-66 edge.
fourth foul. Birmingham·
Eau Qalre ·pulled within four
Southern did not miss hlm much.
twice after that, but by then
Martlnear worked the left side
Butler was back In the game and
for his tie-breaking field goal and
each t.l me had answering baskets
hll from just left of the lane for . for the Panthers. ·
his second. Shortly after that
Butler's 36 points capped a
Scott Webb hit two free throws
tournament In which he In·
and thll Panlhers were ahead
creased Ills point total in each

87 ~OHN BENDEL
VPI Sporta Wrller
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) ·,
Fred Martlnear sc;ore!l consecu·
Uve bul!eti to lplte the decisive
run and Stacy Butler scored 36 ·
points Monday night, llfllng the
Blnnlngham-Southern Panthers
to the 'NAIA Tournament cham·
plonshlp with an 88-80 victory
over lhe Wisconsin· Eau Claire
Slugolds.
It was the first NAIA title for
•' the Panlhers. 31·3, who had never
advanced past the seCQnd round
In five previous appearances.
Eau Oalre, qualifying for Its
second title game In 18 tourna. ment showings without .. ever

..~

...

..
,

.

,

ByLES K~OS
UPI Sporta Wrller
MIAMI (UPII - Thirteen·
year-old Jennifer Caprlatl, vlc·
tlmlzed by her own unforced
errors, was defeated 6·2, 6-4 by
113th re,nked Nathalie Herreman
of France Monday In the fourth
round of the $2.55 million Lipton
PI ayers Intern at Ion a I
CbamP,lonshlps.
Herreman downed Caprlatl In
the first matlh of the day. Less
than two hours later, at 1:20 p .m.
EST, It began to rain and play
was suspended. After two attempts to resume play, officials
decided at 7 p.m. to postpone the
remainder of the program until
Tuesday.
Before play was called, third·
seed -Stefan Edberg· SWI!Pt past
Amos Mansdorf oflsrael, 6-2. 6·1.
No.1 seed Ivan Lend! and No. 2

Boris Becker were playing when had to win the match In two sets,
the rains came. Lendl . led that's why I looked so relieved
.MarceloFlUppinl of Uruguay G-O, when It was over."
4·2, and Becker held a 3-1 edge
Herreman, who has' won 14
over Jean Fleurean of France.
matches and lost six so· far this
Caprlatl, who earlier this year, jumped to a 5-0 lead, when
month ,became . the youngest Caprlatl began to show some life.
player to reach the finals of a pro
She broke Herreman's serve
tournament, lost only her second and then held hers to make It 2-5, ·
match In 10 starts as a but with the score 40-30 In the
profeislonal.
next garne, Herreman rifled a
"I didn't .think ! played that forehand winner to take the set.
well,"·sald Caprlatl. "She play sa
She broke Caprlatl's service In '
little different. She has that short the second set, but the Tampa
slice, and then comes with the say area youngster immediately
tops.pln. I'm going to have to broke back, and then took a 2·1
work on that."
lead when she held her serve.
Herreman, 23, said she felt she
There were no service breaks
had to wln the match In two sets until . the ninth game when
because she had been playing a Caprlatl was wide with a backgrueling schedule and was afraid hand to give Herreman the break
of fatigue In a third set.
· and set up the final game,
"It was my seventh match In a
Herreman held service and
row, because I had to quallfy for won the match when Caprlatl's
this tournament," she said. "I

•

Sixers hand Nets 108-94 loss
84-80 heading Into · the final
period. But PhlladliPhla shut
New Jersey down In the final
period, allowing the Nets,. just 14
points.
. ·
.
New Jersey scored just got one
basket, a Jumper by Conner. and
was outscored ·l3-2 \O trail 97-82
with 4:53 remalnlbg In the game. ·
Barkley scored 11 of Philadelphia's 24 fourth-quarter points.
"They looked confused out
there," Barkley said. "They
argue with each other and It's
really a shame. But I'm not going
to cry for them, because when we
played that way nobody. cried
any tears for me."
The Nets lead 11·10 with 7:25
left In the first quarter when
Philadelphlawent on a 17-0 surge
that made the score 27-11 wlth
3: 34' left. The Slxers. led 39-19
after one period. ,
The Nets cut ihedeflclt to 55·45;·
when Dennis Hopson hit a layup
with 2: 30 .remaining. However.
the Slxers led 61:47 at the half.
In other ·games, Dallas
dumped ·Atlanta 117-110, San
Atonlo topped Phoenix 113-102,
and Utah dumped Sacramento
105-97.
• Mavericks 117, Hawks 110
At Atlanta, Sam Perkins arid·
Roy Tarpley combined for 20
points In the fourth period to lift
Dallas . The Mavericks led by as
many as nine points five limes !n

By United Press International
Shh! Charles Barkley has a
secret that he doesn't want the
rest of his team to know.
Barkley collect!!d a triple. double with 29 points, 15 re·
bounds and 10 assls ts Monday
night to lead the Philadelphia
76ers to a 108-94 wln over the New
Jersey. Nets.
The victory moved the Slxers
Into first place ln. the Atlantic
Division, a half-game ahead of
the Idle New York Knlcks.
"I know we "re In first place
now.'' Barkley · said, "bUt I am
going to tell the guys we are still
In second and hope they don't
look at the papers."
New Jersey has lost 26. of l ts
last 29 games.
"It's tough going through the
losing," said Nets coach Bill
Fitch. "They've been humiliated
In previous games. They are
fighting tough and thah all I can
ask of. them."
Hersey Hawkins scored 21
points for Philadelphia with
Derek Smith finishing with 15.
New Jersey was paced by Chris
Morris, who scored 17 of hls 19
points In the third quarter. Lester
Conner finished with 18.
· "We did what we could, we'Ve
just got to give them credlt,"
Morris said.
The Nets ~taged a 26·9 run In
the third quarter to pull within

'

the final quarter.
Spurs ll3, Suns 102
.
At Phoenix, David Robinson
scored 34 pQints, grabbed . 14
rebounqs and blocked eight shots
for San Antonio. The Spurs' third
win over the Suns this ,year
snap~d a 19-game home win
streak for Phoenix. Kevin John·
son had 36 points and 12 assists to
pace the Suns.
Jazz 105, Kings 97
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
scored 32 points to lead Utah . The
Jazz, 47-19, posted ttoelr 22nd win
In their past 23 home ·games to
raise their home record to 30-4.
Wayman Tisdale led Sacramento
wlth 24 points.

S,\TIONAL'BMDTBALL AS!!OC• .

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------

199l Vacation Clubs wm Start
On April 9, 1991

expialned.
BJ CJIA8IMNE BOQ'UCH
"Whether a person who Is
· 8 "wl Newalltalf
Skin testing, chest x-rays for exposed to tuberculosis actually
positive reactors, medical eva- contracts the disease depends on
IuaUoa. tuberculin drii&amp;S, and many factors- general physical
CGIIIIIIWIIIY ciiDicl. wltl\ home debllllatlon, conatant expoa11re
and ec:IIDol Yblta for evaluations to active tubercle bacllU, lo811 1111ded are Included In tlie wered re~lltance becaulll! of
variety of eervtces provided by other dlieues and condltlona ·
the Metp County Tubercu~ls such 811 diabetes, cancer, illleoala, alcohollam and preiJillllcy,"
and Healtll Offke.
Accordllll to the report re- the director continued.
She satd that there are a lot or
leued today by Joan Tewbbary,
factors
that can IJ!fluence the
R.N., execuUve director, lour
of tubeleulOIIs were re- development of clinical tubercuported Ill Dlt. The main el!lpba- 10111. "It lJ like 1 time bomb,
sls af tbe_ oftlce' Is to )leep 'becauae some people who are
IDfe~:t!!d can get ·tuberculosis
tuberculoU Wider control. Besldla "'•.,..,.uc and follow:up. months or years after the Initial
treatmeat procedures, education contact."
Nl , positive reactors to akin
playa an Important role. Literatesdng
. are given chest x-r•ys
ture on tullercu losls and other
which
will reveal If the tuber·
re~plratory disease Is available
culln
·germs
have done any
for tree dlstrlbl.o lion at clinics and
damage.
Last
year 668 x-rays
the office which Is located on the
were
obbllned
and Interpreted
SeCQnd floor of the MultliJurpose
rec:9111mendatlons
made for
and
. building, Mulberry Heights,
treatment
If
Indicated
after
eva·
Pomeroy.
. Thl! agency Is fUnded solely luatlon by the ·cllnlc physician .
In inacy Instances other labor•
through the tuberculosis levy
with no feder111 or state monies a tory procedures are ordered by
Dr. Donnerberg or the patient'~
coming Into the program, Mrs.
Tewksbary reports. · Currently private !JI:!Yslclan. A total of 101
Tubercialosls and Health oper- such· procedures were carried
ates with a .. 5 (one-half of one out last year.
One hundred · thirty-six pamill) which ' generates about ·
tients
were seen In chest clinics
$91,500 a year. ·
.
bY
Dr.
Donnerberg ln.l989.
Dr. Roy L. r;&gt;onnerberg, M.D.
Other
services Included tbe
of Columbus Is the chest~llnlclan ·
provision
of tube\'(:ulln drugs as
and conducts chest cllnlc5 at the
"ordered
by
the ' physician to ,29
Pomeroy office ·rour · times . a ·
persons for preventive purposes
yeilr.
and to four as
therapy
In 1989 a total of 3,692 skin tests
·
medications.
were administered. A major way
Patients who are put on medi· of preventing_tuberculosis Is fo ·
cation
are monitored lor the first
Identify the person with tubercumonth
on a weekly basis.. then
losis Infection and treat that
once
a
month, so that any
lhdlvldual so tl)e Infection wlll
possible
adverse
toxic effects to
not progress at some later date,
the
drugs
can
be
detected and
Mrs. Tewksbary said. If a skin
corrected
early
In
the
treatment
t"st Is positive, it Indicates
program,
Mrs.
Tewksbary
said.
i nfectlon, but does not prove the
During the past year 75 clinics
presence cif active disease, she

---~-- - -

...........

Lawrence, Racine; Pastor Wll·
liam Mlddleswarth, ' Pomeroy;
Donna Nelson. Chester, Olive
and Orange; Paul Patterson,
Rutland; Harold Rice, Salisbury,
Salem and Rutland; Charles
Riffle, Salisbury, · Salem and
Rutland; Michael Struble, Srya -

cuse (SEOLA member of Regional Board of Trsdtee~ I; Helen
Swartz, Bedford, Scipio and
Col11mbla; Jane Walton. Pomeroy; Joan Wolfe, Sutton, Lebanon and Letart; Faye Wallace,
SEOLA representative; and Or·
ion Roush, board consultant.

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CHEST CLINICIAN - Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg of Columbus
conducts chest clinics at the Meigs County Tuberculosis Office four
Urnes a year.
·
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773-1514

POMEIOY, OHIO

•.•
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'
CLERK-RECEPTIONIST -Ka&amp;hy Cumlap' responsibilities
to help make tile office fuactlon efficiently Include maintaining
contaetawlth patients and arranrtnl for cllalc and otller eervlces
111roq11 tbe office, su baadl• all recoJ'I!a of skin testing and
aeeompaniMIIM n•ne 10 tile eo•tJ'ssehoell.
.

. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR - Joan Tewksbary, R.N. Is the
executive director of the coWity Tuberculoals office. She
' · administers the tubetcuUn skin lesdng In the county,. provides
guidance to all tuberculosis patients and contacts any suspects.

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CHIEF DEPUTY - Maida Mora not on~ handles the
bookkeeping for the Tuberculosis Office, but also asslsla durtn1
clinics.

.Abortion filibuster continues·in Maryland
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UP! I Maryland senators waging a , ·
5·day-old flllbus!lir over leglsla·
tlon that would keep abortions
widely available refused to give
up Monday and demanded that .
voters-have the choice of a more
restrictive statute.
After Senate leaders predicted
a possible end .to the filibuster
sometime Monday, abortion op·
. ponents and bill sponsors split
over a proposal that essentially
would shift the responsibility of
· determining Maryland's abor·
lion laws from legislators to
voters.
Senate leaders sent weary
legislators home at about mid·
night Monday, ordering the debate and closed-door negotla!Ions to resum'\ Tuesday.
Anti-abortion senators wanted
a section added to the bill that
would take effect If the leglsla·
tlon p811sed the General Assem·
bly and It Maryland voters
reject!!d It In a threatl'!n~ fall
referendum. The section would
ban abortiona except In cases or
rape, lncestorwhenthemother's
ilfe was In danger.
.
Once a fetus was determlnea
viable, abortions would be allowed only to save tile. mother's ·
Ilfe _ no matter what the cause
of her pre~J~Bncy -: under the

proposal advanced by abortion
opponents.
Legislators have also , dis·
cussed tempering lanj(Uage In
the far-reaching bill that has
troubled abortion opponents hamely provisions allowing via·
ble fetuses to be aborted solely
because the mother's mental
health was In danger.
Senate President Thomas V.
"Mike" Miller, who has depended on negotiations to end the
debate rather than pressure
from keeping legislators In the
chamber round the clock, said
the talks bad to continue.'
"You could filibuster this Issue
for the next 10 years, no problem," Miller said, explaining
that abortion opponents remain
confident they have the 16 votes
needed to block a cloture motion.
Miller needs 32 votes, or
two-thirds of the Senat,e membersblp, to end the filibuster, which
started Thursday.
Miller sent senators home at
ll:20 p.m. Sunday, ,saylng he
expected to muster the neces·
sary votes sometime alter the .
session resumed Monday.
Senators have had breaks to
sleep each night since tile debate
began Thursday, prompting one
member to dub It a "limousine
filibuster.,

preme Court eventually over·
"The only thing worse than a
tyranny by the majority Is· turns Its landmark Roe vs, Wade
decision, .which In 1973 created a
tyranny by· the minority," said
.
constitutional right to abortion.
Miller. "What I'd like to get are
The measure was Introduced
the votes without turning up the
after Maryland's attorney gen·
heat."
eral determined that a 1968 state
.Senate Majority Leader Clar·
law restricting abortions would
ence Blount said both sides were
become enforceable If the Suclose to resolving their dlfferen·
preme Courl ever overturned
ces, Including the ment{ll health
Roevs.
Wade.
provision.
If
passed
by the Senate, the blll
"Nothing has been approved
would still need approval from
yet bul that Is still a major
the HouS\' of Delegates and from
issue," said Blount. "We have a
Gov.
Wllllam Donald Schaefer,
good feeling about it but a snag
who
has
not taken a position.
can develop on any Issue at any
Abortion
rights advocates. In
time."
the
Senate
who
have,. maintained
Abortion opponents have
.
all
along
that
they
could eventU·
waged a campaign to write out of
ally
muster
enough
votes to end
the bill the mental health provl•
the filibuster opened negotla·
slon, which they believe Is equal
lions
with antl•abortlon leglsla·
to having no restrl.ctlons at all.
tors
Sunday
afternoon.
"It's a choice between more
Abortion
opponents
CQnceded
death and less death," said Sen .
that
because
or
their
numbers
Patrl-;k O'Rellly • a Prince
slightly
more
than
a
dozen
of
the
George's County Democrat who
47 senators are viewed as un·
opposes abortions .
In addition to mental health swerving anti-abortionists, questlon,threeotherlssueshave they remain vulnerable to losing
the support of senators consl·
been at the heart of talks over a
possible compromise, Including .dered to be swing votes If the
parental notillcatlon, reporting filibuster dragged on .
As drafted, the leelsJatloa
abortions and testing to deter·
would
allow unrestricted abor·
mine the viability ol the fetus.
tloios
until
a fetus Is detannlllecl
The biD before the Senate Is
to
be
viable
by a doctor. Aft..,
deslped to guarantee that abor·
that,
aborttona"would
!»allowed
tiona rema:rn widely available In
wh~n
the
mental
or
pbyalcal
Maryland even If the U.S. Su·
health of the modier or tile
physical health oftheelllld-ln
danaer.
Senators ·conduct lng tile
to fly w811 when E:rt he\d ~~= . uster, usually adllreulaaa ...,•
newspaper ad for e move
,. empty chamber, llave'lll4alautl
a quote fr~u::e ~lila.: v:~~~ from boob, COMIItaeat Jet•&amp;
calllllg t
nncomedy of aDd teeal brltfiiD 1~21ra1a 'ta
clerical tra~sves 11te
attempt to obltnact lit-bill Mil'
the decade .
preserve tile 1MB law.

· Fox Network bans Siskel and Ebert·over review

PEOPLES BANK
112·2136

appointed by the Meigs County
Commissioners. The members
and the areas they represent are
Lloyd Blackwood, Chester.
Olive, and Orange Townships;
James Hlll, Sutton, Lebanon and
Letart; Dr. Larry Kennedy,
Middleport Vlllal(e: Jeannete

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675-1121

were helcl around the county for
the convenience of the general
public. There were 3,760 home
visits and outside office contacts
made, and 408 school visits and
contacts made.
The Tuberculosis and Health
Office Is guided by an advisory
board consisting of 13 members

ern Oblo Lung Allooclatlon representative, Helen Swartz, and
back, WilHam ~lddleswartb, Har11ld Rice, Jim Hill, Uoyd
Blackwood, and Charleo RlfRe. Bciard members not plctlll'!!d ..-e
Paul Patterson, Michael Struble, Jane Walton, Dr. Larry
Kennedy, and Orion &amp;lush.

'

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Newttaven ·

. TB AND HEALTH BOARD - An advisory hoard representing
, all sections of Meigs County Is charged wllb guiding lhe.J)roll'ams
and flllanclalupecl• of the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health
Association. On the hoard are left to right, seated, Jeanettz
Lawrence, Joan Wolfe, Donna Nelson, Faye Wallace, SoutheaSt-

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P'olnl PleaD II

.

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OFF ANY ABOVE
GROUND POOL, IN STOCK.
24 FOOT IOUND IBOVE $
SQ
GROUND POOL
NOW 13
OPDI 6 DAYS 9100. A.M.·5:00 P.M.
•NEW LOCATION•

I.A. OI..... olllloll,oloiO

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Cllka&amp;e•

THANKs·FOR BANKING
· WITH US!
The Last Day To·Make
· · _.,ayments On Yo1U
1990 Vacation
Club Is.
. '
March · 24, 1990
•

a1 Hard•~.

U .1M 21 1"t

'

REACHES IN- Sacramenlo's VInny DeJNell'o (right) reaches
In for the steal attempt against Utah'i Delany Rudd Ia Monday ·
, night's NBA game In Sail Lake City, Utah. The host Jazz beat the
Kings 105-97. (UPI)

"'e-•hr'•7:,.,.a
Qutobl'"
ss p.m.

Hellltko ....................... ...U II .114 II
*Mr ............... :Jt 1$ .U.J II
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lA OIJIIffiM Dt1wr.

Calgary beats St~ Louis 5~2 to
push unbeaten streak to nine ·

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baseline backhand was long.
"I knew exactly how · I was
going to piay her," Herreman
said. ' 'I used my sliced backhand
to make her make errors."
The two players disagreed on
· whether· lt was an upset.' Herre- :
1
man thought It was. ·
"I am only ll3th In · the
ran kings, and I think she will get
higher than that when she Is
ranked," Herreman said. · "I
didn't feel any pressure at all. I
was pretty cool. I think an the
·pressure was on her."
Caprlatl, who has not yet
played enough tournaments to be
rankj!d, disagreed.
"I don't think It was an upset
because It was only my second
tournament. It's not an upset to
·me," she said.
Both players agreed that Caprlatl tends to rush her shots.
"I needed to. take my time
more," Caprlatl said. "I had a
couple of break points and I
didn't wln those points and I think
that was because I rushed
through ~hem ....'
Caprlati said she wasn't sure
what tournament she would pjay
next, but It will be either March
26 at Houston or Aprll2 at Hilton
Head.
By JOHN SWENSON
Mullen ppen~ the scoring
Edberg had been struggling in
when
he fired MacLellan'.s reSrorts
Writer
UPJ
hls previous matches In the
The
Ca:tgary
Flames,
riding
a
bound
into the net at the edge of
tournament and was surprised at
nine-game
the
unbeaten
streak
after
crease
with jusi ten seconds .
the way he played In his victory
topping
the
St.
Louis
Blues
5·2
remaining
In a Calgary ,power
over Mansdorf.
·
play
at
3:
33
of the first.
Monday
night,
·solidified
their
"I thought the match would be
Smythe Division lead and set .·
Paul MacLean tied the score
a lot tougher," he said. "Amos
1·1
at 9:29 when he snapped a
their
sights
on
the
best
overall
!))awed two gocid matches and
won easily s.o far, and I had a. regular;season record, which 35-loot wrist shot by Calgary
guarantees home-ice advahtage · goalie Rick ~amsley for his 29th
·difficult time winning the last
through the playoffs.
of the season.
.
mateII. I came prepared for .a
Joe
Nieuwendyk
scored
a
pair
drilled
a
slapshot
at
Macinnis
long afternoon of tennis.''
of third-period goals 15 seconds the top Of the faceoff circle by'
aparrto break operl a close game Rlerideau· lltgh on th!! stick side
and pull the Flames to within one lor Ills 26th goal or the season to '.
point of the Boston Bruins for the 'give Calgary a 2-1 lead at 13:56.
The goal for Macinnis set a .
overall point lead.
"We're going to take a shot at club record for goals by a ·
this thing," said Nieuwendyk. defenseman In a single season. :
"It's good to have a streak going
Calg~ry continued their doml··
now. It's ar the right time of the nat.lon ·1.n the second period,
year. Our focus Is to play good, outshooting the Blues 15-4, but
solid hockey from here on ln."
Brett Hull !led the score 2-2 with '
Brian MacLellen snapped a 2-2 . his 69th goal of the season.
tie at 3: 27 of the final period when · . HU:ll snapped a 35·foot shot past
he deflected Joe Mullen's 15-foot Wamsley on the glove side 10 .
screened slap shot Into the net on seconds Into th~ period . with ·
the power play for his 18th goal of Calgary's Sergei Makarov In the
the season.
· pertalty box.
Nleuwendyk scored his 41st
In the only other NHL game, .
and 42nd goals just over a minute Chicago beat Toronto 3-2.
•
after MacLellen's goal. .
Blac...,awks 3, Maple Leafs 2
Nleuwendyk received credit · At Toronto, Denis Savard
for his 41st of the season at 4:53 scored pair of goals, lnciudlng
when his rebound off the boards the game,wlnner a,t 11:57 of the ',
bounced off Blues' netminder second period, and Greg Millen
VIncent Riendeau in the crease faced 29 shots. The victory
and trick led over the goal line.
enabled thealackhawks to cline hi
Nieuwendyk made the score a . playoff berth for the 21st
5-2 when he tipped defenseman consecutive season, second only
AI Macinnis' point shot in the slot to the Boston Bruins' record of 23
for his 42n'tl of the season 17 straight.
seconds later at 5: 08.

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DeFore.
Eau Clalre kept fairly close
The Panthers broke open a 9·7 due tc 19 lint -half points from
game when Butler dropped In _ Bushman and pulled within 4HO
consecutive buckets and Brent with 53 seconds left when
Carter conneded from three- Pr811ber went the l~~:fllll\ of the
point range. After Eau Qalre' s court for a layup off an Inbound&amp;
Prasher scored off a drive, play. Blrmlngham-Southerq
Butler, who had 16 first-half chose to work the clock and
points, scored again and Marti· DeFore took a long shot trom the
near made a shot from just left of left side as the shot clock.went to
the lane for a 20·9.EIIrmlngham· zero for the elght·polnt lead at
Southern lead at the 13: 11 mark. lnterm~Nion.

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Tuberrulosis, Health. Offices provide services to residents

Herreman beats Capriati in Lipton fiTJtllls

NBA roundup

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round. The senior center had 17
points In the first , 22ln the second
followed bY games of 24 points
and 25 In the semifinals, when
Birmingham-Southern ousted
top-seeded David · Lipscomb
(Tenn.).
Martlnear, who liad 32 points In
the David LIPscomb game. fln·
lshed· with 21 and Matt DeFore
added 11. Duane Bushman
scored a career-high 30 points for
the second. time In the tournament. Mike Prasher chipPed In 15
and Tim Blair 14 for the Blugolds.
Birmingham-Southern led 4840 at the·break on the strength of
· an early 11·2 run and a shot-clock
buzzer,beatlng three-pointer by

The Deily Sentinei-Pegl

Ponwov-:-Middlapofi. Ohio

CHICAGO (UPH -Twentieth
Cenlu(y-Fox has Indefinitely
&gt;banned film critics Roger Ebert
and GeneSiskel from screening
. previews of Ita movies, a publlahed report said Tuesday. ·
· &lt;

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Fox offl~lals eave the two a
"thumbll down" on their review
of the new Folt comedy "Nuns on
theRun,"theChlcagoSun·Tlmes
reported.
"I _guess you could call It
thumbll 011 tiM!-run," said Ebert, a

'·

Pulluer P~tze.wln;ung crlt~ for
the Sun-Times. ·
Ebert and Slskel, a Chicago
Tribune film critic, were euests
lastweekonthe"Llve-Reglal:
Kathie Lee" television show and
panned the Fox movie bY sa,ylng

It didn't contain 1 single laugh.
"If you can find a laugh In this
film. I'll give you .~ shiny new
dime tor everyone, Ebert said.
"And you'll not ~orne a rich
man."
. ·
What really caused the Fox fUr

ron..

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1:"he., Daily Sentinel

The ·Bend

~-~~-~~---~---------------....;._.;_

Women's group meets

PW!s were finalized for obThe meeting opened witli the
serving the 75th anniversary of· Phllathea song and prayer by
the Phllathea Society or the
Farle Cole.
Middleport Church of Christ
Marlyn Wilcox presided at the
·when that group met recently.
meeting and ~ports were given
The a~nlversary will tle obby Dorothy Roach, Farle Cole.
served with a formal tea on April
and Mtklred Riley .
12 at 6:30 p.m. All past and
Named on the prayer Us t were
present members are encourFrancis Rouah. Donna Hartson,
aged to attend.
Colleen VanMeter, Mike WilCommittees working for the
fong, a,nd Lul_a Mae Qulvey .
observance are Clyda Aliens-.
The group ·v oted to give Donaworth, Bea Stewart, Farle Cole, . tlons to the American Heart
Thelma Boyer, Invitations;
Association and the "Home or
Mildred Riley and Kathy !hie.
Love" project sponsored by the
favors and registration; Clarice youth of the 'churciJ.
Erwin and Phyllis Gilkey, decoTh~ Meigs County Women's
rating; Sharon Stewart, Donna
Fellowship IOias J~nnounced to be
Hartson, Kathy Wilfong, and
held Thursday at the Pomeroy
Regina Swift, refreshments; and
Chutch of Chrwt. Ladies Day at
• Marlyn Wilcox, Terri Hockman,
the Kyger Creek Clubhouse was
and Dorothy Roach, program.
.
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English colony In Australia. The
climate was Ideal, there were no
dangerous animals, and the
aborigines were friendly. Men,
women and chilllren were sent to
'the colony on ships. ·
They were transported over
15,000 miles and not one ship was
lost. The convicts were lodged
below deck in battened down
hatches and conditionS In thiS
steamitlg. sklnklng hole were
extr~me. The book ~.ent on to say

Lewis Manley Unit meets
The American Legion Lewis
Manley Auxiliary Unit 263 met
recently at Dale's Restaurant in
Galllpolls.
'Margaret Bowles, president, .
served as hostess and opened the '
meeting in ritualistic form.
Dorothy Casey wa.s acting ·
chaplain.
A bulletin from the eighth
dis trlct president was read by
Florence Richards and bulk
m'allings from department headquarters was handed out to the
chairmen.
Mrs. Bowles appointed Edith
Ross and Lorrene Goggins to
conduct the memorial service
that will be held at the next
meeting. She also asked the
chairmen 1.0 work o·n their annual
reports.
Contrlbu lions were made to the

American Indian Relief Council,
Covenant House, and CARE.
The "Firing Line" was ordered
and payment for the blanket
position bond was made.
Lula Hampton state from the
legislative bu.!letin that the 1991 ,
'Veterans budget had been ap.
proved and that the Agent
Orange issue Is back on the
agenda, She also stated that
health care for veterans remains
a priority.
Florence Richards ''reported
from tlie "Firing LL!ne" on the
chanlng ·of the Star Spangled
Banner as the national an then.
She s~ted that there Is much
disagreement on this ~alter .
Prayer for peach, the singing
of " America" and remarks by
the president closed the meeting.

History Group
Census testing

I

· Anyone interested In working
with the 1990 census Is encouraged to take the census testing
which will take place Friday. at
the Meigs County Library.
Test times.will be9: 30a.m. and
1:30 p.m. Those taking the test
should bring two forms of
. jdentlflcatlon.
For more information contact
the Meigs County Library.

to meet

Jill,_

~~~~!:::::::!:':-' ;., ,

Public N alice

announce&lt;l'for March 29.
.
Clarice E:rwln gave the report
of the nominating committee
with the lollow.l ng to be Ins tailed
at the April meetjng, Marlyn
)\lllcox, president; Mildred RIley, vice president; Dorothy
Roacli , secretary;· and Farle
Cole, treasurer. The installing
committee will be Donna Hart· .
son, Terri Hoclqrtan, and Sharon
Stewart.
A silent auction and tole
painting was enjoyed by those
attending.
Martha Chllps had the closing
prayer with refreshments carryIng out the St. Patrick's Day
theme. Serving the refreshments
were Kathy · !hie a'nd Pat
Wehrung,
'·

Read the
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE ITATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
Tt1E CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY OF
SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO , N.A.

.

."

that each convict had a given
span of time to serve and then
they were pardoned. ·They could
then seiUhelr labor and choose.
theit . place to work. When thev
served their time they !)ever
became property of the owners.
Children were born free. Mrs.
Thomas concluded · by , stating .
that Australia was settled as a
prison and built by convict labor.
Mrs . George Hackett Jr. presided at the meeting ·. in which
members sang "Happy Blrtllday" to Mrs. Roy Casell.
Roll call was answered with
members telling an unusual fact
about Australia.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

.
EMR.Y G. DAVIS

•
. r

. alld Carol
' Will, Is
Ill-, Pll&amp;rlcla Tbomaa,

NATIONAL NURTIUTION MONTIIof nil&amp; tonal nutrition month, Amerlcaf.e.Pomeroy, ' · • 1"811pon•lhle lor.the preparation and ~~ervlag or 21
Is salulla1 Its dietary ~eparlmeu~. 'Ole mo•lh; ?1 ·autrltlonaiJY· balabced meals eveey w~ek. Tbe;. '
spon8orecl by the Amerlcu Dietetic Aaloela&amp;lon,
dietary department Is alao respoaslble .for tbe'
Is celebrated anauillb' In MIP'Cb to pnmOie looc!
. sueceu of maay special events aad ranilb'
nutrition to tile public. VIolet Walker,. wltb ~e· '·. dlaaers beld a&amp; the laeiUty. Pictured are
help 1r Lynda Adkins, Janet Ebiiii,:Anna IJ~Ielcl, . , Hll&amp;fleld, VIolet Walker, and Renee.S&amp;oae,, (rom
Gladys McGhee, Paul!~ Rife, Pal,rlllla $nlltll, - left. ·
.
·w

An.-

•

chapter ·me,et{
Delta Kappa Gamma
.
.
"Shenandoah," and "Almighty·
God of pur Fathers." .
The chapters .enjoyed a seal·
loped chicken dlmier. Tables
·were· decoratPd wiih gref!nery
and red roses. Favors were
miniature red rose·corsages.
Helen J. Anderson, Delta Ep·
sllon president, Introduced· vlslt·Jng chapter presidents.
Alter singing the Delta Kappa
Gamma song, the chapters separated for Individual meetings.
Rebecca Zilrcber, president, wel-comed Ann McCarrel! and Mar- . ,
guerlte Gahm, reserve members
wbo ar@ .not able to.'a ttend all ,
,
meetings.
Nellje Parker, secretary; !'fad
thank yo~&gt; notes from Carolyn
''Snowden. Carol Eberts, · and
Beatrice Reinhart .. The society .
signed sympathy cards for Helen

Dr. Marian Korner, , second
vice president of Alpha Delta
State, was the speaker at the
joint quad Delta Kappa Gamma
meeting held recently at Chr~t
United Methodist Church ·. In
Jackson. Chapters or the quad
are Alpha Omicr90, Meig$-Vinton; Beta Tau, Wave~ly; Beta
Alpha, Gallipolis; and Delta
.·
Epsilon, Jackson. ·
Dr. Kurner reported that Ohio
Delta Kappa Gamma Is the third
largest in the nation. Greatest
problems .are atte!ldance and
getting new members.
Mary Nutt, first vice preslde!ll .
of' Delta Epsilon, presented the
New Harlech Singers. Their
director is Wilbur McCormick
and' !)tevle J arts in the pianist.
Songs included "Halls of Ivy,"
"Some Enchanted Evening,"

Kinder, Pauline Horton, arid
·Carolyn Snowden.
··
The grcup voted on proposed
new members and on the, nevi
slate of officers. VIlla Get ties, .
legislative chairman, spoke on
proposed new legislation which
Includes grandparents rights,
hazardous waste, teaching or
human growth,and development' ·'
In grades four through 12.
The n~xt meeting will be at the
Racine United Meth.odls t'
Church,. on Ap"'l ~ at 6: 30 P-~·
New offlcers r wlll ·be Installed .. ...
N~rology aervlc~and founders
day PIOIIIm ·wtlliVpresented.•
Members present from Meigs
County ·were RebecCa ·;~:urcher,
Rosalie Story, DoJVthy Woodard, ,
MaJ"jory· Fetty, ·Donna Jenkins, ,
Nellie Parke{, Carolyn Snowden,
an~ Sanra

Each member responded to
roll call with a bible verse.
"Happy Birthday" was sung to
members having birthdays In
March.
It · was announced that the
church will be having a bake sale

RDS

nuts. ·

Community.calendar-

Davis birth

'

""

American Legion
m.akes contributiom

I..ncal doctor attends convention

which is automatically renewable lllld redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary

Alfred news

Th~ 7-Day·Premium

.,

is another example of our
Commitment To Customers.

Sl 0,000 AWJIMUM DEPOSIT

Mu ~um dOJ?&lt;».it S99,\l99.99. ~till p~altr for

·. .,

••ly withdrowat.

Int....., pud to principal ond mmpounded ~.14ta tfkliYo W.rch 9 1990. '
and ~~ ro chltlp widtoul naci:e. Yield -..um.- .rh• Jrated rate r~ 111
coM•n,l for I lui yeu with n.o wklkhwals of infemr or principii.

Tffl,!: CENTRAL 'reUST COMPANY
Tile· Be,k That MP '••• Thing• Happen.

OliO ·

'

992·1111
Middleport

441 ol802
B•Ripol1

.

Mtmbar PDIC

Ware OIMIWM'e '

Thraa (31 Electric Aangea
Three 131 Ga Aengea
Tannt of tale ahtllbe cah
in the form of c•h. or a certified or coahler' oclleck peyoble to the board of edYca·
of the Maitll Local
P11rch•o.
III ~~t•'!i~~r.-2~l dog.
E.,10 tlon
School Dlatrlc:t which Ia re-.
,--. :·::cr from Fenny , qulred It the t -.ofthe pUb·
vs
co.-and in Ac auction from the hlgl\elt
· FREDERICK .W .. KLEIN.
the center of the road:
. AKA
.
.
thence N. 119'11 deg. E.. 1.3 bldd•.
FAEO W: KLEIN, ET AL·.
In-Ion
oon..,nlno
tt.·
rodo; thence 6. 41'11 deg. E.,
CASE NO. 89 CL 227
13 rodo to the road; than.,. auctlonotltohtltba-td
In punu.nce ~o· an Order along the road S. 89'11 dog. It the oftlce of the PrlnoiPol.
of Sale directed to me in the W.. 13 rode; thence N. 117 - t i l High School. 42081
"""'-·
above entitted ection. I will dog. 6 rodl 10 Iinke; thence _ _.., Pike.
offer for ule at publlc.auc- N. 22'11 dag. W. 7 rocll-17 Oh~ (Tal~e: 11~J-8112.
tion, at the front door of the link1 to the plica of begin- 21Hl. · .
The - d
the
Courthou• In Pomeroy. ning conulnlng one acre, reright to reject •nv or all bido.
Ohio. in the 1b0ve named
MNing from thlo grant one
Jone Fry, Tra•ucounty, on T,_dey, May 1. larg11 ch_.nut trM and one
Maiva Locol School Diatrict
1990 at 10:00 a.m .. tho folcherry trM. Being known u
lowing d•crlbed r~ MtatB.
the Ptlach Fork· School lot (3) 20, 27: (41 3, 10 4tc
situated in the County of•
being the ..me pr• 1--~ibiii;iiiiitiee-:­
Meigo, and tho Stote of and
mlan conveyed by fanny I
Ohio. to wit :
Smhh to Boord of Educotlon
Situated In the Village of
by d - doted N..,...bar
MEIGS COUNTY SOIL
Middlepor't,
County of
30,
1989,
recor.S.d
In VQAND WA1EA
Moigo end State of Ohio:
fume 102, pege 248 of ooid ,
CONSERVATION
Being Loto No'!- 129 and
Me\111 County Ooed· Re.· ·
DISTRICT STATEMENT
130 in Palmr • Adcltlon to
cordo.
•
.
OF RECEIPTS. ·
.
Shaffiold.· now inoorporattd
the
nmo
reeleotato
.DISBURSEMENTS.
AND
Being
intoondopa1oftheVII-of convoyed to Hen'.,. .Joneo CHANGES IN BALANCES
Middl-'- Moigo County. • and Ethel
Joneo. Moigo
FOR THE YEAR ENDED
~ Ohio. For 1 mora definite d•
Deed
Recordo.
DECEMBER 31, 1989
County
scription of otid toto. ref..-.
Parcel
2
:'
DISTRICT FUND
onca is horeby n\tde .to the
The
following
rut
eotate
Rocoipto:
ou......,ad piM thereof on ,..
situated In the County of Glfta, Contribution•
cord In the oftlce of the-~~~
Melgo . . Townohlp of Sella·
• llequflto ............. 3,378
County A._dor.
buty and State of 0 hlo. and Sale of Proclucto/
,.
Reference Dad' Volume
bounded and dfticribed I I
Materiala ............... ....781
240, peg• 866.
Meigo
foltowo: the following real ·Aontat1 .................... 1, 707
County Aecord1.
·
eotlta aituote In the North· All Other Rtvenue .... 3.321
This property to located ·at
west One Ou1rter of Section T0 t I 1 RICOiptl
·
·
9 . 187
..........
4155. Fourth Avenue. Mid·
No
.
18.
S1li1bury Township. Diebur.-mente:
dleport, Ohio.
Moigo
County,
Ohio. EqYip!Mnt .... .'.......... 1.613
Property
opproload et
bounded and deocribad I I lnforlllatlon Eclucotion · ·
$29,000.00 and c·annot be
follow1: Beginning at· the ' Bchola-•• 1
·
397
sold tor lel1 then IWO-third1
Northwoot corner of 127 Travol
'
•
.
Expan111
....
2.004
of the lpprllllad vai\Hf. "
17/100 acre tract recorded Prodycto/Metarlolo for
Aloo the following doDad Book 173. pogo Reoole .................. ..... 781 .
in
scribed real .. tllta aituata in
159.
on the WootlneofSec- Other ... , .. ,...... , ............ 886
the County of Meiga in .the
tion, No. 18; thence Eoot Totol
.
State of Ohio, ond TowMhlp
14011
feet
to
tho
center
o
f
Diabunemonta
........
8,680
of -Sellobury. end bounded
tho rood; thence North ·27 Toto! Recoipto Ovori
and delcribed a1 follow•:
dog. 60' Wat· 206 feet (Under) Oiob. .......... 3.487
Parcell:
along the center of the road; Other Fiuncing Sour. .
Beginning
South 20
thence North 16 deg. 40' (Uirll):
·
chain• 6Biinka from theN.
Weot4B1 foetalongthecen- Total of Roc. and Other
W. corner (whence ·a block
tor of the r&lt;Nid; then.,. north $our- Ovaf/(Undor Otob:
o a ~ ~~" ...
f on N. 83 ~eg. E.;
36 cllg. 30' Wat 160
ond a.... Uaea . ,.... ,3,487
6 110M, o 8 ec;tion 1.8, Town along
the center the rOIKI:'I Fund Ceih Bal1 nce. .
Jon.,.ry 1. 1989 ..... 3.483
2, Renee Pn :~f •t'- Ohio · t~~en ce _Nort h
·
deg.
Com,.ny ur~·•e; thence 40 ' Weot' 3 73 foot olong
Fund C•h Solanco.
Dec. 31, 1989 ........ 6,970
N. 88'11 dog. E .. 20 clloin1 the center of the rood;
8 6 YJ links to tho center of thence North 83 dog. 30'
SPECIAL FUND .
the ol~ rued from which • West, 700 foot along the Gronu:
of the rood: tho nee
State Govern ........ 21 ;975
Sy..mo"ffe' 12" be•o N. 21
d eg. 1
3 411nko and lo..
80
dog.
16'
Weat,
80
T
· t I ...... .. 21 ; 975
6" be oro S . 40 dog. 3 6', foot along tho center of the Solerteo
o t o1 Aecap
c u ot.
.............. .... 27.48 o
2 4 1•nko;thencoS. 31\o\deg. roedtothaWeotltneofSec·
s" ppl'•
1 ' 1311
1
E., 5 cheinl89 link&amp; to the . tion Np. 18; thenoe south
................... . · •
Equipment : ...... ... ......... 842
he
S
f or k1 o f t he •--•
- : t nee . 1 170 feet along tho Weof Cqntracu: .
'
· .
~8V. dog. E .. 8 ,choino 81 lineofSactionNo. 18.tothe
Rtpoiro ........................ 33
inks; thence$; 42Vz dag. E. place of beginning, cont•in·
Service ......... ............. 311
3 ,~h-.nd· • &amp;Wo link s; thehnce s. ing£27 ac':~, ·
service r=.e. ................ soo
3 ~ ag. ., · 7 c a1n1 8 8
xcept • legal highwaya.
Information Education
·
Iinke; thence S. 3'.4 dog. W..
Being the iamo real eototo
s
h 0 1 hi
20 chains 42 linQ; thence conveyed to, l:fence JonM
c · ars PI) ............. 642
N. 88\o\ deg. W., 34 chaine end Ethel Jon• by deed re~::::.:~;~:';.111 .....3.332
31 Unite; thence N. 3'.4 dog. corded in Volume 199, page
Prl In
·
E., 41 cholno 741inko to the 233 of the Molgo County
nt g .... ................... 83
place of beginning, contain · Deed Recorda.
PYblic Employing 132.17 ocreo, more or
The property In Por..tllldl
3. 7/UJ
lees in old Section 18 . Being is located on P,echfork Roed
c
the same premises known as·
Road 19t epproxima·
ompenution .,.... .. .....628
3 .066
tho Adonijoh Smith Farm tely YJ to 7 110 mit• ftom
f.!~~·
and t"-' uma as conveyed Route33onthelllfthendskle
o·11b uroomento ......41 •981
by Geor- Titus. Shariff of , of tho road.
.
u•
Total Aecalpt1 Over/
Moigo County to Wolter E.
Porcol1 I • II opproloed at
IU ~-·) D'11b
2 00
HyEII by .deed dated No- *27,500.00 end cannot be
n• " .... ( 0 • 61
vembor 4, 1884. end rfi· told for teoo than two·thlrdo
~hltr Rnoncing Sourtea
corded In Volume 64. page oi the opproioed volue. The w•a):ln "
683. ReCord of Deodo of property located In · tho viiTpera-t 91 ·
Molgo County, Ohio; ·. EX· logo of Middleport. wHI be
rn
• n ............ 22 •506
CEPTING from. the obove oold 1-eret-'from
pro·
p
Othar'A-.,ta
............ 642
~
_,
Total other Financin\
.
deocrlbad proparty a trion- arty on Sellobury Twp. The
s
•u )
3
148
gular otrip of 7 acres. out of property In Soll1bury Twp.
OVfCII ' • • ......
•
the S.E. Cornortobauoedu will be oatd u • """·
Total of Aec. ana Other.
an outlettotheBOacrefarm
TEAMS OF SALE: The
Sou,_ Ow/(UndorJ. Dilb.
odJ'olnlng which io owned by oucceolfut · purch. .r. a
and Other U•• ....... 3,142
Fund Caah Balon.,.,
John W. Carr11on; and EX- ooon 11 hio bid io accepted
J
1 1989
2 a
CEPTING AND RESERV- ohall be required to depooh
on.,.ry '
""' •4 II
lNG ott cool, oil and goo on the doy of ..ra. in coih·or Fund Cooh Bolonco,
Dac. 3 1 • 1989 ........ 6,128
uncllrlylng the oame with by cartlflad chock. Jlll""blo
•A••- for Encumbran-.
tharighttomineandopwete to the Sheriff of Melp
D
311989
1117
County, Ohio, 10% of the
••·
Fuiiiii"""
omount ., oucll occepted Granfo:
Public Notice

r......

!:

Ohio

Business Services

~-:ublicNotice

~":l:.'.rn .......... 22.11062 t;:::;:~;::;::==:

GUN S.HOOT

~.........

':=,:*cu-l ... ,~ls.1•

UCINI
PilE DEPT•

TOIII o f -· and Othar
lourm Owr/(Utldlr! Dlob.
onc1....., u-........8.229
Fllllll C.~ lat-.
J--11. 11 . .....1.481
Fund C.h loiMaa,
o.c. 1118 ...... 11.1118
11-- for Enoumbran-.
Dec. 31, 1111 ........... 1117
I -'lfy till folowlng , .
pon to be -rect. to the
beat of ;ny knowledge:
Roy At., Holler
Flocel Agent
221 w. 2nd Bt~WR
Pon!•CII'· OH . 411788
WH!Iam A. Wlckllno
3-1-88 '
2nd Street
Pomor..,, Oh . 411789
(31 20, 1tc

EYRY·

.

12

SAT. NIGHT
Fectwy challo

a.., Shet.., Clftlr

PUBLIC NOTICE
The VHI1111e of Middleport
wiiiiiCCIPt oaaled billa unti 3
P.M. April 9. 1990 It the
mroyon offlco, 237 .Race St.•
Middleport, Ohio for the fol·
lowing .... ipmont:
J
1-1978 Caaa uckhoe
Thla aqulpmo]nt ,.., be In·
s pectetl et the vlltlllfovaraoo
at Park ond High St. betwean 8 A.M. 8nd 4 P.M .
The vllego reoorvn tho
right to rejact: eny or 1H bidl"
ond the right to walvo any informltlon In bidding.
Fred lfolfmon, Mayor
V1111111e of Middleport
(31 20. 27 2tc
.

1

2

· 1n_M1mory

_,

..

Total
Dloburoomento &lt;....... 1.900
Total R-pto Over/
1Unc1M) Diob........... 1.800
0"'- Fln.,clng Sour(U...:)
·
Total of Rea. ond Other
.....,_ Dvor/lUndor Oiob.
Ill d. Other U1• ....... 1,100
Fund Clllh Bllan.,.,
January 1, 11118 ..... 2.800
Fund C•h llllenca, ·
Doc. 31.1118 ......... 4.100
TOTAL MEMORANDUM
ONLY

LOTIONS - STICKERS
Cal Sus• C...IIICin, 742·1771

3-t2-10-1

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Roger Hysell

CIIE$111, 01110

11. 124, , _ . , Olio

JO'S GIFT SHOP
SYIACUSI,

•o

l&amp;llowe Plua Shep)

IS NOW OPEN
FOI IUSiiUSS.

IN STOCK&lt;oCefnont ~h
Boxft •t.mDry Flower

V•• oCi"' llrd lo\ho
•Cemtnt Bird llthl
•Fountain llrd lith• • Peue
.D••· Froge. Angtlt •n,d ·
Oth• Y•d Orn.mlftll ·

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·

MOVAL .
*FIREWOOD

•

BILL SLACK

992-2269
EVENINGS

992~592$ !11_5 /t ....

USED APPU411CIS
tODIYW&amp;aum
·~HER5-UOO

up

DRYER$-$69 up
REFRIGERATOR5-SIOO up

RAIGIS-Gas·Eitc.-$125 up
FIEIZEI$-$125 up

MIC«O OVU$-$79 •P

lEN'S APPUAIICE
SEIVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Aaou fNM Pat OHio

POMROY, 01110

10/30/'11 tfn

........ 1,1311
........ 2.41111

In Memory of
JUNE C .. CREMEANS
· who paaMCI _ _,
March 20, 1188
hclly mlaecl and •
lovwd ~Ia wit. and

·~· :le

fo,.,.,

.....

Wif8 lVI Crwm•n•

..

~niPi0¥*"""""'93 .

,..,.....

lletw-.t.............. 3,740

It
ve.t.rdey
alnoeonly
you
late ua. It' • atll hard
to bear.
We love you
In our ha.ta.

'

~.......................... 33
llenrloa ........... ........ 2.211
hrvJceFaa .......... ...... 8oo
1 - - n Edllcetion
........ ahlpoj ............. 938
,...,.. • .Ex....- .... 11,3341
Aclvortla..gMd
.

Comp ..oetlon ............521

Ptoduota/MIWWa
for .......................711
Olhar ....................... 3.HO

TOIII
OJ. . . . . _ . ......49,1111

Total fh Ill IIIli OWr/
lUnder! Ololl ... ....C1ol,l181
Other Flnendng Sourc.
I,

Alee Tre•••lnlt•

985-4422
MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAIR

ElWIN
CONSTRUCTION

· IEPAII
L_..atY...,L....

.......,.,,, Olt.

I'AATS AND IERVICE
For Molt 2 ond 4-cycie
en gin•
Stock Porto for
HomaiHa, W•ao!-or,
Tacumoeh. lrlggo •
•
Stratton.

PH. 992·3922

FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

CHESTER, OHIO

Custom Built

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Home1,
Remodeling &amp;
Repair Work

992-5335., 915·3561

985-3365

Acrou F.- Pat Offkt

217 E. s.c. ·-•Y
POMROY, 01110

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"At l101onttltle Prices"

Pl. 949·2101
or let. 949•2160'
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

::~~:~~M SIDING
· INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
llew • - Wt
. "FrH Eltlmetea"

Pl. 949·2101
or 111. 949-2160

311!90/tfn

SE~ICE ·

Wt· can r~ IMd rt·

radiators tmd
hlatll' care~, Wa can
also acid boll and rot!
out rlfliaton. Wt also
rtpair Gas Tonlts.
mr1

. PAT HIU FOlD
992-219&amp;

RUTUND nRE
SALES and
SERVICE
742-3081
•Tire Salea

•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change Lube
•Brake Work

a.

MAIN St., IIIILAND .,

Middleport,

1-15-'!0-lfll

FURNACE
FURNACE
FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE

PlUMIING &amp;

.New Loaofionl
161 North Socoetl
Mitltlloporf, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE .

w, C1rry Fi1hing luppli•
Billa Here

IUSIIISS PffONI
16141 "1·6550

992'·53:15., 915·3561

Paot OHa

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
=~=~:kino

g~!~~ ~~mbl"u
E~lor

Pointing
.
«FREE ESTIMATES I

Mape. dr.wlngs. envlr'onmentol deta, other pertinent
information dewalopad by
the Trtnoportatlon Depertment, end anv written commentoracolllad a a ra111t of
coordlnotion with State Aa·

DOZER
SITEWOIK • ~OADS
CLEAIING

N~WLAND
ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sand, Stone-Dirt

992·6215

16141 667-327"1

IOUFCM,

Aeareetktn.

lnd

Pfenning Agenci•. Federal
Agancla. Local P\rbltc Offlcillo and Aganol•. and Pub·
lie AdviOCNV Groupe wNI be
mode avollabia to the public
far vlowlng ot the tranaportatlon Department' a Olotrict
Offl.,., MuoJ.dngtum Orilla.
M8rlatta, Ohio.
Anyone wtahlng to IUbmlt
1 written ltldem. .t or ••·
hlbit aonc•nlng thla project
may dti 10 by -ontlng It at
the heorlng or melting H to
the Ohio Department of
Tronlportatlon Dlotrict Deputy Dlractor, P. 0. lox
IIIII. Marietta. Ohio 46 7110.
The flnal Dote for lllbmioalon of ltatamonta will be
Morch 30. 11110.
Bernord I . Hurot. P. E.
.Director of Tron1portatlon
(31 13, 20. 2tc

. ..

11

FREE ESTIMATE8

1

palttllt~t.

~."; :0~~~··
HAVE IEHIIIICES

ann ·, ,• ...

16141915 4110
........... - ...-

._, ......

1....

~===t=1=·1=·~··
EUMHO.

GIIG BAILEY·
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

Stop In and S..

DALE HILL
PAT HILL

992·6873

,., s. 11tlrtl, Mltlllepert

20f Settth 4th St.
Oh.

•...,.,f,

992-6421

"LOW IICOIIIIIOIII"

·i0-1

1 -12-'110-1 mo.

COUN*Y
MOIIU
HO. PARK

Stop by for an inrerview, or phone Sally
Gloeckner, D.ON., at (614) 992-6472, and let us
sh~ you that aU nunlng homes are 001 alike.

OVERBROOK CENTER
333 Page Street, ~iddleport, Ohio 4~760
..
EOE

l'

. 1·12-'a.lfll

IACIU
G\1,1 CWI
GIN SHOOT
EVIIY SI.AY
StW11W1&amp;tiP&amp;
FtatiDt v Challlcl
12~ugeOnlv

'

.no.

SilEO
PIZZA

LOWEST PIICES
IIGIIEST QUALm
FilE. LCKAL D1LM1Y

•Mobile Home
Rent11l1
•Lat Rental•

, •••,.,, ow.

..

'AI

Qooo RotH
T.L.C.
27 Yro. Exp. •
Aat.ollooe

9tl·7479

'I

991·6110

S.ilar Cltl- anti

· lt. n 11ert1t ••

.'

A GrHt Combination"Quillity and ltasonable Prices"
WE GO TIE EXTIA IIlLI.-••

,..,.

Our rapid growth as the area's newest and fl .
nest Skilled Long Term Ca.re Facility has
generated opportunities for RN's, and LPN's,
to become a part of a responsive, well managed Health Care Delivery Team.
Come for a visit, talk to us about your ex peri·
ence, .and we will talk to you about Overbrook's coml'edtive wages and benefitS offered on whar is tr-uly' a "Stare of the Art"
Nursing Faeility.
""

..

I and J CONSTRUCTION

llmiiOIIDIIIOI
Toke tho Jltlln out of

''

IISIIBta PIIOtf(
16141 992·:7.!li4

~~

PAll'::·: co.

·•

Your Phone

• . 4-16-H-tfn ~:;~p~;m~•;o~,~~~-~~:lU:~G;ran~t~A;·~~~!
·
·30-'19-Z mo.
NOWN~YCMU

Public N.otice

·l

36629 517

4-i&amp;-16-tfn

•VINYL BIDING

'

4-25-tfn .: ...

1·11-'lt-tfn

INSULATION
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS

ALL MAlES

•Mobile Home

...... 27.410 '

. AUTO &amp;TRUCK .
'.
. REPAIR
PH. 992-5612
or 9CJ2·7121

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE

J&amp;L
Wlattt Speel•l 0•

.

*LIGHT HAULING

Buy From Uo &amp; Save!

... 21,47&amp;

................... 711
...... 1,707
.... 3,321
........ 34.142

Garage

1-1

card or Thinks

for' helpina me
throuah it ell.
May God be with
YQU aiWiys.
·
, Har1111n
.
Redman

6 SesSions............................~........
S12.00
.
12 StsliOfll,,,,,,,,,,,,,,............,,,,,,,,,, s20.00
1.5 Stssi0111 •••••••••••••• ~...... ~ ••••••••••••• S:2 5.00
FIRST VISIT FlEE - POSSIIL Y MolE

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
~FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

CAU

ow.

1 Session ........~....................~.......... &gt;•3.50

,

Re11dentlal &amp;
Commercial

1~T~J'.?A~~~~~·T':tl

" ............... '· '
1

949-2161
2-1-'IIH 110.

Stricktly lnferOIItl

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

b.i1d,obutoo
oolnnoTh-nbt
lao! 'thanf
•
I
·
, , 0 Mite 0
the purilh•• prloa 1htll be
due ond JIIIY•bla to tt. lh•Iff of Molt~~ County, Ohio,
whhln thirty (30) day1 from
the dote of conflnnetton
oalo, Tho purch•ar oNII be
r-uirad to· ~ lntar•t on
~
~-·
the unpoid boi.,Cf ot · the
rota of 10%parannum from
thedtteofoalotothedataof

FREE ESTIMATES

leatlftt, Coollnt~,
lefrlileratlon
Service

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEAR lNG
. CONTRACT SALES .
LEGAL COPY NO. 90-350
In ecconlanca with the
provlolono of Chopter 1111 11
of tho Ohio Aavloed Cocll
the Director of the O~io Oapertment of Tranoportotion
will hold o pUblic hHring ot
1:00 P.M. Tu•doy. March
27, 1990. at the Villege
Ovmn•tum, 320 E. Main
St"'lo Pomeroy, Ohio for
,tha purpose ofhNrlng ltlt•
mente on the proPOMd lmprovemento of a portion of
State Aoutll No. U. S. 33
and a portion of Stote Route
No. 124 In Mlltll Co11nty.
. PROPOSED, THE
IMPROVEMENT OF

MFR

IEPAII

-HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

NQTICE OF.
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On ~orch 7, 1980, In tt.
Melt~~ C011nty
Probata
Court. Caae No. 21111111, Eerl
·A. Grimm, 11334 AaclwOOd
Rood,
Columbuo.
OH .
~3229 woe appointed Ex•
cutor of tt. •tat• of Harald
B. Grimm, .-...... late of
848 Broeclw-. Atclna OH
-·
. •
.
411771 .
Robart E. Buck,
,
Probata·J11dge
Leno K. Naaalroad, Clark
(3)13. 20. 27, 3tc

VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHO.
IY THE .
RECONSTRUCTION OF
. THE ROADWAY.
And baing moro fully deICribed • folows: ·
lleginnlng ot a point In the
centerline of exilting Stlta
Route No. u.. S. 33 .,d
State ·Aoute No . .124; oaid
point baing 0 .07 of o milo.
mOre or 1111. aa measured in
a northW•terly direction
from • it1 Junction With
State Route No. 124 (Brldlle
Street~; thence in a S:.:Ju'theatertv dlrect&amp;on llong extoting Stete Route No. U.S .
33 ond Stota Aoutl No. 124
•nd • new 11ignment, 1
tangent end a curve to the
r!IJht to ito propo•d junction with Stet:e Route No.
124: thence in a weoterty di·
rectlon along a tangent (ea·
toting State Route No: U. S.
331 to • point and there ter·
ininete. Said point of termination being 0.1 1 of e mila,
more or t.e, 11 me.ured In
1 watorly direction from Ht
txieting junction with Sbtt
Route No. .124. · Sold d•
ocrlbad tmpr0&lt;1ome~t hevlnft a total length of0.18 ofo
m le, mora or lese.
PROPOSED. THE
IMPROVEMENT OF
STATE ROUTE NO . 12ol .
SITUATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF POMROY,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
BY THE
RECONSTRUCTION OF ..
THE· ROADWAY .
And bolng mort fuHy · deocrlbacl • followo:
· Beginning at • point in the
contarlina of exi1tlng State
Aoutll No. 124, uld point
belnget Mojunctlon wMhthe
lmprovocl State Route No.
U. S. 33; thence in an • •terty dlr'.ctlon on new align.
ment, o curve to tho right
111d
,to • point in
of State
and
thoro
StateR-pto
OoWmment ....33.1100
'Total
800 I:~~~~~··
point of tarContracto:
.. ...... .. • ·
0.11 of a
•- 1c1
1 800

........... lei., IUtl...t,

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

6:30 P.M• ·

Public N alice

1

lEW~

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

:n.

SUN'S UP TANNING

ilew••LWrlt1lll

ROOFING

.:::...W:,r;eni ..............

I would like to
express my
thanks to all
those who
brought food and
a feeling of love
and the many
flowers at such a
trying time in
life. Apin thanks

CD

Call or visit you nearest
Central Trust off~e for· details today.

for the ume.
Aloo the fo-lng raat ,..
ohuetad In the T-nCounty and !hat• ofo·
and In ..,td Section
2. Aonva13 of the

·-P• .......... ..

The Bedford and Lodi History
.G roup will meet Friday at 7 p.m.
TUESDAY
,
at theBurUnghamModernWood-1
will be provided.
Township Trustees on Tuesday
MIDDLEPORT .;_;There will
men Hall.
,
at 7: 30 p.m. at the town hall.
.Mr. and Mrs. Michael Davis
be an abundant living senilnar
SYRACUSE - Tlie Third Wed- .
Slides will be shown and
(Sherry
Tackett.). Rutland, are
nesday Homemakers of Syra- ' ·
through Wednesday at the Bradinterested parties are asked to
RUTLAND -The 1989-90
bring pictures or other history announcing the birth ofthetr first
fo~ Church of C!!rlst. Dean Mills
cuse will meet Wednesday at io
sports banquet wlll be held
child, a ~aughter. Em Uy Gall on
will speak each evening at 7:30 'Tuesday at 6:311 p.m. at the
a.rn. ai the municipal building: .
related items.
Nov. 5 at Holzer Medlcal .C enter.
p.m.
Refreshments will be served
Member~ are to bring necessary ··
Rutland
Elementary
School.
'-The Infant weighed · eight
lteiTiS for stuffed toys.
by ihe Junior Camp of :the
pounds and 14 ounces and was ·21
Modern Woodmen of America.
POMEROY
.The Ladles
WEDNESDAY
Inches long.
.
Auxiliary Fraternal Order of
MEIGS -The Ohio Valley
RUTLAND - - J'hP Leading
Maternal grandparents are
Eagles 2171 will meet Tuesday at
Creek Conservancy District will
Church or God, Route 50 East,
Mr. and · Mrs. Fred Tackett, 7'p.m. All members are urged to
hold its monthly meeting on
will hold. a revival Wednesday
Vincent; and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie attend.
·
Wednesday at 9 a.m.
through
'Sunday
at
7:30
nightly
.
(Yvonne) Whittington,
evartgelist
wlll
be
Joe
The
In front of the welfare office at Middleport.
RACINE -The American Red
MIDDLEPORT -Group 2 of
Beasley .
the Coats building. Donations
Paterna] grandparents are Ha- the Middleport Presbyterian
Cross Bloodmobile '!ill be at
from the church of baked goods rold ·Davis, Columbus; and Mrs.
Church will meet at' the home of ,
Southern High School on WednesREEDSVJLLE .,.. Tl)e Eastern
and candl.e s wlll be appreciated. Freda Davis, Bidwell.
Elizabeth Burkett ·on Tuesday·at
day from 10 a.m.' to 2 p.m.
High SChool Winter Spotts BanProceeds will go toward .the
Maternal great grandmother 7: 30 p.m. Martha Anderson will
'
quet will be held Marcb 21 at 6: 30
•
proposed church annex.
Is Mrs . Anna Welch, Middleport. have the study book and Kathryn
at the
' school. Each
RAClNE - The Southern AtThe class Is planning a trip to
Miller will have d~votlons .
hletic Boosters will discuss the
Is to ortl~g.tllll:
the Middleton Doll Factory In
.
winter
sports banquet on Wed·
and
a
April.
.
'.
nesday
at. 7 p.m. 'tt t
POMEROY
-The
Pomeroy
The annual white eleJ)hant
Committee
will
Sesquicentennial
auction sale was held.
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Refreshments were served by
Contributions
of$300
to
the
Gift
JTPA office in Pomeroy. The
the hostess and Betty Denny.
public l.s invited to attend.
. Attending were Rosemary to the Yanks, and $100 to the
Lyons,' Ruth Ebersbach. Pooch cancer fund were made when the
POMEROY - The SoutheastBrewer, Beulah White, Elizabeth Racine American Legion Post
ern Ohlo'Rabblt Breeders AssociSlaven, Nora Jordan, Dorothy 602 met recently.
Plans discussed Included the ' allan will meet Tuesday, 7:30
Evans, Betty Gilkey, . Lillian
annual
Easter egg hunt, the p.m. at the Meigs County ExtenDemosky and Betty Denny.
delegate to Buckeye Boys State, sion Office. Anyone Interested In
and a summer camp week for the raising rabbits is invited to
local bOY scout troop.
attend.
Association Is a statewide profesAny•veteran Interested In joinCHESTER - There will be a
sional organization with more Ing the post ls welcome.
meeting of· the
special
than 1,7!5o members. lt maintains
standards of education, ethics
and professlona~.competency necessary to meet the require·
ments of the profession and
expectations of the general '
., ' Enjoy the flexibility and liqllidity of a CD
publiC.

Dr. W. David Krawsczyn of
Pomeory ·has returned from the
Ohio Veterinary Medical Associ·
alton's 106th annual convention
held recently In Columbus ..
Nearly 3,500 people attended
the convention which Included
four days of continuing education
seminars featuring exjlerts from
around the country in the field of
pet animal health, food animal
and equine medicine, public .
heal til. emergency medicine and
practice management. Veterinary technicians and hospital
B~· NELLIE PARKER
staff members also participated
Donna Stearns, Centerville.,
In special programs.
·
Va., spent a weekend with her
Highlights of the conveil tlon parents, Marguerite and Delbert
Included seslllons on proper nutrition for pets, advanced surgi- Stean11.
Ruby Burke has r~urned .. to
cal technlquel, advancements in her borne after an extended visit
farm herd health management io her son, Bill, and hll wife, In
and updatel on public health Cambridge.
'
lsluel JUCb aa nblel prevendon.
Mr. and ' Mrs. Joe Poole and
Dr. Billy E.' Hooper, execuUve Will v!lllted Mr. and Mrs. James
director of the Assocatin of
Nally, Nancy, Mary, Patty, and
.American Veteriiiiii'Y Medical
Jimmy.
Copllegel, was the convention's
Cora and Samuel Mlcbael,
1rief aote speaker. Dr. Donald sttversvllle, were guests at the
Nolh ot'WCN»ter was Installed as
Poole-Parker borne on March
OVMA p~e~ldent.
11.
Tbe Ohio VeterinarY Medical

NOTICE OF AUCTION
Notloa to llereby
the IIDaod of acllloMion olthe
Malga Local lcllooJ Diatrict,
M*t11 County. Ohio, wll of.
far for ulo It public Miction
It Metgi High School. Pom•O'J. Ohio. comrnencing
at 7:00 P.M., on April 12,
1180, the following d•
ocrlbacl penonat P&lt;OJIIIftY:
s.v.nil lett of A -

gtv..,-

Public-Notice

Busy Bee class meets
The March meeting of the Busy
Bee Class of the Middleport First
Baptist . Church was held at the
home of Lillian Deii'!Osky.
· The meeting opened with
prayer by Pooch Brewer,
president.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Demosky from the .:·Dally
Bread" entitled "Life's
Seasons."

of INII.,.,. 11nleoo
lllktiNiJIIICI ... paW In
oltlhllll "-• frGm the ....
of'tt.Nia.
J-M.-Iaby
lllerlfl of ...... C011nty
Oou..•M.CA t t - 1o&lt; Pl. 131 20. 27; 141 3. 10, 17,
241tc

...

_..:o....;.,.,....,-•~------...;.--------...

Middleport 'Literary Club meets
Mrs. Danny Thomas reviewed
the book, " Fatal Shore," by
Robert Hughes at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held at the home of Mrs.
Eileen Buck.
In her review, Mrs. Thomas
noted that Australia was ·called
the fatal shore because that was
where the English sent their
convicts. The book stated that In
im Englas had so many convicts that they established an

Public Nalice

Merc:h 20. 1990 '

My,

Pomeroy-Midcl~

'

POMEIOY AND IDUPORT'S ONLY
LOCAUY OWNID PIZZA SHOP • .
Pizzo-Subs~$alads-Daily

.

Sptdals
992-2221
'

·-

�'
·,

Sentinel .

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

44
•

Apartmem

51

for Rent

3 AnnoullCIInenta

m·N-

Household

''
it.? '"ra7r.~- •
tifi,, !' . . . . . . , . -'
-.maaJI.
j

(Joodl

_,...,...,...,,_.,
__
lor"'.................. _.......,.
I Will ""' ... I 4
OOiilleci.MI

!of..,

PI

Lodr

P-nr.

o.nu.n.n.

call, DlrNI ......,, 114..J'JS.a31.

4 ...... . , . _ , . . , ..... lin'
fumilllocl. Ll P - . Prtvoto.

Giveaway

t2IJO ..... -.!h. 114-11~.

---·

I ..,._ Poadlo, moll, At. I
Box 310, Clolllpatlo f«ry, 3
mi._ ... Rtdmond · A~
~112 ,...

7

..

PICK£"'
, .,FUIINITUM
.....

~

.._

.., •....,., ... ,_~- ...- -

..,,.,.

Col......

"They're lovebirds, lady.
. They're supposed to..fight."

lpm, ~• 1117.

Pupploo
11
honle.

6

~\1.
173 to good
tp.m.

Lost &amp; Found

11

Help Wanted

Lool: Block · ohort-,.lrod moll

lion

11 $11.41/hr.
For ....... ooollcallon lnlo. coli

7 doya . .. m.'10p.m.
2111, En 101.

1~1-117-

loll A-.1 OWft - · IIIII oo
ond rolol'-, lund
iodl 114-1112-7110.

.........aa_,..,,... __

&amp; VIcinity
All Yord Salol Mutt Bo Plld In

AdYonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Carporotlon hM • IUI1-IImo
Oho doy bofaro ,,_ od II 10 nm. oplllohlft
-hog Alolo Sllndoy odHion • 2:00 p.m. tor -lour honoio ot Mlddlolon
Frtdoy. Mondoy odhlon • 2:00
Eolotto,
moluo
I -by
p.m. Sa1ur•y.
....
,. Yaoltntl..,lllo
to -r.
with , . _ witlo _..,._..

8

Public Sale

.. Jive
In-lot . . illy
wfthln
I "lldlntllf

&amp; Auction

ooltlnJ, , _ . ... 11+441-n41

for 1n0Ni Into; 11 lion.
Wor!od
In 11M Tawn .,. Now
, _ booking -Jono. or·
Dllienee m•kn lhe difference. Haven, • a.. N WM• end
LJ~onood Oh~ J!.oni!'Cky, Wool Wnt•
w... rr........
_...,, 111111 bo willing to
Yltglnlo, :104-TT.H711.
Wlnlar Auction lotVIce, 11 yra ......... Will . . . . -lior
OXptl'i&lt;lnco~=nc:"!!, llcio,... to Tawn EtnplopM. SalOl)' ...,
ood ond
In wool VIr· aalllble. PIMIIil •nd I'MUIM
fo: Tawn of Now ~. lor
glr:-1• •nd Ohio, 304-27'3-3447.
217,- ........ wv.
.
Rick ,_,_ AUCIIon Compony

9

wamedtoBuy

18 Wanted to Do

Eloctrlc wood plant . .....
Ml-lll'&amp;l 1ftor 5:00p.m.
Junk Ara wtth or wtthaut
matoro. Coil Lar'l' Ll..,y 114,....303.

Qllftl

Pro 1140 qulfto. AII)'"-Nion.
cHii Pold. Coli 114-tt:z-1117 or

AND HOTHIH6

AAf'f'ENS TO 111M ..

-··-,-,... ... _

Ulllhloo pd. Ill Ill .........

~7p.:::m:::·:_..,..,........,..-,..,..,.....,.

32 Mobile"Hom"

:JJnt1 dlbl1,
Chrtltllln womtn
to do bobpllllng II my

.81+441o

11110 DonYillo t4r72, 2 BR, 2 lull
botloo. Talll - · Oil fumllon, CA, dlohw-. rodl
..,.oplnnlna. , Voluod
11
127
,IJCJO..
lolling
tar
···-111 oo8 1111 "' 114 411 mz.

Toro

Knopl

:r;::~·"'.:;.-...:rudU;:!~

45

homo with 1112 tXPondod LR,

446-1013.

Furnished

Rooms

Hciifta Courf. 114-

- · 114-·'11112.

UA TIM Sanrlco. T""""',
ttlmmlna, ohrubo, . a · trt1

Roomoforror!·-armor!h.
ttontng 11 1120/mo. Ootlloi
Hatol.lt4-14HMO.
Stooping ......... wlh -ldng.
Aloo trollar opoco. All lloak-upo.
Coli on• 2:00 p.m., 30+773-

lllt,-WV.

,.,..or
Pruning -a-. ""'
4tl 1411

46 Space for Rem
1 room olflco lor rwr!. StOO por
""""• All illll- lnctudod. Coli

Employment Services

Help Wanted

t m - - Von.

111!10 ......, tlolbod.
0111.

MUIICal

57

alii e!ll CurNftt Affair

Miami Vice Tubbs

to prove hie old Now York
cop partner is clean. Stereo.

e
e Ill Mama'• Family

Acceilorlea

=

. . . . TraMIIIII

10 .. ,

8 1 1 1 1 - TOIIight

'

ltliA¥"HJeopardyl E;l

•••t
tMihow ... II+
' I 4I7N2U, Ill
I

..

IIJ) Ct0nllre
·
ID Night Coufl
7:35 (I) Ianford And Son
1:00 Cll MOVII: F-llj Jtowell

Campers&amp;
Motor

c.;,;-.

lllolt,

Hom•

....

.h
1011-No'o-ah.- 1171 Zlft. HoiiiiiJ polnt. SAGO. ltwt7-1.
-MICJO. ·
- with """""'
oft•
114-Col
· In
·8:00p.m.
- oholpL
1177 Grind Pill ¥1, ond
111N211.
...... - - • rldolo Willi :104171-1401.
tm ~ 2211. Salt
c-lnod,
.....
. . 1ul bOth
• . ~ 30+27Mtll 114.....771 oft•lp.m.
"•"; .
• •• ••apl111 ~'· AC;
dillon.
iiAftlrig, $2000.
- · 114-7•2413.
IJO!Iil -

:"'::00::~::.=00:::...--""------,-

Fann Equipment

1174

Ko-h ,,..,.,., 331
CUm- molar, aotid,
311447S-Df21 ... 171-

(2:00)
8 (J) 1B Metlock D

• Ill •

(I) WI!O'I 1111 .
lou? Tony lies in order to

get out of 1 ·dinner dale wHh
a prolesaor. [R) E;J
Cll C!) Nova Look at how
Chin811e polhics bolh
promoted and 2!&amp;vented

advancement 'II

I!Dl

i'

the mountains lor a lost
tive_:year-old.' Cl
[l) MOVIE: Eddie And

Thl Crul.... (PG) 12:00)

111\ PrimeNewa

2 ..., ...,_ ,,.,..,, MOO.

0 Murder, She Wrote

114141-S..

Prediction Murder'

r 11

Ill Clluteh II1NM 1111ttioll
=Buill Eye
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Qune Of Dltblo
11:45)
8:30. Ill • (I) The

with-

c. .....

ltW.1-.

Crofto, Wooden NoYOitloo. Ex·

-td

clllonl l..,omol
AcMFII2.

501 811 2335

Merchandise

Houtehold
Goocla

· tiO,OOO'o.
Wool - 111tt.
Low
112P-noy.
1317 o~

•••p.m.

IU2 Manto Corlo,

*•

VI,

~~:·r~

1111.00. Lompo, ....-. ...
I rW. llonllllr ,., .......
low • $11.1111. c.- _,, -

- --, l:::oo m-

·SZ.IIJO flfm. II

711.

tiJU Col\'!,~1::· Edhlon,
PI, N, · AC, AIM'M IINrJO.
atUioo, lilt, IN&gt;*, lOlly

-n

wl-. -

tfrM,puJoo
811*

lrll-.

........

with

tiJU Oklo Iloilo U~':"hom.
4-doclt AC, PI, P aaollonl

- .......1--.

.oondiil...
lunomiil.

_.,.ott.
114-1112

_. 112

1114
:1422. et.vy• Ctonott., - -

31 Homel for Sale

Lololoc- 2.1 onlloo, AI. z.
holidoYO. OUotlllcotlono: tlu 3 b1droam .._loeatldat 212 - . . . , Chopol Ad., wotor
Mulborry Ave. ~ to oDhoqt
· compuler
bo I n
- good
114-IIII-U74~
hNfth,
nperlenc~~
or ond - l. lold by .. onlobJi!,
wllllnQ ID
the ........... ldMI oflfoe ...- or NO. room. 1724.
Coli tar on oppolnlmont, 114- Colt 114-911-411 I, 114-II:Z-31JIJ O.J. White Ad., 2 acrr. aadld
448-REAO.
. or I14-II2-G71. •
bultdl,.
olio
EARN MONEY Aooillng Boalotl 3 tt.drooma, IMXtl . . , 171 l10,toer. 114-245 II
$30,000/vr. lncomo potontlol. South l'oullh, llliiil'-' (nMr
Doldo. (1) IOI.el7.ectll0 Ell. y. ~ High). 131,000. 114- 36
ReaiEitale
10111. '

t• 1114.

accidant with a iormer
employer. E;l
Cll C!) Novo EKamlne the

tiding,

...
CIA capt. St11mer
Clllnll"', 114 441 ..04 or 304-'

_____

11711-2211.

.......

. •

Aon'l TV SaMoo, opooloilllnti

.. Zonllh .. IIIOiil
oppJionoo toplllrl, .WV
.....~ Ololo 11+441o

'

~-

'·

• THeY &amp;.Y 11'"5AL.WA'tS
OA.RKE6T BEFORE:
THE DAWN ...

0

SO IF 'rOLJ'I&lt;E: 601Ne:
OUT' BERJRE 61')( O'CI..OCK.

mustc' s hOttest stars are

featured live.

9:30

~~

llalory ar aoblo tool ..,.,..
....................od_::l;
..._ and .........

'

'-~- ...... ;, ,,

10:00 Cll·700 Club Wlllt Pet
Riab 1rt1on

e (J)

1B Mldnlgltt Cllter A
cop commits suicide on the
air during Jack's radio

c: ....... ...

broadcast. [RI Q
(J) ........ ,.oftlgflt
• Ill • (I) lhlrtyiiOIII""IIIIItli*lfngiO
Nancy finds a ·klndred spirit
in a felloW cancer patient. E;l

COME ON IN

YOU

BEEN OUT HERE

TH' HOUSE AN'

Cll Frantllno Broken

GOTO BED!!

promiee&amp; by 011 companies
and government lad to the
Big Spill. E;J
l!l On Till LIM

-lrog
....,. within
10 A 35. 114-

eIIJ) till
Twlllgllt Zone
Evanlng Newt

..,._, p_., In

Oalllo ar
llolgl Couooly -~h llllinl

. . -11~7211.
Jail CoKhlo lo tn1n
lnofl'flduoll wnh dloobUHioo In
octuol jobo. lntlflftlllant IIIII limo

@Newt

10'.30 (J)

.

11:00Cillcorecrowl Mrs. King

iCJl 18eCDNewae(J) 111
.1!2)

1no-,.
_..lion

-lnlonlloillon

-r.

Job Huntf..? o *Ill? Wo
tooln pooplo tor 'lobo • Auto
l l e a h a· n l o e ,
Aoaount

'"&amp;!';.::'putlnt
8poelollolo,
.,..

.............. --.()oj.

......

~

T. . ' ' - . ....

llullouloe
M

trW

.................... HurM
Akllo, lloclolnlllo, Pof1il!lllo,
It - l w and W1ldars. ~
tor
- Zl,tor
- Colt TrJ.Counlj
boglnrilng
.......
1110.
M1 r-.1 Adull Center .. 1·
A """"" t/1 lloto
.... . . -to PlY ""tnlliLig

For-=
· , 112
both,
-- - · ·-CloiHDolll
..
_ 2-.114-441-1117.
_

....

,.,...
~"=-. ~ ':\':
446-17zi,
m t.

. . -Jon.-·-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOI;

11+11111

tn 011112 aft I, Pllln IMII

lll'flct..t

....-y ..... ;lb;tJ ·;.MIG
f1WII sese.
.

In Qolllpallo. Will
•• on ~Me~ mibwt Wldl 8111111
down Ji&amp;z=..ilftL 114-446-'1172,
114-441-1-.

.,. .., trr..,....., .........

.-..

IAIII-YR Cot
. loaltol
- · ( I ) . . . . . . . Ill. Y·
4111.
I tf•
P.O. ._ 414, Paint

oJM~piHr.ll(llllllw

-~

r_.,wv ....

ASTRO-ORAPH

_In_,

'17,000. -727-1011.
HouM In Wntaft on - rJI ci1M4n
:JRI. 110), ......... ,_loom,

.--............
_.......,_
.........
=
..... - .... ..,.,
tt

ioo.elr-.

.

42 Mobile Hom•
for Rent

2 IIJMGIII ........... for

I

32 Moblll Homll
for Sill

Qlllll ,..., 11..... . , Tltn'l In

be atlrecfed to you beeluee ttoay'H llkl
your alyte. This lhould be especially
lrtll Of members Of IIMI appoeitl

==·10 (Oot. :M Nou. 221 Time Ia too
you

to ICIUIInder today.
Sh11t11 It witll people you ttUiy love IIIII
want to be wtlli you lnalelld or wullng H
on outlidera w11o don't appreciate 1111
previOul lor

,..., you.

· c=~-

.

,.... .,...., . , ,..,.,.• a

---·

.,.__.,.__
,.,.,

TAUIIUI (Apr111H18J •1 Today you
may rllillt competHive alluatlqna a bit
more than IIIUIII. You'l fwl you hive
101M extra t 1 .. upon wloleh lo draw
lhal otlterl lack, IIIII you'llbe right.

--

Unfurntlhld ar. • .., ••• J,
no fiOIO. 322 Thlfd-. .,.,_

3741,114-211-1101.

ttand What to do to ~e '"" relation·
ohlp worll. Mill $210 Matehmllcer, P.O.
Boxi1428,C~eve~Md, OH 44101-3428.

Old 8CIIge IIIII llayl, "exp•tance Ia thl
t.-clllr" and, in your"'*'-·lhctUd be true lor you today. You're not
....... mlatlk•INII C&amp;UIId

....

, - , QoJipollo

i:l~ ... --

:=·- -~~

T...,lullkollflaod In lhl ywr ahlld
youwllllflrlmovlnginmoruprOiftio..,.

1011111 e1tc111 than.,_ to wi!Jah you've
.,_,. ICC'MIHIICI. Funltlllil . . In
111e
10 mlkallli 11111111 ol thlmM8 (llonoii11-AfJIIt 11) YIIU might
III...,.,..WiillllotiiiUI
-role
today in a 1'C14.1P In iiiiiCII ,ot~'re InvOIVOCI. T111
aoulll be lfylng, IIIII
your paors will 11- 11111t In your lblll-

. . . . . . .141.
J I
..... Heme ... _ _ _ _

omna.

. . . . .7471• .

I

t•

m llr a.IIM•J•

"Which eatlmalo do you Willi? Repair
c;oill or Insurance rate lncreuae?"

tllltodoltrtgllt. T*toptllollupe
brOitlln - ? lfli ~
Mltulttl. . Olft llllp ,OU 10 llf'llllr-

,,

-- ...•

-~~·

__ ..

-,.

"

C...., ...... .,
dayi)IOU""IIIilllldtocloeo.Hw•••
•·1110 -;au·,. meet..., 10 tiki
will Ill Gill 1111 Jill • """' far ol '

•P

alollluoll 11M no claulltl.....,. )IOU
l18nCI tOfllr IIICI ~·
nleto ,ou
1111110 more far your oundor. L8rJng II
Plltllllllf•INIII.
: · (II your ..,. out on Ill IUblll w111 .,.
~ ......a f( II) 1'111111 Wll
-.ge thlm to do Wu ii-. .
youNtiCIIriildal'lllouldlleur.a.. ono
olt.,Sottlllhlna l
buoln II Ill I 111111. .,._ who lllllcll , : - M . . Ita tiona today Ullotii ~
your lklll - · t Ita IIIII 10 IXpectl I In old liUIIIIC'tiiiMIIIIWIII you. •
.frllllle. F'll)'llllllllllould Ill PRIP a IIOito prOICII 111U c11111ctr In a .._
11110 ...... 1 I)*!.
I JltllporiOftwtlglllllin
8 Wllllotll ;
'..-a C....... OiJ . , Pwople you I tn.JI.
"
• llnCD~IIIW lf1 1110111 .......... today will
"'
·
' ·. .

:'-:'liM.. X

,,
...

I ••

.....

(J) Major League laHIJeH

.L......,Jl-...1..--'L-...1.......1--' you develop from slop No. 3 bolow.,

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
AN SWER

II
.•

SCIIAM-I.EfS ANSWIRS

.tillA........ HaH
OllaRe,tll ..
9 MIUtlli VIce Tubbs helps

V•-

hie old llama
find hlr
billy lister.
• Cllunlll ..... lllttktn

ID Ccln!*'J Tonlgllt
11:30. (J) 18 Tonlgllllhow

IEl-,
IC~'ii!
::.:..........

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

'

eCNot~aca..

n=•i=';:, lUo1
1I:GO!!! IIOVII: ,.,..., ,.
...........

1iic;... Drill ftnt-e
So PlrntiiOIIIIII, From
Houlton, nc en

II.EtTonlgM

12::...a:- .
9 Tile ....... Ha--·
Too Young To Dill

..

Openly-Jumpy- Swamp- Bqrder - WRAP it UP

Have you ever noticed that the people.whD have the
gift ol gab never know when to WRAP it UP.

•x

'AQ5
Althoup brielle teacben do not adt K764
vocate junk pre-empb, many e1pert&amp;,
+AKQJ&amp;
with favorable .vulnerability. will
open with a three-bid on very poor val- WEST
EAST
ues - as in today's three-diamond +QJ1084
+71532
opening.
'107Z
'KHI
.. .
North was quick to ask lor aces. t AJ5
+10
3
+8742
South. unhappy with the strenct.h of
his suit, ine1plicably an~wered wtth •1
SOUTH
lie. II West could have looked at all
lour hands, he would have led a heart,
•so
but his natural lead was the queen of
tQ109832
.• 95
spades. Declarer won the king and
played a trump from dummy, putting
Vulnerable: East-West
up the queen as East showed out. West .
Dealer: South
now shifted to a heart. Declarer
played the queen, losinl to the king.
Norllo Eul
and a heart came back. He took the ~
It
Pa.a 4NT
P..
ace in dummy and played A·K and 5 ••
Pa.a 5t
AU•a deliberate 1ie
ruffed the tl!ird club. Alai, West o-·
ruffed and the defenders took another
Opening lead: • Q
l .•
heart trick for down two. Declarer's
careless play at trick one was indeed
costly.
·
He has a rare safety play to insure Ibis quo:stion. Even if East Wins the ;·:
· the contract. He must waste dummy's jack of di%111Qilds, can you now poui- :
spade king, overtakiRI with ~is ace at bly loae the baad? Tbe IDI1m' of
trick one so that be can lead \,~e 10 of coune i3 that East ~ill be on lead and · ;
diamonds from hilt hand and let it ride. have no way to develop a trick for bis"; ,
Before you protest that declarer side. The defenden get only the ace ofwould have to be peekin~o ask yourself diamonds. For the declarer who flncll. •
this play, the layout of the ~enden' &lt;
· trumpo can be described only as a re-',:
ward lor v1rtue.

.

.At

-·

1.:.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 38 French
1 N. Scandl- city
navlan
37 Ireland
5 Maine
38 Gainsay
city
39 Gravitate

'"·

..

.' .

.

'

9 Esau's • DOWN
grandson 1 Hunting
10 Cotton
resort
2 "Toujours
I'-·
12 Thera·
peutic
30n lhe
afT'I!)Unt
dow!lgrade
.
4
Prior
13 Cling
to (pref.)
Yeaterday'l An....14 .....
reaction 5 Law symbol 15 Elmer 27 Undersized
15Toupee
8 Belgian
18 River mud 21 VloHn
(sl.)
commune 21 Castle
bow
18 Negative 7 Soon
'defense
conditioner
17 CausHc
8 Leading
22 In demand 29 Alrican
19 Norse
lady role
23 Mother
antelope
healing 10 Color
(Fr.(
34goddess 11 Hear
24 Angelo,
20 Pleasant
a case
·metabolism
Texas·
21"- are
~~,....:25~
35 Coterie
called .. ."
22Cross out

23"honored
In the
breach .. ."
240uldo
25 Giving

•· I

. . ..
.... ··."
'

... ;...
.
....
"

.
..'•

'·

•

'·

·.,.,.....'
.,
I

o

no heed

26Snake
27 Rock music,
to some
opera-goers
30 KnlghUy
IItie
31 Lamb
32 Sanskrit .
school
33 Gone above
351ranlan
cUy

..
''

.'•

DAILYCRYPTOQU&lt;Ti&amp;I-Hen'l how to wort It:
•

Cll--

• ...,CIIoll

DipoOINioiiMIIIMIItlly your eclv•llllll111811 Ufldlr· ·
(1111. . . . . . . Your floi
rail you Ill your ~wr•OIII dNIInal 'IIIIIINIIIPIJIIIooii_,NIIIIIy-.•
today.l'ftlllaoulllbelnlarollldi8Mio- . "'IIII ....,, 10 " ,ou•re lrtuolued Itt
enlng, lllll•
JMh to llllfMihlntiiiiM COUld mlkl or -)IOU
" ' -·
1110111)1, gift IIIII projiCt )lOIII' ~
-~0
YOU'I 11M lhl· lllorl. , .
·
whwouoiMIIIIOtlftiolotallllda.Libto- ACIIIAIIUt (,._ • ,._ 111 - ' -·
I

1

Hood·
I ill ...., tor
. . - ... llilm. -

...........

IIIOnlgge

Rr'ltals

10 , _ ...

-lonoly. Bond ......... to:
..... CMohJ'.O. lor 307, 1310
Clrlllan •·• 1~, OIL
41771. To-..., ,......, lor

Milar Lei(IUI

~a.-

• till lenny HIH lhow

ond potl limo omploymerol,
- - raqulrod.
.... yoJid Ohio - - .
JJco- ond
MUll bo
-

ebird111&amp;IC8pes
e Ill Colcll
Lulhtr's
while in

Hayden 's care. Q
1:50 (I) MOVIE: llraollhloltt Paet
11'!01 (2:00)

•'

. . . .,.iCIWCI.a7M.

. '

CD ,.ashville Now Counlry

~RRON ..v.DQNINS:...

=~~-',:..ooc~O: '•'

Frod lllrLo :104-TIM111 or

transformatiOn that ptopelled
Europe outward. C
II}) ~ny King Uve1
.
0 MOVIE: Ha ap II lf'9) (2:00)

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

polr!l,., tor -

ALL OAf .
LDN(fll

W5

I mllll rodluo AI.

"'*

.........

now=lr, aorponll)', odd lobi.
. ., ... 114-tlt-820, oolc'!or
IIIah. ·

lnltlmatl

e (J) 1B In Tile H. .t·Ot
~:'C'ti'no-nne
Roseanne his a minor traffic

11:00

PAW II

Wanted

3 to I oarol
.... on niral or c

CD CroOk 6 Cllau
ID NIA lalke11MoH

BARNEY

J-olalod).

Exm $300' to 1500 Pll' wool&lt;
Jloodlng 8ooU II hi&gt;mt. Coli
11~73'7440 Ext. 8303.

hold

- . . . -""""'·

-.sa

._m

e!D MOVIE: '8uiJIIC1'
cas T - v Movie (R)
(2:30) Q
'

Conool l - I o n ond nopolra.
Coif
4" 1210
Jao'o TV lotYiao. 1104-875-1724.
Cono!&gt;lll• ..,.... on ........nd.-11.
,·
Hoc

a

11Di

lor-··"'

lop, . votaur podolod MSOO.
a,ooo
miiM, 114-3n-2711.

ReJI Esi&lt;Jtc

l.ibfoty ..tor
- an- odull
tlng ooollclllono
dMk-chirll oubolftulo. AI 11.11.
MUIII
be IVIJIIbM
U11,
nenif'91, WHk...- 1nd minor

-.71

-MW

WOLFF TANNINO BEDS. ContmercW ltome Unlta.
From

Yt!ft Jack reluctantly
. ponderS 1111 purchaee of
new 1utomoblle. (R) E;l

.~lL'(.Wf-10'?

will fiMnoa. 111 - 1122
t N Fotd trMIOr, ....... 111 k'l
11
. . . . IIIIo, 104 . . 11••
Aile CIJ ·~ ......
culltv8tON, run. en a 11,

w.....,.

SHtS
A
GUEST ~DIUIER

.

.

quo1o4

by fill ing in the mlssirl(l -d•

CROSSWORD

e

'

wllhbolorlobr,I=IOIO.ID
lloa,
OWrior

FinJnCIJI

e

il2l Ancue: 11 t A
search ta.m combs lhroug~

.,
j

Serv1ces

Cl:'·
, .
tm

CD lest Of VldeoCountry
. ID Abbott And Coolltllo
7:05 Cll Jettenono ,
7:30 (J) Femlly Feud

AJ!IO Paata &amp;

Owner.

1177

.

NORTH

IL~!"""
E;l
0
wants

•••

61

.

-Hour

001 p'n' .. 21.000 ........ .......
......... - . NIJO. 31144171-

r drm Suppl•l",
&amp; Llif'o!Ocf

(J) ..., llagaltne

,. ea 1B Whlel Ql

715

.

•

(IJ C!) MeoNell L......

1.1 71-100 Cll);. oyt .......

lnstN(!Ients ·

.

BulaYillo

-·

·olol--311441-

comptoto oototiHo oyolom. '114-

4p.m.

4:11111'11 .......,...,_

r-1

.

9He Men

Oao - - - , , ,..
old, one """"'" ond OM I -

116 wood illlllly buuflng •
~3110.

77 CMw Mollbu, ...._ oflor

aJolno, .10 ...... ond .10 .....

'"""I

.

grocery

Belore a storm, the
store is lllled with paople who
don't want to be caught with

A~IT. . :;E;rl'";,:.... _,1 ;i~=~:~:n~huckle

,.1-1-r-lc....:;Liorl'

.,. PRINT NUMBERED
,;tt lETTERS IN SQU~RES

i

dloa,- . . . . - . - . . -

cttlng program.
Duortor
, ....... begin M1rch 2 , 1110.
-mblyl Watll AI ,._,
Comput•
Porto,
Craollvt

I::======-.:.,~

···~-Q
ea caa Newl E;J

R\f..:..:t

laO JD with . . . . trw

•••na•·tor

I

1---r-lTIYSI
-=.rls;;...,rr-=.-_,_..?.,
1

CIJ.IIoclr I

AKC
.......
---. _~n411Hht
_..,.._..7471.

11+441o

~i&gt;m bull toalng Oo CWI. I
HP, TIOUII'IHh~ ntno
good. $300. II
oftor

51

I· r Re i El I.

. fl),..l•••onMIIOr
LMaue ......u

w-·~·2141.

A.....w.... b

1:30~=JafltiY - ·

-eoalt4 tiiDDI.

tulllor, Jool gull" wlih Dlomlzo
pickup. AtooPif lnoptlllor.
. -

Ad. Wotd'o Trollor Pork. lt4UI42tl

SpOorw, 1104-875-1428.
AVON - AN orOH, Colt llortlyn

.

-1

,_,

Country Mobllo Horna Pork,
AoUII 33, Norllo at PonMtOJ.
Lalo, -~~. pono, Coli

A-

a-.

4414177
ond 1upp1r ~
a.-dna. Q - AI

aooo

CllckolMIll
YOftlt+S71H1,
mla -22.-·
Somo
now.

Traitor ipooc:o:

AVON I All Arooo I Shlttoy

,strut;~ ton
1nd
'"'-'de-on"
· traininG In a ~ lab 1urnllhocf with lfl&gt;oiO-dato equipment. C.ll 1-800-e31:UOS now
to ••u,. your pl10e In thhl ••·

D CllatiH In C1tarva
.:05(1) ......., ....,., ••

ANTI ED

of

14_
, Fl,. 13,'1110.
. . . . - - 11 ,
II Fl. - . 110
- ...... ·114-M2-

.:onc1 '"mt:;~
..t-:.~!"0\.'!~
$110. II+

54 Mltcelreneous
·
Merchandl~

l.oloyollolloll. lll Ill 1222.

l14.el2-74'111.

. Accounli"j!, Computing Jobo.
TrJ.&lt;:oottoly o Aduft PIOgjom Will
~ you with Otalnlng tar •
vorloly Of Accoullloog lril Dolo
Procoeotng lobo by iJIYing you
nine ID IWIIVI manth• Of In-

IIJ) WOfld today

9 ......

with lhlluek 1111 draw.
ID Hongln' In
8:35 (I) Ancly Cirllffth .
. 7:00 ~ lcorao ow 6 Mra. King

for Sale

For-AKCA•aln oc~-. ·

2 ..... tiding ....
10
-211H211.
- · POO,
both,
ot4.

onolllla

CA. dick, - • blilllllng. Pori!

Lane-

Apotlmontt.

01 -•••t. 14-31 ·71!10.

•vre mrneoe.

c:uotom .,..

Town-

~- 2br, z - · , .. ::.; ft.
t t/2 both, CAICH, dlolow ,.,

'""rr......tctambltd
-·
befour li"'f)Jo
-dl.

low 10

combin&amp; entertlinmenl trivia

75 Bollts &amp; Motors ·

Tr dn-;portat 1on

-,..-=ri =n..=

~t'1. 1.

3.

•

......... QAY I. '0'1•"
._,.,... lollen of ....

IJI Top Cord ContiSIInts

From

S1&amp;4. How through llorah u .
FIIOI month rwntltoo to t,_.
who quoiiiJ. Colt 11+112-7717.
1174 K l - 110112, kftchtn EOH.
r, hilt pump. central
a r, eallllla tiW.. 7 acN lot ln- Oroc:l... Jiving. 1 ond 2 boo!' 52 spo"lng GooCII
.,..,. wHh 24124 born. """" apon.,.nto . 11 Vlllogo
$20,!00. 010. 11+112·221111 or llonor
ond
Aex..,.. Eq..._,.,. 'r·lor,
114 •• 31137.
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month
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Dolollo,
6 IIOYO,' rofi'Jg, ooayoo, portlatly
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53
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1

Pomeroy-Middlepoet, Ohio

Tunlfey, Madl20, 1880

Deputies investigate theft

I~~ ~n:.:e:,~~.~~. . . .

10-lhe Deily Sentinel

Weather
Tonight, clearing with a low 20
to 25. Light winds. Wednesday,
Increasing clouds and warmer
with a high 50 to 55.
1
Exlealled forecast
A chance of showers Thursday .
fair Friday, a chance of rain
Saturday i'xcept rain or snow
north. Highs 45 to 55 Thursday
.and J"rlday and the 40s Saturdav.
Lows rnalnly In the 30s. .
.

•

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•

there were no signs of forcible Garage In Racine. When deputies
entry.
a~rlved no one was around.
Greg Erwin, Starc.h er Road, " Sheriff . James M. Soulsby
Pomeroy, reported to the depart- reports that the department took
ment Monday afternoon that a
a report of a hltsklp accident that
lawn mower, fishing gear, radio, occurred on Route 681 west of
.and a fan, that had been siored In Reedsville on Saturday. AccOrd·
an outbuilding, was stolen on lng to the report, an unknown
Feb. 3. The Investigation Is vehicle, around midnight, rlan off
continuing.
the roadway Into the yard at the
Hazel.
Barton residence and
The
department
reports
that
Continued from page 1
,;,____ Robert "Pee Wee" Riffle was
.da!'llaged.four bushes.
Sheriff Soulsby would like to
improvements to the plant will be
bills, and meet street depart- arrested Monday momln.g on a
bench
remind
residents of the Neighwarrant
from
Meigs
ment payrQII through the end of
made In such a way as to
County
Court.
According
to
the
borhood
Watch Program to he
accomodate future plant Im- the month.
report,
Rll!le
was
arrested
after
conducted In the Meigs Cou!ltY
provements, as the need exists
-Agreed to participate in
the
department
responded
to
a
Common
Pleas Courtroom this
and money becomes available.
Clean Up Rural Ohio Week, April
evening
(Tuesday)
at 7 p.m.
domestic
complaint
in
Racine
The finance committee Is to 22-28, as requested In a letter
Patrolman
Dave
·.
Williams,
around
3
a
.m.
Sunday
.
. meet in the near future to from Ken Wiggins, dlre.c tor of the
a
·
call
Athens,
willconductthemeetlng.
Deputies
.received
·determine exactly how much of Meigs County Litter Control
around 3:40 a.m. Sunday that , Allin teres ted persons are invited
: an Increase to customers will be Program. County litter control
three juvenlles were atte!'llptlng to attend.
:necessary to cover the village's work crews will be In Pomeroy on
to
E&gt;nter a vehicle at Codner's
· 10 percent cost of this first Tuesday, Aprll 24, to assist In the
' improvement to the sewage village clean up. If. Pomeroy will
provide the truck for hauling, the
, system.
· Council passed unanimously · county program will pay the
: the resolullon to enter lnio the landf111 fees for the one day .
Well, of Darwin, LaiTy (Judy)
Dutch Well
: engineering contract and start Litter control will be doing. the
Well, of Darwin, Richard (Chris)
· the ball rolling, with th.e under- same thing lit the other villages
Vern C. (Dutch) Well, 78, of Well, or Fredericktown, and
~ standing that after the treatment
of the county on the Othfr days
State Route 681, Shade, died Jerry (Susan) Well. of Darwin;
· plant is upgraded, the village during clean up week.. Council
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial "15 grandchildren and one step
: faces additional monumental ex- agreed to coordinate efforts with
Hospital following a brief Illness. grandchild; nine great grand: penses to begin extending sew· litter control, and stated that
Mr. Well was born July 9, 19li e hlldren; a brother, Ernenon
•, age lines to unsewered areas.
with Utter control picking up the
at Trimble and was a son of the Wen: of Pomeroy; several
' Following discussion, Council landf111 tab for the one day, the
late Valentine and Audlth Young sisters-In-laws and se.v eral nie: voted to accept the bid of $15,531 village Itself should l;le able to
Well. He was a heavy equipment ces and nephews.
· from Smith-Nelson Motors, cover costs for at least one more
In addition to his P;~rents, he
operator at strip coal mines, and
: Pomeroy , for a heavy duty clean up day. However, no
was
precedfld In death by a son,
was a member of Harrisonville
: plck\IP truck for the water decision was made.as to when the
Boyd
Well; five brothers, Dale,
Lodge No. 411, F&amp;AM; the York
· departrnent. Council accepted additional day might be.
Orville,Floyd, Dayton· and DoRite Bodies, Pomeroy; the Izaak
: the bid upon the contingzncy that
-Discussed with Anderson min.
a
ld
Well;
and two sisters, Hazel
Walton League; and the Cold
' the bid Includes a steel truck bed. nor street and sidewalk probElta
Mae Well. •
Hawk
and
Ridge Gun Club.
· Anderson Is to check with the lems, as well as ptoblems In
Services
will
be Thursday, 11
Surviving Mr. Well are his
: Pomeroy dealership and makfl specific areas with 'w ater leaks.
'
a.m.,
at'
Ewing
'F uneral Home,
wife, Audra Willard Well, of
· the determination. If the bid does In regard to water leaks, Anderwith
Rev.
Alan
Blackwood offiShade; a daughter, Donna (Guy)
: not reflect the cost of a steel bed, son said he would speak with
ciating.
Burial
will be In the
Morris, of Pomeroy; ' five sons,
: Council •Will purchase the truck affected property owners In the
Burlingham
Cemetery.
Friends
Denver (Florence) Well, of Hem· from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport, areas In question and make a
may call at the funeral horne on
lock Grove, Vernal (Louise)
: with a bid prlce of $15,500. A third determination as to what correcWednesday from 6 to 9 p.m. In
: dealership, Turnpike Ford, Calll- tive measures should be taken.
lieu of ·flowers, the family re·
: polis, entered the lowest bid of
-Instructed CouncUman
quests that friends make dona. $15,420, but the bid did not refect Larry Wehrung to obtain figures
lions to the Meigs County Senior
: a heavy duty battery.
on how much guardrail would be
The following couples have Citizens Center, Mulberry
Council alsP conducted the needed In front of certain sec- filed for dissolutions In the Meigs
Heights, Pomeroy, 45769, or the
: following other business lions of East Main Street and the
County Court of Common Pleas, · Meigs County Chapter of the
1
matters .
'
costs of the guardrail. Council
Mark Harrison, Pomeroy, and
American Heart Association, Ill
• -Following an executive ses- discussed the possl!lllltyof Instalcare of Bank One, P.O. Box 586,
Linda J. Harrison, Pomeroy;
: sion, gave the first reading of a ling guardrail In front of East
Reldun Ovrebo·Welker, Pome- Pomeroy, 45769.1
' resolution to grant employee , Main Street intersections ;~nd
roy, and Gerald Tunney Ovrebo: raises of 25 cents per hour ·any other sections of street
Welker, Pomeroy; Leonard Lee
: effective May 1.
!)ordering the river where safety
VanMete~, J'omeroy, and Janice
-Passed a resolution to io motorists Is questionable.
Lee VanMeter, Middleport; and
: transfer $30,000 from the general
Cathy Hart, Racine, and Monty
: fund to street fund, and $5,000
·Hart, Racine.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
·rrom general fund to the perm Is·
Seeking divorces .are Dale
Monday admissions -Robert ·
: slve tax fund, In order to pay
Edward Taylor, Middleport,
Rinehart,, Middleport; James
In the Meigs County Court of .from Mary Ann Taylor, Middle·
: winter salt biDs and other related
Common Pleas, the following
Hayes.. Pomeroy; and Roland
port; Naree Hale Florian from
Dill,
Pomeroy.
cases have been dismissed,
Edgar Florian; and Terence Lee
Monday
discharges -Thelma
Sharon Russell . vers11s Wayne
Brewer, Middleport, from BonChase
and
Roland Hewlett.
Russell; Melissa C. Bailey vernie Lou Brewer.
sus Clinton J . Bailey; and John
DallY stock prlees
Hunnell. et al, versus Malcolm
(As of 10:30 Lm.)
Lentz,
M.D.
Bryce and Mark. Smith
of Blunt, Elllti 6 Loewl

p,omeroy
.

··~

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriffs·Departrnent are investigating a report taken Moilday
evening from Pam Asher, Route
2, Racine. According to the
report , Asher stated that some
money had been stolen from her
residence. She also reported that

______

- -.Area death--

Divorces sought

Hospital news

.NBA~reautts:

Emergency Medical Service re- Veterani.
•
sponded to eight calls for assist·
At 10:10 ll.m. the Middleport •
ance on Monday.
unit rosponded to a call on North
At 4:36 a.m. the Middle~rt First for Megga11 Ostermayer ,
unit was called to Rutland Street who was taken to Holzer.
for Robert Rinehart whO was
At 3: !10 p.m. the Pomeroy unit •
taken to Vete.r ans Memorial went to Eaat Main Street for Hospital, and at 4:49 a.m. Christopher Ed11vards · who was •
another Rutland unit went to transported to Pleasant Valley
.
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Larry Hospital.
Stephens who was transported to
The Rutland unit , at 8: 42 p.m., •
Holzer Medical Center.
· was called to Side HIIJ. Road for •
· Lena Hatfield who was taketi to
The Racine unit, at 8:36 a.m1, Veterans and later transported
went to Basl\an Road for Pauline to Holzer.
.,
Rose who was taken to Veterans.
Finally, at 11:31 p.m. the ,·
The Tuppers Plains unit was Tuppers Plains unit went to .;
called to Township Road 215 at Reedsville for Della Coleman •
'·
, 9:18 a.m. for Mildred Hauber who was taken to Veterans.

Controlling...

'

Ohio lottery

~ Delsoit

tops
:Mnwaukee

'

Daily Number

651
Pick4
"0192

·page 3

Lisa Suennen, represen.tlng
American Blodyne, ' said her
company provides services for ·
state employees In Florida, indl·
ana and Arizona. ·
The board also approved a $2.9
million contract with Dentacare
of Blue Cross-mue Shield for
services for state employees as a
de n t a I m ·a In t e n a n c e
organization.
The largest school loan of$1.26 •
million was designated for the
Gal Ua County Local School Dis- ·
trlct. The 'state no longer lends
the money but guarantees bank
loans. The, Controlling Board
must approve any loan. however.
Other loans Include $341,000 for
Conneaut Area School Dlsttlct,
Ashtabula County; $151,000 ,for
Leetonia Exempted Village
School District; $234,000 Cor
Western Reserve Local School
District, Huron County; $70,000
for Western Reserve School
District, Mahonlng County;
$32,000 for Westfall Local School ·
District, .. Plckaway County;

·;

$13$,000 to~ Green Local SchOOl •
Dis trlct, Scioto County;· $242,000 .

for Frontier Looal School Dis· ~~
trlct, Washington County; and ,
·$90,000 for Southeast Local .
School District, Wllyne County.
James VanKeuren, director of
the Division Of School Finan~
for the Ohio Department or :
Education, said seven or eight :
more districts are expected to
'
apply for loans next month.

.

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•
;

Court grants
end to marriages

I

In the Meigs County Court of .·
Common Pleas a dissolution has
been granted to Vonda K. Burney
and Floyd L. Burney.
·
Tlmotlw Patrick-Gillilan has
been granted a divorce from
Luanne GIIUian.
· Joseph Curtis Wright has been
granted a divorce from Veronica
L. Wright.

•

•

a1
Copyrtghtell 1810

'

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Gov. Richard Celeste .baB lllgned
legislation allowing C11yahoga
County to aak voters to approve a
measure to raile taxes on alcohol
and cigarettes to finance a
stadiUf!l·arena complex. ·
The stadium legislation, which
also applies w other Ohio cities,
particularly those with major
league franchiles, clearlld the
House Tuesday morning, 76·18.
The Senate then . ratified ihe
proposal, 26-6.
,
Gov. Rjchard Celeste signed
the bill ' Tuesday . night, and
Cuyahoga County commissioners were expected to vote Wed·
nesday ttiplactheproposalon the
May 8. llallot, The d~adllne for
committing It to the ballot Is
Friday.
The Senate also passed a bill
Tuesday providing new judge.

•

1

ship&amp;' In Licking, Aihens, Mahon· sold In carryouts • and superlng, Jian'lllton and Franklin coun- ' markets. She said It would
ties. That bill must tecl!lve House amount l1l 1 ~ cen Is a drink.
coi,)CWTt!nce In Senate changes
Campbell conceded that In the
-~tore being forwarded
to past, Cleveland was d\vlded ovef
CeieStt!.
.
the need for a new stadium and
Most, but not al~ representa- how to finance it.
''This time, the community Is
tives. a!ld senators from Cleveland, extolled the plan to bring a much more united on what type
of sports complex It wants," she
~ sparta complex with . a
baseb&amp;ll stadium and 'Indoor said. "We have been under the
aren11 to the lakefront city. But gun, and the community has
.,
bitter legislators from Suinmlt gotten It together."
County forecaat the end of ·the
Campbell said the~ Is a
Richfield Coliseum If the NBA partnership i&gt;Eitween Cleveland
Cleveland Cavaliers move and Cuyahoga County as well as
with private parties, Including an
downtown.
Rep. Jane Campbell, D· $18 million commltrnent from the
Cleveland, said Cuyahoga nonprofit Cleveland Tomorrow.
County voters would decide No more than 50 percent of the
whether to put atioiher 4 ~ cents financial support may be public
I8Jt on,a pack of cigarettes and to money, and none may be used td
·raise the taxes on liquor sold· In "operate the sports facility.
state stores and on beer and wine
Campbell said the Cleveland

Judgement sought

I

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....._...,....,of~=·-.,....._ C.. 7
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._ . . . .__...bMII. To-~ · IIWI*tMioonllillllwtD:

400 C.dot Blvd.
Oalllpallo, OH. 411131
(1114) 4411-3818

· ..... Co.

••tc•y
a.•
Itt. 3

11

Pom"'!'V· OH. 417119
11114) 912-7440

PIONe Send My Veteran of Service ,Eligibility Certlflclto

NQE ______________________________

~

ADDRESS
BRAIICH OF SERVICE ---~----,--SERVICE SEIIAl 10. ________.....::._____..,---..,----- AG._E~...,

~ou're

In'Ciitei
'To an Open Jlouseifor

.

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reattonscm
'

Where Generatipns Begin
tfie

.~w j'ainify-Ctnteretf Maternity Care Unit
at

Thsnk You Fot Vout Help In "Mskinf/1
Gtesf/ ',' Sines t985/
Lookinf Fotwstd To Anofbe.t Btest Yett.'

PCeasant o/a[{ey !l{ospitaf
%!fey 'l&gt;riVt
~oint Pkosant, mst 'Jifiainia

Suntfay, ·Marcfr. 25, 1990
fl'ours from 1 to 3 p.m. .

415 West
Main St.

PO"EROY
~ ·--~----------~--------------·

'

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'

....0. to Vwtc:ac In tM ~

1Mol811- Cout -· .._ "" ....._ _ . .... .. doo ........
...... Armed fcnll. ~,., bl ....lta.dfDr ftw .......... IIGAIM, .,.,,..,.
......,tortla You ...otboalltato-proolall..•-llle~qo. TIION ... a
Olio Vllley .._, ~~~~

992-6477

1 Section, 14 PagM 21 Centa
A Multlmedie Inc. N - -

•

Indians have agreed to a 20-year
lease at the facility, although a
lease has not been· signed.
But Rep. Ike Thompson, D· .
not swayed by
Cleveland,
threats !·h at the Indians would
leave unless a new stadium were
built. ·
HLet 'em 'g ot'' said Thompson,
'a conv~rted non-smoker who
w~nts ·to tax cigarettes for
cancer research. "I'll go see the
Toledo Mud hens."
'
•'As always, who's going to pay
the tax?" said Thom~on . "Joe
Slxpaok, who makes "$10,000 or
$11,000 a "year, or people on Socllil
Secuiity." . '
·
· ''This legislation Is destructive," said Rep. Wayne Jones,
D.Cuyahoga Falls. "It reaches
beyond Cuyahoga County and
, hurta· Summit County and other

was ,

Activities of.the Litter Prevention and Recycling Program
''are well underway" in Meigs
County, says Ken Wiggins, director of Meigs County's Litter
Control Program. ·'And April
wlll be the busiest month'yet with
Recycle Month, Keep Ohio Beau·
tifulMonth, Earth Day and Clean
Up Rural Ohio Week, all sche·
duled during the · month;' ' he,
adds.
For. the' ·month• of · April ·- ·
"R....,cle Mom!!;":;.:· the-local litter

_Announcements ......_

Nellhborhood Wateb
be observing "Fill God's House
Meigs County Sheriff James Day" on Sunday. The public Is
M. Soulsby would like to remind Invited to attend.
residents of the Neighborhood
Nwnber cbaD1e
Watch Program to be conducted
The Southeastern Ohio Legal
in the Meigs County Common Services: a federal . agency loPleas Courtroom ·this evening cated ln"Athens, serving the legal
iTuesday) at 7 p.m. Patrolman needs of low-IncOme residents In ·
Dave Williams, Athens, will Athens, GaUia, Meigs, and VInconduct the meeting. All Inter·
ton Counties In civil matters Is
ested persons are Invited to · announcing the change · of Its
attend.
toll-free number . Effective Immediately the new number Is
Club to meet
1-800-686-3669.
The Syracuse Third Wednes·
For further Information conday Homemakers Club will meet tact Timothy J. Foran, manag·
Wednesday al the Presbyterian lng attorney, Southeastern Ohio
Church Annex at 10 a.m.
Legal Services, 36 South ConSpecial service
gress Street, Athens, 45701, at the
The Racine Baptist Church will above listed number.

•

couniles that don't need them.
One of the finest faciliSen. Pa11i Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus,
ties In the NBA will be
: said a new domes tic relations
destroyed."
'
Sen. Lee Fisher, D-Shaker judgeship In Licking County was
Heights, said the proflosed facil- warranted according to caseload , ,
guldellne,s Issued by the Ohio
Ity would bring 2 mUlion people a
Supreme
Court. That judie will
year to downtown Cleveland a!)d
be
elected
In November.
Is "crucial to the economic
?fetter
said
a fourth judge on
development of not only Cuya·
the
Franklin
County Court of
hoga_County but n&lt;irlbeast Ohio
Appeals
also
fit
the guidelines,
and will have a ripple effect on
but that the Common Mleas
the economy of the entire state.''
judgeships In Athens and MahonBut Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Llma,
said Cuyahoga County . had lng counties were not justified.
· The court did not have time to
"pulled an end run" and there Is
no state assistance for small evaluate the need for an addicities that cannot have big league tional Domestic Relations judge
In Hamilton County Common
stadiums.
The blll creating · judgeships . Pleas Court, he said.
The House adjourned until
was passed, 26-6, with Sen·.
Wednesday
at 11 a.m. and the
Theodore Gray, R-Columbus,
Senate
until):
30 p.m.
cau tlonlng that the door hl!S been
left open for giving Judgeships to

~ountles .

Litter control

.Case dismissed

Am Electric. Power ..... ..... ...30%
AT&amp;T .. ............... ... ..... ........ 42~
Ashland 011 ........ ....... .., .... ..35')i
In the Meigs County Court of
Bob Eva,ns ....................... ... 12')i
Common Pleas, John Roush and
Charming Shoppes .. .... ......... 9~
State Farm Insurance Company,
City Holding Co. ·........ ...... .... 13
Columbus, are seekll\g $5,690.82
Federal Mogul... .................. 18 ·
from Chad,Wolfe, Racine. ·
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .._ .. ...... ..... 37
Heck's .... ........ ....... :... ..... ... .. 3~
Key Centurion ........ , ....... .... 13'Ji
Lands' End .. ,.... ... .. ..... .... .... lB')i
Speedlq tidlet
Limited Inc ........... ... .......... 41 ~
Multimedia Inc . ..... ...... ,.... :.79%
President myues G. Grant wu
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 2~
stopped by a policeman while be wu
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15~
driving hts carriap lbrouglt WashingShoney'slnc ..... .......... ... ..... 12%
ton, nc. He wu ilaued a ticket for
Star Bank ...... .. .... ....... :....... 18l&lt;t
speeding, but ratber tllu appear for a
cilurt trial; Grant paid a fine of $20,
Wendy's Int'l. ...... ..... ... ... ... . .' 4~
notes Tile Klda' World AimaJiac.
Worthington Ind .. ............ .... 21*

'

Ohio.Senate passes stadium, judges' bills .

Who Have Honorably Serviced Ttutir Country
l.n Time of War or Peace

Stocks

•

PQmeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 21, 1990

NOTICE TO· ALL
VETERANS ·

. '

ToUJ, ....a,....., wtlltt a
lllclttlllall. 1o r ..., ....,.
lacreula1 .1o lt lo a mlliiTonJ&amp;Ittt, par&amp;IJ elllllll7 WMitt •
low &amp;1'0111111 •- lotdllweat
wlllda IJ lo 11 mpll.
Tlwnday, variable cl..n• - wllll a bllltt • lo II •
·Chance of rain II • percqt,

vot.40, No.z:lo continued from page 1

· Wetllhet

coUN11HG
-Two ''Cetakers" Interview hom'elesa mea at the Salvation
Army Iii Sacf!UIIeolo u ~ of a nattolllll U.S.

C..• Bureau tally Tuetda¥. Ia excbange for tile
· . ltlformatlon the homelesa received food., (UPI)

Census takes ·t.o streets, shelters
.

.

~

By UBJIIed Pr- lnlernatlolllll
The Census Bureau's $2.7 million effort to counl America's
homeless In subways, shelters,
.abandoned buildings and
beaches went "very well," with
only one report of violence
against two of the army of 15,000 ·
counters, a spokeswoman said
Wednesday.
But sub-freezing weather In
many of the nation's largest .
urban cities filled abetters to
capacity early. In the evening and
forced the bureau to add a second
night to Its unprecedented effort.
And In some places shelter
workers waited for counters who
never showed up.
Census spokeswoman Rhea
Farberman said she did not yet
have a definitive list of cities
where a second night of counting
would take place but said "It's
.s afe to ' say tHere will 'be a

number."
"It depend~ OQ .how the
weather played," she said.
''There were places where, when ·
our enumerators got there, were
already fJUed to capacity and
closed. We were ready for this
and this 1$ a contingency plan.''
Dubbed "Street and Shelter
Night," the unprecedented effort
· late Tuesday a11d early Wednesday . was the opening of the
Census Bureau's1990count- the
massive, · once-every-10-years
tabulation of all penple living In
the United States and which
.federal officials claim will be the .
most comprehensive In Its 200.
year history.
"Overall, It went very well,"
· said Farbennan. "We had one
report of a robbery. It was fairly
minor. There were no Injuries. It
was In Fort Lauderdale, FJorl!ia;
A team of two was robbed at

~;;-Jttoi prdiit'llt~fif''Ur~lng'

knife-point of a watch and a ring
and a small amount of cash. They
reported the Incident to the
pollee."
Traveling In teams, ·the paid
counters wore bright, white vests
and carried two-way radios while
searching out those In 11,000
conventional shelters and rundown motels and hotels.
Many more soug~t out the
By United Presslnlernatlolllll
familiar street sights of the
Warmer lemperatures have
destitute pressed to hissing
returned toOhlowlth thetlrstfull
steam grates or stuffed Inside day of spring, although they ·
. wrappings of blankets, plastic
won't quite reach the marks seen
and weather-beaten cardbQard.
Others checked desolate ·hi- last week.
High pressure that was over
deouts beneath the concrete and
.
the
state Tuesday night caused
steel of, bridges and elevated
•
mostly
clear, skies
and the
highways, dank subway and bus
mercury dropped Into the 20s.
stations an&lt;l abandoned
Skies were to be partly to
buildings.
inostly sunny today and, as
Their orders were to count the
homeless even If they . had to southwest winds Increase, . the
mercury was to reach the mid·
' Continued on page 7
40s to mid-50s, about normal for

'

. By VALERIE KUKI.EN81U
· United Prea IDternatloaal
A Greyhound bus carrying 50 .
people on Interstate 81 In VirginIa was hll by three shoiB fired
from a pli!ISing car, but no one
was Injured, state 11011ce said
Wednesday.
~
The shooting was the !ales t
lncldet\t,of violence In the often
n,ated ltrlkl - the Uih IDipblg
at 11·bus, according to Greyhound
- since some 9,000 Greyhound
workers walked out on strike
March 2.
.· .
NegOtlatort for Greyhound and
Its striking driven. have bee!l·
talking to federallllecllator_s but
not to eacb oiher and reiiUllned
far apart In eftortl to cement a
contract tbat could · l»'lllg the
employees back to work.
''We're In toUC!b'' with both
llides 11)1 telephone but no "a~
,atantive converaatlou" ware
held, Paul Stueka~telulelder of
tbefederal Med!aifonalld Cone!·

'

lntersectlonofUnlonAvenueand
stress the urg'i!ncy of ~ctlng !O
Route 7, Pomeroy). "We hope
project the ·world for future
this arrangement wUI eliminate
generations, Wiggins adds.
the problem of careless dumping
Clean Up Rural Ohio starts In
along our township aiid county
April and· continues through the
roads, creating maj~r problems
summer . "Our program Is, tar·
for everyone," says Wiggins.
geting the week o! A.'Prll22·28 for
'l'he theme of this year's Keep special activities," · Wiggins
says. The local program bas
Ohio ~auUful Month (also
April) Is "Don'tLetaGreatState asked all flvel villages In the
Go to Waste. "Says Wiggins, "We
county to schedule their annual
live In ·a beautiful part of 'Ohlo spring Clean-ups during this
and we Invite all Meigs Counuans .time. ·- :~our program.,coJiectlon
· to gellnvolvei,W..vOiunteer cleaii·, cr.a:_will be ~~~r~lng-_on~ day Ill•:
u!J · ~ttorts;·· ~ofonly around the edC1!"8r't~i!"'VIlllie$ (lui'lng 1lllsi
home and farm, but In the week, and we're asking for lo~of
community and at public use
volunteers to help In the clean up
areas and businesses. With the
activities," he explains.
Last year, the cou1.1tr litter
Village.of Pomeroy observing Its
sesquicentennial anniversary .control program had help from 10
this year, It Is a great opportunity
Girl Scout troops, 10 Boy. Scout
to at tract visitors and tourists to
packs and troops. five 4-H Clubs,
the area."
four elementary schools, as well
Also this year, ' on Sunday,
as the townships and. vlllag~.
April 22, the 20th anniversary qt "We'll help your group plan
Earth Day will be cele!Jrated,
projects, provide you with trash
Wiggins reminds area residents.
bags and arrange for pick up of
"All of us are aware of the · the trash collected," he adds.
Also, If desired, someone from serious environmental problem~
which must be solved, lnchtdlng the litter control program will be ·
the conservation or valuable '· available to talk to groups or '
natural resources and proper
organizations about litter prev- •
disposal of solid waste," he says. entlon and recyl'lng.
.
F'or more Information about '
Wiggins suggests that in celebra·
tlon of Earth Day, garden clubs
litter prevention and recycling,
,. and other civic groups might
telephone 992·6360, or write toP. ;
select a specific area for a
0. Box 502, or stop In at the Utter
control office at PQmeroy.
beautification project. On this
special Sunday, churches around
"l.t's a good time to volunteer ;
your help," Wiggins urges, "and ·
the county might use their
services, bulletins, newsletters
we're sure you 'II appreciate the
and other communications to
resufts."
·

Warmer weather arrives for spring

•

Greyhound bus
hit
by
rifle
·
fire
·
'

an

Meigs Countlans to start, · or
continue, recycling Instead of
disposing of all solid waste.
Nearly ali Items except' newspapers may be recycled locally
at either Tri-County Recycll!lg
Center, located at the lntersec·
lion of Routes 7 and 143 near
Pomeroy, or at Man~y's Recycling Center below the Intersection of Beech and Park Streets in
lower Middleport.
The Meigs County Litter and
Recycllt)g Program bas quarterly "recycle days", Wiggins
reports, "where newspapers can
be recycled untll a l&lt;ical outlet Is
available." Also, for a limited
time, the Meigs County program
has an arrangement for local
resideJtts to recycle old appllan·
ces (washers, dryers, stoves,
refrigerators, dishwashers,
etc.).
The appliances may be placed
al the upper edge of the litter
control parking lot (the fanner
. Ohio Job"Servlces building at the

progr~s ·underway

-·- -H. ..
.
cold air pushes In from C:anada.
Highs will he mainly In the 40s,
A cold front that was over the and there Is a chanceofprec;lpltanorthern United States early tlon, especially on Sunday.
today will drop slowly south and
On the morning weather map,
move Into northern ohio either · high pressure extended from
late Thursday or Thursday nlgiJt . Michigan across Ohio to LouisiAhead of the front wmbe some . ana. The high will move off the
clouds and maybe Isolated show.
East Coast tonight. A cold front
ers . .Qlghs Thursday will range
was located from Quebec across
from the. upper 50s In the north to
upper Michigan to the northern
Plains. The front will sink slowly
the mid-60s In the south, aboutlO
degrees above normal.
south and reach northern Ohio
Temperatures will cool of! for
either late Thursday or Thursday
Friday and the weekend as the
night.
. ~·
.
I

this. time of year.

'

llatlon Service said Tuesday . · weekend, said mediators ex·
"We'll be IIUigeeting or calling a plored several Issues with eacll
meeting aa 100n as we get some side to "see 11 som~ alternative
indication that there might be solu lions can be developed."
Wages and benef!IB have been
lome movement (!IY either
among the hurdles . since the
side&gt;·"
VIrginia State Trooper E.R. strike bepn March 2; lnvolvlna
Adams, who was lnvestlgat.lng many of Greyhound's 6,000 drivInterstate Sllncld~nt, salll three ers and 3,000 oiher union
small holes were found In the · employees.
Earlier Tuesday, a replacewlndlhleld of ihe bus, poalbly
ment
driver hired l)y Greyhound
from a 1!11a,ll-callber rifle. .
turlll!dover
tO !he U.S. Al;my,
waa
All tbree lholl lilt UN! wind·
shield near driver DaVId Kallbt, . on a warrant charalnl him with
but the Wlndlhleld remained desertion. Martin A. Sbaw, 28,
Intact, said State Police s,t. J.R. was arre•ted when pollee
Peter1. He said unallepllnter• of stopped the bus he waa driving
alai• from the holes bit Knllht, about ~ a.m. Saturday for a
routine 101 check on U.S. 101 near
but he wu nOt burt. .
.
cmcent
City, Calif.
'Thla Ia tUI'Yinllt ju1t a J.tttle
Army
offtclall . transferred
.too far," ll8ld Mull LawiOD, wbp
waa rldlnl from Noliolk to Shaw from the Del Norte County
Knoxville, Tena. "Whytakeltput Jail, w~ be was beln&amp; held on
n.GODINO IN 80VTII - A boat a cMr
a federal fugitive warl"alltaccu•on the paueaprs?''
a
to 1M ar~ ten .. &amp;Ilia mWI
Stw:llenacllllelder, wbo partici- . 1n1 blm ot military deserUon, to
..... AI....,.. ....,., ftla ..aal wa llllllle
pated Ill neaotlallc;l!ll between the FortOrd, Callf.,torprocesllng, a
.~ Monda,)' an Ill IMpea&amp;lo• ~ '11'1&amp;11 pvenineD~
Contln~ &lt;?II page 7
two lldel ID 'l'llclbn, Ariz., laat

*"' •

war

.

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