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•

Page 10~The Daily s.rtinel

J

--Local
news briefs..._..........;,
Condnued from page 1
Bidwell man's. body found Sunday

Monday. April16, 1990

Thunderstorms cause· flOOding .in Tex~

By United P..- lateraadoll&amp;l
· No· InJuries were reported,
Thunderstorms shook the
Garland pollcf! said.
MUOII CoQ.nty au thorides said today the body of Rick Goff, 32,
southern Plains Monday·, driving
BidWell, was found Sunday on the shore of the Kanawha Rivet
streams beyond tbelr banks and
The thunderstorms, which .
about 12 miles from Its Junction with 'the Ohio River. .·
washing out roads around Dal·
spawned a tornadoandbaseball·
Goff was t:ejl(irte4 missing AprU 2 from a GMC Towing
las, while heavy rain pounded the
size hall Sunday In north and
tow.Jioat at !be Winfield Locks In Putnam County, W. Va., after
South and dense fog hampered
cenlral TeJr¥, lost much of their
falllng.tnto the Kanawha River according to a dispatcher at ·the
the morning commute In the
punch as they drifted through
Masoa County Sheriffs offiCe.
Midwest and New England.
·eastern Texas and Into Arkansas
Goff's body was discovered at 8: 43 a.m. Sunday by an
Dozens!)ffarnllles In the Dallas
and Loulsl&amp;na, the National
Americlll Electric P()\Vl!r employee on a towboat, the
suburb of Garland, Texas, were
Weather Serv:lcesald.
dispatcher said.
. ··
,.
forced from their homes ear)y
The rest of 'I'exas and Okla·
MoDday by · the .storm-swollen
homa reported fair to partly
waters of the Duck Creek. An
cloudy conditions Monday. Some
empty !Jlekup truck was washed
blah clouds moved eastward
The Southern Local School Board meeting scheduled for .
2 mUes downstream, battering across New Mexico, bu !'the state
tOJdgbt (Monday) has been c)langed to tomorrow at 7 p,m,
bridges along the way and
was mostly fair.
A cold front passing through
causing enough damage to close
one of the spans, pollee said.
the South produced sc11ttered but
The evacuees bega!l returning sometimes heavy · showers
to their swamped homes as the across parts of the Carolinas,
floodwaters· subsided .later Man· Tennessee and Florida, where
day morning, but not before the · hall was reported. The front left
lloyd Middleton, president of have that entrepreneurial spirit : high water played havoc With the 'cloudy skies as It moved out of
and want to slart their own
· the Middleton-Doll Co. of Belpre,
rush how:, especially along Gar· · Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama
formerlY of Coolville, will be the business.
.
liPid
Road. a maJ~r artery Into and Tennessee.
keynote luncheon speaker at. tile · .On May 10 the conference Is Dallas.
' Dense fog niade for dl(flcult
Second Annual · Small Busfness directed toward busmess. start·
)Success In Appalachia confer· ups.
. .
,
Experts from around the state
~-ence to be held at the Shawnee
state Park Lodge near Ports· wlll explain how .to develop a
. '.
business plan, select the right
mouth on May 10·11.
Units of the Meigs County Center.
The announcement was made legal structure, Identify Emergency Medkal Service reA 12
today by Frank D. Ray, Director markets, and determine br~k sponded to 12 calli·for assistance
t :41 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
and
fire department was called
of the U. S. Small Business
. On May 11 the conference wlll over the weekenj:l.
·
to
the
scene of a tllree car
Admlnl&amp;tratlon's. District Office deal with theproblemsoflndlvld·
On
Saturday, at 9: 03 a.m. the accident at the lntersecdon of
In Columbus.
uals already In business who
Pomeroy unit was called to Route 7 and 143. Sherry Utile
Middleton has expanded the wish ,to Improve their sales ~ad
Forest
Run Road for George was transported to Veterans and
doD company to a poliit where he management C!lpablllties.
.Folmer
who as taken to Holzer
the following were treated but
now employs over 100 people,
Participants may attend one or Medical Center, and at 12:31 p.m.
not transported, Stacey Novak,
many from Meigs County, and
both days. The cost per partlcl· the unit went to Rock Springs
Joyce Whiter, John Novak, Dale
last year had sales exceeding ~
pant Is $19 per day of $29 for both Road for Mary.CompSoll who as ·Little; Shane Little, Sharon
million. ·
days. ltegistratlon Is being transpOrted to Veterans Memor·. Warner, Justin Warner, and Erin
' Tbe conference Is designed for
handled through the office of lal Hospital.
·' ·
· ·
· Warner . . ·
both the estal)llshed business cilntlnulng edqcation, Shawnee
The
Pomeroy
unit
and
ftre
· The Rutland unit, at 3•41 p.m,
owner and those Individuals who State University, 614-355-2274.
department, at 7:46p.m.; re- wenttotheRutlacdCivlcCenter
&amp;ponded to a caU on County Road . for Phillip Smith who was taken
25 for an auto accident In which to Veterans, and at 5:52p.m. the ·
Roger Smltb wu · taken · to
unit was called to White's Hill
G&amp;C Towing Company of Pt. · Veterans.
.
Road for Anna P. Nixon. At 6:27
Goff
Pleasant.
At8: 56 p.m the Middleport unit p.m. the unit went to White's Hlll
He Is also survived by one son,
went to Overbrook for NeiUe Road for Elsie Southerland who
; ·Graveside services will be
MlchaeiLeeGoffandonedaugh·
ConnoUy who was taken to as transported to Veterans. At
• conducted 11 a.m. Wednesday at
ter, Ashlee Nicole Goff, both o( • Pleasant Valley Hosplt!IJ.
. ·.8: 43 . p.m. the Rutland unit
; Vlliton Memorial Park for Ricky
the home; six sisters, Marl., .
On Sunday, al'11:4l a.m. the responded to a call .on Brick
: L Goff, 32, Qf328 Evergreen Rd.,
Amy, B:everly, Beth and Bobble,
Pomeroy unit wentto Bailey Run Street for Maude Smith who was
•Bidwell
all of Cincinnati and Shelly pf ROad for Mary Osborne who as ,taken to Holzer.
· .•
• Rev. James Stewart will offl· Covington, Ky.; five brothers, 'lransported to Holier Medical
Flnalty,•t9: 16 p.m.theMiddle- ·
• elate. B1Jrlal Will be In V"-'tQn · David, Matthew, Jeff, Brian and
·
port unit went to Overbrcioll' for .
Memorial Park.
Paul, all of Cincinnati.,
Hele!l KennellY who was taken 10 . .
Tbere will be no ldsltlng hours.
.
Johnnie
Qualls
Veter!lns.
. . .,·.. . '
Funeral arrangements are
.
under the direction of Willis
. DU1J sloell prlcee
: Funeral Home.
Funeral services for Johnnie (Aa of U:SG a.m.)
· Goff was born Aug. 22, 1957 In · Mae Qualls of Pomeroy, will be
• Cincinnati, 8011 of Howard Goff of held at 11 a.m. Wednelld!iY at the Bryce ud Milrk SmiiJI
Cincinnati and Barbara Rouse Naomi Baptist Church oil New ol Blanl, Ell.. It Loewl
' Schmidt of Cincinnati.
Street In Pomeroy. The Rev.
Electric Power ...... .... .... 30
: . He Is survived by his wife, Sarnual J. Jackson Will offiCiate Am
ATAT
................................. 41%
• Mary ·Lou Ash Goff of Bidwell,. and burial Will be In the Miners·
Ashland
011 .. .............. ....... .... 37
: \Yhom be married.March 30, 1983 ville Hl11 Cemetery. FriendS may
Bob
Evans:
............ ~ ...•....·..... ;.13
• Itt Wise, W.Va.
.
call at the funeral'h'!meTUesday Charining Sboppes ...... ......... 9%
Mr. Goff was an · employee of 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
City Holdl'ne· Co .... :.................14- ·
Federal M!)gul...: .......... ,, .... 18%
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... ~ .... .......35*
Heck's ...................... ........... 2%
Key Centurion .................. 13%
'
'
•
Lands' End .. ............. : ......... 15%
: OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)
slder. Cullison said he called ior Llmjted Inc ...... .................. 43%
• Scores of Oklahoma schools the ~ew vote Thursday In an Multimedia Inc..... ... .............. 77
closed ·Monday In response to a
atterppt .to work out differences Rax Restaurants.............. 2 7116
call for a weekiong teachers and ~ake the proposal and Its . Robblllil &amp; Myers ........ ........ 15%
walkOut to protest the Legtsla· erne gency clause acceptable to Shoney's Inc ..................... 13%
both houses ,
lure's apparent reJection of a
Star Bank . .................. .. ... .... 20
Cu !son said the Legislature ~endy's lnt'l.. ....... : ............. 4)1
:. $230 mlllloD tax and education
must get on with Its work of Worth~on Ind ... ... , ... ..... ... 21% .
·: blll.
Oklahoma Education Assocla· writing a budget for the next
; tlc:in President Kyle Dahlem said fiscal year, beginning Jll)y 1, and
~ner
: more than ,3,000 teachers had It would be futile to purSue .the
: committed to withhold services. · education blll later' than this
Many o! the t~achers said they week.
; would demonstrate Monday at
Bellman called the Legislature
. the state Capitol, where leglsla· Into special session lastA11gust to
CLEVELAND (UPI) -No big
• tors were to resume efforts to solve .an educatlonfundingcrisls.
winners . In Saturday night's
• reach a compromise, and others Tbe special session recessed In
Super Lotto game' has pushed the
· planned demonstrations In their November and has been resumed
Jackpot tot WedneSday night to
home districts.
from time to time durhnk the
School officials canceled Legislature's regular session
at least $6 mUllon.
·
Numbers were 23, 24, 36, 40, 42,
, c~ses for one to five days In that began In early Febrilllry and
·. ,
and 441n the game that produced .
·'' about 90 districts, lilcludlog . ends May 25,· ' ·
$3,582,356 worth of tickets.
·
~ TUlia, the state' s largest, while
The House and Senate· both
· ,. others said schools wlll remain approved the blll earlier this
Ohio Lottery officials said
,; open whether teachers shOw up year, but on)y the House ·passed
Sunday that 94 tickets had five of
those numbers, each worth
· or not.
the emergency clause. Senate
.
The walkout was not endorsed )eaders delayed a · vote on that . $1,000, white another 4,657 ·had
• by the American Federation of question last week In an unsuc·
four of them, each worth $75. .
: Teachers, AFL·CIO, the bargain· cessful attempt to round up
In ·the Kicker game, the
· numiJer 527009 produced one
;. lng agent for Oklaltoma City enough votes for passage.
:: teachers. Superintendent Arthur
winner. That ticket, one of
669.,024 sold, Is worth $100,000. ·
; Steiler. . said Oklahoma City
Ohio Lottery offtctals said five
nu~bers
: schools \\'Ill remain open, al·
. thougll an estimated 900 teachers
more tickets had the first five of
. CLEVELAND (UPI) ....: Salur· · thosenumbersfor'$5,000each; 57
:: also.. are members of the OEA
,' and .teachers who do not report' day's winning Ohio ·Lottery
have the first four for' $1,000
n11mbers:
: for work will be temporarily.
each; 569 have the first three for
l&gt;ICK·3
•. replaced.
·
$100 and 6,008 ha:ve the first two
'
663.
for $10. '
·
·: Tbe OEA asked Its members to ·
PIC,K·3 ticket sales totaled
; withhold · services for a week
•; aftefj the state Senate refused $1,476,523, with a payoff due of
.
.
:• W:edne'llday to approve the mea· · $315,889.
.
PICK-4
• sure's emergency clause. Senate
9954.
: President Pro Tempore Bob
Veteraaa Memorial .
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
;. Cullison said he would not send
Saturday
admissions .:... Chris·
$285,969, with a payoff due of
:: the bill to Gov. Henry Bellman
tine
Pullins,
Racine; EtoUia
$63,600.
. -: without the emergency clause.
Cassell, Pomeroy; Mary R.
Super Lotto
'•
Kl~, Long Botmm.
23, 24, 36, 40, 42 and 44.
Saturday dllebar&amp;ea - none.
Cullison said the blU would be
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
admissions - Tina
Sunday
meaningless without the emer$3,582,356.
Jacobs,
Pomeroy;
Martha
: gency clause - making It effec·
Kl~ker
Baggy,
Po~eroy.
· live Immediately after being
527009.
Sunday dlleharges- Christine
• signed by the governor Instead of
· Kicker ticket sales totaled Pullins.
.
.
• 90 days after the session ends $669,024.
; because no money . coulC! be
: budgeted for the nextflscal year.
lneotlle tax
· The Senate kept chances for a
Correetion
cOmpromise alive by voting
During the Civil War, the United •
Thunday to reject the original · States Imposed a temporary 1acome
Local dairy farmer Tom
'
,. measure It approved Feb. 13. The tax. The I)'Btem didn't becoq per· 1'11elss reported an error In a UPI
; bill had been kept on the Senate nsanent utll the adoptloa o1 the Six· story on milk prices published In
'; calendar on a motion to recon· teenth Amendment to the Coaltlta- The SUaday Tlmes·Sentlnel. The
tlon In IJIJ.
story said that "prices are now at
~~--·-~---$12.22, IIIII bll!ber than both the
_ _ _ _ MPiDII
a aanon that rarmers ·are
--eguaran!Hd by !be federal p
••*l•eellnr
County Extension office. The
vernment and the price of a year
• Tile SOutbeaat Ohio Rabbit meeting Is opened to anyoae _ aao.''Tbelanaldthat tlleflaures
~eede~s Asaoclatlon will 'meet Interested In raising rabbits. .
qll!)ted appHed not to gallons but.
Tuelday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
to buadrecl weight.
•I

Board meeting chartged

morning driVIng In much of the
Midwest, cutting visibility to 500
yards or less In parts of Indiana
Missouri, llllnols, Kentucky . '
FogalsoshroudedpartsofNew
England. VIsibility In, parts of
Massachusetts and Vermont was
close to :rero as Sunday's rain
was replaced' by humidity.
.
A cold front swept through
Massachusetts the night before
the 94th annual Boston Mara·
thon, but temperatures were
warming back up to 50 to 55
degrees In advance of the noon
start In Hopkinton. Skies were

partly to mostly sunny with, a J
west wind - a helpful tailwind ·
for the runners- of 10 to 15 mph. · ·
In the Mldwes t, clear skies an"d'~
cool momlng temperatures prevailed across most of the region.
Scattered rain fell In sections of
central Wisconsin.
ln . the West, clouds spread
along the California coast ahead.
of a slow-moving Pacific weather ·
system.
In Oregon, Widely scattered ,.
thunderstorms rat.tled eastof the
, Cascades. Washington was fair
and warm.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, April 17. 1990

sua

.a

;

--' ---Weather------South Central Oblo
Occasional showers and a
chance of thunderstorms Man·
day night, wlth" a low near 50 .
Chalice of rain Is near 100
percent. Rain likely Tuesday,'
wlthhigljslnthemld50s.Chance
of rain Is 70 percent.
-~ "'ExteDded Forecast . ·
: 'led!lesdQ .tbfoulll Friday
Fair, Wedneeday and ' Thurs·

day, with a chance of showers on
Friday. Hlghswlllrangefrom45 ;
to 55 Wednesday, from the mid

• 50stothemld60~Thursday,and .
from the mid 60s tc:i. the mid 70s
Friday. Overnight lows wll! be In :
.20s Wednesday mQrnlng, be- .
tween 30 and 40 early Thurdsay , ,.,
· and between 40 aild, 50 Friday :
morning.
,

!
' ''

'
'

THE LEDGE -Cast members of ''Tile Ledge,~·
which will be presented by Meigs High School
seniors on Friday at 8 p.m., are Eddie. 'Crooks,

sealed: Standing, Nancy Baker, Tony Miller; Jay
Humphreys, Cary Bet7ing, Amy Epple, and
David Buchanon. Absent for tbe pboto .were John .
Anderson and Dan Kennedy.
,

'

'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's street department
Is scheduled to start thls week
patching those potholes that area
motorists have been complaining
about over recent months. It was
reported at Monday night's meet·
lng o! Pomeroy Vlllage Council
that , careful repairs will be
starting right' away to ensure
that the repairs wlll be lasting.
Council members, agreed that
potholes have been the biggest
complaint they have received In
the past few weeks.
The third reading of · an ordl·
nance to give village employees a
$.25 per hour wage Increase was
approved last night by counciL
Council also approved a pay ·
ment of approximately $250 to
engineer 'Gene Triplett, Pome·
roy, to cover costs of needed
litformatlon ,which Triplett ob-

Horace. Karr;: :Pomeroy, renamed
chainn.a n of·Ohio Wildlife ·. Co~ncil ~Save · the
. .

.

.

Horace Karr of Pomeroy has
only a minimum length of five
Aprii22,1991·May 11, 1991; deer,
been relected · chairman of the · Inches with no restriction on ", archery, Oct, 6-Jan. 31; Deer,
Ohio Wlldll!e Council, according . maximum length. ·
gun, Nov.26-0ec.t: deer, speclal
to the Ohio Department of
Hupters wlll . also be able .to
prlmltlveseason,Oct. 22·0ct.27;
·Natural Resources, Division ' o!
hunt bobwhite quail In Cham·
and deer, statewide ·prlmltlve
Wlldllfe.
P'lign County this fall and. wild
season, Jan. 3·Jan. 5.
. Meeting In Columbus recently,
turkey In Geauga County next
The season for trapping rae·
the 199091. h11 ntlng and trapping sprlnll·- In ·.addition to those coon, mink, or muskrat Is from
~ -::"~Jill 'a'na:.t!\iloi? (lhang'oi.:M!ere ~\•counHes•cllneiitly open,for. •!;IOth"'''!libY. 20.J~Sl,.w!ll~.tll!! be~ver
annouiiceil and Wlfllaril Lyi\Ch of ' llimtlpg season. Deer arcbery·J,.h'applrtg·: season· Is .. from Jan.
HudsOn was'· lntroduced as the
hunters wlll be prohibited' from ' 15-Feb. 28, 1991 .
·newe's t council member. Lynch,
using.any electrical, mechanical ' ·• .
appointed· by Gov. ' Richard. F.
~r e)ectronlc devls\' attached to a
longbOw or crossbow w.hlch Is
Celeste for a !our-year term on
March 20, replaces Don Watkins. · Cl!pable of projecting a beam or
Hunters will be permitted to · ray o! light on a wild animaL
kUI one deer during the 1990-91
Xhe 1990-91 hunting and trap·
hunting season and benefit from
ping seasons are ask foUows:
elimination of certain restrlc·
Squirrel, Sept, 9-Jan. 1, dally
lions, It was noted.
limit 4; ruffled grouse, Oct.
Deer of either sex may be 13·Feb. 28, dally llmpt, 3; Cotton·
hunted statewide during (he
Iilii rabbit, Nov. 2·Jan. 31, dally
one-week deer gun season, Nov. limit 4; Bobwhite quail, Nov.
26-Dec. 1, except in 21-northwest 2-Jan. 1, (!ally .llmlt, 4; pheasant
Ohio counties 'where deer of and ·chukar partridge, Nov. 2·
either sex may be hunted Nov. 26 .Jan. 1, dally llmlt 2, cock
and 27, and bucks only Nov. 28 pheasants only; crow, June 7·
thl'ough Dec. 1. Double barrel March 15, Thursday, Friday; and
muzzleloadlng rifles .38 calibre Satruday only; badger and wild
or largzr are now permitted for bOard, hun,tlng permitted year·
use du]lng the gun and primitive round, except on Sundays; wood·
weapons deer seasons. Barrel chuck, coyote, year-round, In·
length restrictions for handguns eluding Sundays; raccoon,
used during the deer gun season skunk; JOPQSsum and weasel,
HAROLD KARR ·
were also modified to require Nov. 12-Jan. 31; wild turkey,

are to be estimated by another
talned from a governmental
adjuster, Werry added.
agency lri order t.o create a new
Werry also reported that the
Pomeroy Vlllal(e map.
Council Is requesting that !Ire department and the Meigs
County Car Club are hoping to
Triplett, and Attorney Pat
O'Brien, represenllng the vlllage co-sponsor a May 6 car show
zoning committee, come to the behind the · fire department,
next meeting of council to ex· Some of the city· parking area •
plain In detail the need for the behind the station may have to be
maps and. how the maps will be blocked off, Werry .said. Mayor •
created. Council wlll then decide Richard Seyler Instructed Werry ·
to talk to the village secretary to
whether to contract with Triplett
verity the date and make ne.c es·
. for the finished product.
Councilman Tom Werry re· · 'saryarrange!lients for the show.
Mayor Seyler reported that all
ported that insurance has agreed
vlllage parking met.ers have
to pay thl' blll for repairs to the
been replaced "but just a few,"
village's fire truck which was
and those few will also be
heavily damaged a few months
rep laced as soo'n as possl ble,
ago in an accident on Union
Finally, a reminder was Issued
Avenue. Two bids were received
that the village will be coordlnat ·
on the needed repairs, which
lng efforts on Tuesday, April 24,
"were better than $16,000 In
difference," W~rry pointed out .. with the Meigs County Litter
Control Program, In a villageSo although the insurance will
wide spring clean· up .
cover repairs, costs of damages

Pool' events are
set this ·weekertd in Syracuse

Residents are 'asked to donate
By KATIE CROW"
David Deem, and Michael Smith
Items or their helpduringthetwo
as life guards. and arranged to
SenUuel CorrespondeD!
Plans for a flea market and .day fund raiser. Activities wlll
Interview applicants for pool
manager on Saturday at 4 p.m.
chlck!!n barbeque to be held get underway Saturday about 9
. Jlw, Pape,· council .member
~J&gt;aturday .. and . SUQday at the a.JTl: anll on Sunday,the firemen
municipal li\Jlldlng ·' and' •park wlll!M!Jt.i1\ Yli!\'\111!1 chlcken at 11
announ'1rell '''lhat the ' Syracuse
· area ln. Syrac4se have been a.m. On ~aturday the firemen
Pool Association will sponsor a D
com!Jleted, the "Save the Pool" will be selling hot dogs, fish
&amp; E men's . slow pitch softball
committee reported to Syracuse 's andwiches a'nd beverages.
· tournament lin Saturday and
Gene Imboden suggested coun·
Vlllage Council Monday night.
Sunday, AprU 28 and 29 , at the
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Cobb and ell g.,-t estimates on the pool
Syracuse ball park. There will be
trophies and awards given to the
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Imboden, filtering system and Its lnstalla·
first three places. Entry fee Is $65
co-chalnnen of . the "Save the tlon. Mayor Eber Pickens' noted
Pool" committee, met wlthcoun· that the chlorine or filtering
and two balls. Those Interested
are to contact Dennis McKinney
ell to detail plans for the weekend system must be a liquid. The
fund raising event and report on mayor also reported that there Is at742·2279 or Jim Pape, 992·3420.
a posslblllty that the pump can be
other activities.
Katie Crow presented some
They reported that the car repaired.
Information on the Water Edge
Council In other business apartment project apartment
ash netted $218 and that so far
they have received $371.40 from agreed to advertise for bids on complex as relayed to her by
the sale of the pool slide and Greg Bailey, the promoter . Bal·
other ventures.
Spaces for the weekend flea ladder which ls no longer being ley told Crow that there Is a
market, yard or rummage· sale,
preliminary drawing available
hired
Ingles, now and also noted that the
are available at $5for a l.Ox10foot .
ConUnued on page 10
space. Donations to the depart· Shannon Slavin, Leslie Carr,
ment for the flea market are
being accepted now. Churches
and organizations within the
village are being requested to
donate pies or cakes to be sold on
Sunday at the chicken barbeque:
'
'
The 'Red Cross Bloodmoblle will be In Pomeroy Monday fr.om
1 to 5:30 p.m. at the Senior Cltlzens Center. Blood Is urgently
needed, according to Marlon Ebersbach, chairman .
The Middleport Child ConServation League wlll furnish and
serve the canteen at the bloodmobile.
William Brooks Shoe Co. of
Nelsonvllle . The Brooks Co. has
'donated a pair of slmlllarboots to
.. the Sesquicentennial Committee
·· tobe worn byNewmandurlnghls
Wednesday's weekly meeting of the Meigs County Commls·
speech and then auctioned o!f
sloners is being postponed until Friday, 1 p.m., In the
that evening.
'
commissioners' office In the courthouse, due to Wednesday
Tickets for the Founders Day
night's Lincoln Day Dinner which Is being held at the American
Dinner are now on sale at the
Chamber of Commerce and
Legion Annex In Middleport.
Meigs County Park Dlstr.lct
Office, 204 East Main St., Pome·
roy for $10 for singles or $18 for
couples.
Other events scheduled for that
TWo calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units of
same weekend Include an Appal·
the Meigs Emergency Medical Services .
achlan Arts and Crafts display
Middleport at 2:29 a.m. went to Lincoln Street for Millie
demonstrations and a quilt sho~
Blaine· to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
by the Senior Citizens, and a
Pomeroy went at 8:22a.m. to the Country Mobllz Home Park ,
flower and quilt show by the
for Mary Lyvere who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
WlndlligTrall Garden Club at the
Continued on page 10

u~~~ilcll

T~nya

Local news briefsl-....,

Bloodmobile to visit Pomeroy

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Newman named Founder's Day speaker
Steven M.'Newman, 'author of dinner on Saturday, AprU 28, to
p.m;
"Worldwalk" andGuinnessBook kick off Pomeroy's sesqulcen·
Pomeroy, a boom town 1~.1840,
of World RecOrqs holder for the , tennlal celebration.
where coal was "king" and
first person to walk around the
The,dinner wlll be held In the
Industrialist Valentine B, Horton
world alone, will be the featured gymnasium o! the Pomeroy . built steam operated towhoatsto
speaker at the Founder's Day Elementary Auditorium at 6:30
carry coal to ports on the Ohio
River, this year celebrates150
years of 'history.
Pomeroy wws known as the
"Ruhr River Valley", named
that by the German lmmlgraflts
because of the similarities to
Europe. It was believed that the
Ohio River, the area's Industrial·
lzatlon and bOuntiful agrlcultl,lre
that Inspired Europeans to lmml·
grate here.
Newman will tell of• his s~o
.trek through jungles, over snow·
rovered mountains, and arid
deserts. During his adventure,
Newman wore boots made by the

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Fortunately, there are~
anti-drug efforts going on ·
in every town.-Do your ···· ·
part to help save·lives. Get
involved.

It's no easy task to erase
the the blight of drug .
abuse. Education is vital,
but it must !:&gt;e backed by
a community-wide
·message that drug abuse is ..
· unacceptable.

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Commission meet rescheduled

EMS has two calls-Monday

FBI joins search .f or infant of.slain wc:-man

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A Public Service Message·
Brought To You By•• ~ '

announcements

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26 Cenu

A Mut1:knedlalnc. New.-er

Pothole repairs start
this week in Pomeroy ·

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forget.

Hospital .

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WEATHER M~- The Soullleut U.S, will be sunny and warm. "
Mild tempe~atures over llle.Northeaal alleJ\d of an approachln&amp;
cool'fr~t. The cool from. tbroasb the Midwest Will produee some
wldl!lljlread showers and lhuDderldomis. Very cool air niovlng Into .
the Northern ·Plains .. 1n tile West, Paclftc front will produce ,,
heavy ral"" an!l maybe some thuaderslorrilll over most of '
Ca!Uomla and Nevada.ll'he Deaert Southwest will have one more
day of bot,' dry condltlcui8. before the Pacific front reaches thai · ,
area.

~ow soon they

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Super Lotto game

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Lottery

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·Oklahoma Jeachers·on strike

·No big

Low tonl«bt Ia mid 201.
Sunny Wednesday . Hl&amp;h In
mld 50s.
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Stocks·, ,

Pick 3 .
374
Pick 4
2748

1 Section. 10 Pages

EMS has. 12 weekend ealls··

:Rleky

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Vot.40, No.238
Copyrighted 1890

Middleton to speak

·--Area deaths--

Ohio Lottery

Reds open
. home season
'w ith Padres .

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THE DAILY .SENTINEU ,
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TO Sl'EAK - Steven M. Newmaa, aalhor ef Worldwalk, will
speak at Pomeroy'• Fonnder Dar d l - AprilS. Thetll-r ldcu ·
~t1 the ~qulcentennlal celebration of Pomeroy.
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A search o! the site was
"It's In keeping with our empha· ,25, of Bucyrus - are charged
FINDLAY, Ohio (UPI)- The
required
"to preserve the evisis of Investigating violent with murder In her slaying. They
FBI has Joined a search for the
dence."
Spieker
stated In the
are being· held In the Hancock
missing Infant son of a Fostoria · crimes, especially when a child
affldavll,
Detectives
collected
County Jail on $750,000 cash bond
that you11g Is Involved."
,woman found slain In , south
two
soli
samples
With
red
stains
Findlay Pollee Chief David each: ·
central Ohio last week. ..
and
a
32-lnch
piece
of
wood
wlth'a
All three have cooperated In
Clark.sald there .Is some specula·
· Harold Jones, chief of the FBI
the lnvesdgtillon but they deny · red stain, and made a plaster ..
tlon
that
the
lnflllt
was
aold.
office In Toledo, said Monday
cast of two tire tracks.
"I would BaY. that's a posslbll· knowing the whereabouts of.the
FBI agents 'a re helping Flhdlay
·
· Dauterman and MUllins are
child, Clark said.
and Fostoria pollee and Hancock lty, or he's secreted away, or
both
ex-convicts. '
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An affidavit Flndiay detective
dead," Clark said.
County sheriffs, deputies In
Dauterman
was
released
from
The search for the Infant began Fred Spieker filed Monday In · the Ohio State Reformatory In
searching for Michele Huffman's
last Thursday after Huffman's Findlay Municipal Court said
3-week·old son, Christopher.
Mansfield In 1986, where he bad
Doyle admitted to pollee that he
.Jones said agents are conduct· body ·was found on a creek balik
served two years for carryiJII a
near ChliUcothe; wrapped In a struck Huffman In the head With
lng a "common sense' '.lnvestlga·
concealed weapon . Mlllllna
a
piece
of
wood
last
Wednesday.
watetbed mattress. Authorities
tlon. •1we have a child of tender
served 2 .~ years In the Soou·
The
Incident
occurred
In
the
years missing, and .we presume say the 24-year-old woman died
theastern Correctional Inatltu·
storage
yard
of
Roger's
Pallet
be was kidnapped or abducted," of an apparent blOw to the head.
' tkln In Lanclll!ter on drutr
Three men - Chr• Doyle, 33, Service, a Findlay business
he said.
charges. He was releued last
partly
owned
by
Doyle,
tl!e
It Is not unusual for the FBI to and James Dauterman, 7!1, both
June 1.
of Fostbria, and Brian Mullins, affidavit said.
enter such cases, Jones said.

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�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
·Pomeroy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO_'J:J!E INTI£RESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
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Bm~ ,..,..,_,._..;...,\-r,;;;;,c:;~,.,...

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICII
General Manq""

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
!

A MEMBER of The United Press International Inland Dally Press
Association and the Aml!!'lcan Newspaper Publls~s Asooclatlon.

•

· LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thanOOo
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone.number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
l\~~- Letters shopld be in good taste, addressing issues, not personal!:

Letters to the editor

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The Daily

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~ribe

slaps 6-3 loss. on KC;
Brewers whitewash Red Sox

Page 2-The Daly Sentinel

· Pom•oy-Middlepon, Ohio
TI.HIIday, Aprl17, 1990

Low achievers DOt·aided Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - It sounded·
like a foolproof notion In 19~ - ·
recruit low-aptitude people Into
the mUI!al'y, enable them to be
soldiers and train them wltb
skills to keep them off welfare
' , once they rejoin the civilian
·
ranks.
Lyndon Johnson had launched
a War on Poverty, and his
defense secretary , Robert
McNamara, was certain It was a
war the mUitary ·could help win.
Npw, 24 years later, the federal
government Is losing that war.
Along the way, the Pentagon has
figured out that the mUitary Is
not a social welfare laboratory
that can experiment with soclety's low achievers at the expense
of a well·tralne!J military force.
, ' The recently published Pen·
lagon 'stu&lt;jy ·on the fate of
low-aptitude recruits puts
another hole In President Bush's
education plan, which already

Dear Editor:
In the later years David and I
One of the most unusual, started to exchange letters.
unique , self-educated, hard · Some of them are masterpieces
working, patriotic, conservative and many of them he did not
man that I have ever linown was publish. I will miss these letters.
I received a cornmunlcatlon
David Hart Cuinlngs. He passed
away In the early morning of from David concerning Simon
March 21, 1990. . David was. In West, the old Indian Scout. In
character In waltlngforSprlngto David's words, Simon Passed
arrive ))efore passing away.
!rom this world at the moment of
For the past 30 years I had the my birth at 5:30 p.m., June 7,
good fortune to have lunched 1921: . David strongly felt. that
with him on an Irregular basis at .Simon West's soul was 'felncarGloeckner's Restaurant. On nated In his body. This subject
these occasions, I was able to matter Intrigued me since I had a
Jearn a great deal about his dream In which I was killed
feelings towards various lndlvld· during the battle ol Chlckauals and subject matters. AI· maugadurlngtheCiviiWar. This
th h D ld 1 h d
dream was very real. But as I
. oug av on Y a an eighth told David, I do not believe In
grade .education, he had a super·
·
lor mentality as far as current reincarnation.
.
events, history, politicians, reli· ' David noted an article In the
glon, · and .many, many other newspaper that I had written
subjects. I admired his scholarly relating to my dog "Bimbo". I do .
approach to these various sub· not believe David was . overly
ject matters.
Impressed with my artiCle, but
It did not take one long to he stated as follows: Your lead
discover that on the subjects that statement, "an old man and his
we discussed, he had read just dog' ' was a title even Hemlngabouteverythlng, proandcon,on way would approve. He also
the various Issues. It ·should be mentioned In his letter, his dog
pointed out that after David "Kessler" and how devoted .
made a decision on any lndlvld· "Kessler" was to David. In this
Recent events In Japan and the
ual or current.- event, It was .connection, he stated "Kessler
Soviet
Union confirm a trend and
almost Impossible to convince relished my foot odor and Is the
lead
me
to announce a contest:
him otherwise. In short, he felt In only member of my family to do
Who
can
rome up with the best
his own mind that he was rt_ght. I so." David describe!! the fur on
name
for
a
nation that Is one
found that It was nearly lmptlssl- his dog as smooth as sUic"
up
from
a superpower'?
notch
ble to chapge his view point once .. Unfortunately Kessler had to be
Contest
detaUs
In
a moment, but
he made up his mind.
put to sleep because of old age . .!!
notethatwearetalklngaboutthe
So, as a result, I decided to play was In this· letter David gave the
the Devll's advocate In order to following tip, "to keep the faith, United States. The Idea that
get a lively discussion going. I did never pray for rain untUyou hear " America Is In Decline" was
wrong when II first surfaced. It Is
this many times, even though I the thunder."
felt the same way as David did on
David was an ardent fls)ler- more wrong now. ·
Thus, the only other super·
many matters. There would be man anct hunter. For many years
the Soviet Union, n~w
power,
times when David would get so he drove to Quebec, Canada on
denuded
of Its Eastern European
upset that you wondered If he fishing trips. Each year for about
satellites,
Is no longer one.
would ever speak to you again. 25 years he was accompanied by
as
the
Lithuanian sltuaIndeed,
On one occasion, he left · the dltferent friends, namely, Tom
Union may be
tion
shows,
Soviet
dining room, went out Into the Reuter, Lenny Jewell, Art
an
oxymoron.
There
Is little
street ·to cool off and then Skinner, Don Williams and his
union
among
the
Soviets.
returned. As time went on, i brother Durward Cumjngs,
In Japan, the stock market has
began to ~now when to cease my among others. I am !!)formed
crashed
(already losing a quararguments against his view that David was always the first to
point.
arise In the·morning and the last ter of Its value), the yen has
As pointed out, many of these to go to bed. He made certain that dlved, ' lnfiation Is' taking off. A
discussions were In real!J.y de- all camphlg members got up at recession Is a clear possibility.
bates. For one thing, DaV!It-was dawn to go fishing. David was the Nippon stands revealed: They
an ultra-conservative. He had no kind· of person who neither rain, are just human beings.
This ercdes the case made by
use for a liberal politician, a slef1t nor hall would stop him on a .
the
ABC Gang (Apocalyptic
liberal newsman or a liberal TV hunting or fishing trip. He loved
Bean
COunters)~-Those are the
commentator. Likewise, he had the outdoors. Remember Simon
Japanophlle
grand scholars who
veryllttleuseofJesseJacksonor West was an Indian Scout.
~har
t
.
the.
status
of a clvUizatlon
David worked for the United
Edward Kennedy. When I argued
Y
economy'
and balance of
the merits of these men, he States Post Office and was a
trade
statistics.
In
sb doing, they
Immediately pointed out their rural mall carrier for a great
elevated
Japan
to
the
status of a
shortcomings. Believe me,' we number of years. People who
had many serious debates on the knew him said be would never
merits of these Individuals. miss a day delivering the mall
Come to think of It, I believe unless It was Impossible for him
Qavld did like Sachtel Paige, the to go. He loved to work. On the
negro pitcher. He liked Sachtel's · other hand, he felt every ablestatement "Don't look bacJc, ~led man should work. He also
something may be gaining 0~1t that the United States goINDIAN SPRINGS, Nev.
you."
vernment ·should provide work (NEA) - Most people are
Ask non Williams about the lor every person who was able to thrilled to watch the Air Force
nag Incident. David was· really work. He did not believe In Thunderblrds perform Intricate
upset.
government spending, except for aerial maneuvers while fiylng
Did you know that Pastor ·defense of the country and tu · their jetflghters at high speeds In
David gave the Eulogy at the provide jobs for the able-bodied. tight formations. But ·for the
He was proud tohavebeenable residents of this ~ommun.lty, It's
funeral of his brother In law
James Gibson?
' to serve his country In W.W.II. terrifying.
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Ori religious subjects David He enjoyed bls companloi)Shlp
Although the local high
did believE! In God, but' did not with his comrades at the Drew school's sports teams are nick• attend any church. He had great
Webster Post In Pomeroy, Ohio named tbe Thunderblrds In hodlftlculty In reconciling the fact
and with his ex-comrade In nor of the Aerial Demonstration
service, Bradley Johnson.
Squadron ·(the unit's official
that there were man\1, many
To many people David would name) whose home Is at near-by
Individuals who were of the
Jewish, . Moslem, IDndu and appear very gruff. His brother, · Nellis Air Force Base, classes
other faiths. In this connection
Durwar~. described blm as a
are · abru!!tlY halted when . the
lle read everything that he couki·· perso.n, whose ''bark was worse planes regularly roar over at
pertaining to religion. He had
than his bite". HOwever, If David altitudes as low as 500 feet.
read the Bible many times and · got mad at someone YO!I would
Teachers and students - ·and
could quote many, many pas- quickly realize it. I also believe everybody else In the small
sages as·well as ahy Jay person I
that he was a person that could Nevada town of 1,500 people soon forget · his mad feeling. At can't communicate over the
have ever known. I must say that
I:did' have strong feelings other·
least that was .my experience noise and vibration. In · past
with him.
years, scared youngsters on the
wise, and our debates on tb!s
point were probably real. I would
David, though s~lf .educated, · sehool playground nung them·
became In my mhtd a true selves to the ground when the
llaye to describe David as being
agnostic, although to repeat, I scholar on many subjects. He planes screeched overhead while
.know he believed In·God.
mu~t have had a tremendous IQ.
fiylng In and out of Nt:llls.
· As stated earner David was a
I am certain, not-with-standing
Conditions became so tntoleraconser-Vative Republican. He had
his religious beliefs, his soul Is ble that angry tDW115people In·
no use for any Democrat, al·
now In heaven, provided he 'did • sis ted that the Air Force modify
though he was · an admirer of
not gjve St. Peter any fiack.
tbe Thunderblrds' filght patterns
J!enator Byrd and In later years,
_
. Carry on, In mld-1988. "For a whUe after·
President Truman. Therewerea
Fred W. C~ward-tt was-mc-, but-now It's
few Republicans he did not like
P.S. David, ·I know that you getting bad again," ,says one
because of their liberal views.
would want to ~11 this story as It local resident, Ellen Butterly.
Is. That I tried to do. Aaaln,l will
"They 1cream rillht over the top
Senator Goldwater was one ofhls
favorites.
miss you.
of my house."
.
Fred
Nellla Is hardly the only mil·.

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wrong;
because the results were
looks 111&lt;4! SWisi cheese.
· Another heavily fund~ pro- · counter Intuitive."
gram for low-achievers - the · The data simply didn't jibe
Job Training Partnership Act- with common sense. If you take
Is not doing mucb better. Aa we · people who do poorly In high·
recently repor!ed, · the success school and teach them a skU! In
stories are hard to come by, the mUitary, they QUght •tO be
despite the expense of $3 biiUon better off than their peers wbo .
annually on JTPA prQirams for fiunked out of high school and
didn't jolp the Army. R111ht?
t)le poor and under-educated. ·
Wrong. "These data provide no
Combine that with the often
half-baked education children .evidence to S\lpport the hypotheget In ·public schools and tbe sis that mUitary service offers of
apathy of their parents. The 'leg up' . to low aptitude and
result Is mUJions of unqualified disadvantaged youth as they
young people with unemploy· seek to .overcome their cognitive
and sk.Ul deficits and compete
ment staring them In the face.
The Pentagon study caught successfully lri the· civilian
even ltsauthorsbysuprlse.Jalllc worljl," the Perita~ron report
..
Laurence, the senior author of ·concluded.
In. fact, In terms . of employ- .
the study , told ull that at first she
didn't believe ber data. ;,I even ment status, Income and'educa· ·
asked our computer pro- - ·tion, the people who never served
grarnmers to recheck theformu· In the mUitary looked better than
U.s to make sure nothing was those who did. Vete~:ans were
·

... AND 'IOA10Ri9&gt;W CLASS~
we'LL. STuDY ~ Wo.RI&lt;S
OF TMe GR@AT /~\ASTeRS,

RAPHAel, MICW@I.AN6e!R
DoNATeLI9 AMD ··
L€0N~RDO...

more likely !o be unemployed
and .Jess educated than non-vets.
The vets surveyed were making
less money. They were even
more prone to divorce.
Laurence had to eo back over
30 year$ of research on ' the
subject before she was convinced
that the conclusions were correct. ''There was ·never any firm
dala to show that going Into the
military was good for training,"
she said. "McNamara was.golng
on Intuition. He really felt that
this was an extenslonofthe Great
SOciety and Its War on Poverty."
Time was when a high school
dropout could always count on
Uncle Sam to take him In, tutor
him through to a diploma, teach
him a skill and turn him loose on ..
t.h e ·world. Now It's elear that
Uncle Sam didn't do them any
favors.
·
·
The Congresslona:t bud~!' of·
fleer recently reported that In
1987, more than half of the black
·men recruited Into the service
came from middle and upperclass families, compared to 1980
when the black recruits ~re
overwhelmingly low-Income.
Gradually, the military has ·
become more selective and less
willing to. be a dumping ·ground
fo~ the poor &amp;Jid un~er-edl,!cated
of· all re:ces, especially when
there Is no war 10 beef up troop
·
counts.
What then does America do
with Its low achievers? Aftew..
studying the veterans, Laurence
thinks that "by theageof18or19,
It's too late. The school system In
early childhood Is the only place
to really help, and that Involves
heavy participation by the
parents."
It doesn't work · If parents
consider their job finished when
they put their children on the bus
In the m0 rn!ng. "If parents don't
get Involved, these kids will be
lost Americans who wlll be a
burden on the system instead of
produ·c uve citizens," Laurence
told us.

Contest! Reclassifying . America' Ben Wattenberg

115

superpower, all .the whUe chant· world, heretofore ·always a key world put tog~ther. Legislation
now moving through ·cqngress
lng their mantra, . "multi-polar, criteria of global greatness.
multi-polar."
·
We have cultural dominion. will likely raise the number,
WhaHs ·Japan? A lveaithy and The ACademy ·Awards, a glitzy yielding healthy population .
productive little Island, but with· trade show of some California growth.
out natural resources, will! an · merchants, · were watched on
Much to tbe sbock of the ABCs,
aglrig and soon to be s~llikln~ tel!!YIIilon by 1 billion people, In 94 our trade and budget cleflclts
population, with oniy half the coun~rles! HQwcome?TheCall· have been cut In .half (as a
U.S. population, with a labor fornla peddlers were selling function of GNP). Our standard
sho~tage but unwilling' to take In
American movies, and American ·of living remains the highest In
Immigrants, speaking .a ian· movies (and television and the world. And, with little notice,
guage with no global reach, music) are the only universal American businessmen are buyfeared or hated by their ·~~elgh- currency In the entertainment lng Into Europe at record rates.
bors, defended -by · America, . business. And getting stronger,
Such cultural Influence,
crammed Into crowded housing. as communications deregulate prosperity, commercial and mil·
Superpower? ~
everywhere.
ltary power bave never before
Europe Is In better shape. But
Which Is linked to the fact that been In the hands of one nation.
assume everything worka: li for the first time since Babel, , We sland partially guUty as
European Community from Eng- there Is an emerging universal charged by anti-Americans: we
land to the Russian border, with language. It Is American, or It are, Indeed, the most potent
tree trade, a common currency you prefer the archaic term, cultural Imperialists In history,
and free governments. Tile result English.
although non-coercive on the side
stU! leaves Europe not quite
America Is the Intellectual of liberty.
where the United States was In centeroftheworld.OuruniverslSoweneednewnomenclatui'e.
1789. The'ECwUJhavenocentral tles ,are the best. That's why so America ls , not just "a super·
government and speak 20 major many foreign students study power." The choices are not
na'tlonal languages. While popu- here. America won 48 percent of great. "Unl-power" Is alrt_ght.
lous, the EC projections show the Nobel Prizes In science and "Maxi-power" and "Super,
demographic shrinkage:
medicine In the 1960s. And 55 duper power" won't do. "Solo
And America? Consider some percent In the 1970s. And 64 Power" doesn't quite make It,
new developments, and some · percent In the 1980s. How strange
Send your Ideas to me, care of
that have·been In motion and are for a nation In decline.
your local newspaper . .:rhe
Intensifying.
' From all over, people come ·winner wUJ be announced In a
America has become the most here. We take In more legal future · column and will gain
powerful mUitarv for~ tn·-the Immigrants than the rest of .the geopolitical ~mortality.

Military .sprawl alarms residents
ltary facility whose activities
Intrude upon life In the communIty. On one side Is the Indian
Springs Gulll\ery Range. On
another side Is the vast, 864,000
acre Nevada Test Site, where ·
nuclear warheads once were
detonated In the atmosphere and
now are exploded underground. '
~ougbout the nation, from ·
Minnesota· to Mississippi, rural
communities ·are Increasingly
concerned as all of the mllltary
services - Army, Navy, Air
Force and Marines - seeking to '
acquire mUllons of additional
acres for their bases and thousands of miles of new air lanes for
their Dlanes.
Military Installations In this
country already occupy _25 mil·
Uon acres, most of which was
previously public . land. Now;
.various .components ·of the Defense Department want an add!·
tiona! 7. 7. mUlion acres of public
' land while seeking to close older,
smaller Installations;
"Today, a mechanized Atmy
battalion needs more than 80,000
acres to practice standard maneuvers, compared with 4,000
acres during World War II," says
Robert A. Stone,

.

Robert Walters

new advanced tactical fighter Is practice "may keep city dwellers
expected to need between 80 and safe," It Is "destroying the '
quallt_y of life In the very areas of
100 nautical rnUes," he adds.
Rural .regions offer the most our nation where It Is most highly
logical sites for those activities esteemed."
because "adequate weapons test·
The Hawthorne Army Ammu·
ing and training requires spar: nltion Plant Is the nation's
sely populated areas to mlnlmlze biggest. Nellis' 2.9 mUllon acres
tbe rl!!ka to human health and of air and ground range (lnclud· '
lng highly secret facilities such
safety," Stone explains.
But a different perspective Is . .as . the Tonopah Test Range)
constitute· the largest · military
offered by Robert. Fulkerson
executive director of Citizen operation anywhere In the WestAlert, a grass-roots organization ern world.
On the public Ianda surio~nd­
based In Reno, Nev., that J:~!pres­
ents those "flgbtlng to protect lng the Fallon Naval Air station,
themselves and their rural com- · 11 search late last year produced
123,375 pounds of spent ordnance,
munltles from rnUitary abuse."
He understands thilt low popu- 28,136 rounds of live ammunition
lation denalty Is "the prevatUng for everything from machine
reruion for sltinK the vast major- guns to cannons - and 1,38911ve
Ity of the federal iQvernment's bombs.
"People are under a tremend·
dangerous, dirty and deblllta tlr!g
·ous amount of stress," says one
projects In rural areas."
.
But Fulkerson says while that physician wbo practices medl·
cine near Fallon.

.

Bordin,
Mota·
. win
'.,

Boston ·~.·

Marathon &gt;
BOSTON (UP~) - Italy's Gellndo Ilordin, capitalizing upon
what he called the "crazy" pa&lt;;e
of the early leaders, Monday won
the 94th Bos.ton Marathon with a
time of 2: 08:19.
.· Bordln, the 1988 Olympic rna·
rathon winner, becomes the first
!Uan to win both the Olympic gold
medal and tile Boston Marathon.
I?ortugal 's Rosa Mota completed a sweep by the O!yinplc
champions. The women's rnarat\lon gold medalist at Seoul easily
won her third Boston crown In
2:25: 24~
e~ucnH .
Bordln, the first Italian to win
at Boston, ran conservatively In
the early miles while the lead ·
pack, headed by eventual
~~· •'*'•~filtill %
runner-up Juma.Ikangaa, set out
WOMEN'S MARATHON WINNER - Pm,tu.aJ'a
at a reckless pace.
crowned wllh a vlctmous laurel wreath by
Flynn, wile of
''They ran really c~azy," said
Boston's MB¥ilr Raymond Flyu Monday. Mota was the WOifMln's
1;!9,rC)In, .~hg_ P"f'JI"~ )~ang!'a 111
wla~~er In the runnlnl of Boilton's MthJIIlaratljon, .She ls,th~ only·
t.h~ ' top Of Heartbreak Hill, .hlst · woman IIi win the Boslon Marathon thi'~e times. (VPl)
before the 21-mlle mark. . ·
"I was sure thiit ..something
would happen to them," Bordln
said. "I). was very fast- too fast.
· I love this course, It Is very hard.
You have. to concentrare, you
have to understand how tp run
and change your speed.'.'
llordin. who prefers to. run
from behind, was not challenged
In the final 5 miles.
·
·Ikangaa, who·suffered a slight
cramp in his left. calf, defended
the speed of his early pace.
. ''It was the rtght pace fOr such
a strong fle)d ," he said.
..
The strong pre-race favorite,
Ikangaa ·finished second for the
th ird consecutive year, with a
time of 2: 08: 52:
.
"I think I 'feel unlucky," he
said. "I'm second all the th'ne. I'll
keep on trying untll 'l win."
Bordln trailed the leaders by 46
seconds at the halfway mark,
which Ikanga·a passed a.t worldrecord pace of 1:02:01.
MEN'S MARATHQN WINNER -Italy's Gellndo BordJn,ralses
·'It never ceases to amaze me
his arms In victory Monday as he hils the tue winning the running
- the aggressiveness that the
of the 94th Boston Marathon wjth a lime of 2:08: 19. ( UPI)
Africans run with," said fifth ·
plaoe finisher Rob de Castella,
the Australian who set the course
re cord In 1986. ''They have a 'f ree
abandon ·ln.the early stages of a
marathon.
A 5K run has been planned for. . who register on the day of the
Saturday, May 19 by the Middle· race, $9 . Registration on the day
port Recreation Department.
of the race will be held between 8
. .
TheracewlllbeglnatlOa.m.at
a.m. and 9:45a.m. Registration
Th~ Daily Sentinel
fees a,r e non-refundable. Race
the corner of Walnut and Second
'
T·shlrts wlll be given to the first
Ave. In downtown Middleport.
(U&amp;PSif . . .l
The age divisions will be 13·19,
50 persons who pre-register,
A Dlvloloa olllllllllmodll!o ·Joe.
20-29, 30·29 , 40-49, 50-59, and 60
according to Roger Williams,
~hUshed · every afternoon: Monday
and
over,
all
male
and
female.
recreation director.
thrwgh . E'riday. lU court St., Po·
To enter the race, the entry
Trophies will be awarded In first
merO)I. Ohio, by the Olllo Valley Publishing Company/Multlmellla. Inc..
form below should be completed
and second places overal~ male
Pomeroy, Ohio 4$7119, Ph.' 992·21!11. Se·
an&lt;! female, apd first and second
and the form and a check lor the
cpDd 'elass postage paid at Pomeroy,
places, male and female, In each, entry fee .made payable tohlhe
Ohio. ·
age division. Participation me- · , Middleport Recreation DepartMembe~
:
Untted Press,'f'.~~~.~~~~~· ~ dais will go to all entrants.
, · ment, and mailed to 237 Race ·
Inland Dally_ Press A,Ssoci•tlqu
Ohio Newspaper AssoclatloD. National
: For those whO register by May · Street, P. 0 . Box 165, Middleport,
Advrrtllinl Rer,resentattve, Branham
9, the fee will be $7 and for those
Ohio 45769.
Newspaper Sa as. 733 Third Avenue,

.,F ·og'

.:·1

Charleston defeats Rio ladies

~

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POSThiASTER: Send addreiS chan(!BI
to The Dolly Sentinel, Ul C&lt;&gt;urt St.,
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week.

'(

19·

JOnes new Vir.oinia coach

New York. New York 10017.

The Dally Sentinel on a3;1.._12 mOIIIIa .
baals. Credit will be atven &lt;ll'rtor eaeb .

Installations.
Those born on this date are under the sign ~f Aries. Tiley Include
"The five nautical mUes re- American lndustrtallst and financier J.P. Morgan In 1837; Danish
quired for aerial maneuvers author Baroness Karen Blbtel! ("OUt of Africa"), who wrote under
during World War II has grown 1o the name Iaak Dlnesen, In 181!5; Soviet Premier Nlklta Khrushchev In
40 nautical miles today, alid tbe .1894; novelist and playWrliht Thornton Wilder In 1897.

M~y

5K run set

Subscribers not dealrtngtopay U.eear.

By Ualled Prallnterllltlobal
Today Is Tuesday, Aprll17, the 101th day of 1990 with 258 to follow.
•
The moon Is wanlfti, rilovtq toward Its last quarler.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn .

·;4'

second 1!11111! then throwing to third f()r the 'double
play In the second lluitngoflheMondaname. The
·
Indians won, 6-3. (UI!I) ' · . .

~.....,..

_.rler may remit in advance dlnict to

Today in history

~

'
MISPtt\.YS BALL- Clevel.. d Indians shortstop Rafael Santaaa misplays a hit by Royals
WIU!e Wilson dropplnc the · ball as seeond
baseman Carlos Baerga scoo)lll up the hall to tag

.

whole field, opposed to what I mph , made me conditions even ·
heard be was · tying to do last more uncomfortable.
year, and It 's helped."
'rpe Indians reached Mark
Around the Leque
Gublcza, 1-1, for six runs In 11-3
Long In tradition, the Boston
Innings.
Red Sox gave Patrtot's Day a .
, Gubjcza stuck out Mitch W~bs - special significance all It s own. .
ter to open the game but walked
On a day when the city of
Carlos Baerga. Candy Maldo· Boston honored Amer ican hero :
nado singled to left and Snyder P~ul Revere. the battles of ·
delivered a two-run double to Lexington and Concord and the .
right-center field.
events that led to the start of the
Cleveland had eight of Its first Revolutionary War, the Mllwau·
nine batters In the second Inning kee Brewers staged a revolution .
reach base. Brook Jacoby led off of their own Monday by as se m&lt;
with a walk and scored on a
bllng a 20-hlt attack to annihilate .
Sandy Alomar double.
the Red Sox 18·0.
;
Rafael' Santana singled In
" It didn't matter who I threw •
Alomar to push the Cleveland out there today," said Boston '
lead to 4·0 and scored when
Manager Joe Morgan. referlng to
Webster singled. Guj)lcza finally
the members of his pitching ,
gotan out but Maldonado chased staff. "It would have been the :
him with a run-scoring single.
same way after you got going." •
Snyder met reliever Luis
Milwaukee feasted on Red Sox
Aquino with a double Inside third
pitching, roughing up five vtc.
to complete the sco·rtng In the
tims.. en route to Its biggest . ·
four-run Inning. '
margin of victory In Brewers'·.
"I felt (Gublcza) wenttl\ro~gh history.
·
·
what a lot of pitchers do during
Starter Mike Boddlcker, 1·1,
sprtng tralnglng- he hit a 'dead who took the loss , was knocked
arm,' period," said Kansas City around for six runs and six hits In
Manager John Wathan. "It's 2 1·3 Innings.
something like fatigue that
Many of the 35,478 In attendcomes on after the third or fourth ance had left by \he eighth Inning
time out of the season. But his when the crowd turned to the
arm felt gnod, his. ball was just &lt;D Brewers' side.
more flat than It usually Is . His
"I noticed after I came out of '
pitches usually move more."
the game that they were booing
·Kans11s City scored three runs when we made · an out aQd•.
· agaln~t Candlottl with two out In cheering after we got a hit." said ·,
the fourth. Jim Elsenrelch and 'Mllwaukee's Dave Parker.
Kurt Stlllwell ·each. singled Parker and Greg Brock both
giving l&lt;ansas City 20 consecu- went Hor-4, as the Brewers tied
tlve one-base hits. WilDe Wilson a club record with nine doubles.
snapped thatstrtngwlthadouble Brock scored three runs and
over first base, knocking In two produced three RBI and Parker
runs. Wilson scored on a Frank scored three limes and collected ,
White single.
two RBI. Greg Vaughn added '
The game was delayed 41 three hits and three RBI In four ·
minutes In the sixth Inning as at·bats.
heavy thunderstorms blew.
"Maybe we can play more of
through the area. The tempera- these 11 o'clock games ," joked .
ture dr 0 pped 12 degrees - to a Brock. · 'It was one of those days .
ch111y ,39 .- from the start of the you can't figure out."
game to the end of the rain delay ..
The game began at 11:06 a.m. , :
Winds gusting to more ihan 35 the traditional starting time for .
f
· - ··
baseball at Fenway Park on the.
holiday, which also coincides
0 •
with the running of the Boston
Marathon.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. student-athlete at the University
Lefthander Teddy Higuera . ,
(UPI) - Th~ University of of VIrginia," Copeland said.
1-0, coming off an Injury-riddled ;
VIrginia elevated assistant Jeff ·' 'Academics and the Integrity of 1989 season, worked 61-31nnlngs :
Jones to head basketball coach the program are critical . at
of two· hit ball for the victory. He .
Monday, making the 29·year·old Virginia, and Jeff understands
walked lour and struck out three . •
alumnus the .YOungest coach In . that."
"It'd be nice If we could pick
the Atlantic Coast Conference
got a little luf!kY. Some and choose our runs," Milwauand •ending a convoluted, nine- things fell Into place," Jones
kee Manager Tom Trebelhorn
month search.
said. "But I'd like to think that , said. "It wasastrange game. We
· VIrginia Athletic Director Jim the hard ~ork I put In for Coach
had nine doubles and dldn' t even .
Copeland, who endured criticism Holland has prepared me for this
·
use The Wall." .
after af leastfour other coaches task. Any succeSs that we ac·
It was the worst loss Boston
backed away from the job , In compllsh will be built on the suffered In 35 years, since being .
recept weeks, said former coach foundation he has established."
shutout 19.0 by the Cleveland
Terry HoUand's assistant was
"It's sort of like having your Indians on May 18, 1955.
signed to a four-year contract daughter married - you have
Elsewhere In the American
with a base salary of $100,000 per kind of mixed feelings," Holland
League. Toronto topped Balli- year.. •
said.
more 4·2, Cleveland dropped .
Jones was a four-year starter Kansas Clty6-3, and Seattle sank .
Holland, Vliglnla's wlnnlngest for VIrginia, ending his college Minnesota 6-3.
coach in his 16-year tenure,
career In 1982 after setting a
IntheNL,Itw.as: NewY6rkJO,·
announced last summer he would - record as the school's all·tlme
Chicago 1; .Montreal 5, Phlladel·
leave after the 1989·90 season to
assist leader with 598. His co liege ·.'phla 4; St. Louis 6, Philadelphia
beco.me . athletic · director at
career was highlighted .by the 4; Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 3;· and ~
Davidson.'
~chool's only 30·wln season; an
San Francisco 3, Los Angeles 1. •
"Jeff Jones understands first·
NIT championship and a trip to
Blue ·J ays 4, Orioles 2
hand what It means to be a
the NCAA's Final Four.
At Toronto, Jo.hn Cerutti held ,
BalUmore to three hits in five
scoreless Innings, pacing Toronto to its fourth win In its last
five games. Cerutti, who struck
The University of Rio Grande Golden Eagles, coached by Mid·
out five and walked none to
·SOfl.ball team dropped a pair of dleport native Charlie Entsmln·
Improve to H, received relief ·
Monday at Stanley L. ger, recorded six hits and a single
help from Tom Henke. He ,
Field to the University of error. Fabian's plt.chlng held the
pitched two shutout lnnin,l!s for .
~;arleston, 10-0 and 5·2.
his first save.
·
hosts to five hits, whO committed
Norris led the Redwomen four errors. Ridgeway and Kathy
In 'tllttlnl! with a single and a Lute each had singles for Rio
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
.
In the opener, with Missy Grande while Norris added a
446 4524
.
Kitchen supplying one hit to double.
"
account! or all tbreeoflhe team's ·
For Charte ston, Jennifer
'"2."" - - - · hits. The . team recorded one Stover suppUed two base hits and
fi!Dlf tan ,..,.."
error.
Fabian was credited with a pair
Charleston advanced on nine of bits. Lute pitched for Rio
hits and limited Itself to three Grande. ·
The Rio ladles played Ohio
errors, with Bev Smith hitting a
pair of triples. Robin Jackson Dominican at Rio Grande last
also had a triple and Angle Thursday, losing 10·1 and 10-2,
Minter chipped In with a single placing them at 0·2 · In the
and a double.
Mid-Ohio Conference.
Taking the win on the pitcher's
The Redwomen, now 1·13, host
mound W!IS Tr!cla Fabian, while Shawnee State Thursdaytln a 4
Cindy Ridgeway pitched for the p.m. doubleheader. Charleston
Redwomen.
(7·11·1) is at home today against
rn the bottom half, the Lady West Liberty (W.Va.).
·

• , .JOHN HENDEL
VPI8ports Writer
KANSAS CITY - In his
four -year major league career,
Cory Snyder considered himself
a poWer bitter.
A.n off year In: 1989 convinced
him otherwise, however, and
exte.nslve' clrUls In the 'offseason
has turned Snyder Into a spray
billet. Snyder had four hits,
Including three doubles, and
drove In two runs Monday night,
boostingthePeveland Indians to
a rain-delayed 6-3 victory. over
the Kansa$ City Royals.
Tom Ca~;~dlotti , whose first
start this season was snowed out
In thefooirthlnnlng,plckedupthe
victory despite glv1ng up 10 hits
over five Inning~. He struck out
four and walked one. Doug Jones
rerorded three· outs for his
second save. .
Snyder pushed his average to
.450 with his flft.h career lour-hit
game. 't he rlght-han~ed hitter
had two of his doubles to to right
while his other two hils were
pulled, showing ·just how be has
changed his came.
· "It's the way good hitters hit .
It's exactly thewayGeorgeBrett
hits," said Snyder.' 'It's using the
whole field.''
Snyder said he hit twice a day
between ' the end of the 1989 .
seasonandthlsyear·"to.trytoge).
th~&gt; swing down." He ·also at· .
ten(jed the hitting lnstructlom11
' sc.hool . of Chicago ' White :?ox
coach Walt Hrlnlak.
"II was something that I had to
do. It was something I learned
last. year. Iguesslfldldn'thavea
bad year I wouldn't have done it.
"Lastyearistruggledandwas
In there doing s9 much thinking
at the plate. It was just one of
. those years I wanted ·to forget
and go on." ·
Cleveland Manager John
McNamara said Monday's game
was just a continuation of. solid
batting from Snyder.
"I think. he's trying to u~ the

•

No sublerlptlons by moll pormltl!d In

areas where borne carriC' .ervlce II
available.

) '.

~

FEMALE (

AGE (Ao of•Moy I, 19&lt;10) ..........:.................. ..,. .......,..........,.
SHIRT SilEo (Aduk) S

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aleport Beereallotl Deparlmoal IK 1\1111. I waive oil dallllllor \"J:MII,
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for d1111"1-. demaadlud ael.... ·l:tJIN bave
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Blat I uve otdftdeally lnlaod for 11t11 evea&amp;, ud llutlllde bu be8ll ver-

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26 Weeks ......... .. .. .. .... .... .... .. ~ ... 137.11
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52Weeks ........ v...................... ... ,to

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'

1980

home ·t o: face
Reds ·r ettlm
.
.
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••

'

Padres With
'

ATLANTA (UP!) - The Cln·
clnnal Reds are off to their best
startln,lO years, thanks In partto
playing much of the young
season· against (he Atlanta
Braves.
Cincinnati swept · a four-game
series with Atlanta to remain the
only unbeaten team In the major
leagues Monday night. Jack
Armstrong combined with two
relievers on an eight-hitter and
Barry Larkin and Paul O'Neill
drove In two runs apiece to give
the Reds a 5-J viclory.
"We've got a great ball club,"
said Larkin, who got four hits in
five trips to the plate, "and we've
got · the potential to be
trenemdous.
"We're doing the things we ·
need to be doing right now to win

perfec~

By The BenJI

"

Th~

Tuesday, April 17, 1990_
Page 6

record'

and hopefully we can continue to Larkin stole second and one out
la ter O'Ne111 del1vered a two-run
do that ," he said.
Reds manager Lou Pinlella sin gle to left .
Atlanta drew to J-11n thesl,xth.
said Cincinnati's 6-0 start, their
best since going 8-0,i~_191Jl, " was Oddlbe McDowell led. off with a
tough; especially on the road, but double to right and werit to third
we' ve got guys that just play on a groundout by Jeff Tread. way . Lonnie Smith lofted
good baseball."
_
Armstrong, 2-0, gave up five sacrifice fly to score McDowell.
Cincinnati made It 5-l In the'
hits over .seven Innings while
slrlklng out three ·to earn the ninth off reliever· Mike Stanton.
victory·. Norm Charlton surren- Pinch hitter Joe Oliver led off
dered two hits over an inning, with a single and went to sec6nd
and Rob Dl bble earned his first on a sacrifice by Ron Oester. One
_save, allowing one hit in the out later Sabo doubled to left ·to
sco re Oliver.
ninth.
Sabo moved to third on a single
Cinclnf\atl took a 3-0 lead In the
by Hatcher and Larkin drove h'm
first off loser Pete Smilh, 1-1.
Chris Saba and Billy Hatcher led in with a single. ·
The Braves drew to 5.-3 on a
off with singles. Larkin then
two-run double by Ernie Whitt In
singled to center to score Sabo
and move .HatCher to third . the ninth.

Meigs County honor rolls announced

a'

Meigs · tr~c~ teams win 3-~way . meei:

baseman, Jell Blauser In filth .inning action
Monday. Oester got hung up between blllle!l on the
grounder by teammate Cbrls Sabo. Cincinnati
won, 5-3. (UPI)

OESTER TAGGED OUT - Reds' Rnn Oester ·
can't jump fat enough as he Is tagged out between
second and third base by Braves' second

Majors

Orlando ................... .... l7 II .til 38 %
Minter n Conference

....

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By United Pl't'fiS lnkr•Uollll
NATIONAL l.Ei\.GUI:
T!!lloll1

Tum

GB

Chl fi!&amp;KCJ ..........................

3 .571 -

Montreld ..................... .4

3 .571 -

~- Loul!; ,,, ... ,............... .-1

3
4
4
4

New Vo rL .... , .............. 3
P~lllt.d~;&gt;lphlll •... .... ..... •... S

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CIAC inmtll. ........ .. ....~ ..... l
San Dl t! (O ................ .. ... Ii
Los .\n,;d cs ..................4

.$71 .UII I
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.4'!!1 1

0 LDtiO 2 .711 114

San Fran ch«.'O . ............. 3

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AUan&amp;a .. .... ........ ... .... .... l
Heuston ....... , ............. ... I

II .117 5
5 ,117 • 5

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New York 10, Chh:a8Q I
,\tonln!a.l 5, PhU.d~pNa"
st Loul!i Iii, Plttlhu1Jh 4
Clndnr.tl S, A.Hanta J
SIUI FranciM:o 3. Uli AnJclf'll I
'ht!!WI"f Galne!ll
San Di e ~tt !Buea 1·1 ) at Clnrhuatl
fBrowninrl -0) , !:01 p.m.
Chi CiloKO (Nu~z 1-0) at New York
(ferrandez IH), i:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Combs o-1 1 IU MontreW

{Gardner G-1 ), 7:35p.m.
st. Loul!ii CMallhf'WsO.I) 4l.t J"ltWIIIrrh
cu~..ton " l·l'l), 7:35p.m.
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A.IIJU1bl (Smolb: 0-1) al Houlion (Pert•·
~tai6-I) , H : 35p . m .
,
,
lA!:! Angel e~~ (MJU"II•I!'l t -t) at
Fran cl.o~;o {GarrelbO.fl,, 10: 35 p.m.

SlUI

Wf'dlte!!diQ Gam('!&lt;;

! 4 .It! x-8an Mtenlo ..............53 !I .I'll 1~
Oallls ........... ..............43 35 .551 II
Denver ., ..................... .40 31 .SI9 U
Hou~on .......................39 3t .1111 11
Minnes ota .............. .. ..

PhU1ddphlaat Mqclltrul, nlifN
Atlunla IU HOLI!IIOn, ni&amp;N

I .M33 1 .Mot
! ,i)4

Tex1111 ........................... s · 1

~"•

*'tl

t%

Ku.niiWI City ............. ..... 2 I .333 3
St utllt' .... ..... _, ......... ...... ! 5 .!llf l %
Mlnnu ota . ................... 2 8 .'!51 .a
MoQ!IayRHii.M"
fdlhnu lee lA , 8011toa 0
Torollto ct. Baltimore Z
c'leve l~nd&amp;, Kan- CitJ:I
Sealtlt' 6, Mln~ollt :J
'I'Lie!ICIIO' Ganwo
Nt•w York (Lear:~· 1·01 "' Deholt
IT IIliana 0-1 }, 7:35p.m.
llallln1ore (Hal lard ~I J at Toronlo
~Jo'lllnllJUD 1..(1) , 1 : ~ p.m.
~
Bnfliton ( Dop!!On 0.0) at (;hlca,;o (Kina;
6--0) , !1: 05 p.m.
C l~elaad (Black 1).1)' at KIIDIII&amp;-'i tlt y
( Dohlon 0-0) , M :!l ~ p.m .

Mllwaulee (KnOoo IJ-D ) llt ·T t:!lll"
f.Bruwa.l·O) , M: ll!lp.lJ\. ,
Mlntl!lli!Ca (Andenon 1-1) at -~llld e
.(HaRMOn IJ.O ), 10:8$ p.m~

Ollkland (Moore. 0:1) at UliiHornl.a
!Lanjplton 1-11, 10:35 j.m.
\\'ednftlcla,v Gam~
New York a&amp; Dc:troll

BaiUmoK" at Toronlo, allhf
Roston at (" hltq:~J, •IP&amp;
Cle\'f'land at KIUIIMII (;lty, nlchl
- Mll~-a" r. e at Texu, nlaH
~linnr:Ht a 111 1\tQitle, niP!

Oakland at

f a iUoml~

nlrtc

NATIONAL Bi\."KETBA.LL AS !f)(:,
EW~Icrn Conference
Atlantit• Dlvilllon
Tu m
. W ~ Pet. GB
111-l'hlla ddphiu ...... .......5 1 iK .... !11· 8oll ton .. o.. .................4!1 tt .628 I ~
li · Nt'W York .................-15 :1.&amp;. .570 6
H'Mbln«(on .................30 4Jl .!1~ 20 ~
~t)'r J crMPY ..-............... 17 61 .'ZUI 33'1
Mlllml .. ...... ~ ............ .... 17 &amp;% .'lU ll-1
f entrul Dl\"lll lon

)'-Detroit ...... ...............5 ~
111:-(.,l llca.:o ,,,,, ............... 53
111:-Mihuu IIP t•............ ....u
ll· lndlanu. .................. 1.:41

U .722 -

2$ .6i9 1%
37 .531 15
311 .5111 18
Ch•wiiUld .... .... .. ..........3K 40 .-1!'11 IK %
AtiKntK ............ ...........:111 41 .4KI It ·

'

EAliLY WEDNESDAY MIXED
3-21·90
TEAM
TOTAL POINTS

Tonys Car2; Out.. .. .............................. 6G

. Sltantmys arry Out ............................ 60
Hackett s Roodng ... ............................. 42

Cl&lt; A Auto ..................................... .. .. .42

F .O.E. 2171 ................ , .., ......... ...... ....... 42
Mike Sells .......... 1 .. . ......... . . . .... .......... . .. 36
HIJh Team Serla- Shammys-1764.
b Team Game- Shammys-663.
h. !Iori• - Bob Hensley-501; Betty
Sm -490; Terry Seldenabel-426; Pat
CariCI1•468.
.
lllall Game - Bob Bensley-2CI; Betty
Smltli/ Pat Carsoo-176; Terry Seldeflabel179; Debl Hensley-170.

...

:1-211-00

.. ......

.171 1%
.500 !I

MorKIIQ' Rf!!lult~

New York Ill, MlamiiCI!'
Ani oal• Ill, O.arlotlt' 111
lldiAIIIllil, Chkaro 11n
PortiiiM 13, LA Clippers &amp;:1
Phoulx HI, Goklen Stale l=t

SIUI

Tuelld .,Y Game8

N--Jer!lll!y al Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
" '!UihlnponatOrlllndo, 1: 3D p.m.
O.nYer 11t Mlnne"ota, Kp.m :
I .A L11ker" al St'lltUe, Mp.m .
~AioniLIChlcag:o, II: 3Ap.m . ,
Mllt~;aullee,

Cl evelaad at

II;Sfl p.m .

Sacramonto at Ho1a!Co~, 11: 30 p.m.
Utah at Dllllwi,ll:30 p.m .
Wednet!duy GLltnCII

Sport.'! t a lrndJU"
lloc key
NKL PIIIJ'offs

Dlvl ~ ion M-mlflnaiM
Will e~

Conteruu-

Ad ams Dlvl!'i Jon
Hartford ul Boston, i :U p.m.
&amp;Jdnr
Statetlac, !'l.'e\'. - Gl'OI'Jte Forrman \'11.
Mlkt&gt; ,Jamt·~on .

Sul!cer
MISL .
No

,~~;am~

•hedaled

·

Tt nnl ~

Nl cl', F'rllnt·f' - M1•n':o rzGI,tlOO Philip"
Opl'n,
TamP!', Fill . - \\'ome n's 12!5,000
Ecke,.. Opu,
K11alu I.Mmpur, Malay lila - WllmP,n'"
11110,1100 Kuala Lumpur Open,
Mond~a·

S porl s 'l'ran!'iact tol\li
BaM! ball
Nt~· \ "ork (1\L) -Sent Jik&lt;• hcr Lancf'
,\'h:C..'uU.-rs to Columhu11 of th e Jnh!roo.tlonul L.- ax-ue {'t\AA) on IR)ury

re hahllitat lon.
Lo11 Anlfl'l~- l~aHd rllll' hl!l" Ri c k
IJrmp;fj on 13--dnydl~ hlt d list; ret: !.lied
c alc hl."f' Carl os ller .. nd.:ot. fro111 AUMJ ·
qur.rque of lb e Pacific CoaMI l.toagtll'
( 1\Ai\J; shifted outfielder Kirk fdbsotl
frtrnlhl'l!ito:!l - da.l· dl.'lllhledii~ L •
Philadelphia - Namt&gt;d Da"\'t Ca'4h
munagf.r of Rata \' Ia ol Nl'W Vork·Pt'nn l

Lupe ( i\) .
( "OIIf.'ge

htdlarau.- N umed Krl'IKircbner men's
swlmmltlR t"Oilc h.
Mlnnesofu. Named Llllfa HIIIMacDomld womeon'11 hli!kl'thall t·oa,•h.
Saa Dl ex-o ..I. Ml'n'?&lt; Mslsblnt bllllkel ·
ball colt c hl\laul')· Hanloi ~lgned .
UC." ln1ne - N amed Tom Fllni albl t.otlc
dlftctor.
.
VII'J(hia ~ Nil.mt•d ,Jf'ff dODfli bulu!l·
hall coach.
Feolbadl
Denver - Sl lft!ld two fret&gt; a rent~~:
kiL·ke r lan Howfleld and puller Pul
Cal ~Dun.

Miami -

Relelllled llnPbackl."f' Bob
light end Bruct Hardy,
tat•kte .Jon Gll'!lh!r 11nd comerbat.-lr. Doa
M eNeal; N IK~Wd frl'e a11ent rUDnlna: hiCk
Georg:e So,urn.
San DieS" - Slpd two lree ~tsem.i.:
Bruddn~k.l ,

By United Press InteriiB&amp;Ional
The Montreal Expos won the
battle of the -bu llpens Monday
night 1 capitalizing on five walks
from Philadelphia relief pitchers
to fashion a come-from-behind
5-4 victory.
Andres Galarraga drove In two
ryns, including the winner In the,
seventh ·Inning when he walked
with the bases loaded, to lead
Montreal.
Joe Hesketh worked - two Innings of relief to bting his record
to 1-0. Jeff Parrett, 0-2, was the
loser.
Steve Frey came on in the ninth
for the Expo§... and earned his
. second save bylnduCing Lenny
Dystra to hit l.nto a double play to
end the game.
·
Elsewhere in the National
League. St. Louis edged Pittsburgh 6-4, New York pounded
Chicago 10-1, and San Francisco
overcame Los Angeles 3-1.
Cardinals 6, Pirates 4
At Pittsburgh. Terry Pendleton went 2 for 4 with a·two-run
first-inning double and Pedro
Guerrero added two hits to lead
St. Louis. Jose Dei.eon; 1-0.
scattered two hits over 5 1-3
Innings. John Smiley dropped to
0-2. The Cardinals got the Winning runs In the eighth when
pinch-runner Dav.e Collins and
Terry Pendleton advanced on· a
double-steal. Collins scored .on
catcher Don Slaught"s errant
throw to third, and Pendleton,
who went to third on the play,
scored when Ozzie Smith hit Into
a double play.
Mets 10, Cubs 1 ··
At Chicago, Frank VIola scattered four hits over six Innings
ana Howard Johnson and Mark
Carreon each had three RBI to
lead New York. Viola, 2-0, struck
out eight and walked one. In two
sta.rts this year, the left-bander
hasn't allowed run. Alejandro
Pena pitched three Innings to
earn his first save. Steve Wilson.
0-2, allowed three runs In 5 1-3
Innings, gave up six hits and
struck out seven in suffering the
defeaj . The Mets batted around
In the seventh Inning, scoring six
runs with two outs against Jeff
Plco.
Glauts 3, Dodcers 1
At Los Angeles, Will Clark
drove In two runs ana Mike
LaCoss allowed five , hits In
picking up his second win to help
. San Francisco snap a :threegame losing streak, LaCoss
retired the . first nine men he
faced . and did not give up a hit
until Mike Scioscla singled with
one out in the fifth. Dodger
slarter Fernando Valenzuela,
0-2. gave up six hils and three
runs in six Innings.

a

The Meigs Marauders girls 800 · Meter Relay. I. ·Mary (Nelsonville, York), 3. Shank
and boys track team recently
Cremeans, Jennifer Taylor, Amy (Meigs)
Wagner , Holly Williams ,
Discus-Monk (Nelsonvllle took another tri-meet over
Nelsonv1lle-York and Trimble.
(Meigs) 2:02, 2. NelsonvilleYork ) 145-5, 2. · Cummins
In the girls meet the Lady
York,
(Nelsonville-York), · 3. Miller
Marauders totaled·911-2 points to
1600 Meters- 1. Sonja Cory (Meigs )
(Trimble) 6:50, 2 ~ Downie
Pole Vault -Shawn Hawley
win the meet, Nelsonville-York
finished second with 38 points i¥eigs) 3. Christ (Trimble)
(Meigs) h9 .4 , 2. Cremeans
and Trimble flnishecl In third
400 Meter Relay- 1.. Ronnea · !Meigs), 3. Haynes (Meigs),
3200 Meter Relay - 1. Trimble
with 30 1-2 points. -'~he Marauder Davis, J~nnlfer .)'aylor, Amy
boys outscored Trimb)e 71 to 53 Wagner . .Holly Williams (Meigs ) 9: 15.1. 2. Meigs
1-2, while Nelsonville-York came '. 56.5, 2. Nelsonville -York-'
100 Meter Hurdies- 1. Campbell
4!10 Meters-I.' Katrina Turner (Nelsonville-York) 18,3; 2. Coklln
in third place with 4112 points.
The Marauders wlll .hosfNortli
(Meigs) 69.0, 2. Cremeans
( T:rtmbl~). 3. Durst (Meigs) . · •
GaiUa and Trlnible In a trl•ineet
(Meigs), 3. McClean ITrimbil!J
100 · Meter Dash-Mike ereTuesday evening at Meigs High
300 Meter Hurdles-!. Jennifer means (Meigs) 12.5, 2. McCallen
School.
Taylor !Meigs) 61.0. 2. Schnipke (Trimble), 3. Blake (Meigs)
Glr~ Team Results
(Nelsonville- York) ·
1600 Meter Dash- Bickley
800 Meters-1. Missy Neloon (Trimble) 5:18. -2. Smathers
1. Meigs 911-2, 2. Nelsonvlll!'
(Meigs) 2:52.9, 2. ·Gallager (Nelsonville-York) , 3. Chadwell
-York 38, J. Trimble 301-2.
Events
(Nelsonville-York. 3. Benpelt~ !Meigs)
High Jump- 1. 'Deanna Haggy
!Meigs)
400 f'1eter Relay-Shawn Haw( Meigs) 4-6. 2. Rodgers
200 Meters-1. Ronnea Davis ley. Steve Caruthers; Frank
(Nelsonville- York) , 3. Fries
(Meigs) 30.0. 2: McLatfgplln Blake, Mike Cremeans (Meigs),
(Nelsoml[lle-York), 3. Rhy.ley 49.2, 2. Nelsonville.- York,
(Nelsonville-York) .
Long Ju111p- 1. Ronnea Davis
(Trimble )
· ,.
. ·.
· . 400 Meters-1. Shawn Hawley
3200 Meters: . 1. Sonja Cory &lt;Meigs) 56.4, 2 . . M,o nk
(Meigs)16-1,2, Wagner(Meigs),
·3. Warren (Nelsonville-York)
(Trimble) 15:30,2: Christ (Trim- (Nelsonv111~-York) , 3. WashingShot Put_. 1. Nancy Baker
ble) 3. Cremeans (Meigs)
ton !Trimble) ,
.
( Meigs) 25-6 , 2. Gall
1600 Meter Relay- 1. Katrina
300MeterHurdles·l.Campbell
&lt;Nelsonville-York), 3: Martin
Turner, Missy Nelson, . Deanna (Nelsonville -York) 43.8, 2. f:on- .
(Trimble)
Haggy, Amy Rouse · (Meigs ) klin iTrirr1blel. 3. D. Cremeans
Discus- 1. Joyce Riley (Trim4;_57.2, 2. Nelsonville-York. 3. !Meigs).
Trimble
800 Meters-1. Leeper !Trimble), 2. Cremeans (Meigs), 3.
Baker (Meigs)
Boys Team Results
ble) 2;13, 2. Dounkle (Trimble) 3.
3200 Meters-1. Missy Nelson,
1. Meigs 71, 2. Trimble531·2. 3. Hall Y. Meigsl
·
Amy Rouse, Eltzabeth Downey,
Nelsonville-York 411-2
200 Meters -1. McClelland
Tiffany Bennett (Meigs) 12: 29.5..
Events
!Nelsonville-York) "25.6. 2. Cre2. Nelsonville-York, J. Trimble
High Jump- 1. Matt Haynes mean s !Meigs), 3. Jenkins
100 Meter .Hurdles-I. Jennifer . (Meigs) 5,8, 2. Leeper &lt;Trimble I (Trimble)
,
Taylor (Meigs) 18.2, 2, Tu~r
3. Caruthers !Meigs)
. 3200 Meters- 1. Bickley C:I'rlm(Melgs),3.McCleland(Trlmble)
LongJump- 1. Mike Cremeans ble) 11;26, 2. Chadwell &lt;Meigs), ·
100 Meter Dash-. 1. Ronnea
!MeigS) 19-0, 2. Leeper rTriin- 3. Baloy {Meigs) __
Davis (Meigs) 14.1, 2. McStepl)en
ble), J. Kline 1Nelsonv1lle-York
1600 Meter Relay- 1. Trimble
!Nelsonville-York), 3. Wagner
Shot Put- 1. Monk (Nelsonv11le- 3: 54.2, 2. Meigs, 3. Nelsonv11le·
(Meigs)
, York) 53-10 , 2. Cummins York

' "

ONCEUPONAP~\Y(IROIUND-·Th,~IMeliP

High School seniors will present "Once Upon a
Playground" a&amp; the hllh school Friday evening a&amp;
8 p.m. Cast members are, Todd Smith, Nancy

OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) appears that Oakland has with- .
Mayor Lionel Wilson said Mon- drawn from this proposal. and 1t
day he would ask the City Council
appears that they have with-.
to rescind Its $486 mllilon plan to
drawn," Brooks said. ·'We're
pursuing other opportunities ."
return the NFL R~!d~rsfrom Los
The origmal deal annou.nced
Angeles, saying . It s n?,t dead .
but 1t seems to be dying.
. , · last month. was a $660 mtllion
The surprise move came alter
package that has recently been
Ralders' principal negotiator
revised downward to about $486
Jack flrooks blocked Wilson's · mtlllon.
plan to putthe controversial deal
Los Angeles Deputy Mayor
before the voters In a special Mark Fabiani said the latest
election. ThAt angered Alameda , developments "open a tremendCounty Supervisor Chillrman ous window of opportunity for
Don Perala. a· leader In the Los Angeles to retain a profescampalgn to ret turn the team-to • sional football team. and Infuse
its Oakland roots.
large amounts Of private money
"I have heard there Is no deal. to renovate the Coliseum."
that the deal. Is dead," Perala , Brooks's move came only
said. "lforonewlllnotspendany minutes before Wilson was to
more time. or energy pursuing hold a news conference to anfuture options or prospects for nounc e his pian to put the .
returning the Raiders."
.. financing plan before the voters
Perala said he was upset with tri a special · elect.ion in July.
"the manner In which (WilsoQ)
did it."
.

Syracuse Elementary
First grade: Cara A$h, Daniel
Bable, Sarah Ball, Jeremy
' Fisher,.TammyFryar, Beth Hill.
Chad Hubbard, Erin Struble,
Matthew Warner.
Second grade: AdamCumings,
Josh Davis. Sara File, Tiffany
Hickel, Donnie Proffitt, Ashley
Rupe, Jon Smith, Autumn
Thomas.
Third grade: Bridget Cross.

Ash II Davids Tara Ktrighting, cole Nelson, Brandl Reeves,
Lauren Young, overall honor
Sonya Lltchlleld, Kim Sa.yre.
·
Fourth grade: Cynthia Cald- roll.
well, Evan Struble, Billy Young .
Riverview Elementary
Fifth grade: Brian Allen, Chris
Third
grade: Stephanie Evans , .
Ball, Kevin Field:&gt;. Shaun Fife,
A
s,
Michelle
Buckley . Shane ·
all
Jason Lawrence, Travis Lisle, ·
Church,
Christa
Circle, Jull
Amber Thomas.
Hayman,
Wesley'
Kanawalsky,
Sixth grade: Robby Crow,
Ryan Hill. Rochelle Jenkins. Heath Proffitt, overall honor roll.
Fourth grade; Paul FrldenJennifer Lawrence, Jay McKeistlne,
overall honor roll.
vey, Saplml Sisson, Ray an
Fifth
grade; David Baker,
Young.
Martie
Holter,
overall honor roll.
The honor roll for the fourth
grade;
Rebecca Evans,
Sixth
six-weeks grading period in
all
A
s,
Connie
Pooler, overall
elementary schools in the Easthonor
roll.
Candy
Mays, acaern Local School District has
demic
honor
roll
.
been announced by Dr. DanielL. ·
ApUng; superintendent.
Tuppers Plains
Students listed on the overall
Third
grade:
Jessica Bartram,
honor roll made a grade of B or
Jennifer
Cline,
Joshua Hager,
above In their subjects while
Sarah
HousehOlder,
Allsha Rothose listed on the academic
jas,
J
.T.
White.
overall
honor
honor roll made a grade of B or
roll.
above In all academic classes .
Fourth grade: Michelle CaldChe11ter Elementary
well,
all A s. Vicki Adams,
Third grade: Jason Mora , aliA
Blllena
Buchanan, Wesley Bucks, Beau Bailey, Dustin Huffman,
ley.
Steven
Durst. Jeremy Kehl ,
Valerie Karr, Brynn
Moss.
Kelll
Norris,
Abraham Rach ,
Aaron Wllf. Angi Wolfe. overall
Betsy
Sheets.
Joey
Weeks, overhorior roll; Jessica Marcum,
all
honor
roll;
Misty
Lyons,
academic honor roll.
academic
honor
roll.
· Fo)lrlh grade: Kelli Bailey,
Fifth grade; Katy Manlcke. all
Reilae Pooler. all A s, Stefani
A
s. Amber Fortney, Billy ·
Bearhs, Brandon Buckley, dverFrancis.
Tract Heines, E;rln
all honor roll
·
Sexton,
overall
· honor roll;
Filth grade: Meredith Crow,
·
Sherry
Burke.
Sean.
Maxey.
all A s, Chris Bailey. Eric
Watson,
academic
honor
Chance
Dillard, Marla Frecker, Leslie
roll.
Parker, Lisa Stethem, Aima
Sixth grade: Jonathan Avis,
Wolf, overall honor roll.
Brian
Bowen. Brian Hoffman,
Sixth grade: Jessica Karr ,
Michael
Laughery. Ginger NutJennifer Mora, all A s, Melissa
ter.
overall
honor roll.
Dempsey, Robert Mur(ihy, Nl-

Star Grange meeting conducted
"Spring, A Time lor Safety and lor children and may be pur- attend . .
Health" was the theme for the chased from any grange master
Ashley Colwell received first
program conducted by Lecturer . and before April 15. .
place In tM Junior ages 5 to 9
It was niported that three sewing contest which was a dust
Katherine Riley at the recent
meeting of Star Grange. Read- members and five juniors at- milt. Second place was received
logs Included, "Accidents Tend tended Grange Rally recently.
by Bridget Vaughan, and Chel·
to Blossom In the Sprll)g" by
Election of Delegate and alter- sea Montgomery received third
Freda Smith; "Embarrassing ·-·nate lor State Grange Convention place.
Moment" 'by Bernice Mldklll; was held.
In the adult sewing contest, an
"How to Join the Coronary Club"
The Meigs County Pomona outside garment for a child was
by Ann Halliday; "Home Medl- Grange bake sale was announced won by Freda Smith with Bernice
Bissell, Hea&amp;her Hova&amp;ter" aDd Shaanon NewKISS ME QUICK -"Kiss Me Quick, I'm Double
cal Club" by Opal Dyer; "Think· lor May 4 and 5 at Krogers In Mldklf! receiving second place.
some. Staadinl, Mike Parker, Jim Durst, Marsha
Parked" wm be presented by these Melp Hl~h
lng out Loud" by Larry Mol)tgo- Pomeroy. All members were
There were 26 members, visKing, Dennis ~othe, Kelty Douglali, Kerry CoK,
School seniors on Friday evening at 8 p.m. ai the
mery; ·:Drlvll)ll Advice-Here's asked to bake something for the . ltors and juniors present.
Na&amp;alle Tromm, Chris Stewart, and Ryan Harper.
hlgb school. Cast members ore, seated, Amanda
How to Reduce Fatigue"; a quiz sale.
The meeting was followed by a
'
.
on safety and health was given
Special Gr11nge Week activlpotluck supper.
andhandoutsonhomeflresa!ety ties' were planned with a potluck
were distributed. ''Today Is supper on Saturday Aprll21. Also
Ours" was read by Charlotte an Easter egg hunt for the
·children and a prograi;T~ lor the
Erlewlne.
There w111 be a music festival
Donations were made to the evening. All members and Intersponsored
by the skUled nurlng
State You·th and Junior Fund; ested persons are encouraged to
..
facility
of
Veterans Memorial
Ohlll Travel Fund; and the
Hospital
on
Saturday from noon
DEARREADERS:Overlbeyears,
"He'snicetoeveryoneelse.llmust
national Youth.Leadership Fund.
to
8
p.m.
I bave received dlousands of lette111 be my fault lfi can learn 10 do things
The Meigs Cqunty Grange
Admission to the charity drive
·Banquet was announced for April
from abused women. They aD sound · right, he won't get mad.
Is
S5 per couple or $3 single with
20 at 7: 15 p.m. at the Salisbury
as if they were written by the same
"He11 change. He means it this
children
under 10 admlt.led free.
)letliOII- SmaD wonder. The (llltcms
time. rm going 10 give him another his victim rrom outside support -- Elementary School. The speaker
·
Enterlalrunent
will Include the
of ablise are similar. The rt$p00ses chance.
family, friends, pc:Ople at work. wUI be Patly Dyer and music will
Charlie i.llly,
groups,
Occasslon,
Mrs.
·
Wilson
Carpenter
reaue similar. The lies these wcrnen tell
"It's the drink (ocdrugs) lhatroakes Keeping you isolaled is an effective be provided by Denver Rice.
Mud
River,
and
Abandon
T.V.
viewed
the
book;
"Riding
the
Tickets are .6 for adults and $5
themselves are similar. Abused him behave this way:
ploy.
There will be refreshments and
Iron. Rooster" by Paul Theroux,
women shale a paralyzing fear !hat
"l'msougly(orstupid),nooneelse
An abuser tries 10 desuoy the
at the recent . meeling of the door prizes. The public Is Invited
keeps them locked in10 these tragic, could Jove me. He's the best I can do. woman's self-esteem and mab her Walk-a~mon
to attend.
·
Middleport Literary Club.
self-destrix:tive relationships.
Being alone would be wane. •
believe she Qll'l live wilhout him.
In her review. Mrs. Carpenter
THE1RUTHIS:ThewayhetrealS COIUiselinll at a women's center can
Recently I 118W a splendid healthThe Great American Walk-astated that few authors have
oriented brochure put out by FDR you is despicable. It is not normal10 help you-understand tbis.
Thon
lor
March
of
l&gt;lmes
will
be
done
a better job of recording
.
April
28
at
10
a.m.
and
Is
PublicationS. It contains some infor- be abused. He's going 10keep ~g
held
impressions
of the immense land
The most loving lhing you can do
sponsored
by
the
Meigs
County
mation that fd like 10 share with the on you IS long IS you penni! it.
of
China
and
that many do not
is make your abuser responsible for
Jaycees
.
know
·lt"s
various
Inventions. For
millions of WOIIIIIII who aue beinll
He doesllhbuse others, because it .his behavior. Separation is the only ·
There w111 be an adoption
·
For
those
who
would
llketojoin
•
example,
lhe
umbrella.
gun
lcoocked around by their husbands · isn't safe. Nobody else would put up way til demonstrate that you will no·
orientation
workshop on Saturand lovers. Here it is:
wjlh iL You aue the only one he can longer put up with iL As lonJ as you the team effort of the Meigs powder, paper money, spltroons, day at 4 p.m. at ·st. Lukes
citizens striving for a chamber pots. 1954 packard cars,
HE 'J'EU.S YOU: "You're flot so knock uound.
stay with an abuser, he will continue County
better
future
for the children, quills, pens, wpoden yokes. play- Lutheran Church in Marietta.
bad off. We haye a good life.
Abuse ·is slow death. You were 10 dish it out, 8nd this wiU go on until
contact Laura Gaul at 992-3403 or Ing cards. and many more. She The ·church Is located at Fourth
"You'lire J'C!I)Iy askina for it when probably abused when you were you are a tocal WJ'C!)k -- or dead.
Karin Young at 985-3303.
went on to say that China has a and Scammel Street ,
you~ me crazy like this. I don't yOWig, so his cruelty seems nonnal.
There IS help, dear readen. C!ill
The workShop · Is open to
The rain date for the event will law permitting jusr one child to a
get Ibis WII'J with anyone else. It's It is not nonnal. It is a hideous way to the Domestic Violence Hotline at
anyone
Interested ln. adoption ·
family and that R)any Infant
be May 5.
yOII" fauiL
live.
·
I-800-333-5AFE (7233). Tbc hear·
and
there
w11l be no admission
There will be an Informational baby girls were drowned.
He will never change until you ing impaired can call I -800-873- meeting on the walk on Sunday at
, ~Give me another chance. I'll
charge.
Mrs . Carpenter concluded her
change. .
make it clear that you will no longer 6363. You will be put in IOUChwitha 3 p.m. at the old American review by noting that since the
Adoption social workers from
various
Ohio agencies will be
"Ifyou leave, n1 fmd someone else put up with his abuse. Separating shelter in your IU'CL
Legion hall in Middleport.
rule of Mao, China has chan~ed
presenting
a panel discussion
who is beaer than you.
from him may make l!im act profes·
An alcoltol problem? How can you
and that the people lear the ir .
4uesdons
and answeres.
with
"I was drunk. I didn't know what I · siDIIIII help.
lilllp your&amp;lllf or someone you lovt?
freedom will not last.
was doing:
.
Hehitsyou,bccauseheisacowanl •Alcoliollsm: HI1W lo Rtcoglliu II,
"lfyouleave,mtakethecbilclrm. andabully.Ifhedrinksorusesdnlp, How 10 Deal Wirlill, How 10 Colllmigl\t even Jdll you.
·
that's another problem. It is not lhe quer II" will giw: you IM QMWI!rs.
Judy Crist who Is serving with
"You're so fat (oc dumb oc IJIIIIC!u- reason he beats up on you.
Selld 11 &amp;ll/f-oddresmJ, lo11g, busi- the World Gospel Mission In
caled), I'm the only One whO would
When an abuser is faced witb MsHhe llttWiopt and II CMd: « Honduras. Central America, will
putupwilh}'QII. Youcouldneytrget losinll his victim, he wiU uy to han&amp; INJniyorder for $3.65 (this ittCiudes be the speaker at the Heath
.,
· another _man. •
·
011 any way he can. Threats and .. poslllgtandltmidlittg) ro:Aicoliol,cl United Methodist Church Elea.'
YOU TELL YOURSELF: "I 1;111 . promises are his best weapons. Don't o Alii! l.mulers, P.O. Box l/562, nor Circle meeting to be held at
handle this, bee an~ a lot of lhe time fall for this. ·
Chic11go,lll. 60611--0562. (Itt Can- the home o! Betty Fultz, Fairlane
Drive, Thursday night, 7:30p.m.
A typical abuser tries to separat,e /Ida, stllll $4.45 .)
he's OK.
• 24-Hour Skilled &amp; Intermediate
Ms. CriSt who Is relatively new .
Care
to world Gospel Mission has been
ePrivate
&amp; Semi-Private Rooms
appointed to El Sembrador Do• Thonpeutic Diets
There ~Ill be a Bend area nald Hawk In Honduru. She says
that as a military c hlld, she
• Speech Th.crapy
time of 8 p.m, was ~et beginning
gospel sing on Sunday at2p.m. at experienced moves · to many
Louise Radford presented a
•Physical
&amp; O ccupational Therapy
In May.
the Bellemead United Methodist slates and countries, learned to
program on Easter for the recent
•Recreational Activities
Refreshments were served by
Church on Burdette Street in deal with other culture$ and
meeting ' of the Rock _S prings
C:har~ and Bunny Kuhl. ··
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va.
• Religious Services
Grange.
adJusted to the changes o! new
Members
reported
Ill
were
Featqred
singers
will
be
the
•Medicare:Medicaid-VA Approved
Her p~ogram Included readand new people.
N·ancy Radford and Bruna· Spencers from Shiloh, Reflec- places
At El Sembrador, she will
lngs'"'of "What Easter Means,"
lions, and Charity.
"In the · Carpenter's ·Shop," . Grueser.
teach the missionaries' children.
446·7112
The public lslnvtted to attend.
'
"Spring Fever," and "Spring ·
Cleaning."
Barbara Fry reported on tbe
eyeglass proJect and announced
the winner of the blackberry
Gallipolis, Ohio
The Bashan Fire Department
cakecontestwasSarahCaldwell.
La&lt;!les Auxiliary will have a
She also gave sevl!l"al safety Ups .
smorgasboard dinner on SaturThe Pomona Granae bake sale
day from 5-8 p .m. at the fire

The truth is this:
abuse ·is not normal

Wilson had called Brooks to
advise him of the news conference Mc!\rthur said.
·
·"Brooks said there is no
exe~~ted document to put before
the voters and, thus. in essence,
there is no agreement. no final- ·
ized documimt ," she sald:-·

r----------....,

Ann

Music Fest set

Middleport
Literary Club
meeting held

slated

APRIL SPECIAL

Adoption orientation
workshop scheduled

ON CARPn CLEANING ·
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ON ANY COMBINATION OF 5
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ADVANCED CLEANING
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''For 15 months, we operated
as partners In an enterprise we
felt.was good for the community.
But It Is a partnership. And when
one partner pulls out, you kill the
proposal. This deal is now dead."

Baker, Tammy J.a,&gt;liJ,ei1, M.iiiiie
Epple, Amy Johnson, Jenny Buck, Tony
aad Kri&amp;lln King. Absent for the photo was
Stevens. ·
·

The honor roll for i:.etart Falls
and Syracuse Elementary
Schools , In the Southern Local
School District has been
annoUnced. ·
Making a "B" or above In all
their subjects to be listed on the
honor roll were the loUowing
students:
Letart Falls Elementary
First grade: Katl Cummins,
Holly Hannan, Garret Kt~r .
Jessica Nance, Fallon, Roush,
Matthew Shain, Kayla Stover.
Second grade: Jessica Alley ,
Brawn Herman, Autumn Hill,
Misty Sellers.
Third grade_; Jane Hill, Mike
Johnson, Jennifer 11/lorrls, Carrie
Stobart, Rebecca Wolfe.
Fourth gr11-de: Wesley Hall,
Dean H1ll, Jennifer Roush, Billy
Tackelt;.HIIlaryTurley, Ranetta
1
·.
Wh eeer.
,
Fifth ·grade: Eva Crabtree,
Daniel Fisher, Tl'udy Justis,
Ryan Norris, Adam Rou.sh, Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre, Vanessa
Shuler.
.Sixth grade: Jason Barnell,
Jennifer _Cummins, Kevin Por~- Sh u 1er. •
ter, J aswt
.

_Raide~ deal hack to squar~ o~e

Brooks stressed during a late
afternoon jlhone call with Wilson
kicker Tom Whellban and piMiler Keith
that there was only a verbal
Enrlbill. ·
agreement
between 'tlie team and
Hoe key
Philadelphia - Flred(taerlll~n~na~:er
~the city and Alameda County,
Bobby t'larke.
·
' ·
and therefore no legal basis for a
81. LoW" Blurs - Recalle d a:oallen*r
Pat JahlonHkl.
special election.
"In elfecl, what ,the Raiders
are doing Is taking the rna tter off
the table," Wilson said. "It Is not
dead, but It seems to be dying:"
Wilson's press secretary Carol
McArthur said Wlls6n " Is going
Sports briefs-- to ask the council to rescind the
Hensley-524;-Dale Davts-504· Pat Carson479.
•
'
proposal. the latest one. ·which
High Game - Bub Stlvers-194o Debt
soccer
came
when Brooks sat In the
rs~~sley-203 : Bub Stlvers-193; Pat CarsmThe World Collegiate SOccer
mayor's
office and said the
Championship, featuring eight
Raiders
would
for! ell their"detop college. teams from ~he
ALLEY CATS
mands
lor·
gua~antees
on general
3-2j)-90 .
United States, Canada, Mexico,
admission
tickets.
TEAM
TOTAL POINTS
Brazil and W,est Germany, will
Codner Trucklng ............... ...... ~ ... ..... ....66
"Which comes down to, there
be
played on the U.S.-Mexlco
~nl2 ou &amp; cas .......... .. ....... :·.......... .... 43
will
be nothlpg ·on ~he tab!~."
g
nd Ladl"' Aux ............... .. ...... ... .42 border April 18-22. The tourna· Wbat~·s Auto Parts ........... ........ .. .... ... 42
McArthur
said. .
,
·
ment will be held In Las c:ruces,
~~~~b Olds.• cadillac &amp; Chev ... ....... j()
.
"So
we're
_
pulllnt
back
and
U$ .................... ...... . ....... .. ....... 34
N.M., and Juarez, Mexico.
regrouping
the
City
Council
and
~r!ran futies ................................... .34
.Track aad Field
r var Sounds .. .......... .................... .t9
discussing
It
With
them,
In
detail,
Marathoners Lindo &amp;miers,
exactly where they would like to
IDGH ..!MME -:::.. Brenda Hagjy-~;
Rosa
Gutlerrez-a.nd t.eslle Lewis
~fdowery- 181; Brenda Haggy &amp;
go - wlfetijer to p,ursue It or not."
Shirley Simmons-179.
have been named to tbe U.S.
, Wlilon Jald the Raider move
BIIIH 8EBJIII - Brenda H~!138·
team for this summer's Goodwill
Marlrne Wllsm-509; June Mowe •
'
lett
blm no choice, while Brooks
Games In Seattle. Most of the
&lt;! BIJH TEAM GAME odner
suaeated
It was all Oakland's
Trur,klnr-631; Whaley"• Auto Parto-605:
U.S. Goodwill team will be
Jln1 Cobb Olda., Cadillac 8t Chev.-l!e3.
chosen at the U.S. Outdoor Track doing.
HIGH TEAM 8ERII!:8 - Codner
•The organization Is going to
and Field Championships In
Truckl~-!'193; Whaley's AutoParta-1789; .
•rk at other opMrtunltles· If It
Blr Ben . Ladl .. Awt.-1689t
•
. Norwalk, Calif., June 14-16.

Local bowling

!

.. 789 , liMI -1 %

.4-13 25%
.3KO 38 \-1
SacramPnto ................. 23 H .2tl 31}/1
x -ciiDilhed playoff herlh .
Y·CIIIIl'laetll dhi810n tile.

"""'

.................. , ..

3&amp;%

Tutsd~·

W L Pet, GB
TnroJJto _...... ...... .......... 5 3 .625 N1•w Vork ..................... :l I .751 Rmdon .......................... 4 3 -~m
%:
Detrllll .. .... ....... ............ 3 1 .nt 1*
M~lwa11k ee .................... 2 :1 .100 1%
CIC\'c:land ...... ... .......... .. 2 ~ .100 1%
BultlrrlOJ"{' .; ................... 2 4 .333 '!
\\l(.'ftt
p

. ~:a\

~llt:Ui c Dlvi~IOn

x·LA Lakers .......... : ... .. 60 Ill
• ·Portl:&amp;nd ................. .. 116 2!
• ·PhoenU ....................113 · 2i
Stoattle ......................... !lt :JI
Golde n Statl' .. ............. .35 U
lA Cllppt"n ..... 1.......... .3t -19

AMERICAN LEAGUE

O&amp;&amp;kland
5
Chl t•aao .. .................... .. l
Callfornl.ll ..... .... .. , ......... ~

lUI .:11~ · 3Z

Cleveland at New Jer!tll)', nl~
lndlanu. at Phlla4~phl a, nlrht
Churlotte Ill Miami, nliht
Utah at SIUI A.nlonlo, nlg:hli
Pertland llt Phot'nb, nl1hl
1..4. Cllp)W'r"~at Golden Slate, nlrhl

St. Louis at Plttlihu I'll\ niJhl
san Dt e co 14t Clnrln-'1. nl 11hl

•

:n

Charloue .. ... ........... :.... lll 61

OrlanOO w Bos,on; nlr't

Lo!f Anreles lit San Franci!'ICo
Chlcal{o a&amp; New hrtt, niKftl

1'l! llltl

GB

x ·Utah ............. ............S-1

W L Pet.

Pl~ tsburgh ................... 3

DlvbiWn
W L Pet.

·Expos edge
Phils; Cards
down Pirates

·Daily Sentinel

.

Crist to speak

•.

PROFFSSIONAI
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Home-Like ·Atmosphere
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.Rock
. . S. . .G
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..
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The } -Day-Premium CD
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an d stDJcet to
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that stared rate remains

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992·8861
448-0902
Middleport

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Member .FDIC

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Krogers.
• A communication was read
from Arthur Crabtree, deputy
muter.
Obligation of first and second
degree )l'liS copferred !ln two
candidates 11\d a new meetll)g

Tbe cost Is $4.50 for adults and
$21or chlldrell&lt;UIIder 12.
The dinner wtll feature ham or
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'

Paga 6-The Daily Seminal

Pomeroy,.- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, April 17. 1990 •
17, 1990

Oklahoma union.leader -It's legal...--------~------~-__._____,

says.strike. will la8t
all week in schools
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) Tho.u sands of Oklahoma
teachers wen I on strike to protest
against state lawmakers who
"thumbed their noses at the
publiC" by rejecting a $230
mUllan education-reform package, a union leader said.
On the first day of the strike,
some 15,000 teachers and school
employees stayed away from
their jo!»s Monday and 145 school
districts were closed; said Kyle
Dahlem, president of the Oklahoma Education Association.
The OEA, Oklahoma's larges t
teacl\ers association, said the
strike was expected to last .
through the week.
· 'The response to the call for a
work stoppage has been over·
whelming, " Dahlem said.
Many of the .strlk.ing teachers
went to the state Capitol In
Oklahoma City, where last Wednesday the Senate squelched a
$230 mllllon package that would
have raised teacher salaries which are the third-lowest In the
nation - · consolldated some
schools, and aimed to produce a
more equal le..:el of education
quality and finance across the
state.
·
liundreds of schoolchildren
joined their teachers on the steps .
of the Capitol for a rally Monday.
No headcount of demonstrators
was Immediately available irom
pollee or the governor's office,
·but unofficial estimates ranged
from 14,000 to 20,000·.
i 'We are here to protest the
aCtion of 20 senators last Wednesday night when they thumbed
their noses at the public, the
business community, teachers
and, most important of all, the
clilldren of Oklahoma," Dahlem
to!d the protesters.
The teachers . association
le~der sa!d the demonstrators
have "joined together to protest
the failure of · the Oklahoma
Leglslat.qre to deal with the crisis
in· publlc education" In
Oktahoma.
·
~
Dahtem read a statement of
support from Keith Geiger, presidllnt of the National Education
Association. the national
'
teachers
group with which the
OEA is affiliated.
· ','Make no mistake about it there Is an educational emergency In Oklahoma right now,"
the statement said. "The future
of! Oklahoma depends In large
part on the courageous actions
taken this week by school employees as you stand up for what

.

is right and so desperately
needed."
Teachers aiso muted through
the halls of the Legislature
Monday wearing stickers saying,
"We have waited long enough."
They stood in long lines at lunch
counters and restrooms, but
were advised by theOEA to limit
direct contact with lawmakers
and to.stay out of the House and
Senate galleries. ·
The walkout was not endorsed
by the state's other teacher
association, affiliated with the ·
American Federation of
Teachers, which considered the
strike illegal.
The OEA Insisted the "with·
holding of services" was legal
because the only type &lt;if work
stoppage prohibited by· law is a
strike during contract negotiations.
Altoaugh Dahlem said the
s trike will last throUgh the week,
it Is not yet clear if the level of
support will be as strong as It was
.
Monday.
The response to Monday's
prates t request varied across the
state. Schoolrooms in Tujsa, the
state's largest district, were
empty. Oklahoma City ·school
Superintendent Arthur Steller,
whose teachers a·re represented
by the AfT, said Oklahoma City
schools would remain open and
teachers who do not 'report for
work will be temporarily ·

re~.;;:'dtstrict

school officials
have canceled classes for one to
five days, while others said
schools will remain open whether
teachers show up or not.
The Legislature's action Wednesday · kllled an emergency
clause in an education btu that
would have put the reform
measures . and $230 million in
taxes - · to be raised through
increases ln sales, personal lncome and corporate taxes·-lnto
effect the moment Gov. Henry
Bellman signed lt.
. Senate President Pro Tempore
Bob Cullison said he would not
send the bill to Belimon without
the emergepcy clause,
Cullison said the btu would .be
meaningless without the emergency clause because no money ·
could be budgeted for the next
fiscal year.
Cullison said the Legislature
must get on with its work of
writing a budget for the next
fiscal year, beginning Ju)y 1, and
it woul~ be futile to pursue the
education bill later than this
week. (

I

I

I

Aseembl;ym1111

Jeeth ele1111ed during a

'

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f

press confereace In

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Oef Ruulft Fatt
L.------~--.;._

Christian s ·c ientists' manslaughter tri.a. I be·g
· •m·.·.s ·
BOSTON (UPI) -The case of
a Christian Science couple
charged with kllUng their son by
practicing their faith could force
jurors to choose between guardlng religious freedom and upholding the slate's rlgl!t to
protect helpless ·children. ·
· Jury selection was to begin
Tuesday In Suffolk County Super· lor Courtln the trial of David and
Ginger Twitchell, a couple accused of manslaughter in the 1986
death of their 2 ~-year-old son,
Robyn .
·
The boy died after his parents
rejected medical care in favor of
an attempt to heal him throl!llh
prayer. Christian Scientists rely ·
on spiritual healing rather than
medicallnter\'llnt1on.
Defense lawyers in the closely
watched trial are basing the!
case.ona'1971Massachusettslaw
that prohibits a child fFOm being
deemed ' neglected &lt;or lacking
proper care solely because he Is

·
provide(! treatment "by spiritual
means alone." The law limits
' spiritual healing to the types
practiced by recognized rei!glous denoinlnatlons.
.·
But as the trial approached,
that Jaw has cpme under attack.
. A state Jeglslative committee
last week heard often emotional
testimony frbm doctors and
children's rights activists In .
. support of .a bill to revoke legal
protectlbns for those who rely
6nly on--prayer to heal their
children.
•'1· see more children die In a
month than I hope you will In
lifetimes," Dr. Lawrence Wolfe .
of Boston Floating Hospital
testified.
· ·
"It hurts me when a child who
hasareliabl)(reverslbleillness)s
allowed to die," the doctor said.

Defense: J(ey
•
•
prosecutr,on
Wltness
·
'ble· l iar ,
. ,COntempU
NEW YORK (UP!) -A lawyer
for the accused rlngleade~ of a
racial slaying In Brooklyn's
BenS!lnlwrst section called a
white prosecution witness and
her mother "contemptible liars"
who have "polarized the whole
city."
Defense attorney Stephen
Murphy pounded the lectern
during his opening statements
Monday, delivering a .blistering
attack Indicating the young woman's' credlblllty' would be at the
heart of his case for .client Keith
Mondello.
.
Mondello and accused triggerma}l Joseph Fama, both 19, are
charged with · second-degree
murder In the Aug. 2~. 1989,
Slaying of 16-year-old Yusuf
Hawkins in the predominantly
white neighborhood. The kUling
· iilflamM racial tensions citywide and sparked a series of
protests, some of theni violent.
Fama' s defense lawyer was
scheduled to present his opening
statements Tuesday In ' state
Supreme Court in Brooklyn.
Justice Thaddeus Ownes ordered Fama and Mondello to be ·
tried together - but before
separate juries -because Mondello has . allegedly Implicated
Fama as the gunman.
Deputy District Attorney .
James Kohler said Mo~ay in his
opening statements that Mondello "boas ted he was going to
'blow the he~d off those nigger
bastards"' who came _to a party
given by the young woman in the
neighborhood the night of the
kUling.
·
Mondello warned Gina Feliciano, 18, "not to bring any blacks
to the neighborhood or he would
shoot them," Kohler said, telling
the panel the young woman
would testify about Mondello's
remarks to her.
The black teenager was slain
during an attack by gang of
about 30 whites, some· wielding
baseball bats: wllo had walled'
outside Feliciano's home. The
young_wpman had told Mondello,
a former boyfriend, that she was
Inviting blacks and Hispanics to
her 18th birthday party . .
But Murphy called Feliciano .
and her mother "contemptible
liars" wbo had "polarized the
whole clly," contending the
young woman and her mother
Were smoking · marijuana the
night of the killing and c;ould.not
be expected to provide accurate
tesdmony.
'

-·
"A child is an innocent who 1~ not
In antlcipaiton of the Twit· -'
in a position to make his own chells' trial, the Boston-based ~!
decisions."
.
Christian Science Church , ~ook.,;
When Robyn Twitchell began
oul"dou?le-page advertisements·"'
sufferlitg from diarrhea , vomitin several Boston-area newspap- .:
ing !lnd fever on Aprll3, 1986, his
ers last week explainlrig its:~
parents called ln a Christian
beliefs. ·.
· · ,: ;
Science church practitioner and
The ad- which ran under the •·
a ChrlstlanScieljcenursetop.ray
headlne " Why is Pray~r ilefng ~·
over the child.
Prosecuted In Boston•" -" de- ;:
. Five days l~ter, the boy died in
fended the Twltcheils and des- ;.
his father's arms of a bowel
crlbed the basic tenets . Qf ' the · ~
obstruction.
church.
"'
. Defense la';"Yer Stephen Lyons
"Selective . prosecution ;....of :
said the Twltchells believed they
Christian Science here and 'else- .
were acting In the best intereSt of
where is of grave concer1i.' : the ·-~
their child. He said they acted ·. ·ad said. "Today, it is the prayers ••
within the law and that he
of Christian Scientists. Tomor- "'
believes Suffolk County District · row, It may be the praye~.s of "
Attorney Newman Flanagan dethose in other established ,i-ell- .i
clded to prosecute the Twite hells
glans, Perhaps your reilglal)." · r
because of widespread publicity . - - - - - - - - - -.....--'-~-1
over the case.
· """
· • "'!" •-:~
"I'm disappointed in htsdectsion to lgnote the statute au tho·
Kl · " ·"
rizing spiritual healing," Lyons
Ma~.· -~~said.
The prosecutor In the case,
John Kiernan, said tile state was
.
not condemning the Twitcheils'
Suppresses calorie absor.plioo
'!
religious belief and wa,s focusing
SWEDEN-Medical re.~arthcr:s at •,
only on their alleged neglect.
the University of Ku9J!iO, in ·fin -·•· ·
"The case against the Twit'land,hnv~discovered (accidentally}':
anew we•gllt-.loss fol111ula. The new"
diSfovc;ry a~s llJenablean·over-'•
cheI Is Is based on their violation
of parental duty, be it Ch&lt;lstlan
we1ghtindiv1dual to lose·poilndund "i
or Judaic or.whatever religion,"
fatty tissue without conventional di- "1
he said .
edrig or exercise.
·In a simUar case, at least nine . SCJe\ltist~mnde ~discoVery while''
sean:hmg for a fonnula to lOwer ?
members of the Faith Assembly.
cholesterol. In a t9ntrolled stutly of ;:
a religious sect In northeast
a teat grouP. of people, chole~t~rol ;
Indiana, were convicted in the
levels remained ,uncl!anged bUCthc,;.
mld -1980s in the deatlts of
dOCIDill wel'lfillltOundcdlo find that .
several children who were deevery Jl!ltient :who used the fonnnla ..
nled medical treatment. because
lost weighL The P.UblishC!heP.Ot1, or'•J
of the church's beliefs. Like the
this ~tuoy state~." A highly signifi- "
10• bodhy wcrght was·::]
Cllll,~&lt;ltreas~
Christian. Science Church, the
seen m patients w o n;cerved the;;
Faith Assembly shuns modern
formula.
·
•
'
medical practices · in favor of
The formula was then tested at an- .I
h 1 1J 1
·d
other prestigi()us European univer- ''-'·
prayer t.o ea
n ur es an
. sit% IJOspllllf. Al!ain all Jllltients lost' ,.
Illness.
we1ght even tlfqugii .tliey did ·nor ··&gt;
The cor.victlons prompted th e · chaiige tiJ&lt;;ir raqng habits~ The re- '
Indiana Legislature to change
por\ Cletailm11 thiS study published
m the Britisli Journal of Nurritlon '''
state law to prevent members of
stated: "BodY. weight was signifl: '""
the Faith Assembly and similar
groups from using religion to
cantly reduceil even !hough l~e pa. '''
deny their children care.
~~~~:e~~~lltsa,~~~61 to .:1
tlent in this study lost more than
~

ACCI"den•.;..l : ... "'
Discov'ery. y
End Qbesl"fy ' ''.:

'Jo :

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST

ACCIDENT

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

you quollfV . . . poo,_ ....
rtak for . _ Auto
ll*ial Uadloltot Auto Polley,· your
ra101 w..,•t 10 up with your flrll

.........

.

Untttoe olrnl.- DOilclet raquh
of policy ownaoololp,
the Meclatlot •II-• tho ....,.lOtion.

- v-•

-lltlly.

The M-Ill-too• the otclor,
lifer ..,..., with .oulrotlrott.t ,...
1nd reductioniMd tiraad11 COver·
.... ,._ reducdonto ...... - ..rr
.. 21 llid ora ...........,. It·
tflctlw lor ttoe 411 to 114 old.
H you h - a•omo drlvlrot - ·
- Juat low your - ln-.,.. prwftium- bl Willi the Medalfot Auto PotJav ~ ltela Auto

••-oac..,........
Colt uo about brllllthrough

oar I.,.,_

"''om. .......

Sacr-te, Call., to tatnicnce hll biD whlcll
w-ould allow •-v.eterlurlalur to conCinue to
clean aahal'e teeth. ( UPI)

. •r

pounds.
.
. Accqnlin_g to one informed~ ;~
the aclivc mgredienl comes fmm ti &gt;'I
I~ natural botaniral sow-ce and "'
COIIIIIIDS 110 druf,'l II" stimUian18. When -~ ; ·
taken before m~time it bond., ~ith '"
t!te food yqu eat and ''tles up'' Calo- :-;:

51

nes. ~W,ly . those from fa!!l \ ·911p. •·•
~ ng l!!etr absorption

"
.., ··
. A signtlicant pOrtion rhe calo: ::1
ne.&lt;rlng~ted therefore pass~ "'
lite diftsdve system unabSOtbect
•~
body lias to get ~nergy to replace e ~•

of

lo8tCa19'1cs,so118tart•toburn~l~d '

fat.. whtch ·can result in raP.id
y J.
welRht loss. CUnical tesli1111. as ' ·
."1;:veriJicd the safety of this fonnula for ~~

·term

use.

··

formula t~ marketed~in
ca ~
sule form In tlte United Sta u
·

tlte tnde name Cal-Ban
A -~
finn located In T,mpa, Flori!la, has .'"

exduslve North Aniencan dlstiibu· "'
lion riRh~J. A review of the tus~omer , ~

Illes OJ lhls coml!lny revealed the :•

n81liCI of hunclreils Of ~le who ·n
have lost as much as 20,40 or 80 or'
more ~nds overtdl With Cai-B~n ·:~
3000. 'Ibis IIJ!PW'S to be a J!Olden
opporlqlJity ror J)eQJ!le wlio" tU"e ~
(l!'{UeO Dy fat and "cellulite lhat they .
talfl seem to lose by conventional .',

methods

'

· '

·

Wt\!'~~-=:5.blyl;i:f~

214. EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-8887

II
~-~-'(1 •6-t~kiiQlllly.
;;
AMRXIIId
: $3. VISA,
, ,.,
To
·
ro'lt'~- ::J
37~~tm~~~- ., .

omJr i~.::r~ .;::

SJr.macy, 112 B. Main, Pol~oy, ...

~~~~~~..~ ;1

=.'l:r: =~J:;r~Yl :~:.

lOIS JOII ~ retunlllre allp!y
within 30 di)'S f« I IOO'Ii ref'll!
'

t·

""'

..
&gt; "!

17 - u,......,.......

. . _ ........... 1(. . -

liEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

'

992-5335 Dl' 915·3561

__..________.;.______________________...;.;......;,;....J

. d

~·

Public Noll«:!!

Public Noi1C41

Public

orty to be ootd It Public Auc8HERIF.F'8 SALE
tion m.Y be IUbject to I FoCAIE NO. 80-CY-111
11oe 8toto of Ololo. Meigo dlfll Tu Lien thot moy. not
County, u. PuriUint to the be ullngulohed by the Solo,
ouch
com11111nd of., ordor of Nle and puoah••• ol
rNI pro~ ore urged 10
l o - from tiHi Court of oooroh
tho Foderol Tu Lion
Common PleDI
or Mid
County, ond to me directed, lndu llolt II kopt by the
In the IICI!on of Clt-o Fe- County R-er 10 dotor•
clorot ....... I fedorel Sov.· mine If Nollco of 1 Fed...
fllocl wlllo
lnOO lank. Plaintiff, v. WII- Tu Uon h• rMpect to ony ouch reel
Uom!.Morrlo- landrloK . property.
.
Morrlo. It et .. Defondonto,l, Jom• M. Souliiby,
Sheriff
Jam• M. louloby, Bherlfl,
Pouto A. DINapoli,
ohol offer for oote It public
· ·
Attorney
-Ion, at
the Metgo
AND
CAMNER
ITUZIN
County Courlhouoo, In lhe
11797 N. High Strait
Cltv of Pomeroy, County ol
· Bulle 134
Molgoond 1 - of Ohio, on
· tiHi 14th doy of Moy, 1180 Worthington, Ohio 430811
111141 8811-41111211 ·10:00 o'cloc:lc o.m. the
·
lo-lng dllcrlbed ,. . . (4110. 17, 24 3tc
MdiM-o,towlt:
. . . _ 1n ttoe eounty of
Public Notice
Melgo In the 8tata of Ohio, 1-.....,;...;:;;~~;,..,;-..,dlnlheT-:='/ofllllaNOTICE OF BALE ·
ond ...
By virtue of on Ordor of
bury end bou .
ICrlbld M followo:
Solo t o - out~ tloe Comlltultad In ._Ion 27, mon PI- Codrt of Metp
Froctton 33, T-n 2, Ronge County, Ohio, 'I~ the ciH of
13. Sollollury Towollhlp, Diamond Sovtngo • !.ben
MelgoCounty, 8-ofOhlo Company, PlelntlH, VI. Don
oncl 1oetn1 mono fully do- C. lec:lc.-. at II., Defonol• followo:
ontL upon 1 JudgmMI thor·
'Commeooclng at o point In lin ron-.
Cue
the~helltcor-ofllld No. 89-CV-1113
n llld
Froctlon 33; tloen01 North Court. I wll offer lor lllolt
. . _ the ttno of llld the front aoor of the Court; ·
Froctlon33, 11160foltmono houoo In Pomeroy, Metgo
or lllo to 1
County, Ohio, on the 11th
Wall otong •
doy ol Miy. 1190, It 10:00

•nv

beln'

~-~or~~~~~~~~~~~~::f;J
A.M.,tonomonto
the following
IMola
,,.
111d
toootld
ot

Md
412 8. F.lflh Strait, Mldd•
right
port, Ohio 46710. A. com'
IIpleto togot dMcrlotton of the
rail point
rail ootat• to • fotlowo:
the t.,d heroin
Iaing Lot No. 1381n'8hof·
flotd,'ln tho Vlll"tl of Mid·
thonao north 71 degoo•
00" Wilt otong • line. dtoport,
Molp County,
160.33 fllit to M Iron pin; Ohio.
Deed: Volume
thlnae
11 dagre.
303, Metgo
OT 114" EMt along a tine,
R-clo.
210.111 1oet lo on Iron pin; I'Count-j
oototl Ia oubjoct
thonao North 1!1 dlgr11' 20" EMt along • line, lo ICGruocl 1980 fH1 Htlll
1117.111eet to •Iron pin In - ·
The oboVo deocrtbed rOll
ttoe granton propeny ltno
Md tM Uildng UUM-.iy iootlle ha been Molgned
lliht of woy Hne ilf lltate Audltor'o Pwcol Numbe!':
R - Number 143; tloenoe • 111·00100.
Pram- known u: 482
Iouth along
17 · ·the
- 00'
00" 8. Fifth 8trwt. Mlcldtoport.
Wall
_.oro
Ohio 411710.
prope11y ..... and the
REAL
ESTATE
APlng
right ofwoyltne
of ._flcoutiNumber143, · PIIAIIED AT: U3,&amp;00.00.
324.11 t..t to tho potnt of Tho root 111811 connol be
loelllnnlng ond • coi!lalntng oold for 1111 then two-thirde
the approloed volue.
1:071-.
TEIIMI OF BALE: C01h
Elooeptlng .. • .......t
for In~•••
being on dollvory of dead.
tully dllcrlloed • folSheriff
of Metgo
towo:
.Iomll
Com--gat I point In
lhelilulhull cor- of llld
froctlon 33; tloenco North
Pubilc Nollcl
etong the eioot tine of llld Froctlon 33, 1 110 fllit mora
NOTICE
.
or lllo to • point; thenoa
Notlcoloherofrr ..... th.
· Well olong I line, 1100 feet t1oe onnuot -tng ofthooho- .
mora or lllo to,an Iron plr&lt; In ......... of ........ ·~:
thll .,antara praplrty line ,......_ Inc. wll bl loolcl II
Md the ulotlng
the ofll• ·of Fw11ws lllnk
right of woy line of 1te1a !"'d ......... Colllpallj, 211 .
I I - Number 143 Md the Wall lmnd ·eaw, . Poreel point of beginning for
ONo. ••
ttl
the
lieraln ... m...,,
tryllwl.onlhe ...d
•·
thlnoe
78 . . of April. 11180, .. 3:00 p.
....,_
04'
0 0North
" - along
m.lorlhe.....,...ofot tlig
....... 71.00 fllit to. point;· A 1 a.ndtlwba
..,
thence North 19 ....,_ ofiOich""*bulllntuMm.,
13' 22" Ellt elong a Uno,
looltiro, oold .
71.11 fllit to • point In the pi'&lt;lpOrl¥ -

Nort,_

••lot-

"•torty

Into and 1 part oftheVItigeof
Mlddl~ Melgo County,
Ohio. Far · moro- d•
ol ...dmodoo
lolL to
-tloe
·
MCI lo lilrllrl'
IIU.-..vod .,._ thoroot on ,._
_,.In ... ofllce oftloe Melgo
County Ro doo.
R - . , .. Doed: Volume
240. PltiDI 81111.
Moilll
CountyR-.11.
Thlo 11'-'Y lo IOaoted at
41118. Fourth Avenue. Mid·
dleport, Ohio.
_
Praparty
•p,.lted It
'29.000.00 ond connot be
oold lor 1111 thon two-lhlrclo
of tloe appi'lloed votue.
..
Aleo the loll-Ing deocr!- raot oltuetoln
. tloe County ol Melgo In the
Stiota of Ohlo•.ond Townohlp
of Sollobury, ond bounded
ond dMcrlloed 11 foli-o:
,Perce! t:
Beginning
South 20
cholno 118 Unko from the N.
w. _ ,.......... blocl\
OK 12"1oeoroN.B3deg. E .•
I Hnb) of ._ton 18, Town
2. Ronge 13 ol tho Ohio
PurchMo; tloenco
N. BII'Ao dog. E.. 20 ch01no
II'Ao llnko to the center of
t1Hi old rood from which •
Sycomoo:o 12" beoro N. 21
dog. 1 0' E.• 34 llnllo and tocull II" beoro8.40dlg. 311',
2411nko; thence S . 31'Aodog.
E., I c6alno 88 llnllo to the
fortu ot the rood; thence S.
31'Ao dog .. E .. 8 cholno 81
ltnko; thonco S. 42'Ao dog. E.
3 o-oiiO llnko; ttoence 8.
3l4 dog. W., 7 cholno 118
Unloo; thence B. 3l4 deg. W..
20 chetno 42 Hnko; tloenco
N. 811Yo dog. w .. 34 cholno
31 llnko;•tloenao N. 3l4 oleg.
E.. 41 i:helno 74 ttnko to the
ptoco of bealnntng, containlng 132.1'f oc-· more oo
1111 In old ._ion 18. llelnq
the 11m1 .,_.-...known 11
tloe Aolonqoll Smith Farm
ond the ·oome 11 convoyod
by George TltuL Sheriff of
Metgo County to Wolter E.
Hyooll by dated November 4, 1814. and reoqrded In Volume 114. pago
113, llicord of D. . .. of
MoiGI County~ Ohio; EX·
CEP'riNG from the abovo
deocrlbed pr-'Y 1 'trlongul8r 11r1P of 1 icioo. out of
tloei.E :Comortoloeu-..•
an outlot to the 80 ocn form
od]otnlng which II owned by
John
c. ......; and EX~
CEPTING AND IIEIERV-

-ton

c.._

w:

M-,~~~~~;:~~·:~~:olt::•nd with
11•

-~=l=1J0~·~17~:~2~4!~~c~~==

-ty

a,;;:

-.....m

m•lnt.

:

grMton PIOPirtY line Md
PoutE.KkNw,lewWbif
lheoxlotlng
ilaht of ·t31 211; 141 2, 13, 17 4tc
woy line of • - Aouta
Number 143; then co Iouth'
Public Noi1C41
1 ....,.. ocr OO" woot
II'"' tilt grantor• praplrty
Moio enol tloe ullllnl.,.-SHERIFF'S IAL! OF
REAL ESTATE
14

••*ty

=. •=.:•N:t,; r.

TH:r.~~=N~~C)
THE

::...t.ttolhepolntofloe·
Prior
Deed ...........,
CENTIIAL TIIUIT
Deocl . _ 210. Pogo 943,
s&amp;=tA';-flN
Malgo Cou~:::•rde32131
OHIO, N.A .
Pro' orty
o:
VI
· Colllno liNd. 8 - Routl
FRIOEIIICK W. KLEIN. •
143.· tlouta 4, Pamoroy,
AKA
Olot. 41711
FliED W. KLEIN, ET Al.
Parcel No.: 14-01013.000
CAll NO. I I CL 227
Sold PIMIIII
II Apo
In
111 ~
preiHd at 021,000.00 enol of Sole dlloclldto rna Ill t1oe
OMIIOI .. llllhlfllr ._....., olicroio •nlllord 8lllltl, t w11
- F . : o f thelomount.
offer for .... at·fll*lcA
of a CEIITII'IID lion, at tiHi fnlllt doer oltloe
CHIC , poyabto ·
the CourlhOu• In ,_...,.,,
....... 011 CASH, lor 10 Ohio, In the ...... .......
.... of .... , _ . . _ i!DI!ftlY, 011 'flleldey, .... 1,
prloe wit bl roqutrocl at the 1810 at 10:00e.&amp;, --~
lfllltrtloelll41o lCD Jl.
lowtlttd• . . . . . . . . . . .
The PULL
1111 t d In the
of

....,_..to

to

¥Q'Ihaif.r.

r.fwr..t'&amp;III.,V,Io, !;;

lrllllltloedMtol.. .....

....... •

..

cz:
=::--to::,

tile
of
.........Ill .... ,..... ol

.. . . . . . . .,....

tt::: ~.:t'"''

d

SERVICE

Oautlltr of •

--=.~-:: =-~'

Call

•.

,

IN STOCK: etement Porch

lox• •Cem~MrY F..W.

V••
•Ct.,. llr.d •thl
.•c.mn Bird Bettw

PH. 949-2101
or hi. 949·2•60

B&amp;ftle and Bu1.
6
15

........

FREE ESTIMATES

IS NOW OPEII
FOI BUSINESS.

.. FrH ERkftatu"

Jetta. Golf.

...........li...
Slermllwn &amp;

STIA&lt;IISI, OliO .
IAN•• Pine SIMp)

...........

NEW &amp; USED
PARTS
For . Rabbit,

Yiilyt Nifts
.S.OIIIIo.. Guttw
I ·p11 .tn.. l Windows

JO'S GIFT SHOP

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
NO 5UNDA
.. Y UUS

AI .. CMII04

IJ-fiiCMiiftt

'Sharpe In removing the lid, which was accepted &amp;Sa alegal check ,
by the ms at tbe Federal Bu!,1dlngln Washington, D.C. ~~~)

•VINYL SIDING
•AlUMINUM StDtNQ
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

INSU.lATION

•Fountain llrd lethe • Plut

De•.
fi'OII. Ang ... lftd
Othlll!l' V•d Ornem.-rtl

I

Fr0111 Uo &amp; Sove!

4.16-16-tlil

117- CMhM•

· Cyn&amp;hla Sharpe aitempta to pay her portion of taxes destined lor
. Ihe mUIIMy bud1Jet on a coUlD Monday. A pollee ~fflcer ~ 188lirtlng

v.w.
PARTS &amp;

MMOII CD , WV

1'··-·--1-··-.. ••• -c••••
JH-G...,..Dilt
141 - ...W•Dil•
JH - w ......

•

Roger Hysell
... ~:r•l

ISDIIOWIRS
ltiW YUIIIIll &amp; KNO

HOUR&amp;: M-F 8 -7
Sat. 9·11: Cloood Sun.

a

: BBVSB, BRUSH, BRUSH -

Now Location:
161 Nortll Sec....
"II 'oport, Ohio 45760

JO .f!,ACilN lD &lt;AU "J-:il56 .

I

MONDAY

.. .

Brace JlreiiZIUI (D-Fresno) heljrs Bruky cet hlir

P\-NG &amp; tttlll..li

··The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

•

7

Business· Services

Classified

I

The Daily

Ohio

. : : : : " . . . . . . . , ... 130 Ill ........ Millon.
_...._ .. ...,rail prop- . IMI'II 14 ,_ ln=pazW · , ,

PubliC

Aa-- F...217 L Soc. ,.,..,.,

Noi1C41

POIIIIOY,

30, 1989, .....,,_ In Vqtumo 102. p1ge 248 ol11fd
Meigs County Deed lle-

cordt.

'

"SHRUB &amp; TREE

Being the Nme rill Htltl
conv..,.d to Hence Jon•
111d Ethel · Jon•. M8lp
County ~ Rocoodl.
Parcel 2: ·
Tho lotlowlng ,..r Mtatl
oltuoted In the County of
Meigs, Townohlp of tlolla·
bury ond Suote of Ohio, oncl
boundod Md deurlbed •
followo: the following raal
tttata olt,..te In t1oe Noi111·
Ono Ouoner of Section
No. 18, loUoibury Towowhlp,
Molgo
County,
Ohio,
boundod Md deocrlbed H
loH-o: Sovtnnlng 11 the
Nort-1 cor- of 127
171100 ocro to:act reco..ln Dead Book 173, - e
188. on the W•t lneof lielion No. 18; lhence Eool
1406 fHI to the conter of
the· rood; thence North 27
dog. 60' w- 2011 . t..t
otong lh•-•• of•the roed;
tl!eftco North 18 dog. 40'
W•t481- lllongthoa.tar ol t1oe roed: tloenco north .
311 oteg. 30' WMt 110 IHI
olongthe _,ter of tho roed;
thorince ' North
74 deg.
40' Wnt 373 IHI
the centor of the r
;
thence North 113 oteg. 30'
W•t. 700 feet otong tho
contor of tho ro..t; thence
South BO dog . .111' Well. 80
foet olong the cantor of the
,.....to tho W•t Nne of lietlon No. 11; thenoa oouth
t170 leet olong the WHI
tine of Seclton No. 18 to the
place of beginning, containlng 27 ocr•.
Excopt oil legaol hlghwoyL
Being the Nme rflll•convooyod to Henao Jo~•
ond Ethot Jon11 by dood ••
cor- In Volume 199, P"tO
233 of the Melgo County

TRIM anti. RE·
.MOVAL ·.
"LIGHT HAULING

. EWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

EVENINGS ·

.

Tho,_.., In Porcotl• II
lolocotodonPe-kROid
(County Rood 191 ~mo­
toly 'AI to 7/10 d• from
Routl 33 on tloellifl hondolde
of tiHi oood.
I • II appi'lllld 11
t27.1100.00 and OllinDI be
oold for 1111 then -thlodl
of the aptnloed v - The
proporty locned In .... vii lilt• of Middleport, wHI bl
oold -~~ely from · prop·
ony on· Sotlobury Twp. The
proporty In lellobury Twp.
wHI be oold u 1 unit.
TERMS OF BALE: The
IUOcellful
purah••r. •
- n • hlo bid lo occeptld
oiUill be required lo oll(loolt
on the dey of ulo, In - h or
by cortllled check, -ble
to the lherltf of Melgo
County, Ohio, 1Q" of the
•mount of auah uoepted
bid, bulln no -nt looon,ooo.oo. The bllanao ·of
the
prlao ohetl biro
due Md poyelole to the I her·
Iff ol Melgt County, Ohio,
wltllln thirty 1:101 doyo from
the data of oonflrrnlotlon of
llle.Thopoirato••lhlllloe
roqutrocl to POl' 1 - on
tiHi unpold bi!Mce at tloe .
,... of I~,., MilUm fr..n
tiHi - o f Nlo to tiHi dOle of
paymont of boiMce unt••
fllld bllolooe ohllll be paid In
eight Ill deyo from the data
ofthelllo.
Jo..,.. M. louloby
Sheriff of Melgo County
Oougt• M. Cowlll
Attarnoy (or Ptelntlff
(31 20, 27: 141 3 , 10. 17,
24 ... .

IIITIIIOR IXT. .OR
Rental Cllaa...
I Pttlntlna .

'

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE

I; L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Haatlng, Cooling,
lafrlgaratlo11
Slrvlce

c•STD, OliO

CONTROL

FREE ESTIMATES
Toloo tho poin aot of pciootioJ

l.otUJ.hferyou.

VaY IWONMtE
HAYI IIFUIIKIS

Rellidontlol &amp;
Commercial

lF1II .....

CALL
992·5589

(614) .915-4180

lloforo 6 p.nt. IMwt MKorige
4-9-'90-1 mo. pa.

985·4422
1-1 -80-tfn

2·2·'90-1 tnO.

SER~ICE

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE ·
•FlU DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

· IUTUND niE

Wt can rl(ltlir and re·
cort ratllaton and
hltltw corts. Wt can
1llo acid bill and rod

SALES anti

SEIVICE
742·3QII

out rldltrtors. Wt also
rtptir C.OS Tlllks. ·

•Tiro Still ·
•Front Erid
AHgnment

PAT HILL

,on Change •

992·21
Middleport,

Lube

•Bralto Work .

MAIN ST., IU1UND
1-15-'to-tln

CHANGE

516 95

4 Qt. Max •

n11 IEI'lll

MOYIIENTAI
CONYBIIIKE STOifiTIMS

CHEnEI

QUIK STOP
46317 SMut

. a. ...

BUILDERS
CUSTOM 1•T
HOME$ &amp; ~RAGES
"At •-onable l'ricoo"

PH. 949-2101
or In, 94,,. 2,ia,o' I
Day or

NO SUNDAY .,,......

1 \.---....;~

' ·'

Public Nollce
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 4. 1880, In the
Mollll County
ProCourt, Colo No. 201180, Robert E. Dovlo, Routo I ,
Lln!ll'lvlllo.
Ohio 411741,
woo appointed E•ecutor of
tho 11tot1 ol Elnora Oovlo.
doceMed, toto of Route I,
LongevMte. Ohio 411741 .
Robert E. 8uc:lc,
ProbltoJudge
Lona K. Naflllroad, Clork
14110, 17, 24 3tc

pu-•

PubliC Notlcl
NOTICE QF
APPOINTMENT' OF
FIDUCIARY
On Aprl 11, 1980, In the
Moip
County Probllo
Coaort. Cui No. 211114,
Trovo Klrnll. 11171 IR
331. Raclno. Ohio 41771 .
ondUoydG .Luoher.S72CR
21, Aohloy, Ohio 43003
.,.ra eppoltotod oo-odmlnlotrltOII of the • - ot Beu·
loh G. Ranoorn, d-oood.
1111 of 11117t Ill 331, lloclno, Ohio 111771.

,._. ........

''" ...Cterto
Juclee
t..one K. N11oolroed,
(4117, 24; 111)1, 3lc

11

Help w.mec1

SIIVICI UIIAWe •lloolclllf fllr

'" .....-~enc~~c~

........d ........
Good wottdnt .

oondltlllnl Md top
JNIYtotherJallt
lndlvlclu81.

........
••
MCOD

POMEROY,O.

USED APPUAIICES

992·2259 .
LETART- 7 Room house. 3
bedrooms. I bath, carpet

90 DAY W-AIITY

throughout. large k~chen ,
larv living •oom, TV room,
dinmg room. Patio for cook·
ing out. Gas heat and hot wa· ·.
ter heat. 2 car garage.

~~~~~:~.,
KEN'S APPUANCI
SEIVICE

OFFER.
POMEROY - . A 2 sto1y
home w~h a large lot. big
krtchen, 3 bedrooms, buiRin china cabinet, nice deck
in back and a part basement. $25,000.00.
IIIDDLEPORT ..,. 1978"Mo·
dular Home sitting on 2 lots
in town. 2 car garage, N.GJ.
A. heat. garden area. Also
has self contained AIC un~.
Many other nice features.

$39,500.00.

POMEROY - This neat
home is ready for immediate
occupancy. Five rooms with
3 bedrooms, large lot other
leatures. $14,900.00.
IIIDDLEPORT - Ill story
frame home with 4 bedrooms, separate 2 c11 gar·
age wtth room above, and
extra lot. Satellite dish and
more. $37,000.00.

CHESTtR - NEW HOPE
ROAD - A newer double
wide, 3 bed10oms, 2 bath
home, on over an acre tot
Electric FA. heat, rural water and cable TV, Call lor app~ntment

lioward L Wrlttsll

NEW -IEPlll

G1.1ttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning •
Painting

992-5335 Dl' 915·356 1
,.,_ p,... Poot Olfke

FREE ESTIMATES

.. .lOY, OliO
10/J0/'19 lfn

949·2161 .
2-1-'90=1- " ·

·-····

NEWLOOAnOM
DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE IIPAII
J 531 West llal11,

·-~.
ot..
PARTS
AND BIIIYICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cycle
1

99!-6173

WMCIHtor,Teoumoelo,

209 s.th 4th St.
Mitldleport, Oh.

Ill ODLEPORT -

2 story

brick home on 2·1ots wrth 4
to 5 bedtooms, 21+ baths,
wood Qoors, N.GJ.A. Cur·
noce. Gor•&amp;e. carpcrrt ond
15'125' siDrap shed. RE-

DUCED $47,900.00.

. H£1RY E. CLELAIID
. !92·1111

PUICitASE MilL£ TilE SUII
111110. 1ft liED IOIE·
lliTIHS TO •1111111 OUI
DAY AID YGI. LIST liTH
CLELAIID IOI.TY FOR lEST

•aumm
~~-

..

•
•

DI·COUNTY RECYCLING

omiS J

LOCAftOIS YO SDYI YOI.".

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 . S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 110. S.lt 143
HENDERSON; WV.: Rt. 311 Adj. to stcloro Equlpmont
. NEWHOURS:
POMEIIOY: I a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALBANY: 10 a.m. ·l p.m. I Doyo. Cloood lundoy
.
HENDERSON: 10o.m.·l p .m. IIDoyo.Ciooodlun.·Mon. ,
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAR. 13. 1990
•

W1 CopJ* IIC per tb,;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cana, 311C per lb.
WE IUY All NOif ,IIIIIOUIICIIAP. IAnEIIIEI,
8TARTI!R8,
OC,

SUN'S UP JANNING

New Unttl ld., lutl.ul, Ohio
1 Session .......".~.................."....... S3.50
6 StssiiiiS...........- ........................ s12.00
12 Stili-..---···-···..·-···· 120.00
15 s.st.l..
........................ S25.00
FIIST VISIT' FlEE .:.. POSSIILYMOlE

Jtil Trt1111iC. .... 949-2660
LOTIONS - STICKERS
·Jo Hlll .............. 98S.4466
•• Hupp.-......... 949-2217 .
Office................ !192·2251 l~=======
TIIIUPilii8UK£1UlHER
HAS ,_,ED MUS 10

•
•
•

"IOWMo•

ro see this ona

$31,000.00.

~

GoodRalll
T.l.C .
27 Yro. Exp:
Rofor011coo

..g~n.

8toc:lc Pertolor Hoonotlho,
lrllltll.
~--=··~!2.
PH.
992-:

•.

ROOFING
.
.

up

$29,900.00. PRICE REDUCED. MAKE OWNER AN

N\WLAND
ENTERPRISES
Safld·Stone·Dirt
(614) 667-3271
Grant A. llle1llo

f

E. Mlol,nlzlli

SITEWORII • ROADS
(LEARING

DUMP TRUCK

1241
OHIO

JOHN

•::::r,

~ R-ro~e.

UNDA'S
. PAINnNG &amp; CO.

I and J COISIIUCTION
GIIG IUIUY
•NEW HOMES' •SIDING

•GARAGES ·
•RE!IIODEUNG
•GENERAl..CONTRACTING
. A Gn1t
tien"a.llty and RN••h Price•"
WI GO nlllmA .LL"

c..-...

Ht-6110

'

�17,1990

l?ilge-8-The Daily Sentinel
'

LAF.F-A-DAY

Announcements

4

Uoton:ycleS

1m .......,
Household

GIV!NIW8Y

a...., tor ....

I1441N7Wo .

I~
· 114,

2 PltYful mlnloiUN -

.. ~J"' good -

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

T.-day, Apri117, 1990
BORN LOSER
IF

-m '#1151l1b CAAIJI!:if. 't\Jtt

~ 10 eeNTL'I'-Mi!ea!AM
. ~UJTH~II«.1 Et,~...

r !!el.l~~ 11'.e

£1 AJIIO I

~Yfi(.,I

ttU'f 1II,A;T ~

IM:t'W~m:&gt;

Mi6trr~... ·

?tu.1.. ~SIR

eetn'L'H.IU!AA"

~IIOP.

Reorro~oe

~

letters

~mploo

low to form four

wordo.

I
I. I I 1 I I .
12

I

llpollo . By Trtburio, 121 Tlllnl
Ave., GalllpOHe.

HERE .. IF '(OU WEAR THIS
CROWN,EVERVONE WilL THINI(
YOU'RE KIN6
JON6LE!

LOS1 a. Found

LOST Cnlb C..... Jld, com.tqek
vicinity, flmale ..... l1cll ~

Hound, w.f!na Nd OGIIIr with
· Dhonl nurribir· and .- - .
REWARD. :IOW7JI-7U4.
, LOM: 21 , _ Of grwit

. .

. 801111 &amp; ~01'1 .
fOr Sale

.

.,...an:d this,
·of course, is the
• "

~~'~'":..'=~'"".::::.~,:
. 448-1247.
.
Yatd Sale

·ofour ocrombled wordt·
o1
"-

.

.

,..L_ErR_.r.-0....,"r-11 .. .

~:d~~~~ ':..e-'tl!t '

7

- - - - - 14llotl ~, C~Y ~- I'CILUN

-r· I

~trJ:f."""'~ .... --,,. .

-el...,._

WOlD

1

Block - · Chow. I .,.:0141,
' good ,.tell dog, 3114 ·~- .

Loot:AedoiprWHi ..•, Theler
F~rd 11M
·volue. 114-37t-2331. ·

. '::~::.' scc~~lA-/£~!fs· ....
DEIIBEB

4 mlad b&lt;oed pupploe, holt
=~ a old.. 11_.

6

Television'
Viewing

bOttOffi ·1me.

L---------r,;...____..___;

r

11

Help Wanted

18 Wanted to Do

WELL, FROM ADISTANCE
N~ER KNOW IT'S CARDBOARD

13

j· .

K A Q U E .,

the

I I .I .I" · ·. ·7 . ~e~~ngto~~u~etotede;at~i~/i~~
I;:;;;::;::;:;;:;:::.,r
•

I

I0

' NAF.Ij:E

1--.T~-."T',. -r.lgr'Tl.-.

:'
.,

grudg~;"

"Carrying a

,· !·". '-t

Compleoe the chuckle quofed

.
~
•
•
.
•
.
by. filling .in tho ry1 luing words
L-;...L..;..J._.t...,-;...L--L'--.1 you deve:lop lrom slep No. 3 below .

Rentals

--~;;;.,..----~4~ Houaes·torRJnt

•

SCRA'M-I.ETS ANSWERS
·
Shears ~ aruie'-Goose- Tripod-"$PAGHETTI
We had walked through tha gourmet section of the .
· grocery. My huSband muttered, "Even though they call1t
pasta, !0 me .it's stil.l SPAGHEJT,.._.n_·_ _ _ _,........._ __.,_ _,

BIUDOI ..

.NOiml

HI·M

.....

+A K9
.AK963
IAKJ83

lludfll

\1

30 to
" ' " WOIIMI)' ...~ ., ...
~. 11W71G3,
,_,.,., CMnor.
,
I

11

14118 211&lt; ........ In EV!I!V...n,

_.. 'J.V., eu ••• • .,. e14-.

:April te:11. 1-112 mtlel .HYHII

J'Dtl,

f/17

camper.&amp;
.Motor Homes

3411ZI;I• ..

, Run. Rain or elllne. llanr • -

TfaML

Wf S'AY5 VtiHAr Ht
.~EALLY MfANT WA$'
• If NO GNU TA')(E.f."
'

::.:'':.:.4..
,;.112;;;·,;.'275=.""":'----

:a

PUblic Salll
&amp; Auction

1

--

l_...n c.r Cruolllna. Top

iD.Ioo· pold for ...., ... - ·
i4l&lt;a ton. AjlplllnoM 11M. - ...
, Inti '"""Piiol1or 2S I ton. Fl..

'How ·paradoxical that early bridge
lessons teach us to draw trumps to
;prevent ·tire defenders from making .,
their trump&amp; separately, and then a !
little later we learn there can be many ·' WEST
good reuoni ~ to take out trumps : ; ~ I 5
tfll! quickly. Nqrth held cards tbat rub- 1 t Q 10 6 .4
ber bridge players dream about, but ' • A K Q 6 i
the deal bappelled in tournament cornipelition.:After Wt$t had opened one
SOUTH
'club and North doubled, .there was no
+J7
•• 7 4 2
.scleatlfic method for North to show
. t7$
·hiS •trength when South bid one heart.
+107532
So North cue-bid clubs and then
.jumped to six hearts. That was reason· ··
Vulnerable: North-South
able, unlike declarer's play.
Dealer: West
South ruffed the club lead in dummy
West
Eut
·,and then played A· K of hearts. He .Be!oll
Paa
I+
could sWl make the slam by ruffing a
•
1
Paa
Pass
spade and taking a dlamood fineue,
Pass
All pus ;
2•
but he elected to play A·K and .ruff a
diamond. When East showed out •on
Opening lead: +K
. the thlnl diamond, declarer . was a ·
. trick sborl He could ruff tWC! dia·
monds, setting up that suit, but was
still left with a spade to lose in addl·
,
:tlon to tile queen of trumps. ·
canilot pin by ruffing early, si~
· It is not hard to make l2 tricks. De- Soutlt will simply dilcanl and can then
clarer must play only one high heart. draw the last trwnjl before fiDilhing
lie can then play A·K and ruff a dia· his rufflng wor~. The ~ declarer.
,monel, spade to the ace and another dl· ·should not play two high toanda of·
amond i'uff, and another spade to the trumpa Is that be may need to ruff
king followed by ! spade ruff. East three times in his hand.
'
.

. 'mU.. ' Norlh ham ....... 011 At,
1- J""!lllhlp ~d 7. t:OG-4:30
~rider· 114,3'1S-

Apanment

t:2.

· for Rent .
Bualnea

Jullk' .... With ... wltlioul
.-,. c.n IMr)' I.Miy 114-

....-

• •I
Qullle
' Anllq.. '"' ,_,
dillon onlY. l'rolllpt _.....

Elo- -

CROSSWORD

114-lllilf&amp;7.

'

by THPMAS JOSEPH.
ACROSS · 43 Gladden
· 1 Leftover - 44 Entree
. 8 ungene · 45 :Zidn't
Item
·
.
stop
10 "Falstaff'
heroine
· talking.
11 King.
DOWN
of Judea 1 Poet
13 "Nevennore" Teasdale
utterer
2 Malleable
14 Expiate
producl
15 Sailor's
3 Fasten
assent
4 "The Red
16 "Shol"
Baron·
. sampling . was one
18 Dress,
5 In a
as stone · . . brown
19 lnstani
sludy
21 Spoil
6 Contour
22 Stanwyck's7 Give the
"The Lady •go sign"
•
. 8 Gehrig's
23 Pottery
nickname
24 Steps
9 DaggE!r
over
fence
27 Prlnllng

Employment Serv1ces

A lodW 111 · help ..,. lar ··· .... 114-Mf.
21111Dr-•lew.
..
A - I All Aroae I lllliltr

l b l _ _ _ _ . . .,.
-

- h , llcldlepolt (nNr
114;

=~· lllohl· 131,000:

llpMJa, -1421.

3 b&lt;J bell!,. 1111 modul1r Mme
on a.1 mn hftty, wooded ~r•
w i t h - - Ulllllullln. 114-

ti74Maalllrlp....

54 . MlacellaiiiOUI

Mel'chanclll
unturnlollod 1 "'· . . . . Nlrlg.,
dlepoult · Pri!P: , . w.t•,
aallliat jjlld. llallolft,
,...,_-;-131l'lnl Avo., .......

-(11.

114-4-1.

--..--- Furnlahed

RciOml

IIWIIna II

... Golllll...

..
_... - .......with
...
A!MtNlllr
All ...........

c.n elllr ,2:00 p.m.,

-wv.

Eemopi~~,.---­

..t•Amallnl.
-1 p.m.11,
_1rua,..
...
4-337-211114 ell. 11.

46 Space for Rent

••M'I ourpnxl_ll_

W'lllll•

Cell..,.._·~

"

• MY MAN SNUFFY
IS HEI.PIN' JUGHAID
· GIT READY FER HIS
' · 'Ril}IMATIC TEST

:IG+m-

18111, . .

WtJN'T WDNIIIIS
NII/II CIASIII

Little things ·
are Worth Alol
zn

'

.

.

the Classified Section!

28 Singer
Bennett
29Large
· container
30 Furrow
31 Yuletide
name
33Anger
34 Card game
·35Lab
·· ·
animal
38Famous
ship
40 Metrical
pattern
.42Germsn

..

'

h-=+--t--

. .'

city

.

DAILY CRYFroQVOI ES- Here's llow to woriJ it:
SNAFU® by

Beattie '

. One Jetter slands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, ·X for the ·two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code.letters are dUfer_ent.
•
.
CIIYPTOQUOTE
4-17

CXGY

CD

BZQ

G X E ER I

X.IE

JMQWRI

DV

DV

B R' E

T.X A p W' N

NCRLN.-EDMOGXN

v...,..,•• Cttpla . .atc

'

f' .

;

CBR

XNY

TRIIDGE
"I'll. be happy they spend 111 milCh llmt
on It liS It took to put It toga-." ,.

4/t?

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW ·

. BERmQE
BEDE OSOL·
•'

'

. Yeaterday'a An.W., .
.,
.12 To a~
29 Philippine
(somewhat)
la~er
17 Chiller
31 Distort
20 Have
32 Scottish
faith In
lslrind
23 Custom
38 Concerning
24 Chevron
37' "Harold ·
25 Major
•
Industry
39 · In
and
Barbados
Sympalhy"
28 VIvid
41 Highest
27 Trample on
nola

. . type style

.,211/mo.

Hotel. 114-441 1510

'

TEU. THAT TO THE

~

. 1

•
~

IT.-~

...

•'
"

..
'

,,

.

MARINES- ntE SAU..ORS WON'T .BELIEVE
SIR WALTER
.. SOOn

..

•'

.~

�.•

Paga 10-The Deily Sentinel

Neu;man..

Tueaday. April17. 199o:

continued from page 1

Pomeroy Vlllage Hall auditorium.
· On Sunday, April 29, the
. downtown ch~rchl!s wt,ll be open
fo r historically ll)(ormatl1(e
tours.
•
Festlva.ls and craft fairs have
been planned throughout Pomeroy's sesquicentennial celebrli·
tlon year.·Herltage Days, June 8;
9 and 10 will be a three day
weekend of activities pertaining
to American Pioneer Heritage.
There wm be free entertainment,

authentla pioneer food, Civil War
musket drills, and buggy rides.
On Oct . 6 and 7 are the dates for
the Ethnic Settler s Fes tcelebrat.
lng the European Herltag01 of the ·
settlers Jn Pomeray.
Mary. Powell, chairman of the
Sesquicentennial committee tor
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, Is soliciting organ!·
zatlons and Individuals wishing
to participate or sponsor an
activity or event during .t he year
to contact her.

State.loans.money to
T~ition Trust .Authority
..

....

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The board authorized a $1
The state Controlling Board
mIll!on loan to Tusco Groceries
Monday loaned the Ohio Tuition
Inc., Dennison, Tuscarawas
Trust Authority $300,000 for star· . County, for the purcbase of a
tup expenses With assurances the
building to open a grocery and
money Will be repattl by June 30,
who)esale distribution center.
1991. .
The Ohio Department of Devel·
William Napier, a vice chan- opment said the loan, repayable
cellor of the Ohio Board of
In 10 years at '3 percent Interest,
Regents and member of the would enable the facility to
· authority board, told the Control·
provide 80 new Jobs In tbree
ling Board the long-range sav·
years. The COJTiml!nity has
lngs plan for parents and grand·
raised $3 m!lllon to Invest In the
P!lrents offuture.college students
t
project.
Is In good shape and right on
schedule.
·
The board authorized the Ohio
Controlling Board members
Department of Education to
were concerned about reports
spend $3.2 million to hire n!n~
that the Tuition Trust Authority
architectural firms to assess the
was In financial difficulty bephysical condition of 3,800 school
cause of startup problems.
buildings across the state.
.
Napier ·said · 9,000 Ohioans
James Van Ke.uren, director of
enrolled In the program during a
school finance, said the archifive -week ·, period between
tects will be paid $868 to Inspect
Thanksgiving and the end of 1989.
each bu!ld!ng and will report to
·He.salcl an estimated 15,000 more
the Legislature by Nov. 1 on the
will enroll during the next period,
cost of biinglng tbe buildings Into
which closes In May.
compliance with state and local
The authority offers two sav·
building codes.
lngs programs. One Is a bond
program which guarantees all
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura,
full subscribers the average
said
the local · scbool boards
state university tuition at the
should
be responsible for making
time their child goes to college.
such
assessments. But Van
The other Is similar to a bank
Keuren
said the architectural
savings program.
firms will be able to provide .
more detailed and uniform
Subscribers purchase credlis
Information.
for $33 eacb, of which $5 goes for
Tbe b&lt;lard released $2.2 million .
administrative costs. One , for a satellite boiler Installation
b!lndred credits buys one year's
project at Central Ohio Psyeblatcollege tuition. The student must
rlc Hospital, Columbus. ·
pay any tuition that exceeds the
average cost at a state
linlverslty.
Don .McCue . of, Coopers &amp;
Lybrand, another authority
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon· .
bOard member, said the au thor·
day's
Winning . Ohio Lottery
lty·owes $554,000 In expenses but
numbers:
will be receiving $4!i0,000 from
PICK-S
tbe sale of additional appllca·
374.
!Ions to the program, and ·an
PICK-3 ticket · sales totaled
estimated $500,000 on purcbases
$1,181,188.00,
with a payoff due of
of credits between now and June,
$538,472.50.
McCue said the authority's
PICK-4
expenses are about $40,000 a
2478,
. month for one employee,·· four
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
temporary afflce workers, equjp$228,748.00,
with a paypff due of
melit, supplies, office rent and
$158,500.00.
.
mar ketlng expenses.

Lottery nUmbers

Winter weather returns to Buckeye State

By United Preas l!lternatloaal
The pesky winter of 199!1 just
refuses to glveupltsgtlpon Ohio.
4ght snow was falling In parts
of northeast Ohio Tuesday morn·
· lng, 3 ~ weeks after Winter
officially ended. ·. Skies were
cloudy over nearlY all the state at
dawn, with ·temperatures In the
mld-30s to low 4P!,. except for a
50-degree reading In Zanesville.
The · rain moved Into the
Buckeye State overnight with a
cold front pushing In from the
northwest. A hfgb pressure sys·
tern was to take control of the
state''s weather later Tuesday;
bringing part!y cloudy skies,
brisk northwest wln&lt;ls and bighs
In tbe mld·40s to mid-50s.
The hlgb will take firmer
contiol of Ohio Wednesday, with
clearing skies and temperatures
. moderating Into the 50s to near60
In the south. Things get better as
the week wears on.
Thursday will be sunny and
mild, and It will be m!ld with a
chance of rain Friday ani!
Saturday. Hlgbs will be In the
mid-50s to mid-60s Thursday and
from the . mid-60s to mid· 70s
Friday and Saturday: Lows will ·
be 30 ro 40 Thursday and 40 to 50
Friday and Saturday,
Temperatures dropping Into
the 20s Tuesday night could
cause problems wltb fruit trees

Stocks
Daily stllck prices
(Aa of 10:80.a.m.)
Bryce ud Ma,rll. Smltb
of Bluld, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .... ....... 29%
AT&amp;T . ...... ................ .......... 41'!4
Ashland Oil .. .... .,.... ....... ........36
Bob Evans:.............. ::....... ,.l2'!4
Charming Shoppes ............... 9%
City Holding Co .................. 13~
Federal Mogul.. ................. .18%
Goodyear T&amp;:R ................... 35%
Heck's ........ ...., .... .. .... .... ...... 2'lfl
Key Centurion .................. 13&gt;,4
Lands' End ................ ......... 15Y.
Limited Inc..... ............. ..... .42'lfl
Multimedia Inc ..... ..... .............78
Rax Restaurants .............. 2 7/16
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .16
Shoney's Inc . ...... ............ :.13~
Star Ball'k ............ ....... ...... 20~
Wendy's Iilt'l. . ............. ..... ...... 5
Wortblngton Ind ..... ........ ..... 21%

In southt!rn Ohio,.where cdtlcal
temperatures for many · trees
remain In the mid· to upper 20s:
Lows of less than 25 may also ·
Injure overWintering wheat, es·
peclally in tbe south. Producers
and gardeners should take neces sary action to protect young
plants and seedlings from the
cold.
Relative humidities were to
drop to near 40 percent later
Tuesday, and humid1t!es could
fall to 30 percent Wednesday.
Light, variable winds Wednesday will make It a gOOd day for
outdoor spraying to proceed.
The s!x-to-10'day outlook for
Sunday through the foUowlng
Thursday calls for above-normal
precipitation. Temperatures
should be near normal, except
tot the southeast, where abovenormal readings are likely.
On the ear!y morning weather
map, a cold front extended south
from a low north of Lake Huron
across ,eastern ohio to .northern
Texas. High pressure was centered ov.er North Dakota and

Save
Continued from page·t
entrance to the complex will be
off State Route 124.
Plans are moving forward by
Council to annex the area wbere
the complex will be located. The
nextstep, lt was reported ,: will be
the publication of an annexation
notice for four weeks. After that
the Meigs County Com'mlssloners will rule on the proposal
before ·the· ·annexation ·can be
finalized.
At the Council session were
were Teresa TYson-Drummer,
Kenny Buckley, Jim H!ll; Minter
Fryar, Pa(ie and Crow, council
members, Janice Lawson, clerktreasurer, and Jim Connolly,
pollee chief.

extended from south central by ·Tuesday night as tbe high :
Canada to Kansas. The cold front · moves to Illinois. The high w111 :
wtll continue tb Pl!Sh east tQ be drift slowly east over ·.Ohio on :
located along the Atlantic Coast Wednesday .
OAECASTTO 7 AM EST 4·111·~D
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2 Sectiono. 12 Pog11 25 Cento
A Multimedio Inc. N41wopopo•
I

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N8me Might to Meigs
Eldercare Options post

•
WEATHER MAP - A large area of blgh presslire cen.tered over
tbe- Ohlo RJver. :Valley will bring moally cleat sklel and cool
temperatures &amp;o tbe eaetern two thirds of the nation. Stonny
conditions will prevail along a froa&amp;al band stretching west
througb the GuH of Mexico and showers will occur over the
· mountains In the Four Cor.n ers area. High pressure returning to
the PaciOc Norih\rest will produce clearing conditions to most of
the West Coast.

Weather
South.Central Oblo
Clear Tuesday nlgbt, with a
low between 20. and 25. Mostly
sunny Wednesday, wltb highs
between 55 and 60. .
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
· Fair Thursday, and a chance of
sbowers FPiday and Saturday.
Highs will range from the mid 50s
to mid 60s Thursday, and· from .'
the mid 60s to the mid 70s Friday
and Satul'liay. Overnight lows
will be between 30 and 40 early
Thursday, and between 40 and 50
Friday and Saturday mornings.

:
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NOW·OPEN FOR THE I•
SPRINO SEASON . I:-

Complete Une of
Vegetable and Bedding
Plants, Blooming and
Foliage Hanging Baskets. •
Fruit and Floweril!g Trees,
shrubs, Azaleas and . . •
Rhododendrons

HU.ARD'S GENIIOUSE
SYIACUSE, OliO
992·57U

Open

Daily

9-11; Sun. 1-6

I.
I'•

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lion wae beld Tu~ eveulng at the French Art
Colodf ID honor of the Ohio Supreme ()our&amp;'&amp;
arrival In GalUpolls. Pictured are some of the 1110
...Uvlduals attending tbe reeepUon, which was
sponsored by tbe Ohio State Bar Association.

Co~tracts .·
Several teaching contracts
were renewed when the Southern
Local Board of Education met
Tuesday nlg~t at the hJ,h school.
· Given a ~ntlnulng contract
. ~as \'!111~ Henaler. Contracts
- renewed 'for "five ' years · ~ere
~of 8ar.bara BaileY, Sandra
Bootfi, Karen Ifill, Pauline Hill,
and. Kim Phillips; for three
years, Wanda Shuler, and for one
year, David Gaul and Joan
Hudak.
Two substitute teachers were
approved for the reminder of the
school year. They ·are Deanna
Apllng and Karen Sue Lever.
Hired as transportation supervl·
sor for the 199().91 school year
was William Hoback.

j

Seeks sum in court

In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, General Motors
Acceptance Corporation, Worthe case of BancOhlo National thington, Is seeking $5,297.30
Bank verses Deloris and Ray from Crystal L. Lee-Hood, Mid·
· dleport, and Randy J. Lee,
·
Tryall.
Pomeroy
·

member case managemen t
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
team.
Sentinel Newa Stalf ·
The Options for Elders ProSherrie Might, R N. of Pome.
roy has been hired as the Meigs gram Is one of two community
County case management based care demonstration proworker for the Eldercare Options grams for the elderly recently
demonstration program, Cindy funded by the Ohio Legislature
through the Ohio Department of
Far~on, director of the Area
Agency on Aging, announced Aging. ,The program Is designed
today.
to coordinate existing home care
Might Is one of 14 hired to services for the elder'iy · and
operate the Optlons program In ·provide funding to supplement
the njne county area. About lbe cost of . additional needed
$133,027 of the 1.5 million dollars serviCes.
An 800 number will provide any
allocated for services will be
coming Into Meigs County over family or ln(jlvldual wltb lnfor·
the next year to be . used for . matlon on home care options for
programs geared to. help dis· lmpa(red elders and now to
: abled senior citizens wttb a full proceed with assistance In obrange of In-home personal care taining In-home care services for
Impaired senior citizens.
and health services.
The mos I severely hand!·
Mary Mcintyre of Marietta,
who has a masters deree In capped clients and those without· .
business administration and was family support may have access
. the former bY$lness manager at to 1i case manager who will
Colin Anderson Center In West
VIrginia; will be Home Care
Cowles, (left), G:l•~:=~
Sauilden, Gallla
Director for ·the nine· county
attorney, Oblo Supreme Court Ju·~~:~~~
. program. Jane Armstrong,
Resnick aad Bernard Fultz,
Meigs L.S.W. will act as case manageCounty attorney. ( OVJ&gt; pboto by Krill Cochran)
ment supervisor for ·the seven
.

assess .their needs and work with
them to obtain appropriate servi·
ces. The program will be bw sed :
In Marietta with case managers :
placed throughout the region.
Tbe approximate 1.5 million
dollars annually Will be avalla ble
to purchase specific services
such as homemaker and home
meals. The funds will purchase
or subsidize the cost ot services ·
on a sliding fee sca le. Income and .
assets will be 'used to determine ·
eligibility.
Farson sa id that the Options
fo~ Elders program Is scheduled
to open In May . She added, "We
couldn' t be happier with the
quality of people who have been
hired for the Options program.
Their professional backgrounds
and knowledge of the region
should get the program off to a
great start."

Stability, equality,
provided. by court

renewed by board
In· other action the board
approved purchase of a 71
passenger bus With tbe specific atlons for tbe cbassls and body to
be advertised. A resolution was
pas$811 reql!flltlng a. c;aah, ana1y·
sis by the auditor, Ol stat.e for the
purpose of determining If there
.wtn be sufficient money for the
school district to operate on
during tbe 1990·91 school year.
· Approval was given , to an
Education Management Infor·
matlon Syste!Jl subsidy payment
of $1,003.93 as , mandated by
House Blll140 which provides for
several student educational
options.
Southern High School gradualion was· set for May 20, and the

Vandalism
acts are
reported

It Isn't often' the justices leave
By LEE ANN WELCH
Columbus, but Douglas said they :
OVP NEWS STAFF
When a case reaches the like to show others wbat the :
Supreme Court of Ohio, that's as Supreme Court does and how !(
district's academic banquet was
far as It can go, and that "court of works. While the justices hear
scheduled for April 25 at 6: 30
p.m . In the high school
last resort" Is In Gallipolis to cases today , tile courtroom Is
· filled with students - to allow
gymnasium. ·
·
hear five cases today.
.
The Supreme Court makes the them to see the judicial process.
Shellle and Eddie Sawyers and
The court c;lpej;n't ju5t '.'sit In
stability and equality of laws In
BH~Ppwell were a~ted as
Columbus
and pontificate," Dou·
An Incident of vandalism at
Ohio, acCording to Justice Andy
t!lltlon student$ for the reglas
said,
wblch Is how many
Wrlgbt
Cemetery,
Langsville,
JTialnder of the school year.
Douglas. Douglas came Into town
view
the
justices
. By bringing ihe
has been reported to the Meigs
Tuesday .afternoon prior to the
CalaJTIIty days tor Dec. 8, 15 arid
court
to
cities
outside
Columbus,
Coun!Y
Sheriff's
Department.
22 were approved for all schools
flurry of actlv.ltles surround•lng
people
get
to
seek
exactly
what
According to . 1i report from
In the district, and Jan. 2 for the
the just.!ces' court date.
the
Supreme
Court
does.
Racine ·Elementary, junior bigb Sheriff James M. Soulsby, depuThe . Supreme Court of Ohio
Douglas Is finishing up bls first
ties )Vere notified on Monday that
hears cases of public or great
and high schools.
term
on the court, and will be
general Interest, and when subAttending were Charles Nor· 15 to 20 tombstones at the
seeking
re-election this year.
r!s, president, Denny Evans, vice cemetery had been damaged.
stantial constitutional questions
Being
a Supreme Court Justice
According to a Rutland Township are Involved, Douglas told the
president, Sue Grueser and Scott
Is'
'the
most
exciting and busiest
Trustee, the damage was done
Wolfe, along wltb DeJ!nle Hill,
Dally Tribune.
job
I've
ever
had," Douglas said,
within the .past 30 days.
treasurer , and Bobby Ord,
It takes four of seven justices to
But
he
doesn't
mind the work Anyone With Information on get a case before the court. he
superlntendenl.
or
tbe
reading.
tbe damage at Wright Cemetery said. It Is necessary to speak on
The .justices hear ten case5
or any other'cemetery Is asked to certain areas of law for the lower
weekly
and render decisions on
contact tbe sheriff's office .or courts, the lawyers and the
tbem
the
day they are heard. He
respective. township trustees.
citizens of the state.
.
said
those
argued In Galllpo)!s .
Greg Garretson, Route 1, Por·
The court must be neutral and
will
be
decided
today . The
tland, reported Tuesday evening see that laws are Interpreted
Stearns, Rutland; Dano Ralph
majority
and
justices
may,
when
King, Pomeroy; Gary Lynn . to the sheriff's office that on the equally across the state, Douglas
minority
opinions
are
completed,
weekend of April 7, his garage said. "It Is Important to .set the
Nelson, Pomeroy; Charles E.
was entered and an air compres- tone and policy or standardize change tllelr minds. but that
Price, Long Bottom; Cindy M.
doesn't usually happen.
so_r_ was tlllten. G;nretson ad· .the laws."
Pickens, .Pomeroy; Pamela J.
.
By life ilme they leave Gall! per
vised that the garage was not
.. The Supreme Court must hear
Dill, Racine; Anna Sue Grueser,
lis,
the Supreme Court Justices
Rutland; Vlkkl Lynn .Miller, . locked. He reported thecompres· · all death penalty cases, review will have decided a diverse set of
Racine; Nancy Avice Burns, sor had a six gallon tank and was all Public Utilities Commission
grey lri color.
of Ohio rulings and all Board of cases Involving firearms, labor
Pomeroy; Paul J .. Huston, Syra·
disputes and medical
On Sunday evening, deputies Taxation Appeals, he added .
cuse; Thomas K. Roush, Racine;
malpractice.
1t Is their job to see that what's
Flossie M. Nelson, Pomeroy;· took a report from Daniel Cun·
The "court of last resort" w!ll
nlngham, Bailey Run Road, that fair In Gallipolis Is also fair In
Greg C. Sheets, Pomeroy; Rohave
set made determinations
·bert Ph!l!p Meier, Middleport; . someone had just run over his Cleveland as ·utility rates or
will
essentially affect all of
that
mailbox. Deputies responded to taxes -to make them equaL
Walter G. Tomblin Jr., Langs·
Ohio.
Douglas
said one case
Douglas said the job of justice
the call and found that a neighbor
ville; Rowha G. Reed, Reeds·
labor
Issue
on collective
alone,
a
had struck the box. The neighbor Is a serious one - when a case
ville; Donna L. Hartson, Middle·
bargaining,
will
affect
at least
!Jlake restitution. No charges gei.s there, Its the final stop,
port; Carl . B . Jennings,
57,000
public
employees
In the
highest aut!Jorlty In the legal
wer4i1 flied.
Pomeroy; Rosemary Pierce,
state.
On Sunday morning, Krlsty L, process.
Racine.
Boals, Chauncey , reported to
deputies that she had been at the
Watering Hole on Route 7 near
Pomeroy when she came out to
the parking lot and discovered
Pomeroy; Bertie R. Lance, tbat the right rear quarter panel
Pomeroy; Barbara Joan Smltb, of her 1990 Chevrolet Cavalier
Th~ Red Cross bloodmobile will be In Pomeory on
Shade; Roberta Irene Jeffers, bad been struck and damaged.
Wednesday, April 25, not Monday, as earlier announced,
Racine; t,ydla E. Gilkey, Middle- There WIIS light damage to tbe
Marlon Ebersbach, blood chairman, reported today. The
part; Carolyn Sue Page, Langs- car.
Middleport &lt;:;hlld Conservatlo'! League will be serving tbe
ville; Mae Anna Weber, MiddleSaturday evening around 11: 30
canteen at the bloodmobile.
port; Melissa A. Snyder, p.m., Candace E. Carleton, Cal·
Pomeroy; ' Joyce L. O'Bry~nt, !away Roild, Cooly!lle, was traPomeroy; Barbara L. Eblin, veling south on Route 7, just
Pomeroy; Brian Lee Dlebl, Ra· south of Route 681 at Tuppers
cine; Penny Nicole · Jeffers, Plains, when she struck and
Attorney General Ant.hony J. Celebreze, Jr,, today announced
Pomeroy; Clarence Wilson killed a deer that ran Into tbe
the appointment of Robert Malson, Jr. as Meigs County
Henderson, Coolville; Frederick path of vehicle. There was
manager for the Celebrezze for Governor carnpalgn.
Dorsel Thomas, Cheshire; Henry moderate damage to her 1985
Malson, wbo will serve In a volu11teer capacity, will be ·
T. Carsey, Middleport.
Buick. No citation was Issued.
responsible for managing and coordinating the Celebrezze
The sheriff's deparlment Is
·Carl L. Loomis, Syracuse;
gubernatorial campaign In Meigs County.
Investigating a Saturday evening
Marjorie J. Manuel, Syracuse;
In announcing the appointment, Celebrezze stated "I feel
Rlcbard Lee Roberta, Reeds· report from Denise Williams,
very fortunate to have Robert Malson, Jr. serving as my Meigs
Briar Rlclie Road, Lanpvllle,
ville; Lowell Allen Ridenour,
County mangaer. Bob Ia a proven 'leader, someone who Will
Long Bottom; Rosemary Lynn that ·she bad discovered one of
actively manage my campaign In the county, and who Will
Randolph, Lolli Bottom; Betty her COWl &amp;bOt, but not killed.
Include not only'Democr~tic actlvlsia, but the working men and
Irene Spencer, Pomeroy; Robert
Deputies responded to a dowomen who look to this campaign With confidence to tbe 1990's
Jetter•. Albany; Mlcbael E. mestic viOlence call at Harrison·
Together tbrough bard work and plain talk, we will get our
Guess, Luppera Plains; Ray· ville on Saturday evening. Greg
mesaage to all Ohioans."
·
mond Edwin Maxson, Reeda- Taylor, 27, was jailed on a
The regiOnal vice president of a financial services markeUna
vllle; Donald E. Myers, Long domestic violence charae.
company, Malson Is currently a Central and Executive
TberW RandolpH, Reedsville,
Bottom; Constanc~ Len KariChCommitteeman for the Democratic Party of Meigs .County. He
nlk, Pomeroy; 'James M. Werrq reported Saturday evelni tbat
has been Involved With the Central Committee since 19'18 alld
Sr., Racine; Joyeph L. Evalla; sometime dur.bii the past month,
has tiled for re-election for 1990. He bas been a member of the
Racine; Clyde Edward Kellllldy, 10111eone cut the lire on hll truck.
10tb District Democratic Action Club since 1980.
Pomeroy; Loll AnD , Cun- ~'* W01'U ou the river IDCI
Continued on page 5
ningham, Syracuse; ,Mellllaa bid just returned borne and
found the pllllcture.
Continued ou paae 5 ·

Grand jury ·. list is .selected

Hospital funding in jeopardy

Fifty area residents have been
selected by. random draw for
possible service during the May
term of the Meigs County Grand
Jury. The follow! ng names_ Wf!re
drawn for possible Grand Jury
duly'.
Arthur Anthony Hunnel, Pomeroy; Bessie A. Landaker, Pomeroy; Carl Ray Thomas, Long
Botto'1'1; Wlllls Joseph, Racine;
Don Wendell Wilson, Albany;
James M. Milliron, Reedsville;
Linda R. Faulk, Pomeroy; Lll·
I Jan Lucille Demoskey. Middle·
port; Daphne Gaye Young, Long
Bottom; Cella • Rose .McCoy,
Pomeroy; Betty L. Bayes, Mid·
dleport; Betty Lou Wilson,

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Here is a sale where nothing is h~.ld back.
Every item throughout our store has been marked down and is on sale.
·You .can save 10% to ~Oo/o OFF Mason Furniture's everyday low.prices.
We haven't held·anything back. In addition, just look at this·... .

,.

Pomeroy; Pamela Kav jude.
Vinton; Gloria Jean Nelson,
Langsville; William R. Hall,
Middleport; Brl,a n Keith Conde,
Middleport; · Jeffrey C. Kimes,
Reedsville; Kevin Elwood Venoy, Racine; Carroll Rc Norris,
Syracuse; Paul E. Beegle, Ra·
cine; John E. Lyons III, Racine;
Diane Kay Jones, Reedsville;
Katby Sue Hetzer, Reedsville;
Rick D. Lawson, Albany; Mary
Lee Maxey, Reedsville.
Olive C-. M!lard, Albany; Lor·
ralne P. Aelker, Pomeroy; Ro·
bert E. Brewer, Pomeroy; Mary
E. Qualls, ·Pomeroy; Alicia
Dawn \VanMeter, Syracuse; Lila
R. Jones, · Dexter;· Warren J.

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Names drawn for Meigs petit jury

___,;.__.Area deaths

_ _ _. Meigs announcements _ __

Low tonight In mid 388.
Sunny Thul'llday. Wgh In mid
6011.

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By United Press International · money for programs In ,which
Ohio's prograll) to help hospi- hospitals supply tbe state's
·
tals deal With mounting debts Is share.
In jeopardy because of a projlosal
Under the state's program,
to that would prohibit It from hospitals pay 0.5 percent of their
License issued
getting federal matching money. total anriual costs Into a pool. For
A marriage license has been
every 40 cents In tbat fund, the
Issued In the Meigs County
The Care Assurance program, federal government provides 60
Probate Court to Mlch~tel ChriS· which brought $55 million In cents. Tbe combined fund Is tben
topher Dorst, 26, Pomeroy, and Medicaid money to Ohio when It redistributed to hospitals based
Angellque Starcher, 21, Racine.
started last year, could be ended on the number of poor patients
by proposed regulations from the they treat.
Health Care Finance Admlnls·
The money paid back to
Names omitted
tratlon, James Castle, president hospitals Is Intended to help
of the Ohio Hospital Association, · cover some of the debts they
In the recent report of a
said Monday. ,
Incur from patients who cannot
retirement party for Clair Giles
Ohio Human Services Director pay their bills: ·
beld at the Kountry Kitchen In
Roland Hairston said the proRacine, the names Of Vlkle
State Rep. David Hobson.
Morrow and Pal!la Daugherty gram Is jeopardized by a prop-. R-Springfleld, says even If the
osal to prohibit federal matching_ state supplied the $36 mlllloil for
were unintentionally omitted.
Its share of the Care Assurance
money, federal officials still
would
find a way to.eliminate the
_""'""'lprogram.
He said ·the federal govern·
Lockwood United Methodls t
Naomi Bailey
mel)t
asked tbe · state to find
Church In Boardman and a
Innovative
ways to help hospitals
69-year . member of Pomeroy
Mrs. Naomi· Bailey, Girard,
but
now
proposes
to penalize
Chapter 186, Order oft he Eastern
formerlY of Meigs County, died Star.
Ohio
for
being
"too
InnoVative."
_ .
:
on April 18 at ber home. Funeral
Ohio hospitals have seen their
Her husband, Fred C., wbom
services were held there at the
annual
debt from ·unpaid bills
she married In December 1922,
Blackstane Funeral Home on died In December, 1958.
rise
from
aliout $178 million In ·
·
Ohurch Hill Road.
1983
to
$406
million In 1988.
· She Is survived by a son,
StAte
offlci8ls,
Hobson said,
Born on March 23, 1900 In
Mahonlng County Judge Fred H.
are
trying
to
persuade
the
M!nersy!lle, Mrs. Bailey was the · Bailey; two daughters, Mrs.
federal
government
to
allow
tbe
daughter of Edward and Mary
Mary E . Whitacre and Mrs.
state
program
to
continue.
Other·
Reiber Funk and lived In Girard Margaret L. Whitacre, both of
wise, hospitals may be forced to
!or 30 years. She worked as a
BerHn Center, six grandchildren,
reduce services or Increase their
nurses aide at Northside Medical and six great-grandchildren.
charges
to paying customers, he
Center for 10 years.
Two brothers, Earl and Henry
said.
She was a member of the
Funk, are deceased.
At a meeting In Cleveland,
Wayne Rice, PI'!'Sident of the
Greater Cleveland Hospital As·
soclatlon, said el!dlng t]1e proserved following the meeting.
Sororl&amp;)' &amp;o niee&amp;
gram would cost area hospitals
The XI Gamma Epsilon Chap- CCL &amp;o mee&amp;
, .
'
$19 million.
·
ter, Beta Sigma Phi SOrority will
The Middleport Child Conser"These funds have bec&lt;ime an
meet Tbursday, 6 p.m. af the vation League Will meet Thursoperating necessity for boapl·
senior citizens center In Pome- day at 6:30 p.m. at the home of
tala," he said. ' "E&gt;ar hospitals
roy for a p~ party and Linda Broderick.
cannot continue to absorb tbese
AA&amp;omi!M
·
fiecklace making session.
lOise&amp;. ,, .
Amerlc• Lepoa &amp;o meet
The Pomeroy Group of A.A.
MetroHealth Medical Center,
The Racllie American Legion and Al 'Anon will meet Thursday
he said, already a~ .abo11t
Post 602 will meet Thursday at at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart $40 million In losses-annlial!y for
7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be catholic Church.
Indigent care.
·

' Pick 4
2961

t

Two default judgments aw~ed
Two default judgments bave
been awarded In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
The first, In the amount of
$25,160.54 has been awarded In
the .case of BancOh!o National
Bank verses Ricky A. Freeman.
The second, In the amount of
$11,606.15, bas been granted In

3o6

,.

VeteriUUI Memorial
Monday admissions - Wlllle
Blaine, Middleport; Romona K.
Smltb, Middleport; Jobn Dean,
Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Carolyn
Jacobs, Etollla Cassell, Carrie
Phillips, Woodrow Hall.
•

Pick 3

Page 3

~

Hospital news

.

Ohio Lottery

Reds open
·home
with victory

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........--iiiApprowd CNdJI
-t'h end Appl!lft- Ellcludld Ffom lNa otr.
'

a .PUR
.co
2ND STREET

t:

MASON, WV

~

The names of the following 300
Meigs residents have bei!n selected . for possible duty during
the May term of the Meigs
County Petit Jury.
Clifton J. Jude, VInton; Robert
.Fortney, Repdsville; Joseph R.
Cremeans, Reedsville; .Emmett
A. Rawson, Middleport; Frances
E;velyit Hysell, Pomeroy; Delbert R. Ours, Portland; Debra
· Kay Mullen, Middleport; Ronald
D. Roberts, Portland; Harry E.
Roush, Racine; Trll(llan L.
Grim, Albany; Lisa G. Plemmons, Langsville; Todd Wayne
Hoscbar, Pomeroy; Mildred F.
Bissell. Tuppers Plains; John F.
Hill, Lona Bottom; Raymond L.
Rowe, Racine; Mlcbael Paul
Mulford, Pomeroy; Thelma El·
1
1leen WatkinS, Coolville; Charles
LeohEskew, Pomeroy; Agnes
·Leona Mowery, Pomeroy; Larry
G. Johnson, Rutland; · Jim E.
&lt;weese, Syracuse; Eric Shane
Sayn, Albany; Laura F. Circle,
Baclne; Emma Jane McCIIn·
· toeIt, Racine; Kathleen Lebew,
.
Pomeroy.
Marilla Joanne Dill, Long
Bottom; Kimberly Dawn Taylor,
Long Bottom; Edltb Mees King,

Middleport; Loura Jaye Hupp,
Racine; Iva Gertrude Johnson,
Pomeroy; Daisy L. Blakeslee,
Pomeroy; Robert C. Sargent,
Rutland; Vernon Blevins, Pome·
roy; Pauline F . Davis, Dexter;
Dorothy E. Bentz, Racine;' Sheila
Baltic, Racine; Steven Clark
Bachner, Middleport; Douglas
Chapman, Rutland; Douglas G.
Lambert, Rutland; John F.
Snyder, Pomeroy; De lora Allee
Spencer, Racine; Daniel G. Ed·
·warda, Rutland; James M. Sauv·
age, Pomeroy; Katrina Mareel
Hayes, RaCine; Curtis E. Bal·
!baser, Langsville; Madgle L.
Smith, Pomeroy; Peggy L.
Moore, Pomeroy; Larry Gene
Grogan, Middleport; Charles C.
King, Pomeroy; Terry R. Brown,
Racine.
Gloria K. Kloes, Minersville;
Valerie Lynn Simpson, Racine;
Carroll Ann Harper, Middleport;
Edith Frances Buchanan, Reeds·
ville; Timothy Eugene Mullins,
Dexter; Goldie R. Heiney, Ra·
cine; Monserrate Cordero, Mid·
dleport; Donald E. Reuter, Mid·
dleport; Jimmy Cline Haning,
Albany; Billie Alll!ll Davis,
Pomeroy; Allee M. Freeman,

Local news briefs--

Bloodmobile visit set .April 25

Maismi to head campaign

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