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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
' .

'

•

..
•

2 Sectiono. 12 Pog11 25 Cento
A Multimedio Inc. N41wopopo•
I

•

•

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.

:
~
•
•

.

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'•

~

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,

'

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

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VeteriUUI Memorial
Monday admissions - Wlllle
Blaine, Middleport; Romona K.
Smltb, Middleport; Jobn Dean,
Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Carolyn
Jacobs, Etollla Cassell, Carrie
Phillips, Woodrow Hall.
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Page 3

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Hospital news

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Ohio Lottery

Reds open
·home
with victory

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-t'h end Appl!lft- Ellcludld Ffom lNa otr.
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.co
2ND STREET

t:

MASON, WV

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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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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coun Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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. ~miiill ,..,...,_,._...,...,~=·""

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ROBERT L. WINGETT

l

l'llbllsher

. CHARLENE.iiOEFLICH
General Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD .
Asslstaat Publllher/Controller

.,

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland DaDy Prest
Association and the American·Newspaper Publishers Association.

..

Battle over vests':-....,_;....____Ja_..:_ck_A_·n_de_r_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_a_n_A_tta
WASHINGTON- Tbe Justice
Department has locked horns
· with the Du Pont Co. over
national standards for bullet·
proof vests. And those tor whom
this is a life and death argument
- the pollee officers of the nation
- ·don't like the sound of it.
The pollee on the streets are
facing bigger gi.tns carried by
drug dealers. They want state-of·
the-art armor to keep t~em alive.
Du Pont Is the leading producer of Kevlar, the protective
material used In most bullet-

proof vests and other body armor the nation's pollee organizations.
for the past 20 years. Two years They doll' t like the notion o(. the
ago the Justice Department standard being set by the comtightened Its voluntary standard pany that makes a pro !It from the
for bullet-proof vests because of sale of. vests.
·
the ·heavy arsenal of criminals.
Du Pont says It Is driven by .
Some members of Congress are concern for the· pollee, not by· a
agitating to have that standard . pro!lt motive. The company
made mandatory.
"
wimts the federal government to
But Du Pont thinks the stand· adopt Du Pont's standard for
ard is Hawed, requiring more 1 lighter armor and contends that
Kevlar than necessary, and that ·more pollee would wear the vests
a t\llnner, light vest will do the if they were lighter and less
job. The Justice Department vlslble.lsn't buying It, and neither are
The trade group or vest manu-

WASHINGTON (UPI) ..:.. The Senate, In a moment of enUghtment,
bas set a statute of limitations on the experimental use of drugs,

Thanks spo"rtsors

facturers - the Personal Protective Armor Association - backs·
Du Pont In this debate. They are
the people who buy Kevlar and
other materials to make vesis
and body armor..
Confronted with ' the fact that .
Kevlar vests sometimes fall the
Justice Department's toUgh ,
standard, Stone and a· few other
vest makers have turned to
another fabric called Spectra
made by .Allied Fibers. While Du
Pont II comptalnlna about the ·
Justice DepartrneQt standard,
Stone says Spectra has no trouble
meeting it.
.
Du Pont's paten! on Kev!ar Is
about to expire, which wW open
the door to more competition.
But John FallOn; Du Pont's
director of lndustrtal products,
says that Is not the reason Du
Pont Is pushing Its standard.
"There are much bigger lasues at
stake," Fallon told our associate
·
Jim Lynch.
Fallon also thinks the pollee
would•fallln line behind Du Pont .
If they better . understood the
Issues. Du Pont claims Ita vests
have never failed to perform In
the field- and that the Justice
Department's testing procedure
Is faulty.
Tbe behind-the-scenes feud between Du Pont ,and ·the Justice
Department has drawn·the atten·
tlon . of capitol Hill:· Three congressmen and a .senator have ·
written to l;lu Pont sayiD~ "As
members of Consress we are
gravely concerned about this
matter. As the level of firearm
violence in this country continues
to escalate, pollee are ever more
at risk of lethal gunshot
wounds.''

OUT AT·F IRST -l'adres' Tony G'wynn tries but cannot beat the
ball by a stretching Tom Browning In fourtli Inning action at
Riverfront. Gwynn was called out on the play . The Reds won their
opener, 2-1. (\)PI)

Bruins advance
••
In NHL ·playo(fs

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BOSTON (UP!) - . Ray
Bourque's pain was · overmatched by his heart. and the
Boston Bruins rode his dra,mallc
ret tim to a seventh-game playoff
victory.
JohnBycescored hls'flrstN'Hl,
goal 90 seConds Into the game ani!
theBruhts went on t.oa;J-1 victory ·
Tuesday night -lo the _Game 7 of

Risky

were a l:lecade ago; yes, we now
have a fuller appreciation of the
need for sound and practical
envlronl'nental controls being
placed on the use of such energy,
but that Is about the extent of the
good news. J'tlow for the dark side
of ourcountty'senergyeqliation.
As We· begin the decade of the
1990s, the United States riow
depends on imports for 46% of Its
on ·needs - a record , level.
Domestic oU production, as the
states of Louisiana, Texas, and
Oklahoma can readily at(fst, Is
In declln.e. and practical non-oil
alternatives such as .coal and
nuclear energy have fallen out of
favor because of the perceived
threat they pose to the environ·
ment. Other less practical but
still threat they pose to the
environment. Other less practl·
cat but still threat they pose to the
environment. Other less practical but stU! threat they pose to the
environment. Other less practical but stlll promising renewable
technologies such as wind and
solar energy have had their·
llPPlicatlon· lessen with the re-

cent removal of the tax Incengrave environmental consequentives that encouraged conversion ces that can result from such
to' these sources.
-,
shipments. '
Getting back to our tmporta·
Over 95% of all the additional
tlon of foreign oil, virtually all of energy production In the United
the increases in oil shipments States since the 1973 oil embargo
over the past !IOVeral years have has come from coal and nuclear
.come from the Middle East. At energy, Ironically our nation's
present we spend ·$50 billion per two most embattled domestic
year on Middle East oiL At energy Industries. Nuclear
present such oil expenditures energy now supplies l/5th of our
make up ~%.ol our country's $125 COUI!try's electricity and bas
billion annual tra4e defiCit. It precluded the need for roughly
goes without saying such depend- four billion barrels of oil Imports
ence on J=&gt;erstan Gulf on can since the embargo." Nevertheseriously distort our nation's less, we as a country are on the
political and foreign policy verge of pe~manently turning
Interest.
·
our back on three abundant
As mentioned earlier, we as a sources of energy that could
country have been the benefl· seriously undercut our dependclary of relatively stable and ence on foreign ott: coal, nuclear
moderate oil prices. Should Ml· ,energy, and offshore oil. · .
deast oil prices suddenly rise, the
To borrow a title of a recent
economic consequences of such popular movie; the energy
dependence on Mideast oll could course-we are placing our counbe severe. Another danger of try on, is "Risky Business" to say
Importing foreign oil .that gener- the least, and whether the riSks
ally gets over looked is the this course poses are any less
potential for calamity that · the than the risks associated with
shipping of such supplies pose. coal and nuclear energy produc·
One only has to recall the Valdez tlon Is debatable at bes_t.
·
episode_to be reminded of the .

portions of several national
forests, mining and grazing
areas, fragile ghost towns, proposed DeW wilderness areas and
Indian reservations belonging to
the Walker River Paiute and
Duckwater Western Shoshone
tribes.
Indeed, many Westerners fear
that the De~nse Department. Is ·
well on Its way toward establish·
lng Its long desired Continental
Operations Range bounded by

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..

Browning, 2-0, yielded seven
hits ·over stx innings , making
only one mistake - a leadoff
home run to Benito Santiago In
the seventh. Randy Myers
. plklied the ninth inning for his
third _save, getting pinch-hitter
Joey Cora to bounce out with
runners on first and second to end
the game.
"Anytime you win seven in a
row, you 've got to be playing
game.''
good ball, " added San Diego
. rhe Reds have drawn ·first Manager Jack McKeon. " I was
blood In each of their games thus impressed with the Reds in
far;•scorlng first while collecting spring training. In fact, I've been

Impressed with them the ·past . Glel)n Wilson added a solo shot
four years."
lor the Astros, whO handed the .
Elsewhere In the National Brayes their llfth straight toss.
League, Montreal shaded Phlla• Mark Portugal, 1-1, allowed two
delphia 2·1, Pittsburgh pounded runs and six hils over 5 2-3
St. Louis 7-2, Chicago nipped the innings, striking out four and
New York Mets 8-61n 13 Innings , walking one. He retired 12 In a
and Los Anteles topped San row duitng one stretch. Dave
Francisco 10-5.
· Smith ·earned his second save,
EKpoe !, PhWies 1
pitching two Innings . John
At Mont,real, Dellno DeShields Smaltz, 0-2, took the loss.
delivered a tle-brei!klng
Cubs.8, Meta 8, IS Inn.
grounder In the seventh inning to
helP the' Expos to their fourth · At New York, Howard Johnstraight win. With one out and son' s throwing error scored two
runners at first and third, De· runs In the 13th inning. giving the
Shields grounded to second 'but Cuhs the victory. Johnson's twqshortstop Dickie Thon failed to out error on a Ryne Sandberg'
complete the doub!e play, mak· · grounder allowed Joe Girardi
tng Drew Hall, 1-1, the winner . and Jerome Walton to break a 6-6
Steve Frey pitched two Innings tie. Reliever Jeff Innis, 0-1, took
the loss. Paul Assenmacher, 1-0,
for his third save. ToddFrowtrth,
who gave up one run In his two
0-1,. was the loser.
innings of work, got the win.
Pirates 7, Cardinals 2
At Pittsburgh, Neal Heatori Dean Wilkins worked !lie bottom
scattered five hits over 7 2-3 of the 13th for his llrst save.
Dodgers 10, Glanta 5
innings and Bobby BonUla and
At San Francisco, Eddie Mur. Jose Lind e&lt;~ch drove In two runs
' during a six-run third tnnlng to ray and Ml.ke Scloscla drove In
two runs each and the Dodgers
-lift the Pirates. Heaton, 2·0,
kept the Giants winless In their
walked two and struck out four In
first four home games this year.
winning his seventh straight
decision dating back to last year. Sctoscla belted his . third home
run of the season in the four-run
Greg Mathews, who missed all of
eighth inning and singled In a run
last season following elbow
in the ninth. DonAase,l-1, picked
surgery, fell to 0-2.
up the win In relief for the
5, Braves 3
Dodgers. Atlee Hamm!lker, 0-1,
At Houston, Franklin Stubbs
suffered the loss. .
•· ·
·
belted a two-run homer and

-"tros

8 ·u 'IIS de1eat
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1•
. e tiCS; 8VS remam a IVe
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At Orlando, Bernard Klrtg
scored Washfngton .- s last 11
points, including a 15-foot baseline . jumper with two second&amp;.left , to )1ft the Bullets. King
finished the night with 32 points.
Jerry Reynolds scored a teamhigh 26 points for Orlando.
Lakers 102, SuperSonics 101
At Seattle, Magic Johnson 's
15:foot running hook sllQt with,
eight-tenths of a second remain·
lng In the ' game paced Los
Angeles. The. vlcto.ry , Los An·
1geles' third In a row, guara~tees
the Lakers , 61-18, the best record
In the NBA and the hOme court
adv!l!llage tli'roug~out the '
playoffs .. J11mes Wortliy topped
the Lakers with 22 points. The
Sonlcs were led by Dale Ellis
with 28.
Maverlckslrl, Jazz 96
At · -Dallas, Derek Harper
started Dallas on a 23-2 run in the
first half and the Mavericks

ville may also be first-round ·
picks.
Even If they all went In the first
round, fine backs Ilk~ . James
Gray of Tex1J.s Tech, Terry Allen
of Clemson, Reggie Cobb of
Tennessee, Mike Pringle of Ful·
lerton State and fullbacks Barry
Foster of Arkansas, Ernest
Thompson of ·Georgia Southern
and Pat Chaffey of Oregon State
would be left for the second
round,
There ·might be • 20 or more
backs taken through the six or
seven rounds completed on the
first day of the draft.
Thomas was a quesdon mark
entering his senior year because
he missed the 1988 .season after
knee surgery. But his knee held
up to the pounding of 264 carries
las I season. Thomas rushed for
1,341 yards In the regular season,
added 186 yards on 35 carrtes in
the Holiday Bowl and finished his
college career with 3,30.1 yards
and 5.4 yards per carry.
"There might not be anyone
better," Jets general manager
Dick Steinberg said. "He does
everything for a feature back.
He's an excellent blocker. He's
got very good hands. He's been a
punt returner and a kick re-

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Sports briefs

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"Do you want 'nutrlt/0!18' or 'non-nutrtttcus. "'

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Baseball
The 1994 All-Star Game will be .
In PittSburgh's Three Rivers
Stadium, th,e 50th anniversary. of
tlie mid-season classic. : T!tts ·
year's hJI-Star Game will be .a t ·
Chicago's Wrigley Field .... Com· ·
missioner Fay · Vlnce"-t Is un· .
likely to. lift Shufflln' Phil Dolfglu' 68-year .banishment from
h.Ueball despite a campalen to ·
clear his name. Douglu, nick·
named for his peculiar walk.
pttcbed 11 seasona fill" the New
¥ork Giants and struck out Babe
Ruth four times in the 1921 World
S!!ries. He wu banaed by CommiSSioner Kennenw Mountain
Landis for eoUcltlna a payoff
during the 1922 pennant race.

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survived a fourth-quarter Utah
comeback. The Jazz saw its
· Midwest Division lead over San
Antonio sltced to one game. Karl
Malone paced the Jazz with' 39
points and Roy Tarpley added.17
for the Mavericks.
Rockets 112, Klnp lrl
At Houston, Eric "Sleepy"
Floyd scored 22 points, Including
15 In the fourth quarter, to boost
the Rockets. Sacramento '~
Danny Atnge led all scorers with
27 points and Antoine Carr added
21. '
Nuggets 99, Timberwolves 88 ·
At Mlnneapolts. Michael"
. Adams scored 15 of his ;!2 Points
In the second hall and Lafayette
Lever added 21 to lead Denver.
The Nuggets, 41·38, currently hokl the seventh playoff spot In
theWesternConferenceandhold
a one-game lead on Houston and
a two game advantage orer
_Seattle.

'

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Senti~el
,

PubliShed every afternoon, Mondly
thrwp Friday, lU Court St.. POmeroy, Obi" by the Olllo V•lley PublllhlnK Company/ Multimedia. hie.,
!'Omeroy, Ohio 4S7al, Ph. 912·2lllf. !Je.
cond clus pootaae paid •t Poltllroy,
Ohlo.
Member: United Prets InternattoaaJ,

'

Inland Dally Preu AuoclatiDn and tho
Ohlp Newspaper AsaoclotiDn: Natloool

Adver!IIIDK ~pmentatlve, Branlwn
NewiiPOt&gt;« Sal•, '133 Tblrd Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.

POS'IloiAS1'ER: Send · - cllml!l to The llolly Sentinel. W Court St.,
- . , .. Ohlo 11'189.

• Needs no
primer
• A one coat;

Tuellday's Racine
Dept. Store ad
should have read

e-.y.to-appty
gloes enamel
llntsh.

• l'roteetl

metal, WOOd
and masonry
surfiCIIS.

·Cushion Panels

s.oc . . .

The Daily

(VBPS ltutl)

COllECTION

.

· turner. He's the total package, no
doubt about iL"
Smith, wtio left school after his
junior year, probably wlll be \he
second back selected . The
Tampa Bay Buccaneers are
leaning toward him with the
fourth pick If they fall to swing a
trade with San Diego for Gary
Anderson.
Other teams looking for immediate help at running back
include Atllulta, Dallas, Philadelphia, S'e!lttle and Phoenix.
Along with Smith, the other top
juniors coming out are Hampton.
Cobb, Allen, Foster and Michigan's Leroy Hoard.
Cobb, who was suspended from
his team last spring and then
kicked off the club during the
season, may go lower than his
talent Indicates. Bu.t he was
Impressive white working out for
scouts recently and may betaken
before the third round. Another
,InteresUng early-round posslbll·
ity Is Oregon's Latin Berry, a
terrific athlete who led all backs
hi testing with a 4.4 40-yard dash,
40-lnch vertical jump and 10-foot 11 standing broad jump.

A Dhto... ot lllllllmodla. Joe

BRUINS CAPTURE IIERII:S - llftton Bruins' Brian Propp, . ·
Ray Bourque (71) and Cam Neetr (8) embraceu tllelr.flllll cbeer
· them oil after Cam Neetr 1p0ret1 the &amp;ldrd pal of tbe 1ame In the
second period Tuesday, at Boa ton Garden. '111e Bruins won the
·game 3-1 to win tile llnal I 111M of the tei'IB. (U,I'I) ·

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"Everything is flowing real
well right now ," saJd Reds
short.ltoP Barry Larkin, whO had
· three 'hits, boosting his average
to .594 (1!Mor-32). "We' re re·
.!axed, confident and
comfortable."
Clnclrlwitl's Bllly Hatcher.
· who collected three singles, and
Mariano Duncan, who had two
hits, singled In runs In a two-~un
second Inning to provide the
winning margin.
"Tl!eY didn't hit. me that hard
today," said losing pitcher Andy
Benes, "but they're hot and the
· balls they .hit are finding the
·holes. One thro,ugh nine, the Reds
are a very good team. They're
not going uP there to walk,
they're swinging the bat." \

a

•

:Today .in history

.,

Mountain Home AFB-In Idaho on
the north, Hill AFB In Utah on
east, Nellis AFB In Nevada on the
south and Fallon NAS In Nevada
on tlie west.
~n that vast airspace, military
jets - some fiytng at supersonic
speeds - would conduct thousands of the solitude and destroyIng the . tranquility that the
region's residents value so
highly.

Berry s World

'

ill least nine hits in each game.

Running backs _tabbed 'f~anchise
players' in Sunday's NFL draft

Military gobbles. up the-w est _R_ob_ert_Wt..:..:..:...:.alt=ers

WASHINGTON (NEA) - AI· · pending In more than a dozen
.'
though
Sen. James ~ - McClure, · other states. In California, for
value of academic organizations
R-Idaho,
long has been a staunch example, the · Defense Departat our school.
supporter.of
the military, he was ment wants to expand the 1.3
S!Jfty-four people entered the
upset
when
the Air Force last million acre China Lake Naval
tournament. Tbe day proceeded
yew;
.annouJICed
Its Intention to Weapons Center.
smoothly thanks to the cooperagreatly
expand
a
bombing range
(Although most of the tracts
1102!/&gt;f the participants.
hi
hls
state.
,
currently
being sought by the
·manics again to our sponsors
Predicting
a
"flrestorm"
of
armed
forces
now administered
and .participants .lor helping to
grassroots
opposition,
McClure
by
the
Bureau
of Land Managemake our annual fund raiser
expressed
his
"grave
concern"
ment,
more
than
600,000 acres of
successful.
about
the
Defense
Department's
what
previously
were national
Sincerely,
"lleclslon
to
drop
this
proposal
in
forests
are
currently
under DeNancy Baker, President
.
our
laps"
without
making
any
tense
Department
control.)
.
National Honor Society
attempt
to
deal
with
public
(In'
1940,
for
lnstanc~.
the .
Meigs High School
concerns.
·
entire Choctawhatchee National
At Issue Is the expansion of the Forest In Florida was given to the
I
Saylor Creek Bombing Range, War Department and trans·
south of Mountain Home . Air formi!dlntowhatts.nowEgllnAir
Force Base, from just under Force Base. Federallawcallsfor
110,000 acres to almost 1.46 • return of the land wbeil It Is no
•
By United Press International
million acres. McClure now longer needed for military purToday Is Wednesday, April 18, the 108th day of 1990 with 257 to
awaits the conclusion of public poses, but nobody expects that to
follow . ·
-.
hearings before taking a formal occur any time soon.)
The moon Is In Its last quarter.
·
·
·
position on the substance of the
Tbe Army wants to acquire
Tbe morning stars are Ven.us, Mars and Saturn. '
proposal.
almost 665,000 acr~ at Fort Sill
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
·
·
It Is vehemently opposed, In Oklahoma, 238,000 acres at
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
however, by sportsmen fearful of Fort' Irwin In California, 139,000
'Italian duchess Lucrezla Borgia In 1480, lawyer Clarence Darrow In
the destruction of fishing and acres at Fort Bragg In North
1857, symphony conductor Leopold Stokowskl In 1SS2, actresses
hunting grounds, by ranchers Carolina, 83,000 acres--at Fort
Barbara Hale In 1922 (age 68) and Hayley Mills In 1946 (age 44) and . resistant to the withdrawal of Polk In Louisiana, 82,000acres at
'
actor James Woods In 1947 (age 43) .
range land on which tb.etr cattle Fort Riley In Kansas, 51,000
and sheep uaze, by envlronrnen- acres at Fort A.P. Hill In
On this date In history:
tallsts concerned about !be des- VIrginia, 50,000 acres at Fort
: In 1775, American patriot Paul Revere began his famed ride
!ruction of critical wildlife habl- Lewis in Washington and more
through !~e Massachusetts countryside, cr:Ytngout " ... the British are
~t - and by . residents who • than 120,000 abres at various
coming! to rally the Minutemen.
cannot tolerate military jets other ba8es In Alabama, Hawaii,
In 1906, an earthquake str~ck San Francisco, collapsing buildings
ceaselessly screaming Kentucky, Missouri and
and lgnillng fires that destroyed much of what remained of the city.
overhead.
·
VIrginia.
·
By the time It was over three days later, almost500 people were dead
The Air Force says the range
In Nevada, a new 610,0oo.acre
and more than a quarter of a million were homeless.
wUI be operated six days a week tank maneuver area near HawIn 1949, the Republic of Ireland formally declared Itself
from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Moreover, thorne Ia being sought by the
Independent from Britain.
on one day per week It will he Army National Guard, while tile
In 1980, Rhodesia became the Independent African nation of
open all night. The Committee nearby Fallon Naval Air Statton
.Zimbabwe.
for Idaho' s Hltb Desert predicts wants to more than double the
. In 1987, Democrat Annette Strauss was elected the first woman
the "Afghattlstanlzatlon ff !be airspace reserved for Its use,
,
. American West."
mayor of Dallas.
adding 10,~ square miles to the
.
.
Similar scbemes to take con· 10,200 square mUes already
A thought for the day; Lawyer Clarence Darrow once said "There · trol of vut tracts or public land under Its control.
Is no such thing as justice ... In or out of court."
'
and air space for mU!tary u.se ate
That expansion would cover
.

,,

By TOM WITH~RS
.
UPI Sports Writer
,Cincinnati had to wall two
weeks for Opening Day this year
but for Reds fans 11 was worth II.
'Cincinnati, traditional host of
the major-league owner, lost the
honor this year due to the spring
·training lockout. The ·lockout
postponed the first week of the
season and the revised schedule
forced the Reds to spend the first
· two weeks of the season on the
·
road.
The Reds returned from their
Initial road trip of the 1990 season
unbeaten after six games · and
Improved tbat to seven Tuesday
with a 2-1 Victory over the San
Diego Padres.
Under the spotlight created by
the Pete Rose gambling Invest!·
gatlon, the Reds struggled last
year. But this year under Lou
Plnlella, the Reds are off to their
best start since 1980 when they
won their first eight games.
"Lou must be a genius.'' said
winning pitcher Tom Browning.
"We're 7-0." ·
;·n was fun to finally play In
front of the home fans.'' said
Plnlella·. "It's great to open with
seven straight wins, but we've
· got to keep battling every

Bourque, tlje Br'ult;ts' .star de- ·· first ptayoff slliltout when _Hitrt·
cramenlo 112-97, and Denver
fenseman and team leader,. \vas fOrd. center-Ron Fracts scores! on ·. By United Preu International
slashed
Minnesota 99-88.
not expected to play bfcflUse of a · a (!()Wer play at 11:31 of the third.
Chicago Bulls r()Okle' Stacey
Cavaliers
96, Bucks 88
hlp Injury which bad' Sidelined At 16:04, Moog, who had lost his ' King Is- becoming a veteran just
At
·
Milwaukee,
John WIIHams
him for the Previous four:games.. glove after falling, made a
In time for the playoff drive.
scored
~9
points,
hauled
down 11
King, theBuJls'topplcklnl989,
The selloUt erowd• of .l4,M8 .at · spectacular bare-handed save
rebounds
and
blocked
5
shots to
Boston Garden sustained a de- off a shot bY Dtnnen, knocking
scored ·16 points off the bench
pace
.
the
Cavaliers
and
keep
leaning rqar when Bourque · the puck Into the air with Ills Tuesday night. Including a key
game
In
front
Cleveland
one-half
skated onto. the Ice before the bloc~' then catching it. ·
free throw with· 5.3 seconds left,
game.
.\,..
Hartford's Ray Ferraro said
to help rally the Bulls to a 111-105 of Atlanta for the -final Eastern
Conference playoff ·spot. Jay
'·'In .this k,fnd of ·se~lel; jhe that If Moog ·c an remain hot ·victory over the Boston Celtlcs.
emotion takes evf)ryth lng • 'they are going to be tough _and
The loss snapped a six-game Humphries ted the Bucks with 22
·
away,'' s~ld Bourque. ."Emotion- . have to be' favored to win .tbe wtilntng streak for the Celtics, points · .
Hawks
118,
Nets
95
who drop~ two games behind
ally 1 was so ,high, 1 had to bring ... (Stanley) Cup."
At
Atlanta.
Dominique
Wilkins
myself down before the game." ·
•'I felt comfortable out there," ·the Idle Philadelphia 76ers In the
.
scored
36,polnts
to
lead
Atlanta
t._o
"Ray Bourque has too .much sald-Moog. •:Ithlnk that mentally , Atlantic ·Division.
an
easy
victory
over
New
heart to miss a game like this,'.' ~xperlence might have a lot to do ;:" "Kipg played quite ·well and ·
said Harlfo'i-t!'s Kevin Dineen'
"'!lh-ri.'·
·, ' · · has come a long way," Boston Jersey. The Hawks, 39-41. got 16
BOurque had not expected to • '· . The Brul~ts' defense allowed · coacl) ,Jimmy Rogers said. points and 13 rebounds from
play1 bul 'be took part In · an Hartfof!,l18 shots on goat to 1,1\e . "Their young kids have stepped . Moses Malone.. John Battle
addedJA-polnts and John Long
atteriiQOn . ~armup ska.te "just first period then just. 5 In the forward."
.
carne
off the bench to score 13.
for my owrt sanity'· and disco-· second and 5 In the third.
, The old kid, Michael ,J ordan,
17-62, was Jed by
New
Jersey;
vered that the pain had lessened
Boston took .a 1-0 lead when · scored 12 of, his 35 points In the
Dennis
Hopson
with 20 ' points
In his htp: When the news spread Byce, who .led Wisconsin to the fourth quarter . and added 11
Jack
Haley
and Purvis
while
. to his teammates that Bourque NCAA title In March, scored on rebounds, as the Bulls snapped
Short
each
scored
19.
would play, ··1 saw a lot of little the rebound of a John Carter their · two-game losing skid,
Bullets 129, Magic 127
smfles, ~· said Dave Poulin.
shot. Byce was playing in just his which . followed a nine-game
13\&gt;sto.n will host Montreal in second NHL game. · Bourque winning streak. ·
.
ThUrsday n~t~ht:s opener of the . assls ted on .the goal.
· Chicago, 54-25, needs one more
,Adams I;U'IIston final. The Cana·
''I just wenf til -tl)e net as hard · victory· or a Philadelphia loss lo
dtens have won 21 or 24 post.. 'Continued on page 4
.cl'tnch home-court . advantage
• ,
'
· · .thr"ough the Jlrst •two rounds of
t·lie_playoffs.
'" "I'm playing· with a, lot -of
By DAVE RAFFO
c~ntldence • now;" Klrig sal.d.
UPI Sports Writer
''Whenever you're piaylngwlth a
NEW YORK (UPI) - When
lot of .confidence, you feel that you hear a coach use the "'otds
you can practically do anything. "franchise player " on NFL draft
"The' guys have been really day, chanc~ are he will be
great with me. They keep work· talking about a running back this
log the ball to me and working · year. '
i·
with me and keep telling me to go
Some inay even be tempted to
out there and relax. That's the refer that way to backs picked on
whole key, as long as I'm relaxed the second round, because the
and .just playing and letting the Aprll22-23 draft Is so loaded with
game come to me like l have been ball carriers . As good as the
. doing the whole second half oft.he upeo!nlng draft Is for lineyear, we think It's going to backers, quarterbacks and def·
happen."
ensive linemen, therl! are more
What almost happened In the top players .a t run,ntng back thai! .
final minute was more like any position. · ·
'
disaster.
·'There are elgbt or nine backs
The Bulls -appeared to have with first-round ability," ESPN' s
wrapped the game up after a draft expert Met Kiper Jr. said.
Jordan free throw with 1:14 left, "And eight or nine backs won't go
making the score 105-98. But In the first round . That means
Bqston made
furious come- teams In round two looking for a
back, running off consecutlve r unning back might find a guy in
baskets by Kevin McH!!.l e, Reg· the top 15 on their board
gje Lewis and Jim Paxson to available.'-' ·
close to within 105-104' with 25.9
There will probably be at least
seconds to go.
five first-round picks spent on
McHale scored 22 of his team· running backs, with Blair Tho·
high 28 points In the second half, . mas of Penn State Ukely going to
while Reggie Lewis added 24 and the New York Jets with the
Larry Bird 23. ·
second pick. Othet top running
"The . Bulls are showing backs include Emmitt Smith of
they've practiced hard, and their Florida, Harold Green of South.
young guys are there," Bird said. Carolina, Darrell Thompson of
"It's no longer just Michael."
Minnesota, Rodney Hampton_of
In other games, Atlanta Georgia, Anthony Thompson of
pounded New Jersey 118-95, Indiana, Dexter Carter of Flor·
Washington beat Orlando 129- Ida State, Steve B~oussard of
127, :Los Angeles nipped Seattle Washington State. Fullbacks An·
102-101, Cleveland defeated Mil· thony Johnson of Notre Dame
waukee 96- 88, Dallas downed and Carwell Gardner of LoutsUtah ·. 97·96, Houston bias ted Sa·

business_::---':"""'"""'"'..._..;:;~---,......;..;.-C_on...;;.g..,....C_la_re_nc,.....
. e_M_il_ler

With the lmll'llnent consideration and antlclpa ted passage of
the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990, I think It Is appropriate to
sound some cautioning and sobering notes as to the risky course
this and other well meaning
environmental legislation is
placing our country on with
respect to Its ever Increasing
energy needs . .
1 recently bad tbe opportunity
to read an op ed piece In the ·
Christian Science Monitor writ·
ten by a professor of petroleum
engineering, SuUivan Marsden of
Stanford University, which cut to
the core of the problem. While
acknowledging our country's
good fortune In being able to
experience relatively stable and
moderate petroleum prices for
much of the last decade, he goes
on to me_ntlon In compelling
detail the down side of this good
fortune.
Yes, the United States uses 23%
less oil per unit of GNP than It did
ten years ago; yes,-by and large,
Americans are much more con·
servatlon consclou~ when it
comes to' energy use than they

'--

season series against the-Bruins.
Craig Janney and Cam Neely
assisted on each other's scores as
Boston took a J.O Ie.ad In the
second period. . .. .
.,
,. :
·• 'Evetytime the p\ICk bounced,
It didn't bounce ow: way,'' said
Whalers Coach Rick· Ley .. ''The .
Bruins ov.ercame a lot of 'obsta·.
cles, a lot of 'injur,les, They dug

~:;~~t;J~~~~:~;.layoffwlthfhe de.t~~~~:~~:~::;:d·~orhls

·'

Dear Editor:
On February 19th the Meigs
High School National Honor
Society and Quiz Team held the
Second Annual Euchre Tournament. The tournament held at
Meigs High School was a project
to raise money. Members of both
organizations asked our local
businesses for financial help with
prizes for the tournament. The
response was tremendous. It Is
greatly appreciated by both
organizations that the local com- ·
munity recognizes the need and

·'

.

Wed1181dev. Aprll18. 1990

:A ·statute of
limitations on ~g u~e

Letters fo the editor

Cincinnati
records seventh win in ·row
.

Dally Sentinel
. Pomeroy-Middlport. Ohio

'

Including cocaine. and saved a generation of Americans for future
public service.
.
Tbe verdict came In the case of Timothy Ryan, nominated as the
nation's top thrift regulator, who was confirmed 62-37 despite
admitted use of marljuan.a and, on one evening, cocaine.
Ryan, now 44, partook oft he Illegal substances In the early 1970s at
a time when the enjoyment of such pleasures was, If not pervasive, at.
least fairly common among men and women his age. It was also
Ulegal.
• As all- nominees are required to do, Ryan complied with an
_exhaustive check by FBI In WhiCh he declared his drug
experimentation. This information was then transmitted to the
Senate Banking Committee, which handled the appointment.
Under normal circumstances, the chairman and the ranking
members of the committee -In this case Sen. Don Riegle, D·Mich.,
and Sen. Jake Garn, R-utah, -are pr!Yy to this information, which is
a confidential communication from the president.
These two, Riegle and Garn, were at lll!erty to share this
Information with other members of the·commlttee. Whether they did
remains unclear but probable.
.
Although Ryan took a pounding at his confirmation hearing, mostly
because the Democrats found him ·painfully Inexperienced In the
world of finance, the issue of drug use was never raised.
It was only after the Information was leaked - It later prompted a
request for an Investigation by the ethics committee~ that Ryan's
long-ago e)!;perlment w!Ut . drugs ·became public knowledge. He
Immediately admitted It and expressed his regrets.
Nor was this part of Ryan's past used byhlsopponenlstntheSenate
debate, although Democrats had hopes, apparently based on nothing
solid, that they could defeat him.
Interestingly, It was two Republican conservatives, Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole and Sen. John Warner, R-Va., who
made m~ntlon of Ryan's drug use and both did so In his defense.
The most telling argument, made by both senators, Is that denying
a person public office on the basts of long·ago experimental drug use
would deny the nation a "generation'' of talented· and committed
Individuals.
Tbe Senate. ,In confirming Ryan, reached that very declslq'l and
·. thereby set a precedent for future nominees, although Warner
stressed that each case will have t.o be judged on Its owll merits.
' That such heavy-handed !Inti-drug senators as Sen. Jesse Helms,
R.N.C., and Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y. , joined In Ryan's approval
seems to be the Issue at rest.
What the Senate decided In the Ryan case is limited to
appointments In the executive branch and may not be applicable to
lifetime nominations to the federal co uris. Only two years ago, David
Ginsburg withdrew his nomination to the Supreme-Court after It
became known he had used marijuana.
The question Is already moot with respect \O elected officials. A
growing number of those In office have openly admitted the same
kind of enounter with drugs as Ryan and gone on to win another term.
As sound as the Senate's decision In the Ryan case Is, It does raise
some aspects of hypocrtcy. The same senators who are now willing to
forget the transgressions of 20 years ago, have, and will again, vote
for stiff prison penalties for the user of today.

-

Page~2-The

·. LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesslhan300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and_ telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be publlshed._Letters shou'ltl be Ingood taste, addressing Issues, notpersonall·
ties.
.
·· ·
·
..•.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

IVIIIaiiP'I'ION IIATIIII
. , Clonl• ........ one Weell ................................ :..ll.to one Mootb ............................. ....14.10
One Year ........... ............... : ...... m.110
SINGLECOFY
PBICE
Dally ................................... 25 Coats
Subocrlbtra not d•lrtna to pey thtcor·
rler ·may remit In ldvonce to
'lllellally Senttnelooa3, 6or12month
buto. Cretltt wm be ....,. corrtor aocb

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

Np sublcrlpttons by mall ~nnltl!d 111

ar- wlln home carrloa' __._ 11

lot .,._ ,rllltMI.

av.U.131e.

PICKENS
'HAIDWliE

RACINE DEPT.

-stea

USOII, WY.

94...1100

,
I

'

-llotptoulJ

13 Wetlll ............. .................... .llUt

:16 Wetiii ..... .......... .. ......... ........ II!.M
52 wet~~s ......................... .........
OottsW• llolp C..IIIJ
13 WHiti ........... .... ........ ...........

rr•.-

• w-......................... .........
52 Wetlll..................................

EJO30
40

�WednlldeY. April18, 1990

Wedl:a1dey, April18, 1990

.

KC RQyals stop Indians, .4-2 ·

....

Manager John Wathan was try· ueorge. 1 threw a couple pitches
lng to figure Snyder's ·chances way out of the stlke_zone, trying
to put a little something extra on
ofgetUng to the ball.
·
n
. ~~
-:.,;
.
He said, "When It was hit, I
Olin.
relieved
and
allOwed
aBo
thought It was In the gall for sure.
Then I thought he had a shot at It. Jackson &amp;Ingle, JackSon 's first
:
"But there Is a dead spot out lri RBI of the season.
Kevin
WicQJider
~epJ8ced
right center and lett center
Olin
and
struck
out
Jim
EISen•
where you can lose the ballln the
reich
butStlllwellfollowed
wltlra
Uahts and maybe' tllat:s what
drive
Into
the
rlgltt
center:fleld
happened to him.
'"!'he last two days we had gap for a triple. Carlos Baerga's
more hits. Today our hits were relay got past . thU.d baseman
more timely and StUiwell's was BrQPk Jacoby for an errqr that ·
allowed Stlllwell to score.
the big one."
"I don't know if It tilt me or
Steve Farr ~ 1·0, retired the only
batter he faced for the victory. not," Stillwell said of the throw.
"But I wasn't going anywhere
Cleveland reliever Steve Olin fell
to 0·1. Mark Davis pitched the until I saw It hit the camera (a
ninth and has saved all tnree of television at the · end ot the
on us."
the Royals' victories. He allowed Cleveland dugout)."
Cleveland reached Richard
Stillwell benefited frcirn the a single to Mitch Webster, the
architecture of Royals Stadium, first American Leaguer to reach Dotson, making his first appear·
ance for Kansas Oty, for runs In
however, and Snyder lost the ball base against him after seven
the first two innings. Dion ·James
in the lights. ·
s.tralght were _retired.
"I had It' and I losf it,'' the
Cleveland starter Bud Black opened with a double, advanced
on a , groundout and scored on
Cleveland right fielder said. held hiS former teammates
'
•When I saw It again, It was too · scoreless and led 2·0 through 51·:!' Snyder's sacr)fjce fly .
. Jacotiy tripled with one· out in .
·l ate, .
innings before Kevin Seltzer
''I know the lights are low )!ere, doubled am~ George ·Brett lbe second and scored · when
·Sandy Alomar's. smash at ··· a
but you just have to stay With lt." · walked on four pltc~es. . ·. , '
While Stillwell was doing a
'"!'hat was a good : deCision;" .drawn-ln. StJIJwell went .off the
shOrtstop's glove for an iilfleld
"stutterstep" around fltst as he said Black. "I was tired. I didn't
hit.
'
.
make
many
good
pitches
.
to
watched ~nrder~ Kansas City
"

•

'·'

Continued from page I'

Absentee ballots being accepted ·
·

Applications for absentee ballots are now being accepted by
the MelliS County Board of Electclons.
Residents may go to the board office or call 992·2697 and an
appllcatlonwm be mailed to the voter. A voter may alsocasthls
· absentee ballot at the Board of Elections office, Monday
·•
through Friday, 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
Final day to vote absentee Is Saturd~tY. May 5. The board
office wlll be open on the final day for-voting from 9 a.m. to 12
noon,

EMS has eight Tu~day calls
• Melg's Emergency Medical Services answered eight calls for
help Tuesday.
· Pomeroy at 1: 45 a.m. went to State Street for Terry Stobart
who was iaken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Mld&lt;jleport at 8:06a.m. was called to Beech Street for Henry .
Turner to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called to Elk Run Road at 9: 25 a.m. for
Kimberly Turner to O'Bienness Memorial Hospital.
· Rutland at 2:37p.m. !l"ansported Melissa King from Route 143
to Holzer Medical Center.
.
At 4:.52 p.m ., Middleport went to North Second Avenue for
.
John Myers to Holzer Medical Center.
Syracuse at 7: 40 p.m. was Cl!lled to Dusky Street for Mark ·
Dueer who was treated but no!'transported.
. At 9:57p.m .. Pomeroy went to East M!lln Street for Charlene
•Goodman to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
Middleport at 10:36 p.m. was called to Le!idlng Creek Road
for John Thomlln to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

!

Skateboards said stolen ·
Kids! You have to be very caretul, as two area, youngsters
found out over the weekend.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that on
Saturday, deputies took a report from Diana Bateman, Ro_ute 2, . '
Albany, that her daughter and a friend were along Route 6l!1 '
with their skateboards when they saY( a turtle at tbe side of the ~ .
road. The two laid their skateboards down along the edge of the
roadway and went lpto the ditch by tbe culvert for a-closer look,
at the turtle. When they left the turtle and returned to tbe
roadway, they saw a silver truck driving away pulling a tr!llier.
The truck was headed east on Route 681. The skateboards wera
gone!
·
·
·' . . ,
.
.

Cole charges dismissed
; DOUBLE PLAY - Orioles' Cal llpken fires
: over sliding Tony Fernandez of Toronto In time to

double up blltter Mookle Wilson In game action
Tuesday. (UPI)

Blue Jays wallop··Baltimore;

Van~ees

hand.. Tigers 4-l .loss_

' By. United Pren lnterllllilonal
(compared to Williams)," GasWednesday's series finale.
The people who said there was
ton said. "I think tllere·s enough
"You'll see a different team
noclearfavorlteintheAmerlcan
pressure coming to the ballpark
out there tommorrow, I prom·
League E;ast thls season may
every day without any extra Jse," he said. ""And I'm not
have overlooked the Toronto
pressure being put on you.
talking about (different) bo·
"If my attitude has made a
dies."
tllue Jays.
: Notoriously poor starters, the
d'tf!erence to the players. well,
Toronto grabbed a 1·0 lead in
"Jue Jays have amassed a 6·3
that's nne with me."
the thltd w)len Borders belted
$tart so far and, though they are
Flanagan, 2·0, who left the Ballard's first pitch o( !be Inning
still tied for first place wltb New game after Phil Bradley's lea· 380 feet qver the left·fleld fence
York, their history of, fast fin· . doff double In the sixth Inning, · ·for his second home run . of the
!shes bodes well.
·· walked three butdldnotrecord a year.
.
strikeout.
·
Gruber's second home run of
:_ Mike Flanagan scattered four
flits o\rer five innings Tuesday
Jeff Ballard, 0.2, suffered the tbe season, with one out in the
night and Kelly Gruber, Pat
loss. He yielded four runs and fourth, barely cleared the right·
Borders and Junior · Felix ho- · five hits, Including the thtee field fence to g\ve Toronto a 2·0
inered in an 8·2 win over the
hOmers. He struck out one· and lead. •
·Baltimore Orioles.
walked one.
With ·one out in the fifth,
"We're just not doing the Borders doubled off Ballard and,
· "I think (April games) are
very Important," Toronto Man·
things we have to do in order to one out later, Felix hit his ,second
ager Clto Gaston said. ''I ihlnk
win," Bal tlmore skipper Frank home run of the season for a 4·0
~very game you play Is lmpor·
Robinson said: ··we're not doing advantage.
'·
tarlt. If you can put some space
what we're capable of doing.
In oth~r games, Texas downed
· between you and tbe other teams
"'You've gotto keep the ball in Milwaukee 6·2, New York beat
qow It'll pay off atthe end of the
the ballpark If you're going to Detroit 4-1, Kansas City .topped
sea;on."
·
·
.
,
win, especially the way we've Cleveland . 4·2, ChiCago shaded
• Gaston · replaced Jlmy WUJJ.
been going," Robinson said. .
Boston 2·1, Minnesota shaded
ams.Jast May after the Blue Jays
The manager said he would be
Seattle 6·5 and Gakland clipped
conducting a closed-door meet·
California 7·5;
$lipped to12-24.
; "I'm ·a pretiy relaxed guy lng . with his players before
Rangers 8, Brewers 2
:
At Texas, Pete Incavlglla
· snapped a tie wl!h a three-rub
homer ln the sixth, leading the
Rangers. Kevin ,Brown, 2·0,
pitched 6 23 Innings for the
victory. Mike. Jeffcoat finished
for the save. Tony Fossas, 0·2.
Ptll•ll• 1, lk. IAIM t
took the loss. Brewers pitcher
Hn••l, AUut.ll I
AMEitiC.\.111 UU,OUE
Chlekp I, Niw Yerk t, 1J bla.
Ctim was eject.ed for
Chuck
BJ Valted Pres• .. ter..t io.-1
Lo• Aaplslt, s .. PriUid;eea S
,.
· Eue
.
throwing
at Jeff Kunkel ln the
WedMedQ Oant4!e
,.
Tum
W L Pd. GB
14• .bpln {MOflall t.e) -at S1n
seventh.
"'
NflW York....... .........'•.•.. l · I .!Ill Pranci.IIC'II CO.nler110n N), :J:JIIi p....
'"'
T•rallto ,......... ........... 1•• •1 3 .111 Yankees 4, Tigers 1
n.tlOI ............ , .. .'.......... I ~ 4 .Itt I""
Chk!qo (M&amp;MI• 1-D) M New York
At
Detroit,
Tim Leary, 0·1, shut
Del roll ......................... 3 I .115 IVr
(C.~ ... ,. '2:111 p.m.
~·
M:ttwaukee .................... l
1 .sss llYr
Phlladell*lt (Hewell 0-11 at Monlrul
out
the
Tigers
for six innings,
0e"¥rland ..................... l 4 .ISS 2"
(OrOM HI, ')':A p.m.
llaUimore ..................... t 5 .181 S
his
scoreless
streak
running
81. lAIII f'bllor 1·11 II Pitlabtns• .
w...
(Walk 1-1), ')':II p.m.
against them to 24 innings, pnil
SaD
Dle11 (Ra.n-• t-f) at
~ ~-=:.::::::::::::::::::::::: : ::: - ~
Dave Winfield hit a two-run
ClaelllMtl (JacUMI-f),1:Jip.m.
·
,.. Calllunla ..................... s s .US l'fl
AUuta ' (Litlq•t 1-1) at Holllloa
single. Frank Tanana, 0.1, took
T - ........................... .f .. .... '!'It
(GlllkkMa':,t).l: II p.m.
... Kan. . Ck)' .... .............. S 4 .Ill S
the loss. New York's Roberto
.• Mlnnt~~Gta .................... J · I .JSI 4
Chic. . at New Yerk
became ,the filth major·
Kelly
8eaUW ....•...........•......... ! I .151 4Y,
Mo11treal at r.lladei.Wa, alpt
Tueld.,.RNIIM•
league player to be caught
Pitt* .... at St. . . . . . ....
New Ynr:k 41, Bet roll I
Ho•••• at Le1 AD ~f!l!, 11lp&amp;
stealing twice in an Inning.
Torealo 11, llialllmeft II
Cllleaao I, 'Bot&amp;ea 1
8p111t1CaleDd•
White Sox 2, Red Sox I
Ka•• City I, t1nelllld 1
H.elley
At
Chicago, OzzleGulllen's line
TeiM I. Mllwau let I
NHL PI&amp;Joftl
Mlnii!IGU I, I!Jea&amp;Ut 5
drove home Sammy Sosa
single
No J&amp;melteMdllled.
'
Oakland 7, Callhrria 5 '
latda1
.
from
s.
econd base in the ninth,
,.. .
We&amp;le!ICIIQ' Game~~ ·
.Uiaalk Clly, N.J, .... Olenwllll BrtiWn
Nt'~· York ~LilPolnl o.tl) at Detroit
\'a. Bur~ Vtuarell.
leading
the Chlsox aild dropping
...
( ~orrl• I·IJ, 1: :n p.m.
,
r
Baltlmort' (Harnl.cll ... ) at Toroato
Smith
to 0·1. Barry Jones,
Lee
MJSL
(Key 1·1) , 1:31 p.m.
OeveiMd at Dallas, fi:Up.m.
2·0,
was
the
winner.
Ron Kittle hit
Bollten (Ciemene 2-1) at Chlcaro
-'
Tenal11
,.
( M(lDO~'f'IIIHI) , M:" p.m.
450·foot
homer
ott
the roof In
a
Nice, ,..... ce - Men'• ....ltlt p11111pe
Clft'l'land (Farrell t-O ) ai KattMI CltJ
ComiSkey
Park
.
(S.Davlll 0-1 J, II: 31 p.m.
Tampa. 1'11. - Womt•'• na.•
Mllwaulet {Navarro O-tt at Teu.s
Twins I, Mariners 5
E&lt;:kerd Optn,
'
(MO)'fr .. I). K:H p.m.
Jl. .la a..mpur, Maaa,llta - Womtll'l
At
Seattle,
Kent Hrbek's one~'
Ml•••• (8ml&amp;h t -1) at Seaue
1111. . . &amp;ala a..m,.,- o,e..
r
(BI•11MIId0-1),11:15p.m.
out
single
to
left scored Kirby
.,
Oaldud-(8utl!rtoa 1-1) u Caltforalia
,._... 8p.-tt TIU•dlo•
Puckett
In
tbe
top of ~e ninth
·
{MeCuWIII.f),ll:lip.m.
a-boll
~
Tt.IIIIII.-Gam.
Inning,
lifting
Minnesota.
Juan
HtWIIOII - Placed ' lllleltler Steve
Del ruM • BatUmote'
LombaniOnl . . . . . . . d... biHI 1111,
Berenguer,
1·0,
tlie
foUrth
Mlnne·
New \'ort atCievelaud, allllt
• reirc.ctln leAprU 11; nctlled hdlehler
Mllwaull•• M Tell:!'!', nllhl
CUey Cuhele lrem T..c.•• of tltt
sota · pltcber, ~rked a perfect
BeaUle lit Oaldud, nl~
Pad""~ ... _
(A.U).
. ei hth for the vlcto .

..

'

...'.

...-;::;r ...

,...,...,o....

we.-.,

..._

.....

0

1•

.,..,

NATIONAL LEAGUE

,.

.. .

Team

W L Pet. GB
Mo•rell .............. :....... $ I .t!ll -

Clllcap . ...............,....... $

"'
..

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PM .... IIb .................... t

'

Newf'oll'k ..................... l

I -•• t .IM I

t .SM

I·

PtiUllllel .. ia ................. :1

1 .3111
I :mi

!
!

OICI-U ..................... 7

I l.IM -

w...

8u Dlep ..................... l . s .ID

t%

l.ol Allelfl ........... ....... l

t

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Ro.-ea ........................ J
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Dlllu - .._dtvaifl. pard Brad Dll\'11
trn laJ•ttd l..t; nlnlfd pard Mark

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Pearl 'Nixon

...

Scoreboard.u

.

GOOD FORM - .Ka11888 City Royall eecoad
baseman Frank White throws oot Clevelaad

IDdlana' SandJ' Alemar off of Felix Fermin's hit 1ft
the aecond lnnlil1 of the game Tuesday. (UPI)

Bruins... ....;.~--:---c_o_ntl_n_ue_d_,f_ro_m....;.p...;ag;...e_a_:;."...;':o.:...-:. ,.
.

as I could and the puck was just
lying there,'' said Byce.
.
·Janney scored on the power
play at 7:29 of the first period.
Neely's fourtb playoff goal came
at15: 22 of the second period for a
3·0 Boston lead.
The Whalers have lost six of
thelr seven NHL 'playoff series.
The Bruins limited Hartford to .
just 3 goals in 34 man·advantage
opportunities.
· "Our penalty kUJ (players)
moved extrern,ely well together
this series," said Poulin.
On the opening score, · Carter
' came down the left side and fired
from' 10 feet. Hartford's Peter
Sldorldewlcz, who was In gaal for
all seven gam~s, failed to cleanly
glove the shot' and Byce came ·
do.wn ·the slot to knock the loose
puck 111.
·,
Janney, whomlssedGames1, 2.
and , 6 due to an. Injured left
shoulder, scored off Neely's pus
across the mouth · of the goal:

Teammate Dave Christian, who
was standing In front of the goal,
stabbed at the pass, missed: and ·
Janney knocked Ji home, Inside
the near post.
Neely's score was set up by
Janney, who was at the blue line
when he fed a blind, behlnd·theback pass to Neely, who skated
through the lett circle and fired a
low wriSt' shot from .15 feet,
beating Sldorklewlcz Inside the
far post..
· ·
Game 7 was. the first. playoff
contest In which Boston had both ..
Janney and Bourque.
,.,

. NOW OPEN FOR THE
, SPRINI SEASON .
Complete Unt of .;·
Vegltallle and Betiding
Plantr, llooming and
foliaie Hanging loskets.
Fruit and Flawering Tr11s,
lhrullt, Azallas alii
Rhod•d•ndrlns .

HUIWD'S

'

.

of escape, a felony of the fourth
degree. Lemley had been In·
dieted previously by the grand
juryandcharj:edwlththeoffense
In connection with an Incident
whic!J occurred _In November of
last year. He allegedly escaped
from the "Middleport Jail. The
felony carries a possible pen~lty
of six, 12, pr 18 months In prison
arid·a fine of up to $2,500.
,
In a ·plea agreement; between
the state &lt;lnd defendant, Lemley
entered a plea of guilty and the
prosecutor 's office recom·
mended that he be placed on
probation and sentenced to time
already served, with no add!·
tlomil confinement or flne to be
ordered.
·
Sentenci!lll was continued until
June 5 ai;, 9 a.m. to permit
completion, of a presentence
Investigation and-~ report. Bond
. w~· conti,qued a~ . previously
ortle~d. · ; ·
;
' "
: ~ijJJc Defender · Char.les H.
Knight represented·Lemley.

Hospi~J

news

Veterans Memorial .
admissions - Henry
C. Turner, ~Jddleport; Leona'
Karr, Racine.
Tuesday discharges - Mary
King, Ramona 'Smlth. ·

~llay

the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. on Thurs_day.

GIEENHousE ,

. SYIACISI, 01110
· H1·57J6
Open Delly'9-8; Stm. 1-6

Weather

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COUNTY

SPECIAL·Of THE WEEKI
CHUCK WAGON
'

---Meigs announcements----

Lynn Woods, Pomeroy; Doris J.
Leo Casto, Portland; Ruth E .
To Meet Sllturday
Pleasers Restaurant In Pome·
Bl!lley , Middleport; Marjorie A . Carr, Pomeroy; RIChard D.
District 13, the -Daughters of
roy . All proceeds will go toward
Leonard, Pomeroy; Barbara J .
Sauer, Middleport; Gladys Helen
America, will have a meet!J)g
the group's summer tours to
Crabtree, Albany; Fran~es B.
Heiney, Reedsville; Mary E .
and practice at their Chester
Florida and Nas hville, Tenn.
Goegleln, Pomeroy; Eric Allen
Davidson, Rutland; Roy V. How·
Lodge Hall, tliis Saturday, April
Thoren, Racine; Geneva Carolyn
ell, Pomeroy; Mary Louise
21, at 1 p.m. All members are
Maxson, Long Bottom; Mary
Pickens, Racine; Robert D.
urged to attend Ibis meeting.
South Central Ohio_
Elenor Osborne, Pomeroy; John
Reiber, Racine: Barbara E . Will,
District 13 will be In charge of the
Clear
Wednesday night, with a
D. Costanzo, Racine; Gardner
Middleport; Steven H. Dunfee,
memorial at the August state low between 30 and 35. Mostly
Lyle We!Jrung, Pomeroy .
Middleport; Leta Lynn Hall,
session In Toledo.
sunny Thursday, with highs
James R Cunningham, Ra·
Pomeroy; Rita Joyce Fields,
between 65 and 70 .
Car
Wash
Saturday
cine; , Sandra Mae Phillips,
Pomeroy; Roger WUlford,
are
The
Midnight
Cloggers
Pomeroy; Milford Lee Hysell,
Reedsville: Marvin D(luglas
Middleport; Dgn C. Becker,
Wise, Middleport; .. Kathryl\ V. . sponsoring a car wash on SaturSPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
day, from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m ., at
Middleport: . Gaty Dean Rife, . Hall, Pomeroy; Leo R. Story,
446 4514
. .. .
Langsville; William E . Cadle,
Pomeroy; Donald Ray Lauder·
'
MUI--IBI$2.75 U....-_..._,
Middleport; Terry L. Smith.
milt, Rutland; Kathleen J .
GOOD
USED
Racine; Bill R. Hall, Langsville;
McNickle, Ra~lne; Teresa Ann
WASHERS, DRYERS,
Sol S. Bigley, Reedsville; Shelly
Shuler, Racine; Jerry W. Well,
Anne Arnold, Syracuse; Kllren
Shade; Robert F. Lawson, RaIIEFIIGEIATOIS, TVs,
LesUe Werry, Middleport; Alvle
cine; Darrln Anthony Warth ,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
Buck Partlow, Pomeroy; Thiry
Pomeroy; Donald Edward Bush
Diana Mllllron, Middleport; Cha·
Sr., Racine; Elaine Antoinette
r!eS H. ffilmlne, RuUand; GreCorsi, Middleport.
gory S. Grover, Pomeroy; Ken·
Ishmael J . Smith, Vlnt9n;
. neth Harold DeLong, Pomeroy; Weber Wood, Pomeroy; Herbert
~ Rita S. MatheWs, Racine; Bruce
E . Shields, Racine; Mindy Susan
·-627 :lrd Ave., Gallpolls
.·· oavid Bumgardner, Middleport;
Seymour, Middleport; Cathy J.
PH. 446-1699
'
' Billy Joe Trout, Albany; Clell F. Haning, Middleport: Barbara
HOUIS:
I A.J1.·6 P.M•
. . LaBon~, " Middleport; Erma Sue Varney , Langsvme: CaraM.
.,Jean CpnnoiiY, Reedsville;
'
Marr, Pomeroy; Clyde Edward
Joann Panglo; Middleport;
Kuhn, Reedsville; Frances M.
Mabel Brlckles, Pomeroy; Ken· Pickens, Racine; William H.
netb Edgar Imboden, Middle- Bird, Racine; Larry 0. Sellers,
port; Harold . ·D. Grahitm, Portland; Rebecca Jan Eichln'
· Pomeroy.
ger, ReedsVIlle; Robert M. John·
Cynthia Richards Birt, Pome- son, Racine; Lola Faye Whittingr oy; LoiS Ann Snodgrass, Ru· ton. Pomeroy; Wayne S.
tland; Clay T. Ihle, Pomeroy;
Michael, Portland; Sandra Kay
, Lisa · Marie Frymyer, Shade;
Patterson, Racine; Stephen Eu·
·Hershel B. McClure, Pomeroy; gene Frost, Long Bottom; Dena
Estll- · L. . Johnson, Ewlngton;
Michele Lawrence. Pomeroy;
Myrtle L. Holter, Racine; Joseph Byron D. McCoy , Reedsville;
R. Poole, Pomeroy; Gay Marsh Shane Marcel Engle. Middle·
Perrin, Pomeroy; Charles M. port; Harriett Elizabeth Evans ,
Cleland, Long Bottom; Angela
Pomeroy; · Junior Herman
Sue Sp)res, Rutlal!d; Mary Ann Keeder, · Racine; Loretta R.
Call; LangsVIlle; Gregory T. Long, Reedsville; Jame~ L.
Thomas, Pomeroy; Leslie L. Trader, Pomeroy; Sliaron Jean
Whittington. Middleport; Eva Swain, Reedsville.
J.ucllle Norris.; Racine; Edwin .
Albert William Schultz, PomeOberholzer, Albany; Jean A. roy; Randy E. Houdashelt, RuWeaver, Syracuse; Francis Leo tland; Clarence E. Might, Vln·
Taylor, Racine; Susan Renee ton; Laura K Hart, Racine ;
Yo11ng, Pomeroy; Linda D, Par· Darvln Fltchpatrlck, Middlesons, Albany; Alan C. Seth, port; William Harold King, MldPomeroy; Deanna Marie Rock· dleporl; Rita J. Boggess, Ra·
hold, Reedsville; Rhonda R. cine;
Ann B . Thomas,
Rathburn, Middleport; Clarence Middleport; Esther Coelle
E. -Hlll; Racine; James Robert Salser; Tuppers Plains; Paul D.
Pauley, Portland.
Hwnsiey, Tuppers Plains; Mary
Mary Louise .Birchfield, Mid· Findley, Racine; Ro~mary Hy·
dleport;· · Eddie Arnold Hupp, sell, Middleport ; William E.
Long Bottom; Kirk Dean Reed, Lewis, Syracuse; Sally-A. Yates,
Reedsville; Frances L . Carleton, Long Bottom; Karen J . Brown,
Pomeroy; Hazel Vlrglilla Fox, Racine; Devere C. White, RaRacll)l!;, .Ray A. Wilson, Por- . cine; Jeannette K. Klnane, Syra·
tland: Anita L. Kennedy, Pome· cuse; Barbara Lee Hoffman,
roy; Richard E . Ours, Racine;
Long Bottom; Paula ·J. Hall,
Tammy Lee Johnson, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy; Jane Ann Williams,
.Matthew Kevin Burke, Pome· Syracuse; Christopher L. Work·
roy; DenniS L. Palmer, Racine; ' man. Rutland; Karen Sue Baker,
Erma~· Smith, Pomeroy; DeloReedsville; Betty A. Hutchison,
. rls Ada,Powell, Middleport; Lori Rutland; Donna Marte Wolfe,
A. Miller, Pomeroy; Betty Jo
Long Bottom; · Glenn William
Foster, Racine; Alvin R. Taylor,
Tuttle, Racine.
Pomerily; Ralph D. McMUltn,
Margaret J. King, Middleport;
VInton; Kenneth L. Byer, Mid·
James Roger PuUJns , Middle.dleport; · Jobn Thomas Shlltz,
port; Eunice Jean Cooke, Mid·
'Albany; Dennis Lee Richards, ,dleport; Brian K. Armes, Long
Racine; Rufus Edward Dlllon,
Bottom; David A. Acree, Middle·
Albany; s. Robert Mills, Pome·
port; Wesley L. Grounds Jr.,
roy; Mildred F. Miller, Pome- Albany; Linden E . Dunn, Pomeroy; Twlla Sue Buckley, Pomeroy; Debra Sue Boring, Pome·
roy ; Jerry M. St . Clair,
roy; Geana Ladawn Seers,
Reedsville.
Pomeroy; Peggy Sue Holman,
Eldon Leon Sauters, Pomeroy;
Racine; Nina Jeannine Sanders,
Carl E. Nottingham, Long Bot·
Reedsville; Joyce E . Hoback,
tom; Robin Renae Haning, Ru ·
Racine; Chris T. Shank, Pome·
!land; Jane A. Stewart, Pome· ·roy; Joyce D. Otto, Pomer~y;
roy; Edward Allan Crooks,
George Jeffrey Beaver, Racine;
l'i\lddleport; Carol S. Brewer,
Todd Martin Kimes, Racine;
Middleport; Paul Eugene Casto,
Dortha LeeNeutzllng, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy; Rose M. Patterson,
Rebecca S. . Eblin, Pomeroy;
NO COUPON NIEIEDIED
Rutland; Oraanna Perry, Al·
Dicky Jeffery King, Pomeroy;
bany; Deloris Ellen Rife, MiddleLeah Rae Williams, Pomeroy;
Offer includes potato, garlic toast and
pc)rt; Angela Kaye Payne, Mid·
Elma Jean Owen, Middleport;
Ponderosa's All• You•Can•Eat Grand Buffef."
dleport; Jeffrey Lynn Knighting,
Ronald Franklin Reynolds Jr.;
Racine; Mabel Louise Brace,
Middleport; Julie Patricia Hou·
Racine;- Tammy K. Wright ,
dashelt, Syracuse; Stephanie L.
Pomeroy; Dean V. HJli, ,Raclne;
Ash, Syracuse; Diana L. Smith,
Carolyn Ann Bissell, Tuppers
Middleport.
,
Plains; Donald L. Hubbard,
Divorces granted
Syracuse; Mike Lee Wright,
Langsville; ..Nancy J . Lawson,
Divorces have been granted in
Racine; Charles Douglas Carr,
Meigs Common Pleas Court to
Pomer.oy; Carolyn Sue Banks,
.
Peggy McB11ne Will from Haroid
, RUtland; Raymond Eugene
. Klein, Pomeroy; James Richard . J. Wili; and Janet Nakamoto
HURRY! Coupon Expires 4/29190
Buskirk, Middleport; Shirley . from Ivan Jerry Cardwell. The
plaintiff
In
the
Will
case
has
been
;\nn Jones, Tuppers Plains;
restored to her former name
Cheryl Lynn Triplett, Racine.
.
McBane.
Alfred, E. Young, Pome~oy;
&gt;.

Pearl Anna Nixon, 91, of
Whites Hill Road, Rutland, died Ucil Karman
Sunday at her residence.
Born on Nov. 21, 1898, at Davis,
Cecil E. Karman, 78, of Pome·
w .. Va., she was the daughter of roy, di~ Monday at Vetera~~:s
Charles McCleary and Laura Memorial Hospital.
Peters. She was a reUred nurse.
Borrron Oct. 3, 1911-atPomeroy
Mrs. Nixon Is survived by four he was the son of Henry Karman
daughters; Gerri Stewart, Chi· and Emma Findling Karman. He
c~go, Ill; Helyn Hummel, Akron;
was a ret.ired farmer, ~rved In
Edna Fiber, Akron; and . Mrs. World War II, and was a member
Edward (Bobble) Smith, Chi· of the Drew Webster Post 39,
cago; four grandchildren, Jo: · American Legton.
.
seph Peters, Susan Jewel, Debra
He Is survived by his wife;·
Slckenberger, and Sharon Gar· Goldie Hendren Karman, Pome·
cia; four great·grandchlldren, roy; a nephew, Robert L. More,
Stefan Bjes, VIncent Peters, Elkview, two nieces, Helen Pau·
Lauren Slckenberger, and ley of South Gharleston, and
Jeremy Jewel; and two sisters, Mary Stover, Charleston, W.
Jessie McEieary . and Anna Va.; a half·slster, Josephine
McCleary.
Adams, Columbus, and · a half·
Also surviving are ,several brother, Hugh Hedrick, address
step~hlldren, ,peggy
Nixon, unknown.
.
Besides his parents, he wag
Kathy Nixon, Connie and Warren
Dunkle, George Nixon; and Wil· preceded l!J d~th by four sls_ter,i
Jlam and Kathryn Nixon. Besides and four" brothers.
·
Funeral services will be held ' '
her parents, she was preceded In
death py her husband, Sal!luel.
Thursday at 11 a.m. at the Ewing
Funeral services will be held Funeral Home. The Rev. Vict.o r
Friday' at 10 a.m. at the Ewing Roush will officiate and burial
Funerai Home by the Rev. Amos will be in the Gilmore Cemetery.
Tillis. Burial will be in Miles Friends ~ay call at the funeral
Cemetery. Friends may call at· home from 7to9 p.m Wednesday.

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Christopher C. Cole, 30, Cool·
ville, appeared In Meigs County·
Common Pleas Court Tuesday
morning before Judge Frew W.
Crow,_ III, upon a motion of the
prosecutor's of!lce tQ,, dismiss
charges against him.
' ·•
Assistant Prosecutor Linda R.
Warner . made the motion In
behalf of the State of Ohlo.
Cole had lieen previously In·
·dieted by t~e grand jury and
charged wltli unlawful posses·
sion of a dangerqus ordnance, a
felony of the fourl)l degree. ·
Colewas'c harged-!nconnectlon .with an Incident which occurred
lnJuneoflastyear Jnwhlchwhat
was beJieved to be a "IJve" hand
grenade was found in a vehicle.
The prosecutor's ,!lfflce stated
~hat _tbe _Indictment was being .
dlsmts~ because\tesllng of the
gre"iiade, , whlcli ' was _not done
prlor.toptesentlngthecasetothe ·
grand Jufy ,,found II. to be not!ully ·
charged and the grenade Itself
was destoryed leaving the Alate
with no evidence upon whiCh to
proceed.
·
Meigs CountY Public Defender
Charles H. Knight represented
Cole at Tuesday's hearing.
In other court business, Ken·
dall M. Lemley , 24, · Pomeroy,
appeared before Judge Crow to
enter a plea of guilty to a charge

_...:..-Area deaths---

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The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

r---LoQJl
news briefs ....- - . Names drawn .. ....:C:.:o.::.nll::n:.:u:::ed::.:·f: ;ro: : m: . p!: a: !:g~e.:..1- - .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. {UPI) - .
For three days, the Kansas City
Royals played the singles game.
On Tuesday night, Kurt Stillwell
changed that.
Before Stillwell came to bat In
the sixt)llnning, Kansas City had
amassed 32 hits over the last
three games but 30 of them were
singles. Without the big hit, the
·'Royals were falling to score. ·
But Stillwell tripled In two runs
and scored on a 1\'lld throw,
rallying the Royals to a 4·2
victory over the Cleveland
Indians. '
" I was watching It · all the
way ,'' said Stillwell. "I thought
(Cory) ~nyder was going to catch
• 11. He's made so many good plays

-&gt;

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio ·

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(Across from Airport)

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�Paga 6-The Daily Sentinel

there ·are " big name" groups
scheduled to perform. Last year
' 'Stryper' • was there.

By~ The-Bend

Quirks in the news--------

Syraruse church youth to see Ichthus
Teens of the Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse, will
attend Ichthus, a weekend . of
Christian music and · teacbln!l,
April. 27-29 . .on the campus .of
Asbury College.
Dennis Moore, Randy Dud·
ding, and Carl Weaver will
accompany the 16'teenagers who
have been carryfng out projects
to raise the $17 which each one
needs to attend.
The event last year was at·
tended by approxlmatl'ly 15,000
young (ieople. During ihe day
music groups perform Christian
.rock, contemporary and rap, and
.on Friday and Saturday evening

Wednelday. Apri118, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tbey wlll leave from t he
church where they will camp out
on Aprll26 at 5.a.m.

The teenagers live In tents and
prepare their own meals. Chris· ..
t lan -teaching workshops are
provided anll everyone attending
Is required to attend at least one.
An "Evening •of Theatre" wlll
Going from the Syracuse · be presented by Meigs High
church will be Kevin Burgess,
School seniors on Fr:Jday at 8
Donia Crane, Crystal Harmon,
p.m. at the school.
Wendy Harmon, Amy Mills',
Three plays, "Once Upon a
Angle Mills, Amy Moore, Andrea
Playground," "The Ledge, " and
Moore, Jarrod Moore, Kristen
"Kiss Me Quick, I'm Double
Pape, Heather Roush, Emily
Parked'' will be presented under
Shain, Mark Taylor, Amy
the direction of cella McCoy.
Weaver, Becky Wlies, and Shelly
Admission to the eventts $2 for
Winebrenner.
adults and $1 for students.

Theater night set

Irate mu drives truckthrouJh
windows of poHce station
•
CHICAGO (UPI) - An angry
Peter Halan did as be was told
ami lett the Nqrth Side pollee
station, but not before promising
officers he would return.
· Halan, 38, kept his promise a
few minutes later Monday night,
driving hiS small truck through
the-glass doors of the Belmont
Dls·trlct pollee station.
The rusty old truck came to a
stop between the outer doors and
the Inner doors of the station.
· ;Halan was promptly arrested .
and charged. with two counts of
aRrrava~ed assault and one of
criminal dll-mage to property.

The Incident began when Ha·
Ian went to the pollee station to
report an accident In which he
was Involved on the' KennedY
expressway. When Halan was
told to walt and speak wlth state
.pollee, who have responsibility .
over the expressways, he "became Irate and began to throw
his clothes around," Sgt. Gary
O'Hara said Tuesday.
"He even took off his shirt and
threw It at the desk ·sergeant
before we told him be had to
leave, " O'Hara said. " He lett but
returned minutes later with his
truck and drove througb both
doors on the station:"
Sgt. Bennet Klauba also wit-

·At Kroeer You Can

nessed the Incident.
"Apparently; he took our tell·
lng him to leave
a personal
affront and decided be was going
to be 'The Terminator' and
charged the· station," Klauba
said.

as

Wedrleaday, Apm18, 1990
Paga 7

O .

Meigs County property. transfers

muJ'ion

Brian Caldwell, student at the
Salem Center Elementary
School, made a grade of "B" or
above In all his subjects for the.
fourth six weeks • grading period.
His name was not Included on the
. list of honor roll students submit·
ted •for publtcarton recently by
the .school.

COniiJDed by:
EmmoJene Holstein Coli10
Becorder, Melp County, Ohio

Deborah Kay King and Nlchl&gt;las King, parcel, to John ft.
Hunnell and Violet F . Hunnell,
Letart.
· Roger Van J)yke and-Kathryl!
Van Dyke, 29,170A., to Ronald E.
Bolen and Barbara ·J. Bolen,
Columbia,
Sammy L. Darst and Sherry
Darst, parcel, to Walter J . Robb,
III, Salem.
Danny A. Brickle and Peggy
Brlckles, parcels, to James Hysell and Patricia Hysell,
· Rutland.
·
Harold H. Blackston and Helen
· E .. Blackston, easement, to Obto
Bell Telephone Co. , Salisbury.
Robert T. Burdett and Genevieve Burdette, easement, to
bhto Bell Telephone Co . ,
Salisbury:
·
John D. Wolfe and Pamela C.
Wolfe, easement, to Ohio Bell
Telephone Co., Chester.
Leslie V. Frank and Rhonda J.
Frank, easement, to Ohio Bell
Telephone Co., Chester.
Charles D. Jeffers and Brenda
K. Jeffers, easement, to Ohio
Bell Telephone Co., Salisbury.
Lawrence D; Carpenter and
Lena M. Carpenter, parcel to
Harold P. Jones, Columbia.
· B.e verly L. Murdoch · and
George A. Murdoch, parcel to
Beverly Murdoch, Rutland.
Jimmie J. Evans II and Donna
L. Evans,lA., to Jeffrey Bole and
Peggy Bole, Sclplo.
Michael E. McDaniel lind
Sandra K. McDaniel, parcel, to
Betty Rupe, Rutland VIllage.

• • ••

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY-E•ch of these .tvertiHd irems ts reqiJired .
to be reacf~v available for s.le in Hch Kroger Store, except as
specifically noted in this ad. If we do r.un out of en ldverltsed item.
w~ will oftt!r vou vour choice of a comparlt*t i1em, ·when
available. reflect ing the same Savings or a rainchick which will

•"

entiUc vou to purchase the ad~o~ertised item at the 1dvertised price
With in JO davs ..Ontv one 11endor coupon wil be accepted per item
pur chased

COPYRIGHT 1990 THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY . APAIL15: THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 21.
1990 · .IN

POMEROY, OHIO

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLO
TO DEALERS .

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WEJ)~DAY

~

COUNTRY OVEI':

STIVERSVILLE -The SUI)Jersville .Community Word of
Fallh Church will have revival
through , Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Jerry Cottrell, 'Palestine, W.Va. wlllbetheevangellst.
Pas tor Gary Holter Invites the
public.
'

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Shortcake
Shells
,4·Cl .

2J$129.

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U.S. GRADE A PERDUE OR

FIRST OF THE SE4SON

Fresh
California
Strawberries .. ..

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE .
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI .
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI .

$J&amp;S
ouart

Holly Farms
Whole
Fryers'........... ...

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2.5-0Z. PKG. ALL VARIETIES

HB. PKG.

Country Club
Chipped Meats
GET ONE

Louis 'Rich
Ground Turkey
GET ONE

FREE! FREE!
BUY ONE
13-0Z. BOX
.KelloQg's. .
R11;e Knspies
GET ONE

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1Texsun

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NONRETURNABLE 16·0Z. BTLS .. 6-PAK . . . Sl.99

1

LIMIT ONE 'COUPON PER FAMILY

L

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J.LB. PKG.

~
Kro.uer .
~Graham Crackers

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IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOF'PE

BUY ONE ~IL(iE~~

14-0Z. BAG NATURAL OR
UNSALTED

· Deli Style
. Nacho Chips
GET ONE

a.GIIDOD . .. ..... 11-UT .... " · I .
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Sliced Cooked Ham
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FROZEN 5-LB . BOX

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Light n' ·Lively
Freezer Pleezer
"1 DO Calorie" Yogurt Ice Cream Sandwiches
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Kroger Ground
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M &amp; M Marl BrHds
..Single Candy Bar
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Rutland AUumni
Banquet slated

Forty-four Meigs County stu·
dents were listed on the dean's
list of the Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, for . the
winter quarter. Each of the
students achieved at least a 3.3
quarterly grade point average
and completed 12 or more credit
hours.
Inclu.d ed on the Jist were
Victoria E. Ables, Racine; De·
nlse E. Arnold, Pomeroy; Mar·
cia Barrett, Langsville; Susan
Bauer, Long Bottom; Lori L.
Burke, Coolvllle; Leanne S.
Clark, Racine; Christina Cooper,
Racine; .GerogeCooper, Rlloclne;
Michael Deem, Racine; Charles
Dill, Sr. , Pomeroy .
Penny Dudding, Syracuse; Tl·
.mothy E. Durst, Middleport;
Mary Flagg, Syracuse; Kathy
Fraley, Pomeory; Lisa M. Frymyer, Shade; Sharon Griffin,
Reedsville; Angela Grueser, Ra·
cine; Julie Hawk, Reedsville;
Brenda Hysell, Pomeroy; Val·
erie J . Jeffers. Pomeroy; Phillip
King, Pomeroy; Donna J . La·
comb, Tuppers Plains; Christine
Lambert, Coolville; Darla M.
Lambert, Syracuse; Melanie L.
Mankin, ~omeroy .
Peggy Marcinko, Long Bot·

tom; Patrllca M: McGhee, Ru tland; Matthew Peterson, Ru tland; Calvin Pickens, Racine;
Lisa K. Pooler, Pomeroy; Susan
sandy, Langsville; Tina Sloter ,
Racine; David F. Sorden, Ru·
tland; Sonja Steele, Pomeroy;
Shelly WoHe, Pomeroy; Joe A.
Young, Reedsville.
Jeffrey Miller, Middleport,
Cynthia Morris, Syracuse; \Ina
R. PhUilps, Middleport, Eliza·
beth Pierce, ·Middleport; DanlelhRomund, Pomeroy; Dorothy Smith, Pomeroy; Bobby
Stanley,. Racine, and Kimberly
Zerkle, Letart.

~ 1:•

I ... , "' .

1 • 8 X 10

2·5X7
10 Wallets
I&lt;OOA I&lt; PAPf R

ALL AGES AND FAMILIES
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMI~ Y
SPECIAL SCENIC BACKGROUND NO EXTRA CHARGE
GROUP PICTUAE'$1.00 PEA SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TAKEN .
BACKGROUND SCENIC AND !!LACK

FIIDAY, APIIL 20, 10·7

FOOD
LAND
BIG BEND - POMEROY .

$24.99 sq. yd.·

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ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Sprinp Better Health Club will
meet Thursday at 1 p.m: at the
home of Judy Humphrey. VIolet
Hysell will be hostess. Dorothy
Jeffers will host the program and
Nancy Grueser the rontest.

MIDDLEPORT :._Thi! Middleport Child ConserV&amp;tlon Leaeue

• Llmhed t 0-year warranty against
matting and crushing
• 5-year DuPont stain-resistance warranty
• Available In a wide selection ol colors
• t 00% DuPont nylon lor easy care

Guaranteed against
toot traltic and stains

Harrisonville happenings
.
.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue, Kenda Donohue, Gary
and Linda Haynes, Ger.ald and
Unda DQnohue attended a retirement party In Athens given by
Allen Stone Co. to honor Ray.mond and a co-worker.
Mr, and Mrs. Harold Graham
and his mother, Bessie Graham
spe11t Easter weekend' visiting
Dar,old Graham and famUy In
·South Carolina.
· '
Mr. and Mn. Duane Stanley,
Mr. andMrs.StevenStanll!y,Mr.
and Mrs. Denzle Stanley, daugllter and Fanddaqhter, at tended
the funeral of Harry Ross In

.

Huntingtol). w.va: Mr. Ross was
the husband of the former
Geraldine Cuckler. who was
from Scipio Township a.n d at·
tended Harrisonville school.
Mr.·and Mils. RaYJ110nd Patter·
son spent last weekend visiting
Tom and Lori :r'Ucker In Greens·
boro, N.C.
.
Amanda and Michele Finley,
Columbus, are spendtna the
week with their lfaDdparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Don CotterW.
Nellie Lowe has returned trom ·
O'Bleness Hospital where she
underwent surgery.

1:30-1:00 ....... , _ , Wee!.. '"·
1:10-2:00 Thun: .....

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The annual Rutland alumni
banquet and dance will be held
May 26 at 6: 30 p.m.
The event wlll be a catered
affair and the theme Is "Tbe
Nitty Flftie$. ''
The cost will be $10 per person· ·
and for those unable to attend the.
dues will be $2.
Re5ervat Ions need to be made
by May 18 at Joe 's Country
Market or the Rutland Depart·
ment Store. Reservations by
mall can be made to the Rutland
High School Alumni Association,
P.O. Box 125, Rutland, 45775.

Jade 4H and junior
Garden Club meets

Offlcets were elected at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
POMEROY -The Bells and County Jade 4H Club and JuniOr
POMEROY -XI Gamma Ep·
Beaus
dance club will have a Garden Club. .
sllon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
danc.
e
,
at , the senior citizens
MIDDLEPORT -The . Ash " Sorority W\11 meet. jhursday 6 ..
Elected were Phyllis Clark,
bUildldl:
011 Friday from 8-11 president; Michelle Miller. vice
Street ~l Ba~at QluJ:ch . . ,p.m .. at the sellter citizens center :
will ha~· ~lVIII through Satur- for· i pizza party and necklace p.m. Caller will be Jay Harbert. president; Vanessa Harless, se·
Dance Is open for all western cretary; Amanc:ta Musser, treas·
day at 7: 30 P·lll· nightly. Clovtc making sessiOn.
,_,_ , urer; Ryan Dalley. health
dancers.
·
Vanover will be tbe evangeliSt.
.
FRIDAY
leader; Bever~v Stewart, safety
SATURDAY
·LONG .BO'ITOM -faith Gos· .
POMEROY -The 11nnual
leader; Paul Szarls. recreation;
CHESHIRE -There will· be a
; pel · Church, L9rig BOttom, will . grange banquet will be held
and . Tammy Miller,
haye revlvl!l through Saturday at. Friday at 7:15p.m. at Salisbury gospel sing at the Silver RUn
newsreporter.
·
7 p.m. nightly ·wtth Jimmy Elementary School. The speaker Baptist Church In Cheshire oon
Members chose their lndlvtd·
Stewart., Albany, as speaker. wlll be Patty Dyer and music will S11turday at 7:30 p.m. featuring , ual projects for the fair and
There will be special music each be provided by Denver Rice. JoApn Wellington and the Unroe
retreshments' were served by
night.
Tickets are $6 for adults and $5 Family.
Janet Bolin.
The next meet log will be held
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the hOme of
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Janet Bolin.
will have revival through Sunday
at 7 p.m. nightly and Sunday at 10
Four classes In art develop- through Only from Ohio and
a.m. Speakers Include Robert
ment, stained glass, oil painting, Trlsollna Gallery and has exbl·
Foster, Bob Tbomas', Dick Dambasic airbrushing, and portrait
The Village of Pomeroy will
ron, Tom Lawson, Mike Leavitt, drawing, are being offered by the blted at the Dairy Barn Cultural
Arts Center.
have trash pick up next Wednes·
and Jlni Girdwood.
Ohio University's CommuntverThe six-seSsion course In baste 'day, Thursday. and Friday In
i
.
'
slty this spring.
airbrushing
wlll be taught by conjunction with the county wide
. DANV):LLE -There will be.
The fli·st session Qf a six week Daniel Marlhugh, a freelance
Utter pickup.
revival through Sunday at. the program In beginning oU paintDanville ·Holiness Church at 7 Ing will be held tonight. Susan Illustrator. and will begin Thursp.m. 1Jightly with Rev. Johnnie Phllllps, who has had extensive day In Selgfred 'Hall. Those
Blair. Rev. Rick Maloyed Invites training In oil painting and enrolling are required to own an
the public. The church Is located graphic design, wlll be the airbrush and have a source of
on Route 325, six miles east of Ins true! or. Em phasls will be on compressed air. Each week
those In the class will learn new
VInton.
learning how to organize a
techniques whlcb will allow them
composition, mix colors and
to achieve professional-looking
RACINE -The Southern Boos· create three-dimensional forms
results by creating shadows,
ters will meet Wednesday at 7 on canvas. The class Is designed
highlights, metals and transpar·
p.m. at the high scbool to discuss to give anyone a solid foundation
ent
objects.
tbe chiCken barbecue.
In paint appllcatlo!IS and the
Portrait drawing Is a new class
proper use of materials.
offered through Communtver·
ANYTHING GOESI•
. POMEROY - The ' Willing
stty. Working wltb boih photos
Workers Class of Enterprise
Scheduled to begin Sunday Is a
and a live model, students will be
Elite saxony plush carpeling
United Methodist Chui"(;Jj .•will class In beginning stained glwss.
taught techniques for portraiture
meet Wednesday at the' home of The course will teach, step-byand learn to find and render the
Mary Starcher.
step, the copper foil (Tiffany
small facial differences that
style) method of stained glass
make up the unique feaiures .
THURSDAY
construction. It will teach tech·
. Sharyn Yullsh·Lusty Is a proMIDDLEPORT - A meeting nlques for cutting, assembling,
fessional artist who teaches a
lor all team managers and·others . soldering and finishing from
variety of popular Communlver·
Interested In the Middleport conception to completion of a
slty classes. The live-session
Men's Summer Basketball ten-piece window hanging.
class begins Tuesday In Ellis
League will be held Thursday at 7
Instructor Lidia Anderson has
Hall and there Is a $40 fee plus
p.m. at Middleport VIllage hall. 10 years of experience working
materials. ·
Anyone interested Is Invited to with stained glass. She has made
More. Information on any of the
attend:
stained glass windows for numer- classes can be obtained by
contacting the Office of Con tlnu·
REEDSVILLE -There wlll be ous private homes as well as for
the
"Iii
Our
Midst"
church
In
'lng
Education, Memorial Auditoa public' meeting on Thursday at
Columbus.
She
retails
her
work
rium,
toll-free 1-800-336·5699.
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Fire
House for voters and supporters
of the .former voting precinct . .
Refreshments will be served.

PO~EROY -:The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and AI Anon will be
.held Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
lleart catholic Church. Call
1-800-333-~051
for
Information.

FREE!

FREE! FREE! FREE!

Hocking Tech dean's list set

Armstrong carpeting
takes the scare ·out of
·everyclay householcl spl

·FREE!

of

REEDSVILLE -The annual
math fair of the Eastern Local
School Dis trlct will be held
Friday from 6-8 p.m. at the high
school.

Marcum, Nicolas McLau!lhlln,
J ohn Cook, Bethany Cooke, Joshua Marcum, James, Alan, .
Denise, and Rita Hayes, of
Bedford, Va.; Fonda and Dan
Thomas, Becky and Nick Depoy,
Caroyln Thomas, Dianne Hawley, Jobn Musser, Allee Globokar, Pauline Mayer, Eleanor
Werry, Marla Hauck, Bill Ma·
tlack, Jan Davis, Jim Huff,
Susan Well, Cheryl Thomas,
Sandy Hawley, .Debbie Cooke,
Patty Pickens, Ralph Werry,
Beth Mayer, Linda and Don
Mayer , Jan Holter, and Connie
Marcum .. .

SEARS

·· Flanders
Beef Patties·
GET ONE

FRE~!

RACINE - The Racine Airier!·
can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. Refreshments wlll be served.

for children.

'fhe youth of Trinity Church of
Children, guests; and helpers
Pomeroy celebrated Easter by attending were Trevor Depoy,
making Easter baskets, · an Jennifer Kennedy , Alyssa Hoi·
Easter egg bunt, refreshments, ter, Brandl Thomas, David
and the celebrating of the birth- Kennedy , Sarah Hawley , Ross
day of Pauline Mayer.
Well, Danlelle Thomas, Michelle"
The youth made the baskets Thomas, Nancy Ann Pickens,,
from multicolored construction Autumn McLaughlln, Jessica
paper before having a program Blaetmar, Heather Thomas,
of games and stories.
·
Adam Thomas, Tara Erwin,
'An egg hunt was held, followed Trisha Davis, Nicole Pickens,
by the reading of the Easter · Noelle Pickens, J;:rln Krawsczyn,
story. Refreshments followed Jody Sisson, Ryan Well, Johna·and a surprise birthday cake was than Haggerty, Jackie Buck,
noted with the group singing Julie Spaun; Sarah Craig, P.J.
Erwin, Shawn Powell. Jessica
Happy Birthday.

Trash pickup

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Buy ··o NE

--~~-------.------------~
UY ONE
BUY O~E
16-0Z. BOX, HONfY, REGULAR.
B·OZ. CTNR. WITH NUTRASWEET
CINNAMON OR CINNAMON/RAISIN

OF
40

wlll meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
at the home Linda Broderick.

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I

Trinity Church celebrates Easter

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. William Pooler, Jr.. Sharon
George B. Skinner and Phyllis
Pooler, · Charles Sinclair, Mar- H. Skinner, 4.571A , to John
garet Sinclair, parcel, to Joseph Weeks, Salisbury.
Graci, Olive.
George Sellers, Vytlce Sellers,
Bruce P . Eades and Dorothy William Edward Sellers, Kat·
M. Eades, 1.0175A, to Southern hleen Grigsby, Gerald Sellers,
Ohio Coal Co., Salem.
..
Hattie Sellers, Kathryn Heater,
Mary L. Meredith, by Douglas Fred Heater, Ruth Kesterson,
W. Little, exec., . parcels, to · Roy Kesterson, ' James H .
Sherman Wli!te, CMster.
Sellers, and Ruth Ann Sellers,
Leslie F . Fuljz dec' d, by parcel, to Trls A. Sellers,
executor, parcels, to ' John R.
Lebanon.
Alfred Ward, 1acre, to Alice M.
Hunnell and VIolet F . Hunnell,
Pomeroy Vlllage.
Harris, Lebanon.
David D. Campbell,_parcels, to
· Denver ·C. Folden and Mar·
David D. Campbell and David F. garet R. Folden, 66A, to Denver
Campbell, Pomeroy VIllage.
C. Folden and Margaret R.
Guy A. Russell and Norma Folden, Trust, Salem.
Russell, parcels, to Howard E.
Carlos Snowden, dec'd, afftd,
Minard and Katherine A. Ml· t&lt;i Pauilne Snowden, Chester. .
nard, Salisbury.
Mason H. Mullins, dec'd, af. John Hansen, coal, oil gas and fld., to Anna Lee MuUins by
minerals, to Thomas A. Zano and P.O.A., Chester.
SuSan J . Zano, Beford.
Anna Lee Mullins, by P .O.A.,
Margaret Ella Lewis by Trus- 1.002 A., to· Dora F. Hysell,
tee, easement, to General TeJe: Chester.
phone Co. of Ohio, Scipio.
Jeffrey Lynn Elliott and Chert
_Basil Wright and Florence Lynn.J:Illott, parcel, to Shirley .
Elizabeth Wright, parcel, to Henthorne, Scipio. ·
Darrell Wright and Wand a
Ohio Pallet Co., aka The Ohio
Wright, Scipio.
Pallet Co., parcels, to Harold H.
· Harold E. Rose and Leah R. Blackston and Ray T. Grueser,
Rose, parcels, to Harold E . Rose Salisbury.
. and Leah R. Rose, Letart.
Esta M. Roberts, parcels, to
Karen Connolly, Jimmy Con- Delevon Roberts and E.ula
nolly, Joyce Smith, James Hensler, Salisbury.
Smith, Edith Manuel, Roger T.
Frank Nile Dorst dec'd, affld.,
Manuel, ·JoAnn Smith, Rfchard . Mae Stout Dorst, Olive.
. Smith, Gary Roush, Tert ROush,
Earls. Shaffer, dec'd; aflld, to
VIcki Cundiff, Gregory Cundiff, Gatbei L, Shatter, Salisbury. .
Michael Roush, Beverly Roush,
Anna Haines, · iot, to Paul
John Roush and Regina Roush, Simon and Allie Mae Simon,
parcel, to Carrie Roush, Letart.
Pomeroy VIllage.
Wlllard G. Durst, Jr., eta!,
Danny L. Meadows and Karen
Nancy M. Durst, Menifee E. Meadows, Lot 14, to Michael R.
Blevins, Tina L. Blevins, she- Bonnett and Paula. K. Bonnett,
riffs deed, to Diamond Savings Middleport VIllage.
·
and Loan Co., Pomeroy VIllage.

Community calendar

And More.

.'

.

The Daily Sentinel

'

992·2171

�•

NBC top network for fifth season

NEW YORK (OPI)- NBC was
homes \ISing television - HUT rallnis were off 1.2 rating points
the top network for the 1989·90 · levels - was down from the compared to the previous year.
television season, It was a spilt
1988-89 figure of 67 percent NBC The only form to gain over the
decision · between "The Cosby
gave this season's three-network previous seaspn was actualtly
Show" and •'Roseanne'· for No. 1
HUTs as 65 percent, while David program, which Improved 1.9·
series, and there was a mystePoltrack, CBS senior vice presi- rating points thanks.to ' 'Videos''
tlous dropo!! In general televl·
dent, planning and research, and NBC ' s "Unsolved .
Mysteries."
.
slon viewing, accordlqg to end·
gave the figure as 66 percent.
Ou tstde of prime time, CBS ,
of-season figures released
Poltrack, at his news confer·
Tuesday.
ence, went on to reveal 'II was the daytime winner, with
The 30-week prline time season
deerease, particularly In day- 'The Young And The Restless"
ended Sunday, Apr\115 with NBC
time, of overall homes using topping the chart. In morning
programming. AliC's "Good .
way out In front, posting Its fifth
television.
.consecutive win with a 14.6 rat !Jig
He called the decline "unprece- Morning America" was topand a 24 share, according .to the
dented and unexplajned" and rated, with NBC's "Today" sliow .
t..C. Nielsen Co. ABC was second
said CBS was .pressing Nielsen falUng off after Deborah Norville
with a 12.9 rating and a 21 share
for more data In an effort to find replaced Jane F'auley . cas was
and CBS was third, with a 12.2
to what extent the dropoff Is real third.
In late night, NBC's "Tonight"
and a 20 share.
'
and to what extent a matter of
·In ·evening news, ABC's
statistical sampling. The day remained on top, and on Satur·
"World News Tonight" With
parts hardest hit by the decline day ·morning, ABC was the big
Peter Jennings was . the new
were daytime and evening news, winner with the top four ktdvtd
champ, with a 10.9 rating, with
and It occurred almost entirely In 'shows. The No. 1 show .was
; •cBS Evening News•· with Dan
the second half of the season. . "Sllmer &amp; Real Ghostbusters
-Rather demoted to se.;ond with a
The top new program for the . II."
lo.o rating. ·'NBC Nightly News' • season that aired six or more
For the final week of the
with Tom Brokaw was third With times was ABC's "America's season. ABC tied NBC, both
a 9.9 rating.
Funniest Home Videos," which receiving an 11.9 rating and a 20
. The question of which show · bad a 20.9 rating and a 32 share. share. CBS had an ll.Orattng and
was on topo!thellstwas·amatter
"Twin Peaks" on ABC won as a 19 share.
of whether or not you counted a most-wat'ched made-for"Twin !?eaks," In Its premiere
" Roseanne".. episode broadcast television movie. Top miniseries · show In Its time period opposite
outside of Its regular time period. · of. two or more parts was .ABC's ..Cheers" and ~~crapd" on NBC,
NBC and ABC called the Win for "Small Sacrifices." The most- came In 13th. "Cheers" held onto
ABC's ''Roseanne," while CBS watched theatrical movie was Its audience despite the competigave It to NBC's "The Cosby "Lethal Weapon" on NBC. The tion, but "Twin Peaks" won the
Show.''
. Academy Awards on ABC won as second halfhouragalnstGrand."
"It's no surprise," said Bob top entertainment special.
In the evening news ratings,
Niles, NBC vice president, re·
Poltrack said the most popular . ABC's 'World News Tonight"
search, In announcing the form for network prime time with Peter Jennings cbntinued tn
season-end statistics at a news programming continued to be first place with a 9.8 rating and a
conference.
sitcoms, which took up 23 percent 20 share. "CBS Evening News"
The three-network share of of the schedules. although sttcpm With Dan Rather seesawed back
Into second place with an 8.6
'
'
rating and an 18 s)!are, while
"NBC Nlght.ty News" with Tom
Brokaw dropped to t)Jird with an
8.3 rath1g and an 18 share.
·

Pistol-packin' second-grader ·
suspended·at ·olentangy school ·

DELAWARE, OhiO (UP!) - A 7-year-oid second-grader at
Delaware County's Olentangy Elementary School was
suspended Tuesday for carrying a loaded .22-caltber pistol on
his homebound school bus.
'We suspended the child for a' minlmum amount of Ume for
this week," said David Ritter, superintendent of Olentangy
Local schools. "We talked to him and his parents, and that was
it.
Ritter did not Identity the boy but said his parents did not
know. he had the gun. The child. apparently did not threaten
anyone with the .pistol, he said.
"II was show and tell," said Ritter. "He picked It up at
somebody's house (not his own). We've tried to defuse the
situation. Some people want to .hang the second-grader."
Other students on the bus last Thursday saw the gun and told
the driver. The boy willingly gave It up when the driver asked

-- -

. Rttrer said he doubts the child knew how dangerous the
· weapon could be.
·
'That's why they have all those people out there who say we
need gun laws," he said. "It's like leaving the key In the car.
Somebody's going to steal It."

B.'eat of the Bend

Another report has been issued.... ·

Aprtt 23 Is the deadline date
for the pure base of your ticket to
the first celebration to open
Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial observance.
A founders' day dinner wtll
mark the opening of the obser·
vance. The dinner wtll be served
tlle Pomeroy Elementary
School at 6: 30p.m. on Saturday,
Aprll28. Tickets are $10 a per5on
) or $18 a couple. They may be
secured at the K. and C. 'Jewelry
Store, Gallery Hair Arts, Swisher
and Lohse Pharmacy, Anderson's, Clark's Jewelry, The Fabric Shop, Main St. P.lzza, Hood
Shoes, the Oh!Q Valley Bulk Food
Store, Chapman's Shoes,
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
Bank One, . and at the Pomeroy
CHamber of Commerce Office.
Incidentally, seating for t,he
dinner Is ltmjted to300so lfyoudo
plan to at ~nd, It would be good to
secure your ticket at once.

at

Cantata set
The cantata, "How Great Thou
presented by ·the
Mtddl$rl Cburcb of Christ
cbolt Wednesd.tf (tonight) at 7
p.rn at tJJe cburcb. II was first
lung at the £u tel' IUnrtse
service at tile eburcb. The
cantata Ia directed by Ron Ash
with Jennifer Sheets,
accompanist.

Art", wW be

Civil rights leaders express'
grief over Abernathy's death
ATLANTA (UP!) Ctvtl
rights leaders who marched with
the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy
through social fire In "the army
of justice' • expressed sh&lt;!Ck at his
death Tuesday and hope for his
place In history.
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern. Chris dan
Leadership Conference, .said .
Abernathy's death wlis unexpected. I..Qwery's job with the .
civil · rights organization had
been held by both Abernathy and
Martin Luther King Jr.
'We dtd not know his Illness
was quite so crtttcal. He had not ·
been receiving visitors," Lowery
said. "We had heard he had been
on a diet and hls,sodlum level was

low."
Abernathy en~red ·the hospital
Marcil 23 and had been treated
for strokes In the past. Abernathy
died of cardiac arrest after his
\llood pressure-dropped during a ·
lung scari. ' .
"A stalwart soldier In the army
of justice has fallen," Lowery
said.
Lowery said controversy over
Abernathy's book, "And the
Walls Came Tumbling Down,"
will be largely forgotten as time
passes. The book, an account of
events ·surrounding the· early
civil rights movements, also
deal 1w)th King's alleged extramarlllll affairs.
•'I think that has passed Into
history, and hlstpry wll) . look
kindly on his cont.r tbution," the
SCLC p~std~nt said.
·

If Irwin Is able to complete the
journey on IC?ot, he will possibly
be the first blind hiker In the
United States to accomplish the
feat.
He has had some cl6se calls
and once almost sltppe!l over thfi
'Side of a steep ravine, bu.t he got
out of It by clinging to ·a small
sapling.
Twice he almost got
hypothermia.
'.'I must have fell 50 or 60 times ·
the flrstfew days," he said, ''but
I've gotten better and now It may
be only a couple of times. "
IrWin, carrying a 60-pound
pack with food and other .supplies, Including chow for his guide
dog Orient, manages fives mttes'·
every three hours. Other !~!an his
guide dog, he ts making the trip
alone.
·
On the trail, It requires slow
and careful navigation to av 0 td a
misstep that could mean death.
Orient, his two-year-old Ger·
man Shepherd, learned not to
stop at every three-Inch step-up
as he would If they were walking
back In his hometown of Burlington, N.C.
·
Since leaving Spring Mountain, Ga., five weeks and 250
mUes ago, Irwin has laced
·s erious Injury and death on sharp
drops, rubble and narrow ledges
along the t.r all.
Sighted people have little trou- .
ble with these obstacles, but!ora
blind person, they are formtda·
ble challenges:
If Injured along the way, Irwin
might have to watt hours and
even days before help arrived. ·
On the trail, Orient leads and
Irwin follows, probing every Inch
of the way with his ski pole. He
has to Interpret every pause and
and slight. change of direction
that his dog makes.
The two have been rained and
snowed on, and one day It took
Irwin until 3 p.m. t.o thwaw out.
his shoes and socks.

ASHEVU.LE, N.C. (UP!) -A
blind man with a strongfalth said
God called him to walk the
rugged and sometimes treacherous 2,126-mlle Appalachl!ln Trait
alone to bear witness to people he
meets along ·the way from
Georgia to Maine.
· ·
"I don't know why God wants
me to do this, I just accept It,"
Bill irwin, a 49-year-old hiker,
bltpd since he was 28, said during
a rest at a hiker stop on the trail·
Monday.
·There are times when I
wanted to cry when I was so tired
and cold. I was absollitely
miserable: This Is a tremendous
test of faith, " he said.

.

It's you and I agalbSt.the world
- so do hang ciose.
1\nother report . bas been
Issued. It states
that several
·popular pain relievers are be. Jteved to cause
kidney failureand the bottom
lthe Is that ap:
parently there are no plans to
remove them from the market.
These are things that'you and I
buy over the counter. Oh well, we
all have to go from somethtl)g why not kidney failure?
'
A 100-year-old North Carolina
physician has shocked the world
-: he's running for Co~s. Of
course, he won't get elected. Why
would we want anyone THAT
alert?
And- Greta Garbo can't even
escape wide publicity In death.
She only made 24 movies, the last
almosj 50 years ago, and we have
to the very end refused to honor
her wish that she VANTS· to be
alone.

Steven Newman who took a
four year walk around the world,
will be the guest speaker and
Mary Powell of the Sesquicentennial Committee reports be ts an .
excellen I sqeaker. He has ap· '
peared on a number of television
shows and Is the author of the
book, ' Worldwalk". Anyone ha·
vlngha copy of the book can have
It autographed by N ewrnan at the
· founders' day dinner and afso
there wtll be copies of the book.
for sale that night. He wtll also
autograph those.
The volunteer unit of Veterans
Memorial Hospital the
Women's Auxiliary headed by
Mrs. Jessie White - will be
honored at the hospital the week
of Aprtl 22, National Volunteer
Week.
· Members of the volunteer
group do an exceptional job at
Veterans Memorial every day of
the year and the organization has
been. tn existence for over 25
years. During . the week-long
observance hospital employees
will . be wearing· specially designed badges which carry a
message expressing thanks to
the group. On Tuesday, AprU 24,
the volunteers will be honored
with a breakfast at the hospital
and at that lime a brief history
wtll be presented along with
service pins.

presentation wtll be given at 7: 30
this evening, Wednesday, for the
benefit of the public' Those who
had other crimmltments Sunday
are cordially welcome to attend
tonight's pre!!f!ntatlon.
Olive Weber, formerly of
Meigs County, ts reported In
satisfactory condition following
surgery at St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg, W. Va.
,
Meantime, George Folmer of
Pomeroy, a patient at the Holzer
Hospital, Is · In need of replacement blood when the American
Red Croys Bloodmobile visits
fromlto5:30p.m. Wednesday at
the SeniOr .Citizens Center in
Pomeroy . George has used 11
pints of blood. Those giving
replacement blood for George
are requested to advise the
clerical help of that fact.
lf !t-Pril showers bring May
flowers what does the Aprtt
freeze bring? Durned If I know.
Do keep ~lltng.

EYEIYDIY AT
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CASS. S7,99
CD S13.99

BECAUSE MOM'S SO SPECIAL ...
Show her how you feel this Mother's Day~

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Far the .... Price, Soloclilln 111111

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.01 / doy

113.00
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HUCk'S CAl WASI

Mvrclwnl1:;e
1- Citd of Thanks

MONDAY · '

3-AnnoUcements
5 - Heppy Ads

54-Mite . M...chendita
5'6-Buildlng SuppliM ~

4 - Giv..w·•v

53- Amlquea

6 - lott 1nd Found
7 - V•d ' S.Ie !paid in acflltncel
8- Public Sele 6 Auction

66- Pett for Slle

'

FRIDAY

Ar.. Code 614

Aru Code 614

Area Code

21-Busin•• opportunity
22-Monw to Lotn

441- GIII Ipolil "
3e7-Ch..hi~e
318 - Vinton

99~ - Middi-.;Jort

6715·-Pt. Ple...nt

Pom.;oy
98&amp;- Chftter
843- PorUend

671 - Apple Gro\le
.773 - Meton ..

379- Weinut

23-Prof•lklnel l•vicet

Real

•

62-W~nted

71 - Autot for Sate
72-Truclce for.Sale

73-Vtns &amp; 4 wo·s
74 - MotorcvciM
78 - loetl &amp;

•

41-HouMI tot Rent
42-Mobile Wom11 for Rent

43-Farnu for Rent
44-AP.,tment for A"'t
41-Furnlth•d
4e-Sp•c• tor

47-Winteelto

. APPLES ..........lJJ.L,.. 2/79&lt;

HEAD •
LETTUCE ........................ 59C

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NEW ONIONS ..:ut... S1.39

ORE-IDA GOLDEN

·zAJ.fn·ToTs ..............R~.z••••• ·s1.99

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3 Announl:lmlntl

Good worlttng
concittio'na and top
pey to· th• right

PubliC Notlc:e
million of Ohio, 180 Eut
Bread Stteet. C.olumbuo,
Ohio 43288·0573 .
(4) 18, 1tc

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

A Great Conibinatiall~'Quality ancl Recn011able Pritts"
WE GO 1111 EmA MILE.....
992-6810

• 99~·7479

lt. II Nerth af

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JO'S GIFT SHOP
SYIACDSI, OliO

IN STOCK:

992-"14

•

oc:.m... P.......

lo... •c.m-.rvo FloWer
v • • eet., llnllet ...
oc.terttllrdlll...
•Foune.ln llrd ..... • ltkl1
Fro(ll, Angal1 end 4
Oth• V•d Ornemem:a

De•.

21
Opportunity

From Uo &amp;. Sue!

, I!XCIUBNT llfCOMB PO'nN"''W.

lnvl!stmcnl lOO'.'csecurcd 1-!y
model home. s1&lt;.111ing a1 Sl .'.41tt.
· Re1o1in your 1.: urn:nt joh.
Cull Don Hidmun

Toll Fn.:c:

J. ~fXI-b~J-CNl711

or

Coll~ct hi~-Jl)l) - 1721 .

~=
!il l Mu rrr(o:o;t\lm• KU.

l\nliud1. To:nn.:(so.'o.: ,17111.1

•V'tNYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Real

4.16-86-lln

International Classified Advertising Week
· ·' April 22-28, 1990

'· ..

When you place yD111' &amp;d It Will be listed In all 3 'o f our
newspapel'!l: . Gallipolis Dally Tribune, The ·Dally Sentinel;' and

Point Pleasant Register.
ALL ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE and received to be publlllhed on
or before our AprU
38,
1990
edition.
.· '
I ,
:
,
•
'
Pleaile llllt "'e column~you wiruld like your ad to run under.

Nune----------~~--~------------------------P h o n e : - - - - - - - - ' -''·'--CI...iftc•tlon:--------

.

1, _ _ _ _ __

Cash

Only!
Mall or Bring In person.

MIUiiLtrutu -

n~::muu·

eled. home, 3 bedrooms.:
basement, small yard with
privacy fence. Nice (ront sit·
ting porch. PRICED TO SELL.
REDUCED $19,900:00. .
POMEROY - Nice neigh·
borhood, 4 bedroom home,
sliding glass doors in.li¥lng
room, bak trim ·woodwork,
carptin~ ai( cond~ionina;
alit. over garage tor rental or
workshOp. And much mote.
$42.900.00.
"'RACINE _. Rancll hOme
·w~h 3 bedrooms, HI blllhs,
carpetin(L and 2 cw Pflge,
sitt~ngon 3.2+ acres. Wood
burner to supplement hell
and
spring availlble.

S28.!J90.00.

HEIIIY E. CLELAND
992-6191

Jt• Trumll ..... Mt-2660
Jo Hill .............. 9U·4466

2. --:--:--~

'·----7. _.....__:..,..,.._

11. - - ' - - - - ' - •
12. - ' - ' - - - - -

Office................ ttt-2259

8. -----.~:'-'-

8. ---'-""""":-:-:'--

13. -:---_.:..--'-

THIS SPRIJIG LIKE'IIIEATHER

u. _........;._:__;___

HAS PROIPTED BUll.. 10
PUICHASIIMILE Tlf£ $1111
liliES. Ill IHD IIORE
&lt;t.lln. . TO .IIIIJEI OUI

•. - - --""-

10. _. - . - - - - -

11. -..:.:.......:..'_,..~_.,..~

v.w.
PIUS &amp; '

Pomeroy Daily .Sentinel
· Ill Court St. ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
' (614) 992-2156
pod Aprd 23rd.SOih, 1990

••

..

ClDJID IIIMTY FOIIm
IESULISIII

WI-UIIJIIII

&amp;..TREE
an~

RE·

H~ULING

992-2269

EVENINGS
COIIIIIE'$
OHIO IIYEI
HEDS and
EYEILASTIIIGS

OPEN:
AP. 1 TIIIU JUL V 1

NEW&amp; ·USED
PARTS

HOURS:
thru Sun.

For Rabbit,

.61

15

Good Roteo
T.L.C.
27 Yro. Exp.
Aetor.. _

99!-6173
209 South 4th St.
Oh.
"LDW

HEATING

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2511Wtit .....
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PARTS AND' IEIIVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-ayale
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SALES &amp; SERVICE

,ilhlng
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Phone·

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99!-39~12

Aaward L. Writ.... .

ROOFING

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NEW - .liPAll

7U-3088

Gutter~

161 North Socend .

We

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IUIII ST., ji!;;~ ~;::;::):~2-1-'!Q:I
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Wtcani'IIICiirciilllrt·

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REPAIR

992-2191

Mkldlepon,
.

Ohio

1-13-tlc

.CIOWAYE .
OYINIIPAII

Roger :My~ll
Garage

·auuas

Iring It In Or W1
Pick Up:

.

Al11 Tr....lltlt•
PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

lEN'S APPUANC.E
SIIYICI
992-5335 • 915·1561

DOlEI
SITEWOIK • ROADS
•
.CLEARING
N~UID

ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK

Sand·Stone,Dirt

217
-L·S.C.
- ,__.,.
Offlq

16141 667·3!71

I. L HOLLON
TIUCIIIG

01 CHANGE

POMIOY,

GIWifA.

4-25·1111

Mu Hupp.......... 941-1257

DAY AID llllllal USJIITH

Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAW

- -· ---

PlUMIING

MIDDlEPORT - Are you
looking for a. really neat
home with low heating bills
at a small price? This 2·3 bedoom.' Ill story home · is
waiting lor you. $19,500.00.

... Rn. 949~!16d

BILL SLACK

NO SUNDAY (lli.s

CARPENTER - 4 bedroom,

POMEROY - Doublewide
trailer. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. ·
ca-~ FA. elec. heat. Buil in
corner cabinets and bar in
knchen. Ready to move into.
$34,900,00.
.

PH. 949·!101

*FIREWOOD

PH. 949·2801
or ln. 949-!860

Jetta', Golf,
Beetle and Bu1.

$16,000.00.

up

"At .......1, Prices"

*LIGHT

.. Free Eatimate.''

992·2259
MIDDLEPORT- Here is a
lot 60xll3 yoo can set 2
trailers on and have a good
rerital income. Has electric,
water and sewer.
$11.000.00.
HI stllf)' home w~h garage
on approx. I a~re lot_ Shed,
workshop, and root cellar.

' Search . out really good ·deals,
On a new set of wheels ...
Change your career ...
Buy some used sporting gear!
Remember one man:s junk
Is another man's treasure,
~So 'turn to the Classififlds
For: resulis you can measu':e!
'

$3.33

0.

toDAY W. .Aim

MOVAL ·.

....

General

EROY,

USED APPUAIICES

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

TRIM

SERVICE

,

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

·•s•tRUIB

BISSELL
SIDING
.._._ CO.
.

Prtn t one ·word In each space below ..
Each Initial ·or iJ'OUP. of figures
counts as a' word. Count name and
address or phone number If used.

Call Susan Cole111an,

GIEG lAlLEY

IS NOW OPEII
FOI IUSI..ESS.

JIM COli

dealership

.

LOTIONS - STICKERS.

Kand J CONSTRUCTION

(Abevt " " · . . , ,

indlvlclu•J.

A*t.r•• fn

dovlto oubmltted by the opI'·· t F "h Info
io
P ""'" · u., er
rmot n
mriy be obt!tlned by contactIn~ t~o Public Ulllltioo Com-

5, _ _.....__ _

....~

SEIYICE IIAIIAGEI

87-Uphol•terv

auch 1•-· thla matt• ~II
be dedded oit the b01lo of
tho information contolned·ln
tho
ond ihe
otfi, " oppjlcatlon
. . ...
'

•·---.----'

BOUNTY TOWELS ···~·········· S1.19

Help Wanted

. We are loolli!lll for
en exP.ienced
taact~ •nd man•li•;

85-Gen•al Hauling

Celebrate_With 'u s .... ALL 3's Speciali
3 Days -:- 3 Papers.- 3 Lines (15 wo~~s)

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice lo given thot Affdld·
. A-Coli Cotp. ha filed on •P·
plication wMh the Public
Utllltleo Commloolon of
Ohio (Cae No. aii-1 .768-TP-ACEI req.tingeulhority
to fumioh intraotato (ong
diatonco ilttrnotiva OPifl·
tor uaiated aervice8 on a
otlitewide b•lo thrqughout
Ohio. Any · lnlereotod pereon, .firm, corp0111tlon, or
entity who con ohow good
cou• why thlo oppllcation
ohould • not be granted
oltould file with the Com·
million 1 wrfttan atatement
detollng tho rlllilono on or
before May 3, 1990. Unl••
the Commloolon r-"rtl o
wrltton ote-ont to thot effect ond on occompenylng
requ•t for oral he•rlng on

TACO SHELLS ••••••••••••!~.~~·..•• $1.49
OI.D EL .PASO
REFRIED BEANS •••••••• 1t~1•••••••••
99&lt;
OI.D EL PASO TACO
·
SEASONING MIX
••••••• ~M~•••••••• 59&lt;
DB MONTE CRUSHED
.
. .
1
PINEAPPLE
•••••••••••••••
J\
:.~!·••••••~89&lt;
CHKIIEN OF THE SEAS .
TUNA
••••••••••••. ~.........
·•••t':.il·•••• s1.2 9·. .
GENERAL ltii.LS
• .
.· WHEATIES •••.••••••••••• ~.~1\~1••••• S2.99 .
HAWAIIAN PUNCH ...¥.~1....,••••• S1.09
CUfiEU.'S CIWI OF ·
POTATO SOUP •••••••••• ~~·M~••••••• 59C
JUliO

11

81 -· Ho!'l'lelmprOWimants
82- PJumDine 6 He•ing
83--EICIWA1inl
,
84-Eiectricel A•"it••tion

Public Notlc:e ·

.

PUblic NotiCe

...

•Mobile Hame
Pllrte
•Mobile Home
Ren'-le
•Lat Ren{'l•

1bove do•

J.ymor Cool Co.
Ch•hlre, Ohio
Effective Dote: 4-9-90
This f~RIII action not preceded by p 1 - d action end
lo appealable to EBR . .Pertaint .t o 401 certification'.
grant. Pertains to Huntington District Corps of Engi neert Public . Notice No.
(H)90-12).
141 18 .

'""'tho
... .,,"'""'··
Itt
it ,... , ...

MOBILE
HOME PARK

Serv u:cs

Public Nollce

tion.

GOlDIN DEUCIOUS

&amp;PIIhltllle
FREE ESTIMATES

llew LIIIICI ld., lutl•d, Ohio
1 Session •••••••••• ~ •••;•••••••- .......·-········· SJ.SO
6 Sessions ....;................................ s12.00
12 S..liolls................................_ $'20.00
15 Stssi0111................................... S~5.00
FIRST VISIT FlEE - POSSIIL Y MORE

..,.,. 6

86-Mobile Home R~air

•a - Equipment for

•e- For Le•a

not include receipt of 1 v•i·
fled oompleinL If oignlficent
public Interest ex itta, e pub- .
lie moilling moy be hold. A1
to •nvraction, including re- ·
ceipt of verified complaints.
any person miY obtain no. tlco of turd.•· octlono, end
eddltlonol informlltion. Unl•t otherwite provided In
notice ,o f pa"lculer action1,
all conliJlunic•tionl 8hall be
_ , to:
Hearing Cleric.
OEPA. P.O. lox1049, Columbuo, OH. 43288·01 49
Ph, (614) 644-2116. Conoult OAC &lt;;hap. 3746 and
OAC Chepo. 3746-47 .,d
3746·6 tor requioamonto.
Fin•l iaa~anee of certifica-

ALTEIIN,TOIIS, ETC .

SUN'S UP TANNING

(6141 98$-4180

Menon tor Sale

Town St .. Columbuo, Oh.,
43216. Notice of ony oppeol
lholl be filed with the diroctor within 3 doyL Pr!lpooed
octlona will become flnol unlell a written odjudlcotion
.... ~IO·oeq. . . lo.oullmltted
within 30' doyo !If tho lt·
..,.nce detr. or 1M director
141Vioel/wlthdlilwo tho pw
poled action. /Uiy person
may .Jubmit commentaand/u,.e mMCing regarding any
dr"" oction within 30 doyo
. of tho dote indlcoted. "Ac·
u~

.IWGI IITRIOI.
lental Cllanlljll

to Bu'f

in writing, wjthin 30'dayaof
the date 'Of this notice. to the
Environ.mental Board of Aa~
view, Am. 300, 236 E.

tlon... 11

UllOA'S
PllfmiiG &amp; CO.

Ul

63-"- livelfock ·
64-HaV &amp; Grain
66-S. .d Ia Fertilinr

•

Cot Roculft Fact

ICIIAP. IATTEIIIEI •.

WE IUY
STARTI!AJ.

Ann 6 , •.

Haven

681- Coolville

#1 Copper B&amp;C p11r lb.;
Aluminum Cano, 3&amp;C per lb.

Cleen

VEIY IEASONAIU
HAVE IIFEIDKES

59-For Sate or Trede

7G-Auto Parts&amp; Aec•toria
77 --Aulo Aep•ir
78- Cemplng Equipment
79- Campers &amp; MQtcir Hom"

937- Bu1hlo

742 - Rutl•nd

Fsi~IP

.

896- Letlr,l

a.

Relldential
Commercial

&amp;1 - Fern.. Equipment

30~

·882-~.W

3·1•··to-f"mo.

Tr~nsporl~l1n11

M .. on Co ., WV

247-letart Falls

,,;·,

"2.~6244 Gai'CIIII

Siipfllli!S
1\, liVI!SIOCk

1 &amp;- School• &amp; lnllruction
1 1-Redio, TV &amp; Cl A•p1ir
1 7-Misc::etlentous
1 8-W•nt•d.To Do ·

WEDNESDAY

949- Aec/ne.

992·6))7

Fun'

14- 8usinen Training

'

THURSDAY

Meigs County

643 - Arabi • Disf

~all
~

, F.lf Appt.

Vev••bt•

58-Fruits &amp;

·

1 1 -MelD Wtnted
1 2 - Si1ullion Wenfed
1 3- lnlurence

following telephone. ~xchang~s ...

246-Aiq Grinde
256-Guyan ·D iu

51 01/t 2ftd St~ Mldll111p41rtf

57-Mulliclli Instruments

Si!rVII.f!S

TUESDAY

468-Loon

..

·~-s,.....ineooo

9-Wanttd to luv

Classified pa.ges· col'er the
Gelli• CQunty•

61 - Houtehold Goods

2 - ln Memory

POMEROY, OHIO: lit. 7 . S .R. 143
AlBANY, OHIO: Rt. 110. S.R, 143
HENDERSON: WV.: Rt. 31 Adj. ~ Shloro EquipiiiMt
NEW HOURS:
. POMEROY : 9 o.m.· 7 p.m. 7 DIY I
ALBANY: 10 o.m.-11 p.m. 8 Doyo, CloMd S~y
HENDEIIBON : tO o.m.-11 p.m. II Dr(o. Clolld Sun. ~on.
PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAR. 13. 1980

be ch•g«i

Emplo vII If! nI

- .,1 :00A .M '. SATURDAY

- 2 00 P.M .
-;- 2 :00P.M .
- 2 '00 P.M .
- 2,00 P.M .
- 2 :00 P;M .

S.rwlce

To All . . ,.
Typea Of
Travel" .. ; .. 1 mo. .

.20
.30

. ,.4·2

contiJclolt~e runs, broke~ updlltfswill

, OAY BEFORE PUBLIC.A TION

WEONESDA't' PAPER
· THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAV PAPER

I ~ 1 JU

~~----~~~---··-'--~----~ ·--------~------------

1!l

cue -

,,,

COPY DEADLINE ' -:
• MONOAY PAPER ·
TUESDAY PAPER

. PUBLIC NOTICE
The folloWing were receiv·
ed/prepored by the Ohio
Envltonmentot Protection
Agoncy (OEPAI last week.
Effectiv• dotn of fin•l action~ and laauance datH of
propoHd 1ctiona •nd of
droft IJCiiona ore otated. Fi•
iiiloctlono m'!'f be llflpooled,

OI.D El PASO

.

mus~ bl

.

.

SHREDDED S2.19 LB.

MARGARINE...t!!t.... 2/ s1.09

16

10

•A cleuitied ·~•rtf~:-m.,t pieced 1n Th• Deily Sentinel lea ·
te.P t - ~l••f•ecl. d11play ~ BuainMt Card end' legal, notices)
wtH. elao, eppetr 1n the P1 : Ple. .nt fhgister en'd t\-te Galli·
pohs De•ly Tribune. teiChtng over 18.000 homn .
·,

CHOPPED HAM ••••••• ~A. Sl.99 SLICED.

SHADOW TUMkER

Mason coumi•

fine type on I., u..d.
.
'Sontlnol tl ' ~oi retponsible for errors'1tter first dl\'. {Check
errorS'f.ret day ed runs in peperl . Call b-'ore 2 :00p.m .
after publica'lion to milt• correction .
thM must be paid In 1~ce .,,
Card or Thenks
Heppy Ads ,
In Memori.m
Y1rd Sat•

IM'f!P BOLOGNA ··~··.··~···· $1.29

LARGE EGGS ......P.9~J!!.. S1.29

~·Ill• or

.d•••t

CHOPPED. HAM ••••••••••• !!...... S1.49
·~~~1 SALAD ...............~.L~•••••••• 89.&lt;

.A VII YAUEY GlADE l

a'.

.
- Gt!ieaway end Found eds und•, 6 wordt wm be ·
no ch•ge,
· r
.
•••• ~1 .o~f •d for eN C8p~el ltnen is double 'price of ed cost.

HOMEMADE

LONGHORN
CHEESE ................L.~••• 12.19

1s

.

:~•colv~· t : so . diJcounl for ade paid In advance. '

ECKRICH

COllY

15

3
6

Monthly ·
Mel

u .oo

OfPIIS I LOCAnGIIS TO sa¥1 YOII-.

lefrlpratlon

cor,nection£\

· Ov•r 16 Wordo

Til-COUNTY IECYCUIG

HUMPHIEY'S
CUIUTE
COIIIOL

Heat-., Cooling,

: 'Your ·

Rate

16

1

c

il.' ,'it:·;
~I

PURSUIT

Word•

Days

~

PubHc Notlc:e

PIE CRUST ••••••••••••••••·.!llS!•••• S_
1.59

Shirts Ant. SizB/Stylts

~

~

DEPARTMENT STORE
I' HILi S tt llC liVL l HHU St'\ I. Fd'i{IL

t'}t . TRAVEL.

RATES

TO PLAU AN AD CALl 992·21 56
MO~A¥.. thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
.

RUTLAND
PHUr~r:

usiriess ~Services
(614)
742-2027

•There are thousands of steps
' He said God made It IncreasIngly obvious to him last summer
a day that could be fatal," he
said. "I have to concentrate at. that He wanted Irwin tqmake the
least ·100 percent where l'rn
trek.
Irwin recalled his narrow
walking. There Is no whistling In
the woods and kicking up my
escape earlier on the trail.
heels. By the end of the day. I'm ·
"I put down my pole a~d there'
was not anything there. I started
physically, mentally and erno.·
tionally exhausted."
to slip that way and grabbed a
sapling rlgt.t next to me. It was a
Irwin prepared for the hike by
walking four or five miles a day
miracle. That was the strongest
and taking a week's training · witness you can !Ind.
course. Be.lore. t.he trail, he had
"I know the Lord won't let
anything happen to me that he.
never hiked.
He makes It clear he is not on
doesn't W!lnt to happen. If I get
sick or hurt, If I'm not able to
t.be hike out of a love for nature
and the peace of being alone In
finish, It will be tough. Bull won't
the wilderness. •
be disappointed because I know ·
"I'm on a mission," ·he said.
He did It for a purpose."

CAULIFLOWER ...........~~~~.........99&lt; ·
WICK'S PRE-BAKE

A brilliant full cut diamond set in 10K yellow
gold.

hMI Ani viii: Simp 11 ns, T•nage

OliNDa 5U- HOlliS
Price• So LOW It's A Crlllle

lems he had, I still look upon him
as ihe man who stood by Martin
Luther King. We all stuck together. He' II be missed." .
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, considered a national force
In black politics, said, "I am
deeply saddened by the news ....
· (Abernathy's) . leadership and
vtston have Inspired hundreds of
· thousands of people, aitd through
his work .. . he has lett. a rich
legacy for us all. He and I bOth
saw the power and passion of
King's work."
A spokeswoman at Atlanta 's
Martin Luther King Jr. Center
for Non-violent Social Change
said Coretta Scott King was O\!t of
the country and unavailable for
. comment.
Philadelphia mayor Wilson
Goode safd Abernathy's memory
should not be tarnished by his
allegations that Martin Luther
King Jr . had extramarital
affairs.
. "It would be wrong to pay· so
much attention to this bookth;lt tt
takes away from his record as a .
ctvll rights leader," Goode said.
"Ralph Abernathy was· one of
the greatest civil rights leaders
In the country.It's a real loss for
America," Goode said.
National Democratic Party
Chairman Ron Brown . said: •
' 'America has lost a leader. For a
generation of tunnoU, Ralph
Abernathy led his people and his
!\alton along a path of righteous
. change. Tile Democratic Party
mourns the passing of a devout
and courageous mart."
·

•

111110ARD'S TOP 20 ON SALE

"'·3302

Martin Luther King In and
other black leaders filed Into the
hospital _to comfort famUy.
''It Is a very tragic loss to our
nation and a loss to the communIty," King said. "(He was)
someone who opened so m~ny
doors. It Is a very sad day. "
Dr. William Gibson, a Greenville, S,C., dentts~ and chairman
of theNAACP's national board Qf
directors, said Abernathy Would
continue as a symbol of the ctvll
rights movement even In deaih.
"Most people know he gave his
life during . the '60s, even If It
wasn't taken like Martin Luther
King's," Gibson said. In life, ''his
presence evoked memories of the
past ctvll rights victories."
Long-time Mississippi civil
rights activist Charles Evers,
brother of assassinated activist
Medgar Evers and friend of both
Aberpathy and King, expressed
doubts Abernathy's memory In
· history would be untarnished.
"If they look at the positive
side, it will be great," Evers said.
"But If they look at the one
negaitve thing, h1s book about
Martin, then I guess he'll be like
all other great men - soon
forgotten.
"I know only the good things
about him. We we.nt to jail many
times together. We marchEd
. many times. together," Evers
said.
•
.
•'There Is nothing bacj you can
say a bout him, other than he's a
great man and he'll be greatly
missed. With some of the ptob·

The Daily

Ohio

~·· classified

•

By the way, reports on the
Easter cantata presented sev·
eral times on Easter· at the
Middleport Church of Christ
have been glowing. The excellent

OPBI Ill I PA IYIIY 1H1t1
WATOI fOI OUI

Wedr~e1day, April18,_1990

Blind hiker on·mission· for God on Appalachian Trail.

Jl

forit.

.

Wed.-ay, April18. 1990

· Pomel oy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

..

SIUU.IIIIIII

CIIISIU, OliO
•GRAVEL
•UMEITONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

'915-4422
•

S169S

4 Qt. Ma.

..1 .....

110¥t1 IIIII Al
(IIIOIIIIIIViil.irita SfiiiE fTIMS

c•na

.II STOP

at••
OliO

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY!

Announce rne nt s

73

oc..-----r----

4

z....,.... .......... _!O
~-...... -.., ..

=. . ·-old........

Ohio

18,1990

Wednesday, April1

Television
Viewing

v...... wo..
•

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111,

4 nx.cl bi'Md IIUIIJIIE,· half ·

104..75-1071.

~I

l1 ........

lllondly
- - ·- l.ovW
1D
run, ....
- - -.nlry
· 114241

0

......
1

• (J) • •I;J. CIJ ill

... I

~~ · 114-

3
"'*.....!.-

-11l'S. ·

~.M--

6 ·Lost &amp; Fouod

.,,.. ., .... ,.--,"'*....

•NOW, 60 OVT THERE, AND
SIK&gt;I.Il EVER'fONE THAT YOU'RE
THE KING OF THE JVN6LE !

r.1 u clldll d 1se

li::'7a~~ I;J

WELL. SURE .. '(()II MA'f I-lAVE
TO CROSS THE STREET..

liJIIe Men

I:OICIJ .. _..., 1na•n
.... I(J) •
NlghiiJ ......

51

zt .,._ o1 · II'M!I
~
RoctnOy I
At. Sll .... 1111!1. .,....

-7.

bill•••

Help wanted

11

---.:..------

Yard Sale

. ... __ _....
- . I obllly 1D

loti: 11M·-~
value. t1Wft.2DI.
fonlllll
-·-

7

Ill-~ J:.;.~

11 Help'NIIntld
,..., ... ,....,.,,o _ _
_ _ _.;...._ _ _ _..,., , , . , ••• Oft , . . 141. 11.....

.

ill a _ .

/IIllA?!

18 wanted to Do ·
'

Gelllpal'1 Vlclnlly

DooNo
...........
ol--.=: ::as:~:=
In

ALLVanl--le-ln
Ad\'8ftOL QFAEM INI: J:OO p.Jft.
tho clly tllo Ill .........
~ odltlon - 2:0t ......

·-

----......
_....... .

jNCIQi...

,.......-,.

w ........ - .

... lt.--- . .

-

Prine 111 (2:00)

.(J) 8J.Ineolved

My.-... A North c.rollna
_.,.n·a brUtal murder Ia
11f0ftlect (R)

or-.....

-wtthplonn~-.-~~

t• '
1401 FrMidln Ave, ·IIIII 11rU,

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

a

flr1111phol• . . - . .
114 44114D.

• • e&lt;ll GniWIIog .....,.

After 1 big promotion, Clrol
decldlla not to alhlnd oollige .

..... bedllldeOOIRmcdi,IItut.
1111 anltnala ond tore. -

~

ud

(!)
F10111 Uncaln
Cenlw Fradertca von Stade
lingt In a aala concert of
operaa and enltllllblet. (2:30)
all • (II 8JIIMJ' Silly filii
In IOv. With one of Mill's

Pomeroy,
r.lddllpart
&amp; Vlclnlly

-

·•s

D Night CoUit 1;J
7:31(1) llnfonl Ancllon
1:011()) MOVIE: Tile Little

For pa MlrM Udc PIIJ ....... ~

Pt.Pieaunl
&amp; Vlclnlly .
'lllunl!oY ,..... 10, 10:00

.J

.

[ll ...

!l!lriiN ...

c111n11. a
e all MOVII!: The Qodfalher

I
I

• ling - - . •·

r:a..:=.-~w:

\

II CJ112 Of 2) ~R) (2:00)
QPriiMNewa
. liJ ........ lite WnM
Murder To A Jazz· Blat
• c-ulan Will DNh
ft ~~E: P.O.W. Tile

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

(R) (2:00)

I:GicJl MOVIE: Tile Fa.teet Gun

1:30..
•
a...

AIM (1:55)

Ylrgl!llo, -71N711.

CIJ Head 01 Tile
With T.J. lnlured; Allx

9 wanted to Buy

-"iililiWith 111rprlalng dlnce

;rt;'ajR~ Lillo Jakll
Houllhold

hal to Qhooll betwHn being

...........

a rock mullclan or going to

ild.!Spol:atlorl

. 1:011.:a&amp;'£.
(J) •
Eaoahlrlc:

Nigh! Court
Buddy Ryan Ia
~ and on cloud nine.

~ifeCIJ llclo(lie tkwur,
M.D. Doogllilleg811y
~ surgery on a ClOg.

.,............1,.,...

•

Filii ,.., 1411 .II Ill I o love.

flun........

ltftDIInay,

:::-.:-:tli.~;.

f171. '

oomplth

IJIIiltlee peioiL (~!!nil hi'!, ~ ·
.......llpollo, 1 1 4411 ..... 7p.nl.

luv or oo1. R - Anllqual,
11:14 E. lllln It-, ~

HelpW.nlld

"'=
,,P."'··.......

....., II.T.W. 10:00 LM. to ••
1:00 to 1:00 ,.....

--·and;_Work_yout_
:. . ; :.,_ =
=..:~-

llorllyn

•uoa.

=4:t-'1.=~·

'

Empl:·vmenl Servrces

11

llolory Of oallloo 1111 *lllq. ·;

Moolwollo aomplalod- clloi. '
Pump- ond . . . . . . . . . .

- 4•1111.
u..*."'lo*
.w.iii.CIIII14
........ 1111' I ao .......
ldftina. 1101 ...;. 11oJt I ....

t~--..Cilll. 11 ua aa7.

Dovto
1111 AIIC lalrll. I ovt.

ao

-·-· . .:11'-foiir.
..... t1.........
- ~ali. J. - .

. . . . . .,..,.
lloooi-v.c

a.r up 111e murder or a

;'Ieiman. (R)~
liJ =-~ Dellrt Kill
(2:00) SllniO.

'

emualc'a
NaetMII Now Country
hottest atara are

•

.• t

lelllnd llva.
e:•e(J) e I'M Ted and

........ '

0 ... Crook Rd. - . .... ;
=~
11,. :

IM-Am's former
llllllvtrWY (~I Fool'a Dey)

.,

.

;r.~ """-

~---.

CARIIA CII'POIITUIIITY Do J10U

GOTAK&amp;
YORESELF
A FRESH-AIR
,BREAK,

J•m:=ito .

, ... tNinlng
.... - - ·
Cltlly
104-47Z-C1821.

IN IT.

54 MIICIIIIneGUS
Merc.h lndl•

eo•• Al'd n.

l'lllftln Jaka IS •llllned to

THROW' CSAI28'SE

"DUSTBIN!..

DrljOiMJtMI Cltf., ,.,...,..
8 1 - ond llnwlojln-

~

E!JUT THEYemL-L

THEY D\L.L ITA

Ciwal\lclu Marahall mi• bllk.u.il game 10 IIOOrl
LAllie lo • w8ddlng.I;J
10:00 (J) 7011 Clull Willi ...

THANICY,

Ralurllan
e(J) BillY TV Pnunll:

HtHIIY

HTII

ttowToae·;-n.

playful and II'N1ilrW wit of

Spy Mauulne foe!A- on
tne ~point of
vloW !IIIII COVBB tne .

MAW

,_~, ~

centara.

jl;~E:Y~IIIIr

Little things
.are Worth.Alot

..

f011111 ~Gl (2·00)
• • eCIJ l!quel

h IICt
Mb lnd Gene handll I
!I!U(Ih, racially Chllged - · .

-.

.Fumllhld
Roome ···,

iPearly.........
Ga1M blc:kOn
oomatol8 Mal"lke. a
1?-":.T:"z-

,._................
....,. • . , _ OoiMe
1Wel.lt44···

Till
I

tn

maker can help you to ui!Watand whal
work.
Mall $2 to Matchmaker, P.O. Box
91428, Cteveiand, OH 44101-3428.

the Classified Section!

10 do 10 mike tile retattonlhlp

(!)
Plullledtn-lllodtl
Cllopln
Pl8nllt Paul

....

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

:r'd'C!i::l IIIOW

.

••(J).
......
U

..-:

~'-t,.t:s
114-1111 or- lloot.......... .
Colwory ........

P11r1Ck

it~iiiiW!IIII:.IWWMaemmar

11110, I • diOMoo

dl?ld . . . . . .

.

tf7111C.kic aJ, 141170.11/r, I IIIII

...
......
~~---=··
=r11~
~~.~.They~~==~t~he~co=lll of
.
-

...,., 114 41t

postage !rom
.our tax refund."

•

·u••w•...

lanW.OIRIII
0
Talfllll
I OIIUMI
I d)

................
........,.
:::=.=:· ........

Cl

,,.a_

•. .... .·g

---.. -· .,II
•

0

,,

KAWU

ZQGQ_

IR.U,

U A A'U V

,..Till Fix

~-----~~~

'

UYA

l'lf DIMDI 1111
WMIIIO

(!) M

.

VQF

I Z
Q 0 F

ZCNAOFW

·WI

F I 0 A

SAQCW

.Y N W
WIXA

QLI.-UVIXQW
YIIF
Y•lel•ay"• Crwtot!J-tes TALK TO HIM OF
JACOB'S LADDER AND HE'D ASK THE NUMBER OF
StEPS. - DOUGLAS JERROLD

0
'

'

AXYDLBAAXR
.Is LONGFELLOW

~u

L 1"1111~11

CluopoiMI II. loll,..........,.

.,

·One letter sta~ for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two. O's, etc. Single letters,
:nostrophes, the length and formaUon or the words are all
hailts. Each day the code letters are different.
caYPTOQUOTE
·"

·ec:..-aa11:111 latiiOIOW a liN. ICing

1171 - - 10 112. Ono

--.--

~··

B Minor, Opul 55 lklrlnll an
lftftiVWUrY Oltlblatlon lor

_...,·---. 11~

1110 Donvllo 141m, -

-..

Nlbt'llka'l Wealeyln

32 Mabile HaiMI
for Sale

11 ......74lt.

(l) Hewea8lclt

F1tcllrldc Chopil\'1 Sonata In

BEDEOSOL
" .

1m

·

ACROSS
45 Array
1 Break,
DOWN
as dishes 1 Ermine
- 6 Flower
. in summer
9 Papoose's 2 Singer
home
Haggard
10 Rumanian 3 01 bees
city
.4 Bishop's
12 Window
domain
slyle
5 MischlelYesterday's Ana13 Souvenir
maker
15 Wing
6 Lamb
16 Song
owner
18 Palm leal 7 English
24 Good bu.v 33 S)Yeep:
19 Gral'a game river
25 Thoreau s scope
21 Patriotic
8 Bad odor
pond
34 Biblical
group
11 Expand
26 Ended
wttch's
14 Joyce 27 Hunting
home
(abbr.)
22 Aslronaut' s Oates
cap,
36 one of the
affirmative 17 Call for . Spanish
generations
23 Lorre
20 Capture
style
39 Slamme11
film role ., 23 · - Indigo" 29 Notion
sounds ng
· 24 Gallant
( 1931
32 Sel on
41 Russian
27 Mushroom
song)
Its feel
I 28 Way up
r-~1:1""'"
there
· : ~ 29 Ghostly
shout .
30 Building
secllon
31 Put up
with
35 Commotion
38Wager
37 Sylvan
deity
38 Embankment
•
40 Correct
manuscripts b+--t--fl"ll!
· 42 Tiber
lributary •
43 Kid or Starr
44 From
a to u .
DAILY CR YPI'OQU&lt;ri'ES- Here's hqw to worldt: 4118

BldUri-Skoda perform8

BERNICE

L1ooutr
..........,-..-n

DNewl
111:30 C1J •• aunan~g~~~

+KQ1073

If you want to give yourself a head·

cover the East·West cards ani&gt; WE'.'!T
E.UT
. place yourself in the position of Edwin .AKJ62
• Q 10 91
' Kantar, playing in an 'invitational .Q
.K 83
palrs competition iri · Italy. Kantar, +K)l~l
t913
86
' South, opened two hearts (weak), and
+1.94
the bidding proceeded as diagramed.
SOVTH
' West led the spade king, and East sig·
.753
. ~aled encouragement. A second spade
.,.109652
· was ruffed in dummy, and declarer
tQS
illayed the king of clubs. East took the .'
2
:ace and played a third spade, ruffed in
Vulnerable:
Neither
dummy. The jack of hearts was played ,
Dealer: East
·to the ace, West dropping lhe queen. ·
What now?
Soonh
West · Nortll Eaal
Did you play another heart, hoping '
Pass
that the overcaller (West) .held the 1 2 •
All pass
king of hearts and the king of dia·
monds? If he did, he would not be able
Opening lead: • K
·to attack diamonds, and you would
,have a chance.to work on clubs. Unfor·
,ttmately we see as the curtain rises
:rrom the East-West cards that in fact unless he were trytng to build a·,trick
:East will win the king of hearts and . for his king of hearts. When East holds
,play a diamond. In a futile attempt at ·the heart king, declarer's only chance
salvaging the contract, you put up the is to play a club to the IO·spot in dumqueen, but W~t covers with the king. my and hope that the jack is with
Down one. Perhaps all declarers West. So it is, and declarer can make
should have done better.
four hearts by disCarding a diamond
; After winning the ace of clubs, East on the queen of clubs before giving up
would
. ' not have. played another spade a trick to the heart king.

• 0 A'I'H
Ill JeaPMIJf 1;J
.
I.oer.u••

torlp.m.ll~--.11.

••.J74

1ache,

~=:::.:=.,

.

--Col

.

eCIJ ....,.., ,....,

.........
Dol_,,,_
,.,110,11!10 "' - .......

r-~--------~--~
NORTH
4-U.II
tAB&amp;Z

7:10 e (J) FM!IIy Feud

IIIIIL
llowlna ...., lSI Doblor DoiYo, Eom .,.to1114J_........
SaL fo.OI.04:10p.... NO IOfly
-b!lftl
.....,oa_ll.......,..
•
Alnulnii our
ruproudld :s• 11

:::.. ..!::&amp;t -.........

.~CoUit I;J

!

7:01(1)~

Apo!I1HO.
4B7JW. - - 11~
c~othlna. tor-. •••• •• a lata 1111.
~
IAIIN MONeY Pt1arlng loobl
o -·lelo: 1 dey, only. I y.
-'Wile on tiM[ l'rldOf, Ajwl!

-

[ By James Jacoby

D Abbott a Coetllo

~
Frldow. 11c1nc111J ...lon • 2;111 ~ o107-1110
l - llotif.
lllatlilrt; P.O. ._
C.
'
llton lnlt, Sfn!t -. Ohio

... - •1 .

Webbed - Lower- Quake - Fiance -ONE BEE

NanHour

Stno.

.

.

"Carrying a grudge," the mom told the teen, "is like
getting stung to death by ONE BEE."

a Mullc: Row Vldlo

lend

uNSCRAMBLE LETTERS 1
FOR ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

liJ ;;;;;tv;. Over Till une

""'

you develop· from step No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

'aJ!-.3!~ Wl1lll Of

114-7a.IOalaNt••

A
V

l!±! * -

Ill
. I (J) PM ......... .
()) lp an.&lt;:1nlwr
e(l) e(!) ellecNIII
C1J CurNIII AIIU'
...,_

-

Rcnl do

AaaiY In ~ O!'IJ. 'II'Ra F.•
nllift, 4 oiollal .. Rl. 141.

iabJalt• ....-d In Rut._,.
._,_lflhll*lft.Pa.,.....,ln
lilY -Rolo,.,_NOIIAM

140141 '1111.1 II'IIR'

~

Complere ohe chuc&lt;le quoled
by fi, ling in the missing w o rds

oft PRINT NUMBERED
1
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

• Top c.d eoncombine enhlrUIIII('IIInl trivia
with lhe luck of the draw.
DHingln'ln
.... CIJ Andy Olllftllt
7:00 let-OW a lltt. lOng ·

..

I

_
•
1
L._,___._........,_....._......._....

(!) ....

-1

KATJEC

1---n
.,:..,.:.Tiler.-T1;...,:;.1--;;,.1-1 0

!i~~Newii;J
Canttlct I;J

, _, KOf ring I kOfe
found ot Hit oii/Onvlllo lory lollool. 114-74WOOO.
LOIT Cralt CrMII Ad. CotlliiiUII .___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"r"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Loot:

I

*

"Okay, I'll take a bath! Then

llloii'Aty, llok c:Hound,· -'!&gt;~
- ...,.,
- ·
DhoM
numltir ....lftd
IIEWARD. ~7414.

There is no surer way to find
out if you like a person than to
go with them on·a .........

0 Clllllelln Clt8lgt

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

can I go home?"

V A L (N E

lneldelllePGATow
Dt..llll Hltlh Lucy
1110011111 dlreciOr and Wl'lter
ol ..... llrlt 111m. l:i

II
1111.
llllda - t aalll........
- · Cit ...
oil Rt. "'· .....,..,., Of ~ · IB ·

I

the

besirnple words.

. ~--.,..:-1,_I',1..,.1....,.12r l

'

...~.. And .

1ora..-lll: • - - .·wnlld '

Avo., Oolllpoll&amp;

low to form l~r

. EVENING

. . . . . II ..... , d1 ..

Wooden ~ to .... WC)L
I I .-.,C
- 011llpolle Dolly T
IZilNnl

RearrcnQe t.tters of
0 four
scrambled words

WED.. APRIL 18 ' •

35 LOla I AcrMge
Ullrlahl Dllno to
742~111'.

- - - - - - 141!o4 loy

.

\~ I.

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

&gt;TIAT DAILY C,/iQ
PUULII p~ li.~''IU

t990 by King FeiiiU&lt;H Syndicate, Inc.

.

�18, 1980

Ohio

.,....

Reds remain
unbeaten with
8th Win, 11-7

CCJII'ONS
.ALL·'"-EI·

wn
JIIIS co•o•
(S.. St., ..........,

STORE HOURS

. 11NY•DOI

Monday .''thru Sunday -

Pick 3
213
Pick 4

0030
Super Lotto1-4-6-25-28-33

Page 3

J,!=:tood
April18,

8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

19~21

. co~l11~l tRiPif~;s

·298 SECOND ST.

. POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFEcnvE ·~HRU SATUDA Y, APRil 21, ·199o

•

. . Low lonlcbt In mid 51!1 •

Chuce ol rain 38 perceat.
Frllda·v. high near 70. Chance

••

·-.---~r--------,

SILVER.. FLOSS
.
'

~

·~

s·AUER~ ·

Vol.40, No.240
Copyrightoll 1990

! '16(

Leg Quarters ••••'! ••49C
1/4

1 Umit 1 With Coupon and
I
... •&amp;.00 Purcha•

I
I

.

PORK

Good tl!ru saturday, ·
·April 21 ..-199Q

I
·--·
...... -.-..----------..1.

.

-----i,~---

Loin Chops •• ~ ••••'!. S159 CHICKEN
POll
.
s 9 NOODLE
Cubed Steak•••••~. 26· SOUP
· CAMPBELL'S

•

WILSON'S SAVORY-

$ 59
Steak....... 2
.

U.S~~.A.

.

Ll.

I

II · ,

· (

UELLER'S
SPAGHETTI,

$ '3,.

Bologna ..•••••..•~.. 1

1he ·

I

8 oz. PIG.

I
I

Limit 1 With Coupon and

. '6.00 Purcha•
Good Thru Saturdily,
Aprll21, 1990
'

'

1-·--·------------·
p-------------.,
I

I

.
u. 39C
Ton1atoes ••••••••••••
.
FLAYORITE .
.
.,
69
.
Sl
2°'10 .M.Ik
I ••••••••••
. ::•.
KRAFT AMERICAN IND. WRAPPED .
.
. o~ Sl 79
Cheese ••••••••••••••••
•

.

28 OZ. BOX

16&lt;

•

•

•

'BANQUET

I
I

MO.R.TON!
SA·LT

,.

12

.

Limit 1 With .Coupon and

*6.00 Pwcha•
Good Thru .Saturday,
April 21, 1990

I'
I
I
·-------':-·--·-·-·-~··

•

c
ARMOUtt
.
89
TV Dinners ••••••••••
VI·EN
.
N
.
A
RHODES

LlnLE DEBBIE

Snack
Cakes
••••
~.'!.6.9&lt;
HUN.T'S

-----------..·-~·..,.
•\

10-12 .

••

•

1.,

oz..

.

(

.

•

'

5 OZ: CAN
• f ' "

PURE SWEET

CAMPIEU'S

SUGAR

PORK &amp; BEANS ·.

99C

u~
._. cw,

LUNCH MEAT

1~oL 3/$1'hi.

At , ..... s.,. voilu
. 8tell S..., ..... !5 tin Sat. Apr. 21

.

'

8tell o.ly At P.wii'o S.,.
' 8tell S.... .... IS tin s.t. Apr. 21

-·.

·''

ARMOUR TREO

,

____ ·- "·- ·---.,,

_.._

••

99C .

120z.

. e-.o.lyAt ......... , .
S.. Apr. 15 tin s.t.
II

.•

-~··- ~----------"~ ~;

I'

•

. CAKE MIXES .

2/Sv•1,·

11-11.soL

Aprii21,1HO
,.

.. -

-·- -·- ......

'

.

•,.'

Limit 1 With Coupon and
.
'11.00 Pwchall
Good thru .....,.,,

..
~:

I

DUNCAN HINES .

I ·._. cw, at ,..••, ...,
: . . . ~ Apr. 1S .... .s.t.. Apr. 11

'

'T

\

.

. l

•

"'

•

:{

.~':r::~ ;~~. n~~~~~~il~~'v.fr~o~~ ·~~hl~~.;e·~~er~~7e~;:~~ Ta
·;;~if
.

Two die in.Caldwe-1 ·shooJing

oz.

.
69
.
.
$149
"
!!unUSAGE
.Tomato Juice ••••••
White Bread•••• ~:.
46

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stalf
Cleanup..--Week activities to
Include two days of free village
pickup of debris, appliances
which can be recycled, and old
furniture and other Items to be
taken to the landfill ·have been
planned . by . Racine VIllage
Council.
On Wednesday, the village
packer truck will canvas the
village to pick up Items wlltch
residents have placed at the
curb. Residents are encouraged
to clean thelryardsandget ready
to fully participate In the village
pickup program. Items to be
picked up that day must be able
to be handled In the compactor
truck.
· On Thursday, Aprll26, anotheP
truck will canvas the village
picking up appliances for recycling, and that afternoon still
another truck 'will pick up furnl·
ture and other large Items that
. SEEDLINGS PLANTED - Volunteers plant a
International Center for the Preservation ol Wild
need to be taken to the landfill.
portiiJn ol the 23,000 seeclllngs honoring American
Animals, Inc . .
•
.
It was noted at the meeting of
. ~echic Power System employees at the
VIllage Council Monday night
D
that the village Is cooJlerating
with the Meigs County Litter
Control Office In the Cleall'\lp
Week activities.
Bids for roof replacement at
the Star Mill Park bulldlng .were
.
opened and the bid of Bruce
by
AEP
and
Ohio
Po~er.
.
of
AEP
.
Service
Corporation,
H
. ysell, Dailey Road, Racine, for
Ohio Power Company and Its
·
e1
2
.fl
f
parent, American Electric · . ~pprolti~Jlat . y.,
.,_ y~ oot •• J;P!J.I.n:tbu~; . A~P l',;u~ Supply • . ,_,
. ... _.
.
. .
·~; today ' wur:par!lci!!!JU! In
.t\etlvlt1es' •hD1ft)l'fJI'R' ..
~EP
..,
'j:'.
Snt~m's 23,00jl employ'ees B!ld
Center which was dedlca.ted In
Power •.Company, Columbus; . · ~ j
(..
,
.
December.
,
·' ,. · ' ' wii~eling '" Power Company,
symJx&gt;l~!ng. Its c.ommltment to
Wheeling, w. Va.; lnduana MlchBy NANCY VOACHJtM
the environment.
. The ceremony Is a cooperative
A total of 23,000 seedlings-one effoFtlnvolvlng the Ohio Departlgan Power Company, Ft.
Sentinel News Stall
Wayne ; Ind.; . Appalachian
"1990 is not just an ordinary
for each system einployee.is ment of Natural' Resources'
being · planted at the Interna- Division of Reclamation, the
Power Company, Roanoke, Va.;
state election," said Robert Taft ,
tional Center for the Preserva· Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Kentucky Power Company , Ash·
Republican candidate for Ohio
lion of Wild Animals, Inc. , in Association, the International
land, Ky.; and Kingsport Power
Secretary of State, keynote
eastern Musklngum County. The Center and AEP's operating Company, l&lt;lngspart, Tenn.
speaker at Wednesday night's
center is the future site of the companies .
After the ceremony, the volunLincoln Day dinner at the Ameri·
largest wildlife preserve In North
Participating In the ceremony teers from Ohio Power. Its
can Legion Annex In Middleport.
(Continued on Page 6)
"We're talking aboul the future
America and Is on land donated w.lll be employee representatives
of Ohio for the next 10 years and
.beyond. Not just governor and
secretary of state and the other
offices. We're talking about who
· controls the state legislature,"
. Taft told the more than 200
people ·present for last night's
dinner that their . votes are
"needed this year as never
before" if I he Republican party
Is going to lake statecontrolfrom
the Democrats. "We've got to
take control of that state govern·
ment before It's too late for· the
State of Ohio," Tall declared,
and urged Republican voters to
go to the polls and to ·talk with
Independant friends and urge
them to go to the polls too.
Taft charged that Ohio "Is
losing ground to other states;"
and explained that the state is
losing two of Its 21 U. S.
congressmen . "We're going
down to 19 because were losing
population. Thai means we're
losing clout In Washington."
KEYNOTE SPEAKER- Robert Taft, Republl·
Cincinnati, where he has been a HamUion County ·
He also charged that the
can ciUHIIdate for Ohio Secretary ol State and
Commissioner since 198. Pictured with Talt, lelt
personal income or Ohlg res!·
keynote ~peaker at Wednesday night'&amp; Lincoln
to right, are Meigs County Commissioner · and
dents Is growing more slowly
Day Dinner In Middleport, predlcta thai the
candidate for slate . representative, Richard
than almost any other state In the
Republicans are going to go all lhe way this year,
Jones, Melp County Treasurer George CoWns,
country. "And almost every
just like the Clncltulall Reds are gobtg to win this
and Evelyn Clark, a Meigs County Republican
county In the state has an
year'&amp; pennant and series. "~:aft, ol course, islrom
Partyleader.
·
unemployment rate higher th~n
the national average," he said,
Including Meigs County.

'
c
d
AEP
.
W
.rower
ompany
an
.
Oh
• t r,ee
. .p lan t lng
• c.eremony
t a..k.e par t Ln

April 21'. 1990

·-------------~
/
,

•

.

'
,
'
6
1

. .
Umlt'1 With Coupon and
I
•&amp;.00 Purcha•
GIIOd :rtwu Saturday,

u. .

~CK,~ICH #1

•

10.5 OZ. CAN

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A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Racine cleanup dates .
announCed by council·

KRAUT
·
16 OZ. CAN
·CHICKEN

2 Sectlon1. 12 Pages 25 Cents

Pom'e roy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April19, 1990

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CALDWELL, Ohio {UP!) -A dence. Deputies said Hayes had
Washington County sheriff' sdep- been sleeping ln. his car when he
uty was fatally shot during a
was shot four ·times with a
shootout In Noble County with a
.38-callber weapon and suffered
man who died a few hours later wounds In the shoulder, chest and
when the barn' was set afire, the
neck.
·
sheriff's department said WedSmith went to Egnot's resinesday morning.
dence Tuesday night to serve the
Noble County sheriff's officials · warrant that had been Issued
said deputy Rodney l&lt;lnzy, 30, . after , that . Indictment. Shots
was one of'several officers from
werre fired when Smith tried to ·
Washington and Monroe counties serve that warrant.
who had responded to a call for
The sheriff returned to his
help from Noble County Sheriff office and summoned help from
Landum Smith.
his neighboring counties.
Smith had suffered superficial
About 15 officers from Wawounds when shots were fired as shington and Monroe counties
he tried toarrestRobertEgnot at joined those from Noble COunty
his residence In the southeastern at Egnot's residence, and surpart ot Noble county.
rounded ' the · buildings. Shots
· Egnot, 29, had been Indicted rang out from the barn. with one
March 9 on charges of felonious of them hitting l&lt;lnzy In the head ..
assault and attempte!l murder
Severa~ pleas were made for
stemming from the shooting of . ;Egnot td surrender, but he
Jack Hayes near E~~:not's resl· Ignored them, de!)utles said. The
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gurchase of a new tanker truck.
There was a long discussion on
financing ihe purchase and no
action was taken at the meeting
pending further discussion.
j'.layor Frank Oeland reported
that he had talked with Phil
Roberts, county engineer, about
the street Improvement projects
funded through Issue 2 and the
possibility of including prelim!·
nary preparation work prior to
the appUcallon of hot mix ,
Roberts, he said, felt this "mil·
ling" could be included since It is
necessary it be done before the
paving. Council decided to proceed with the necessary paper
work on that.
Council rejected the request
from Bill Bird to close an alley
which runs between two of his
lots. He had asked It be done so.
that he could use part oft hat areaon which to construct a garage.
Council noted that similar re-.
quests In tile past have been·
denied with the only excepilori
being when the area was needed
for pubilc use. Possible future
change ln ·ownershlp was one of
the reasons given for rejecting
the request.
The May 7 meeting was set for.
7 p.m. Attending were Mayor.
Cleland and Council members,
Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Ron
Oark, Carroll Teaford, Jeff
Thornton,
iulll Larry W!!llt!.
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'a'"ddres''s"'e's Met•g.'·~ . 'GOP

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Super Lotto grows
to $10 million

barn was then set on fire. His
body was found after the Cald·
well Fire Departrilent ex tlngulshed the blaze around 2 a.m.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -The $6
Wedne~ay, •
million jackpot went unclaimed
Noble County Coroner SherIn Ohio's Super Lotto drawing
man Smith pronounced both men
Wednesday night', Increasing the
dead at the scene.
gran&lt;l prize to $10 million for
Saturday's game.
The two bodies were taken to
·
··
Columbus where the Franklin ' None of the tickets sold for the
County coroner's office would
nildweek drawing listed the six
perform the au topsles.
winning numbers - 1, 4, 1;, 25, 28
The sheriff. not ser tously
and 33, a lottery spokesman said
wounded, returned to work. ·Thursday.
Wednesday.
However, · there were 120
Klnzy had been . with the
tickets with five ol the numbers,
Washington County Sheriff's De.
good for payoffs of $1,000 each,
partment since August 1986. He
and 6,227 tickets had lour of the
had worked In the jail as a . numbers, making them worth$75
corrections officer betore going
apiece.
out onto the road, deputies said.
The $100,000 top prize In the
l&lt;lr\zy, who had been divorced accompanying ~cker game also
about a year ago, bad three
went unclaimed Wednesday
children. Services are pe"dlng.
night: Thewlnnlngl&lt;icker combination was 112476.
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$699.60 was accepted. It was the
lowest of the seven bids on the
project.
Again meeting with Council
was the skateboard group which
presented a set of drawings for
the proposed skateboard area at
the park. Council deferred action
pending clarification on lnsu·
ranee and its cost.
The tree ·and landscape commlitee discussed replacement of
trees this year and was autho·
· rized to expend 'up to $200 for
· replacements. The committee
also proposed an "adopt a
street" program. This would
mean residents woulld clean the
sidewalks, plant flowers, and
generally Improve the area.
Anyone Interested Is asked to
contact either Kay Warden or
Becky· Mallory .
.
Council gave all three readings·
and adopted an ordinance
al'!lending several sections of the
codified ordinances to bring
t11em up to date.
Purchase · of a blade for a
mower was approved following a
request from Glenn Rizer. street
commissioner. He was alsoauth·
orized to purchase motor oil for
the mowers and some weed
killer.
David Nelgler, '[)oug Rees and
Fire Chief Robert Johnson of the
Racine Fire Department, met
with Council 10 diKUBS
the
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The Corporation of Economic
Development. a Washington D.
C. organization, recently rated
the states and gave Ohio a ·c• for
its economic development pollcies. "A 'C' for "mediocre." Taft
· said.
He also charged that the Clean
Air Bill, which Is on Its way
through the federal legislature,
" In Its present form, is not going
to help Ohio" when it comes to
economic development and
. vitality.
.
In regard lo education, T~ft
took the Democrats to task
charging that they were "10
years late on school reform and
they still haven't done much."
But what concerns Taft most Is
"the er.osion of public trust and
confidence In our state govern·
ment. I am ashamed of the
corruption ihat has occurred In
Columbus In the last eight
years." he said, and cited newspaper accounts of alleged Democratic corruption at the state
leveL
Tart urged voters to support

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him In his bid for secretary of
state so he can clean house In
suchareasasabuseofcampalgn
finance laws. He also pledged to
work closely with and provide
accurate and timely Information
to county boards .of election
throughout the state.
He also promised he would
work to restore confidence in
state government "so Ohioan's
do more than just register to
vote. The,\' turn out to vote."
Taft, 'who' Is presently Hamil-.
ton County Commissioner, and
other candidates who spoke at
the dinner, Including incumbent
local candidates, Commissioner
Manning Roush, Auditor Bill
W lckline, Proba te· Ju ven lie .
Judge Robert Buck and Coroner
Douglas Hunter; State Senate
candidates Dan . Hleronimus, of
Lawrence County. and Claire
(Buzz) Ball, Athens County; and
State Representative candidates
Richard Jones, Meigs County,
and Larry Payne. Athens
County, urged voters to support
the state ticket.

Local news briefs--Middleport cleanup dates listed
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman announced that the annual
spring cleanup will be held the week of Aprll23 through Aprll27
in conjunction with the Ohio Cleaning Up Rural Ohio campaign
and the Meigs County Litter Control Program.
Residents are urged to take advantage of the yearly free pick
up by cleaning up their yards and vacant lots . All material must
be prepared for easy handjlng and placed near the curb In front
of the residence .
There will be no pick up of garbage, tree llmbs,lirush or other .
bulky Items. Your local trash hauler should be contacted about
thiS type of materiaL
In order that all residents may have the opportunity to
participate, excessive amounts of materials will not be handled
· and only one pltkup Will be made at any one residence.
VIllage workers will begin In the first ward on Monday and
will proceed through the remaining three wards throughout the
remainder of the wee(l. Residents are urged to have their debris
at the curb by 8 a.m. Monday as there will be no return trips
made to the ward after Initial pickup has been completed.

Grant agreement signed
· Middleport j'.layor Fred Hoffman. announced today that a
grant agreement has now l!een signee! with the Governor's
Office of Appalachia to Implement the ARC housing assistance
grant which was earlier announced as being awarded to the
.village.
The grant In the amount or $43,869 will be use to hire a housing
specialiSt for the purpose of encouraging, promoting and
assisting In packaging and facilitating FmHA loans In
Middleport and Meigs County. A part of these funds will also be
used for site Improvements.
It Is anticipated that a person will be hired for this position and
the office In service at village hall by f4ay 16.
Anyone Interested In applying for this position should provide
Continued on page 6 .

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