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                  <text>Pea•

Monday. April 23. 1990

Poma'Oy'-Middlaport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

_......_Local ·news briefs...~-.. .Rising health.. _eo_n_un_u_ed_rr_om....:..pa.:.ge_I_ __
Continued from page 1

Esmpes serious injury in wreck Rodney Clonch, Middleport, escapetflnjury when the vehicle .
he was driving struck a concrete wall at the Intersection of West.
Main aild Locust Streets in Pomeroy early Monday morning.
Pomeroy pollee reported that Clonch was trav!!ling south on
W!!st Main-St. at 1: 19 a.m. when he failed to negotiate the curve
and hit the wall. The vehicle was heavily damaged and towed
from the scene.
Clonch was charged with DWI.
A two-caraccldentat 11:32a.m . SaturdayonEastMalnStreet
resulted In damages to both vehicles but no Injuries.
Pollee reported that Angela McClure, Pomeroy, was
attempting a left turn Into McClure's 31n One when her vehicle
was struck from behind by a car driven by James Carsey
Middleport.
.
.
'
There was heavy damage to the l'E'ar and both the right and
left side panels of the McClure car and modera te damage to t~e
·front end of the of the Carsey vehicle. Carsey was cited for not
·
maintained assured clear distance.
One of the three chUdren In the McClure car, David, a four
. year old, was tak!!n to Veterans Memorial Hospital ,but no
treatment was required, pollee reported.

Two hurt in dune buggy crash·
Two Vinton area residents were Injured In a dune buggy crash
Sunday at 7:35p.m. In .Salem ·Township on S.R, 325, 1.5 miles
north of the Gallla-Melgs County line, according to the
Gallia· Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Charles G. McMillin, 34, and his passenger, Carolyn K.
McMillin, 31, both of S.R. 325, VInton, were taken by the Rutland
EMS to Holzer Medical Center.
Carolyn McMillin was admitted for treatment of a fractured
right fibula, fractured ribs and various bruises and cuts. At last
report she was listed In stable condition. Charles McMillin was
treated and released for multiple bruises and scrapes.. . .
Charles McMillin, driving a homemade dune buggy, was
heading north when he went off! he left side of the road in a slight
right-hand curve before hlttlng an embiiJiklt\ent.
He was charged wltli DWIIn addition to being cited for failure
to yield and not having a valid registration decal.
.
A Shade youth was chargejlln a one-car crash Sunday at 12:30
a .m. In Salisbury Townsshlp on Bradbury Road, .3 of a mile
west of the junction of S.R. 7.
·
David B. Frymer, 17, was charged with DWI after his 1986
Ford Escort hit an embanknlent.
·
·
.
Frymer was heading east wnen he ·failed to negotiate a
left-hand curve. He then went off the right side of the road and
Into an embanknlent.
·

Shaw candidate for Fourth
District of Appeals Court

standing an application for fundIng Is likely to be filed with the
stat,e, although there Is still . a
question as to whether all of the
· above counties still want to
participate In a regional jail. The
comm issioners said the Interested counties are "continuing to
explore all possibilities" and are
to meefln th"e near future with
representatives of a regional jail
facility In Northern Ohio.
At the request of Meigs Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story,
the commissioners have approved the sale of approximately
125 acres In Meigs and VInton
Counties which were seized by
law enforcement au thorltles
from Joseph Douglas Nelson lor
drug-related offenses. The property will be advertised for sale by
the prosecutor, and proceeds
from the sale will be paid Into ihe
county's law enforce111ent trust
fund.
The commissioners es tabUshed 10:30a .m. on May 16 for a
viewing of property In Sutton
Township for possible annexation Into Syracuse Village to
facilitate building a senior cit!·
zens' a partment complex. A
public, hearing on the· proposed
annexation will be hekl.1 p.m. ()n
the same date Iii the commlssloriers' office. The request for
viewing and public hearing came
by letter from Mrs. Sidney
Grueser, on behalf of Waters
Edge oi Syracuse, a limited
partnership.
The Commlsslone~s also conducted the following routine
matters.
-Tabled dlsi:usslon on ways to
pay costs Incurred by the Meigs
Clerk of Courts office for cases
filed on ·behalf of the Bureau of
Support, until Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer can be present for
the meeting. /?
- -:::&lt;F-abled-a' bid for a mixing
trailer (pug mUI) for the county

No big winner

PORTSMOUTH - William K.
and Plpefltters Local577, Labor·
Shaw Jr. has flied as a DemO: ers International Union of North ·
cratlc candidate !n the May 8 America Local No. 83 and the
prltnary for the seat on the International Brotherhood of of
· Fourth District Court of Appeals Electrical Workers Locals 88,575
' to be vac11ted next year by the · and .972.
r~tlrlng Incumbent, Homer E.
A 1973graduateof0hio Onlverslty, where he earni!d an A.B.
' "Pete" Abele of McArthur. .
Shaw, a Portsmouth attorney degree, Shaw received his law
who has served as assistant degree, cum laude, from · the
Scioto County prosecuting attar- · Cleveland-Marshall College of
.ney for the past 11 years, said he · Law at Cleveland·State Unlverhas litigated matters before slty In ' December 1975. He has
federal and state · courts and since been admitted to practice
administrative agencies In five law In Ohio and Kentucky, the
states 1\nd the , District of U.S. Supreme Court and federal
Columbia.
'
district ·. courts In Ohio, West
As assistant prosecutor, Shaw VIrginia and Kentilck:v.
said he has tried civil cases In
Shaw resides In Portsmouth
areas from aggravated murder with his wife. the former Susan
to cMIJrials and appeals.
Snedecor, and his two daughters
Shaw's candb;lacy hils received Rhachel and Sara II. :
'
endorsements from the · Scioto
Tile Fourth Dis trlct Court of
County Democrallc Party., the Appeals hears original actions
Tri-State Buildlng ·and.Construc: and ap{l"als of ~eclslons by
tlon Trades Council, the Ohio county, municipal and common
State Association of Plumbers pleas courts In Adams, Athens
and Plpefltters, Carpenters Lo· Gallla, Highland, Hocking, Jack:
cal No. 437, ·Millwrights Local son, Lawrence, Meigs, PlckaUnion 407, U.S. Steelworkers of way, Pike, Ross; SCioto, Vinton
America Local 2116, Plumbers and Washington counties.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Saturday 's $10 million Ohio Super
Lotto jackpot went unclaimed
because no one picked the six
numbers chosen In the drawing.
The Ohio Lottery Commission
said Wednesday's grand prize
will be worth ·a t least $14 million.
The six numbers are 5, 8, 10, 16, .
22 and 35.

Seuthen board to meet
,
The Ohio Association of. Public ;
highway department, pend,lng
The
Southern
Local
School
EmplOyees
IOAPSE) 453, ~uth- :
review of the bid by County
Board
will
meei
In
special
ern
Local
School
District, will;
Engineer Philip Roberts and
session
tonight
(Monday)
at
7
meet
at
7
p.m.
Tuesday
at the
JDghway Superlnt~ndent Ted
p.m
.
at
the
high
schaoi.
high
school.
·
.
Warner.
Plannlac
~e~lioa
set
Revival
slated
·
-Approved payment • of an
There
will
be
a
planning
The
Mason-Gallia-Melgs
Cru-:
animal claim to Calvin Hawk,
sesslbn Jor Meigs Courity Church sade for Christ revival will begin~
Tuppers Plains, as recomWomen
United for the May tonight and continue through
mended by Prosecuting Attorney
fellowship
on Friday at 1: ;10 p.m . . · Saturday, AprU 28, at 7 p.m. each.
Steven Story .
·
the
Forest
Run UnltedMetho· evenlng ,at the Carleton Church'
at
-Approved a $100,000 certlfi·
dlst
Chutch.
.
on Kingsbury Road which Is
cation from Auditor William
RaciDe
F
aad
AM
to
meet
County Road 18. There will be.
Wickline to the county's real ·
The
Racine
Lodge
F
and·
AM
special
·singing and preaching'
es tate assessment account.
,will
meet
for
annual
Inspection
each
night.
The . Rev . Clyde
-Discussed with Sheri(!
Tuesday
at
7:
30p.m..
·
Henderson,
:pastor,
Invites the \
James M. Soulsby and Deputy
OAPSE
to
meet
public
to
a
ttend
.
Carl Hysell the purchase of a new
radio system for the sheriffs
department.
continued
1 · ..
' :.
-Tabled a letter from the
pledge of..support.
The three candidates for com-'
Salisbury Township Truste~ re· Sue Malson was mistress o! missioner, Janet Howard, Cecil;
garding the possible addition of
ceremonies and Introduced sev- Gillogly and Bill Quickel spoke;
.4 mUe to the township rQail
eral candidate representatives briefly, as did Oon Mlc)lael·
system.
-:-Accepted bids' from both the . including Caro]yn AndreWs for Mullen, candidate for jUdge or:
Attorney General AnthOny Cele· ·the Meigs County Probate anti:
Asphalt Materials and Ashland
brezze; Michelle Jenkins for JuvenUe Court, and Wflllam !{·, ·
OH Compailles for aggregate
Secretary of State S)jerrod Shaw, Jr., Portsmouth, a candl·
products over the next year, to be
Brown, and Beverly Grimshaw date {or the office of Judge of the
purchased by the county engl. neer at the lowest price for the . from the state auditor's office. Ohio Fourth District Court · of
Also ln.troduced was · 'Melg~ Appeals.
'· ·
purpose.
County Sheriff James Soulsby,
Jane Frymyer spoke on behalf·
-Accepted the 10"111 · bids of
John lhle, vice chairman of the of Ralph Barrett whO Is runnmg·
Asphalt Materials for asphalt
executive committee, and Ohio for the lOth District Central
materials'for the county highway
department for the, month of · Department of Transportation Committeeman' s post. Also
representatives Including James speaking briefly was Lee Wede·
May.
Proff_ltt of the 'Meigs meyer, superintendent of Ca-Accepted the county highDepartment.
rletoit School who asked suppor t
way department's Inventory of
of the new 1.5 mill operating. levy
all equipment valued at $500 or
.,:
which will be on the May 8'
more.
.
primary ballot.
Dally stock prices
Charles Scott provided plano·
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
music during the dinner hQur.
Bryce aad Mark Smith
·
·
•
Sentb Central Ohio
Judgment sought
Clear Monday night, with a low · "' Blunt, Eilts a: Loewl
in ·the mid 50s. Mostly sunny
Am Eleetrlc Power ., ........... 29~
General ·· Motors Acceptance.
AT&amp;T .......... ........... ....... ...... 40')1,
Tuedsay, with highs between 80
Corporatlqn,
Chesapeake~ . Is
and 85.
·
Ashland Oil .. .. ....................35%
seeking
$3,462.31
from Timothy
Extended Forecast
Bob Evans .......................... 12*
Charming Shoppes ......... ...... 8J1 · R. Priddy, · Pomeroy, In the
Wed.aesday th1'811Jh Frtday
Meigs County Court of Common
Fair through tbe period, with
City Holding Co ................. :.14
Pleas.
'dally highs In the 80s and . Federal Mogul ............. .. ...... 17
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34\7
overnight lows ranging from the
Heck's .... ....................... ...... 2%
· mid 50s to the mid 60s.
Key Centurion , .................... 14
Granted dissolutions
· ON CARPET Cl~ANIN'G
Lands' Erid, .. , ............... ; ..... : 16 ·
WHOLE HOUSE SPE(IAL
Granted dlssoluUons by the
Limited Inc ..., .......... , .... :., .. 40~
7
ON ANY COMiiNAnON OF 5
Meigs County Court of Common
Multimedia Inc . ...... ·........... 7'li'
Pleas are Reldun Ovrebo-Welker Rax Restaurants ................. . 2\7
ROOMS, HAllWAY AND BATH
and Gerald Timney Ovrebo· . Robbl~ &amp; My~rs ................ 15%
·wettter, 'a nd Reldun OvreboShoney s Inc. ......... , ............ 13~
' ONLY
·Welker has been restored to her . Star Bank·............... .'.. .... :.... 19%
ADVANCED CLEANING· •
malden name of Reldun Ovrebo;
Wendy's Int'l.. ................. .. .. 4%
Mark · Parrlson . and Linda J.
Worthington lnd .... ·.. ~ ........... 20\j,
SEIVICE
H
(Asl!land Oil's aecond-quarter
arriSon; and Cathy ·Hart and ~et 1.12/share vs. lo!l8 •.21 after
446-3915
Monty Hart.
ebal.'p.)

•

Hospital news
Veteraas Memorial
Saturday admissions - Helen
Eblin, .Pomeroy; Walton Manley, Reedsville; Nellie Brown,
Pomeroy; and Edna Pickens,
Middleport.
satufilay Discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - Dorothy
•
Roush, Mlddlepcitt.
Sunday discharges -.Willie F.
Blaine, Gladys Short.

Department went ,to College
Rqad for a structure' fire at the
Chris Capehart residence . . The
Middleport Fire Department assisted. Accordlng.to,Jeff Jones , a
spokesman for the Rutland Fire
Department. the ,structure sustained heat, smoke, and water·
damage In the two rooms which
were Involved. There were approximately 15 men on the·scene
and there were no Injuries, Jones
reported. No. other Information
was available.
'!:he Pomeroy unit at 3:54a .m.
went to Railroad Street for
Dorothy Roush who as trans·
ported to Veterans.
The Tuppers Plains unit, at
1:49 p.m. wenttoPlneTree Drive
for Audrey Crites who was taken
to Camden Clark. ·
At 4: 11 p.m. th~ .Middleport
unit 'rent to General H!irtlnger
Parkway for Brad Robinson who
was transported to Veterans.
The Salem Township Fire
Department waS called to Route
325 at 7:35 p.m. on an auto
accident. The 'Rutland emergency units assisted and took
Carolyn McMillian and Charles ·
McMillian to Holzer Medical
Center.
Flnal]y, at 9:29 p.m. on Sunday, the . Racine u·nlt went to
Bas han Road for Margaret John·
son wbo . as transported to
Veterans.

S

Indians drop

12·9 battle

Daily Number
201

to Blue Jays

Pick-4
2457
LGw ton(Jht near 10. Sunay
Wed.aesday. HIJh In-the mid

3

•

•ocks

Vol.40. No.243
Copyrighted 1990

•
•

1 Sect ton, 10 Pages 26 Centa
A Multimedi,. Inc: . Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, April 24. 1990

Planners discuss ·industrial
site
development
.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Getting that brochure out Is a
Sentinel News Staff
first step In letting Industrialists
Industrial site development In know what Is available and
Meigs County was discussed by · happening In ~lgs County, said
•
William B. Snyder, manager of Snyder.
Economic Development for the
"While Southeastern Ohio is
Columbus-Southern Power Co., not as much of a well-kept secret
at Monday's meeting or the as It once was since the State has
Meigs County Regional Planning been pushing so hard, It still will
Commission.
take lots of preparation here to
The speaker was Introduced by mwke things . happen," the
Leesa Murphy after she an- speaker continued.
nounced that an Industrial broLack of flat landoutofthefiood ·
· chure will be prepared this year plain with water and sewer
with the cost to be underwritten avalla·ble was listed by .the
by the American Electric Power speaker as the primary problem
system.
In gettlr.g Industry Into Meigs
.---------~----~--~

County. " Preparation Is everything In Industrial develop·
ment," he said.
He stressed the Importance of
not "confusing activity with
accomplishment' ' and of being
able to look at loeatlons and
separate "Industrial sites from
corn fields." He said that Is
determined by whether a sewer
system Is readily available to the
location.
"A company will not look at a
site that Is not served by a ·
sewage system,:· )leemphaslied.
·Snyder commended the county
for trying and encoural!e&lt;i offJ.o

.

clals to "keep on keeping on"
since Industrial dev~lopment is a
long-term buslness.-Butheagaln
stressed that "no sewer means
no prospects."
He said that the Hobson area
wouk! be the premiere Industrial
site In Meigs &lt;;ounty If It was
filled in and raised above the
flood plain. Plans are moving
forward by Middleport whiCh
recently Incorporated ·that area
toputlnw~terandsewerservlce.

Commissioner Richard Jones
asked the speaker If the lack of
sewer would rule out development of the Great· Bend area

which Is owned by the. utility and
also asked If that land Is
available. Snyder responded that
the lacd Is not available, that "at
some point in time the utility wlll
probably buDd a plant there... that area Is pure gold to them."
Snyder said that right now he
has nothing In Meigs County with
water and sewer to even show
except the old Pomeroy junior
high school building and the
about 14 acres surrounding lt.
He noted that the competition
for industry Is really Intense and
that the Important thing now Is to .
be ready when an opportunity

comes. Gettlrtg sites 'Identified,
and ruling out those where sewer
systems are not availa ble, and
preparing the broc hure are first
steps, he said.
The good news , accordfng to
Snyder, Is that the utilities, the
railroads, and the Ohio Departmen t of Development are ready
to help.
The speaker who has traveled
to the Far East several times
said that there are foreign
prospects as well as domestic
prospects out there. He again ·
emphasized the lmPQrtance of :
on page
. Continued
.
. 10

Middleport Council· adopts new
•
medical, life r,nsurance program

APRIL SPECIAL

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

Sentinel News Staff
A new medical and life Insurance program for employees
was adopted by Middleport Village Council at Its Monday night
meeting lilt village hall.
Council adopted a resolu lion
approving participation In the
Ohio Governments Health Benefit Program, through the Buck·
eye Hills-Hocking Valley Development District. The program
will go Into effect on May 1.
T mu"ll F. . 1\nder!ionofBuckeye
}!}}!~ .W~J :With Council I!) explain
r • !IJ.9.bealth care and life aoverage,
~ • a!oat With the converslon.plan
· which Is available to employees
leaving village employment. To·

StJ995 '

•

•

tal cost for the health care for the
18 employees will be $70,428 a.
year. In addition Council ap ..
proved $10.,000 life Insurance on
each oerson to be paid · by the
vlll~_ge at a cost of $669.60 a year.
Chief of Pollee Sid Little met
with Council to discuss sick leave
and accumulated benefits. Cur·
rently .employees are able to
accumulate 120 days. Little
asked for more accumulajlon
time. Council tabled the matter
until tile next meeting.
·
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the agreement on the Appalachia Regional Commission
housing project has been received. The $43,869 grant will be
paid SiO,OOO In advance, he noted,

with the balance to be received asc
reimbursement for bills.
.
Council agreed to appropriate
$55,000 Into the the ARC Housing:
Fund for the year. May()r llof-:
fman noted that the village is·
currently advertising for a per-'
son to flU the job and thar
applications will be In before
next Council meeting. The pro-'
gram Is scheduled to go Into;
operation ·in early May.
A community block grant :
application for $510,000 has been ;
filed, Mayor Hoffman reported. ·
He said that $50,000 from Issue
monies had been designated to
the ·project and $25,000 In funds
for the second year of ARC
Continued on page 10

2: ·

PAMPERS
, GUEST SPEAKER - William
·manal(e!', Economic Development, ColumbusSoulliern Power Co., 'Columbus, talked on
Industrial aile development at Moaday's meetlnc
of the Metp County Regional Plannlug Commls-

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'

"I didn' t know him, but he was
a legend In the party, " said Ohio
Democratic Party Chairman
James Ruvolo. "He ' was a
govermir and senator and very
few have held both titles .. His
electoral success Is rtght up there
with anybody In Ohio's blstbry."
..

-

·~ ~

....

__

I
..:. --~·

PiCiimii

Murphey, who presented
new 1110 Melp
County brochure, and C. E. Blakeslee, executive
director of the Plannlnc Commission.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) -The shuttle Discovery's
crew rocketed Into a record-high
orbit Tuesday ,arrying the $1.5
billion Hubble Space Telescope
on a quest to answer humanity 's
most profound questions about
the birth and fate ofthe universe.
An hOur and a half after the
ship's picture-perfect blastoff,
Discovery's two 60-foot payload
bay doors were opened, exposing
the lllOSt expensive sate!Ute ever
bunt to the space environment
·for . the first time. The ship's
five-member · crew then was
given formal permission to .press
on with ·the flight.

-...

-~.

.

mark. The problem was quickly
resolved and Discovery triumpliantly thundered away on a
spectacular 8 \!,-minute climb to
a safe preliminary orbit.
"Three, two, one and liftoff of
the space shuttle Discovery with
the Hubble Space Telescope, our
window on the universe," said
NASA launch commentator
George Diller said as the $2
billion spaceplane climbed
through a partly cloud:v, sky.
Shriver and Bolden fired Dis·
"I think our lives are going to · covery's orbital maneuvering
change. Our concept of the rockets 48. minutes Into the
universe, our understanding of
mission to put the spaceplane
our global perspective In the Into a record orbit with a low
environment of the universe as a
point of 358 mites and a high point
''The adventure begins! " said
whole Is just going to be changed of 381, roughly twice as high as ·
all elated Edward Weller, a by this telescope. And It's good to shuttles usually fly, giving the
NASA astronomer who has have such a perfect start to such astronauts a unique .view of the
worked with the sp11ce telescope . an adventure."
Earth below.
project for years. "It's going to ,
Discovery blasted off with a
"It looks like It's still a nice day
revolutionize astronomy."
'
ground,shaking • roar at 8:34 down at the cape," said Hawley
With Discovery sailing along in a.m., three minutes late because as Discovery salleil over Florida
tip-top shape, commander Loren or a minor last-second computer completing Its first orbit. ''It
!lhrlver. 45, co-p!iot Cha.r les glitch at the T·mlnus 31-second
seems like we were just there."
'
'
.
'
.

COLUMl:IUS, Ohio &lt;UPil Gov. -Richard Celeste signed
legislation Monday establishing
a state program of licensing
businesses and Individuals that
. test for radon and treat homes,
offlces and schools to elbhlnate

•

Bolden, 43, Steven Hawley, 38,
Bruce McCandless, 52 , and Kalhryn Sullivan , 38, geared up to
test the shuttle's . 50-foot-long
robot arm, which will be used to
deploy the space telescope Wednesday afternoon.
.
"It was a perfect start to a
great' adventure for scientific
thought for mankind," said Colin
Norman of the Space Telescope
Science Institute and Johns Hopklns University In Baltimore.

GovernOr signs rad__o n licenSing bil.l
CLAIIOL ··

recent months. He died there
Saturday.

slon.

Di.Scovery soars · into space

·8 ''

Continued fro111 page 1

----- ----------- ·

Ohio Lottery

~]

Weather

Lausche~ .. ·
.

from -pag~

Leadership...

EMS responds to · 14 calls
Qnlts of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to 14 calls for assistance
over the weekend.
On Saturday, at 2:04 .a.m. the
.Pomerey unit went to Reedsville
for Don G. Jones who was taken
to St. Joseph Hospital.
The Pomerey unit, at 8: 52
a.m., was called to Wolf Pen
Road for Helen Eblin who was
transported to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
At 9: 56 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
responed to a call on Htn Street
for Edna Ferguson whO was
taken to Pleasant · Valjey
Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit, at 2: 10
p.m., went to Route 33 for Nellie
Brown who was transported to
Veterans.
At 3:01p.m. the unit responded
to a call on Beech Street lor
Maragret Nunn who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital, and at
4:02 p.m. the unit went to ·
Amedc\ll'e for Ruth McElroy
who was transported to
Veterans·.
Saturday'S final call for assistance came at 11: 20p.m, when the
Tuppers Plains unit went to
Reedsville for Frank Blse who
was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital.
On Sunday, at 12:01 a.m. the
Rutland unit went to Harrisonville for Jeff King who was
transported to Veterans.
At 12:45 a.m. the Rutland Fire

---Meigs announcementS -----1-

ce.nslng "proposal. for several
years • .

The new law will require the
director of health to approve
training courses 'and laboratortes conducting the tests. main·
lt .
•
lain .lists of licensees, receive
Starting July 24, the Ohio complaints from the public,
Department of Health will ad- conduct tnspectlons and coordl·
minister and enforce the llcensnate thl!'- state program with
.11!11 program In accordance with school ndon prlll!rams.
.rules adopted by t)le Public
rhe new law establishes II·
Health Council. .
·• mlted llabiUty for licensed pracRlldoll Is a colorless, odorless tltloners, permits the state attorradloactlve gas which occurs ney general to seek a civil fine of
naturally In the earth; but which up to · $1,000 a day for any
.can . seep through cracks In vlolatton.
,
foundations or cement sllabs,
It also sets criminal penalties
causing potential harm to lnhab- of a maximum six-month· jail
ltal)ts expoaed over long periods term or maximum $1,000 tine for
of lime.
p~:_acllclng without a license,
· The state of Ohio Is concerned ' f!llllng to submit records .· or
about unqualified i:ompanles do-· ~d!Jl&amp; radon-rellited services
log the testing and treatment, bued on radon test results from
and Rep. Joseph Secrest, D· research.
.
Among tho~uempt from the
l'!llnecavllle, 'l'Orked on the II·

licensing requlremepl'are people
tes tlng and treating their own
home or property, those licensed
In other states and those conductIng research.
. The governor alsO signed these
bills, effective July 24:
-Requiring the state to adopt
rules for disposing of construction and demolition debtls;
• - ensuring that 13 state boards
and , commissions have a
member who Is at least 60 years
old;
-establishing' licensing requirements lor nail sal~ and
managing manicurists;
·
-requiring every state agency
with a federally funded employment and training program to
give prlol'lty to veterans;
-closing a llli.blllty loophole In
the child abuae reportlna law and
another loophole In the law
protectltlll 15-year olds from
sexual advances.
\t

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oJUS11CI!; WRIGHT SPECIAL GUEST Supreme Court .Justice J. Crall Wright was a
special guest at at Wednesday a(Jbt's Llncola Day
dinner of the Melp County Republican Party. His

Pomeroy

man arrested
by sheriff
Michael Gilkey , 19, Cave
Street. Pomeroy, was arrested
. Monday on an aggravated menacing threat charge following
an Incident on Bailey Run Road,
reports ·the Meigs County Sherlfr s Department. According to
the report, he Is charged wltb
striking George VIncent, Rutland, with a tire tool. VIncent
was taken to Veterans Memorial
•Hospital l\11ere he was treated
and released. Gilkey posted bond
for appearance In Meigs County
Court.
Deputies took a report frOm
V~kle Metheney, Wellston, In
which she stated she had acne io
a residence In Meigs County and
dUritlll an altercation, tbe mirror
and lett tall ll1ht were knocked
out of the car she was di1:vlng.
Continued on pap 10
•

llolt for the dlaner waa Melp County Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred w. Crow ID. ·Pictwed
wltb Judce Crow,left, and Supreme Court Jusllce
Wrlcht are Sybil Ebersbach, left and Sara Gibbs.

---Loeal news

briefs-~

Free trash pickup .offered
Lebo nan Township res ldents are being given the opportunity
to have their trash hauled away free of charge over the nexl
week.
·
.
The township trustees advise that any resident can leave
trash which has been properlY packaged at the township garage
before noon on May 2 and It will be hauled to the landfill at no
cost to them .

Trash must be.boxed, bagged
P,omeroy VIllage Council requests that all trash be boxed,
bagged and placed at the curb for pick up. AppUances, tires, and
brush will not be picked up. second ward pickup will be
Wednesday; third ward on Thursday, and fourth ward on •.
Friday.

EMS lws three Monday rolls
Unl~ of the Meigs County EmergenCy M!!dlcal Service
respcl!lded to three calls for assistance on Monday.
At 9:01 a .m .. the Rutland unit was called to Goute 124 for
Continued on page 10
·

�r

Tuuday, April24, 1990

...

Commentary

P.sa 2..:...1M ·o,~~y Sentinel

Pomaroy-Midd'aport•.·Qijo.·
Tuaeday. Apr124, 195M) ·

'

Ill Court Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREsTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

· l::.!m~
.~~~

,......_,.._...,...,r'T"'GOc:::loo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlllber

I·

,.

. CHABLENE HOEn.ICB
Generai .Muqer·

A MEMBER of The U11ited PreSs Jnternatlonal, I11iand Dally Press
· Assilclai\On and the AmeriCan Newsjlaper Publishers Association.
·

.

..

PAT WHITEHEAD ·
Asslsialli Pub!lsher/Ccintroller

I

j.

.

L:E:TI'ERS OF OPimON are welco!lle. 'T hey should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wlth
name, address and telephOne number. No unsigned letters wm be publlsl)ed. Letters should beln gdbdtaste, addressing Issues, not personall-'
Ues.
·

Backstairs at .
the White House
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White HoWle Reporter
WASHINGTON - White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
must feel Uke a pariah sometimes In hiS own SPfi!clal stronghold. The .
problem Is he smokes clg!lrs.
. ·
His former secretary banished him from his office area whenever
he wanted to relax and smoke a cigar. .
. . .
.
· Much to the dellght.of reporters and cameramen, he used to retreat
to the press ·center to have a puff or two. On those occasions, hi would
put his feet up and survey the scene and reporters could pick up a
morsel or two of"lnformatlon.
..
But, alas, a vigilant reporter, who has crusaded against smoking In
the press room, gave him his marching orders. So Fitzwater 110 longer
wanders down to smoke and chat.
He .has been for~ed to go outside In the' West Wing area, rain or
shine. That's the way the world Is for even one of the .most powerful
men In the White House.
For reporters, it could be a health boon, butlt Is aloss of access that
Is precious when a .p ress SpOkesman Is operating on 10 cylinders and
rushing from meeting to meeting as they do In the Bush W,hlte House.

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The Daily Sentinel

The prestitent Isn't afraid of reporters. It Is a rare chief executive
who will wander Into Fitzwater's office where there could be
reporters hanging out In the late afternoon or early evenl11g. He also ·
often pokes his head In the press room on his way back to the mansion
· for dinner after a day In the Oval Office.
His departure Is usually a signal that the official day Is done and the
press can wrap up. But often It means that he Is going to pop Into t)le
family quarters for a brief time and then head forhls favorite Chinese
restaurant.
,
So off the motorcade gOes to Falls Church, Va., to the Peking
Gourmet restaurant.- where the president Indulges to ·his heart's
· content.
· · ·
·
Reporters also can order their favorite dishes and l!t the same tline
·keep an eye on the president;. .
.
•.
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Bush frOwns ·on bill
.

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..~&lt;:::":&gt;"&gt;, \O\

Jack Anderson

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&amp;Dale Jl'an Atta
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bogged down In the ethics debate over then:speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas, and the " motor voter"
bill never came IQ the noor last
year. ·
Now the bill Is hot news. again,
but If It Is l'assed till~ session, It
would not take effect untll 1993.
Bush has lost 'Interest. His big
problem now Is how he will veto It
without looking like he oppo,ses
more voter registration.
· Rep • . Bill Thomas, R-Callf.,
Isn't being much help. ·Thomas
has been busy marshaling the
GOP ·forces to reshape the bill
and ellmlliate the potential . f9r
trai&amp;d. He 'apd others l!ave
gathered statistiCs to refute the
old folklore that only Democrats ·
benefit from heayy registration.
One poll by the New York
Times and CBS News showed
tl!at 29 percent of unregistered
adults consider themselves to be
Republicans, compared to 23
percent who call · themselves
Demcicrats.
· Richard Wlrthlln, Ronald 1teagan' s favorite pollster, took a poll
and . concll!decJ that · younger
voters, ages 18 to 24, when asked
· to vote on a generic congres-.
slonal ballot, favored t)le geqetlc
.ijepubllcan candidate over. the
Democrat · 57 percent to 35
percent. Many of the . young
people are unregistered... but
would be. automatically Signed
up under the "motor voter" bilL
That's how the bill got off the
ground, beacause both parties,
for different reasons, believed
they would benefit from expanded reglstranon.
The bill· was headed for easy
passage In the HOuse In late
• · January. when the' White House
began. to lobby against .lt. The
reason, according,to one source,,
was that Bush still )lelleved In
Teeter's poll w!tlch showed that
higher registration would ·nwan
more Democrats•In Congress,
Despite Bush's ll!st-mlllute objections, the bill pa.~sed· the
House on Feb. 6lJy avoteQf2Jll'to
132, Now It Is pending In tlle
Senate where word of Bush's
earlier self-serving shenanigans
Is spread~ng behind closed doors.
The dupllcl)' may come back to
haunt him.
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Is plan tQ refo~111 Teamsters ·. flaw~d?
·l?~l?l'sed

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illngs to
tl!li ·:,ln • While
·'ftQ
Quillen finished the game. They
A'
._.AD
..._ ·
.
combin~ for 3 walks .and · 7
.
.
E lsewhere In the American;
strlkeolira.
By ERJK K. LIEF .
dered 24 earned runs . In 15.2
· ChriSMetzgerpltc.h edwell, but
VPISponaWI'Itet
Innings In his lilSt four ·s tar ts at League, Toronto outscored . .
dldn"t get the defensive support
Frank Tanana's contempt fol' Minnesota, was the biggest fa c- Cleveland. 12-9, Detroit t ripped ,
Minnesota 6-3 and Baltimore·
as he fanned seven and walked . the Metrodome f\leled his re- . tor.of all.
:
three.
venge· against , the team which
Tanana, 1-0, held the 'Twins dropped Kansas City 8-5. .
Southern .hitter$ were Brent calls It home.
l)ltless over the flrsi fou(lnnlngs
Bille J~Q&gt;II 12, IDdllUUI •
;
Shuler an!! Mark.Taylor with two
Aftl!r getting pound~ In his and walked one. Reliever Mike
At Toronto, Tony Fernandezhits each, Andy Baet a double, previous four ou tlngs. In the Henneman got the fi:n&lt;ll two outs dellvered a t!o"o-run single- In the
sixth Inning and Fred McGriff
and singles by. Jamie Anderson, . Twins'. home · par~ •. the Detroit for his four!)l save of the·year. ·
Hank Cleland .Jason Quillen, Jer- ... pitcher channeled his dislike ro·r . Minnesota starter Roy Smith, led Toronto's 17.-hlt attllck with
rod Moore,Javler Bgthollo, and · the domed stsdlum Into a. tight 0·2, allOwed four runs, three four hits. Frank Wills, 1-.1, got the
Doug Lavender.
.
focus by scattering six hits over 6 earned, and seven hits over flye win with one Inning of perfect:
Southern plays Oak Hill Tl!urs- 2-31nnlngs Monday ntiht to lead Innings. He walked one and relief. Duane W11rd earned his·
secOnd save wlt.h three shutout:
day In a leagile game at home.
the. Tigers to a 6-3 victory over. · struck out two. ·
,
the Twins.
'The .Twins .a re such a good · Innings. Kevin Wlckander, the ·
· ·
·
•To · me It's not baseball," hitting club, especially here," fifth of six Cleveland pitchers,'
·p·
•
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.
Tanana said of the tefioJI-roofed said Tiger Manager Sparky took the loss despite not allowing
Minneapolis ballpark. "I don't Anderson: " But:Tanana' pltcbed· a hit. .
,
Orioles 8, Royals 5
care for the park or the way the good tonight. H., had a real short
game is playl!d here. A lot pf spring training and l!as had to · At Baltimore, Sam Horn pro- .
· Durst a .t riple, and Jefi Horner · two singles.
goofy, crazy tl)lngs can happen . pitch In some very cold weather. vided a .two-run single· and Joe .
Easternhosts.KygerC:reeklna
here....
·
· But he's coming closer. Two Orsulak had three hits to power ·
two singles.
Baltimore. Pete Harnisch, 2-0, ·
. North Gallla · hitters were suspended game tonight ln which · However, on this night; !twas . more statts and he'll be ·back."
the TWins and not their oppo- . ·Twins players were also quick who scattered four hits over 61-3
Darlil Smith and Brad Fuller EllS leads 2-0 In th.e third, then
nents w.ho fell vlctlffi 10 the to credit Tanana . " He. was Innings and retired 14 straight
with singles; and Casey Staton EHS goes to HT on Wednesd~y ·
~um
-.
w~l-1,
park's quirks. Several TWins lost mixing It' UP; throwing "some . batters at one stretch, received
.,
e~- ·
•
balls In the ·white dome ceiling fastballs, some forkballs. " said relief from Jay Aldrich. Aldrich
·
·
· · ·
andrlghtflelderCarmeloCastillo Kirby Puckett. " He was just worked the final 2 2-3 to earn his_
· VIsiting Eastern rolled to an 8·2. credit.
misplayed two fly balls Into hits. regular Frank 'out there. He did a· first save. Storm Davis, 1·2, took
win over North Ga!Ua to boost Its
Eastern hitters were Lee Gllll-.
This time, Tanana, who surren- great job."
·
the loss.
overall record to ·11-1 and 8-1 In lan with a single, Tabby Phillips
·
·

.TheSouthernTomadiJesswep; . getting relief from
·
adoubleheaderfromtheSouthw- and Joe· ·ifammond . along the
estern Highlanders Moftday evway .
.
enlng In SYAC baseballactlon to - Southern hitters . were Jamie
notchthelr4thand5thwll)softhe Anderson, Hank Cleland,Atnle
season.
Dugan,Javler BothoUo each wltti
Southern Is now 5-9 overall and singles, whllz players getting
5·5 In the league.
.
multiple hits · .Included · Jason
. SHS rolled to a 17-0 five-Inning Quillen, Jerrod Moore .~ nd Doug
mercy ru1 win In the first. lame. ·Lavender with two · singles
Southern's Andy Baer pitched apiece.
.
. · ·. '
.
his first complete game In quite a
Sites had the lone SWHS hits, a ·
whle as he fanned 14 batters anq double ali~ a single. h
walked just one· In scattering to
· In the second game Mark
hits' to plck Up the win.
Taylor and Jason Quillen com: ·
John ·sues suffered the loss blned for a no-hitter as Southern
wlthl4 walks and fouh trikeouts,
rolled to a 10-,P victory' .
Taylor went 'fll.;e ·p erfect In·
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WASHINGTON _ The White cess" by allowing Americans 18 ·reitstratlon. The best !!!Ctlc Is to .
HouSe secretly ·pushed for the and over to automatl~ally ~- claim that liberalized reglstra'"" tlon leaves the system wide open
" motor voter" registration bill ter to Vote at the Same time th~,
·
·
get
a
.driver's
license.
A
time
·to
fraud.·
·
last year because a confidential
~"
Is f ·
poll taken for President. Bush .· the electorate Is expanded, deBut Bush, · to . the surpr e o
showed that It would boost his
IJ!C)Cracy IS served. . . .
both parties, early . on .,began
re-election prospects .)n 1992:
But politics may .not necessar· speaking favorably .of a · motor
What Bush failed to tell his fellow . lly be served, and Bush knows It . vo~" b~'
didn't know
Repu!)lltans Is that the same poll . because of his polls,
. · at ongress
, ·.
t
·
In
Janu
·
ary
..
.
1989,
.
befo!"l!
Bush
was
that
the
presidents
.
lnbterehlss
shOwed GOP senators an~ repre·
11 t k
was Inaugurated, several House was fueled by a PO a en Y
bl
sentatlves would proba Y net . Democrats began making noises personal pollster, Robert Teeter.
fewer votes from the same . about pushing ttirough 8 massive The poll showed that If all the,
:~::~~ - voter r.e glstratlon voter registration bill that would· people_. who were old enough to
A.nd now 1111s year, when It Is ·be difficult for the president to vote · In 1988, but . were not
. veto.
··
·
r;eglstered, had been able to vote,
I t ra tlon blll
I
c ear th a t any regs
8u h uldb
b a much
passed would not tske effect until
Democrats have . always ·fig· , s wo
ave won Y
Sh
ured they benefit from a large . wider margin than he did. B.u
1993, Bush Is back .on the GOP voter turnout the Republicans ., was tantalized by what that
bandwagon opposing the bilL An . prlvate)y' agree'
. , _"We pray for might mean to h.lm In the 1992
Increase in registered voters
1 1
• h 1 1 1993 be
h 111 rain," one Republican told us. e ect on.
. ·
won t e P n
cause e w
The GOP believes Its stalwarts
o,ne. source fa
. mllla.r with Teetron~the~t~~~ alai ed
Several · Senate Republican
'will brave bad ·weather lo vote, er s poll told us that It 0 urn ri
leaders are furious because they
but a certain percentsge of those \lP bad news for. Republica ·
1d f h ,
ld
who favor the Democratic candl- politicians other than the presldates wlll ·s tsy home. At least,· dent. The poll showed 62 perceJ!t
have gotten w n o t e pres en,
tlal · poll and have caught onto
that has been the folklore.
of the congressional vote going to
Bush's sell-serving strategy.
So normally a Republican Democrats.
The "motor voter" reglstra·
11
tlon bill was conceived as a way
president would find a way to
Bush's support for the bl
.of energizing the electoral prooppose a hill expanding . voter came lo · naught. The House

At least half the White House press office siaffwlll remain In Dallas
on May :12 when Rresldent Bush and his enlouragemove on to H!)ustoil
tor other events.
::The staff will remain In Dallas to attend the wedding.o! asslstsnt
press secretary Jay Allison of )'¥fidland, Texas, ancl Melissa Compton .. WASHINGTON (NEA) -The
federal government's ambitious
. of the White Hou_se Media Office, who used to work In the press office.
campaign to restore. democracy
Allison's father, James Alllso!l, used to work for Bush·tn the oil
to ~he Teamsters union has
biJslness In Midland ·and they are old friends. But It appears the
sustained
a potentially devaststPresident.and Mrs. Bush, who have been Invited to the wedding, have
lng
setback:
Proposed election
oiher commllmlmts.
•
.
guidelines
lack
safeguards to
· Aides said that the Bushes also have a policy against attending
Insure
-honest
balloting.
'
weddings because. they rplght be disruptive to other,s In view of the
Under
the
terms·
of
an
agreesecurity. measures that have to be tsken. Some presldentiaJ families
also have refrained from attending weddings be!:ause they· do not · ·. ment reached last year to resolve
racketeering charges brought by
want to stel!l"the show from tbli principals.
.The wedding will take place In the Episcopal Church oflncarnatlon.. · government prosecutors against
the union and Its principal
The couple Will have their hone~m&lt;ion In the British VIrgin Islands.
officers, the Teamsters accepted
the .'a ppointment by a federal
Bad weather seems to follow the president at summit meetings
abroad. No one who was there will forget the hurricane-size storm . judgeofthreespeclalmonltorsto
oversee union affairs.
that prevailed during the summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail
. One of them Is' Elections
Gorbachev on Malts last December.
Officer Michael ·Holland,' a Chi. The ·summit meeting on Friday, April 13, with British Prime
cago )awyer mandated to super·
Minister' Margaret Thatcher In Bermu~ was marked by_ rainy
vise the forthcoming elections
weather with 35 mph winds.
·
for International union officers. But the weather does not deter Bush. He played 18 holes of-golf In
such weather and loved It with the wind and the rain In his face. His · ·Including what could be the first
contested race for Teamsters
golfing pals, Including Secretary of State James Baker and White
president since 1907.
House chief o( stsff John Silnunu, did not seem as happy to be there, to
The balloting Is to be conducted
put It mildly.
ln .three stsge5: In the autumn of
1990, members of each union
'
loeal will elect delegates· to an
International convention. At that
meet)ng, to be held In Orlando,
Fla. In June 1991, candidates for
all major offices will be nom,l·
nated. Ftnal)y, election$ for
lnterna ti9nal officers will be held
among members of each local in
the autumn of 1991. ·
· The Teamsters,· however, are
•.
notoriously corrupt. The Assocla·
tlon for Union Democracy notes,
for example, that' the Justice
Department "charged that this
union has been dominated. by
organized crtme (and) that It has
been the scene of bribery' extortion, Intimidation and murder."
As a result, challenging the
power and authority of Incumbent union leaders at any level from local to International always has required considerable courage from Teamster
members. ·
Seemingly oblivious to those
problems, Holland recently unveiled election niles that allow no
.direct supervision whatever of
the two rounds of balloting to bti
held at the 1,000 or more sites
5!!rvlng the ml!mbers of the 650
Teamster locals.
There. Is no . provision for
court-appointed monitors or
other neutral observei"s at any of
tbose polling places. Instead, the
•
elections wUI be conducted and
~
supervised by ,lnclilnbent offlc'I) 1990 by NEA. Inc. · 'i • C
. ers of Teamster locals, most of
· Whom are fiercely Joyal to the
union's entrenched regional and
"Be gentle! Remember, I have_the same vulna$lonal leadership. ··
.nersblllt/es as complex computer systems."
· Those local .officers will be In
charge of distributing ballots for

: Berry's Wo.rld

Southent wins ·tWo ·from .SW Tigers, Orioles and Blue Jay~
~III .P9tter
clal~
captu...e ~
m• J·u·ni·or c;--c·u···n. .

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The Daily sentinei..:_Page 3

PCJtr.a'9Y-Middleport, Ohio

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. er .. .l._rat.es,·. . • _., . ·
EaO/0'· es
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The·Eastern Eagles rolled to a
. 4-l. wlnoverN:orthGalllaMonday
evening to )lOst niler lOth win of
the Mason In area SVAC b9YS
baseball action.
, · · .
Eastern Is now 10·3.overall and
&amp;:3 In ' the SVAC, "while North
Gallla Is 6,4, S-4.
·· '
Jeff ou"rst picked u!) the win
while scattering four hits, fan·
nlng 5 and walk~g one. Darin'
Smith suffered the loss wltli four
strikeouts and two walks.
A three run third Inning gave
EHS a lead It never relinquished,
. EHS hitters were singles by
Tim Bissell, Michael Smith, Matt
Flnlaw, . Mark Murpllv. Jeff
'

·.. EH·.S airls.·.

·p_h· O"'.er BI"d.

I

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s·•.2....

0
!~~~~~~;c~~~-da~
In glrlsSVAC . ' :n~ ~~!~1e~d~:d D~~;s ~~~~~~· .· Juu,
' Edna Driggs. ' was again the 'With 'three sacrifice fly balls and
~'

winning· pitcher as she fanned
two and walked one. Karen
,Spence suffered . the loss with
nlne,walks and 8 strikeouts to her

.~

-·Steeb upset
in first round
at Monaco

three RBis.
·
North Gallla Is now 2-6 overall.
Eastern goes to Hannan Trace
on Wednesday.

Juuett.e attract. re.cord field
~·

Jersey. He also recorded tour
DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI) Beach Towel and In The Pocket seconds arid four thlrds . and a ·
head ,a record list of 223 eligibles best mile time of 1: 53.4 . .
The Jug' s companion filly
for the 45th edition of the Little
Brown'' Jug 3-year-old pacing pacing s take, the $230,000
· ·
.
. Jugette, al~ has attracted a
classic. .
· The Jug, ~lth Its $500,000 record 103 hdrses ·whose,owners
purse, Is the third jewel of this made the final sustaining
year's · triple crown of 3-year' oid · payment:
That list Is headed by Bruce's
pacing. It will be run Sept. 20 on
the Delaware County Fair· Lady, the top money-winning
ground's lightning fast half-mile freshman filly pacer of 1989 with
track on the final day of Dela- earnings of .$628,925. Owned by
ware's week of Grand Circuit
racing.
Beach Towel, a son of French
Chef, tops this · year's . u .s :
Trotting Assliclatlon Experlmen·
tal Championship ratings with a
potentlaf mile of 1: 49 .~.
The bay colt, owned by the
Uptown Stable ·of New :York 1 wo~
11 of 13 starts last year and Sl!t his
lifetime mark of 1: 53.31n capturIng the Presldel!tlal Final at
nosecroft RaceWay.
. II) ·The Poc~et, · bY Dlreclor
·Scooter, was last year's richest
· juV,e'nUe colt with earnings ·of
$792,42~. winning .!Ieven of 18
stsrts, 11\cludlng the Governor's
,.,~. w,..at Qarden State P,l\l"kln ~.ew

MONTE 'CAitLO, Monaco .
I (UPI) - Sweden's Jonas Svensson, playing In his adopted home
town, Monday upset'lOth·seed.e d .
Cari-Uwe Steeb of West Ger·
many ?-6 (7-5), 6-3 In the ftrsi ,
rou,nd of the $1,milllon, Monte
• ..
• ·.
Carlo Open. ·
Ano)her Swede; . 2l5th-seeded
· . Magnus Gustafsson, . was ellrtll·
nated by Haiti's Ronald'Agenor,
6·2,.6·2.
.. .
~
The Sovief . Union's Andrei
Chesl)ollov, . the 12th ·seed, and
16th seed Sergi Bruguera of
Spain also advanced -w,lth
straight-set victQI"Ies. Chesnokov ·
downed Yugoslav Goran Prplc,
7-~. 6;3 . an!l· Bruguera stopped
FreJ!climan Jean-Phlllppe, l\J,~·
rla_q, 6-4; 6-L
.
_ · ·
. Svensson, ranked 25th .on the
ATP Tour, .said plllylng at home ··
· Gyfl\naallcs
helped him relax. , · . . . .
Andreas Wecker; a leading
'.'It always makes a difference
East .German gymnast left the
when YO!l can stsy lil your own
country last weekend for a future
!tpartmerit and cook your own
In the West, ihe West German
food," the 25-year·old said.
news agency DPA reported. ·
..
,
I
'
•"Menially I felt very good. I
Weck!!r, European champion
GOING THE DISTANCE - E'a stern hurler Jeff Durst delivers a
know ·Charlie (Steeb) Is a good
and World Cup silver medalist on
. pl&amp;!lh plateward In the sixth Inning of Monday's SVAC baseball
~ompetltor. I tried to work lilm
the horizontal bar, sought a new
game apl•tNorib Gallla at Bldwell-Po~r Elementary. Dur•t, a
around and contuse him a bit...
hO!l')e In Hannover; West ·Ger·
tiOphoinore, flllllliid five, walked one and scattered four hits to help
The difference was very small."
many, DPA said.
push the Eagles to a H win. ( OVP photo llY G. Spencer Osborne)
•Svensson Is among several
tennis . professionals, . InclUding
West German Boris Becker,!lnd
Swede Mais Wllander who have
,
•
I
I
'
'
residences In Monaco, an lnde' ,
A FIRST! -When wild turkey hunting aea&amp;On opened Molljlay _'
pendent principality with '. no
By sco'IT WOLFE
1'-.Blrd of Davidson made one last
. Many local drivers along with
momlng
Ron Eastman was In the field wUh hill gun. It dldll'llake
Income taxes.
.
.
.,
.. Driving the .Little Hocking · bid on the final lap, evading a · Tr~·stat~ a.r ea driver~ have _not
long
for
him to bring ,down a gobbler, his lbnll for this year's.,
· In· other first-round play Mon·
Sanitation number "T-1" WRC splnnlilgcarin theprocesstowln yet completed !Jtelr cars for the .
seuon.
The
turkey, a first for Ron who Ia aq avid hunter of Wild . .
day, Javier SancheZ of Spain
Race Car's 'chassis, second gen· by a nose at the finish.
1990 season, but should be out In ·
game,
weighed
22 po~ and was shot IIi Orange Township.
defeated Fabrlce Santoro, .a
eratlon driver Bobby Davidson
Marc French of Middleport the next couple of weeks. Among
17-year-old Parisian who won
stsged a late-race charge to pass had som~ mechanical problems , those absent were local favorite
last •year's Frenc)l OpenI• ·juniors
.former track champion Harold but put on·a good show never,the-· and top five contender last year
title, .6-2. 6-4.
· .,.
Redman on thelastlapenrouteto less .
'·
· Benny Hickel, along with Ra·
Marauders defeated Alexander
The Meigs Marauders. girls
Ninl!teen-year-old YugQSII'v · winning the exciting 30-lap late . TilE' win was worth $600 plus an cine's .-·" Lee Floyd
and
Bryap
by scores of 22-0 and 24-6. Verna .
softball
team
Is
off
lo
a
reserve
.
Goran Ivanlsevic advanced lflth • model season opener Friday additional $100 bonus 'a dded by Wolfe.
.
Compston had the b[g bat for the
goOf! start despite losing some
a ' 4·6, 6·2, 6-4. triumph over
.evenlilg at Skyline ~peedway .
Whaley's Auto Parts In Darwin,
Gallipolis driver .Phil Davis
tough non-leajfue games. The . Marauders with a· homerun,
Swede.n 's Christian Bergs nom. :
Bobby Mossor brought home who added the bonus m6ney for had his beautifully painted "8double 'and a single, sister Mary
Marauders sport a 4-1 record In
Jordl Arrese of Spain . outthe top prize In the serpj-late any car winning with a stock Ball" ready, but his hauler(A
Compston ripped·a double and a
the T. V.C. and own a ,5-5 record
dueled: Italy's .Paolo . Cane,
· · Davis chassis of his own design)
model dlvlslon.:_whlle the Sports- nosepiece.
single. OtheP Marauder hitter~
overall.
(7:3) • .7-5. · Peru's 22-year-pld
man and street stock' classes
Following Davidson across the limped to the foot of Eastern Hill
In recent action . the· Little were Brooke Coates and Anna
Jaime· Yzaga ell!ninated Lars
were ·washed out by the spring line . was Red'man,Chllders, with transmission problems. DaChapman wlth~ 2 singles. Othe~
Jonsson of Sweden, 6-3, , 6-1.
ralns.'
'·
·
Memel, Larry Miller. Kznny vis was last year's track chaq~hitters Included Bobbl Van~e a
Befor:e a large opening night Johnson, Andy Bond, Dan Morrl- pion In the Whaley's Auto Parts
Tomas Carbonell of. Spain had
double, Yvette Young, Carrie
Iitle .trouble In a 6-3, 6·1 victory
crowd, ilefeJidlng ·track cham· son, and Frank Tucker.
·
special.
.
·
-Bartels, Love Batey, Lorena:
Heat winners In the LM dlv·
The Hobby · StockSportsman· 0 .
over .Swltze,rland ' s Jakob . pion" Bob Adams, ·Jr. of Racine
Oller and Jennifer Chasll!en a
paced the 19 car starting field to lslon were Bob Adams, Jr. , Jack heat went to Aaron Flemming
E-astern's Stephanie Otto a 5-8
Hlasek'.
single each.
·
..
. the green flag, tak{t\g the early Kress . and Butch McGill.
over Larry Stathers, Larry
post man for the 1989-90 Eastern
In other action the Marauder~
T~e Daily. Senthtel
lead over Redman, Bill Childers,
.. BObbv Mossor had •a much 'Brisker, and Mike Adkins of
Eagles girls' basketball team
knocked off Wellston 15-9, leadand-Davidson.
Adams,
despite
an
-ea.~ler
ilmewlnnlngtlieseml-late
Syracuse.
earned
"Freshman
of
the
year"
.
lng the way for Meigs·was Love.
]
·
(USI'Sif-1
early baflle with·Redman, pulled model feature, .claiming victory
The Straet Stock heat was won
honors from the Huntington
Batey with 5 singles, Ginger,
A Dlviolort ot.Ma'lilo~ lllc.
away to a straightway lead and by a wide maf'gln in his brilliant . by Tim RoU, foUQwed by John
Herald-Dispatch for her play this
Findley and Verna Compston a,
looked to'be the class of the field blue Camara. Mossor won over Williams, Glen Lint, and Clair
year.
trl~e and a single each. Allison
Published every anernOCII, -Monday
tllrough Friday, Ill Court St .. Po·
In the' Doll' J3rother'sLarry Mil- ' Dave Meadows' Orange _Crus!l Sullivan.
· ·
The team, which was based on
Gannaway and Lorena Oller
meroy, Oltlo. b~ t~e Ohio Voilley.Pub!hOne ·, Trucklng-~D Drilling special, Jerry Toncray, Buck
The Sportsman · and Street
nominations from co.aches
added 2 singles, Candy Harmon a:
Ushlna C0ntpany/Mu)11medla,- Inc..
number l\55.'.
·
Lamb, Marty Jsner,Chrls Diddle, Stock dlvl.slon:S will rill) double
throughout tlie tri-state·. area:
double and Sherry · Johnson;
· eom&lt;ii"ii1: Ohio.met. Pb. 992-2156. s.
eond ellis pootaJe pal~ at Pomeroy/
had
lapjled
half
·
\he
and
Allen
Baker.
Mossor
was
features
next
week
with
no
extra
was
selected
by
the
newspaper's
Adams
Misty King, Anna Chapman and
Ohio. ~ , · . ·
. .~
field and went unchallenged Until undefeated as he also won the charge to the general admlssl9n
seven-member sports staff.
· Brooke Coates a single each.
Member: United Prna lllt....,.t~ .. · bad luck slowed the' local driver
Helmet Dash, while Buck Lamb
price of $8; Children under ~2
Nominations were accepted
In other action the girls.
Inland DaUy"Praa Aaoolllkm and t)lo
•
free.
from 56 schools In 17 counties of
on the '21st lap. Apparently, took thl' heat.
knocked off Trimble 19-4, Brooke
OhiO Kew....{i.:~ollon. Noltoa.i
something · 1':1 the rear d of
Ra&lt;'lne·s Chris Diddle In the ·. Oj;!splte haying a 15 minute
Kentucky, .Oh!D. and West
coates . led tlie •way · f9t thli
Adyert,IJib!i
tatlv&lt;!.
NewiPIIper
.,.. 733 Tblrd Ave~~ue,
Adams'· mount failed and sent RlpleySpencer McDonald's Res- ·• del8yduetoralnandad1Scusslon,- VIrginia.
winners with a triple and a:
New •Yor_k. New Yp 10017.
.
single. Ginger ' Ftpdlay and·.
Leading · the first team was
· blm to 'the Infield finiShed for t!le tsurant 55 had his beaul';ful glbss of n11es · changes, everything
.evening.
Verna Compston each added · a
~Seada-chon.,. .
hla~k. "The Baron" special In
went like clockwork .for a sue·
Krlstl Thomas, a first team
to Tlie ' Dally sentinel. ll1 eoi..1st.. .
cessful opening day ,
All-Ohio Division II player who
Meanwhile, ~?,ack \D. the pack, contention for most of the evendouble and a single, while Lorena,
Pomei-Oy. Olilo 461611.
Butch MCGill, Coolville's Andy .lng before ~adlng somewhat at '
Ra~lng continues next Friday
has been named the H·D Player
Oller and Abby Blake each added
siJiiacalriJON IIATJIII .
Bond. . Jack· ·Kress, and Joe · the finish. Diddle finished fourth
and each and every Friday of · the Year for the second
a
BJ Cerr:lel or Moler
Memel
put
on
quite
a
show
with
·
last
week
at
Tyler
County
In
his
·
evening
until OctOber, bl!g)nnlng '; straight. season. Lori Hamilton,
OneW-... : .. .... .......... ... ......... .. .$1.40
one Month ..................... .:r:........$6.10 . sometimes three abreast action first effort In the tough semi-late . with warm-ups at 6:30, Time also of Gall!polls was a first team
'ii'RI NG VAll f I I' INfM A
One Year .;.. ......... ,.... ...... :......... $72.80
trials at' 7: 30, and races at 8; 30, · honoree, along ' with Brootte
on the backchute: And;y Bond dlylslon.
.ur, ~~ .'·\
.,
SINGLE COPY ·
. rocketed from· 11th "to fourth,
" -~
'
Smith of Symmes Valley .
.
PBICB
whlleJoeMeinelcamefrOJlll2tll' •
Dally ., ...... ............... ............ 25 Cento,
~ fifth, eve!l!Ual)f .IJ,IOving up a
"'lhl ....... 011111111'"
Subscriber• notdOIIriDilopay thecar·
notch
f9r
fO\D'th
at
,the
finale.
,_
·
R.un'llng
'
.,
Martin
t~
discuss
the
"'e
~alter.
Praaenta
rler 8:1ij remit In advall&lt;@ dlte&lt;t 1o
Tile
· !lentiDol·ou 3.6 or 12 illoath
Fast qualifier Harold Redman
"FOR MEN ONLV"
London Marathon director
Volleyball
bolls.•Crfdlt wUi bt-l!- carriii"Heh
A Spealll FE14ALE REVUE
lltherlted lhe lead on 'the 21st
Ka~h Kiraly and Kent Steffes
Chrts Brasher shimmed the
week.
~
Friday. April 27, 1.990
roiiDd and shot out to a lengthy · BrltishBroadcasdngCompany's
~reeled John ·Hanley and Dan
No subocrlptlono by moll pmnllled In
8·10 P.M.
lead' via the high groove. David·
television coverage of Sunday's
Vrebalovich 15-8.to ~ win the
atMs wtieft h;onw earrllr -~ II
son~s 351 Ford powered tnachlne
"FOR WOMEN ONLV"
available.
,,
marathon saying the telecast
$60,000 Miller Lite ~n at New
pressund the Tyler Mountain
The Cajun ltoom
Orleans on April 22. Before
was "not up to par to say · the
.
Will •• OPen
lloolooertft.
veteran
on
the
Inside,
while
Bill
·
least. ,Coverage was hampered
..
...... Jlolp CloUI7
meetiJII Haniey aDd Vrebalovtch
Coming
May ), 1,880
13 Weeki ...... :.... ....................... ltt,:H
CbJ)ders dropped In behind Davis
bY low cloUds which prevented In the charnpiONhlp, Kiraly and
26 WeekJ ......... ... ;•., .................. PT.fl
The
15th
Annuill
·
to mille It a tJireeo.way, slde-tOhelecoptei's from taking off to
Steffes upeet deleadlnr cham52 Weeki ....... , ....... .. .... .. .. , ........ flUB
&amp;eet
Legt
CDntat
~de battle.
•
.
O.lllde Melp CeljoiJ
btoam plclures from the front of
pions and tbe top-seeded team of
.._ ............WHo••"
13 Weelfi ................. .............. ,..
•
Now,
,It
was.
Font
aga~st
•..
the
race.
Brasher
plans
to
met
.
Slnjln
Smlth·and
Ralldy
Stok!Os,
•
UWPOUS.
01.
. ........ .
26 W~eki ...... ~.......... ...... ;.,, ..•••. ~ .
with BBC Head of Spon Jonathan ; 15-13.
52 WeekJ .............. ,.,.................
411
Cheyy, . 11!1~, the 'rrkl~ white
1

••

''

Robert .walters

II
\

.-~ossot . tqp

winner in Friday event

~

:Meigs girls own ~~ . loop record

!

PubliC Notice

Public Notice
gency tti.t 1hell orioe.

Public Notice

Extra Cl•~l Help·- '8.32
Said
SEC. VIII: ThM a group
emergency of •tro hourato hoojlhal ond mecltCIII lniU,..
per hour
VoluntMi- Flr'l"'on . be opprovld by tho mavor.
onoe pion 1M poovided for Ill
•100.00 per yoer
SEC. Ill: The following ere full·tlme .omplo,_ of the
Council- •n.OOporn\MI· · h-by declereciMiegol hoi- VIllage of Mldllopon . who
ic18yo for oil full·tlme em- 11101. In writing to jlaltit. lngl24)
..._ldlllt of Council · ployl&lt;lo . of the Vllloge of · lpotl In tho·llime, ond thlt
.•30.00 per mHilng (241
Mldclopon: NIW Yoor' o • the p....,lum u..otore be
Day; Memorial Doy; lnde- pold by .the VIII- up to the
Board of Public Affol,. . •1 11~ 00 per -lng (12) pen- Dey; Labor o..,; amount of the pQmium
CIA Board of Public
Th..,koalvlng Day; tho dey quotad for the p,..nt con·
Affli,. - •&amp;91.00 per after Tll•koglvlng; Chrlat· tract.
month .
m• Doy; Employoe'i Birth·
SEC. IX: That oil fuH·tm.
Raldent Dla~her - .dey; VM. .no' Doy; Pr•l- employ- dMirlng to per·
•1100.00 per month
dllnto' Doy.
tloipMe In the Dlon ohloll ftto
Cleric, Water Dopmment.
SEC. IV: ThMIIIIdoolert. on olec:tlon with tho .Cierk
leoo than 1 monthl - - wRibelneffectonMidofter wflhlntencl8yo(10)doyllfvlce - 17111.00 · per Moy 1, 1880.
tor .tho offoatlvo dMo ofthlo
month
. SEC. V: bch .full-time .ordlnonco..
Clerk, Water DoportfOMint, employee of tho VIIIIQIIhlll
SEC. !(: Thot lll1rlod 1111·
ovor 1 montho oervlco - · bo enthlld to lick I~Wo In
who do nonleot to
1------~-­
•tl3.00
per
rr10nth
the
amount
of
OM ond oneportlolpeta.
peld IIIIX1ra
, _ _P_ub_l....
lc_Not
__lce_...,.._ Emergency Clerk. Wotor· fourth 11'/oldiiYIPI'MOnlh, •100.00 perbemonth
ln.lidll,.
1&amp;-r - *7-;:3.00 por ond oholl bo oftlhlad to ""'" lion to tho .......,t MillY
ORDINANCE NO. 1223-90
month
cruooaldolckloaveuptcione 10hldull. •d t i l - amAn Ordln.,..co to -bll1h Wot• - S.Wogo Supt. - hu~ twenty t1 20) deyo. plcryMO )llld on on hoUrly
VlllooeJoboendW81Jereteo.
hour
Upon retlramont
bol• -who do not lleet .to
ond -bl'-hlng legal holl· 'W811r - -•ge A111.lupt. ployoo ohllll be plid llfly per, portlclpata In the iniUranoe
doyo, voutlon ond 11ck
- t7.211per hour
i·!*'tiiiO%)ofiRoccruldond ploniMipeldenoddllloneiiO
M- Reider- te.t4 per unulld .olck loevo.
...,.. per hour. Any em·
loovn.
·
Be h ordolnld by tlie
hour
·
SEC. VI: &amp;ch fuH-tlmo ·pioyM m"V olony llmooloct
Council of the VIHIQI of WMor • ·Sowogo Dopt.. employee of the VIIIIIJo, 1... to withdraw from tho pion,
Middleport • followo:
··
Extra Help:
~udlng fuR-time hoully rate ond In ouch • -.nt ouCh
Soc. I. ThM tho following
0wr . t yoor oervlco - emplcryMO, aholl be entitled election for wlthdi'IWII oholl
wage ocllo lo ......,
n.a1 per hour
during uch yur oft• the ll....,.o. be fllld In writing
ldoptld for em plow- of
Laeo then 1 year oiHYice - flrot vo• to two WHkl we• with tho CIA Arrr omtho Vlllllll of Middleport.
•&lt;~.211 per hour
tlori, excluding logol holi- pioyMwhOoiiCIIollllttoperChlefofPolloe-niOO.OO Moch•lc-U.IIperhour deyl. with pey. Employ- tlol,...lnthepllniDIYfllU
-month
c-.tory:
.
whhm-or-yeeroof IUIII-'oiiCIIlofttoperAoolotont Chief of Polloi I 0wr 1 ye• -leo - llnllco lhlll lbo -ltlad to tlalpeta, lllld, If IDIII)Italalo
. ed&lt;ltlonol 40C per ho.ur. · •1.11 per hour
lh- voutlon with to
lrt-nce com118!1Y
Regular Patrolmen:
..
Lae1 thM 1 year oervlce - PlY each .,....
on I non-rated Iloilo. then
OWr 1 yMi' of Mrvlce ..:.
.&lt;1.21per hour
· SEC. VII: EliCh omployee lllch emplowMrMy..._,.
•1.114 per hour
· Rollol D...,atch• - •4.42 of the Vllllll ontltlad to,.. I pertiDiplnt In tile ll)ln.
Laoo thon 1 .,... ...,... - 1---_ por hour
utlon ohllll u• thovooMion · UUwlll. -.,y .mp~who
•t.32 per hour
. SwlmmlntlniiNOior time In thl of entitle- ·,.rtlalpotal In tho pion IDlY
Port
lime pMrolmon - ·
•4.10 per hour
,_or ohollbo Pl(d ftinny flli 1r1 'IIICII!pn to wfthoho1
•t.32perh!lllr
Cull0dlon- ... 21jlorhour unuoed11011fon ofVIICIIllon from llll• plart. In whlah
Porldng ~
II•• Income Tu Admlnlotrltor M their )IAIVIlllag-ol'lte _ , 1111-.. or ... ...,. •
thin 1 .i lrvlcll .,... · - •1400.00 per month et the 111M of paymMit. lht
be. ohiH bo od*3.80 per hotir · .
Public T-1portatlon Coor· the end of'o ny- orrr Jl!ch Jullld • provided In IIIII,..
PorklngM-PoriOn/Aoot.
dlnotor-•7.104*hour employee"- MDrUid l"'f ........
· Soc. 1 - 1 yeer oerVice) Mini-Golf Manog•- •4.211 . unuoecl wutlon time, tho
IEC. XI: AI~-- Ill
- 111.31 per hour
per hour
.
Clorll.T_.., IIIII mao aonflllll with ordlnl!l•
Street El"lljllov-:
£me Help. Mini' Golf - ,poymenttotllelll"llployee,., mlw.bv I!IIIIIIIIIL · ·
· Over 1 yeor Mrvlce t3.7Bperhour
- h unulld time within
IEC.xfl:n..tolt.l-tlmo
•11.11 per hour
Economic l)ovllopment .DI' thlttydlly•IJOI..,_tllo.,..d hourly per-1111 ohol ..
Laoo th• 1
...,Ice rectOr - t7.21 per hour of the
Upon ropojd 111 odtlltloMI tine
2tlotl.,..n
. ,_..!..._ _
· sic. n:, Thet on•lll&lt;lll. :lo~ ~,...~~
~•13
nvwo
allrlcllond/orhc&gt;ok•Mplng
•loaf_, tmow
_, vo
·
: ti,IOO.OOperyew
raaardke.plnt ·=
om· -eoall12-.thpWlod ful·tlmo ....... wllh 1111
•U.....Inll-t3.10perhour ...,._be IIIIP
.t 'o folawtngthlflntful-of V...ofMid .. oport.lliMt_.
,Boor. .rytoMeyor-17.10 .moxlmurn of 311 houra per lit¥1Ciftlent.
·
full..ilmo llllorv .,., ........
' per hour ·
·
wM, • ......, ·for on om•·
IConllnUod on " - 'lt
NOTICE OF
' APPOINTMENT OF
. "FIDUCIARY
On AprN 19, 1880, In tho
Melgo County
Probate
Court, Calo No. 211184,
Gene Grato. 32 Cola Stroet,
Mlddlopon, Ohio 48710, .
w11 appointed Executor of
the
of Helen Lyon1.
d - I d . 1111 of 2211 Spring
Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio
467119.
,.
Robert E. Buck,
Problte Judge
Judith II. Worry. Clerk
141 24; Ill) 1. B. ~
.

'

0Jto ·f reshman
f th
e year

.

••

P'-

_., ·am-

•

.,..!4...

C

..

-10

0

Sports· briefs

lhl-••

W0811on-

...

.....
--

0

Btoll"""'

lhl

Po,_

.

:7-6

•tot•

•a.ooC

Wilshire Racing Stable of LawrencevUie; N.J ., Bruce's· Lady,
won 10 of 21 starts last year will!.
six seconds and four thirds.
He best time was a 1: 54.3 at
Springfield, . Dl .•. In the Review
Stake final.
.
Also among the Jugette ellgl·
bles Is Mean And Green, w,ho
'captured the Walnut Hall Cup
last year at Delaware In st;alght
heats with her. fastest mile of
.
1:57.1.

Sports briefs

bOth elections .. Moreover, they . Indeed, the
rules - ·'
will also print the ballots for the reflect 'the position of Teamsters presidency. In his boo~; ''The
first election, In which convert· G¢neral Council James Grady, · Teamsters," author Steven BrUI
tlon delegates are to be chosen. who argues that HoUand has no . characterizes Carey as "a model
The potential for. fraud· Is virtu· authority to: stst1011 mOnitors at ofhonest,concerned; represents·
ally llmltii!SS.
any polling locations. Holland's tlve democracy." .
.. ..
.The only oversight of the tssk, si\YS Grady, Is limited to
The . presldent of a New York
.elections will be conducted by certifying the election results as Teamsters ' local with '7,000.
·Holland and his aides operating · reported to him to loeal Teams· . members· (all drivers for. the
from a central office, where they ter officials.
United Parcel Service) Carey
. will.recehre election results fromSquanljerlng the opportunity to has an abiding commitment to
union !ocala. They also are likely require an honest Teamsters fairness and Integrity that long
to be besieged by complalllts of eleet\9n .for the tlrst time In ago earned him the ·e nmity of
fraud but will have no capability , decades. will surely .doom the those 1!1 the union dettly desto Investigate those problems In a campaign of Ron Carey, a crlbe&lt;l by Brill as. "the guys with
timely manner.
reformer seeking the union's ·· th.e plnky_rlngs.''. ·
•
· ·
·
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PubliC Notice

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24.1990 ·

Tueaday.

Ohio

Sentinel

Bruins, Capitals
·cop playoff wins

I
I

CAPITALS SCORE - Washington's Jobd Druce (19) lifts 'the
puck over New York Ranger ~~;oalle Mike Richter to score In the

I&lt;

Cards,
Padres
·triumph
'

MONTREAL (UPI) - The
Boston Bruins moved to within a
game of sweeping their post.- season nemesis, the Montreal
· Canadlens, in their Stanley C\lp
playoff series Monday night with
a 6--3 victory.
John Carter scored two goals to
lead the Bruins to a 3.0 lead in the
Adams Division Finals, with the
fourth and possible deciding
game of the series to l;le played In
Montreal Wednesday night.
After Montreal tied the score
2-2 at 3:10 af the second period
when Russ Courtnall fired a shot
through the legs of goaltender
Andy Moog, Bruins Coach Mike
Mllbury called a timeout.
Carter's second goal at 5:30 of
the secOnd period broke the 2-2
tie.
.
Carter, standing I ust on the ·
rim af the faj:eoflclrcle, flipped a
shot at the Montreal net which
bounced tp after . striking the
rigbt s)loulder of Canadlensgoal;
tender Patrick Roy.
Less than two minutes later, at
6: 58, Brian Propp made the score
4-2 with a backhand shotlrom the
slot.
·
Shortly after, at 7:29, Roy was ·
lifted for the first time in this
year's playoffs and replaced by
Hayward,
•!It was tough for me to make
that decision to .yank Roy In .the
secpnd pepod," s,ald C.nadlens
Coach Pat Bur~ - ·'He had Clone
such a great- job for us so far tn
first period of Game 3 of lhe NHL's Patrick Division finals Monday
these playoffs. .
_
.
night In New York. ( UPI)
"It will be tough for us to win
this serieS. It Is going to take a lot
of bl~ and guts.,"
HaYWl\1'11 was beaten by at
13:49 by a 50-footslap shot from
Don Sweeney on a power play.
Dave Poulin got his sixth goal
of the playoffs at 7: 48 of the final
period after taking a rebound off
the goal post, hnprovlng the lead,
to 6--2.
Russ Cotirtnall 0 scored his
second goal of tlie game at 14: 23
to make the si::ore 6-3.
5·
The Bruins took a 1-0 lead at
9:49 of the first period with a
short-handed goal.
,
Bob Sweeney was sitting out a
penalty assessed to goaltender
Andy Moog when Carter scored
on a slap shot.
·· Carter raced Into the face off
. circle to the right of Roy and fl1ed
: a drive into the far cornet of the
net. .
Ray Bourque drilled a shot ·
past Roy on his stick side at 13:02
of the fjrst ·pe~tod to ln;tprov.e the
lead to 2-0. ·
. ··~
·
· ·Moog was screened liy two of
his own player!!' at 15:09 of the
opening period when Brent Gilchrist shot the pilck along the Ice
and right into the Bruins net, ··
narrowing the Boston lead to 2-1.·
"We had too many passengers
on our team fo~ a big game like
. this," said Burns. "But'glve the
Bruins credit. Tonight showed
why they were number one and
we were number four In those
final standings." - .

. By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
John Tudor's return to the St.
Louis cardinals is starting to .
.mak~ people forget about his
injury-plagued stint In Los
,Angeles.
Tudor scattered five hits over
.eight innings and Pedro Guerrero hit a two-run homer Monday
night, leading the St . Louis
Cardinals to a 7-4 victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates. ·
Tudor, 3-0, added another line
to his ·successful comeback from
elbow and shoulder problems
:that plagued him since he ar.rived in Los Angeles in an August
198a trade. He returned to the ·
·Cardinals by signing as a free
agent over the winter.
''l'hree-and-oh (Tudor's re:cord) looks · pretty good when
you' re only 6-8," St. Louis Man·ager Whitey Herzog said. "He's
,already stopped three losing
streaks and we've only played
two · ~eks. We-might puch him
.tomorrow."
·
Til'dor, befuddling the Pirates
by mixing · the speed on his
,pitches, broke a four-game St .
Louis -losing streak and a five' game home skid.
. "You don't want to go on a long
road trip losing five games at
BOND..LA SCORES - ' The Pirates' Bobby
of Monday nlsht's game In St. Louis. Bouma
.home,' ' Tudor · said. "I was
Bonilla
trots
home
to
score
as
Cardinals
catcher
scored
on a hit lo center field by teammate Jeff
throwing right down the middle
Todd
Zelle
takes
the
tale
throw
In
the
first
Inning
KIRfl.
(UPI)
of the.plate, but they hit it right at
,the guys. They were getting some they got some guys over in the
just three ·runs on - live hits.
The Cardinals pounded Pitts. pitches to hit.
other locker room ktc·ktng
Tudor's ERA is 0.42.
burgh pitching for 12 hits. Bob
. " I'm surprised Whitey 1Her- themselves. "
"We had a chance to knock him
Walk, 0-3, laste" just f011,r inzog, St. Louis manager) didn't
Tudor's outing was his longest out early," Pittsburgh Manager
nings. Walk, wbo bad won eight
' take me .out to save the married
of the season. His string of 13 Jim Leyland sal d. "But we didn't . of his last 11 decisions, allowet!,
. guys on the infield. The fact_we
scoreless innings this season and and he got better as he went - eight hits and· ·five runs, three
,scored six or Sllven runs helped
19 dating back to last year ended along. 'Good pitchers are that
earned.
me · go eight innings. I'm sure
in the first Inning, but he allowed way.''
•

Cleveland siarts seasOn slow, finishes strong
. RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) Beating Philadelphia in the first
cround of tlie playoffs will be
.difficult.
: But as far as the Cleveland
·Cavaliers are concerned, it won't
be any more difficult than the
road they traveled to get into the
playoffs lor the third straight
; year.
• Before the season began,
: Cleveland, winners ol57 games a
. year ago, was considered a
.favorite to l!hallenge for the NBA
title in 1989-90. That was before
· Brad Daugherty missed half of
: the season recovering from foot
: surgery, before Larry Nance and
; Mark Price missed the start of
~the year with injuries, and before
:Ron Harper was traded.
In addition, Chris Dudley
• started the. year ,with a b_rok:en
·wrist, Steve Kerr got chicken pox
.early in .the season, and Wayne
. •"Tree" J:Wllins Injured a knee.
:coach Lenny Wilkens spent the
;ttrst month of the season trying to
d lnd enough healthy bodies to get
' a full practice together.
"II loqked very bleak at the
beginning of the year," Wilkens
:said . . "All these things are
•happening, guys are saying
: •wow, what did we do wrong?' I
:Just kept teliing them 'Hey, keep
'oworking
hard because out of this
'
. sol'l'lethlng good will come. It
may be painful, but It will ·be

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there. '' '

But the Cavs regrouped, beat go out on the road and do it."
Eventually, Wilkens' words the Bucks 107-96, ;md have been
The Cavs split the season
carne true. The Ca.-allers won on a roll ever since.
series with Philadelphia, , win'·
their final six games of the year,
"We're playing like
like us
nlng once at home and once on
and 17of theirlast23, and go into to play," Wilkens said, "We're the road. Now t-hat the club Is
the playoffs healthy, a marked ·aggressive, we're moving' the
healthy, winning a series from
change from last year when ball real well. Ther.e's no ques- , the Atlantic Division champions
Price, Nance and Daugherty lion (thl' team Is playing its best
is not such a far-fetched Idea.
were hurting.
ball of the season) . We've had
."We've got a gOOd thing going
' 'This year we are healthier, so stretches wbere we've won five
for . us right now,'' said gua~d
you have to feel better," Nance games In a row, but tms is the
Craig Ehlo. "It's just amazing
said. "We're a good team when best stretch in that the games
how thlpgs can changf so fast."
We' re healthy."
meant something arid we had to
The Cavaliers won't have the .
home-court advantage, but they
APPLICATION FO~M
found out last year that playing
•
3RDANNUAL
more games at home In the,
playoffs doesn't always lead to a
MEIGS CO. GIRLS BASKETBALL CAMP
series victory. Chicago elimi(Any girl in Grades 4 thru 10 (next year) Eligible)
nated Cleveland In five games
last year, and th~ Cavs, who won
57 games last season, .h ave won
NAME: ~----~~-----------------­
only one playoff series In their
20-year history.
ADD~E~: ---,----------------~----­
''They're a dangerous team,''
New York coach Stu Jackson
AGE ------GRADE (n~xt year):~--------said of the Cavs. "This Is still one
.'
ol the l;ietter teams In the league
Shirt Slze:_·- - - - ---.,......on=
· er::..:.s...
~Lu=i«':=.:I:.:S::b=".:M:.:·L-:.:XL=:.&gt;,
and I tell you, It's a !pugh draw if
•Parent/Guardian
you're drawing them for the
·Slpature
•
seventh seed. I like their talent."
Cleveland turned its season
SEND CHECK TO:
.
around In Milwaukee on March
Coach Foster, Meigs H. S. Pomeroy,·OH. 45'768
11. The Cavs went Into that game
.
•
(Ph. 448·2'704 Evenlnp)
with six straight losses, and were
•Signature waives any accident cl~ and giv~ staff tile rtglll
coming ,off a 14~·105 defeat at
.
to administer CPR If aeeded.
. ··
Golden State, a performance that
&gt;!Payment ($3S.OO)due JUNE 25, but pleaae send appUcailoa If
so angered Wilkens he accused ,
.
·
.
planning to attend.
his club of9ulttl,.

rd

Capitals .7 Rangers ILANDOVER, 1Md. (UPI)
Riding a wave of emotion, the
Washington · Capitals transformed a big negative into a big
· positive Monday night. 'Hit by the news earlier tn the
dily that star right wing Dlno

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Spo~

briefs

Complete Unt of

v..............
Plants, ........ and
Foliage ~~cm; .. lalbts.
Fruit

....... ...
n

flo••illt Tr-.

shrubl, Azalea• IIIII

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H1IIAIIrS GaNHOUSE

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mACUSL 0110

Ill hi

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·Community ·calendar
TUESDAY
MEIGS -The Mt. Moriah
Church of God will have revival
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
with Rev. Bryce Utt, Marietta.
There will~ special singing and
Pastor Jim Satterfield Invites the
public.

STAR
FARMERS -Reeelving
Ch!ipter Farmer Defii'Ces at the recent FFA
Banquet al Southern High Sehool were 1-r, David

•;...;'

.

POMERO-Y ·-The Mason Gal~
Ita Meigs Crusade for Chr.lst
reytval will - be · held through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. There
will be special ·singing and .
JitACINJ:; -Racine Lodge F
preaching each night. Rev. Clyde
and AM will meet Tuesday at
Henderson Invites the public.
7: 30p.m. for annual inspection. ·,
. POMEROY - Therl! will be a
RUTLAND ~The Rutland
meeting Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m: at
Church
of the Nazarene will have
Meigs High School for parents of
juniors and seniors Interested in revival through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly and 10: 30a.m. and6p.m .
. helping with J?rom activities.
on Sunday with Dr. and Mrs.
RACINE -Inspection of Ra· P.E. Clay as evangelists. The
cine Lodge F and AM No. 461 will Harvest Trio will sing Thursday
be Tuesday. Therewillbeworkin and Friday. Rev . sam Basye
the EA degree and refreshments invites the public.
WEDNESDAY
will be served following the
MIDDLEPORT -The Middlemeeting.
port Literary Club will meet
HARRISONVILLE -The Har- Wednesd11Y at 1:30 p.m. at the
risonville Center Citizens will Pomeroy l,..lbrary. "Grapes of
mee! Tues\iay at 7 p.m. at tl\e Wrath" will be -reviewed by
town house, All members are Helen Hayes. The hostess will be
urged to at ten~ ·and refresh- Jean Ftsher.
ments will be served.
The MasonPOMEROY
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta -Gallla-Melgs ·Crusade for
Phi Chapter, Beta S~a Phi · Christ will be held through
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7 Saturday at 7 p.m. each evening
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal at the Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road, County Road 18. The
Church.
public Is Invited to attend by the
'
RACINE - OAPSE 453, of Rev. Clyde Henderson, pastor.
.Southern Local will meet at 7
•
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle-.
p.m. at
high school.
port Amateu~ Garden Club will

Rutland

~riendly

..

Is marriage 50/50?

dlug lla,... .Clll Ill far •

..

Ann
Landers

at

meet Wednesday at 7 p.m . at lhe
home of Jean Moore.

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THURSDAY
'-RACINE- The Racine American Legion will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the legion hall.
RUTLAND -The Women's
Fellowship ot Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Rutland Church of Christ.
_POMEROY - The P-omeroy
group of AA and AI Anon will
meet Thursday ' at 7 p.m . at.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Call 1-800-333-5051 for
-information.
POMEROY - The Grubb
family singers will be at Carleton
Church In Pomeroy during revival on Thursday at 7 p.m . Rev.
Bob Grubb will be preaching. ·
POMEROY -The Senior Cltl·
zen Dance Club will have a dance
Friday from s-11 p.m . with
music by Circle D Ranglers. The
public Is .· invited and · t!lose
attending should bring snacks for
the snack table.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9003
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at
the post horne. There Is a time
change from 7:30p.m. to 8 p.m. .
CHESHIRE -The Gallla
Meigs Community Action
.Agency wll hold its· regularly
scheduled meeting on Thursday
at 5:30p.m. at the Guiding Hand
School. In Cheshire.
.

Gardeners _meet ·

----4-H news reports_;....--

•n•
a•••on Wid.a

seeds for the '4H and Junior
garden club under the direction
of Janet BoUn. Mrs. BoUn gave
devotions on the theme, •'Flower
and Friendship" and "I Dll Not
Ask." She also brought the
traveling prize wpn by Joanne
Fetty.
Mrs. Fetty' presided at 'the
meeting and -noted that she had
purchased seeds to be distributed
during Sunday'.s earth day
observance.
.
Mrs. Bolin r~cently weeded the
civic center planting made last
year by the club. and also placed
on display in the Rutland Post
Offlqe a modern mass design of
dried materials. Juanita Lambert later placed window designs
on the Easter theme In the post
office.
A tour to Cox Arboretum, set
for May 12 and 13, was poatponed
and plans were discussed to have
a joint fall flower show with the
other two Rutland gardP.n cl~bs
on Sept. 8 and 9.
·
Several members plan to attend (he spring regional garden
club meeting on saturday in
Nelsonville. Members were encouraged to attend the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
Exhibitors and Judges School on
May 21 and 22 In Columbus.
Mrs . BoUn, Margaret Ed·
wards, and Carrie Morrts held
the garden therapy session With
patients at the extended care unit
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Patients made potpourri baskets
decorated With ribbon. Mrs.
Morris gave each a ra bblt that
she had made.
. Members wtll meet Wednesday at the home of Lorri Barlllls
io study .wildflowers and wild
ferns , and seed growth by Mrs.
Morris, Mrs. Bolin. and. Kim
Willford.
MarJorie Davis conducted an
auction of Items brought by club
members and Mrs. Wlltlord
suggested members hold a Joint
yard sale for club profit In early
May.

APRI~ SPHIAL
ON CAIPO CLEANifG

'

WHOlE HOUSE SPKIAL
ON ANY COI.IIl110N Of S
lOOMS, IIAILWAY AND lATH

ONLY

$99 95

ADVANCED CLIA.NG
SEIVICI
"'·3915

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·Dean's list

'B.~.!'-~

NEED_100 DONORS

-.w.=.!R~
·
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·214 EAST MAIN

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POMEROY

·~··187

rromr

HI·S776 ,

Open Deily. 8·1: Sun. 1·&amp;

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REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Local School District Spring
Band Concert will ·be held Tuesday at 7:30p.m . In the high school
gymnasium.

the

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llidwi.

MIDDLEPORT -Revival services will be held through Sucday
,at the Middleport Church of tbe
Nazarene at 7 p.m. nightly alld 6
-p.m. on Sunday . Rev . George
Williams will be·the speaker. The
public Is invited to attend.

Over 100 people attended the
Brent Rose received the wild- rural soil judging.
· ·
annual banquet of the Racine
life management award sponMonica Ml'lier was awarded for
!,".FA chapter of Southe~n High
s.ored by Star Supply·. Placement · reporter's hqok; Michelle Brown
School held recently.
in production went to Aaron foF secretary 's . book; Aaron
Rev. David Curfman gave the
Laudermilt, sponsored by Chuck Knopp for treasurer.
·
invocation.
Yost. Farm management went.to
The .rural and urban -soli
Bob siieppard, John Hill, and
Brent Rose, sponsored by ·Fair- judging teams both place4 first
Chuck ·Yost received honorary
plain Tractor. Small engines
in Meigs County .
chapter farmer degrees , and
went to Jason Row, sponsored by
Brent Rose was recognized for
special awards were presented to
DJ's Trading Post. -Tbe agricul- market hog project and Kevin
Chqck Yost, Otis Knopp, and
ture sciellj:e Award went to Grueser for market steer project
Mike Duhl for the work study
Michelle Friend sponsored by at the Meigs County Fair.
program.
Keefer Bros. The welding award
Receiving greenhand farmer
was presented to Tyson MuHonored for awards received
degrees were Robert Hendrix,
grage, sponsored by Ferrellgas.
at .the state fair were Brent Rose,
James VIning, Shawn Engle,
The·followtng were recognized tomatoes and State FFA Degree;
Travis Nease, James Litchfield,
for district 10 awards ; Aaron
Fred Engle, tomatoes ; James
.
John McClintock, Monica Miller.
Laudermilt, electricity; Brent Languell, tom.atoes.
Keith Jones, Ron Wagner, Mi- Rose, wildlife management; Aa·
Kriston Newlon was guest
chelle Friend, Tyson Mugrage,
ron LaudermUt, turf and lands• speaker for the dinner.
Leroy Lander; Rohnie Mullins, ·cape; James Languell, fruit and.
Officers for 1990 installed were
. Mike Hill, Tim Haves, r&lt;orman
vegetable production; Aaron
Michelle Friend, president;
· -Biennials .Include Sweet Wll·
Suzy Carpenter presented
' Evans, Shannon Pierce, Percy . Laudermilt, forest manage- Shawn Baker, vice president:
llam,
foxglove, Canterbury bell,
·
"Biennials,
Annuals,
and
Peren·
Levacy, Jasop Row, Mark ment; James Languell, .David .Michelle Brown, secretary;
wall
flower,
Just to mention a
nlals.
What's
the
Difference?"
at
Brown, Tom 'Adkins, Charles Custer, Fred Engle, and Michelle Perry Levacy, treasurer: Monthe
recent
meeting
of
the
Rutland
few.
Buckley, Nancy Hudson, and 'Brown, urban soU Judging; AaIca Miller, Sen tine!; Aaron
Mrs. Carpenter noted that to
Friendly Gardeners held at the
Rodney Grueser.
ron Knopp, Brent Rose, Shawn
Knopp, reporter; and Brent
plant
biennials a seedbed had to
home
of
Joan
Stewart.
Michelle Grueser received the Baker, and Shannon Williams,
Rose, student advi~or.
be
prepared
as If planting annuIn
hl'r
program,
Mrs.
CarpenStar Greenhand Degree, sponals.
She
stated
that seeds are
ter
.noted
that
annuals
sprput
so~d by Farmer's Bank.
usually sown In rows or in cold
seed and bloom, and bear
from
&lt;. .~e~~~Y.ill~ c~i!P,ter farmer de
more seed which reproduce and frames for later transplanting to
grees were . April Freeman,
die
In the same year. Biennials beds. In the fall. When planting,
Jamie Proffitt, and Michelle
also
sprout from seed but spend dig up as large .a soil ball as
Brown. Bren.t Rose received the
flrsJ.year growing, and then possible and keep it intact when
their
Star Chapter Farmer Degree
,.,;;_.~.T~
·
reproduce
and die In their second transplanting. Place the ball in a
sponsored by Home National
year.
Perennials
are herbaceous good sized hole, .·ftrm the earth
· Bank; for public speaking, Shanthat
have
found a more around It and water well. They
plants
non Williams received the extemdependable
·
way
to
survive the should be grown in as cool an
poraneous award sponsored by
seed
germination.
Some
peren- area as possible. Mulch should
Dan Smith; Michelle Borwn, for
nials are grown as bennials admit light and air, slichas piled
being prepared, by Mr. and Mrs.
depending
on climate. Plants pine or other evergreen
Bob Ord; and for the creed,
branches. ·
may be Classified as perennial,
Tyson Mugrage, by Mr. and Mrs.
Members answered roll call by
biennial, or annual alternately
John Hill.
by
locale.
·
naming
a biennial and brought
Brent Rose received the Bob
Btl' Lee. Memorial Award spon•
sort 1 by Bank One, and Michelle
Frle 1d and Brent Rose received
recent!y a) t)le extension office
.
Charmlngs . .
.
the ·s. · holwrshlp award.
12 ml!mbe~s and one adVIsor
with
The Charmings 4H Club met
. Jar.1es Languell received the ··
attending.
recenily at the home of Linda
· fruit and vegetable production
Officers were elected and a
Dllnobue
with five members and
award by Wagner Hardware, _ I
••
'
Uem·
s · discussed Included a veal
STAR GREENHANDS -Presented Star Greenhand Defll'ees al
one advisor present.
and Aaron Laudermllt received
show
and candy bar sales .
the recent FFA banquet at Southern High School were, l~r,
Officers elected were Angela
the electricitY and turf and
·
The
gtoup·watched a video of
Donohue, president; ' MelisSa
Michelle · Friend, Michelle Brown, David Custer, and Kristin
landscape awards by Ferrelgas
the
1989
Meigs Dairy Clbu show
Reeves. vice president: Brooke
Newlon.
·
and Chester Agrl Service.
fair.
·
at
the
county
Howard, seeretary; Crystal DoThe
next
meeting
will
be
held
. rtlhue, treasurer and news repor·
Monday
the extension office.
ter; and Robin Dllnohue, recreaPaul
Smith,
news reporter.
tion leader .
Full
Deck
At another meeting of the
Dear AnnLanders!Afterreading woodwork and replaced the faucets
The Full Deck 4H Club met
group
Items dlscusse,d were
the letter from "Been There and Know all over the house.l've waterproofed
recently
at the home of the
ANN LANDERS
candy bar sales, Ohio River
"1989. L- AnjP'iftl
What I'm Talking About," I was fwi· the basement and hung three ceiling
Sharon
Card, with six
advisor,
.Timl'll ~\l'ndl1'8lf'
Sweep, and projects. .
members
·
and
·
one advisor
ous. Having married a couch pOtato, fans (even hooked up lhe wiring). I
Cruton. ~yndlf'Mf'
The next meeting will be held
aitendlng.
not only do I take care of the oil doallofthecooking,dishes,laimdry,
Friday at Dllnohue' s.
Group projects, chaogtng of
changes in my husband's car, I alSo cleaning and~ry shopping. I buy
Crystal Donohue, news
the
club name and flection of
change flat tires, tighten up oil pans aU the gifts for SJ?eCial occasions, never 10 argue with a Swede•.
reporter.
officers
were discussed.
and make sure bolh vehiclcsdon'trun includipg tho$e for his gro~ kids _Grand Folks: I'm a North Dakota
Hllllop
Refreshments
were '5erved by
out of gas.
.
.
from a pre\jous marriage.
farm wire who gets up at S Lm. wilh
The Htlltop 4H- Club met
Tracy, John, Robbie, and Aarom
lcutlhegrass,cleanlheguttersand
I drive our two cblldrcn lo sc:hCiol my husband. Together we milk 50 recently at the Pentecostal As·
Card.
' ·
take care or lhe furnace and humidi- and church eventS. I have landscaped cows~ 1scrub die equipment while he sembly with 15 members and two
Karyn Thompson, news
fier filters. I have refinished the my front and back yard with the belp feeds lhe caule.! do all the gardening advisors present.
·
reparter,
Business discussed was abput
of my u:en-age son. (No help from and shovel the snow. 1 can handle
MelpCreek
The Meigs Creek 4H Club met
the couch potato.) In my s~ time, almostalltheequipment,andathar· · fund raisers, the Clean Up
America
program,
and
checking
recently In the cafeteria of the
I steep. ·
.
velit time, I haul the grain. My husTuppers Plains Elementary
lfl waited for my husband todQ-his ·band appreciates what I do, so I'm not books.
C.J. Harris, news reporter.
School with 12 members and four ·
share, the ldds would be walking eoinplaining. He's good 10 l!lC and
Melp County .Jade
advisors attending.
around naked, and the !louse would wiD )lclp wilh the dishes if' I ask.
The
:Meigs
County,
Jade
4H
Judging dates, registration
he condemned. There iS no 50-50
Da1I8s: The fillY in Detroit who
Club
met
recentlY,
at
the
home
of
·
dates,
camp date~. hoof trimin Ibis tnarriage, and 111 bet it's the . listed all the tl!ings he did in llld
Janet
Bolin
.
w
ith
nine
members
steer
and heifer shows,
ming,
same all over .lhe country. -· 100 . out of the house sounded vapely and two.adviSors In attendance. and project
books · were
PERCE~ FED UP IN OVER· .familiar .: cspecially the pan about
New officers were Installed
discussed.
LAND, MO.
__
"womng ~the car." I know a lot or and everyone chOse their lndtvid·
Project lessons were on cuts of
DEAR FED: I have rece1ved live men who c8n spend hours with their· ual projects.
meat and where to find them, and
tubsormailonlhissubject,andabout bead under 1 hood. Whit are they
A demonstration was given by project requirements.
70 percent of the women claim they . doing? Tlnkerbig. They use the car Janet Bolin on edible violets.
The next meeting will be May
are doing 90 percent or the work as a convenient place to hide out.
Tammy Mt ller, news reporter· 20 at 3: 30 p.m. Plans wUI be made
around the house. plus the shopping, Husbands have been doinglhis since
for mack steer and hetler show;
Kid K•uectloa
driving the kids around, etc., etc., the Model T.
grooming hints and kids practicThe Kid Konnectlon 4H Club
Ing on .animals; and project
even lholllh they also wort outside
Detroit: When I was five months met recently at the home of
1hc home. Reid on for a sampling:
pregnant, I Will! changing !he fuel line Debbie Grueser with 10 members bOOks will be finished .
R. KAY KOEHLER
Justin Edwards, news
From Beaumont, Texss: My hus- under the car. At eight months, I and two advisors In attendance.
rter.
Officers were elected and a
baDd llld I bodl work. He grew up in changed lhe fuel pump. My husband
dlBcusslon
about
brblllnl
food
a home whm !DCII were waited on, does the dishes IUid the laundry, In
R. Kay Koehler, Middleport,
and I know he'll never change, so 1 · Odlerw«ds.eachofllldoeswhat we for the food drive anti plans were
has been named to the dean's list don'tllllbim. Youmightcallilbeiill are best at, lnd tbete aie no r.pts
made tor a club trip, .
·
Retreshmeota were served by
for the winter quarter at Hocking a doonoal, but it kccps'OII' marriqe about who doe&amp; what at our house.·
Technical College, where · she is together, and that's worth a lot.
Cynthia COtterill.
~- it's wonderfllll
studying medical . record
At another meet1n1. of theMadison: We've been married
. RiChmond, Va.: My husband help
group. a dt!monatratlon on how to
technology.
going cn 40 yean, and I.don't mind with hoillewllrk'l Are you kiddiil&amp;?
To be eligible for placement on
make "saack pizzas" wu etven
by Dantelle GI'IM!Rr, who also
the list, a student must earn a doinl all the inside wert and 111011 or Last weet 1ssbd him 10 pleue hang
up bia COIL Ho llict, "''m tired." I served refn!abmellta.
qwn;terly accumulative grade . the outside too, bat its the He n:plled, "I
point average of 3.3. Her average phoning I resenL 1 have to make all liked, "What
Tara Grui!IMir, nl!'illa reponer.
the calls to our children, hia brothen just put the lid down on the toilet
'
was 3.6.
JWtlerUWitocll
She Is the daughter of Mrs . llldsillasandevenbiamother. Why? leaL· J- ' didn't mate this up,
The Melp COunty Better LlMarcia J. Kin&amp;, Middleport, and: Because he hateltotlllkcn thcpholie. Ann. E'nuff said. rm swe y0u ~the · vesti)Ck Dairy 4H Club met
· Period. I leamat;'~ big lime lgO picture.
,
tl
·Harold E. Hager, Racine.

far 1'1181.
alllnllh. ....

II' &amp;Ill •

Custer, Joha T, Wolfe, of Racine Home National
Bank, sponsor, aad. Brent Rose, and Krlaton
Newlon, gnest speaker.

Racine FFA banquet held recently

.......
II.
ll'lDDJU
· -I ·,
ONE, I
bla1d
OOcs; .....,. pdu• plat

piop

1990

·Page 6

a

A ...

The ·Daily Sentinel
Tu11dey, April24,

Ciccarelli would ml$s the rest of
the Patrick Division finals
against the New York Rangers ,
the Capitals banded together to
rout the Rangers 7-1 behind the
continued strimg play of John
Druce to take a 2·1 lead In the
second-round NHL playoff
series.
Druce, ·who recorded a hat .
trick in Game 2 and bas six goais .
against the Rangers and nine
goals In the playoffs. had two
goals ancf an assist during a
four-goal first-period outburst
that carried Washington to
victory.
'
Cicearelli sUStlilned a serious
left knee sprain In Saturday's 6--3
victory in Game 2 ln. New York
and Is sidelined Indefinitely.
Then the Capitals lost starting
goalie Il(ln Beaupre to a groin
-pull early Iii the first period.
But Druce SC!Jred power play
goals at 6: 04 and 10:33 of the
opening per'lod and set up Geoff
Courtnall's goal at 8:20 of the
same ·period. Mike Ridley's
short-handed goal at 11:29 of the
perlpd helped the Capitals to a 4-1
lead after 20 minutes of play.
Courtnall scored his second
goal of the game on the power
play at 11: 58 of the third period
for a 6-1 lead, with Druce
credited with his second ~~Ssls t of
th!! night on'tbe score.
The best-of-seven Patrick Division. finals resume Wednesday
at the Capital Centre with Game
4. "
Mike Llut, shelled Ill a 7-3 loss
in Game 1, replaced Beaupre at
3:16 of the first period after
Beaupre, who faced Jus tone shot,
was hit by New York's Kelly
Klslo. Beaupre's status for Game
4 was scheduled to be reevaluated Tuesday, but Murray said
the injury was minor and Beaupre could return for Game 4.
But Llut stopped 17 sh~ts. as
Washington outsbot New York
4"-19. The Capitals alSO held New ·
York, the · NHL's top playoff
'po'!'er-play team, 0-for-7 ·on the
power play. - ,
·
"It was an awful start fot ,us,
with their two (flrst·perlodl
power pl8y gdals. We seemed to
be down 4-1 before we knew what
was· happening, then we never
recovered," New York Coach
Roger Nells{\n said. Druce lifted
a rebound of his own miss over
prone goalie Mike Richter, then
Druce~ s .. pass . from the right
boards set up' Courtnall' s goal
fl'om the slot for a 2-0 Capitals
lead. .
·
"
Paul Broten s~ored on Llut a
short-handed breakaway at 9:29.
of the first period to pull the
Rangers within 2-1.
But Druce controlled a .loose·
puck In front of the net and scored
with
short high sliot, then
Ridley scon!d his own shorthanded ·breakaway goal after•
stealing ·the puck from Darren
Turcotte for the 4-1 Washington
lead. · ,
·
·. · ·
The Capitals Increased the
lead' to 5·1 on Calle Johansson's
rebound goal at 4: 14 ofthe second
period. SteveLeachmailelt7-lat
17:05-of the third period. ·
Ciccarelli, . who had eight
playoff goals when he was ·
Injure~. was examined by team
doctor Stephen Haas Monday,
club_, spokesman Lou Corletto
said. Ciccarelli was scheduled to
be ·fitted with a protective cast.
and·will he reexamined In a week
to 10 days.
On IY Brett Hull (10 goals) of
the St. Louis Blues had more
goals In postseason play than
Ciccarelli entetlng Monday's
!
action.
.
Ciccarelli, whose physical play
I
arid intensity helped make him a
'
team leader and a local flin -I
favorite, left the game saturday
I
in the lh!rd period after checking
Krls King of the Rangers. His
knee became swollen that night
and he. was walking with
crutchei'Sunday.

BBseball
Outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr. and
pitcher Brian Holman of the
'· ~attle Mariners, were named
the..__ American League's "CoPlayers of the Week'' for April
16-22. Griffey batted .414 with two
home runs and 10 RBI . .Holman
was 1-0 for the week, and came
wlthJn an out of tossing a perfect
game against the Oakland At·
hlettcs. .. . Barry Larkin of the
Cincinnati Reds was named
National J.e!lgue Player of the
week. Larkin hit .500 golllg
10-for-20 and leads theJeague In
batting (·.512), 'bits (22) and '
multi-hit games (8).
'
.
Buketball
_
. San Antonio· Spurs rookie cen:
ter David Robinson was named
the' Edge NBA Player . of the
Week for the final week of the
regular season'. Roblnsoll averaged 26.points, 14.3 rebounds and
3.3 blocked shots, leading bts
team to a 4.0 record and helping
the Spurs captute the. Midwest '
Division champlonsl!ip.

NOW OHfl FOR THE
SPRIIIO SEASON •

By The Bend

":

r1

RED ClOSS ILOODMOIIU
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25

..

POMIIOY SI.OI cm111 Cl11111
..
1:00~5:30 .
"'".'

'

�,
Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

Tuesday, April 24. 1990

·Chester community news

·Busy Bee Class to tour factory

By Cllll'lce Allen
Prayer and pledge to the flag,
Jed by Erma Cleland, opened the
;Ladles Auxiliary meeting, held
·Wednesday evening at the flre'house. Roll call was answered by
'e ach naming a flower bollming In
their yard. The treasurer's re:port was read by Betty Newell.
:_Committee reporU;. were given
.with the fire committee report·
Jng the making of coffee and
refreshments ·for the · firemen
after returning from two !Ires.
Bills were read and approved
and money for cards was .
:COllected.

Plans to tour Fenton Glass
Factory on May 8 weredtscus.sed
at the April meeting of the Busy
Bee Class orthe Middleport First·
Baptist Church held at the home
of Elizabeth Searles.
Pooch· Brewerlpreslded at the
meeting and Elizabeth Slaven ·
gave the opening prayer.
Members responded to roll call
with a Bible verse.
Mrs. Searles gave devotions
entitled, ·'The Triumph of God's ·
Love."
· Happy Birthday was sung to
Ruth Ebersbach.
The gi'gup toured Middleton
Doll Factory In Belpre on April .

their grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Huold Newell.
Donna Kay -Semple, Burling,
ton, NJ, spent Easter weekend
with her uncle Roy Christy.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Allen, Katie
and .Bobby, Greenwood, Ind ..
were Easter gueste of Mr, and
Mrs. Cleyton Allen.
Mrs. Don Eichinger, Tiffany
and Justin and Opal Eichinger
spent a week In Savannah, GA
with Kay ·and Pat Wilson.
.Laura Mae Nice and Jed
Hartung spent Easter weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Har·
tung, Cleveland.
Easter dinner guests of ,Mr.
•
: A card of thanks from the and Mrs. Richard Gaul were Mr.
Conroy family was read. Elmer and Mrs. Mark Hall, Mr. and
Newell, president of the fire Mrs. Warden Ours, Opal Wick,
department met with the g1'oup ham, · all local, David Gaul,
to discuss the !Ish fry and the Pomeroy, Sean "l'hommansson.
Memorial Day barbecue. Games Fairfax, VA, Dan Jones and
were enjoyed and prized ·were Jennifer Smith, studentssat O.U.
given. Refreshments · were
Easter dinner guests of Mrs.
Served by Betty . Newell and Opal Eichinger were Mr. and
Clarice Allen to those named and · Mrs. Jeff Horton, Worthington,
Bonnla Landers, Inzy Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Denn1s Eichinger
Jjecky Edwards, Clara Conroy, and Dane, Mr. and Mrs. Don
. Dorothy Hawk, Paula and Chel· Eichinger, Tiffany and Justin .
.sey Wood, Opal · Hollon, . Lora
Erma Cleland, Jean Freder·
Pamewood, . Marcia Keller, lck, Elizabeth HayeS, and Esther
Etbel Orr, and Elsie Folmer, and Sm.lth attended the Daughters of
li ggest Kimberly Meek.
America Lodge rallys In Cleve; Sandra Wood, Nashville, TN, land, Akron, and Canton.
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Easter dinner guests of Mr.
Mrs. Robert Wood.
and Mrs. Scotty Smith were
• KimberlY and Ryan Meek. Mt. Lowell Ridenour and sons, Eliza·
Sterling, KY, spent a we11k with beth Hayes. and Jean Frederick.
•

Maynard birth

10. Members at teJ¥1lng the tour
were Mrs. Searles, Mrs. Slaven,
Althea Miller, Rosemary Lyons,
Ruth Ebersbach, Gwennie
White, Mrs. Brewer, Betty Gil·
key, and three guests, Unda
Cramer, , Texanna Well, and
Elizabeth Well.
Attending the meeting were
Nora 'Jordan, Beulah White,
Ethel Hughes, Elizabeth Slaven,
Dorotlly Evans, Pooch Brewer,
Gwennie While, Ruth Ebe.rsb- ·
· ach, Elizabeth Searles, and Betty
Gilkey.
·
.
-· "
Refreshments of cake and Ice '
cream were served ·by the
hostess.

Friendly Circle meets ·

MARISSA A. MAYNARD

Sammy and Melissa Maynarg
are announcing the birth ·or their
first child, a daughter, Marissa
Ann on Aprll13 at HolZer Medical
. Center.
The lnfan t weighed six pount~;s
and five ounces and wa~ 20 lilches
long.
.
· Maternal grandparents are
Leonard and June . Stover ,
Racine.
,
Paternal grandparen!s are
Sam and Sue Mayrlard ,
Wilkesville.
.
Maternal gteat graqdparents
are William and Elizabeth
Stover, Racine; and Johnnie and
NellleHoschar. Southside, W.Va.
Paternal great' grandparents
are Cecil and Fannie Maynard,
Racine.
·
·

Easter egg hllnts, bonnets, and ' ·
l
outdoor se~vlces. Many tradl·
~.
tloris are tied to the new life
message of the .resurrection.
SHEUI\ D. COUGRANOUR
High School.
Poems and prayers concluded
Army Spec. ShellaD.Coughan·
'I'INA L. DEWEESE · l' ;
the program.
' our has been aw81'ded the Good
Navy
Seaman Recruit Tina L.:
Upcoming events were noted
Condu~t Medal at Kelly Air
a · 1988 g1"ad11~te of
DeWeese,
and reports or the IU were given.
Force Base, Te,xas.
·
Point
·
Pleasant
Senior High
MemorlallUies for Eva Swartz
The award was presented for School of Point Pleasant, WV,
and Mary VIrginia Rl!!bel were , exemplar)' conduct while In the
has completed recruit training at
taken to shut Ins .
active service of the United · Recruit Training Command, Or·,
Unison prayer closed the meet· State8.
. ·
lando, Fla.
, ~
lng and •Mrs. Kennedy served a
She Is an electronic warfare
During
DeWeese's
elght-~eek
dessert course following an
The tradition of Easter lilies, 'Easter theme to guest Mary speciBiist with the 748th Mlllll\ry training cycle, she studied gen-~
eral military subjects designed
colored eggs, and Easter finery Bowen and 12 members. Favors Intelligence Battalion.
Coughanour
is
the
daughter
of
to prepare her. for further aca·
were noted With general descrip- were Inspirational cards and
Mary
E.
Pullins
of
390
S.
Second
· demlc and on· the-job \raining IIi·
tions of childhood mem9rles of bOokmarks.
Ave., and Frederick E. PuUins of one of the Navy's 85 basic fields.'
894 Hysell St., both or Middleport,
DeWeese's studies lnC\Jided
Ohio,
seamanship, close order (lrlll;.
Her .husband, Army SpeC.
Naval history and first ·•aid:
Mrs. Norma Lee was a recent
Recent weekend guests of Mrs. William L. Coughanour, Is the Personnel who complete'· this"
dinner guest of Mrs. Frances Clara Howard were Mr. and Mrs. · son or Rodney L, and Jo Anne
course or·instructlon
e.lliltbl$
"A Gift of Hope" was the title · vales people for action.
Young:
.
William D. Howard and daugh· Co!Jghanour of Rural Route 1,
for three hours of college credit
of the program presented by
The scrupture read was Ro·
Mr.hand Mrs. Daniel Young ter, VIrginia Beach; Mr. and . Dawson, Pa.
In Physical Education ·· an~
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes and Mrs .. mans 5: 1·5.
She Is a 1986 graduate of Meigs
and son, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dill and Mrs. Elwood Howard Jr. and.son,
Hygiene.
'' "
Betty Roush at the recent meetchildren, David Stlenmetz and Frankfort, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
The g1'oup sang "Room At The
ing of the Chester United Metho· Cross" as the closing hymn.
daughter, ·were recent dinner Raymond Swartz and sons Ma·
dlst Women. ·
The program closed with
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam rletta; and Mr. and Mrs. James
; The group sang the hymn· "fhe · prayer and a benediction. Mrs.
Stlenmetz.
Neal, Cheshire.
By Untied Press IDiernatlonal
• .·
·~lld Rock" with Betty Dean as
Ellza,beth Hayes read an Easter
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jewell and . Francis Foley, Columbus; Mr.
CRU~ING
PAST
THJi;
QUESTION:
As
one
of
the
main ,
·pianist.
poem.
.
Cheryl wererecentdlnnerguests · and Mrs. Gary F!!Jey, Syracuse;
at
the
Earth
Day
rally
ln
Washington.
D.C.,
Sunda,,
attractiOns
The purpose of the program
of Mrs. Pauline Atk111s.
were weekend visitors or .their
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, vice pres!·
Tom Cruise urged the crowd to recycle, conserve and ·plant
was to . strengthen the under· dent, presided at the business·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ma!lr.
trees .. But he was decidedly yague when reporters asked hlrn
:Standing of the spiritual life as a meetlrig with ten members presMr. and Mrs. Rober.t Gibson, ·
1\tr. and Mrs. Allen Gibson and
about
his hobby - driving gas-guzzling, carbon monoxide;community .of christians com· ent and 35 sick and shut In calls · Robin and Ray · Alkire, Colum- children, Columbus, vlslled Mrs.
spewing
race cars. "The thing Is, not many people are going to .
bus, were recent dinner guests of VIrginia Gibson over the
-milled to the church's mission. to reported.
be
ab\etodrlve
~ace cars, OK?" Cruised said. "It's lmportan,t \O,. ·,
· llear and partiCipate In stories of
It was deCided to .glve $50 per
Mr. and Mrs. ~bert Alkire. .
weekend.
. 1
point
to
the
things
you can do to make a difference as oppo6ed to
~biblical and . conle'1Jporary
at
TQm
Cruise. Look at where he stands and look
saying,
'Look
women of faith and to celebrate
County ..
·
at
the
effect.'
You're
pointing a finger at the wrong why."
Spirituality and how that mot!·
BARRY'S HEALnl: A New York judge says If millionaire
Bradford Church of Christ
A birthday pizza partY was
hotelier Harry Helmsley Is flt enough to dash off to Florida, hels
you~ adult class had a weiner given In honor of Ann and Bobby
fit enough to undergo a mental ·coJllpetency examination on
roast at the home of Terry and Mash, Those attending .were
May 9. ~ast month Helmsley, 81, fell head·fitst down some
Tina McGuire on Saturday, April Burdell and William Bradford of
stairs
but a prosecutor' painted out that on Aprll5 Helmsley arid
•
7. Those attending were Bill and .Columbus, Ohio, Boll, T"nunle,
his wife, Leona, 70, flew to Florida for a vacation. "It was our
By Nellie Parker
Josephine Shone, Toledo, spent Becky Amberger, Btlap and and Krls Mlish, Susie and Wayne
Information that he .did not go by ambulance or on a stretcher~ "
Guests Of Nina Robinson and the week alter Easter With her Suzie Will, Dave and Cherie PliUins, and Donna Gilmore.
said state' Assistant Attorney General Alfredo Mende:z.
Clara Follrod during Easter mother, Margaret :;&gt;pencer,' and
'1\'llllamson, Mike, Janice, and ! · The Rev. and Mr~. Floyd !\hook
~eb;ll~.Jey's lawyers . hao;l cont~ncjed that the straJn, ,of, ,P.- ,
·were Bob and Janet Robinson, other relatives In tHe area.
David Fetty, . Brenda Bolln, I and Mrs. Theo Davis of ·Colum·
compentency examination by court·appolnted ' psychiatrists
J!elpre; ·Greg and Tammy Crum,
Carl Dorst, who has been
Sherry and Elizabeth · Smpth, bus, (llilo spent the day visiting
would be too much for htm. Helmsley was ruled Incompetent to
;Fairfield; and Bill and Julie recovering from Injuries suf·
Derek, Karllta, and Andrew friends here on Aprll17.
stand trial with Leona last year when she was convicted o~
-smith, T&amp;peka, Kan.
fered In the fire that destroyed
Stump, Bill, Carolyn, Miranda,
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore and Dar·
.fede~al tax charges but since then, there have been reports-that
: Uncia and David Williams, his home, was dismissed from
and B.J. Nlcbo!SOd, Terry Lee ble · Dorst spent the Easter
he bas been making big business deals and seeking documents
',Belpre, were Eas,terlg'uests of Veterans Memorial Hospital. He
and Pat McGuire, and Jenny weekend wltti Mr. and Mrs.
abOut their case.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Is now at the home of his nephew,
· '
Damron. Afterlthe me.a l etecilon James Gilmore.
KO~LCUTS: Helmut Kohl's two-week fast resulted In a loss
Henderson.
(
Tom Dorst.
of officers was held. The ne\v
Mr. and Mrs. -E rnest Van
of 16 pounds. The West German chancellor recently returned
Mr. and. ·Mrs. Bob Keaton,
officers are Terry McGuire, Sr., Inwagen of Bradbury; and Mr.
from his annual trip IQ an Austrian spa, where he had only
; . Mr. and Mrs. Larry Spencer, Bobby, Matthew, and Kevin, of
President, Bill Amberger, Vice and Mr5. Don Nelson of Middle· herbal tea, milk, occaillonal bouillon soup and old. dry ~~heafe,d
Racine, visited the Poole· Chester, and Eva Kelley, local,
President, · Cherie Williamson, port visited Mr. and Mrs. Cliff
breal!. A friend said the 6-foot..J Kohl shed 16 pounds, brll)glll'g
;..Parker hqme and Mr. and Mrs. were Easter guests -of Mr. and
Treasurer . . and Sherry Smith, Jacob Wednesday evening.
, his weight 'down to 235. Kohl was back at work Monday .for,,a,.
:f'loyd Avis and 13Gb.
Mrs. Lester Keaton.
Secretary..
·~ r
political meeting and said he felt a llttlP "stralned' r . bu·t··
.
· othei'Wlse fit and ready to continue working on German
reunification. ·
·
·
.
GOLDIE'S OPPORTUNrfY: Goldie Hawn hasn't had a hli
: Members were reminded ofthe and planted at the Wolf Pen ROad
movie for a while and is lipping that her new seven-picture deal
.regional garden club meeting at sign and at zion Church.
With Dlsne:v. Will recharge her career, even If she's no longer I~
readers.
Jr Nellie Plll'ker .
:Nelsonville on Saturday when the
Helen Eblin presented the
super-star
J11les. ''I have no problem taking a smaller role," sh~ ·
chOir
'members
Nina
Alfred
Alfred United Methodist
-Fernwood Garden Club met at program, :'propagating Lilies"
says
In
Fame
magazine. "It's really about the content of the
·Doris
and
Gertrude
Robinson,
Church celebrated Easter with
r the Zion Church of Christ with In which she state~! JUles can be
size
of the role." However, the magazine quotes
role,
not
the
and
Lloyd
Dillinger,
Ruth,
Lloyd,
Sunrise SerVIce, Easter Break·
: Helen Eblin as hostess.
. started by the stems, root diV·
sources
who
say
Hawn dropped out of the movie "My ·Blue
fast, regular Sunday School.and and .Debbie Brooks, sang ''It was
· Ida Murphy presided at the lslon, bulblets, offsets, and seal·
which
she was to play a district atlorney, because
Heaven,"
In
worship SerVIce, and a egg hunt His Love and Not the Nalls" and
: meeting In which Thelma Giles lng. When the bloo.m dies, the
&amp;eve
Martin
and
Rick
Moranls had juicier roles. "GoWie says
for the children.
·
''The Healer." They presented a
) had devotl(\ns entitled ''Sin· tollage dies; the bulb matures,
~he
wants
to
do
ensemble
.movies but she doesn't really
Ruth Brooks and Marilyn 'Ro· · choral reading of the Easter
• cerely" by Sue Monk Kldd. Roll and a dormant stage sets In until
understand
what
that
means."
one ass&lt;lj:late said. The
blnson COnducted the Sunrty story.
: call was answered with each the cycle .begins again the next
magazine
features
two
striking
photog1'aphs
of Hawn covered In
· l"'lchelle O'Neil gave an Easter
SerVIce. SerVIce opened With a
~ naming their favorite Illy, Tiger,
spring.
gold
makeup
like
something
out
of
"Goldfinger."
,
recitation. Eloise Archer closed ·
plano· prelude by MS. Rqblnson,
' Madonna, Day, Atlantlc Ytar
For stem propagation, she and a scripture reading by Lloyd
PUSSYCAT
UNPLUGGED:
Pollee
in
'San
Antonio
literally
the program With prayer.
: and Trumpet VIne.
stated tltat the s~ems are placed Brooks from the 24th chapter of
on
the
rock
band
Fasler
Pu•yca&amp;
and
arrested
pulled
the
plug
Altar flowers were dedicated
; During Gardeners Week, upright in a field four Inches St. Luke. Nellie Parker read "A In tbe memory of Dinsmore
two members for using profanity during a show early Monday.
; members planted flower seeds, deep, dug In the fall, and planted Man Went Free" and "Early Boyles, Howard · Flanders, and
Guatave Ronald Molvlk, 25, and Bren Presion Musca&amp;, 23, both
:·transplanted plants. and pruned six Inches deep. By the second Easter Morning." Gertrude Ro·
of Los Angeles, paid $100 fines for disorderlY conduct and their
Hazel Carsey.
: rose bushes, as well as trimmed fall, they can be sold 111nson read "What Was Our
bond was set at $5,000 each on cr-Iminal mischief
VIsitors Included Myrtle
: around gardens.
commercially.
Savior Thinking?"
·
Flanders, Edith Harper, Marge
• It was announced that officers
For bulblets, the little bulbs
l.lebble Brooks sang "He was Guthrie, Jeremy Barber, Mr.
: for next year will remain the fall to the ground and sprout.
Despised." Michelle O'Neil, Kirk and Mrs. Kevin Brooks, Halley
•same.
·
Offsets may be attached to the Danlelle, and Tiffany Spencer, · and Aaron, all local; Kathleen
: New plants will be. purchased mother bulb for years. If del·
Larry Ritchie; and Stacy Watson and Ben Jackson, Reynqldsburg;
ached It may take years to be· spelled EASTER with Marilyn Trina Specht, Wellstdh; Pam
'
able to produce a plant and
Robinson and Ruth Brooks as Riggs, Lubeck, West VIrginia.
~
.
flowers alone.
For
the
scaling
method,'
scales
. A Meigs County woman re; celved her deg1'ee from Ohio of the bulb are detached and
: State University at Its wl.n ter pia ted In trays uptll large
An announcement of a state have a dinner meeting at the
·
• quarter commencement exer· eno gh to live alone.
se~slon to be In August at Toledo
Chester Lodge Hall on Sunday at
T e n~xt meeting ~II be held
: clses on March 16.
was made when the Chester 1,:30 p.m. The dinner . will be
' Bailey 1as
: Receiving a degree was Marla Ma 15 with Wllovenl
Council 323 Daughters of Amer·
·Cristina Aver ion, Pomeroy, hos ss ana the progr m will ~be lea met recently at the lodge hall served by the co·nventlon
committee.
on ' Plants for Shady laces.' 1
.bachelor of arts In journalism.
with Beulah Maxey presiding.
Helen Wolf served a'JIIanlst for
•
:J
I
.I
Esther Smith will be installed
the meeting. Refreshments were ·
as Stille CoQncllor of Ohio.
served by ' Elizabeth Hayes,
Tbere were 23 members at·
Esther Smith, Jean .,Frederick,
tending and It was reported that
and Ruth Smith. .
Enjoy the flexibility and liquidity qf a CD ·
Esther Harden, district 13 depAttending were Doris Koenig, ·
Three Meigs County students uty, Syracuse, Is home from the
which is automatically renewable and redeemable
Betty Roush, Everett Grant,
A donation of $225 was given to
attending Ohio State University hospital. ·
at each 7 day anniversary
Marcia Keller, Helen Woll, Ethel
buy new uniforms at the recent
were named to the winter quar·
The
Past
Deputies
and
Past
Orr,
Dorta
Grueser,
Elizabeth
·meeting of Racine Post 602
'
ter honor roD.
Hayes, Beulah Maxey, Esther
The 7-Day-Premium CD
Amerrlcan Legion.
Those honored received ·a Councilors Club of Dis trlct 13 will
Smith, Erma Cleland, Faye
It was voted to sponsor the
g1'ade point average of at leas t3.5
is ·another example of our
Kirkhart, Lora Damewood, Inzy
Racine Minor League Ball Team.
and were enrolled tor at least 12
Commitment To Customers.
Newell,,Thelma White, Charlotte
The 1979 Ya mapa Motor Cycle credit hours.
that the Post Is giving away Will
Those recognized were Jared
'Easter Sunday guesU; at the Grant, Sandra White, Mary K.
' Call or visit you nearest
, )le on display Saturday and
Andrew Sheets, Pomeroy; C8ro1
home of Ada Bissell . and son Holter, Sadie Trussell, Jean
· Central Trust office fo'r details today.
; Sunday at the Syracuse fire
Lynn Flsh~r. Racine; and David Kenneth of Long Bottom were: Frederick, JoAnn Baum, Rutll
Smith, and Brenda Cunningham:
( House. Donations are $1 and the
Eugene RIC(!. Reedsville. ·,
Mrs, Tom Drake, Anne and
• '
i bike will be given away Memor•.t
. S10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Tommy of Valaparasa, Indiana.
'
f!a!Day.
MIXimum deposit $99,999.99. Substlnlial penalty for ....1y withdnw 1 1
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Groeneveld
~ . The Post will also spon~r a
lntrrest p~d to princip1land mmpounded Weekly.Races effealn March 9, 1990,
and Tommy, Worthington. Mr.
and slbject ro change without not' ice. Yield assumes rhar stated rar~ rem11 in1)
\ Bean and Corn Bread and Spagh·
and Mrs. Mark Holter and Kyle, · Sberyl Leann Johnson, .from
constant for a full year with no withdr...-als Qf' interest pr principal.
~
( etd supper. It will be held at the
WIC pick up dates are Friday, Laancaster. Mr. and Mrs. Steve HQCklng Technical · COlleae in
~ Post home on May 10 from 1-6
April 30, and May 1 from 9,:..11
Nel.OOvllle, stient tile weekend at
;. p.m. to raise money for the Boy a.Jll. and 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs MeLevey and . Josh, Williamstown.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mike
tbe
home of Mr. and Mrs. Artllur
1
The Bank That Make• Thing• Happen .
• Scout Troop. t,. consignment
County Healtll Department.
Blase!~ Michelle and Michael
Earl Johnsoll.
982-1881
. 448-0902
~.jluctlon will be held at 6 p.m.
Make up dates are May 7, 14, Patrick, Pomeroy. Harold and
Lula CirCle was a dinner guest
Middleport
· GalllpoUs
~ Reft'elbments were served fol·
and 21 from 9-11 a .m. and 1-3 Judy Holter and Mae McPeek,
Memh,. FDIC .
ofMr.andMn.RobertHa'rdenof
p.m.
.
:IGWtDi tile meetln~.
Long Bottom.
M;ming Star Road, on Sunday.
(

!Chester UMW meets

Post Easter prayer by Gay
Perrin and a review of Lenten
services and activities hlghllgh·
ted the recent meeting · of
·Friendly Ctrcle of the Trinity
Church.
Carrie Kennedy · was hostess
tot the meeting held In the
recreation room of Stonewood
Apartments In Middleport.
Mrs. Perrin opened the meet·
ing with a scriptural account of
. the resurrection momlng.

In the service

nel:J)S

'&lt;

•

Harrisonville happenings

ate

·People in the neU!r--

~~~':-"atl~e~~~ls~.elgs

Laurel Oiff news .notes'

~Alfred . news.· notes.

.:Fernwood Garden Club meets
. .·
.

Alfred church·happenings

Tuuday. April24, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ Notice
c..,...._ trOIIf P8tle 21
be peid 111 ocldhlan8l
""' . . _ . 1•1.001 per
mont11 f o r - y- ~con_ , ful-ttme oomc. to
...... ·""
SEC. XIII: Thill ........
counol 111111 -.nine
which emplo 1- 1, . Olooof.
tied 11 ful---ploy-.
SEC. XIV; 11tlo Ordlnonce
.W toke ef!wt· ond be fn
forae """' Md oftor Moy 1,
1180. ·
,
Pooood tho lth "- 0 fA r1
P •
·
-•

·--··

P.

1110.

Public NOtiCe

Notice .

•

.

· A-t: Jon
Buak. ctertt
. , _ M. Horton.
..... ldont of Council
14) 24 1•1 1 Zlc
- : " · ' · ·

..
NOTICE OF
API'OINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Aprl 4, 1 lio.. ln the
llhllll County . flr9bot•
Court. C..o No. 2111110, Robert E. DIIYII. Route 1, .
Lontllvllle. Ohio 45741,
IPpolntod E-or of
tho . , . of l!lnMO Oovlo,.
""-W. l8to of RoUII 1,
Len!IIYIIo. Ohio 45741.
R~E.Bucfl,

.

Prabete Judgo
Leno K. N•lotrMd, CIOrk
(4) 10. 17, 24 :tic

Public Notice ·
NOTICE OF-SALE
By virtue of on Order of
Solo ltoued GUt of the Com·
mon PI- Court of Molgo
County,, Ohio, In the CillO of
Diamond 1•1!1111 • Loon
Cqmpeny, Pliiii!Hf. vo. Don
C. lodter, Ill ot., Det•d"'!10. upon a Judgm- the(··
oln r•*'"· _bolng Cue
. No. •·CV-113
In lllid
Court. I wM offer for Olio II

I1;~~~~~r:~:

County Counhou•. In the
City of P.,,...oy, County of tlon mey
till
Malgo ond ltata of Ohio, on dorol Tait
mew not
14th dey of Mey. ·1 180 be utln...,.hod by the lole,
j,ilici,;~iftii o'alodt o.m. the ond Pllrclloowo of ony - "
deocrl- ,.,.. ..., -:my oro u--' to
Md '-"-0. tv wit:
.
-.:h
" - Tu Lion
81tuol8d In the County of tndu that lo kept by the
Molgo In the State of Ohio; C.Unty Reoonl• to - ·
MllfntheTow::':/oflolfo. mlnolf Notlao of o Fedwot
bUry bou
..,d d• T11 Lion h• bMn fllod with
ocrl- u faltowo:
,..peat to tiny _ , 1'111
lit~ In Soctlon · 27,
louloby, BherHI
Froct lon 33, Town.2, Ron ..
1 3 • lollsbury Townohlp,
....... f&lt;. I:IINopotL
Moip eou-..
.
An.......,
..., StotoofOhlo
STUZIN ANO 'CAM,NER
ond being ..._ fully . de·
li797 N. High ltrwl
ocrl- • fvllowo ;
·
·
Suite 134
Commondng It 1 point In
Worthington, Ohio 430111
the oout,.._t cor- of oold
.
(114(8811·4512
Froctlon 33;' thonCII North
alone the Uno of oold (4110, 17, 243tc
Froctlon 33, 1IiilO- more
or Ieee to o point;· 1Mn111
Publll: Notice
Woot along o Une. liOO ·fHt
mora or '-• to on Iron pin In
grontoro P--'Y line
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
..._
.....,
RI;AL ESTATE
d
he
..
on t
• t ••, - t - ''
THE ITATE OF OHIO
right of Mv fino of Stato
. MEIGS COUNTY
ROU18 Number 143 ond tho
THE CENTRAL TRUST
-1 point of beginning lor
COMPANY OF
.lond .heroin doocrl-:
SOUTHEASTERN
thonce north 71 d..,_ 04'
DO" Woof olong . o line.
OHIO, N.A.
1110.33 to M "on pin:
FREDERi'l W. KLEIN.
thonce North 111 dlgr,
AKA
07' · 114:' Eoot atune I line,
FRED-W. KLEIN. ET AL . .
280.111 to . , Iron pin:
CME NO. 11 CL 227
thwtce Nfl!lh I I dlgr-.
In pur-- to •n 0...
II 1' 20" Eut otone 1 fino, of Site tlrecto&lt;l'to me In the
117.111 fHt to on Iron pin In obove entldod octlon, 1 will
the g,.ntora property · Uno offir lor oolo It pulltla - ·
ond tho ulotlng -terly
of
right of woy fino of SUtto lion, Ill tho fyont tho
ROU18 Number 143: thence Courthou• In Pomeroy,
Iouth t 7 degr- DO' 00" Ohio. In tho ollove llllllld
1•
Woot atune the grontorl 1·O&lt;IUntly. ~'1,1';-doy
pr~ Uno ond tho ·oalot·
lng-terly right of-y Uno
of 81118 Rou18Number143,
324.1111 fHt t.o the point of
boalnnlng ··and containing
t .071ocroo.
E•c!IPtlne on t l l l " l lngrooHgr••
being
mroe fuRy doocribod·oo fof:. ..
lowo:

·-

~

.~-~. . .~. ~ ~ No-t~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~r=lirr==~~~~~==il~~:i~~~~~
Ill. 11- d of . , . . Of

cArmel news

WIC pickup

f

•

For Appt. Call

ft 2•6717 H- or

d•c 111 d "'"'' "ty o trion-

ou1or
lltlp of 1 - · out of
thaS.E . Cor-tvboullid•

992-6244

onout1Mtotha80ocralorm
11

•lflolnlnt
Jolin
W. ~
Cof'l!lll'l; -11:¥
oncl EX·

=

CEPTINQ AND IIESERY·

~:.,:::,~. "!..:" J:

INSULATION

tharltf'lttomlnoondoporote
for
tho t11e
- •to•-lnt
·
· Also
,..,,_
1111 olluotld' In tho 'Townohlp. CountY ond Stotelfa•
rooaid • ..,dIn oold ' Soctlon
11, T-nli!.IIMge 13oftha
Ohio C o - Purahooe.
flellnnlng 8. 25
E.. 10
..,. 20 llnko fyom Fanny ,
Smith' a N.W. co,_ Md In
the • .,tor of tho rood:
thence N. litl'l clea. E.• 13
.
-~S . 410hdlg.E.,
tv tho
thonce

!NO·

1_. 5

Mallie_
.• V'-'

-r·
.S..tnli'd

Guttw

OVEN HPAIR
All lUllS
ar1n1 It 1n 0r W•

OHIO
liSIIVEI
1111
HE
a
EVEIUSTINGS
OPEN:

Pick Up.

APRl I THIIU JULY I

KEN'S. APPUANCE
SEIVICE

... ,.. -

Wltidows

lito ,. . , . d11arlllod 1'111

Call 992-2772

4-5-'10-1 ••·

*LIGHT HAULING

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

lEN'S

SEIVICE

conl'l\flctionQ
· To AU
' ..
Types Of
· Travel~' ,.., .. ,

Prior
Doncl Rotl{. .ce'
Deed look 290, Pogo 143,
Mol8,l County Roeard8
Property Ad"-o: 32831 .
CotUna Rood, 81111 Roull
143. Route 4. Pom-1
Ohio 411711
Pilrcit No.:,14-01013.000
.•
Sold PNm- ' . ·I• AP:,
Public Notl~.
prolaod ot t28,000.00 ond
CMni&gt;t be oold lor loao. than
IHERtFF'S BALE
two-thirdo of that amount.
CASE NO. 10-CV-15
A dopooll of o CERTIFIED
The ltoto of Ohio, Molgo CHECK. poyoblo
to the
, County, oo. Pur...n to-the lhorHI, OR CASH, lor .10
' com...- of., o-ofulo percentofthopurdoooe
· , lo-.1 fiGm the Court of price wll ·be roqulrld ot tho .
• Common PIof lllid time tho bid lsoccoptod .
' County, orHI to mo diroctod,
The FUU lliiHCh- price
,.,In the~ of CitRano Fe· oholt be pold TO THISHER·
. . . . . . . . . I fodotrll Sov·
IFF within THIRTY f301 deyo
. ,.... Sonll. Plolntlff, y, wu.
from tho- of Nfo. ond on
11om E,.-rlo oncllondro K. foluro blo do
oo, 1M
Morrio. Mot .. Defondlnto.l. p"""'oo• aholl be odjudgod
, . _ M: Sou lolly. Shorlff• Ill
contempt of Court.
ohotl offoo' for Olio Ill public
PubliC
Notice Ia herebv gl·
ouctlon, ot
the Mo1111·

dol.....,

.

, .... ,,_ .... .Offlco

-EUM HOME

. . . &amp;leanlf.,
S4iftler Cltf11111 111111

--··

\&lt; "

614-742-2315

. '"' 949·2101

RUTUND n11

:t-21-'ecl-lfft

.

-~

Pub,ll.C Notice

'

t

'

lnierrurtional Clas~iJif!fl Advertising Week ·
April 22-28, 1990 ·
'

.

. Celebrate With Us.~ .. ALL 3's ·Spe'cial1
3 Day_
8 - 3 Papers - 3 Lhies (15 worclt•)

$3.33 ..

. When you place your ad If will be Jls&amp;ed Ia all 3 of our
newsptipel'tl: Gallipolis Deily Tribune, 'ftle Dall;r Sentinel, and
·
Point Pleuanl Rqtlller.
·

ALL A.,S _MUST 81': l'AID IN ADVANCE ~d ~tvetl to ,~.el'tlllllalled ..

or llelore • r AprH ,.,1111 edit....

'.

Pomeroy Dully Sentinel
Ill Court St. ' •.
.
romeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-21~6 ,·
'

,.

·

·

·

.

9:00 A.M~
,APRIL 26 &amp;.27'
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY .

We are continuing the .
· sale of the late·
, Helin lyons .held·on
saturday, April 2.1. We ,
·will try to get everything
· solei on Thursiay.
•IGs·COUNn FAIUOUNDS

DAN

• ADCnONEER
61

a.

7301

CALL

MAIN 51.,
I•

•

•

NEW -IEPAII
·Gutters

Downspouts .

Gutter Cleaning,

SITEWOIK
ROADS
.
'• .
CLEA''"'

w. can ,..,. and ,.~

Ni._WLAND
· ENtERPRISES

hloter corH. Wt can
aho •ill ...., and , ...

DUMP TRUCK

Puinting

Sand-Stone-Dirt

FRE~ ESTIMAtES

(614) 667-3271

949·2168
2·1-'tfl:l 1110.

G....tl. Newland
·

•

· 7·11-'IJt.tln

SER~ICE

IIOI'e radlatws

oncl

out rllllaton. We also
repoir Gas Tattb.

PAT HILL FOlD
992-21
Middleport,

JOrS GIFT SHOP

·maciiSI. •o . •

·,. MOBILE
HOME PARK

{AiooftPin•SMpl

' IS NOW 'OPEN ·
FOI IUSINESS.

•Mobile Home
Pat11· .
•Mobile Home

IN BTOCII' oc:.m.n POnlh
..... •Cem•ery FloWer
Yoooo •CIII' Bkd Botl!o
•Cemlftt Bird IMM .

Ren..o .
•Lot Rlfll'lo

•Fount~~ In Bird S.tha • Plu• ·

• 992-7479
lt.S3

·oaw: Frogo, Ang* "!ld
Oth• Y•d Ornemns

"···- U• &amp; Savel

SMALL ENGINE
CDnEI .

!ISIIIIOWRS .'
..UIIMAI&amp;KIO
. PIOIIm

·-.........

s...... Coliter • 1DC
............. cw. ,
s...............

.,_

HOURS: M·F 9· 7
Sot. 9·1; Claood Sun.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHES1D, OHIO

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•F!LL DIRT .
• •ANYTHING,
AT ALL

985-4422

K and l CONSTRUCTION ·

Roger Hysell

.

Garage' ·
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Al~t Trl••leell•

G.EG IAIUY

..

•NEW ~HOMES •SIDING,
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAl. CONTRACTING

II. l24J 1'1-.y'Oitlo

REPAUC

AUCtiON "'\

' RHidentill It
Comm1rcial

_Aiigl)ment
•Oil Change Lube.
•Brake W01rk

ROOFING

~PUBLIC \f·•

.

HWHIEY'S
CUUTE
COfmOL
S.rwlce

lowtrd LWrlt.al

PubliC SBle

3-Zt-'10-1 ...

lealktg.. Ceoling,
lefrlteratlon

poymont of boiMce untooo
lllid bolonco oholt be pold In
eight Ill H¥• from tho dote
of the oole.
. .Jomoo M. Soutoby
StwHI of Moi111 County
Dougl• M. Cowloo
·
Attorney for PlolntHI
(3) 20, 27: (41'3. 10, .17.
24 ~~

&amp;

'·

NEW &amp; USED
PARTS

"lOW IlK- 110111"

~;~~§~~~;

8

.,.• ,,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

HOMES &amp; ~IAGES

on

'

·'

*"'"'

209 South 4th St.
Mldtll.,..t, Oh; .

, CUSTOM IUIT , .

of the 33ontholollh•dolde
1'0111.
2 · In
Percola I • It opP,.Isoil ot
U7,&amp;00.00 on\1 ' C.,ft!'l be
lllld too ... two-thlrdo
of tile llltiOIIood value. Tho
In Lov,lng
p&lt;oporty ioclllld In tho vH· Memory Of
Iogo of Mhldloport, wilt. be
sold - t o l y from propROBERT N,
""' on llllloliury Twp. Tho
CLARK,
p&lt;oporty In, Sollobury TWp.
wM bo oold • o unit.
Gone; dean Bob,
TERMS OF SALE: Tho
gone fortvar;
•-oful
purchllar, u
How
we mitt your
'"'"" • his bid lo occoptod
oholl bo required to dopoolt
amlllng face; '
the doy of oolo, lrl c•h or
But you left ul to ro·
by. cwtlftod chadt, poyobla
membor
ta tllo sheriff of Mol111
County, Ohio, 10% of tho
None of earth can,
amount of ouch oc-tod
take your pl-.
bid, but In noM~~nt lwothon
•1.000.00. The bolonce of
Still loved, ltill mill·
the puri:h- price oholl be
od, IIIII· very dear.
due Mid poyoblo to tho Sh•·
Your wife, l.ole end
Iff of Mlllll County. Ohio.
wlthlrl thirty (301 doyo ·fram
1on: lArry • wife,
lho doll of aonflrmotlon of
. Joy. end grindoote. Tho purch•er ohell be
daughter~ &amp;
roqulred to pey lnterlll on
!he unpaid bet.,ce ot the
- o f 10% per onnum fyom
tha dote olula t:;o;.:t;:ho:.:d:et:•;.:o.;.f.- - - - -

"

PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

.... Lemtlon:
1.. North
......rt.. Oltio 45760

· For Rabbit.
Jetta, Golf.
Beetle and Bus.

..._...on

....

v.w.

PLIIMIING &amp; U.. &amp;,n..,.

OoodRot•
T.L.C . .

. BISSELL
BUILDERS

R~

BILL SUCK
992-2269
EVENINGS

.

992-5335 or 915-3561

"Y9ur

NOTICE OF ·
APPF~::r~::~. OF
On Aprl H, 1180. ln't,.
Molga
County Probate
. Court. Cue No. '2B&amp;t4,
Trovo Klmoo. 51 171 SR
338• .118alne. Ohlit 45771.
ond Uovd 0. Luohor: 172CR
highwoyL 21. A.. ley, Ohio 43003
r o o l - 1"1" appointed CO·Idnllf\fo.·
tp Honea Jon• trotoro of t!&gt;o • • of...,.
.,.
Jonoo loy dood r•
toh- o. llonoarn .......-..•
oardocl In YolurM 1 91. pogo IIIII of 111171 SR 338. Rli·
233 of tho Molp County clna, Ohio 411771 .
llobort ·E. Buck.
DHCIR--*·
.
Probete Judge
·lite peaporty In Pwcetl•lt
1o
Plochfork Rood
t..ano K. Noo.,rood. Cllrk
(County Rood 1 l)_aoch,.
!41 t7, :1!4; Ill 1, 3tc
!Itt ~ to ·7/10 mil• from
,...

: TERMS OF SALE: C..h
• on
of died.
Jomoo •· Souloby
; (41 ft~~;~4~11f County

.

.

"FIREWOOD

742-3011

- · h• ..............
: Auditor' a Parcel Number:
.
11-D0100.
Prom- .known •: 452
: I .. Fifth s-. Mlddl-"
' Olllo 411710.
' REAL
EBTAtE
AP·
• PRAISED AT: t33,100.DO.
' The 'rool-.....-be
two-thlrdi. "nlng.

'

TRIM anti RE·
MOVAL ·,

•Tire Saln
•Front End

-· .

.

•SHRUB- a. TRE.E

90 DAY WAIIANn'

- .fo

l""'nco

10

.....,.

FREE EITI~ATES

(614)
742-2027

...

r:;E~=

St. lt.

USED APPLIANCES

.

Solne Lot No. 131 In lhlf·
• llotd.' tn the Vlloge of Mid~ ~ · Mol~ County,

89 o~eg,,
t
otone •
• point In the
grontoro. proporty ,,.. ond
the existing oullllltli right of
fino of State Route
Number 143: thonoo South
, ........ 0!1' 00" Wilt
itone the grontoro l"oporty
lift- ond tho 1KIItlila - ·
tar1y right of fino of
IIIII Route Number 143,
20.00feettottiepolntofbl-

FREE ESTIMATES

loltot!to , . 1111 _. .....,....,
,_.......
lot us da It for. you.

Ami 6 P.M.

'-•r

SAUS and
SEIVICE

,_

c...,.. .

-

llfWII'1nMlolion
Storm .,_, &amp;

; p~e~otegotdooaolptlonofthe
reol
II fotfOWOI
·

: ,. Rotor~ D.oo&lt;l: Yolumo
251, page
303, Moilll
County Dead Roctir•.
' Sold roll -~~ illbl1ct
: tq accrued 1980 real . . . .

Mli&amp;OIIXTBIOI
IHtal
· &amp; Palllt....

,o..m.·&amp;

Acr- ,,_ Peot'bflico
217 L S.C.,
r-" 0 '

._..

UNDA'S
PAI-NG
&amp; ·co "
....

l-'li._..t W'-"·ws

.t:)l TRAVEL
PURSUIT

oold

HOURS:
ThurO: thru Sun.

99M33s or915..3S61

a-.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

t

510'11 21111 St.

M.._
cou~. Ohio: u.
CEfltiNG , _ t11e -

cor- of llfd
Court·ll~~Common~~~~cf~"'~•~toEp~olnt
in
North

:gs resTU-ent.f net
place on·honor roll

.

w

- - 4, • 1114. .. .
~.4.-

D of A to attend state session

Long &amp;ttom notes

Business -'Services

"lt .......le Prlcu"

Earns OSU degree

Racine American
•Legion donates

The

-.c.u~=-E.

•

In:·door
Pomeroy.
Mollll
t.,..,Jront
County,
Ohio, of
oathe
tho 11th
dey of May, 1180, ot 10:00
, A.M.. the followlns lon*
end t • - • IDCOtod 111
· 41i2 8. Fifth
Mldtl•
• part, Ohio 411~. A comIIGUII

.

7·

.

.u. .

A Graat Camllinallcin"Quallty IIMI laasuable Prices"

'"· 992-5682
or 992-7121

WI GO THE IIIII
992·6110
.P. .E~Y

4-25-lfn

FENCING .

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

FREE ·
ESTIMATES

IISSELL · ·
SIDING CO.

... ._ ...

SEARS

... 949·2101
.... 949-1160

.ID&amp;IPOIY

''Freel!ltlm8tel"

711 •• , ...

992-2

NO SIIIOAY

•

==

.•

1

SUN'S UP TANNING
... ... ..., ........ ow.

s.............. ,..._._........._ ....... 13.50

'·

6 Srsde•...- .....................·....... •12.00
12 SJJJIIM...." ....- ...............-•20.00 :

IS S.•l•••--..:-..-···--...... •25.00 :
fiiST VISI1' fl&amp; - POS..y· MOlE
LOnONS - STICKERS

Cal s•• c........

,.:t-~177'1

�..
a

'

· !V!NINQ
1:00

··"'-

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icrO:::a. And

.·~·"•

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· elll • • Q• (I) llll
(I)

etM learnt lbOul tile

lll'l . f

iiJ "-"Man

tD CUrtea In ctwp
1:05 (J) •WI1J Hlllt IIIII

1m ~oloiwtam'......., 1,.o, .•
WD,M\~--

I. '... .-:. . . . .

•

(lj lportll.qok . .
~u~.=:""'•Q

1 - Chevy . . .. CMttlrwiOIII 1

$J;:J..

.l!]l

... llillea'; ~~· 114,

~ ~ ·!,

a'iii&amp;ica~~ewaQ
TlwM'I c:amp.ny

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(

7

S3

.. UvMtock

~

IIIADUNI: 11.'00 ,....
·~
., le .. p.m.
run.
....,. - . . .1111•...1:00
~. . . . . . .,

.

·FRANK AND .

81 PubliC sa1e

. '' •· 1o Auction

· c~:z. .'Gow.z~r':- II / .
fin~ Food.s- f:. ~ -... . .

....,,..........
c -··
r'dng .....,.,
•

ACJIW , '

r:=~~=
Vlillnleo_,..._

(!!

OIC--'IM

8 Night Court Judge H11rry
Stone .approaches his dutlee
with humor and Interest. Q
1:00 CD MOVIE: Wild Timet (PI t
Of 21 (2:0Q)
8&lt;11 QJ Matlock Matlock
an aging hippie
accused of murdering
Chicago's mayor., Q
.
• • • (I) Who'l Tile
Boea? A courH Tony takes ·
.tor in ea•Y A proves harder
than expect~. (A) Q ·
(IJ ffi liova Examine the
.
entries of five architects for
the new Chicago library. Q

.,.,end.

11f.m.

· wllh or without
L&lt;rry · Llwll 1'14-

_ ......,_In __
......... -··
miltoro. Ctll

31111 ' .

'

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n ,.-ntJ. •

'n I

..,. or

114-14:1-11 II

.

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11..-J-7710

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Wrlll

' ~~fl: ._Kind Of
~OIIdlnfoj(P&lt;I13){2:00)

ea'INrciA..,..Owltllaii•,OH
41111.
•

OIPrfmeNewa
11J Munier, 1M Wrote

Murder Takal The Bus

=

121 Churelllhreet ....-

Lowoll ' Unfumilhod

_ , h., ... &lt;pl. In

...z:
le

_____

=...-..... .
['ft
• .......,., ••
'*~:aria hollw,

no

duanluuin, Qal..

UnAiillia 1101 ltiOilJ llld,
~

-4l.IA1tl118

..I'.

...;,_,;,.,_

·

I r~m~por td! 10.1

81

:.lrrch :rtdrsc·

Hom I
Improvement• ·

~·

IASEME~
·
WATIRPRO NG ,

u.-...lonll

Trapper John, M.D. ·Story
follows the lives of the
emplayees and patienta in
· the hospital.
8:30 Cl 8
(I) Tha Wandler ·
Yean Ketln's math teacher
leaves J!!St before a big

1 ALWAYS FEEL LIKE.

•'.,

e

AMI~?

'
'

9:00 8 C2l 8 In The H_. Of
The Nltht A town grieves
when an unknown drunk
driv11r kills lhrH teenagers.

:

'111811ono ~'!'.'~'!'

1

'

=- .·,,..

_,.

SI1UIIIon
Wanted

;i eiiJ Aouanne

...

.

In
Ao88anne's absence. Jackie
realty takes -cliarge or the ·
hou88. (A)D

i

o•D••·~--ot ·~
"'

.. ldndl.
•••, . ,. . . .to.
II.W..IGM. .
•

Wllco,.lorllt= tn.-paotoll.,.,l1
~

(IJ

~

18 W.ntld to Do

tHeRE .ARE~ i'IL.l-ICIN

Cue:,, ,, .......,.. ....

....

--&lt;Iii

I

llll e1121 MOVII!: 'LIO!IIinl

S:ERMS ON uwsr 'rt:7WR

11,.._

Part I' CIS Tueacllly Movie .
(P&lt;I) (2:111~
·

&amp;.YE'l-IDS.

/.

-·

....

01 Lany
Llvel
•
ill MOVII!:
A hMV
Mora, Not A Penny ~ IPt
Of 21 (2:00)
Clll N..hvllle Now Country
music's hottest stars are
featured live.
t:30 a • elll Coilch
Hayden's romantic Wlllkend
with Christine Ia spoiled. (A)

1

"'

AVON J All Ao!ooo I 8hltley

Spoo.., JOW75.1421.

AMATEUR. PHOTOOIIAPHEIIII
WANTEDI
No Ex!&gt;. up to S1~1 can

--.N.......... IL-.

-

..

Wrllo: MIE.aJI, 111 S. LJo&gt;.

s--

. '•

••'

-' eo0o1•
dtvldull
tor
• *"
7

•
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•

. .lvo.
r 1 a JM'W. Send ....,. To
- -. . . . .1.- O.Col!'_l'.-i!t
1121 Joo"-&gt; Plloo, Qolllpollo, 011 '
RljW

......

.....

...

-·

In ,.....
111 ..c~·····
I.

Rrntals

01110i0. (1)
101a

oUrni ·-'·a;=
..,
........,. ."""·

-.r.eocla Eld. Y-

DOGS!!

OPEN WIDE
AN' SAY
"AilF~'

ELSE!!

A~

•

It C2J at Mancuao, FBI

Mancuso trills to uncover ths
r~~slble lor a
• •, (lj The Beat Of
Nlahtllna With Tad Kopptl
ThTs P'"'i'lllllookl .. tan
years ol NtgiiUina's most
Important and - • b l e
apiaOdel from tile lilt ten
yaart. 11 alto ••amlnea tile
lnltuenCI the ahow haa had
on the buslneas of
nawagaHwln!J In gan«al. Q

c:::;

..;J
;' I
-. j

In

Clltl1&gt;1-4o1NII.
....,...., lo cOn)l tu
.,.... lor 2 · -·•1111-, I
'Mil ... 0-.lna/IDII"'
dovo, llo
--~L'".~P.O. -~~~ a! I *'J~ Honi
Box IU, Oooo_.., DH ....1.
"''"' :11. · P.O.I. on Wlndowa.
EARN IIONIY lloodint - 1 liMIT-.
111110 do
M I nloog;
S3QODO If· DoiOniiJL -

lww•-pl"',

DOCTOR

• THEN I'LL TAKE
. MY CASH· MONIV
'
~WHARS

.

.........

r:nnt', npllf

.

:5
ti~:...

....

only ra1ug1e 111811ar lor

Sand lor your Attro-C&gt;rapll pniCIIciiOna
tor the raar I'-d by mlllllng $1.25 to
Aatro-Graph, c/o thla llft'I!NII*, P.O.

Box'81428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Be aura to atate your zodiac algn..

'
BERNICE
'

'. I'

"How can anything with no ..,_valfvel
say, 'Beet II eaten belore your

grandchildren tum 30'?" ·
.

.

~"'

Nciwawld

m .... "-America's

\ LJVI ',',)( ~

F;na11c1al

ISA
WANT AD

CI)

stancea you strove to be cooperative,
beeauaa you appreciate tha v - Of
compromlae tor mutual advantagea.
How-, today your llani:e could ·be
unyielding.
·

OI!SFI?I 1.., 21-.luna·:IOI s-11 old IAGITTAIIUI (Now. 21 Dec. 211
. rerponslblfillea you frllad to take ·care 'Thana'• a poeslblllty today that you

of could gel in lha way of what you hopll might get involved (n IOI!IIIhlng that 11
BEDEOSOL -to -plah today, Clellr them up beyond your acope and talents. • a
now lnatead of letting tham gather mora dow. but 1110 be raaliattcllfly ...... Of
dust.
·• your Hmltatlana.
, CANCU (.luna 21......, 211• mindful. CAI'IUCOM (Deo. INan. 111 Give
• - - - - - of protocol today, so IIIII you don't ' 'youraaff ampta tlrna to get to k - bel·
llfgld .. old lrtend tor you've .... ·ler -·you've 16C*olly met wllam
cently met. Hwd r.llnga COUld raault H you Rncl IPPIIillnll. Thla Individual'•
you're lhougllttea.
peraonaHty ·Could h8ve diiJ'Ur
LIO l.lulr • • Ill n·a. not Aklly IIOela. ,
·
.
you'l get IQO much ellective aupport r AQUAIIIUI (,_, :10 ...... 11) Do not
from othn toellly In aclllevlng yow Ob- like It 1f10i1 yOunalt to 8CIIfngubftr to)ectlvW. You won'l " - much lboul ' dry In a ma1tar 111e1 COUld llfact oilier
.
Apllla 1110
w111e11 1e1 boMI " you're not Mlf. membarl o1 yow fMIIy •..., • . . .
.
.
autflcllnt.
· 1•jiWYOM lain-.!.
{hi y.-lhlld could be'a vet)I8CIIve VIIGO (Mg. II llpL :II)ICIIIUIIOul• fliiCII(Ptlt.• X .,.,Uooman- 'tor you, .,_. . you - 10 whiCII you . . lllllluiiiMio IIIOUid 1101 ·lbll Cloullll ....,. Wllah llllvlfr upon
· palhl you'W po1AouiiY' be IOUI1dld out on IJI'ICIIII wiiO n - · yovr brfOM 111.- . - . 1111111111 COUld
=GMIOUIIYIII ll'leoltriVIIinCII -!lilly naQIIM. Your· IIIMJ COUld: · pro¥! 1111 daiKIIIII· Ollllrl Olll't be
cam11 dol• eo thay help encl dO not ~~~ you blfore you "Y• tllpeCied 10 b 111"' In 101Mt11fn0 .ol
lllndar you
''
them.
.
wllfOh you . . TAUMIS (Aplll • II 1 II) Mlw ~· ..-a(. . . 21 OoL II) Atrt bu1inm AIIIU (MINII ~ 11)
..... aiiOUfdnotbe...,..ln•""" . .cllllelniO~youtnterlllday·allaufd uaame ~nt•/111 Wilt •
:;d - - toellly. AIIU' U ..... , be~
10 be.,....~ ·wiiG dollliOI "*IIIII
mllllonyou'llilldiilflllllnaiiiU. . . . . . . . . . . . . . n ltfW I ilad 10 .prudlnlly.lfyoufallow
be. Tille
pnon - . you 111111 111
10 · - . . gun • yau -

-•*ltd

_.t:.
.. T';r:....t;,....IOeiiiiii*Ygllt.

natt••,. .,.,...,,
IOD't;I.O(~~\';n.•ll)lnmoalfn..

apendwhltyouclon'IY'IIIIW.

HoiOCIUII victims. During
wwn, 982 refugees from 18
Europaan countrln were
brOUgltllo the USA.
el!l) Haw Twfflglll Zona
IIJ l!...nfng Newa
0 ....... League Mubr'
10:15 (J) MOVII!.: Tile Pfnfl P8lllhlr
fllrllc.. Agllln (2:15)
0:30IJ)
Major League llaabll
1

+Qs

minimum balanced band wllll a spade
stopper, North waa pubinl bird to bid
game baaed on three klnp and a COil·
pie of lOs.

=
=•:::::.0
g..,.
• Q AIMIIID

•

Hart

1

IIJ

I-

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

!.

.

.....

""'

Nw..

2NT

P-

0111.•
SNT

z•

.... ..

"-

•aepu.e doable

,., ,.,,

...

p

~
•· ·--

- ... -

..

. ..

CROSSWORD
b~ THO~AS JOSEPH

ACROSS
37 Biblical
1 location ·
kl.ngdom

...

-·
... .•

5 Calculates 38 East
9 Animal's
Indian ·
tree
slamach
1o Bell
39 Auk genus
towers
DOWN
12 libertine
13 Judge's
1 Fig~t
2 Seeing red
chamber
14 Consumed 3 Execulei:l,
gangland 10 Meager.
" ·15 "-:- Is Hell"
18 Actor,
slyle
11 Island
Alistair17 Banner
19 -Paulo,

Brazil
20 Military

4 Lambkin's

mom

•,

._~;

•'":

.. .

···.. ...
. ..

•.
23 AHred 24 Pilot:&amp; 11d.

chain

In !he

5 To pieces

.......,.

Pacillc

......

.•...,

~

8 Obscure 15 Pottery
28 Savage
.7 Caine 111m 18 Not a soul 29 Bowling

....

8 "Perfts of 21 "The term
Pauline" . Played On" 34 Lamb's cry
21 -lugosl
and
22 FumltUJe 35 Gra!JBY
22 Ice-cream
others
piece
ground
holder
23 Youngsters

'

"

n

I

I

7

'

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

order
25 "Candid
Camera"

"

.-

man
28 Arab
garment
27 Dispatch
30 Steven
Spielberg
Is one
(abbr.)
31 Make lace
32Greek
.ghost .
33tH WIH

'

.

.,
..-•

~

-. '.
••· I

.'

. ·•
' "·

3511aHan
cash unit

...

.

38 Blue-

'

~

'I

pencil

DAILY CRYFJ'OQU(m!:S-Here's howlo worlllt:

..

AXYDLB.\AXR
II LONGFELLOW

•

One letter stands for IIIOiher. In tbis Simple A Is Uled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale letters,
.1poetrophes, the lenatfl IIICI fannati111 of the WOI dl1rt 111
htllta. Each dly the code lett.erure different. ·. _
1

•

••

-.I
•

(;RtriOQUOTE
4~14

·--

RPHU

'

PU

"
e.....
WIUIIIW

1iti=a_
•K r_,...

.... "..

25. Merry
lime
27 Bellied

setting

~

11:01~1ICMI: Wid TIMe IPit

~.

••

Mil* .....'I DOtlllll Tour

,~

tJ74

+AJ4

clllmondl.
, _ , _ , . _ ·~- . . . . . . . I
nine of bearla; Eut &amp;!:ed 'low and
West won the queen.
cubed the 'ht:tlltf• cm~o-'(wrll,. ..ut» fl*.oi ;;,
~)
-~~
ace of apadel and then played back a er ''malJtllt•ttpnttr
0 ~.,,...,....._ club. Declart!l' DOW fon:ed out the ace
e-. .......... aal liU.. ...,. ,..,.
of bearta. He .ICOI'ed .two ~~olea, t~

...Hank 'o1n'IIF Jr.

-·

•utoe

· four, queen aod kin&amp;. Declarer played

11:JIIIliifi-

1•

SOUTH
.QJ4 .

'

~a ClleM

•
1
!L.

..

()pellinllead: • 8
When the spade sis waa led, South
WGa the trick and played a low dla· ·
mond to dummy's 10. Mark Cohen, '----.,....-.,...---.....,.,;:!
,~
Eaat, won witb the ace ralller than the
~
' .
queen. Ptrhaps be upecled to demolish 111e declarer psycboiOIIcaUy wbetl hearts, one . diiiDOIIII and lOIII' clllli''
he later took the queen. Notwant~N~ to trlcU to make three ao-trump. ADd' ·
play declarer's flnt-bld 1ull, OJiien CoileD II still WIIIIDC to de¥utale ~ .
• DOW played the .Dine of clubl to the clll'l!l' wttb the cooi!!UIIId • - or ·

elllliiMV 1111.._

11:00 ~!1:: m:•l And
•.
•..,
Q• (I) 111
""'

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•

.....

.,\7U2
.AQ&amp;

tau

24 Steak . ·

10:00 CD 700 Club With Pat

&gt;l1 I
. .~~~ I

Ull31.

-~···,.
1:01 AM
til · 1;OO Pll. 114-2411041 or:J04.e'lll-1140.

gNaws

BARNEY
CffTfll DON'T

ID FrOntline Specilll

Aapott FronUina looks at ths
case 01 Hilary Foretich, the
subject of a child cuslpdy
ballla tllel haa ma"' .
lntemalional t.adlinaa. Q

£A8'I'

•Qa

This bizarre deal from the llnall of
the 1989 Splngold team-of-four faa·
tures a breakdown In North-South bid.dine followed by • 'peculllr deceptive
falJe.canl by . Eut that eoabled declarer to brlag borne an~ 1m- .
poalble game coatract. Jimmy
Cayne, North. made tbe nepU.e dotl·
ble of 'two spades. Ho-. when
South bid two no-lrump to .a-rlbe 1

exam.~:;~

IM. LoOII........,D '~- 1'
..uma~
Clll
1.• ~· ·
114.aJ7-, dly ~ [ njghl. I

n;)

ea Ae~eue: 111 A

young boy beCOmes trapped
in the drain at the bottom of

Empl oyment Serv1ces

1-0IN4f~

·

.......

.1

WI!ST
.A!Ofl32

By James Jacoby

"'mlly
I a!'IA!f.;leoplnlyl Q

IINitOr

,

+Kt072

In waiting

elll .........

Ill.
/.,'liM= '!"d~Oil
T•. I:Oih4:10

JUnlo -

gue •ubiiM

L"gue • ...,..

·-

.KltU

Lady

• • -lnment Tonight

AT
Tiff M00N7

f'IONIAYI~(i

• • a I toft. Five

Co;i.

Mi L..

(J) Mli

~f:.:t.:t.::r
_,.-.:.,r
__ ....,

.·!'P!o--'7'..:

NOilTII
•~tu

=~Q
·11J Miami VIce Miracle Man

AT Tf1F MOON 9~.

9: w.ntecl to Buy
. . . OOIIIF

.,.

."

r---------------~

~ e@ B Wheel Of

e C2l Fllllllly Feud

~.

.. ··-·- .
SCUM LITS ANSWIIS
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Anyway·.:.. Owner-Matte- Whiten-WHAT YEAR
•y ou really will ked the canyon?" askild the boy .whO
·noticed my T-shirt. "Sure did," I beamed. Hurting my
ego, he added, "WHAT YEAR?"

Na•oHaur

7:30

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these days that boys are gomg
steady before their----- are.

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combine entartalnment trivia
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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

--Local

~ews briefs~--

continued from page 1

site preparation and s!lggested
concentrat!ng on smaller · sites
close to water and sewer service. ~
Following Snyder's talk, C. E.
Blakeslee, executive director of
the Regional Planning Commisston, read a letter from Middleport Mayor Hoffman regarding
the GOO acres tn the Hobson area
and the cost of the preliminary
engineering to get water and
sewer service Into that area.
Cost of the preliminary eng!neer tng being done by Floyd G.
Brown and Associates Is $9,950. .
On . a proposal· from Blakeslee
that the Commission contribute
to the cost, It was agreed to give
up to $2,000.
Hoffman, as president of the
commission, then appointed Rtchard Jones, Thereon ·JohnSon,
Kim Shields, C. E. Blakeslee and
Steve Story to . work on the
development of the Industrial
brochure with Mui-)lhey.
SubdiWIIon Dllcuaslon
The proposed Robin's Crest
subdivision between Racine and
Syracuse on land owned by
·Richard and Sherry Payne of
Englewood, F1a. was discussed
at length.
The plans for the subdivision of
41 homes on five acre tracts were
approved at the January meeting
of the Planning Commission
ront!ngen,t on approval by the
Meigs County Health Depart·
ment and the county engineer.
Bruce Teaford, agent for the
owners, and D. Michael Mullen,
attorney, met with the Commtsslon to again air the problems.
Jon Jacobs of the Health Department s~lled out the
require,

ments of his agency for approprtate sewerage systems and
·expressed ~ncern about the
slope and soU as a possible threat
of waste water runoff. He requested that Health Department
approval on s~er systems be
· given to purchasers priOr t.o the
sale of each· lot.
There were . also questions
concerning restrictions on the
subdividing of Jots and whether
those should be stated on the plat
or be In the -deeds. Don Poole of
the Tuppers Plalils-Chester Wac
ter System was also there and
participated In the discussion
since that system Is scheduled to
provide water for the new
· subdivision.
Arrangements were made for
the attorneys representing the
parties lnvlllved, health department officials, Poole and Eng!·
neer Roberts to get together to
try and work out the problems so
that the development can go
forward.
.
Copteso!the 1990Melgs County
brochure prepared by l..eesa
MJifphey and Associates highlighting local recreational actlvt.
ties were distributed at the
meeting. She noted that the
brochures will be used to promote Meigs Coll!ltY not only
statewide but In the tri-state
area.
A representative of Buckeye
H!Us-Hoclling Valley Regtonal
Development gave a brief report
on Industrial sites Including the
old Pomeroy Junior High School
building and a site In the
Portland area.

MUJ4leport .... Continued frompag~ 1
housing project to shpw local
participation.
Council appropriated $3,000 to
the Middleport ' Arts · Council
Fund for 1990 to cover rent,
utilities and some ·miscellaneous
expenses.
'Councilman. Bob Gilmore
·noted that the next meeting of the
Council will ' be held on May 1 at
the headquarters and S!lggested ·
Council be represented.
The resignations of John Hood
and. ·J udy Crooks from the
Middleport Rj:creatlon Commit~ee were received and Council
voted to send both a letter of
appreciation for their many
years of work on the Committee.
It was noted. that two others will
be appointed to work with Brian
Conde on the Committee.
·
The annual Fourth of July
celebration was discussed and
Council agreed to again this year
share the. cost with the F1re
Department. As was done last
year, the firemen ·will solicit
donations, and the balance the
cost will be spUt between the fire
department and' the village.
Gilmore said that the Arts
Council Is Interested In having an
arts and craft day on July 4 and
expanding tile event to both
daytime and evening. He also

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noted that he Is In contact with
entertainment prospects. ·
The jogging path was .again
discussed with Councilman Dewey Horton to work with Pomeroy Coucllmah Bruce Reed on the
project. Another application will
have to be made for funding, It
was reported.
The Ohio River Clean Sweep on
June Ul was announced.
The au tanks at the end of ·
Cottage Drive and tbe hazard
they- present was discussed by
Gilmore. He said · that cblldren
are getting Into thl! area and
climbing around on the ladders
and be feels there Is a real danger
of someone get t1n11 hurt. The
tanks are oWlled by Hartley
Marine, Point Pleasant, tt was
reported., .Mayor Hoffman was
authorized to contact the Ohio
EPA -and request an Inspection.
Gilmore displayed the new
sign for Diles Park. Attending
were Mayor Hoffman, Council ·
members Horton, . James Clatworthy,· Gilmore, Paul Gerard,
William .•,W alters and Jack
Satterfield.
Larry Payne, Republican candidate for representative of the
94th District, was also at the
meeting.
·

- -.Area deaths-Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 to 9 p.m. on
Wed!lesday. 1n lieu of flowers
friends may donate tO 'l)'lnlty
Church.

Dale Smith

Dale E. Smith, 82, a former
Pomeroy mayor and village
council member, died Monday at
Veterans Memorlal .Hospltal.
He was a retired electrician
and at one time served . on the
Pomeroy Board · of . Public
Affairs.
·
Born on July 17, 1907 In Meigs
County, he was the son of the late Dai(J alock prices
Harry Smith and Emma Tobin (As oflO: ae a.m. I
Sn\tth.
Bryce and Mark Smith
Survtvlors Include a daughter, of Blugt, Ellll lr; Loewl
"Charlene McClung, Marion; a
son, Ronald D. Smith, Pomeroy, Am Elechic Power .......... ... 29'h
four grandchildren and . four AT&amp;T .. :................ .. ............ 40'A
great-grandchildren; a brother, Ashland 011 ...... .... :..... .... .. ..35',1
Glenn Smith, Indiana, and a .Bob Evans ..... ... .......... ,....... l2'A
sister, Beuna Grueser, Pomeroy, Charming Sboppes ............... 8%
along with several nieces and City Holding Co............... ...13"'
nephews.
Federal Mogul .................... 17%
Besides his parents he was Goodyear T&amp;R ........ .. .........34'A
preceded in death. by his wife, Heck's ., ......... ,...... ... ... ....... .. 2%
Ella Smith, two brothers, Max Key Centurion ... ... ............... 14
and· Oscar Smith, and a sister, Lands' End .......................... 16
Lottie Leonard.
Limited Inc . ........... ............39'h
. Mr. Smith wasamemberofthe 1\&gt;Jultlmedla Inc ...... ...... ....... . 79
Trinity Church, belonged to' all Rax Restaurants ............ .. .... 2%
local Masonic groups, and was a
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15'h
member of the Knights of York Shoney's Inc ...... ............. .. ..13'h
_ _.....,..s s of Honor.
, Star Bank ... ........................19'h
Funeral services Will be ·held Wendy 's lnt'l.. .. .. .. .......... .. ... 4%
Thursday at 2 p:m at the· Ewing · Worlhlrlgtpn Ind .. ............... :. 21
Funeral Home. The Rev. Ronald
(Federal Mopl'a flrl&amp;-quarter
Wildman will officiate and burial . ne&amp; 1.17/llhare va. 1.17 after
wlll be In Beech Grove Cemetery. cbarge.)

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~--Meigs announcements---Ollldoor alillla worklbop
992-2668.
A basic outdoor skills work- Big ~ad 8en1ce Ualt
shop wlll be held for girl scout .
Girl scout leaders In the BJg·
leaders at Ohio River CampBend Service Unit will meet May
grounds In Racine on May 5. 3 at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Anyone interested In participat- Elemen Jar)I.
Ing should call Shirley Cogar at
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Continued from page 1
Ronnie Fry who was transported to Veterans .Memorial
Hospital.
The Middleport pnlt, at 10: 30 a.m. went to Railroad Street for
Tina Gary who was taken to Veterans,
The Racine unit was called at 5: OJ p.m . to Dr. H11nter's office
for Harry Cleland who was transported to Veterans.

Planners...

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Suinmer-like·weather-·continues ,in Obi~
By United PreS. laternatlonal
at least the middle of the wee)t, continue streaming north and th;•week, but a cold front' may :
A little .over a month alter the tbe National Weather Service temperatures W!!re expected to bring a chance ohbunderstorms : ,
be warmer Tuesday night, with · by' weekend.
. .
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start of s pring, summery condl- said.
.
During the day, lfvestock may •.
tionsbavesetlledoverOhlo, wlth . The forecast for Tuesday llg!lt wlndas helplni. to keep the
.
. need ventllatjon adjusted to ~'
unseasonably warm tempera- · ,called for mostly sunny skies mercury In the 60s.
For WedneS(Iay , the warm_th prevent limited heat stress, tbe :
lures. expected.for ~everal days. under the umbrella of high
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The balmy ·weather arrived . pressure and temperatures In the ' wltr Increase , 1¥1111 a forecast or we.a ther servlce:sald.
courtesy of a large high pressure upper 70s anC:I80s. Those temper- temperatures in t he 80s · Drying potential for fltrnlng :
. ··"
soft topsoils was expected to. be ;,
system that has become en- atures are 15 to 20 degrees above statewide.
The high pressure. a~ea was high both. Tuesday and w ednes· •;
trenched along the Atlantic nonnal.' .
·
Ccoast. The fair weather system . Skies were expected to be expected to keep the storni track day. Afternoon humidltieishould :
has ta"ped Into the Gulf or mostly clear Tuesday night and to the west and ,north of Ohio. drop to minimums Tuesday of 35 ~
Mexico and continue&amp; fa pump partly to mostly sunny on causing dry conditions to prevail to 45 percent and 40 to 55 percent ~
through Wednesday .
WedneSday. Pan evaporation:
warm air ln!o the Ohio Valley.
wednesday.
The combination of last week's · rates wlll ,average 0.25 to 0.30 ;
The weather service said
The high pressure will main·
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Jain Its grip on the area through warm air from the GuH will rainfall and this week's unsea- Inch ·a day .
sonal!IY warm, dry weather will
Continued dry weather ·; .
cause a burst of spring growth In. through Friday m•y allow Ullage ·
flowers and buddii!K trees. .
activities to resun\e In some ~ .
Continued from page-1
The · summery conditions will 'areas by the end of tlie week. . ~
The department reports 1that the mother's 1981 Ford a nd was provide pleasant outdoor wprk- -'" Ligf!tJIOUth winds'I;IIeS!Iayand ;
name ot the suspect Is being driving around. At the time of the tngcondltlons forfarmers 'durto;~g • Wednesday should provide good
withheld pending the service of accident In Syracuse, he was
·
CondltiOnS•fOr spraying activity&lt;
going ·~ast and claims that the
the warrant. ·
On Monday deputies took a gas pedal became stuck. He went
' ' fair weather Tburs- :·
report of vandalism ·to the Alfred off the roadway on the right
South ce'nlral Ohio
Gell'erally
Church. According to the report, hitting the guardrail, gotng
Mostly •cleai;~ Tuesday . night; day an~ Friday, .with a chance .of :a window was broken, the railing across the field and $triktng the with'a'Jow J!ear 60. MostlY SU!)nY ·. showers or' thjlnderstonns on ..
at the back steps was pulled off, shelterhouse causing damage Wednesday, with highs tnthe.mld . .Saturday; Highs will be mostly In ;:
and the lighted sign tnfrontofthe after which the vehicle stopped 80s.
the 80s ea~h day, with overnight ~
building was also damaged. This against the ch!lln link fence at the
Extended Forecast
lows 'ranging from the upper 50s ('
damage apparently occurred pool. .
. .
Thursday throug~ Satur!lay
to the mid 60s.,~
Sunday evwning.
· The report went on to say that
)
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Freeman fled the· scene going
tu.TII'INJ•L WEATHER ~ORepAST TO 1 AM EIIT &gt;1-25-10
~. .
The department took a report flrsf to the Spring Avenue park
Saturday evenblg . that a Gallia where he turned and went over
County juvenile was hitchhiking Naylor's Run to Lau:rel Cliff. He
on ·R oute7belowMiddleportand then went south on Route 7 just
was ~!eked up by a . subject below the Route 124 turnoff to
driving a maroon Mercury Cou- Rutland where the vehicle ran
•
gar with West Virginia reglstra- out of gas. He traveled on foot to
.lion. According jo the report, the Pomeroy and then to his restjuvenile stated that the di'lver dence, and It was reported he
took the juvenUe"s money.
·
came to the sheriff's ofltce with
TheyouthgotoutattheHobson · his mother, Linda Mills, while
exit. The veblcle conilnued north · she reported her· vehicle was
on Route 7. No other description taken'.
Is available. 'Sheriff James M.
According to the report, while
Souls by urges parents to caulton this was happening the Ohio
their children about hitcbhlking. State Patrol located the vehicle
•
W!WamA.Barley,28,Rutland, on Route 7 where a trooper
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has been cited to Metgs County reported seeing a white male
·~ S/'IOw . ~ 7?7.?7.
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Daily Number
579
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Page
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Low · I• mid 8fs tonl(hl.
Tba~. bl(h IQ mid 80s.
Chance of rain ZO percent,

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Sheriff....

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Vo1.40, No.244
Copyrill*d 1910

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'feacher is
suspended by
·Meigs board

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operator's license and expired

Freeman's description. Sheriff

registration. These charges resuited from the ·accident that
occurred Friday evening on
Route 143 south · of Wolf Pen.
Deputies were unable to locate
the driver but Barley contacted
tbe sheriff's office Monday and

Souisby noted that foll\)wlng
fFrurlher questlontngnfof witnesses, ,
eemwn was co ranted with
th~ .facts and stgDed a statement
admitting that .he had driven the
vehicle which caused the
damage.

received his
Citations.
He Is ,
scl\eduled
to appear
In County
Court on Wednesday.
In final matters, P9uelas Freeman, 22, Union-Avenue, Pomeroy, was arrested Saturday for
hltsklp, driving under suspension, and unau thortzed use of a
motor vel!lcle, . following the
hltskip accident In Syracuse that
resulted In damage to the guardrail, shelter house'," and chain
link fence at London Pool.
According to the report; Freeman told Investigator Rober!.
Beegle that he had taken his ·

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WEATHER MAP - Sca&amp;leted lhunderliloi'JIUI -left over from
Tvesdayevenq'sacllvllywillllngerovertbesouthernPiaiDSthls
mora(Jlg and likely lncreue tn lnlenslty .and coverage dlirlng lbe
afternoon houn. Showers wUI also be·preaent along a front In the
norlhern Plalu iuid the Allegheny Mountains of New York, with
mOil.co•uto• Wednesday momiDg. (UP!) · .

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MlliTiage license
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A marrtase license haS been
Issued In MeigS County Probate
Court to John Edward Lyons IV,
25,' Racine, and · Susan Diana
Barnes, 27, Racine.

Hospital neWs
veter- Memorial

MONDAY ADMISSIONS Margaret Johnson, Racine;
Gary Curds, Tuppers Plains;
and Harry Cleland, Racine.
MONDAY DmcHARGES Keith Muuer, Mary Little, and
John Tomlin.
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How sopn they
forget. :·· ·
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It's no easy task to erase
Fortunately, there are
the the blight of drug
· · anti-drug efforts 99i!19 on
. abuse. Education is vital,
in f!Nery town.. Do yo~r
but it must be backed by
part to help ?BYe lives.,Get
a community-wide
. involved..
·message that drug abuse is
unacceptable.
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·B rought To You By..•.
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umerolis supple~~~h":111W-Iill&gt;.ij0aelr~unioitract• -wert! awardM,
the' high · basketball' coach; Kim
Sout!'ern LoCal ~ard of Educa- Phillips, ' head softball coach;
tlon 'It_a -special, meeting, held Salll;lra Baer, head cheerleader
Monday night.
advisor; .William Hensler, assistHired In coacblng · jlosltions ant football coach and assistant
were Howard . C~dwell, athletic baseball coach; James Ray
director and head ··basketball Lawrence, junior. high baseball
coach; David G!iul, - he!ld foot- coach. ·
,
.
ball; Bill Bae~, head basketball
John Van Reeth was hired as
II Iris coach; Suzanne Wolfe, head director of the marching band
volleyball and assistant volley and the pep band; Joan Hudak,
ball coach; Mlck Winebrenner, the yearbook, Barbara Batley,
"''
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. . the r;tewspaper; .Donald Salmolns
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CHAR"'t'ESTON, WV-Forthe the exchange of three shares of
appropriate · regulatory
second time tn a week, Key Key Cent\lrloncommonstockfor · agencies ,
.
·
centurion 84ncshares, Inc ., h!IS each of Spectrum's 1.3 million
Once consummated, the com·
announced a definitive agree- common shares outstanding. The blnati_on of. Key Centurion with
men! of an affiliation, this time value of the tranSaction Is placed Spectrum and Southern Bank,
with Spectrum Financial Corpo- at $53.6 mUUon , based on Key
shares (whose agreement fQr
ratiQJj, Wheeling, W.Va., which Ce'lturio~t's closing bid price on merger with Key Centurion was
has $264 million In consolidated . April 23,1990. The a·g reement Is
announced last week) . would
assets:.
.
subject to approval by Spec" result In a flnarictal Institution
The agreement provides tor !rum's shareholders and the with $3 billion In assets, based on
year-end financial results.
4
Spectrum Financial Is West
.
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A
~-e
VIrginia's. 14th laj:jlest bank
!' • ·
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holdtrircompany.Itoper'atestwo
cnm~VIc•........
commercia] . banks .wltb . four
.
'-'"':, .
offices: Security National Bank
·
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.and Trust Co. (Wheeling, W.Va.)
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) .counties."
and the F1rst National Bank of
The Voinovlch-DeWine Republl·
Among the services offered by
New Martinsville (W.Va.) Setur"
can ·ttcket for governor and . such programs are crisis coun- lty; whiCh has $218 million tn
Ueutenant 110vernor Wednesday seling ·and referral to other commercial banklng asses, also
proposedextendinllcrimevlctlm support agencies, ·updating. the · . operates one of West Vqlnia's
asllstanc;•·programs · to ·aU ·88..- victim on·tbe status of the case, · five largest trwit d,epartmeJ!U.
counties.
·, • escorting the·vlcllm to court and
At year-end 1989, the company
Rep. Michael DeWine; R-Ohio, counseling In the schoolll, partiehad $436 mUllan In market value·
said fewef than half the counties
utarly In child abuse cases. ·.
discretionary usets under manhave formal victim assistance
Financing IBSbared by federal,
asement, and $Jll mUUon In
programs.
' · slate and local governments. "
\&lt;al'lous' other , (Jducl'ary
. "Our goal Is to help make
DeWine said the ticket also
capacities.
·
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OhiO' a Criminal justice system endorses a state coll.ldtutional
Under the agree~J~ent, Specmore - iellaltlve to the needs of '· amendment providing for a
trum wlllliel.'omeaWb"lly·owned ,
crime victim&amp;," said De Wine. crime victim btU•· of rights,
subsidiary of Key Centurion. The
"Some Obte . counties already Including the right to be treated
subsidiaries of KeY. Centurion
bave load; Innovative victim with dignity , respect and senslwould inanage the liiraeat voaallataJIC8 J)1'081'ams In· place. tlvlty; the right to be Informed of
lome of trust assetsamoor West
But we need to reach every Ohio proceedings and to ·be beard at
VIrginia bank buldlng companvictim, aDd we'll do It by setting them; and the right to be tree
tes: The total wouldcometomore
sloCally mm pdiams.tn, ~l88 ,from ,lnilmldallo.JI.
• than $1.3 billion In discretionary
assets under management and
,
$1.9 b!Uion In total Invested
assets.
~
The merzer aiiQ provides Key ·
,.,
.
.
,
Centurion with full entry int911ie
COLUMBUS, Oblo (UPI) -In _ !strata~ will lace cl~Vres next Wlleelfllll cili1unlrclal ·buJtlor ·
a clalfd·.btarllll tlllt could-·ltad
week of malfe11.8811ce and dllbo' marllet. Wheellllc ~ West Vll'll·
to ~dllmlual, anObloDipart· ne~~jy, amcma otllerl.
nta's third larpetclty,aqdll tile
·me~~t Of Human Servtees admlnRose
dalef or the hub of one ' of tile state's four
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deplrtmcait'• Diii!Jion or Public laraeet metaCipOiftan atatlltleal

CLEVELAND, (UPI) - The.
parents of a 15-year.Pid atlident
In the Cleveland Helgbtl·
University HeJcbta Dis Jrlct llave
filed lul_t, CiwiiiDJ their-tmpr'Operly promoted to tllelOtb

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Pro·poses · e:vpandIna
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p' rograrn

tate·a mm18trator to. . . .
f ace' .h • fteXt Week '

Ben-.

. Parent$ IUe .Chool distriet in' ~eland =~~"":n '!p~-= '

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todjrect tli8'-~~~timrl-~llef&gt;1
Maidens, t~e variety show: ,
Name TUI~ 9 compliance offleer was Sandra Booth, Carla
Shuli!~, coordinator and Dennie
Hill, ti'I!Qsurer . of the DDPF .
program; JaneHUl,coordlnator,
and Dennie Hill, treasurer, Chap·
ter· I; Grace Griffin, chapter
secretary; Joyce Thoren was
~amed lunch room supervisor
and handicapped coordinate~ ;
and Bill Henster: prom advisor.

K ey' . centunan
' •· ·- reach·es $3 bill•
. IOD
with .·S pectrum Financial mero-er
·. .
e
.

mentfnethnds, and utll121ngthat
data, has developed -alternatives ,
for the consld.e ratlon of the
district, Neal reports. The district Is considering Ule proposed
alternatives for' recycling and
waste reduction, and those alternatives will be outlined at tbe
public meeting and open for ·
discussion at that time.
At this time, the chalnnan
reports, thedlstricthas•greedto
Impose flow control so that all ,
waste generated In the Dlstrlc~
will be disposed of In the District.
The District has also established
a goal of reducing the amount of
waste .. ndfilled by 35 ~rcent.
The 35 percent reduction goal ·
ts an ambitious goal and may
reql!lre. significant chanses In
the way individuals handle the!~
garJ?age In the future, Neal said.·
Among the consijeratlons are
bans on the landfllllng of ceruitn
materials, required separation
of waste , materials by each
household, and· manilatory fees
for waste collection, .
' ·"
The Dtstrict's.solld waste managemelit plan, as reulred by Ohio,
law, must Include details Oll how
the waste reduction goals will be
met; dooumentatton !.hat tlte
Dis trlct will have sufficient 1:!1·
paclty to meet Its disposal n~~
for at least. 10 · years; and
assurances that sufficient funds
will be available to tmplemen.t
the District's plan.
The plan Is expected to ·be
submitted to the District In draft
form I!)' tile end of 'May, accoJ11•
lng to !&gt;leal.
.
·
Th~ nexfpubltc llll!etln11 will be
held on May 24 at wl!1ch time~
plan will be dlscullll!d:

llfade.
Tbe ~ult WJI flle!ITii..day In
C.y~boea County Common
...... Cotlrt by Slalrlty and
11 of
&lt;lM :It. . . . . .f OD 11¢•
4
their - . AI·Azller Edward~; .

..

A teacher was suspended for
board vote to grant all others the
three days wUhout pay a,t Tues- same half-day leave for that
day night's meeting of the Meigs
purpose upon written request.
James Carpenter, Eugene
Local Board of Ed\lcation.
While the action was taken In Hawkins, and Everette Holcomb
open sesJIOn, there was no open
along with the yet-b)-be-name
discussion of the charge against
transporatlon director of the
the teacher. · . ·
.
. .district were authorized as repre' Supt. James Carpenter read a _sentatives to acquire federal
letter from the Meigs Local 'surplus .property from the Ohio
Chapter of the Ohio Association State Agency· for Surplus
of Public School Employees
Property .
requesting that!negotiations be
The board voted to participate
openedoneltherMay1or2,14,15
In consultant services with the
or 16. No action was taken on that Coalition of Rural and Appalachrequest pending further contact
ian Schools for a school finance
equity study at a cost of $323.96.
with OAPSE.
Jame Pyle was employed as a
The next meeting was changed
substitute teacher for the re-o to May 4 at 7 p.m. In the board
malnder of the school year. Jean· m.eet!ng room. Finandal reports
Wood and Lois Wyant were were given by the treasurer,
granted a half day leave of Jane Fry. Others auendinl were
absence on Aprl127 at which time board members Bob · Barton,
they will take the written com- president, Jeff Werry, Richard
mercia! · driver's license test Vaughan, Larry Rupe, Robert
required of bus drivers. The Snowden.
·

Celeste signs,
1990-91 supplemental pacts
.
v
e.
,
oes
biJls.
.
"
.
-w

~~~!~~·~h::=m~~:~~r.e:~
• .
the existing solid waste manage-

'T HE .DAILY SENT.INEL'
\

.

bustnes!MlS to comment on and
. give Input on the ptstrict Plan.
The SCS Engineers, ihe Dis;

'

•

·

· wi!Lbetoenoourageel~nsand

On dean'8 list

Richard R. Hensley 1 Long
Bottom, and Barbara M. Hay· ,
man, Cottageville, W.Va., are
seeking a dissolution In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.

· .

The third ill a sl!rtes of public ,..
meetings 'to discuss Sll)ld waste
mall!lgementafternatlves wtll!M!
hel\1 by• the multi-cOunty Sol'ld
Waste Mangement District
'Q!ursday ·at• 1, p.m. at tbe
Wl'lkl!llvllle Sl:hool on Route 124in •
Vintor(County.
·,
. ··
Dale Neal, neW chairman of '
the Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
Jack~&lt;in, M'elgs and Vinton Dis- .
trict ,, (AOHJ.MV) . annQunced
that tile purw,e' of. the meeting

candidates for degrees at the end ·
of the winter quarter at Ohio
University.
Included In the group were
Cynthia Baca Nau of Route 2,
Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, and
·John Allen Van Reeth, Syracuse,
both master. of education; and
Deanna L. Caney Apllng, Pomeroy; bachelor . of science In
education; Veronica Provo, Racine, bacbelor of science In
communications; and Sandy K.
Hoyt, Shade, bachelor of arts
degree. .

DiMolution 80U@ht.

! , ··

-~,-,,_, .::,~~,.:·:~~~~

(.

Beverly Jean Hayes, Mason,
W.Va. Is seeking a judgment for
medical expenses from Michael
A. Nickell, Columbus, In the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas.

.

1(JlJS£e,...,.niD~.. .

FlY!! MeigS Countlans were

'JucJsment 80Ught

Pomeroy .until Friday. Pictured, from Ilia, are
Morrison, . ·
Kenny Stewart, Brian Holley, kneeling, ll&amp;rolll Brewer, aDd Rick
Mohler.
·

··,Wilkesville .S..uthem school board \OKshosts solid '" . . . . .
. ' . ..

FIVe receive
degrem at ou

Christina R. Kaylor, Reedsville, was listed on the Honors
Dean's List of Wrlgbt State
University for the winter quarter. To make the list, students
must take 12 or more credit hours
and achieve a 3.4 to 3.59 average
for the quarter.

Eurene

~CLEAN' -Tiuiae wotken wltb tile MeJP Coun&amp;y :uttJer.
litter
Coatrol ~elK B!'e dolnr their part lcJ llelp keep
free. ,.-~~ey !ll'e picking up lrull and otlaer Items throughout

~

. ·.

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.

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&lt;1 .

1 Section. 1 4 Po- 21 c.nu
A Multimecllo Inc. N-opopor

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ar;:

Centurloll ' baa currellt
almoat
tn paymeatl over uleta ot $2.3 biWon 81111 benklnr
a llx·yev period to a computer su..ldtarletl wltb 44 olflcel In
cona~t 1lle later married.
. Wet1t · VirJihia and one in
Tile ~nt bearlq, In- ·Kentucky.
!dally ICblld\Jied for W.a.day
It aliOoivDI ReHable Mortpp
but ~ at Bel' 1•1 re- Co., \\'ltb U otnCe. II Wt~t
'quest, 11 be beld MoJiday.
Vll'llnla, Maryland end Oblo.

•.ooo

'

,.

'

.

By LEE LEONARD
31-2 and 92-5 approval of the
Senate and House, respectively.
UPI Sta&amp;ehoue Reporter
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard
At a ceremony In his Cabinet
Celeste signed legislation Tues- room, the governor signed a bill
day forcing criminals to be more declllring April 28 "Workers
accountable for their actions by Memorial Day" In Ohio to call
limiting the use of the courtroom attention to worker health and
plea of Innocent by reason of safety .and honor those who have
Insanity.
lost :life, limb or health In the
At the same time, the governor workplace.
vetoect·a pair of bills establishing
Under current law, criminal ·
a p~ot program to -poison coyotes · defendants may plead Innocent .
that attack sJ\eep and goats, and by reason of Insanity If they cal)· :
Increasing the penalty for disor- show they were powerless to s !OJ?':
derly conduct and strengthening themselves from committing an·.
the schools' hand In S11$pending act, even If they knew It was •
wrong.
'
'
and expeJUng unrldy pupils.
Celeste, bucking a strong tide
With this new law, authored by ;
In the ' General Assembly, said Sen. Eugene Watts. R-Columbus, •
each of those bills would have and effeCtive July 24, they will no ·
undesirable side effects, adding longer be able to make this ,
he feels there are better claim. Twenty-two other states,
alternatives.
the ' federal goverilment and &gt;
The Legislature will get an Canada and England also no
opportunity later this year to longer honor the "lrreststable
Impulse" defense.
overrld~ the vetoes. The Senate
"What' we have accompllshed
passed the school dtsi:tpllnary
btU 33-0 ahl! the House cleared It by this law Is as· close to
1!0-17. The coyote bill received
Continued on page 6

Jury begins deJiberations
~

•

Moss retrial Tuesday

CHARLESTON; W.Va. (UP!) The boy was bound and placed
A jury began deliberations face-down in a bathtub half filled
with water. The girl was found
Tu~ay ,Jn the retrial of John
Moss Jr., an Ohio man accused of hanging from a door by an
murderlnJ three members of a electric cord.
Assistant Kanawha County
family ilfllis former neighborhood• outSide Charleston more Prosecutor Neva Lusk told the
jury that Moss went throueh the
than 10·years a110.
Jurors spent about three hours family's Christmas ilfts. She
on the cue before calling It quits alluded to the defendant as "a
for the day .
·
,man ilo ,cold that he would open
Deliberations wtll resume . their Chrlalmas presents with a
dead baby hanging over his
Wedh~ay , momtna In the · bizarre cue of Moss, wbo was shoulder."
tracked. down after Paul RegIn rebuttal, defense lawyer
gettz, hus,ttand aad father of the Nelson Bickley clung to his
victims, confessed 11nd spent 11 assertion that .P aul Renettz Is
months In jail.
the real murdered, and that bis
In closlnJ ar110menis, Moss client Is the "vicUm of horrifying ·
was characteriZed alternately by coincidental circumstances ·
the pr01eeut1on and defense u a while the true murderer walks
colil-blooded killer who pilfered alld roams tbe lalld."
the vlctima',Qlrl,stmu presents
Cr:ucil!l to the pl'OIN!CUtlon was
and as a vletlm of • the .testimony of a serologist that
etrcumslalic:es.
a rare blood type matchlag . ·
Moss wu convicted 111 191M of Moas's blood was found at the
scene.
straorltng Vanessa Reaettz, .a
10n, Eric Paul, and her daqllter,
•The detenae would have you ·
knadette, at tbelr $t. Albans , Hlllve that Paul Reaettz killed
banle. But tbe state !lll.j&amp;eii* hll family, tliltlwent out and aot •
Court .,_led the verdict ID aomeonel elae' • blood and'
18, cllq trial ernn.
1prblkled It arOIIlld tile scene,"
- said Assistant Proeecutor Steve
: The 27 -year-old Mci.sa, wbo bas Revereomb.
.lived 1D St. Albulllld CJevelaDd.
Before ll!ndflllljurora borne for
wu -liilleed 1D tllree life tennl
tile day, Judge Andrew Macwithout potllblllty of Pll'Qie ID
Queen refilled a dellluae moUoo
the Dec. 13, 11'19, maaumr.
for a mlltrall after Lulk •111·
Pollee lllltUed a pair of PI ted ID clCiillnJIJ'Itll'llllltl tllat
ltalllllldlll ................... Mosa poulbly latea- ~ lftll·
lbiMcl 1n111 die mother's elaetlt. ally auault VI!Dellu ReaetQ.
-

,,.

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