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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.)

Stocks

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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
I .

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,Tu.day. April 24. 1990;'

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
••
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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Court on char""'"
. . of no valid .w a )kin g south which matched
a a
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L. ,..
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6'!".., _
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Reds

Ohio Lottery

tilts
.nigh
_t

Daily Number
579
Pkk-4

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1237

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....

_.....;..___;___ WeaTher. ·· · ' · .

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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 ·

o·~:~:u· ~~=·mn:;·•~···= · ~· ~· ~;·. ;~.•:l·...;·w

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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
.,
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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A Public Servic~ Mes~age
·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
.
.
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
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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, .
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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.
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-w

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

'T HE .DAILY SENT.INEL'
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bustnes!MlS to comment on and
. give Input on the ptstrict Plan.
The SCS Engineers, ihe Dis;

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· 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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&lt;1 .

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

~}

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

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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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Wednesday, April 26, 1990

·co·mm
· ,·. e~ta·ry ·..• '
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Page 2-The D.UV

sant~,Ohio
r~Seatit.tl .· ~Sj

Jeremy Phalln and Kevin
Taylor combined to pltcb a 2
hitter, and the Meigs Marauders
scored 3 runs In .the sixth lllfllili
to blow open a l run game as the
Marauders downed the Vinton
County VIkings Tuesday night.
The Marauders scored a run In
the first tnnlilg when Kevin
Taylor reached on an error, Eric
Heck on a hit and run lined a
single to right moving Taylor to
· ,third. Ed Crooks then lined 11
slngle . to right to score Taylor
wltlj tile games first run.
· Meigs made It 2-0 In the second
wheri Chris Stewart led off the
lilnlilg wltlr a slilgle, af~r Terry
McGuire forced Stewart at seCODil 'Jasim Wrl~rht reached on an

;:=================~-:--::---~---~~~~:-:-~- -·:.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, (lhlo

·I

DEVOTED TO THE INTERES.T S OF THE MEIG!I-MASON AREA
A~

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S!m~ ,....._.._...,..,,...,..,....r::::~,"""

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ROBERT L . WfNG~
Publllher

. .

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener'!' Maa.,er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of Tbe United Press fnl!'rnatlonal,lnland Dally Preu
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
n.a me, addr'lSS and telephOne number. No unsigned letters will.be pulr
llshed: Letters sho,u ld be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

ties.

·

advantage of the .elderly_.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Pan Atta .

WASHINGTON- Judging by
health care bill. "Despite the
Its literature, a group that calls
financll\1 risk, we decided to fight
Itself the Senlof's COalition . the Cat11stropblc Cover11ge Tax erage, argue~ that the 'senior's
slngle-handedly muscled Con:
night-and-day untO It was offl- Coalition has distorted his legisgresslnto repealing tbe catastroclally repealed by Congress an&lt;! lation as a tactic to "alarm
phlc health care act. Championihe'Whlte House."
seniors about the filture of .•
Next comes the money pttch. · Medicare." Sen. David Pryor,
. lng the cause oftbe elderly Is one
of Washington's true growth
By sending the money In tOday, D-Ark., declared at a reeent
the letter eXhorts, "you would be , hearlilg that the coalltlon should
lndustrtes.
Tbe Senior's Coalition Is one of
helping us help you prevent the . be Investigated by postal Inspecaprollferatingnumtierofprlvate
government from any new at- tors and other federal agencies.
groups tapping Into gray power
tempta to take advantage of
If Congress presses for an
- lobbying on tbe Issues that
America's Senior Clt12ens." It's · lilvestlgatlon, It will be Jooklilg
concern the elderly and someclear the elderly are easy prey; Into one of Its own. Mark
times playing to their vulilerable
tbe que8tlon Is who Is the real Slljander, a former melllber of
spots.
. .
predator?
Congress from Michigan, Is the
A Senior's Coalition maHer
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Dl., "honorary chairman" of the
boasted about the coalition's
a supporter of catastrophic' eov- Senior's Coalition. Slljander dlsselfiess role In defeatln.J the
.
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-~ CI~NNf4Tl'S

ARTCR\TlCS
•

Suppo~ts cleanup programs .·
· Dear Editor:
We are only "a small voice In
the wilderness" but our family Is
In support of "the clean up,
spruce up" campaign under way
In Me1gs County. We have
trimmed our own trees and
planted some new ones, painted
, our house and hauled away a big
load of trash. Tbe people who
come to Meigs County to live or
visit will be favorably Impressed
If our surroundings look neat and
clean and that we care. Get those
junk c;rrs and cans and rubbish.

·

.

Slijander collects about $4,000
a month to lend bls name to t!Je •
seniOr's Coallllon. · "I'm not In~
volved In the day to day"'affairs,
he told our auciclate Jim Lynch.
"I'm the honorary chairman:
They ·use my name and I slgn'.the ·
letters."
.Tbe Senior Coalition boasted of
having a "filll~tlme lobbyist who
worked with key members of
Congress," to repeal the catas.
trophic health bill. But Slljander
said he didn't lmOw who that .
· ..
person was . . ·. ·
:. "I guess that would be ll!e,"
said Jake · Hansen, executive
director of the coalition. But
Hansen acknowledged ·that he Is
not registered to lobby on Capitol
Hill. He said he Is "In the
process" of regtsterlng. ~·1 may
have to eat a little crow."
Slljander says that his current
concern for the elderly· stems
from his work on their behalf In
Congress. But d"rlng bls five
. years In the House, 1981·86, the
National Council of Senior Citizens · consistently . ranked him
near the bottom when It came to
Issues concerning the elderly.
Tbe coalition lltera!Ure calls
Slljander a "member of Congress (ret. )" What the mailings
fall to say Is that Slljander
"retired" at the ripe old 'age of 35
after losing the Republican prim·
ary In Michigan. He now admits
· . that he shot himself In the foot
~~"" . during that election. He tried to
rally a reltgtous constituency by
Implying that his opponents \'l.e re .
linked to the devil and he called
on voters io "break the back of
Satan."

Letter deadline for
prim~ · election May 1
Deadline for letters on local May 8 primary election Issues Is n.oon
Tuesday May 1. Readers are reminded The Dally Sendnel accepts
letters on election Issues, not fndlvtdual candidates.

misseS · his critiCs as publicity .
hounds. "My goal Is to use
convincing, effective , marking
techniques, butto be honest as we '

can.''

~lot ofmolley Is not necessary.
An elderly couple who lived close
by always had things attractive
and were a pleasure to vtslt. He
had his white wash brush and she
her tulips.
We have ·slipped In Meigs
County l;!ut things are looking up.
To be effective It wllllilclude the
schools, the churches, public
officials and ·all facets of our
lives.
If we think beautifUl thoughts
we will do beautiful things.
Gayle PriCe

"~

Cemeteries lacking care

· now lives In Florida, wants to
Dear Editor:
My husband, children, and I visit some of these cemeteries
recently visited Meigs County this summer, but be Is 74. years
while researching family his- old, and could not get to some of
them In their present condition.
tory. We had maps of the area
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Mls- suggesting. ·1'he process ' could confilctlng requlrements1"
.
Isn't there someone who Is
with local Information printed
placed
concern
for
states'
rights
take
three
years.
~·
·
Indeed,
opposition
to
state
responsible for maintaining the
on, such as cemeteries, etc. Both
threatens the success of the
FDA, a unit of Sulllvp's pre-emption also comes from
Labels would· provide unprece-.
It lil·such a shame to
cemeteries?
my mother's and father's famifederal
...
government's
belated
department,
regulates
abou~$350·
·
consumer
advocates
In
Congress
·dented
Information about dietary
'
let them go:
lies have lived In the area since
·
billion
worth
of
foOd
sold
every
and
leaders·
of
public
Interest
effort
to
require
Improved
nutrlfiber,
saturated
fat and cholesIn some of the area cemet~Jes.
the 1830's ..
labeling
on
foOd.
year.
About30percentmusthave
groups
familiar
with
the
Issue.
'tton
terol
along
with
traditional dis·
We had no Idea that some oft he a big effort has been made to
.
After
yeats
of
Inaction,
the
nutritional
labeling,
another
30
They
argue
that
states
·would
·
1
closures
about
vitamins,
calories
clean th11J11 up. They look much
cemeteries would be so hard to
FoOd
and
Drug
Administration
IS
·
percent
carries
the
data
volunhave
no
need
to
car.ve
out
.and
carbohydrates.
·
find! After considerable search· , better, and whoever Is responsi.
committed
'
to
overhauling
the
tarlly,
and
the
remalnlilg
40
exemptiOns
to
,federa.J
s!andards
Moreover, uniformity of the
ble should be commended.
lng, we finally located QuUlen
and
misleading
sys.
percent
Is
unlabeled.
that
are
tough
yet
fatr
.
.
confusing
sl2es on the labels would ,
serving
I
would
like
to
thank
the
people
Cemetery, Inside Syracuse city
tem of providing nutrition lnfoi·
Tbe delays predicted by repreMost of the state efforts to be required. One bag of pretzels
who
allowed
us
to
park
on
their
limits. We pulled each other up
property so we could get to the matlon on foOd labels. But, as In sentatlves of· - public Interest regulate nutrition labeling of designed to be sold In vending
the hill through the brush to find
any rule-making proceeding,
groups could defeat the lmpor- food, they note, occurred during machines and consumed by one
cemeteries.
the cemetery In even worse
hearings,
repeated
tant reforms because Sullivan . the · Reagan administration,
protracted
person, for Instance, now claims
Edward and Janet (Jenkins)
condition! But we successfully
:
revisions
and
even
litigation
are
Inexplicably
lnslsta
that
the
new
when
a
lack
of
any
fede,ral
to
Include 1. 75 ·servings •. per
Howard
found two or the stones we were
the
new
require'
guldelliles
authorl2e
Individual
concern
Inspired
states
to
atlikely
before
package.
Similarly, one com147
E.
Forest
Street
looking for! I am the only living
ments
are
adopted.
states
to
supersede
federal
.
retempt
to
fill
the
policy
vacuum.
pany
originally
said It's 10.ounce
.
Clyde,
Ohio
43410
member of the family who has
"Unforiunately,
the
secrequlrements
If
the
state
rants
Despite
that.
.
only
one
state.
can
of
soup
provided
two servseen these stones. My father, who
stricter regulation. .
enacted a law: A 1986 Cilllfornla
tary's proposal Is years away
Ings, then 2% servlilgs and now
from being seen on tlui' grocery
Tbe National FoOd Processors ballot proposition that received
2'11 servings.
shelf," says Bruce Sllverglade or" Assliclatlon, Grocery Manufac· overwhelming voter supiJOrt reBy manlpul~ting those mea- .
the Center for SCience In the
turers of Amerlcll and other q\lireS .the Iabe's on all prOducts,
surements, food processors have
.
PUblic lnti!rest of the announce.:
Industry trade. asSjlela,tlons long Including food, to dl&amp;eltise con'
been able to make It appear that
Dear' Editor:
An elderly man (Herman Carmeat by Secretary·.of Health and
have opposed mandatory nutrl- tents known to cause · \llrth
they· have reduced the perEveryone probably Is wonder- son) who · lives next door to ,, Human Services Louis w. SulllUonallabellng as too expensive defects or cancer.
serving
amounts of fat, sOdium
Ing how Little Mary Ann·Ranken Mary's grandmother says he
van that FDA will soon propose
and cumbersome. Now, how-·
Some observers suggest that
or
calories
although they have
Is coming along after the ace!· cannot believe the progress she
new regulations.
ever, these groups suggest they Sullivan's support for state prenot
actually
changed the
dent from when she got hit by an has made In two years he has
"We've been here . before,':
could support the concept- but. emption may beanefforttoavold contents.
automobile on June 26, 1986.
been there. He says she doesn't
adds Ellen Haas of Public Voice
notlf It allows state pre emption. ·: O'.'ll!l'ilillnt ttlat popular state law
If the state pre-emptloq Issue
Daughter of John and Connie walk anymore she "runs" and
for Food and Health Policy. "In
That makes sense. Asks NFPA durlna this year's Important can be satisfactorily resolved,
Ranken of Tuppers Plains and that It makes his day so much 1979, we had proposals. But
President John .R. Cady: "Why California gubernatorial
shoppers might soon confront
granddaughter of Tony and Shir- brighter when he see's Mary
we've not seen them lmplecan't this country have a single, campaign.
·.
foOd
labels that actually reveal
ley Jones she has had a long hard coming up the ·sidewalk to mented. We need action much
uniform foOd-labeling system
The positive aspects of Sulll·
the
nutritional valae of the
struggle. Mary goes to Carle\On grandma 's house. We are so faster than he (Sullivan) 1s· . Instead or· a hoc)ge-pbdge of van's proposal are numerous.
package's
contents.
School In Syracuse.. Without the lucky to have our Uttle. Mary
·
·
speech therapist and physical with us tOday.
.
•
·
therapy and every,one el.se who
I want to give a big "Thank
t
~··
has worked with Mary at Ca., rleton she would not be walking
on her own or talking either
~~~•~
tOday. She loves school so much,
thinks so much of.
LONDON (NEA)- According .the United Stat,es. Because the probl~m· and aredolngwhat.they
she cries when she Is sick
·
'1'1\.ank you
to drug agenta here, U.S. elforts !tern was already In transit, It · can
· ·
because she wants to go to school
Mrs.
Shirley
Jones
to
stem
the
now
at
drugs
from
was
never
seen
by
a
German
"The
iiftr~
·"·pean street d!!mand rising dall)!;
so bad.
·
·
Mary's grandin~ther
South AmeriCa to the United customs Inspector. Forged Ger- Its detection of smugglers,"
a kilo of cocaine wlll bring three
States have led drug traffickers man customs PBPI!I'S were supp- Broeders ·said. "This Is forcing ' tlmes as much Jn Europe as In the
to start !iSing European ports as lied that Identified the container the drug barons to search for
United States.
transshipment points for as a shipment of car parts en routes that are less 'vulnerable
AllacrossEurope,overthelast
cocaine.
route from Hamburg to than the dlre.c t routes to the
several years, cocaine seiZures
Tens of thousands of sealed Philadelphia.
United States. They're doing ·it
bypollcehavi!lncreaseddrarhatcargo containers now through
Had the Drug Enforcement through Europe. ·
•
lcally. According to autbcrltles,
the world's ports dally. It Is Administration not received a up
"This ,presents a great chatcocaine Is on the way to replacing
pbyslcaliy Impossible - and In Colombia, and thusknoim the · lenge to us and we are having to her~ln . as Europe's d!iug of
economically unfeasible - to exact container to look for, a ton develop new methods." .
,
choice. 1
..
open and Inspect every .one. of cocaine would have success.
Last month, Dutch National
Spain, because of Its familiar .
Containers arriving In the United fully reached u ,s. dealers.
Pollee made one · ofthi! largest · language and · tack of visa reStates from Colombia and Peru
Other scenarios that have been European cocaine sel2ures ever.
qulrements, Is the first choice
and ·o ther suspectl:ountrles are uncovered are simpler.
In a small Dutch port they
among South American JITUg
often Inspected, but those artlvCocaine Is taken by small boat lnlercepted 6,600 pounds of cosmugg,ers bringing In prOduct
for European consumption: ' In
ing from Rotterdam or Ports- from Colombia to the Nether· caine hidden Inside a shipment of
mouth or Hamburg are rarely · lands Antilles. It Is then frozen orange juice from South
1982, Spanish pollee sel2ed about
,
smuggled aboard · a container America. They arrested eight
2150 pounds of cocaine. Last year
examined.
Thus, the European· route Is ship stoppJng on Its way from
suspects, four of wbcm were
they seized 3.8 tons- more than
quickly gaining popularJ.ty With Holland to a southern u.s. port.
Colomtilan nationals. Authorities
60 percent of the total sel2ed In all
ColoJnblan cocaine amuD!ers.
Tbe drugs are then sUpped lilto a
believe the cocaine was Intended
of Europe.
In the Netherlands, Dutch' .
One elaborate scl!erte that was container, which arrives Iii the tor tran1fer to another container
uncovered Involved lhlpping a · United States as .an Industrial headed for the United States. · , pollee last year sel2ed 3,120
container of automotive parts shipment from a Dutch or
In addition tococalneslatj!dfor pounds of cocaine - up frm:n
from Germany to Colombia. In . ·German port,
· ·.
transshipment to the United 1,130 pounds In 1988. French
Colombia, some of the.p arts were
A!lthOrltles believe that the States, there has been a tremend·
pollee uncovered 2,160 pounds In
unloaded and replaced by an Dutch port of Rotterdam- the ousrlselnthelastyearofcocalne 1989 - more than double the .
equal weight of cocaine, then ·world's busiest .:.... has become
iirrlvln(l for European consumpprevious year's haul. Last year
packed Iii specially sealed airthe port of choice for smug~ers
tion. The' U.S. market Is satuIn Britain, where cocaine had
tlgbtcontalnerssoltwouldnotbe trytngtotransshlptothe· Unlted rated. U.S. demand has started mainly been confined to the
sniffed out by trained dogs. Tbe States.
to fall and, with It, cocaine upper classes, almost thousand
container was then marked to · Commtsslonl!f Peter Broeders prlces.Now,however,WithEuropounds were sel2ed.
look as tbcugb II bad been
of the Netherlands National
mlatakenly shipped and was
Pollee Intelllgenr:e Service, jusJ
back from a trip to the Ualted
being returned.
When the container arrived
States to view the U.S. CUitom1
back In Hambuf(l, It was Imineantl-clrug techniques, said • by
By Untied l.".r eu International
.
dlately transferred to another phone from bla office In Tbe
Today Is Wednesday, AprU 25, th~ !15th day of·1990 wltb 200 to
•
'ship heading for the east coast of ~ague that the Dutch reall2e
' the
fu~.
.
•
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.
.
\
~
~·
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~

Food label may be hard to·. swallow

Robert Walters .

Progress noted past two years

~~~l.toa~~e~o~:r a~u~a~~~~~~

E · ·
urope

dru.
.
.
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•
18 new,.'
·g tran
. s.er..po·mt
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R

obert Wagman

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Spli( twin blll snaps

Redinen
.losing streak
-

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.
' ..
Donnie Becker made his one
Howard, &gt;yho pitched , five In· ,
hit on three appearaqces at bat
nlngs. Brock Barnhouse was top
for the Universit-y of Rio Grande
hitter for the Cougars, going two
for two.
baseball team ·. count Tuesday
when his homer turned Into
Highly ranked .wlt!IJp the dis·
trict, Mount Vernon batJI.ed bac~
two-run RBI, helping the Red·
men .c rest to an 8·5 win over
In the second Cj)ntest as John
Sutton ·assumed pltchlllg dulLes.
Mount Vernon Nazarene at Stan,
ley L. Evans Field.
Sutton lim!~ tbe Rl!dmen to
Becker; Chris Boggs a.nd
eight hits·before Efraln Montero
Jimmy Kearns ·· ted an 11-hit . stepped In as relief. ·. .
assault .agalnst .the Cougars that
Mike Voorhets1.V~-4) opened as
snap~d a s.even-game string, of
pitcher f~r Rl~ Gr,ande, jrlvlng up
losses tor Dave Oglesby's club.
four hits, five runs al)d allowing
AlthOugh the . Redmen . fell to ·four to wal!t. but was ~pelled by
Mount Vernon ·In the nightcap, .. Rob · Kuhn In the' third .. Kuhn
9·4, It didn't dampen their
remained on the mo1111d for 1rlf3
enthusiasm.
Innings, during Wlr\Ch he surren-.
•'In the first game, we played a
dered five hits and fo111 runs and
great defensive' game and that
was l'll.lleved by Alldy ·Bulach,
makes · all the difference,"
who gave up three bits to the
Cougars:
..•.
Oglesby .rem.arked ils the Red·
men went ,to 10..17 on the Ieason,
Joel Perez, thrl!e for four •t
2-8 In District 22 and 1-5 In the ·bal, scored a thr~run llomer
Mid-OhiO Conference.
whiCh put the Coiaaars up M
BOgg&amp; was three for-three and . ' ,the ' fifth jnning, dn a.ddltlon to•·
Kearps connected three times on . steal Iiiii four bases. j{eua* was
four .at bats In, the opener, which '· three for four a!J~·.Beclrer niad~
saw Rio Grande ahead 8-lln .the ·goOd on l)¥'oof 'f ouratbats to lead,
fourth lnl)lng. Darrell j'darcum, · the Redmen hitting.
, ,.,
pitching ,n early· all seven Innings,
Moun.! Vernon scored on 11 hits
l)eld the Cougars to seven hits. &lt; and: had two ·errors, while ;the
Rio Grande had an · error·less
R.edmen also had two errors.
game, whlleKelth·Veale's.Mount
The Redmen will be at home
Vern,on club committed three.
Friday for a 1 p.m.•doubleheader
Marcum• brought his season
against Malone. Mount Vernon'
record to 4·4 before Bucky
(20-14 overall,13-51n thedlslrlct)
Spindler relieved hlm In the early
enters the National Chris dan
part of the seventh. Taklilg the
College Baseball Tournament at
loss for the visitors. was Jim
Marlon, Ind., on Thursday.

a

Scoreboard ...
Majors
llnllr.dP~Irt&amp;er!SCkt...
AM_ERIC.\N LE~GUE

EISt

r.

· W L Pct. GB

Toi'OIIto .................... : ..11
MIIM-uke e.................... "1

5 .M1 II .UI 1%

-.,s~on ......................,..• "1

I

Baltlmorto ................. ,... 1

7 .511

.s• '

t•11

N- 1'-.rk .... ................. l I .455
Cl~eland .... ................. II
'2 .411
Detr~ ......................... &amp; t .4IHI

I
I~

I

I

!

ll .7. 8 .571

%1.,

Ctllcalfl .. ........, ............. a

s .111

1%

Mln.eseta ................. ... 7· 8 ..fM
calilornla ........... .... : ..••. i 1 .ta

I
I

Ku..a (11)' ....... ........... 1

I

II .181

,

I~

EMler • Ce lfernce

Delrt&amp;t-.111 ....; '

AtiiU • - ...... .a .Det'Ril, I p.m.

"Prist- .... _ lii*NI,I; .p:m.

· Mifl- Dttl'tltal ..dl-.li.p.m.
I·M· j - DaiNM M •••UIIW'Ip.m.
I ·M·· f _,......_ a&amp; Oet.ell, TBA

.,

PIIO.del•• n . OewlaM
April • - Cl...t...·.. Pll!lo\... piOa,

New Yortl, Se.Uie!
Toronto 4, OPVeland 3

7:. . .·m.
,
April • - Clewlalld M Ptll&amp;lklpllla.

Oakland 1. Balttmaft' I
Mln . .aea If, Det rGII 4
Te.:• s, Chleqo (

fthr 1 - Phila411elpllla at Clevela...
1 :• p.m:

'7:• ,.m.

BOe.. n -1 , CaiKornla!

•

•
•

•
.t
•'

CftJ

Kalt!IU
Mllwaub~

~S.berllqen

p.m.

1·1) a.t

tFIIer 1·1I, 1 p.m.

x-M..,- 1 ..:,. DM'd_. a&amp; PIIIIIMplllla. .
Til A
ar.1cap va. Mllnalee
Aprl rr - Mll... lr.ee u ~)eqo, 8

•.··

Dt!l.roll tRebl-n 1-11 at Mln.-!aa&amp;a
(Tapaal2-1 J, K: U p.m.
SeatUr (Holmaa !--11 al New Yorlt
(l"eru l ·ll, 7:• p.m.
CaiUorma !McCaskill 1·1) a&amp; BoaiOil
(Bed dicker Hl, 7:35p.m.
Cl"rlaml c&amp;e.ne 0·1) at Toronlo
(SI aUiemyN" 1·21, '2 : Ia p.m.
Oaklnnd !Welch !-1) al Baltimore ·
~ ' tMIIa c kii · R) , 7:3Sp.m .
,
Clllca~ IMcU.Welll-llal Tnu (Witt
. , O.'!l . M: Sll p.m.
,
Thund~ Games
K.a111- CMy at Mll. . ilee
Cle\'rlaadal To..-o
SuiUr- Ill New 1' trk. II&amp;M
Calllonia.a 8osttll, nllbl

p.m.

Apd •

.

'

.
'
"""'II-"""
Y... ··- ' J.m.
...,, ::... .,.••NewYe"-lp.m.

s

X·MQ4----IINetrl'tlti.IJ.m.
X·IIO I - New h .. I&amp; ....... 'ft.t

.....,.c.......

.........
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...... ...... Lea,.. .....:.
u. Labri.- . . . ."

"""' n - • - - ....., Mplea.

.....
...........
:.-.,_:a;rl-llti-•a&amp;LnAI .... I: •
.....
AlriiiM n.

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8M

.

1 .818 - ,1
~~~ AnF.il!'ll .... .............. . f ,IN I
,San Dlep~ ........ ............. 8 • .1~1 · ~
u............................... i iJ .181 •
S&amp;nl"ralcitK.11 ....... ...... . S . ..., 5\o,
Allall&amp;al

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

.

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

Alkl!&amp;ll .(&amp;m•aN)MNnYarii(C.M

••• · 'J: IIJ.m.

CI~~CI..ai(MalllllerN.aiPII .......•

Cltldll•l·l ,, 7: a p.m.
••.-eel CMartl.,. 1-11 t1 . . . . .
(Dtllll. . l.fl,l:aiMII.
Dllt.ap 18te1M'Id tH M I • INep
CWIIH••I·I), II:H , ....
·

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, .......... cTtlftll cM1 a&amp; •• ..._..

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Allrl _.. ..._ Del'" lit

Sports briefs

.

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lal!i Allt•o. I

~

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.

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•·llql-

Dt•_. a1 i • M*-'t, ftA

....-.._._ ..........&lt;• ••
..... .................... .....
....... _............... ,...
...... - llollaa .. ~-.....

New York I, "'Iaiita I

! • 01 ... 11. Cllliap I
Pltllllll1111114. • • huc!l. . t
Lo1 All .... I, St. . . . . I

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Aprl • - Oe••aa.•u.u~ a:•
.

:ta:dllhrl-i•Aill....,ltll ......... 'l'l.t .....

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Mo... .a~·- 1

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,.....,..ell••

I . 18~

·/f.edwomeri split games
·with visiting Concord

'

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Ajootll--·'*'"·
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t-llla··-.
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(

110• OPEII FOR THE
JPQISEASOII
. C..l,ltte LIM of .
'v....... and lidding
, .......... 111. . . . . .

..AI
... ..
..........
,.-

F•••• lllngl11 Wets.
Fruit 111111 ...... 1iiJ.r,_,

·. .....s
.....

Open p.lly 1·1: Sun. 1·1

·-

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·.t .

Olympics
The International . OlympiC
Committee Executive Board
urged African National Olympic
Committees to work wltb South,
African sports officials to end _ :
racial segregation In the coun·
try 's sports. The executive board •
reaffirmed the IOC 's policy that •
South AfriCa cannot be readmit· · •
ted to the Olympic fold until.,. •
apartheid has been dismantled. •
Soccer
•
Joe Gaetjen's goal to lift the :
United States toal-OvlctorYover ..England In the 1950 World Cup Is ' • '·
among the candidates for "GreaJest Moment In United States'
World Cup History." The voting,
sponsored by MasterCard, wm
be done by sports journallsls.
Theothercandidates ·a relheU.S. , ,
learn defeating Trinidad-TobagO ·
to qualify for the 1990; defeating .. .·'
Cuba to qualify for the 1950 World
Cup; and winning two games In ...
the 1930 World Cup.
.·

(USP81fMtt)
A DIYIIIoa ollll. .lm..Ua, Ia&lt;.
Published every afternooo, Monday

.'

'

.

~ ·

..
..,

..

Jhrough Friday, Ill Coun St.. Po-

mer~.

Ohio, by tbe ·Ot)lo Valley PubUshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119, Ph. t92·2l!i. Se-

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Ohio.

·

Member; United Pre"' lntematlonal.
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POS'IMASTE:R; Send otlcftu chan1101
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Sports briefs

;.

.....

'

py ·D~~ HARRIS
. father, retired 11eteran Southetn hits to score six runs before near
Eastern ' took no prisoners In · mentor Hilton Wolfe, Jr. posted a disaster struck ""In the KC
sco,r lng a &gt;one-slded ~1-6 victory 164-100 career record In a Tor· outfield.
over the ~ger Creek Bobcats nado uniform.
·
Kyger ·c enterftelder Mark VII·
here Tuesday evening to give the
Eastern)llttlng was the main laneuva and left·ftelder Jay
Eagles their 11th Win of the story In Tuesday's condnuance Johnson both tracking a Matt
season and Coach Scott Wolfe his of a suspended game from March Flnlaw drive to deep center hit at
100th career . v')J'sity coachlilg 30. The game resumed In the fuil speed with a head on
victory. ·
· bottom of the third Inning with collision. Johnson miraculously
Eastern 'Is now 11-3 overall and
Eastern leading 2-0, 1 out, and a caught the hall, but play was
7-3 In .iile · svAC: Kyger ; who • runner(Shaun Savoy) at-second. delayed for some time as both
started hot at 4·0 Is now 4-9 and
Eastern continued the lnnlilg suffered vlsll;!le Injuries ,
4-6.
. .
by picking up two more runs for a · Eastern had two hits before the
Coach Scoit Wolfe .collecled his 4-0 ·lead.After a scoreless KC . suspension, but rallied for 16 hits
1110th Win against 52 losses In his
fourth, Eastern began With · a Ia~t night, scoring four more In
eighth season at : Eastern. His walk and pounded Olll 7 straight the fifth, and 7 In the seventh as
sophomore Tony Maxey clinched
the mercy rule Win with a
two- RBI single up the middle for
the 21-6 finale.
·
Earlier, down 10-0, KC fought
back hard With five walks and
two singles (Bradbury and Wei·
who was two for five. Suzanne lman) to plate five·runs and pull
Acting'. as
hltdng machine,
the University - Of Rio Grande · Sparks was credlled with four the score to 10-5. Eastern's
walks (n her 'pitching for Con· reliever Michael Smith came on,
softball t~am Sll)a~ked the ball16
cord, while Ellis was the team's to retire the side and gain the
Urnes to outdistance visiting
top hitter with a two for three . save with another goOd Inning of
Concord (\\Wa.) 16-6 In the first
performance.
·
work.
·
·
part of a doubleheader Tuesday
Although
Rio
Grande
~
s
defense
Tim
Bissell
p'
l
oked
up
the
win,
at Stanley L. Evan$·FJeld.
held for tile most part In the going 3 and two-thirds Innings
· Concord'ralllet:l.ln the nightcap
second
· game, the Redwomen around one Inning pitched by Jeff
for a 4-1 victory. The Redwomen
were
unable
to repeat the same Durst, while Mlcahel Smith
emergi!d fr'!'ft the contests with a
hitting
feat
of
the opener. Con- gained the save.
4-14 record. ·
.
cord
pitcher
Kelley
allowed Rio
Bissell Is now 3·0.
Cindy Ridgeway and Becky
Grande
four
hits
while the
Chad Johnson, after also pitch·
Fuller·each-went three for five to
visitors advanced on seven hits. lng some on I'!londay developed a
open the way for Rio Grande In
Coricord's'
Corbett and Pence sore shoulder and suffered the
the openlil(l contest.
were
eac.
h
two for three In loss With 3 and 1-3 Innings, while
. Kathy Lllte pitched the endre
hitting.
·seven lnnlilgs for the hosta and
Phil Bradbury came on In relief.
Fuller, Lu Je, Kathy Snyder and
Shaun Savoy. ,was 3 for. four
succeedl!d In holding• the Lady
Missy Kitchen each · managed a · with a walk and double, Jeff
' Mountaln' Lions to nine hits. The
hit apiece for Rio Grande, while Horner a perfect 3 for 3 With a
Redw11meq allowed themselves
Lute again pitched, recording walk and sacrifice fly and six
two errors and Concord committwo strikeouts and three walks. RBI's. Jeff Durst was three fat
ted thfet!. Lute struck out ~ne
Kelley netted three . strikeouts four, Michael Smith had two
Concord player and allowed five
and allowed four walks.
singles and a double, Jason
walks .
Both teams committed two Hager a double and single and.
Rio Grande also benefited
four RBI' s, Mark Murphy two
from the hitting' of Rob.ln Stull, ·errors apiece.
The Redwomen will take the singles, Matt Flnlaw a single,
momentum generated by · a
and Toney Maxey a single. ·
three-game
winning
streak,
KC hitters were Phil Elradbury
., Tellllla
started
with
last
Thursday's
twin
with
two singles, David Wellman
Defending tournament cham·
victories
over
Shawnee
State,
on
and single, and Brian
a
double
pion Alberlll Mancini of Ar_genthe
road
tOday,
where
they,
face
Vinson
a
single.
tlna cruised to a 6-2, 6-4 'first·
Mount Vernon Nazarene In a 3
Eastern Is at Hannan Trace
round vlclory over South African
(8·
p.m.
doubleheader.
Concord
Wednesday.
Christo Van Rensburg In the $1
18) .will face Mllllgan (Tenn. ) on ,
Llnescore:
mUllan Monte Carlo Open. Ninththe
.road.
Kyger
Creek ..... ooo 051- 6 5 3
seeded American Jim Courier
Eastern
............ 202 647-21 18 3
,and No. 13 seed Guillermo
Perez•Roldan of Argentina also
advanced · to the sec(lnd round.
...Top-ranked Ivan Lend! and No.
· 5 Brad Gilbert are the only men
among the world;s top . 20 .expected to miss the Fren,c h Open
. stardng May 28•. Among those
who have. entered are No. 2
Stefan Edberg, No. 3 Boris
Becker and Americans Andre
Agassl, Aaron Krlcksteln, Jay
Berger and John McEnroe. ...
No. 8 seed Isabelle Dern!lngeot of
France, the 2nly seeded player In
.action, struggled to a 3-6, 6-4, 6-0
flrst-rounil ~victory ovllr tNicole .
Jagerman of · Holland at \he'
$1150,000 women's tournament. at
Barcelona, Spain.
·
Bulr.etball
The·Los An(leles Lakera were
fined $25,080 by the NBA for
keeplrig two healthy starters out
of their season-ending game at
.Portland. Lakers Coach Pat
Riley did not play Magic Johnson
Enjoy o mon!ilJc?ng look inside
and James WorthY In the final
tlie world of cable television!
game of the season, which the
Thirty
days of excitement ond
, Lakers lost 130-88. Riley c ailed
entertciinment for every !MIIlber of
the game "Insignificant."
the family - · mOYii!S 1 comedy,
.:
BoxlDI
sports,
news, education, music,
. No. 1 heavyweight contend_er
home shopping convenienae
Evander Holyfield Will fight
Seamus McDonagh June 1 at
and so much more.
AtlanUc City, N.J., In what be
hopes will be his last tuneup
It all adds up lo
before challenging champion
TV 'f04/ve go1ta 111!
Buster Douglas later thts.year ....
Tbe 1BF named llghtwetghl
champion Pernell Whitaker
Fighter of the Year fo~ 1989.

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

11., 1- Loa Arlllfl• al lleai-. A:.

CI•I••U ..;.................. I

•

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Aprllfa - New y-.,. M • ...., I p.m•

1 .sn. ~
NN&gt; Vort ..................... 1 7 .Ill I
ChiCAfO ..... ................... I II .41. I
81. ............................. . • .... 2\1,
PhiUelpW~t .................

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•.• ,. ' - a(ll ... ~·· ~k ..., TBA.
Boato.V..Nn,Yer'·

Eut
I .•
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NATIONAL LEA.Glll:

W L Pd .

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Mil' I - Qlc!ap M Mll-~e. a p.m.
X·M• I - Qicatu Ill Ml.....lr.ee, 8

Oaklaa411 • Balllmore, •laM
TeA~~ , nllllt

Plfllbulltl ...............~.... l
Mon&amp;nal . .. .............. ..... s

- Mll,...lr.ee Ill Cllkap, I

p.m.

Ollcap a1

Team

.._

·~

• ·M.,J-PIIIIadllpllllaaiCinel ...,8

we...-Q'Garnn
;

IIHiafnve

nr11 . .•• .

Oakland ............. ....... ..10
TI!XIIB .•... ..... ........••.• .. .••tl

Sellltle .... .......... ....... , ....-1 tt· .W
'J'veldlQ' Res•!l
Mllwuket 1, Ku• C11y S

NIIA PIIJOfta

•

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Today in history

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Te ~

a

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By

u.s:

Berry's World

'.

MARAuDER cateher Ed Crooks llln!flell In the Maraudenltrst
run of the 1ame In lhelr 5-1 TVC wiD over Vllllon.
·

.

•

hit and scoring Hainmond from ground. Reed was stranded · a t
third. Phaltn came back to strike second when Hammond flew out
ou t-Hatfield to end the Inning.
to end the game.
·
Meigs scored three Insurance
Meigs was led at the plate by
runs In the sixth, with two QUts Terry Reuter wltb a double.
Stewart goJ the ball rolling wtth a Jasoo Wright, Kevin Taylor,
walk, McGuire reaced on a Eric Heck, Ed Crooks and Chris
VIking error. Jason Wright Stewart each singled. Reed had
ripped a single scoring Stewart. both or the Vlklilgs hlt1.
Taylor then SCQred McGuire with
Phalln'plcked up the Win going
a single of his own to make It 4-1. 5 23 With Taylor piking up the
Wright ·scored the games final . save. They combined . to strike
run on a passed baU.
out 7 and. walk 6. Alder took the
Reed picked up the only other loss giving up 6 hits, striking out6 ·
hit ot the game In the top of the an&lt;! walking 6.
seventh when he hit a sinking line
Meigs Will travel to Belpre to .
drive down the line In left with play the Golden Eagles on Friday •
two outs, McGuire made a dive night. ·Bet pre beat the Marauders
for the ball got his glove on It but In the first game this year In
dropped It when he hit the extra Innings 2·1.

-

l
.

erro~. KevTn - Taylor forced
Wright at second for the second
ciut but the Marauders scored
when Taylor stole second and
McGuire scored Qn a delayed
steal of htlnwo.
Tbe 'VIkings were being held
with out a hlthby the sophomore
Phalln despite putting a base
runoer on In each of the first
three Innings. The Vikings
scored In the flftli frame when
Hammond reached on an, error . .
Wiseman picked up a walk to put
runners on second and ihlrd with
two outs. Reed hit a smash to the
.left of second baseman Eric
Heck, Heck made a diving stop
but Reed beat his throw toflrstln
a close call for ihe Vikings first

Eiis;tern .rolls iover Bobcats;
~Q.ach Wolfe gets lOOth· win

w

.

The Deily Sentinel-Page 3

5-1 ·victory over ,VHS

Pomeeoy-Middleport.
Wednllcley, Aprl· 26, 1990 .•

,.

.

Pomaoy-Mideport. Ohio

�Wednesday. Apri126. 1990

Shopping At Save • A •l.ot ls Like Keeping Mon~ In The Bank
You Save Up To 40% On Your Family's Grpeery Needs _ SPECIAl,

Indim.s drop. 3-l,
battle.to Toronto
.
TORONTO (UPI) - . Oreg
Swindell ~aid he only made. one
bad pitch In the Clevel~ncl
Indians' 4·3 loss to •the Toronto
Blue Jays Tuesday·night: ·
However, there's a difference
of opinion on exactly which pitch
that was.
Swlnclell, ·1·2, says It was the
,, first-Inning, three-run .homer he
· ' gave up ·to Kelly Gruber that
gave Toronto a 3:1 lead. But
accord!iJi to Gruber·, the decisive
throw came when Swlnclell hit
the first l!atter he (aced, Tony
Fernande~.
· •
The 1~ling ori the Toronto
bench was that·It may have been
some retaliation for Candy Mal·
donado. being hit by Jim Acker
clurlngMonday's game. ·' ' .
"It ceriainly did something to
the dugout/ ' said Gruber, who
had two home runs on the night,
. ·•:
his flftli"and sixth of the season. .
· ''We'll' never know if It was .
......
...:..:,__ __:,_.:.__-:-_
Intentional hut Tony cam.e over
and
said llght it up and I did."
tag during second Inning Pblldelphla PhiDies-Cindnnatl Reds
: : SAFE AT HOME - Eric Davis Is ll!lfe at third as PhiDies' tblrd
JimmY
Key, 2·0, gave up live
baseball acti!Jn at Veterans Stadium Tuesday. Third base umpire
• ~aseman CharDe H4)'ea (8) stretcheli out and Is wuable to make the
hits
over
five innings for t-he
Is Jerry Crawford. (UP!) .
victory, striking out three. Frank
'
Wills, Willie Blai~ and Tom
Henke each worked an inning In
relief before David Wells got the
final three outs for his third save.
'"They jumped on me early l)ut
By JOHN SWENSON
blowing a J·l series leaO) reauy series at two gatnes apiece.
after that they hit some hard .
hand Montreal its first .-'four·
,
.UPI Sports Writer
hurt,'' Oilers veteran Kevin
The best-of-seven serle~ re- game sweep since l952.
bl)lls for some outs,'' sal!! Key .
• The Edmonton Oilers avenged Lowe said. '''Tonight was a way to sumes Thursday In Chicago. The
Boston has taken advantage of
' 'What can I say, it was my night,
~ llist year's flrst"round •defeat at
sever all previous ties wllh series winner will meet E;dmon- Montrea.l 's anemic power play,
that's the way It goes.
• tile hands of .the Los Angeles Wayne.
ton In the Campbell Conference which has accounted for only two
"I threw pretty good I
• Kings Tuesday 'night, using a 6-5
"We're the Edmonion-Oilers, finals. ·
'
goals in 40 chances d\lrlng the
thought,' ' ,.
·
·
. overtime victory to complete a and we have our own identity.''
Presle:,', who leads the Black· playoffs.
·, ,
Toronto beat the Jndians for
;tour-game sweep of their Stanley ·
The Kings, swept .In the div· hawks wUr seven .playoff goals,
"We know our power play
the fifth time_ In· as many
&lt;:up quarter-final series.
islon final for the·second straight opened the scoring at 2:06 of the stinks," Montreal forward Brian · , meetings at the SkyDome.
• :Joe Murphy scored at 4: 42 of year, have never advanced past second period, wristing a shot Skrudland said. "But we still · The Indians took a 1-0 lead
.overtime. After' Reljo Ruotsa·
the second round In six tries.
from the top of the left circ(e beat Buffalo in that other series.
after the ftrst two batters of the
~ lailll!n' s slap shot was blocked by
Esa Tlkkanen scored with 2:55 above the blocker of befuddled We have to worry about heating
game. Jerry Browne led off with
• goaltender Kelly Hrudey, remaining In regulation to send Blues goaltender Vincent Bo~ton five-on-five."
:·
a double and scored on a double
• Murphy pounced on the rebound the game Into overtime. The left Riendeau .
The Bruins are cautious enter·
hy Mitch Webster.
• and blasted a25-footshotover the wing, shooting from a near· · :&gt;econds later, Riendeau failed ing Game 4. Boston last swept
1
glove hand of Hrudey for his third Impossible angle along the to corral a puck that bounced Montreal In 1929, and the Bruln,s
,
~playoff goal.
boards, managed to squirt a slowly across the crease and have won only three of 24 playoff
, "I just picked If up, cut to the 25-foot shot between the legs of Goulet tipped in tjle easy goal at
series against the Canadlens.
·'middle and shot It over. Hrudey 's Hrudey for his eighth goal of the. 2:42.
"It's not o.ver untll it's over,"
: glove,'' Murphy said. "It was playoffs.
Rod Brind'Amour, who leads Bruins captain Raymond
~ great."
, , ..
,
The Kings staged a four-goal all rookies in points and is second Bourque said. ''There Is rio sense
" · Edmonton advanced to the rally to take the lead after falling in goals, cut the deficit tp 2-1 at : In us becoming overconfldetlt
~ Campbell Conference final for
behind 4-1 halfway through the 12: 53 of the second, converting on going Into the fourth game. Far
~ the sixth time In the· last eight
game.
a nifty end-to-end rush.
too much has gone down In the
&lt;,years. The Oilers, who will meet
In the Norris Division final,
Brett Hull, who led the NHL history between our two teams
either Chicago or St. Louis, have Wayne Presley and Michel with 72 regular-season goals, for us to be overcorifident." ·
-" won seven straight games since Goulet scored 36 seconds apari drew a game-misconduct and
Washington; ·leading the Pa·
falling behind Winnipeg 3'1 In the early In the second period and five -minute penalty at 16:47 of trick Division finals 2·1, will play
~ opening round.
goaltender Ed Belfour, making the second after high-sticking Game 4 without goaltender Don
~ Former Oller Wayne Gretcy
his first start In the series, made Jocelyn·Lemieux.
Beaupre, out with a groin injury;
missed Game 4 of the "Smythe 19 of his 31 saves In the third ·
In the Wales Conference, play forward Michal Pivonka, sideDIVtslon championship series period to lift the Chicago Black· resumes Wednesday with the lined with kidney stones; and
with a bad back.
hawks to a 3·2 victory over the St. Boston Bruins at the Montreal forward Dlno Clccar~lli, out for .
: · "The loss last )lea~ , (af~~r Louis j3lues and deadlock their Canadlens in the Adams Division the series with a knee injury. ·&lt;
finals and the NewYorkRangers
Washington Is bidding . !o ad·
at the Washington Capitals in the vance past the second round of
Pat rick Division finals.
the playoffs for the ·first Ume In
.-. ~ ·
Boston, ·leading 3·0, · looks ·to club history.

..

____ _ _

=.P ilers sweep Kings, advance _to finals -

But ·Gruber's three-run homer
tri tile bottom of the lnnlngputthe
Blue Jays abead. Swindell
opened by hitting " Fernandez,
then walked Mookle Wilson be- .
fore Gruber drove his 3·1 offering
and off the h\lt·field foul pole for
hl.Soflfth home run of the season.
"I was trying to gei the pitch
Inside but I guess It came a little
too much inside~" said Swindell.
"It kinda upset me, I was a little
:
·
timid after that.
"But I feel I only had one bad
pitch and that was the first hoine
run to Gruber."
..
Gruber's second home 1'\!n, a
solo shOt to deep left In the fifth
inning, increased the Toronto
lead to 4·1. ·

Drive • A • Little To
'

~Low

CUT

See Us

·sELF

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BEANS
coz.

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SELECT GROUP OF ' TENNIS SHOES FO.
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MORNING DEliGHT· 7.5 OZ.

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CAN

DOWNY
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5.5

AN OLD nMi!:R - Frank Broderick wblle out hunting
mushrooms near Long Hollow Saturday morning came upon a
turtle. He picked It up·.and discovered the lnllals C.L.G. and the
date May 1, 1922 carveit on Its shell. Broderick says that tbe Initials
stand for his uncle; the.late Carl Lewis Grueser who lived In that
area. Broderick ntade the markings more visible for this picture
by filling the lndeQtallons with chalk.
·

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$ 19'

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8 oz.
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: by~

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.miRE HOURS:

Prlcer gua11ntled tltrough Aprll2t, 1880
We ......, t.a ri;lt to limit an qu~n~...
Some illn may not be available In alllocldianl.

llondi,. 11111 drr,l IMf pm
Sundly, 11 ..,.. pm

•

.

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY .
POMEIOY, OHIO

BEEF

Dft
136

Price!

RANCH HOUSE

•

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

End of the P-••Y·•- lrhlge"

~Low

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TIDE

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25°/o OFF

·SPECIAL OF .THE WEEIC!

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•

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asset •
··personality

CANS

Price!

OVEN BEST- REGULAR or

WYLWOOD - GRADE 'A' FANCY

;,Phils
hand.
Reds
-

Jose Rljo, 0·1, was the loser as
the Reds dropped their second
straight game after opening the
season with nine straight vlcto·
rles. The Phillles banged out 15
hits off Cincinnati pitching.
Philadelphia scored twice In
the ·first Inning. Von Hayes
walked with two out and Ricky
Jordan followed with a single.
Kruk's double brought in one run
and Dickie Thon singled to make
the score 2·0.
The Reds pulled within a run In '
·the third inning. Chris Sabo
doubled, moved to · third an ·
Infield out·and scored on Howell's
first wild . pile~ of the year.
IS
Howell!~ the li!ague last season
·
with 21 wild pltc'bes.
Kruk's first home run of the
season
In the third Inning gave
'
.
Philadelphia a 4·1 advantage.
:· RALEIGH, N.C. , (UPI)
: There are many reasons why Tom Herr singled to open the
Inning and scored when Kruk· hit
~ North Carolina· State put its
a
1·0 pitch Into the seats In right
• tainted basketball program In
The PliUUes made the score 5·1
:Les Robinson's hands. ·
·
In
the fourth. Charlie Hayes
~: Robinson, who signed on Moo·
singled
with one out, advanced on
'day as Wolfpack coach, Is an
Howell's
sacrifice· hunt and
alumnus with a proven record of
on
a single by Len
scored
• acheivlng athletic and academic
.
Dykstra.
• success.
Clncllinatl scored a run In the
: His last· two East Tennessee
sixth
when Paul O'Neill doubled
: State teams totaled 47 victories,
Into
the
rlght·field corner, moved
and he says only one ·of his
to
third
on an Infield out and
'tour-year players has tailed to
on
Todd Benzinger's
scored
graduate In his J6 years as a head
fly
to
center.
sacrifice
.coach.
Darren Daulton's Rill double
He Is a veteran, yet also an In the seventh Inning, following a
~ enthusiastic rookie as N.C. State
walk toThon, gave the Ph lilies a
· represents his first venture Into 6-2 lead.
' the "big time." His previous
The Reds added a run in the
experience came In the Southern ninth off Parrett Singles by Joe
·:Conference, the· little league Oliver, pinch hitter Luis Qui·
;located at the end of the Atlantic nones and Barry Larkin chased
Coast Conference's lonj(-nose.Parrett. McDowell relieved and
'' He Is accustomed to dlfflcuit retired Paul O'Neill on a fly ball
: assignments. He spent 11 years . to end the game.
•
: at The Citadel, where basketball
b 'players , must also get up and
'l!lllrch at 7 a.m. and keep their
~haircuts as short as other stu·
"The French Quarter"
·dents. He left the mU!tary school
· Preaente .
to take over an East Tennessee
"FOR MEN ON[Y" .
State program that Immediately
A Special FEMALE REVUE
went on a two-year NCAA
Friday, April 27, 1990
probation.
11·10 P.M.
• Thus, In many respects, Robin· .
"FOR WOMEN ONLY"
·son appears the right coach at the
The Cajun Room
•right time for an embattled N.C.
'
Will Be Open
State program that hu suffered
Coming May 3, 1 890
a Image meltdown over the past
The lith Annual
15 months. Robinson knows the
· Beat IAgt Conteat
!IChool's tradition and he knowSl'
"- !hi _... oi "114-11-"
GMLI'OIII, ON.
446-9%61
hal'd limes.

24 f2

2 LITER

'·

.

.PHILADELPHIA (UPI) ' John Kruk drove In three runs
with a double and a home run
"'l)lesday night to lead the PhUa·
, · delphia Phi Illes to their fourth
.: straight win, a 6-3 triumph over
the Cincinnati Reds.
: Ken Howell, 2·1, allowed six
; hits over six innings to pick up the
' victory, walking two and striking
·&lt; out five. Jeff Parrett rellevect. ln
: the seventh.and Roger McDowell
• got the final out for his fifth save.

LOtSA
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RT. 62 NORTH

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POINT PLEASANT." WV
MUce McarnJIOut, OWner

(304) 875-1115

WE WELCOME
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•Pwlanll Checlla
(For Alnollll ol PI.Rhue)

•FoadSia'l'lpl
ollllnullcllnr ca. iplllll
oGift Clilll , IN

•

�Wednesdav. April 25, 1990

. Page 6- The Daily Sentinel

Local. news briefs·-- ·OEA
EMS responds

to Jive calls

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to five calls for assistance on Tuesday. ·
At 9: 10a.m. the Racine unit was called to County Road 28 for
Charles Bissell who was treated but not transported.
The Middleport unit, at 3: 39 p.m ., went. to Mill Street for
Charles Boyles who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pol)leroy unit responded to a call on Route 33 at 8:19p.m.
In w~lch Joshua Withrow was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The child was later flown by Ufefligbt to
Children's Hospital In Columbus where is he IS liSted In critical
condition In the Intensive care unit.
At 10:03 p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Mulberry.Avenue for
A!DY Sayre who·was taken to Veterans.
·
.· .
The Tuppers Plains unit, at 9: Q2 p.m., was called to Reedsville
for Arizona Wigal who was treated but not transported. . .

,,

~,_:--Area
:.JJanford Stanley

deaths-----

COLUMBUS - State Senator
Jan . Michael Long , (D ·
Circleville) has received an
endorsement In his reelection
campaign this fall from the
s tate's largest association of
publiC school' employees, the
Ohio Education Association.
Long received the notification
of his endorsement In a letter
from Pamela Smith, cha ir of
OEA's Educators Political Ac·
tlon Committee for Ohio Senate
,
District 17.
"Senator Long's commitment
til making · fair and equitable
funding a statewl~!' Issue and his
persistence In ·looking for alter·
native funding methods for our
schools were key factors In our
decision to support blm, " Smith
said.
'
Long received the endorsement from the IOO,ooo-member
OEA after Interviewing with
OEA officials. It Is the second
time be bas received the assocal·
lion's endorsement.

Jame5 GlaSsburn o~ Westerville,
,
Ohio and eighi grandchildren .
Funeral services will be con·
~ Hanford E . Stanley, 78·, Willow
·
dueled
11 a.m. Friday at the
• ~reek Road, Pomeroy, died
McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home,
: Tuesday at St. Mary's Hospital In
VInton
with
Rev
. Mar VIn Sallee
•Huntington.
officiating.
Burial
will be In the
: , He was as retired employee of
Pine
Grove
Cemeter
y.
; the Ohio Department of TranspoFriends
may
call
the funeral
. fallon. Born on Dec. 27, 1911 In
home
Thursday
from
2 to 4 p.m . .
Bedford Township. he was the
and
7
to
9
p.m
.
•ion of the late Jack Stanley and
: ArQanda King Stanley.
DallY slotk prices
PelT)' MJtch ·
: : He Is survived by his wife,
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
: F!velyn Riggs Stanley, Pomeroy,
Bryce
and Mark Smith
Perry Leroy Milch, 88, Pome.a son and daughter-In-law, Jack roy.
of
Blunt,
Ellis &amp;; Loewl .
died early this morning
:and Karen Stanley, Pomeroy;
•pd four daughters and sons-In· (Wednesday) In the extended
Am Elect ric Power ... ..... ... .. 29%
:1aw Donna and Bernard Grueser, care unit c&gt;f Veterans Memorial AT&amp;T .. .. .. .... ... .. ..... :.. :.. ......... .40
!henton; Janet and Dan King, Hospital.
Born July 11, 1901 he was the Ashland on ........................ 35%
·Sbade; Mary and Jack Tapley,
of the late Steven and Jessie Bob Evans ....... .. ......... .. ...... 1l'f8
:St. Louis, Mo., Joyce and Bob son
Charming Shoppes , ........ ...... 8%
:Bowen, Pomeroy; his step- ~ Campbell Mitch. He worked as a
City Holding Co ........... :.. .... 13~
cond)lctor for the railroad.
·mother Weltha Stanley, Colum·
Mr .. Mitch .1, ~urvlved by .two Federal Mogul... . ... .. .. .. .. .. ... 18%
bua, and a step-sister, Dee Lee
Goodyear T&amp;R .... :·.·:.... ........ 35)4
sons, Robert E. · (Mary Rose)
Spencer, Coluuibus, along with
Heck's ........... , .... .. : ...... ... .. .. . 2%
11 grandchildren and 10 great. Mitch. Wheeling, . W.Va.; and
Key Centurion ...... .. ..... .. .. .. .. 14
Larry L. Ml tch, M.lddleport; a
Jfandchlldren.
Lands'
End ............... , .. ..... l6*
.· . Besides hiS parents, he was dau!hger. Julie (William)
Limited
Inc ......... .. ............. 39)8
l)ceceded In death by a ·sister, Houck, Marlon; six grandchild·
Multimedia
Inc ..... .... .. ...... .. . 79
ren, and four great
J&gt;{aoml WealtherbY.
Rax
Restaurants
.... ... ....... 2 7116
· Funeral services will be held .grandchildren.
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
...... .......... 15¥.,
In addition to his parents he
on Friday at 1 p.m at the Ewing
Shoney's
Inc
.
......................
13%
Funeral Home. The Rev. William was preceded In death by bls
Star
Bank
.................
...
:
......
l9~
Freda, lour brothers and
Wllllllms will officiate and burial wife,
Wendy's
Int'l
..................
...
..4~
will be In Burltogham Cemetery. one sister.
Services will be Friday at 1 Worthington Ind ....... .... .. ...... 21
Friends may call at the funeral p.m. at the Rawlings Coats
(Federal Mo1111l's first-quarter
home Thursday from 2 to 5 and 7 Fisher Funeral Home with Rev.
net .. $.17/sbare vs. $.17 after
to 9 p.m.
Harvey Rlndfllesch officiating. · charge.)
Burial will be In Riverview
Meetirig Thursday
Cemetery.
~argard Matheny
Friends may call at the funeral
There will be. a final meeting
: Margareti4atheny,55,ofDen- Jionie on· Thursday from 2·4 and
,
for
all persons Interested In a
nison, Texas, died Monday, April 7-9 p.m.
summer
basketball leagUe on
23; 1990 In ·Dennison, Texas.
Memorial contrl bu tlons may
Thursdad
May 3, at 7 p.m. at the
· Sbe was born Oct. 15, i933 In be made to the .Meigs · County
MlddlepO\'t
village hall. All Inter·
Meigs County, daughter of the Senior Citizens.
ested
Individuals
are asked to
late Thomas Nevllle and Mary
attend
the
meeting
since at that
·
Ellen Swick Glassburn.
Judgments granted
time
II
will
be
determined
if there
She Is survived by four sons,
will
be
a
summer
basketball
Anthony Cardillo of VInton, Joe
Peoples Banking and Trust
Matheny of Hemet, Calif., Mike Company has been gran ted a league.
Matheny of Dennison, Texas and
judgment of $63,768.58 from 0.
Loren Matheny of ·Kansas City, Wayne Bennett, et al, In the
Kan.; three daughters, Mrs. Meigs County Court of Common
,,
·
John (Linda) Smith and Mrs. Pleas.
:i:&gt;avld (Wanda) Cardner, both-of·
Th~ court has also ordered that
Langsville and LoiS Matheny of . Diamond Sav,lngs and Loan ComBeumont, Texas.
pany recover $11,754.82 from
~ Also surviving Is one. brother,
Robert W. Crow, et al.
·
•

Stocks

.

____ Me~ announcemen.t..,s.__ _
Free clothing day
: The Meigs Ga!Ua Community
Action Agency will have free
clothing day Thursday from 9
a.m. to noon at theold·htghschool
building l!J Cheshire.
Senior Clltzeua Dance
The Senior Citizens Dance Club
'! Ill have · a dance Thursday
evening from 8·11 p.m.' at the
(en lor c ltlzens center In
Pomeroy.
·
Golf leape
· The Jaymar Ladles Monday
night golf league will have an
organizational meeting Monday
11eg1nnlng .around 5 p.m. at the
clubhouse. -All teams should be
represented at the meeting and a
practice round will be held
following the meeting.

Country music night
Country music night at the
Lottrldge Community Center
will be held Saturday from 7 p.m.
to midnight. All bands are invited
to participate. Food and soft
drinks will be sold and a 50 cent
· donation will be collected at. the
door. The community center Is
located on Athens County Road
53 South, five mUes weit of
Coolville. The public Is Invited to
attend.
Revival
There will be a weekend
revival at Rutland Bible Methodist Church Friday through Sun·
day with Rev, Henry Miller and
· lamUy. Services are 7 p.m.
nightly and the pastor Is Rev .
Daniel Roush.

Cel~ste.

endorses LDng

elbnlnatlng the Insanity defen se bites Into tbe collar, It lngestt
as we could constitutionally compound 1080. a le~al cbeml·
Long Is the ranking minority
member on the Senate Education · . find, " said Watts. "That Is our cal , and dies wlthln'sev11n hours.
Celeste agreed that coyotes are
Intent and consequence - to
and .R etirement Comlttee. H:e
a
p
roblem for livestock farmers,
close the door on this defense to
hils been one of th11 · leading
es
pecially
In easterJtOhlo. But he
all but the truiy Insane.' '
members of the Senate In push·
said
the
Department
of Agricul. lng for reform oft he way In which
Senate Bill 32 would have
ture
has
worked
hard""to
help
established a two- year pilot
Ohio allocates money to schools.
farmers
eradicate
'them
.
program In 25 locations for the
also serves on the Select
Committee to Study Ohio's
use of a pols.on·bearlng coUar on
sheep and goats. Whe n a coyote
· School Foundation Formula, the
Commission on Educational Im·
SouthCentrill&gt;biL _
provement, the Legislative Com· Booklets~vailabl~
. .
·
,
Tonight, partly cloudy with the ·
·mission on Education Oversight,
Entry booklets and inform a·
low 60 to 65. ·Light southwest
and the National Conference on
winds. Thursday, partly to
tlon regarding the Ohio Sports
State Legislators.
Long .said he Is concerned Festival, Ohio's Ol~plc· style , mostly sunny and continued
unseasonably warm with the
about tile allocation of school Sports Festival for ail ages, are
funding In Ohio and added that now available at the Middleport . high. In the mid 80s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
unless Ohio legislators act to Recreation Department. The
reform the system, the state may events Involved are bas)&lt;etball,
Correct'
ton
lace the same funding problei'JI · llowllng, cycling, fi ve mUe run,
as was encountered In Kentuctcy. gymnastics, soccer, softbhll,
In Mond ay 's report of the 75th
"Specifically, the Kentucky swimming, track and field, vol·
of the PhUatbea
anniversary
General Assembly last month 'leyball and wrestling. Entry
women
of
the
Middleport
Church
"oted to abollsb Its system of forms and Information packets
of'Cbrist,
the
name
of
:Elizabeth
flltanclng and operating Its pub- may be obtained by contacting
lic schools and will substitute a the Middleport Recreation De· Loshe, who also attended, was
unlntent!ona!ly omitted.
new' philosophy and structure of parmtent at 992-6782.
management, " Long said. The
Kentucky lawmakers acted In
' by the
response to a decision'
Supreme Court of the Common·
weath last J1,1ne· declaring the
state' s system of school funding
, unconstitutional because of lneq·
ultles In financing between rich
and poor dlsbicts.
"For the 'past four years, I
· have been committed to working
toward a solution for fair and
equltabi,e funding for our
schools," Long said. "No matter
where a child lives, he or she
should have equal access . to
educational opportunity a:s. well
as be provided witl1 a qual)ty
education," he added. . . : •
The 17th DIStrict Inc! udes
Athens, Gallla; Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Plckaway, Ross
and VInton Counties.

ae

PONDEROSA
STEAKBOUSE

"

.I

'

HOspital news
V etera~~a Memorial .
Admlsslons - Brenda Nollge,
Mason, W.Va.; Jodi Imboden,
Pomeroy; Cora, B. Webb, Ra·
cine; and Gertrude M. Neece,
Middleport.
Dlsch!lrges - Harry .Cleland,
Mary Pickens; · Dorothy Roush,
and Henry Turner.

IEA¥£R VALLrt

MEDIUM EGGS .....V!!.t $1,29
SHEDD'S SPREAD

CROCI

Forecl01ure action ·
.~. Engle, McArthur, has
flied a foreclosure action In the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas against Steven A. Giglio,
Pomeroy, et al, Pomeroy.

.

CELERY ~........J!l.lfl1... 79&lt;

PINK.
GRAPEFRUIT ..t~.f1..... 59&lt;

'

I~

•'

Waik For Our
Children's
Future
.
'

.

. ..

THE GREAT AMERICAN

WALK· A· THON
Sponsored by:
lc

Meigs County Jaycees
APRIL 28, 1990

.'

10 A.M.
RAINDATE: MAY 5, 1990

. If. you'd like to join the team effort of the
. Meigs County citizens ,1triving for a. better
I•
· future for our children contact:
.

KAliN YOUH - 915·3303

..
'

.,.

.

.

ONION RINGS •••••• ~ •• ~ ••!.~~.~: $1.89
IAIIQUR
'
TV DINNERS ...............ll.2!••$1 ~69
IIAMS
·
'
EGG NOODLES ••••••••• ."••l!-2!~. S1.S9
YLASIC SWEn

FOR.MARCH-OF-DIMES ·

••

MIS. PAa·s

·',

GHERKINS PICKLES •••••19.2!•• 51.49
KRAn MIRACLE WHIP •••~~.~h. S2.69
LICIY UAF
.
APPLESAUCE •••••••••••••••t~.2!.. ·s1.29
DUCAR _.5 14 01.
· .
ANGELFOOD CAKE MIX ••••• S1.49 .
IIICAII ...U 16~5 OL
CREAM CHEESE FROmNG •••• S1.49
CAMP.Ll'S 11.5 01.
.
BEANS w/BA(ON SOUP••••• 2/S1 ~29
7.750L
WHITNEY PINK SALMON
•••••. S1.89
DLlOIG'S
·;'
CORN FLAKES .............tui•. S1.79
MR. JUICY DRINKS
3/39&lt;

Emily Jade Babbitt, daughter
· of Larry and Debbie Babbitt,
recently celebrated her first
bir thday with a party at Pizza
,. Hut In Pomeroy.
. A cli&gt;wn and...palloon theme was
. used, and refreshments of pizza,
· ·· cake, and Ice cream were served.
,. Atle!ldlng were Valerie and
i Curtis Hanstlne, Carl WoHe,
, Debbie Russell, Jerry Johnson,
; Steve and Jill Lavalley, Christy
' Ohlinger, Sitty Henry, Aaron
:.Ohlinger, Crystal Simpson,
· !Linda, Mandy and Curt Jeffers,
,Debbie a nd Nicole McDaniel,
:nm Wyant, Jason and Bobby
' Wrltesel, Norma and Krlssle
:Torres, Kathy and Adam Cum·
; lngs, and Ruth and Marianne
;Carsey .
, Sending gifts and cards were
:gr andparents Bernard. and Ber·
tnlce Lavalley, grandparents •
'Hank and Donna Babbitt, great
;grandmother Ginny Babbitt, .
•Bernard Lavalley ~r., Donna
:Yeauger, Pam Mees, Carol Tan·
' nehill, Jose a nd Marla Delgado,
Rita Fields, Wesley Fields,
· ,Amber Ohlinger, Della and ·carl
,WoHe. and Michelle Johnson.

study of English culture and
langtl!lge.
.
·
The year· long Japanese exchangees, aged m:17, will attend
local schools and adopt the dally
lifestyle, of their hosts. All of
them have successfully compieted month-long exchanges to
the United States In the past. The
Labo Foundation' covers tuition,
fees and medical costs during the

the

exc hanges, .

~e'!n:reso~~~H.rl~~~!~ed~am~ :

lies .shou ld contact Cynthia S.
Oliveri at 992·6696 fbr an a ppllca- •
tlon form and more Information . .

exchange.
In addition, 93 Labo youth from
Jap,.n and twelve young adults
from Luxembourg , Finla nd ,
Switzerland, Sweden, Aus tralia •
New Zealand and Paragu ay will
be coming to Ohio for various
one-month periods between May
and December.
.
Host families arr/ still needed
for both the year-long and some

a:re
e
II rll

Yo~rlndependendy

Owned, Low Price&lt;J
Supermarket
.

RED RIPE
CALifORNIA

Strawberries

•Mulch
'
•Peat ·
·•Top Soil
•Manure
•Potting Soil
RIPE

Salad Tomatoes

.

-·-D*tolo

Weekend. vlsUors of Mr. ·and
Mrs. Robert Bailey Sr. were Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Bush, Elsie Sutton
.of Minerva: Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Zurcher, Monica· and Tim, Le- •
tart, · W a.; Mr.· and · Mrs.
Clarence Mattox, . Keith and
Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. Corey
Carnahap and Rick Freeman,
:Chester.
,
Mrs.'Danlel Worley, Stacy and
' Qanlel, Daniels. W.Va. spent
Su.ndaY through Thursday with
'Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,.
. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summer·
,field , Crystal , of Medina; Mr.
;and Mrs. Steve Haggy, Ste'
•phanie, Brad, Mr. , and Mrs.
Ronald Russell, Michael and
~manda, Racine; and Mr. and
Mrs. Donold Russell, Harrison·
ville; were Easter visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert ,Russell. ·
'' Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
'Sr. were E as ter Sunday guests of
,Mr. and Mrs.. Larry BaH;
' .
·Rutland.
,; Recent visitors of Ida Murphy
and Iv'a Johnson were Mrs. Jeff
·Bole, Naomi Smith,· and Mrs.
pan lei Worley, Stacy and Daniel.
• Mr. and Mrs . Paige Humphrey
'had as dinner guests Easter
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs.' Bob
,Stanley, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron Stanley and daughter, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Neal, ·
Gallipolis; Carey and Mlkka
Stanley and D~vld McComas,
.Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Carrie
Ann Gillilan, Flatwoods Road;
Jeff Durst, Reedsville; and Mr.
and Mrs. Charies B. Frazier and
daughter, Misha .
, Charles and Sandy Frazier
were united In marriage In .
Narrows, Va. on April 14 at the
rtrst Methodist Church during a
double ring ceremony.
. Mrs. Frazier Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Javes Carter,
Reedsville.

:v

LB...',

CABBAGE ........J••t ..... 29c

Babbitt birthday

.,

MEAT SALAD••••••••••••••••••~~ •••••.•89~
BULK WIENERS ••••••••• ~••••~~•• s2.29

S~EAD ............... ..L.t. S2.59 ..

EMU..Y J. ~ABBJTl'

'

HOM.ADE

CHUSE

•

.:Wolfe Pen
personal ·notes

.

.

BIG BEND •••·

19,!11.
·
These youth have been visiting
the Un ited States for one-month
exchanges with 4-H .since 1972,
but this Is only the second ye ar
Ohio ·will participate in the
highly-successful y ea r -long
program.
The young vis itors belong to
the Labo Foundation, !l Japanese
orga nization which promotes the

'

JUMBO BOLOGNA •• ~••••••!!•• S2 .09

COOKED HAM

Meigs Coun~ · families will
have the' opportunity to welcome
a young person from Japan Into
their home tor 11 months this
year, as part 'of a new program
being offered by Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service.
4-H.
Seven·Japanese teenagers will
be arriving In Ohlq on July 28,
j!!ld.....Staylilg through mid-June

Weather

.

SUCED II 99

•
f
il"
h
£.
•
d
M
. etgs . am ~s may ost IOretgn stu ent

,. contlnued from page I

ECDICH

DIU MADE

Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 ·
W~aada~~26.199'!_~~~:---~~~-7~~----_2~~~~~~~~~-~-~--~--~~----~----~------!M~~~
· ~-~~~;.;~

WITH COUPON BELOW ·

••••••••••
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HURRY! Coupon EKpires 514/90
CHARBROILED

Ribeye
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Includes potaio and '
·
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GAUIPOLIS, OH.
Upper liver ld.
(acrtJI fr-·the Airport)

• SPRITE, DIET OR REG.

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This coupon entitles tile beorerto S3.0 0 OFF
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CAiiPET O~t~!ACf'IE
"l( t. ' '-1''&gt;; A".'[

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.,

.

'

•

, The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will bava revival Monday
through May 5 at 7:30 p.m.
nightly with Paul Bartrum as
speaker. Paul Taylor Invites the
publiC.

i'

'If'&lt; '••

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1001 AI IISIIUII'$ NOIU•S

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CAN .

99C

Macaroni ·&amp; Cheese

Chunk Tuna

01.

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7.5

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WHY PAY IIOIE?

CAIIPBIU'S

Tomato Soup

S179

PLASTIC GALLON

BANQUn ·

SPAll IE

Serenity House
directors meet
. The Serenity House Board of
Directors met recently at Wood~
land Centers In Gallipolis.
Attending were Pat Tope. Sue
-Hudson, Rita Fields, Nancy
Scarbrough, Hilda Tirado, Tom
Hairston, Linda Warner, and
Carol Ault.
Unable to attend were Sally
Clay , · Tom Reed , Leslie
Chambers, Sister · Jean Kaiser, 1
Diane Lew.is, and Jennie Lewis. '
The next meeting will. be held 1
May 7 at Woodland Centers from .
5: 30·7 p.m . The public Is lnv\ted
to attend.

Coca ·Cola

~··

6.5 oz.
CAN

59C

•

•'•
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'.
I

•
•

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•

1

'•

·I,

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pom.oy Middaport. Ohio

Hemlock Grove Grange meets,
Emma Adams was the guest
lecturer at the recent meeting of
the Hemlock Grove Grange with
Racine Grange as guests.
During her lecture, members
named their favorite spring
flower. "A SongBird and Bloom"
was sung by the group, and a
reading, "Spring's Rebirth" -by
Mary Easterday. A prayer, "In
Spring" was given by Mrs.
Adams. Earl Cross spoke on
·'The Lighter Side of Ohio Law :·
•'Driving Laws'! by Charlotte
Yost; "The Flour Sack," "A
Little Mixed Up,'' and ·'My
Name Is Gossip'' by Mrs. Adams.
Earl Cross read "A Letter fo MY
Son.~~

.

A potluck meal preceded the
meeting with 21 members and 11
guests In attendance.
The blackberry cake contest
was won by Helen Qulvey with
Sylvia Midkiff second, and Rosalie Story third.
Earl Cross, Racine master,
spoke to the group and thanked
them for the meal and Invitation.
He made arrangements for Hemlock to visit Racine on May 3 at
7:30p.m.
The Pomona Grange will have
a bake sale on May 4 and 5 at
Krogers.
·
The meeting closed In regular
form with Zlba Midkiff as
master.

Faithful Follewers -meet
An announcement of an auc·
tton sale for the May meeting to
be held at the home of Wallace
and Muriel Bradford was made
at the recent meeting of the
Faithful Followers Class of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church.
Hosting the meeting at the
grange hall were George and
Jessie White and Ruth Francis.
Program bookS for the year
were ljistributed by Jessie White,
president, and cards were signed
lor shut-Ins.
Devotions were by Jessie
. White with a skit by Helin and
Hllber Qulvery. There 'was a
reading by Mr~. White and also

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday. April 26. 1990

library lines
By Bulb Powers
National 4brary Week, Is
April 22 thru 28. The library's
theme this year Is "Make
Friends With BookS" . Special
bookmarks, suckers and bal·
100111 wUI be given away during
the week. Also In conjunction
with National Library Week.
chl~«:n k~ergarten thru 6th

Muriel Bradford.
Recreation was coriducted by
R11th Francis. A .bible quiz was
won by Sara Cullums and ' a
sptlng flower pantomime contest
was won by Muriel Bradford.
Roll call was answered by
naming a favorite vacation.
Refreshments were served by
the host.
,

Car wash set

WIC pickup

There will be a car wash and
bake sale on Saturday at 9: 30
a.m. atPleasersRestalirant. The
WIC pickup for May will be
bake sale will be held rit Food·
Friday, . Moi'lday, and Tliesday
land. 'rbe events are sponsored . from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
by the Carmel Sutton Youth
MakeupdatesareMay7,14,and
Fellowship.
21,

omeroy's
•
•

.e raae nave oeen aslced to na.me
the bookmobile. Forms COr tbls
can be piCked up at the Pollll!i'oY
or Middleport library and on the
bookmobile. 'I'be winning name
wUI be announced at the end or
tbe month.
.
The library staff Is busy
making plans for children's
programs this summer. So far,
some of the things planned
Include, magic, flower arrang·
lng, ceramics, basket making, .
micro wave cooking, wild life and
lots more. ,
In observance of Founders
Weekend: Sunday, April 29, the
Pomeroy Library will hold open
· house from 1·5 p.m. Tours will be
available.
'

15'0 th.
AfPBECIATION - As a gesture of appreciation for support
to their orgaabatlon by Veterana ~orlal Hospital ·
. Admlnlltra&amp;or ScoU Lucas, the hosplial's volunteer orgaabatlon,
the Women's Auxll~y. preseated Lucas with a g,u t. Shown In
maklnl the Pl'e&amp;I!Dtatlon Is Mrs. Carrie Kennedy. The gift was ·
_preseated during a breakfast held Tuesday 1o honor lbe Auxiliary
411ring Nallonal Volunteer Week.
·
·

•

•

SPECIAL HONOR - Mrs. Louise
was presented a
spe(:lally prepared plaque honoring her yeBI'!I of work with the
Women's Auxil~y at a breakfast staged at Veterans Memorial
Ho1pllal Tuesday momlng honoring tile Auxiliary during National
. VoiiJDteer Week. Mrs . .Jessie White, current Auxiliary president,
·
.presented the speCial award;

~~

.

....

'

SERVICE- Two members of the Women's Aulllary received -:; ..
service plno Tuesday at Veterans Memorial Hospital a&amp; a JIU't of ' •~
National Volunteer Week. Scott Lucas, hospital admlnlstra&amp;ot, • 'i:
presents pins lo, Mildred Hudson, left, 500 hours, and Helen Hill, -: ~
2,000 hours.
·
·
: : .-

."
-....""•"'·:::
..-.•
""

Volunteer Week noted at VMH

Community calendar

~
'

Awards and gifts were pres· zatlon which began in Auguut, Llilias presented service pins to
two volunteers, Mrs. Mildred
ented Tuesday morning when a 1962.
Hudson, 500 hours, and Mrs.
gave
special
recogMrs
.
White
RUTLAND
-The
Women's
at
Veterans
breakfast
was
held
p.m.
Make
up
dafes
are
May
7,
WEDNESDAY
Helen H111, 2,000 hours. Lucas"
to
Mrs.
Lo!llse
Bearhs,
a
nition
of
_.
Meigs
County
14,
and
21.
·
Fellowship
Hospital
as
a
part
of
Memorial
MEIGS -The Mt. Moriah
the observance of National Vo- long-time volunteer . who has also commended the Auxllia~y : ~.
Church of God will have revival Churches· of Christ will meet
never kept a record of her hours for their work at the hospital as •
7:
30
p.m.
at
the
Thursday
at
lunteer Week, April 22'28.
CARTHAGE
-There
will
be
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
of
service. Mrs. Bearhs was d ld Mrs. Rhonda Dalley, Dlrec, •
Honored
by
the
breakfast
were
Rutland
Church
of
Christ.
on
Friday
and
Saturday
revival
with Rev. Bryce Utt, Marietta.
at 7 p.m. nightly at the Carthage members of the Women's Auxil- presented a specially prepared tor of Nursing. On behalf of thE! ' ••
'I'bere Will be special sJnging and
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
Community
Church In Coolville Iary, the hospital's volunteer . plaque. Mrs. White highly com- Auxiliary, Mrs. Kennedy pres· . ..
Pastor Jim Satterfield Invites the
the Auxll· ented Lucas with a gift . During
,public. ·
· group of AA and AI Anoq wlli. \)'lth special singing by Rev . S. organization. Host,o; were.depart~ mended members
l)leet Thursday at· 7 p.m. at
Anderson. Rev. Billy C. Murphy ment heads with Mrs. Jackle lary f()r their excellent work at the breakfast!! was reported that
Starcher, head of the Nutr!tlon the hospital and also extended contributions to the Auxiliary's': ~ 1
POMEROY -The Mason Gal- · Sacred Heart Cathcilic Church. .Invites the publt.q.
Call·
1·800-333·5051
for
Department, and her staff pre· thanks to the Department Heads Scholarship Fund In memory or .~ •
Ita MeigS Crusade · for Christ
for their continued cooperation the late Frances Hewetson, RN, , .: 1)•
informa!lon;
paring the buffet breakfast.
POMEROY
-There
will
be
·
revival will be held througli
long-ttme hospital employee,.
session
for
.
Meigs
planning
Auxiliary President. Mrs . Jes- and help.
Sunday at 7 p.m . nightly, There
gone over $600.
·have
Hospital
Administrator
Scott
POMEROY
The
Grubb
County
Church
Women
United
sie White, presided over a
j,;
will be special singing and
singers
will
be
at
Carleton
family
for
the
May
fellowship
on
Friday
program which preceded the
preaching each night. Rev. Clyde
Church In Pomeroy during revi- at 1:30 p.m. at the Forest Run breakfast held In the hospital
Henderson Invites the public.
val on Thursday at 7 p.m. -Rev.
United Metl\odlst Church. All key cafeteria. She Introduced Volun'·\,
Bob
Grubb will be preaching.
women are Invited to attend.
teer, Mrs. Betty Sayre, who
MIDDLEPORT -Revival ser·
h
presented a reading defining a
)'
vices wUl be held through Sunday
POMEROY -The $enlor CltlRUTLAND -There will be volunteer and Mrs. Carrie
at the Middleport Church of the·
,.••
zeri
Dance Club will have a'dance
skating at the Rutland Clviv .Kennedy, another volunteer, who
Nazarene at 7 p .m. nightly and .6
•
Center on Friday from 7-9 p.m. outlined the hlsto~yof the organ!·
p.m. on Sunday. · Rev. George · FridaY from g..._1l ·p.m. with
••
music
by,Clrcle
D
Ranglers.
The
·
and on Sunday . from 1: 30·3: 30
WIUiams will be the speaker. The
p)lbllc
·
Is
Invited
and
those
p.m.
publiC Is Invited to attend . .
attending should bring snacks for ,
SATUDAY
•
RUTLAND -The Rutland the snack table.
.
LONG
BOTTOM
·-The
Long
·
The
Southern
Alllmn(
Banquet
Church of t.he Nazarene will have
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Botttim Community Association
will be held May 26 at Southern
revival through Sunday at 7 p.m.
Plains
VFW
Post
9053
·
will
have
,
Its.
spring
smorgasTuppers
High
School at 6 p.m.
nightly arid 10: 30 a.m. and 6 p;in .
.
will
meet
Thursday
at
8
p.m.
at
board
dinner
on
Saturday
begin·
will' follow beginning
A
dance
on Sunday with Dr. and Mrs.
the
post'
home.
There
Is
a
time
nlcg
at
5
p.m.
The
cost
Is
$4.50
for
at
9
p.m.
with music by
D.E. Clay as evangelists. The
7:
30
p.m.
to
8
p.m.
change
from
adult~
ahd
$2.50
for
children.
The
Crossover.
Harvest Trio will sing Thursday
meal will feature ham turkey and
Further Information may be
and Friday. 'Rev. Sam Basye
CHESHIRE
-The
Gallla
dressing,
homemade
noodles,
obtained
by calling Joyce Quillen
Invites the publiC.
Meigs Community Action
meatloaf, etc. and dessert and at 949-2~95 or Pam Diddle at
' ·
l
I
949-2749.
" E'OMEROY ~ ;-- The Mason. ·:1 ~e!IC¥. w!L,Jtold i' Its .r!!gJIIarly,~ dr inkS, !~\"
GaiDa M~II!S Crusade for Christ scheduled meeting on Thursday
SALEM. CENTER -The Sa·
will be held through Saturday 11 t,r at 5: 30 p.m. at the Guiding Hand
lem
To.wnship·Trustees will meet
p.m. each evening at the Ca· School in Chesh\re.
Saturday
at 9'a.m. at the Salem
'
rleton Church, Kingsbury R,oad,
••
01
County Road 18. The publlc . ls
GA~LIPOLIS -All chapters of Fire House.
Invited to attend· by the" Rev. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Clyde Hendersop, pastor.
celebrate Founder's Day at the
Down Unde.· ·'.estaurantln GalU·
•
Jim and . Cormle Osborne,
. MIDDLEPORT -The Middle· poDs beginning with social hour
Reedsville,
are announcing' the
..)lOrt Amateur Garden Club will at 6: 30 p.m. on Thursday. Ohio
first child, a
birth
of
their
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Eta Phi Is liostlng the event.
daughter, Kara Chantay, on
hOme or Jean Moore.
REEDSVILLE -The River- March 2 at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg,
POMEROY ~The Wildwood view· Garden Club will meet
W.Va.
Garden Club will meet 7:30p.m. -Thursday atsp: m. at the home of
The Infant · weighed seven
Wednesday at the home of Hilda Janice Young. Maxine Whitepounds
and ten and one. half
head will have the program.
Yeauger. -'
•'r
ounces and was 20 Inches long.
Paternal
grandparentS
are
FRIDAY .
THURSDAY ·
Bob and Betty Jackson,
POMEROY·
-WIC pickup for
RACINE- The Racine Amerl·
SllVII IIIDGI PlAZA • IIAIUPDUS, 01.
Reedsville.
can Legion will meet Thursday at May wllllle Friday, Monday, and
1'141 446 19511
IU SAUl ;..au 110 CIMGI CIIDSI
grandparents
are
Materanl
Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
7 p.m. at the legion hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Clark, Medina,
'
· and the late Linda Persons,
KARA C. OSBORNE
Racine. .

or"

.

•

0

U.S. GRADE A PERC

FRESH

. ,-, · Split .
~-. \::{ · Ch~cke:aua~reasts

California
Strawberries·
Ouut

!SAVE (~\~N.fYj

I

;I

.•
•

•
•

•'

\ -

"'ALL MERCfiANDISE

•

HALF PRICE!
HALF OF HALF PRICE!

Osborne birth

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
GRAIN FED BEeF .

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, .
CAfFEINE FREE I'EPfl,

Cubed

Diet Pe'-11
or Pepsi Cola .

Steak
POiilld

12.Pu 1~oz; C1111

Sing~e

Parent '
,Family Camp set _
U.S. GO J"f. GAADEO CHOICE,
Gt\AIN FED BEEF

"FIRST OF THE SEASON"

. · Sw•et
Onions

Boneless
English Roast
·

hwld

. Pound

"A Weekend Toget!Jer" Is the
theme of the second annual
single parent family camp of· .
fered by the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service on the weekend of July 13·15 ·at 4H ·Camp
Palmer near Fayette In Fulton
· County.
Single parents and their child. reo from all areas of Ohio,
· Michigan, and Indiana
Invited to attend this educational
and fun filled weekend retreat. ,
The cost of the camp IS SJ2 pfl' .
person · for all youth and adults
age six and over and $10 for
children age five ··and under.
Costs Include five meals, two·
n lghts lodging (bring ·own bed· '
ding), snacks and the following
activities, swimming, canoeing,
volleyball, hikes, aerobtcs.archery, zlpllne, photography,
crafts. putt-putt golf, camp fire,
kickball, and a vtslt.t,o the camp
farm for those lnteres ted. Partial
scholarships may be available
upon request.
Sessions for parents will be

ire

.

FROZEN ·

Fox De Luxe

.Pizza

8.1-7.&amp;-oz.
, I

offered on the following tqplcs,
stress reduction, communication
skills, time and mqney management, ~oping with change, positive parenting, ·enriching long
distance relationships, planning
quality With youth, and financial
cotlcerns. Age relate&lt;! activities
will be planned for children
throughout the day and there will
also be time for parent and
chnaren Interaction. For those
age eight and over and for all
adults who wish, tent camping
wlll.be offered for all of those who
would like to bring their own
tents .. A session on storytelling
for both youth ~nd adlj)ts will be
offered and a very humqrous
speaker Will be l!t camp also.
Camp begins at 7 p.m. on July
13 with registration and will
conelude at 2 p.m. on Sunday .
Registration deadline Is July 6.
For further Information con·
tact Nancy Layman, Allen
County Hoqte Economics Agent,
2I9 W. Northern ve., Lima,
451101 or by calling 419-222·9946.

Concession reservations
available .for. celbration ·.(·

Acre• 1he
Third - Pllirl Str11t .. lttdM

•

Saaltest
· lea Cream

~-Gil.

$188

SINOLI

.

Harsha's

Candy

~ars

.
$1
.
3
...
FOf

$9995

I

'

I.

.

$3.33'

.. .

'

Wlum.you plaee yoar ad II will he liMed 111 Ill I ol oar ,
newaplipen: Gallipolis Dally Trlbatte, 'nle Dally sen&amp;illtll, and
Pelnl l'leMut ftelllltr.
·
. or belore ""' ,\.,-tiM, IWI - -·

TUESDAY

.

'

3 Days- 3 Papers- 3 Lines .~I·S wordo)

,
•

I '~

.

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
Ill Court St.
Pomero,·, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-2156
ttn.. _.t Af"'l ~oi-HIIL t -

..
: ''

'•
\
• ·"" II

' ALL ADIIIUIT BE 1'1110 IN ADVANCE 1M .-md lo he pwblllhool ..

.·

...

0

•
. '• '•.

Celebrate With Us .... ALL 3'&amp; ~pecial!

lallk;

Baked Hem ....... ··4.8&amp;. Chef Seled ........ •3j5

J

.

·.

Potate Soup ..... ·'1.30 B1ked Chicken.:'4.15

\

....... •'

lnterrwtirmal CLallifiiH1 Advertiling Week
Aprn 22-28, 1990
·

OPEN MON. THIIU lAT. 8:30 A.M.•I:OO P.M.: lUNDAY I AM-3 PM

.

-~
•• • ; j f

APRIL SPECIAL

DAilV SPECIAl$
MOIDAY

•

· Heritage Days w111 be observed sending $10 and the completed
the weekend of June 8, 9, and 10 to . form provided to Pomeroy Sescommemorate the pioneer herit- qulcentennlall990, Mary Powell,
age ot' Pomeroy.
chairman, · Pomeroy Area
Another weekend, Ethnic Chamber of Commerce, 204 E.
Settlers Fest, will be observed Main St., Pomeroy .
Oct. 6 and 7. The weekend will
,salule the village's earliest
settlers, the German, Welsh,
English, and Scotch Irish.
ON CARPET'ClEANING
As a part of these two weekend
WHOLE HOUSE SPECIAl
events there will be arts and
crafts fairs. Anyone Interested In
ON ANY COMIINAnON OF ..S
participating in ;the fairs should'
ROOMS,I HAUWAY AND lATH
fill out the reservation form
provided .below.
ONlY
. ' The six foot
spaces are available at a cost of
$10 plus $1 for each additional
ADVANCE., CLEANING
foot. The deadline .for reserva·
SEIYICE
!Ions for Heritage Weekend In
May5.
446-3915
Spaces may be reserved by

KOUNTIY
KITCHEN
Locatlll
Street PI'OIII .._ •ll••al
FAT FREE &amp; CHOUSTEROL fiRE!
FROZEN DESSERT OR

...

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE!·

•'

•

Final 3 Daysl

Alumni banquet

' '

••'

.

,,,

tees.
Mor

I

.

r1

.. ...... "

.

·~-

...

- --- ------- ____.._..
'

�•

Paga 10-The

Planning session
set for CWU
There will be planning session
for Meigs County Church Women
Un lted for the May fellowship on
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Forest
Run United Methodist Church.
All key women are Invited to
attend.

Classified
.

The Long Bottom Community
Association will have Its spring
smorgasboard dinner-on Satur·
· day beglnnicg at 5 p.m. The cost
IS $4.50 for adults and $2.50 for
c)JUdren. The meal will feature
bam turkey and dressing, home'
made noodles, meatloaf, etc. and
dessert and drinks.

'

~nacksforthesnacktable.

D -~ J
o, the D(;TUI-

,I

·
"
·
h
•
..Over 'everyt tng

. And Paulette Goddard, the
attractive actress whom we
enjoyed so much In those movies
pf the 30's and 40's died In
Switzerland at the. age . of 84.

...

•Ads thll mull .be .,_id in

1502-B!
1195-A'
121S·A
1485-A
.1341-A·,
856-A
1381-A'
T-4

INSURANCE
P...,oy

1495-B

228-A
GM239,
GM204
GM234 i

'

GM-238:
1324-A

Getinthesftnfor Fish-Day
-

THURSDAY, APRIL. 26
4:00 P.M. • 5:00 P.M.

1510-A
1094-A
GM196 i
105-A :
GM240

c~

c.., ...~
-:.-::.

PURINA

TAO IT

Meigs County's Only Authorized .Purina
Chow 'taler
..

I&amp;G Feed I Supply Co.
IIAIII
.......

~

992~2164

.

1111 Stwe .... "II . . . eflteff•

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

I

~~

o•

........

In Memoriam

·Vard Sel es

8 - Public

'

. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- HO P.M . MONOAV
- 2 :00P.M - TUESDAY
- · 2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M . THURSOAV
- 2 :00P .M . FfiiiDA Y

1984 CHEV~
1985 FORD
1985 OLDS
1989 CHEV.
1984 FORD
1984 DODGE
1983 DODGE
1982 'HONDA
1989 CHEV.
1989 CHEV.
1989 OLDS
1"987 FORD
1989 CHEV.
19.89 OLDS
1987 OLDS
1987 BUICK
1984 . BUICK
1984 CHEV.

CHEV.
·CHEV.
OLDS
CAD.
CAD.
CAD.
CAD. ·
CAD.
CHEV.

MODE~

387-:-Ch•hir•

CHEVmE
SUNIIRD

CARAVEUE .
TOPAZ

CAY. •
LANCER

5,495 ·
5,495

STANZA
CAVAUER

36
-36
48
36
36
41
36
36
36
41
48

388 - Vinlan
'2 45 - Rio' Grande

266":-.Guyan ·Oist
IA3 - Arabi• Oitt
379 - W.Inut

24
36
36
60
24
24
12 .
1.2
60

WAGON
LTD

CALAIS
CORSICA
F-150

ARIES '
· CIVIC
.

·CORSICA

1
A
VI

121.1
121.1

IIONCO
Z-24 CAY.

CIERA

88
ELECTRA

RIVIERA
3!4. TON

CAMARO
BLAZER .!
CUTLASS
ElDORADO
SED. DeV.

El DOIADO
. SED. DeY.

SED.
BLAZER

1.52.3
155.80
155.80·
.12
1

.'

'

26-!l:L.:I!:
207.79
2f-Q.~·P 5
217.69
224~94

227.11

274.95
48 275.93
48 278.72
24
36
54 .29.7.60
48
.95
60 308. 56
36
60
60 571.67
60 586.02
60 . 609.94

'·--

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.liUihihijil

TronsporlaiiOII

21 - Bu1in•• Opportunity
22 - Montrf 10 loan
23- Prof•lionel Servicn

.f\utos for Sele
Truck t for S•le
VIns 6 4 wo ·,
Mo1orcytl•
76 - Bo•ts &amp; Motors tor Sill
76 - Auto Pert• &amp; AccMJori•
77 --A uto Rep1ir
78 - C•mping Equ ipment
79·-CimPtrs II -Motor Homes

71 72 ·73 74 -

Real Estale

Ar e a Code 304

31 - Homes for ·Sale
32 - Mobile Homes tor Sal II

675 - Pt : Pleasant
676 - Apple Grove

33 - Farmt tor Sale
34 - Businells 81,1ildings
35 - Lott'&amp; Acruge

773- Maton

36 - ReaJ £1111' \IV.n1ed

882 -·N~w Hawen

._l;t4ij'Qd

896 - lete ft
937 - Buffelo

Serv1~cs

41 - Houset for Rent
42 - McbileMomes for Rent
43 - Farmt tor ~enl
44 - Apan.men1 to r"Rtnt
45 - Furnithed Flo o ms

8J- EKC8WIIini
BC- Eitctricll • "•frig•ltfoft

47-W•nted to Rent

ea- Gtn••' Hauling

81 · · Komelmpro..,emen1a
82 - Piumbini &amp; He•ting

46 - Spa ce for Aenl

Af

48 - Equipmenl for Rent

i.)

PURSUIT
1614)
742-2027
"Your
Connection~-

T;;e:~fTravel"

~

4-ta-t

...........-·~i.-F•.•.~..............·~7·-~u·~···"•"•~........

992~2269

EVENINGS
L£SSONS

1 Hn ....... :. IB
II Hro ........ 4DI
12 Hro..... I'IKII
eCiub Repair,

•New Grips
lns..ll .. ..... ••·
New Shifts for BroUn
Clubs, Clubs Shortlned for
ton or d•ghter.
• Engraving, TrophiM,
Pl~u.. •

PubliC Notice

Public Notice .

Public Notice

""

I' •

0.•.

St. Itt. 7 &amp; ·248

CHESTEI, OHIO

.-··· ..,. a: s....

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

MOBILE
HOME PARK

HIICiting, Cooling,
Refrigeration
·
Service

•Mobile Home

CALL

It, 33 llerth of
P-ray, Ohio

PerJa

•Mobile Home
R11nfllta
•Lot Rent'l•

Reaidentlal &amp;
Commercial

992-747'1

992-5589 '
2-2-' 90-ltno.

.

d.

'U-Ifl

Badg•

46317 !&lt;out ea.., load
Ch•t•,

tt. n~ ,_., Ohie

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(6141 667·3271
Grnnt A. N!~l~!:ld.

Alto Trlll..ltelu
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
4·25-Hn

SER~ICE

We can r~ir and rt·
core rad1atan and

heater ewes. We can
also acid bail and rad
aut rlllliatws. We alsa
reptir Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL

992·21
Middleport.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL'
SIDING
._ CO.

.... ....

..Free EatlrftetH,.

PH. 949·2801
or las. 949-2160

.

NO. SUNDAY

FI.DUCt~Y

-~ .

.f. ., . ,
!r.

"',..

----~---

54 Mlec:ellaiiiiOUS
Merclltl!ndlse

P'...............
'''';!P;'"
I I ....:SAil
FINE-NOODLES
..;;.;g;-}~
. 9S•Pllalb.

!MEDIUM NOODI.ES~........ If!P.~.11.:

• {j.......9S• lb.
01
1 ......9S• lb.
IWIDE NOODLES - ...... _ .. lf~P;.. '1'~6'n';.

1
IROAD NOODLES ...........lf!¥.·..1\.:'1'6''~~;.......95' lb.

99:

STUmNG SHnlS ............ WP;':'Ii~e"(i.~'"""'
lb.
IIGATONI .............. ,•••••••••••!¥...................... 74 lb~
~·
LG. SHELL MACARONI ............!!.!Ii..!!~f.!.~: ... 74 lb.
~ MED. SHELL MACAIONI .........t\tv:.!.~.!!!, .... 74• lb.
.!. SM. SHEll MACARONI-...:..!!!11,.!!~9..!1\·.... 74c lb.
;. WAGON WHEnS .............;~¥..~;H~:........ 77• lb.
" IOTIII ...........................~.N~... i'iC..~~:........ 77C lb.
, SPAGHEm........................M.!i·.:···ftf~:........77' lb.
RAINIOW ROnNI ...........11 ~9;..1l':!lli'l~;... '1.17 lb.
• RAINIOW SHELLS ...........11 ~9;..1\':oli'l'''" '1.15 lb.
95

i.• LASAGS;uilis'iii"t4i"2it~it8ipi: '

I
•

: ·

lb.

COLlY CHEESE ................. ~~it.:~:?.!!.!~;.. S2.48 lb..
LOW CHOLESTEROl

,.

FA-RS CHEESE ............ !!!R:.:~:!!!?.!~:.. S2.70 lb.
MAIRE CHEESE...............!\~.¥:.:.~,.~.~..1.~;.. S2.57 lb.
HOT PEPPEl CHEESE --... ~~it.!-~:!!!,1.~;. S2.57 lb.
IllY SWISS ....................~~¥:..~.~·.~.~..~~;.. S3.20 lb.
lOW SAlT, lOW CHOI!STEIOL
HEIDI SWISS ..................... ~.~!;.:~;!'!.~~;. S3.06
MOZZAREU.I ...................!!!9....~~~!!.!~:... '2.41

lb.
lb.
• SMOKED CHEDDAR .......~.~~\.:~:;.:a '2.70 lb.
WHITE SHARP CHEDDAR ........!.¥;....;....... $3,06 .lb.

t

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice i1 given that hear-&gt;·(
jng wUI be held on
dey of May. 1990,
ron. 1, 10th Fl .. 3119
St., Columbua. OH .
upon 1 petition for
of the property end/or con-

...

oalzod on"Jenue,Y 27,' 1989
end Marcil 1, 1989 by Dept.
Df L[quO&lt; Control from FO~
2171at224E . MalnSt., Po·
meroy, ·OH . • 46789 ond Ia
pr•entlv held 'by tho Dept.
AiW !"'.on hevlng an ow·

nenhip or security Interest

trebend: two electrDnlc in ttie above-deocribed propvideo gambling mechin-. . erty may contest the peti·
81168 .86, - l v peyotl tlo~.
recorda. tip tk:keta and fioh (41 23, 26, 2tc
bowls. Sold propertv wu
~

' '

•

.f

;o

a few. penni$s spent here
comes back folding money

.. t

514 EAST MAIN ~
POMEROY
·
.
__

.-

-----·-·
1 card of Thanks

BINGO

In u.vingfMemo~

WILMA

EVERY THURSDAY

ANDERSON

.VFW POST 9926

Died Aprii 26, 1.986
, You were called away
Juat 4 year~ ego;
Your memory atlll is
with u1
And we still love you
10.
Sadly missed by the

Jam• Anderaon

. MASON, W. VA.

BONUS GARIN 4#

Family

8

'

8

FREE COFFEE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

f·

t'--=:::::::::5=::=..;.,.---...

~- - ./! PUBLIC ~6t .

:tfl
AUCTION ."\·
t'
.
.
.
t_

~

9:00
A.M.
••
f APRIL 26 &amp; 27
l• THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
•

0.

. 992·2259
NEW LISTING - EVERY·

PiUCE RE·
DUCED - 7 room house, 3

bedrooms, I bath, carpet
throughout. Large kitchen
and palio. Gas heat and hot
water he! l l car garage.

creation room, fireplace.
. large living room, lands·
capin&amp; 7 mUes lrom Ra·
venswood Br.idge. REDUCED

$49,900.00.

MIDDLEPORT - Nice I
floor home w~h 2bedrooms,
I bath, carpet, wrth base-

lprllll, .....
IO:OOa.a
Located at 9Q9 Mossl'l'ian

~

Point Pleasant, WV • Watch For Signs
Mr. _
. ., Mri. Gutllrt. ,...,. ...,.
eo~~Pul to • nurdlll • - •
• ., &amp;IIIII ..a ,,.. foDOUif•"
ANDQUES I HOU!Et!ou); ~er WclnJt Vlctoridn book·
al orlglna: be&lt;lulllul double keyboard Hammond
IOI'IlOI"t,StE&gt;~'CIV~tSOnapldnc..veryurlUSUKJISellersl&lt;ltchen
lc•i&gt;lntet •vllhrOII and ftOt.Jr bin. 001&lt; desk. smcA LOWbOy.
d'a-. clawloot Mahogany dr&amp;IMr: b.eaUIIbedroom &amp;ita; one drawer -,wah lland
miSSion oak desk. press back rocker. blaclc
G.E. refrigerator, 28 drawer metolllaek liD

mochlne.recllnar.2metoi
pllclllr.
pot and bowl set,
Flrl&lt; DepreSion. Comlvoi , large 3

We are continuing the
Fedderalr
.
mllrort. llo1wore, trtveh. several braided oval
sale of the late
l:~~set!~o~f old scales, G.E. dehumldfter. large ham·
eiCI. ladder, tools. 3 wheel bicycle, olr tank.
l
chain
ww. II.Jggage, ftoor lamp. clockl. plus
Helen Lyons held on
1
muc11 more .
,,•
Aucttn c.uwe.• a,
,,• -Saturday, April 21. We
Pur•aluctlon Ce.
.."' will try to get everything lick
Lunch
Malon, wv
773-5715
.-sold on Thursday.
P.D.I. llallly !La••.
•"'

...•

1ERMI: Calli ar Check will tD.
Hal t.panslble For lccldtnta or'- oiPiopeoty
Llcentld and IIDndld In Olllo, hnlueky,
qnd Walt V•gll*' 166-tG
Jt-••••fi• •Jitlllfll

-A.....u

,,
'

-·

SERVICE
992·5335 « 985·3561
lcroa• ,,.. Post Office

Y.W.

For Rabbit,

RACINE- 2111 miles out Co.
Rd. 35, ranch st)le home on
paved'road, sitting porch, 7
room~ 3 bedrooms, re-

Wt Accept

PubliC S8le
&amp; Auction

E. Mai1olaai.&amp;IJ
POMEROY,

·

AU PAPEI .NGO GAMES

KEN'S APPLIANCE

NEW&amp; USED
PARTS

LElART -

II YfAIS
SSO.OO PO GAM(

us:::si§ up

PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

NO ONE UNDEI

Food $tam

,

Eatate General

ment and a nice block garage. Sitting on a double lot.

$21.500.00.

POMEROY - COMMER·
CIAl LOT - Approx. 108
foot lrontage on Main Street.
·Nice corner loi on heavily
.traveled street. Appx. 200
feet ol depth. MAKE AN OF·
FER!!

LETART - MANUAL ROAD
- Mobile home srte, one
acre landscaped for mobile
home. Or building s~e. A
steal at $3,500.00.

.

MIDDLEPORT- Vmnllot
IIO'xllO' wrth water, elec·
tric, and gas. Call fo£ more
information!'
HEHIY E. CLIUND

992·6191

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE •
C~NTEI
USED MOWIIS
IIIEW YAIDIIAIIII ECHO

ID/301'89 tfn

THING. GOES - All stock
and eQuipment, buildin g
and ground. I double hump
greenhouse. ASK FOR DETAilS.
-.

OPEN 5:00' P.M.
GAMES STAll' 7:00 P.M.

USED APPUANUS
90DAY

POMEIOY, OliO

3 Announcements
i , .

992-6910

••
•

On AprN 20. 1990, in the
Melgo County
Probate
Court, Coso No. 2111193,
MHeilne L. Pointer •. 31392
No..e SummH Road. Middleport. Ohio. 46710. appointed ExecutO&lt; of the
latoote ol Fran... E. Hyloll,
de-od. late of AR 114, Po·
merov, Mtliga COI!ntv. Ohio,
4&amp;7119.
Robert E. Buell.
Probllo JudAe
Lena 'K. Nea'lolroad,' Clerk
(4) 26: (6) 2, 9. 3tc

992-'
2
156
'·

·· ·oHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

614-992-7301

'I

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

•c.mtntBirdBetht
•founuin Bird IMM • Plus
Frvga.. An••• and
Oth• Y•d Ornarnn•

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

BILL SLACK

ol-18-'80-1 mo.

Vel• •CIWif llrd .., ...

NE._WLAND
ENTERPRISES

Ret• .,.ces

86- Mollile Hom• Repail

CHESTER
QUII STOP

SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

"FIREWOOD

992·6244 Garll!ll.

MOYIE·IOOAl
CONVBIENU STOlE ITEMS

Roger Hysell
Garage

•uGHT HAULING

1Olh 2ild St. Middltpoirfl
Fw Appt. Call
992-6717 H- «

IS NOW OPEN
FOI BUSINESS.
IN ITOCit OCom ... , _
ao... •c;.n......, F~

nil llPAII

TRIM anlf RE·
Good 1111•
T.L.C.
27 Yra. Exp.

209 SOuth 4th St.
Middleport' Oh.
'' LOW

S169 5 4 Qt. Max.

DOZER

MOVAL ·,

992-6873

STIACISI, .0110
~~· Plue Sloepl

OIL CHANGE

TD~a::

"SHRUB &amp;

18 - Wartted To Do

cutor of the 81uite of.John E.
NOTICE OF
Houck, deceuod. late of
APPOINTMENT OF
108 Butternut
Avenue.
FIDUCIARY
On AprM 20, 1990, in the Pomoov. Ohio 46769.
Robert E. Buck.
Molgt County
Probate
Probite Judae
(:ourt, C.Se No. 26691 .
., Lorry C. Doummond, Route Lena K. Neaoalroad. Clerk
"" 4, liD• 312, O.llipolia. Ohio (4) 25: (11) .2 , 9. 3tc
appointed Exe.,. 4&amp;131. -

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

.

Mld••P arl, Ohio 45760

U - Hav &amp; Gr~ i n
66 - Setd &amp; Fertilizer

·~

1

'(

• • localiott

161 North s-icl

JO'S GIFT SHOP

NO SUNDAY

PI.UMIING I IIATING

8, - F.rm Equlpm.,.t

17 - MilttUJn.:JUI

Day« Night .

~ )lrTRAVEL

12- Wented to Buv
63- Livenock
..

15 - SCihool• ~Instruction
16 - A•dio, TV &amp; CB R•pu

MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
DAN SMITH • AUCnONEER

·-~---"---------------~-------~---, -~..

•0 II Change &amp;. Lube
•Brake Work
MAIN ST., .

Farm Suoplt~s
&amp; L1v1:stock

1J - InJurJnce
14 - Butineu Tratning

·458- Loon

f Resu Ifs fa
Notice

...
'"

60 239.07
41 250.83
54

·-

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949•286d

JOHN TEAFORD

l,

9,995 .
·1O;~CbJ

•Front End

PubliC Notice

CAVAUER
CIER~

"At ltasonablt Prices"

"

11 - Help Wanted
1 2- S itua tion W.nted

667 - Coolvill e

WAGON

.

992- Middlepon
Pomeroy
985- Chnter
843- Portllnd
247 - Lotart Fallo
949 - Racine
742- Rutllnd

Auction

E111 pI uy111 e111
Srrv11:P.s

pal{es' corer the

..

s .. e&amp;

9 - W.an'ld to Buy

M .. on Co .. WV

446 - G•IIipalit .

PAYMENTS FIGURED WITH REBATE APPLIED AS CASH DOWN '
PLUS TAX • TinE

POMROY
-

CHEV.
CHEV.
PONT.
&lt;HEY.
FORD
DODGE
MERC.
CHEV.
DODGE
.NISSAN
1987 CHEV.
1984 MERC.

1987
1989
1914
1990
1919
GM244 . 990
GM242 1-990
1206( 19

•

.

6-Lott and Found
.
7- VIfd S.te(ptid in advancel

Mapp¥ Ad s .

Code 614

Art1

. T-1
GM243;

JH WISI

••ce tre

Gallii County

.

Mike Roberts, now of Akron,
writes that the Mid-West Chapter of the Hysell Genealogy
Group Is planning a Hysell
Reunion for Meigs County this
summer. The chapter would
~ very much like to hold Its reunion
; jointly with an already estab' llslied Hysell family reunion.
: "I:he Mid-West Chapter would
' assist ~e local people In prepara; tlon, setup and cleanup and, of
~ course, will have a wealth of
Hysell genealogy and family
; "history available to share witb
·: Meigs residents. Mike says this
could be a . very rewardllll
experience for everyone
Involved.
.
·
I! any Hysell famlly Is having a
reunion this summer and would
welcome the Mid-West Chapter,
· please contact as soon as possl: ble, Debra HysellSauders, Route

5 - H•ppy Ad a

following telephone exchanl{es ...

DOWNING CHILDS
MUWN MUSSER

'
'
.
;
·
:

4 - G i\I . .WIV

Call before 2 :00p .m

.Card of lhW"kl

Clas~ified

Pl. 446-1699
lOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

•••

papM~ .

Houtllhold Goock
lponlnf Ooodl ~
AnliqUtl
.
•
Mite. Merch.,dill
BuildtnQ Supplt•
Patt for Sal11
57 ~ Musicll lnstrumet'lll
58- Fruit• 6 Vetetabl_.
59- For Sale'?' Trtde

J ~ Annouc: e ment s

1

· errors first d., ad runs in

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSO~Y PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

1986
1985
1987
1985
1985
1987
1986
.1986
1985

•Tire Salea
Alignment

51 125354Sfi51-

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM lUllT
HOMES &amp; ~RAGES

7U-3081

Mer~han 1 11se

2 "":.1n Memo ry

dl¥ ett8f pubJic;•ton to mike correction .

COPY DEADLINE - .

MAKE

·

1- Ctrd of Thanks

•• dol.l ble pr ice of 1d cost.

polis 01ily Trib\m fll . tf!!IChing over 18.000 homes.

· COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd ..... Gallpolls

-------Former Pomeroy resident,

c~ite l letter t

will also appe,r in the Pt . Pla•ant Register and the, G1nl1·

--------

The Women's Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
which Is being honored at the
' local hospital this week In obser·
vance of National Volunteer
, Week ·continues Its constant
· endeavors . to raise money for
: 11osp1tal equipment and
scholarships .
·
The group will stage a rum·
mage sale Tllursday, Friday and
Saturday, May 3, 4 and 5 In the
Eagles Lodge-owned building on
East Main St .. In Pomeroy.
That's up the street from the
Buttons and Bows Shop. The sale
will be from 8: 30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
each day.
By the way, the Auxiliary's
schoiarshlp fund has Increased
by over $600, the money given by
residents In memory of the late
Frances Hewetson, RN, who was
a long-time employee of the
; hospital.

SERVICE

Relo
Over 16 Wordl
$4.00.
.
.20
86.00
.30
19.00
.•
..2
$13.00
.10
11.30 / day
.06/ doy

Ann uu 11 ce 111 en Is

•s;.,,,;nol · not rHponsible ior errort atter tint dav . (ChucK .

•.

All chapters of Beta Sigma Pbl
Sorority will celebrate Founder's
Day at the Down ·Under Res tau·rant in GalUpoUs beginning wltb
~lghty-four-howcouldthatbe? · .social hour at 6:30 p.m. on
Thursday. Ohio Eta Phi Is
The James Swiger family of .hosttng the event.
Reedsville lost all of Its belong)ngs - clothing, furnishings, the
whole nine yards - In a fire.
; Contributions to help the famIly can be left at the Fields
residence, 24&amp; West Main St.,
Pomeroy, or at the Cundiff
residence at 244 Mulberry Ave. tri
l&gt;onieroy.
111 Second St,.
; Clothing sizes are James, 14
':shirts;
YOUI ·I-PENDEIIT
'
. trousers, 32 waist, 28
·Inseam; Mrs. Swiger, medium
AGENTS SaVING
"size with a size nine shoe;
:Nlchole, age4, size 5 clothing and
. .GS COUNn
. size 10 shoe; James, one year, ·
SINCE 1168
', size 2; shoe size, 6; Richard, six
montHs. The family needs just
about everything so If you wish to
help contact one of.theresldences
: listed above.

10 .,
Monthly

•A c:lasf!ified advertitem.nt pieced in The Deity Sent•nelle~~: - ·
upt- c:l•sitied diipll!y, Bvsin•s Card and legal notlcesl

a

''

all

type only u11d

Elementary • and on May_ 7 from 8
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Chester
Elementary. Parents may register their chlldren If the child will
be five years old on or before

Founder's Day
set by sorority

6

c

l:hlklren, In order to become
registered, must be present.
Records required are, an lmmunizatlon record which' provides
evidence that the child has had
: .
. .
.
.
•••
four DPT shQts,,four polio shots,
'
B
. y BOB HOEFLICH
· 1A 'Bo 207AB H . t . S C . one MMR shotand a TB skin test
· ,
x
, amp on, .. , administered within the last
Another Earth Day bas come 29924. So now all we have to do Is year. Addltlonaljy, a copy of the
lind gone.
of us thought sit back and walt for the reunion child's birth certificate Is
a bout the earth
people to get together.
required.
and some took a
------The kind ergar te n teac her,
little one day
Of course, you know that school nurse and speech thera_actlon -publicBrenda Morris Is now serving as plst will all be present to answer
tty flowed and I
clerkofPomeroyVIUage, butdld questions . .
you remember that her Dad, the
Parents are urged to call the
have the feelbll
the thought of
late E. J. Strauss was also village schools, Chester at 985·3304, and
-what we're doclerk at one point In time? See- Tuppers Plains at 667-3310, to
lng to our environment won't history doe$ repeat Itself.
make an appolntnient
come back until next Earth Day.
-------. One of the problem~. of course,
You can look forward to the
GOOD .USED
Is today's overcpackagll)g. I'm summer flowers·-~ personally,
afraid we're between a rock and" I'm looking forward to the
WASHERS, DRYERS,
hard place on that one homegrown tomatoes and corn.
REFIIGEI~TORS, TYs,
over-package and we haye the Do keep smiling.
·
problem of what to do With all
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
that packagll)g- under-package
and someone decides to slip a
little arseniC Into play.'

'!J(tat

no ch•ge.

in Eastern Local

·The Eastern Local School
Dl$trlct's kindergarten reglstratlon will be held Mwy 4 from 8
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Tuppers Plains

.3

:€;;;.!t .lt0 discount for ad1 paid in •dvance
- Giveaway and Found ads under 16 wordl w ill b e

.

· The Gallla Meigs Community
Action Agency wil hold Its
regularly scheduled meeting on
Thursday at 5:30 p.m. at the
Guiding Hand .School In
Cheshire.
'

GrapiiB/' · The hl1h school wl-r wu
Hoffmlul, rtrht, for· ber proJed, "Probabllby." "':.
Sbe received a Sl8 uvlnp bond from Fanner's ~
Bull. PreeenllDI Ole awards Ia Charla Moore, ,
blJh school prlnelpal.
·
·

~-

ptan~d

Words
t5
15
16
15
15

1

~

K tnuergarten
•J
•
•
·
regtstratton .

.FAA meeting set
·o-

SALES and

.

A•t .. •re for con•c.utive,run t . bro ~en upd'Yswill be ch.lltld
for ••r:h rhN· •• sap~rate •ds.
·

••
U.. ":

waa tile jualpr wiJmer of the eecoad annual math
fair at Eaalern Hlp School, spoasored by Ole
Academic IIIIGI!ters. Be received a aelenllfle
calculator
for
.
.. his .project, "Comparison of Bar.

ELEMENTUY MATH WINNER -CryNal Smith, a mill
p-ader II&amp; Chesler Elemea&amp;ary, waa a receat wiDDW of &amp;be aecond
auual mlltb fair Ia tile Eastern Local Dlstrld. She received a
calcula&amp;or for ber project, ''Probablllty." Serving aa a judJe lor
the fair wu Carla Shuler, a math teacher at SouU.ern High SehooL

Davs

y

. MATH FAIR WINNERS- Paul Vl.,.ard,lefl,

Dance slated .

.

RUTUND nRE

RATES .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 •21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M. .
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

·I•

; The Senior CitiZen Dance Club
will have a dance Friday from
t\-11 p.m. with music by CircleD
Ranglers. The public Is Invited
and those attendlll!t should bring

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Sm()rgasbord

11 ~

The

Ohio

Jetta. Golf.
Beetle and Bus.

PIODUm

Sor.tce Ceater • IDC
lyan Parts and Sorwlce,
•••s, Iiden, Chai11
Saws, WHIIaotors.
HOURS: M-F 9 •7
Sot. 9-6; Cloood Sun.

AIIIIOOIIOIIII
MEW LOOATIOI
DAY.E'S SMAU.
ENGINE REPAIR

2531 West llllln,
Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE

'-r:!Y·

Foo Moet 2 end 4-cycle
en gin•
Stock Porta fDr Homo! Ito.
w..-or. Tecumoell,
• ltrattDn.

949-2969 .
'
lloward
L. Wrltesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTII, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
.•FlU: DIRT

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4422
,

614-742-2315

949-2168
2-1-'!IO't liD.

MICIOWAVE
OVEN IEPAIR

SUN'S UP TANNING

3-29-'90-1 mo. pd.

All MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pidc Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-S:i!S « 915-3561
lcroa F.- Post Office
217 L S.C. ,_.,.,
. POMIIOY, OHIO .

New Lima ld., lutland, Ohio
1 Sission ........................................ S3.50 ·
6 Seuions..................................... 112.00
12 SHsi011s ................................... S20.00
15 Sessions........................,•.••.••.•• S2 5.00
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBlY MORE
LOTIONS - ST.ICKERS

Call Susan Coleman. .. •·•-•

316/'90/ tln

FENCING
FREE
ESTIMATES

INSULAnON

Malik - Cerlainllld S
Yinyi .Ning

.S.Omllst Gull«

INSTALLATION

Rop~....nt Windows

SEARS

llown 1mulalion
Slorm Doors &amp;

781 N. 2nd
•DDUPOIT

Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

992-21...

Call 992·2772

4- 5."90-1 II 0.

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIVEI
HEllS and
EVEILASTINGS.
OI'EN:
APRIL 1 THRU JULY 1
HOURSt
Thurt. thru Sun.

Kand J CONSTRUCTION
GIEG BAILEY
•NEW HOMES' •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
.aGENERAI. CONTRACTING
A Gr11t Combination-

"Quality ond Reasonable Prices"
WE GO THE EmA MIU.....
992-6810
OHIO

JWI TIUS!Ill .•.. 949·2660

JO IIIL.---·.:: 915·4466
MAIIIUPP..- - 949·2557
OFRtL......- 992·2259
out SAliS VOUIII HAS

11811001 IIID M S1IL
ltAVIIUYIIS UIODII Fill
_ . COIItiiY PIIOPIIn. IF
10 IU CAll.

,. *""'

~··"'-'fll

We Me.. Llatlieel

Til-COUNTY RECYCUIG

O"DS 3 LOCA'IIOIIS '10 Sll¥1 YOI-

POMEIIOY, OHIO: 111. 1• 1 .11. 143
ALIANY, OHIO: 111. 10. S .R. 143
HENDERION; WV.: Rt. 31 Adl- tDIIhlefeEqulpment
NEW HOURS:
.
POMEROY: 9 e .m.· 7 p.m. 7 Deyo
ALBANY: 10 o.m. -1 p.m. I Deyo, Cl...... luntJrt
HENDERSON : 10 e.m.·ll p.m. IDeyo. C'-d.un. · Mon.
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAR. 13, 1890

Cleu
WIIUY

ITlUI~ Ill,

#1 Copper I&amp;C per lb.;
Aluminum Cana. HC per lb.
PIIIIIOUSICIIAP, IAT1111U.

�I

Pc!nwoy-Middlepbrt, Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

., HciUitle for Rent

51

HoulitiiOid

..
JUT 'N' CARLYLE(~ by l,lrry Wrl&amp;ht

.

Wednesday, April 25, 1990 -~

-71....,.------· Autos tor Bale

,Goodl

.

J .~.

•

$

'
.
O
Rearrange lo!tors of
· loor ocramblld word•

v . .... ~

Fot . .IO: t~:o:.IOw

~

~

· ....
ion.
4opd.lrlno.
. . aOiiil
.. tt......U.

..

'~ lOw
'to fOrm four
~
'

.....
c•

,~4.

tiMo

bo·

sttnp'- word1
.
'
.,

OOIIIIUIMINT
· IEIZED '&lt;
from · 11ao. FOnlo. . :•

vo-.,
Surpll&amp;
Oiltdo a-.o.
(1) IIIII-... ,..•.
·!luyero
~
: ~

187;,ea Ext .8-10111.

5-

· ,:c;

72 Trucks for Sale

MUS H U

.,

tll4'- - . . . . . . 4 .,...,..,. •

klliD . .... -good.·
'
'
,:...... ..

•

$1,&amp;oo, .,.....7M1.

~

73 VIOl 6 • WD 11
.,...-' ,
-,.!
ttra canwrolon v.n,, 4 '·.
new eaptaln....., ...,.., MW J. ~·

. paint, J04!e7J.I724,

JlroncO,

11114

.~

..

. . . . . . . .m
.
l f m

13,1110.11~

il,:
•

.

1''

('

4" :

. . . . . . .

t""'' ,.

::.::::=..,:::..:..;::=..::.::==::--:-. ''·
1184 '· Bronco, Eddie a.u.,
.

odllon, good C!l!ld. 304-81112722.
' ' .

'·

.

The latest medical report
says that cookies are ·
good for you.
'

,·
'·
'

T 0 L CH
1-...,:.......;....::.,;:....:.;..,.....jl.
"
'-_.___._..~........L.__,.,.

11

SO .EAT LOTS OF COOKIES •..
8UV TIIEM .FOR VoVR D06!
BUV T~EM S'( TilE MILLIONS!
SIIARE T~EM WITH . f""...--t
YOUR :....:..::,;___. --.J

'

11. · Half ~ad

Fmanc1al

rASS IT Ol'l IAc;/C ·; ('~IPAtef TO
&lt;.QMf TO A co/VIpLtTE JTQp . .

.wm ·

..

""

· Vulnerable: Neither ·
Dealer: EaSt

• •• 0

,,

N.,..

· P.a · ~ z•·
pasl ' , • .
' PIJI '

3' NT

Opening Iliad:

-=

+3'

declarer won the
._,
piayed l)le ~pade .
··
.
·
" '.
West. could 1101 bli ' monel back 1.0 DIS IV, casliea me 111&amp;11 :';
wai'not just boldly dialtiODds and ·put EaSt Oil lead with . "'
a spade trick.before be the last diamond. East did u well u ' ";
business with strooc he could when be underled .tile ace or: ~
cards.' So he grabbed the hearts, but declarer a.-ll!ilit he .
· ~ and played. another 'club. should put up tile lUng, and he bad niQa ,
DeC:Iiln!l' .won, cubed three .spades tricks. Can be ,make the haDd If Wolff '
and pitched a buill- H~,now I~ a dla: ·holds up'wllb tile spade,ace? ,No.
'

.•.
....

•,1

&gt;o " "

'·\. t"

,;1".. ~

•

~

I

0

•,

1

&gt;•

•

"'

.-'·..

--.
"'"iiiiii:.

~

-._.....
- - c:.mpoo;,
llli -

..

"

-~
VloPIIoo -71N*
·9 . Wlntad to Buy
.

...

,,

,_.,

. ·.
•;,~

r · .BEG~

,.

,~.,

·:

.. PAf&lt;l;O).• .

... ' 1:,

... ·to

.

.

.

.
·;

.

.
'MOitK ME£KLE
'

,.
I

R 161-:lT-1"11"'-11..1
WH E:N
111&lt;.1-::M/.

MY ClA-D SA.ID WHE:.N HE:
RETtR'E s, HE:'5601NG10
OOABSOWJTeLY NOTHINET...

.... .
'

I .

'

"

...

·'1 ••

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

I

I'LL TAKE

BOtH

HANDS!!

MY VBRY OWN

DtJDRNATII

.

Jilka Anci.TIIe · . .
Ia set up tlf · ·, ...
take the fall for the dea11i
•a doctor's wife. Q
0 ~
King Uval
· . . .·
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celebration
edition inside
today's Sentinel

COUPONS

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(With Trt,lt Y1ndor
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STORE HOURS
·• ·
Monday thru Sunday

WEIIIfSDA y I .
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY
APRIL 25, 26,·
27. &amp; 28

8 AM-10
PM :"·
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POM.EROV- OH.··
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PRICES EFFECnVE SUN~, APR. 22 THRU SAT.,.APR. 2t :.:

Ohio Lottery
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954
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Super Lotto
2-17-20-26-27-29
Kicker 303252

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ELEMENTARY HONOREES- These Southern Local School
District elemen&amp;ary students were_presenU,id medals at the a11nual
academic. excellence buquet Wednesday night. Pictured left to
rlr)lt and listed second thro"-" slxib grades respectively,· the
students are frent row, Jeulca ~lley, Harmony Jane Hill, Jennifer
""ush, Vueaea Shuler, and Jason Shuler, Letart Elementary;
Joey McKI ...y, Patty Lawrence, Ashley McKinney, Greg

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McKinney, and C. J. Barril, Portlud Elemenlary; second row,
two from each grade, Brandon Wolfe, Kyle Norrlll, Kara Kina, ·
Jesse Lltde, Ryan Grace, Nicole HID, Robert Wrltesel Amy
Northup, Pa111 Dlle, NlchOiaa Sl!lllb, Racine Elementary; third
row, two frol!l each grade, Joshua Davia, Sara Fife, ~btl Davis,
Kimberly Sayre.- Evaa _S tmble, Cynthia, Caldwell, Brian Allen,
Jason Lawrence, Jennifer Lawrenee, and aa,aa Youna. .

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JUNIOR, SENIOR HIGH HONOREES - Southern junior high
and bleb schoolaludenta honored at the Southern Local academic
achievement banquet Wednesday night were left to right, fr9nt
row, Mason Fisher, Kendra Norris, Courtney RoWih, and Matt
Morrow, seventh rraders, aad James Smith, ·Michael McKelvey,
Fred Matson and Ryan Holter, eighth graders; second row, Todd

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ROURNAILE BOmES

$11!
DEPOSIT

rector, both stated their dlscontent with the length of time It hws
taken to receive final word on the
project from the federal agencies
Involved. Hlll stated his appreclatlon to the commissioners for
''golng way out .of 'the way In
helping me wlth thls project."
A reques.i for making Goeglein
Road a township road . was
discussed witn Phll Roberts,
county engineer. Goegleln Road
ls located In the Flatwoods area,
and the request was made from a
resident on that road. Roberts
stated that the property owner
has the responsibtllty of constructing the road and that he
wlll examine the road after lt Is
constructed and will then submit
the request to township trustees
after which t!Jhe the commissioners will declare it a township
road .
Finally, a.letter was read from
Salisbury Township Trustees ln
which It was requested that that
township be permitted to provide
road malntalnence for County
Road 22 from Fisher's Big Wheel
to the Rock Springs Cemetery.
No formal action was taken on
the matter but the commissioners felt . there would be no
problem In allowing such maln, tajnence to take place. A r.Jl§Oiu"on mu11 be pasad~ IIQ-r
before the trustees can take over
the matntalnence.

Commemorative insert in
The Daily Sentinel today .

oz.

. 27.5

By JULIE E. DILLON
, Sentinel News Staff
A bld 'f rom Direct Market Data
Systems was a ccepted for the
new computer system In Meigs
County Court at Wednesday's
meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
A public hearing was set fo r
June 27 on t)le annexation Of 5.5
acres In Sutton Township to the
VIllage of Syracuse to make
possible the bulldlng of an elder~v
housing complex . The annexatlon involves only one residence,
that of · Mrs . Sidney Grueser,
according to Commissioner Rlch
Jones. The commissioners wlll
vlew the property at 10: 30 a .m .,
on May 16. This request for a
v(ewlng and publlc hearing came
from Mrs. Grueser, on behalf of
Water . Edge of Syracuse, a
lbnlted partnership.
Jim Hlll, manager of Pleaser 's
Restaurant, was at Wednesday 's
meeting to report to the comm is·
stoners that he has not yet
received word from th e Economic Development Adminlstratlon on his proposed project at the
restaurant.
Jo11es, however, stated that the
paperwork was in Washington,
D.C. and that all that could be
~"-- towaltfo 411e!lnal
word. Jones and Kim Shields ,
Meigs_ C~unty Development Di-

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partly cloudy. Hlgllln mid 808.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

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Daily Number ·

Grace, .Jalle HIU, Ray Prolntt, Darrell Sayre and Michelle
S!Aibart, ninth graders, and Kellle Ervin, David lhle, Jenny
Varney, and Sarah Dahl, sophomores; and third row, Jai'rod
Circle Jason" Circle and Cheryl Pape, juniors; and Kathy lble,
Brend~ Zirkle, Amy Harrison, and Chris Murphy, seniors.
Jznalfer Smith, a junior, was not present for the banquet.

Academic .banquet speaker urges·pupils
to 'go jQrth and make dreams a reality'
four steps to achieving successBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Rep. Abel congratulated the
Sentinel New• Staff
youth on their academic accomp- . participate.· and contribute to .
"Be honest with yourself, eval- l!shments and challenged them activities, develop self ·
disclpline, set goals, and always
uate your own potential; decide to continue to learn and grow Into
be ready to improve yourself
where you want to go, assess the leadership roles which they
remaining
committed to
your positive traits as well as have already l!egun to reflect.
.
accomplishments.
your llabllllles, then work toward Sl!e referred to leadership as an
your goal."
. acquired trait through training, · · On behalf of the students, ·
Bobby Ord, su)l!!rlntendent, pres- ·
That was the advice given by .an ongol11g experience, one
en
led Rep. Ab~ with the SouthRep. Mary Abel, . speaker at the which Is enhanced through the
ern
Tornado sweater.
·
annuaiSouthernLoca!Academlc · method of·triill and' error.
Supt.
Ord
served
as
master
of
Banquet · Wednesday night at
The only restrictions ln acceremonies for the banquet
Souihe~n High School.
complishment come from those
which was served by Sonja Wolfe
. Thetopstudentsofthedistrlct, which you place upon yourself,
Catering.
He noted thai the Home
grades two through high school, the speaker sald, as she encdUr"
National
Bank
again thls year ls
were encouraged 'by the speaker aged the students to believe In
paying
for
presentation
picture~
to"go forth and make those themselves . .
dreams a reallty. "
In conclusion Rep. Abel listed

to go to each of the recipients of
the medals.
Several attending were recogillzed by Ord Including John
Reibel, Meigs superintendent of
schools, John Costanzo, ele~enc
tary supervisor ·and Bob Hudak,
psychologist for the county , those
Involved ln arranging the banqliet, and Southern School Board
members, Janet Grueser, and
Gary Evans.
The pledge of allegiance was
led by the second graders, and
the Invocation was given by the
Rev . Roger Grace. Evans made
the medal presen lations to the
students.

Celebration events in full swing this weekend
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This weekend ls the first of
quilt show by the senior citizens
three blg celebratl?ns In obser·
at the senior · citizens center on
vance of Pomeroy s sesqulcen- Saturday and Sunday from 1-.
tennlal! or . lijOth year of
p.m. There will be a flower and
lncorportalon.
· quilt show by the Winding Trail
In addition to the dl'!ner on
Garden Club at the Pomeroy
Saturday evening, there will be
VlllageHallaudttorlumonSaturplenty of events for the public to
day and Sunday. The Meigs
attend and learn a bit about
CountyMuseumwlllalsobeopen
on Saturday from 1·5 p.m.
Pomeroy's herltaee.
Other events scheduled Include
Or! Sunday, the downtown
ao Appala"hlan Arts and Crafts ,churches will be open for his tori·
display , demonstrations and a

cally Informative roqrs from 1-5
p.m., and Holly Hill Inn, a bread
and breakfaSt facility, will also .
beopenonfortoursfrom1-5p.m.
There will also be exblblts at the
Meigs County Public. Library
which will be open from 1-5 p.m.
Festivals and craft fairs have
been planned throughout Pomeroy's sesquicentennial celebratlon year.
Heritage Days Junes 9 and
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lO·wlll be a three day wee kend of
activities pertaining to the ploneer heritage 9f Pomeroy. There
will be free eotertalnment, autbenllc pioneer food, Civil War
drUls, and a furniture and
fashion exhibit at the Meigs
County Public Library.
Ethnic Settlers Fest will be
held Oct. 6 and 7 and will
celebrate the European Heritage
of the settlers IIi Pomeroy.

In celebration of the 150th anniversary of the lncorporatlon of
Pomeroy Village, The Dally Sentinel presents a special
commemorative Issue of that hla!Airlc event In today's edition.
Included In the Issue ls lnfonnatlon up to 1880 on pioneer
famllles and early businesses which contributed to the ·
· economic development and growth of lbe village, and the
churches ,wblcb played a significant role In the lives of I hose ,
early settlers.
Compllln&amp; the Information for the tab has not been an easy
task at!d certainly one which coald not have been done without
the dedication and cooperation of many Individuals.
To the public which provided quantltpes of Information and
photoarapha, to the Sesquicentennial Committee and ibe 1\lelgs
County mstorlcal Society which contributed significantly, and
to the businesses which supported the tab with their
advertising, The DallY Sentinel staff extends Its most sincere
thanks.
A lbnlted number of special souvenir copies of the· tab are
available al The Dally Sentinel office at a cost of Sl each.

Celeste signs' tough DWI bill
By LEE LEONARD '
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Terming it "a
thoughtful, well-designed effort
to get dr~k drivers off our roads
and highways, " Gov , Richard
,Celeste signed a law Wednesday
making a comprehensive attack
on motorists who dr iv~ while
Intoxicated.
Effective July 25, the law will
Increase fines and the length of

Ironton police·
chief indicted
IRONTON, Ohio (UPI) - A
Lawrence County grand jury has
Indicted Ironton Ponce Chief
Wtlllam Acklson, who allegedly
stole a $345 Insurance claim due
the clty.
Acklson pleaded Innocent at
his arraignment Wednesday and
was free on $10,000 bond. The money was settlement of
an Insurance clabn for damage
to a pollee cruiser, Acktson
allegedly had the car i'epalred
free at the city garage and did not
turn the money over to the
municipal treasury.
He was suspended pending the
outcome of his case.
Prosecutors said the lnves ligation was contlnuln&amp; and further
charges were anticipated.
Investlptors searched Acklson' s borne and confiscated two
haildguns, a shotgun and a
.22-callber rifle.

dr ivers' U~ense suspensiOns for
drunken driving. There will be no
occupational driving privileges
for at least the first 15 days of the
liCense suspension, and under
certain circumstances the polleewill be able to llft a driver's:
llcense on the spot.
"This law ls no small slap 011
the wrist," sald Celeste In Inking
the bill In front of the Ohl&amp;
Department of. Highway Safety.
"It's an Indication that state
goverJ1!llen! ls committed to·
keeping drunken drivers off the- ·
roads. It sends
very c lear ·
message: lf you drive drunk In
Ohlo, you wlll pay the price."
In the background was a
township patrol car with a trunk
crumpled by the Impact of a car
going '10 mph. The Ohio Highway
Patrol said the driver's blood
alcohol content was 0.24 percent
- more than twice the legal
llmlt.
. ..•
The new law applies to offenses it"
committed on state highways·.
Infractions on city streets are·
goVerned by city codes, whlc~·
may be different from state\
requirements.
$201)
The new ~lnes will be
to $1.000 oo the first offense, up to
$750 to $10,000 on the fourtli '
conviction.
,
Jail terms remain virtually the
same: three days on the first
offense or three days In an
alcohol rehabllllatlon program;
a minimum 10 days on second
offense and 30 days on the third.
Continued on page 12

a

rrom

·'

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