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I"'nleroy-MKIOISport-uaH!pOI•. UhtO-I"'Ont Pleasant.

I imes-5entinel

Panel ·
modifies

w. va.

May U, Ht!IO

Prices In Effect Every Day

antities
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Ohio Lottery ·

· Cincinnati
hikes lead
to five
games
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Daily Number

610
Pick-4
3807

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Super Lotto

Page 3

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - The
Senate Agriculture Committee
voted to modify the "swampbus·
ter' ' program Thursday to make
It easier to catch violators but to
also give farmers some leeway to
drain l;lnd with mlliimal wetland
value.
Under swampbuster, farm~rs
face the" risk. of losing all farm
program benefits If they drain a
wetland and plant crops on tt.
Swampbuster was one of four
programs createc:lln 1985 to link
environmental and farm program goals.
·

De artnient Store
h er's _D ay!
creat ·G ifts .For ot_

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1190

Ohio,

May

fS-octlon, 10 Pagoo

7. 1990

26 C.nto

A Mutt-ia Inc.

State official lauds
Meigs jobs·program

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99
To

·99.
·
15

~· 99·_

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Top

14

99· ·

.

JHnl

Sold Elsewhere ·At Up To 119.99

Compare At Up To 30.00

·14K Gold Bonanza

Ladies'."Gin Tonic"

Necklaces. bracelets and earrings.

or

Jeans

PROGRAM RECOGNIZED - Cathie Wood,
work adjuslmeai apeclalllli, waa pven special
reeophloa at lbe Melp lndusutes dinner for. her
sueceaa Ia job devell!pmen.t, placement and

.~

coaching of people ·with developmental dlllablll·
ties. Pictured with her are David Mlmlrea, left,
admblillb'IUive and Job plaeemeat coordlnatar,
and Kellb Black, adult eervtees dlreetor.

National
Hospital
Week is

.Jumper with
Tee Shirt

2

2/r 1.
Mother's D.-y
GiftWrap

TEST .RVN - Ia preparatloa for Electloa Day activity,. tlte
Melp Cowlty Board of Elections conducted a public test of the
tabulatln1 equlpmeat Friday afternoon. As explained by ·Jane
Frymyer, local director, cealer, purpose of the public ielllllllo
check out tbe equlpmeat for a final Ume before eleclloa aud to
demo111trate to lbe public how tbe ballot cards are co101led by the
card reader. Here Rita Smith, deputy director, and Barbara
SmUh, clerk, ruli the public test.

S!!are
:ro 12.50

A•l.-rted.

Soap Gift Sets

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Local news

briefs~

Damage· light in two accidents
•'

Two accidents were lnvestlga.ted by Pomeroy Pollee over the
weekend.
.
At 5: 46p.m., Jody Will of pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, traveling
east on Mulberry Ave. lost control of her vehicle when she
applied the brakes as she c.ame down tlie hlll near VIllage Green
Apartments. The car slide off the right side of the road and
struck a guardraiL Damage was light to the passenger side of
the car.
· ·
·
· EriC. J , Hankla of Rutland was cited for failure to maintain
assured clear distance In an accident wblch occured Sunday at/ ·
4:15p.m on West Main St.
·
According to the report, the Hankla.car $truck the rear of a
truck driven by Joseph Bailey, Pomeroy. There was .light
damaae to the rear of the truck·and heavy damage to the front
'
end of the Hankla vehicle.

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Select Ladies', Men's &amp;
Children's Clothing .
· Over

54

All Health. &amp; Beaut1·Aids
s1 Million In

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Select Ready· To- ·
Assemble Furniture
$1f2

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lnv~ntory!

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Million In Inventory!

All Electronics &amp; Ceiline Fans
s750.000 In Inventory!

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All Greeting Carda

s3oo~ooo In Inventory!

'All·
·C
osmetics
, · .st
·*. Maybelline
* Max ·Factor
* Revlon
* ,coty

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Rutland man:hurt in wreck

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Million In Inventory!

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Charles Arndt , execu tlve dl· mental disabilities. ·
rector of the Ohio Mental MRDD
In his ·address Arndt recog·
County Board Association waf
the keynote spesker for a lun· nlzed the program as one of
cheon to recognize the· achieve· many established by Meigs MR·
ments of the Meigs Industries DO to provide .a full range of
Job Placement Program held at services mandated to meet the
the Meigs Senior Cl~ns Center needs of Meigs Citizens who have
disabilities. "Many of these
recently.
· The program was started three services are .mandated by the
years ago on a grant !!dmlnls· state In new program initiatives
tered t\lrough t~e Ohlofflepart.- and often ·do not provide for the
ment of Education with funds necessan- fun~s", said Arndt.
from the Jobs Training Partner- "Your local program has demon~
ship Act (JTPA) eight percent strafed creativity In generating
set-aside for persona who have Income. through seeking estab- .
mental retardation and develop- lishment grants \Ike the JTPA
program In order to meet those
mental disabilities.
Honored at the luncheon for needs", he continued.
Arndt pointed out that the
successful participation Jn the
Job Placement Program and nature of services have put
their support were employee of additional strain on the manage· the year, Ben Sll.lnner, employer mentofcountyprogramsHe.sald·' .
of the year, Richard Haft of that It was easier to · provide ·
Morrison's Food Service In Rio services when they were all
Grande, and business oftheyear, delivered under one roof. Today,
McDonalds of Athens and however, they must be delivered
over a larger geographic area
Galllpolls.
Job coaches were recognized which Increases costs and makes
as "Coaches for Indepen~eilce. " staffing more difficult, he said:
A special presentation of rqses
The speaker said that he has
and a plaque was made b¥ Larry encoui-aged Supt. Lee WedeSpencer MI, Inc. trustee, to . meyer to seek additional levy
Cathie Wood, work adjustment Income and he spoke of the need
specialist, for her success In job for passing the three year 1.5 mill
development, placement and levy which will be onJ'uesday's
coaching of people With devt!lop- ballot.

According to the speaker, ·the
proposed tax equalization bill
which " has the support of the
governor and speaker of the
house" requires counties that
wish to participate to show' a
minimum effective yield of. two
mUis. It was pointed out that the
Meigs MR-DD currently realizes
only a 1.22 ;vleld from the 1.5 mill
levy already In effect, and that
th~ yield decreases annua)ly.
Tax equalization would benertt
the agency by correcting the
difference In Income generated ·
per ·mm as compared to neigh·
boring counties, Arndt said. He
gave examples of one mill
comparisons and current effec·
tlve millage: Meigs receives
$212,519 per mill (effective 1.22);
Gallla, $437.790 (1.24); Athens,
$324,189, (6.45 ); Jackson,
$229.,195 (.92) , · Washington,
$6511,582 (1.69) and Scioto,
$502,930 (4.1). He said ihat Meigs
hasas many or more enrollees as
the programs In the comparison
milking the per enrollee yield as
much as $4,000 less.
Arndt encouraged Meigs voters to view the Carleton SchoolMeigs lndustrles levy as a part of
a "sound financial plan to maintaln a program that is recognized
statewlse as a modelfora MRDD
large Qr ,small."

UQdm:w~y ·

Former ...
Continued from E -10 ·.
ted States and Iran. ·
· Reed. kidnapped In 'Beirut
•Sept. 9, 1986, was .released
Monday by Moslem extremists In
Lebanon and arrived Tuesday at
a hostage reception center in
Wiesbaden. Six Americans and
io other Westerners are believed
to remain captive In Lebanon. •
Iran and Its allies In Lebanon
-have been trying to trade the
remaining Western hostages for '
the release.of 400 Shiite Moslems
·.held by Israel, 16 Shiites convicted of terrorls t bombings In
Kuwait and Moslem .fundamentai!S't cleric Sheik Abdul Karim
. Obeld, who . was abducted by
Israeli commandos In July.
Iran also wants the United
States to release the $8 bi!Uon to
$9 btuton In Iranian assets It froze
after Iranians seized hostages
from tlie U.S. · Embassy In
Tehran In 1979. ·
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"It Is a good, realistic compromise, " Leahy said, urging
colleagues to halance farm Interests \¥1th the nationwide interest
In preserving wetlands.
Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo. , applauded ..the language to allow
mitigation and drainage ¢ land
with minimal wildlife values. He
said It would take care of
Instances where a wetland "may
form a small pocket In the middle
of a field •' and hlndercultlvatloil.
Bond said there have been 175
cases In which farmers were
denied · farm . payments under
swampbuster, Including a case In
Missouri where a farmer lost
$37,000 In payments because of
planting one acre.
"Some of these penal ties appear ·to be particularly draco'
·
nlan," Bond said.
The Agriculture Department
said there have been less than 200
penal ties underswampbuster.
Sen. Tom Daschle, 0-S.D., said
there were 1271nstances In which
farmers were denied benefits
totaling $1.8 million for swampbuster violations on 760 acres an average of $1&lt;t,OOO an acre.
Critics have faulted the government as being unwilling to
enforce swampbuster. From 60
million to 80 million acres are
covered by s-,vampbuster.
There were proposals earlier
this year to exempt land from
swampbuster If It had been
cropped fo.r six of the last 10 '
years. That w.ould have removed

Resource Economics said the
. new trigger on violations would
Improve the program, as would
the system of graduated penal·
ties for first-time violations.
"We heard many times 'If the
penalty was not so stiff, we'd
Impose It,"' Cook said.

Low io.IIJ)I&amp; Ia mid

r-day, bl1b Ill mhl 888.

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No.262

In addition, the trigger point
for determining a violation wouJd
be when a wetland is drained.
• By comparison, at present
there Is no violation unless a crop
Is planted, there Is only the "drop
dead' ' penalty of loss of all .
benefits and offsetting mitigation Is rarely allowed.
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asK~~nt:~k o~~~:nc~~~~-'ror

Kicker 368570

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Proponents, ·Including Chair·
man P.atrick Leahy, D· Vt., called
the changes an even-handed
compromise. Environmental•
tsts, who had feared a setback, .
~aid th~ compromise would tmPI:~&gt;Ve the program .
. Committee members met privately for an hour before voting
In a 40-mlnute session to tentatively add the swampbuster
modifications to tllelr version of
the new farm policy law . Only
Sen. Kent Conrad; D-N.D., voted ·
against the .package.
· Under . the · eommtttee plan,
first-time violators could face a ·
penalty ranging from S750 to
$10,000 and farmers could receive permission to drain land
with minimal wetland values or,
In some.cases, If theyagteed to ·
restore .an equal-sized wetland.
Farmers would have to get
permission from the Fish and
Wildlife Service as well as the
Agriculture Department.

10

~7-11-13.~

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·Second Street,~ Point Pleasa_nf,yW. Yci:

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A Rutla'nd man was Injured In a one-car wreck Sunday at 3:30
p.m. In Rutland ~wnshlponT.R. 447,4.6mlles notthofS.R.124,
according to the Gallla-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Archie D. McKhmey ,19, w" taken by the Meigs CoiDity EMS
to Holzer Medical Center, where he was treated and released for
multiple bruises aild cuts.
McKinney, driving a 1986 Ford Escort, was north when be lost
control on the gravel road, slid off the left side of the road and
turned over once before coming Into a rest on Its top In a ditch.
He was wearing his ~at and was not thrown from the car.
McKinney was cited for failure to control.

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Mil.lion In Inventory ·

· STORE H()Uf!S; -

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Dally 1o a.m. · 9 p.m. · ·

Sunday 12 Noon • 6 p.m

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. Squm:ls respond to nine calls
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Unlta of tbe Meigs County Erneraency Medical Service
re1ponded to nine calli for aula lance over the weekend.
On Saturday, at 1: 11 a.m. the Syracuse unit retponded to a
call on
Road In which a tree hlld fallen on power llnel.
At 3:21 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to White Otk for WllUam
Shamblin. --

eoueae

Continued on ·paae 10

Several hundred residents at·
tended the annual open l).ouse at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sunday In observance of National Hospl~l Week.
Members of the Women's AuxIliary, the hospital's volunteer
organization, were on hand In the
lobby to conduct tours of the
h011pital which was attractively
decorated with bouquets of blue
and white balloolll• They were
also In charge of registering
those attendlag for the five door
prizes which will be given away
later this week.
More than :!00 took advantage
of the free cholesterol tea Una
handled by hOspital nurse&amp;. RegIstering visitors for that were
volunteers of the ·Metga Division
of the American Heart Assocla·
ton.
The hospital's healthcare bear,
Bruce Wolfe of Racine, mingled
with visitors and passed out
favors while Denver Rice enter·
tal ned on his guitar In the Skilled
Nursing Faclllty. Punch, cake
and fresh strawberries were
served to the visitors.

Meigs bOard
hires teacher ·
Mary O'Brien was hired as
head teacher at the Salem Center
Elementary SChool In a brief
session of the M!!les Local Board
of Education Friday night. ;
T)le board accepted with regret the . resignation of Letha
Cotterill as a school bus driver
effective June 1, and eranted two
dock days to sandy Napper and a
d&amp;Y and three-quarteJ:s to Kal'ell
Stanley, an aide. Cbrlstlan Diehl
·and Vincent Marot were accepted as foreign exchanae students for the 1990-1991 school
year.
It was voted to give $:!00 to the
q ulz team with the money to be
used only for competition en·
trance lf!etJ. A field trip for the
FFA to the National Rib Cookoff
In Cleveland ·M ay 27-30 was
approved, and the board entered
Into a purchased aervlces aereement with Sandra Wal~ to tutor
a student no loqer .than tblll
school year •
A contract with Orkin for
termite control at the Bradbury
Elementary Kboolfor IN,Nlwu
approwd. llld tile oaleDdar lor
tbe '19!1().91 ICIIool YHJ' .,..
adopted at the IMf''RI attnded
by board

THE IIEALTBCAIUI: BEAR - WhDe Bnaee
Wolfe, lbe bealtbcare bear, •pent most of the open
boUle after_. bouncl~~~t abo11t Veterans Memor-

lal Boapltal dlaQ1hattnc lavon to vt.llon, be took
lime out lo clve a h11g to Freda Miller, a resident In
the Skilled N111'11n1 FacUIIy.

Poll has Voinovich on top in race
CLEVELAND (UPI) - If a
recent poll of Cuyahoga County
voters holds up, Republican
George Volnovtch could be the
next governor of Ohio.
A Plain DealerGordon S. Black
.telephone poll conducted last
week among 600 registered Cuyahoga County voters showed Vol·
novlch with a 47.2 percent to 33.9
percent lead over opponent Democrat Anthony Celebrezze.
The two fron!J;unners will
square-off In the November
elecUoa.
Fourteen percent of those
polled from Apr\130 through May
2 said they were undecided, while
the remainder rejected both
candidates or refused to supply
Information, the Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported Sunday.
The heavily Democratic
county '- coliJldered a key to .,
Celebreue vletory. CuyahDtra
County , traditionallY' casts between oae·llxth and one.eeventh
of the total statewide vote lD
flll!r8l eleetlons - and atate-

wldt Democratle elndkllliel

members, Boll Bartoli. . ..S to ellT)' the county to offlet

Rlehard · Vauabaa, lobert · t)le heavy . Republican vote
downatate.
~~and Larry Rape, SUpt.
POllster Gonlou Blaek laid:
Continued on IMP 10

"If these numbers hold . up,
Volnovich · Is going to clobber
Celebrezze state~lde. People In
Cuyahoga County like
Volnovlch."
The former Cleveland mayor
has been credited with getting
the public and private sector to
work together to turn Cleveland's Image around.
Carl Stetner, spokesman for
Volnovlch called the poll results
"extremely encouraging.
"I think It Is going to surprise
some people bec11use Tony has
performed well In Cuyahoga
County In the past." Stetner said.
Donald SWeitzer, senior ad·
vlser to the Celebrezze campaign
said he wasn't concerned about
the poll.
"I think mainly It's a reflection
of ·Volnovlcli's name IdentifiCation In Cuyahoea County,"
Sl"eltzer said. ''l think t!lal o~
we eet dowa to comparbll both
records, people will see Georp'a
faiiiDgs and thlnp will tlpten

up."

.tl;e.:sm~ l:e!n~==~~

Cuyahoea County- carrytna !he
COQJlty by more than 260,000

votes In · his 1982 election to
attorney general, and by 200,000
votes In his re-election 1111986.
Political Insiders say Democratic statewide candidates must
carry Cuyahoga County by about
100,000 votes to win statewide.
Celebrezze had been crltlclted
for cbanllng his view on abortion
from anti-abortion to t)ro choice.
But the poll showed his switch on
the controversial Issue had· ho
Impact among 37.5 percent of
those Interviewed. Another 27
percent said they were lesallltely
to vote for Celebrezze because of
hiS switch, While 26.4 percent
said they were more likely io vote
for hll;l).
Yet, li1.5 percent of those polled
sal~ a candidate' s position on
abortion was very Important or
somewhat Important. Amona
female voters that percentaae
grew to 66.5 percent. Nearly 63
· ~ent of the women polled had
a pro-choice view oa abortloa.
Volnovlcb II an !I-abortion.
Stetner laid the Volnovleh
campalp had ''bent over t~Jck·
ward not to · make abortion a
· poUticallaaue ID thll campelp,"
and would not talle the I l l
Continued on page 10

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Monday, Mlly 7, 1180

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Commentary
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Page-2-The Deily Santinal ..
Pornaoy-Middleport, Ohio
fI
Monday, May 7, 1990 ·
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Trucking regulations need

The Daily Sentinel
111 Couri Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO THE .INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

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r"T"&gt;.....I'---.-' O"T""I!!!!cd•-

ROBERT L, WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaeral Maaager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslataat Pabllaber/ControUer
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association ;md the American Newspaper Publishers Association. .

•

WASHINGTON - The Amerl·
can trucking Industry Is so
hogtled by outrageous state
, regulations that truckers would
be better c;~ff driving hundrl!l)s of
' mUes across 3 state Jines and
back just to save ·the costs and
paperwork of In-state trucking.
Consider these examples.
- It costs more to ship a
truckload of blue jeans from El
Paso to Dallas than It does to ship
the sall\e jllans from Taiwan to
Dallas.
- Ryder Systems Inc., the

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Allletiers are subject to editing and·must be signed with
name, adtlress and telephone number. No unslgqed letters will be pub·
llsbed. Leiters should~ In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

·ues.

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Letters to the editor

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truck rental con'\pany, spends
$3.3 mUllan a year and uses 100
employees just to stick on the
575,000 tax decals required by 22
states.
..
- In Michigan, It costs Savannah Foods more. to ship sugar
across an 82-rillle delivery route
Inside the state than It does to
·send the same sugar 138 miles to
another state.
- Frlto-Lay finds It cheaper to
ship Its goods from Mississippi to
San Antonio, Texas, than It Is to
ship the same goods !rom San

~evamping

Express appreciatiOn
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial Committee we
would like to sincerely thank all
tqose who . helped make our
F9unders' Day Dinner . a tremendous success. Many g'roups
;tnd Individuals.worked long and
hard hours to assure that our first
o{ several Sesquicentennial
events would ' long be
remembered.
The culinary efforts of the Ohio
Eta Phi Sorority and Gilmore's
Catering provided an excellent
and elegant meal. The decora·
lions arranged by the Preceptor
Beta Beta Sorority were beaut!:
lui and very much In keeping
wlth the theme. 'The Shady River
Sllufflers worked under extreme
adverse conditions to quickly and
effeclently serve tbe dinner and
cltar the tables In the most
unobtrusive tnanner. John Lisle
•

and the Pomeroy Elementary
School Staff and Salisbury Elementary School coordinated ef·
forts ·to Insure the. necessary
equipment and furnishings be
provld~d as well as ' the !aclllty
Itself. KroJ;ter's generously al·
lowed the use o! their waiJ5·1n
cOoler lor food storage.
Sweet Mountain Sound, whose
music so ·enhanced tbe evening,
touched many hearts with their
debut o! "Heart of the Valley", a
song written for the Sesqulcen·
temtlal celebration by Roger
Gilmore. Most ImportantlY, we
would like to offer heartfelt
thanks to everyone wbo attended
for It Is only with tbe support of
tbe people of Meigs County that
we can realize a successful and
exciting year ol celeuratlng
Pomeroy.'s 150th birthday ..
Mary Gilmore, Co-Chairman
Mary Powell

Information sought

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bear Editor
occupations; . educational back·
:· A news family history Is ground; and membership In
planned for publication this year civic, professional, honorary,
Oll the RAMSBURG family. This lineal, and fraternal
history will Include the female organizations.
llites as well. It will, therefore,
The Information may be
lt)clude all o! the George and brought to the annual Holter
1\nna Marla (RAMSBURG)
0
HOLTER family; the first Holl~rs o! ,Meigs County, anti the . Karen Werry at Morningstar:
Michael and Catherine (RAMS. Information may also be sent to
BURG) WOLF family of Plants, Keith Ashley, 34465 Crew Road,
, l;etart Township, Meigs County. Po111eroy, OH 45769. · It the
This Wolf famlly l~ some\lmes 'Individuals families do not send
c11lled the "Maryland" Wolfs to In the InfOrmation, those!amllles
alstlnqulsh It from the VIrginia, will probably not be Included In
rennsylvanla, and German lam- the publication.
Hies of the same last name.
Keith D. Ashley
; Information may Include dates
· ' 34465 Crew Road
o! birth, death, marriage, diPomeroy,, OH 45769
vorce, and military service;

~:~na~ t: h~~e ~~ i:~~/l

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Appreciates supp()rt

Dear Editor:
: we would like to express our
grateful appreciation to all o! the
volunteers who worked door to
door lor the residential cam·
palgn for the American Cancer
~lety ending this week. Bless
9ou one and all.
·
·
; Thanks to )he older people, who
are so falthlill and to tbe
lluslnesses · who donate each
time. These funds help provide
lor medication and transporla·

Pear

· Hunt said big success

Editor:
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··
,
- The Rutland American Legion
would like to thank the bustnesses and residents of Rutland
for their donations for the Easter
•

egg hunt held at the Legion Park.
The hunt was a huge success
due to their generosity. Thank
you!
The R.utland American Legion

Po(itics?

bear Editor:
: It appears to me that Southern
:!flgh School Is playing up to the
democrats.
·
They had Gov. Celeste down to
make a commencement address.
Now Rep. Mary Abel was there to
jnake an address.
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tlon for Meigs cancer patients.
.Our very special thanks to Mr.
Jlin Hill !rom Pleasers Restau·
rant who gave a·rree ineai~oupon
for all the workers as he did last
year, also. Thanks, again Jim.
Meigs County
Board Members
of the American
,.Cancer Society and
Lillian E. Moore,
Executive Director Meigs Co.
John Hunnell, President

Not long ago when COngressman Miller and George Volnovlch made an appearance on the
Pomeroy parking lot Southern
High School .was the only high
school In the county not represented. Politics?
Gayle Price
Pomeroy, OH

Residents deseroe an answer

Meigs Cout)ty?
Dear Editor:
No! Reedsv!lle Is the only
~ I, along with all citizens o!
community In Meigs County
~eedsvUle, was quite shocked to
pick up The Dally Sentinel on without a voting precinct.
Is It a matter of a small number
evening and read on the front
·page, without forewarning or o! voters being Involved?
discussion, that Reedsville would . No! Reedsville ·has three
DO longer have a VOting precinct. hundred !l!ty-two (352) regisWhy?
tered voters.
Is It a matter of finances? No!
; After having a voting location
Iii Reedsville lor over seventy . We have been assured by County
offlclals that fi,nances do not
(70) years, an unanswered ques·
enter the picture.
tlon In our minds needs to be
Is It a matter of a poor location
~nswered.
.
and unlit !ac!lltles being used In a
Is tills a practical, convenient
voting location?
arrangement for voters?
No! The location Is conve.: No! Less than twenty-five
niently located for &lt;ill ReedsvUle
percent (25%) o!these voters are
voters and the facllltles are very
traveling to Tuppers Plains with
Die remaining seventy-five per· · good - quite accessible for the
cent (75%} traveling to Long · handicapped.
WtiY THEN? We deserve an
Bottom - as much as eighteen
answer.
miles, round trip, to vote. This
discourages voting!
·
Grace Weber
Reedsvllle, OH
Is Ibis arrangement typical In

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An emergency meeting of the
GB&amp;G Club was called to order
by the president, pertaining to
the Lithuanian situation. Pracll·
cally all T.V. commentators and
news media have urged the
United States governinent to
support Lltuanla, since It had
voted lor Independence. Nearly
all commentators urged the
United States to go so far as to
have the President, through
Congress, Issue sanctions
against the Soviet Union. This
would mean, In the eyes of the
majority of the members of the
GB&amp;G Club, that If tile County of
Meigs wanted to secede from the
State o! Ohio, the United States
government would back . this
movement.
So after considerable discussion, one .member proposed the
question as to whether Meigs
County should secede from the
State of Ohio and !orm Its own ·
state government. It was mentioned In themeetlngthattheState
of Ohio' has always considered .
the County of Meigs as a
step-child and when tile guodles
were passed aroun.d Meigs
County would only get the
crumbs. This Is especially true of
the highway system. No new
major highway construction has
been built In the County o! Mellis
since tbe middle of the 1960's.
There are considerable discus- ·
slon pertaining to the financing of
the new state government. Several suggestions were discussed.
One of the members stated that
It would be relatively easy to
borrow $2 Trillion· from the

___.__F._red___W~._cr.,--ow

Will 'abortion debate split the GOP ·
·

.

be overrun by lesser. breeds
without the law.
The pro-abortion Instincts of
such voters were held In check as
long as Roe vs. Wade made the
Issue moot. But last year's
Webster decision, which· made It
much easier for Individual states
to ban abortions, energlzed the
pro-abortion lobb~ and .revived
the concern of these Republican
voters. They have already begun
expressing It ·by voting, In
Republican primaries, for proabortion candidates.
Repul;lllcan national chairman
Lee Atwater IS' undoubtedly
right, from the party's stand·
point, In trying to finesse the
Issue. by saying the Republican
"tent" Is big enough lor everyb-

William Rusher
ody. But conservailves will be
very uncomfortable Indeed If the
pro-abortion Republicans try to
knock the anti-abortion plank out
ot the next Republican platforll\.
ThiS problem Is going to
require forb~arance and 'statesmanshlp on both sides, If a
damaging clash Is to be avoided
In the convention o! 1992. Proabortion Republicans, In partlcu·
Jar, wlll bave to decide whether
they are ready to Insist · on
lmflO!ilng tbelr will on the party
on this Issue, at ·the risk of
endangering the only coalition
that has managed to bring
victory to the GOP In modern
times.

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win·
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ST. LOUis (UP.l). - This t11ne then retired 11 of 12 batters he
faced between the tblrd and sixth
around, ~II Scudder bas a
.
'· . .
IDDings;
new-found apprecla)lon for the
'1 know ·I can wlftl.up here,"
big leagues.
Scudder said. '1t'anl~togetthe
Scudder, who contributed it
win lit your first outing."
stroa~~ pertomiance Sunday In
Notrn Charlton worked the ·
his first start since being rec81led
to the major leagues, lifted the final 1 2-3 Innings lor. his first
Cincinnati Reds to their fourth . save, giving the Reds'lliaJlptn 12
stralgbt victory, ll 5-l vl&lt;;tory saves In 13 chanc~_lhfs year:
over the St. Louis Gardlnals. ,
Bryn Smith, ,3·3, a~~wed three ·
Scuddi!r, who ·!ailed to make · runs and nine hits tlil'ough seven.
Innings as the Card.lilals lost for
the Reds' Opening DaY roster
'
and was relegated to Nashville of the fourth stralgiU ,eame.
By seizing a 3-0 lead In the.slxth
the AAA League, pitched 7 1·3
Inning, Cincinnati Improved Its
lnnlnp while allowi,nl one run
record
to 15-11 wlieil tbey .s eore
and five hits. . ·
.
firSt.
•
., , •
'1 spent every day In the .
"When we get the lead, we
minors looking at the papers and
have a great chan~e to win,"
seeing who was up here," said
Scudder
said. "I felt I Could pitch
Scudder, who -was 4-9 In limited
a complete game, but why take a
duty with the Reds last season.
chance with this bu)lpe•-"
''Tbe·time lspent up here last
Barry Larkin ope;ed the sixth ·
year spolleCI me. I' cOuldn't walt
· with a ,one-out slilgle, stole
to get ll'ack."
- .·
second and moved to third on
. However, Scudder was told
Todd . BeliZinger'!! ll!fleld hit.
that If he worked hw:d he would
be called up again soon. ··
O'NeW scored · Larkin with a
"It was disappointing when I
stilgle for the first 1'\01·
Benzinger and O'Neill ad·
didn't tnake the team, but I was
vanced on a double steal and Ken .
told If I did my J!Jb I would be
Griffey delivered Benzinger with
back.qulck," Scudder said.
· Based .on his· ~rtormance an RBI-groundout, Ron Oester
against the.Cardlnals, Scudder Is follo.wed with · in RBI-slngle,
driving home O'Neill.
In the starting rotation for good,
In the seventh, St. Louis scored
according to Reds manager Lou
Its
only run when Ozzle Smith
'
.
Plnella.
doubled,·
advanced to third on a
"He:s going to stay," .Pinella
·
wild
pitch
by Scu4der and scored
said. "I couldn't be happier with .,
on
a
groun(!out
by VInce
him. Whatanlcejobhedld.He's
COleman.
.got all the tools and ·h ehada re~l
Cincinnati scored twice In the
good (asthallt!lday."
,
ninth
off newly-acquired Lee
Scudder, 1·0, ·got ·the c'a lllast
week and made the most of It
Sunday. After glvlilg up a sl~gle
and walking two In the first single by Chris Saba. Sabo then
stole second and rode home on a
Inning, he found bls groove.
Scutter worked out of that jam, single by Larkin.

~':;!~ t~p~~-~~~:~~~~~~n~

~·~---Sporls
Baseball
Former major leaguer Larry
Parrllih smashed a three-run
homer, bls eighth home run of the
· season, ~ to 'pace the Hanshln
. Tigers past the Yokohama Talyo

I

The 8th, ann11al Meigs Invlta·
Uonal Track meet was held
Saturday with J11ckson taking
home top honors In both the boys
and girls divisions: The meet was·
held under rainy skies and cool
temperatures, despite the bad
weather a good crowd was on
hand.
The girls MVP ofthemeetwas
Ronnea Davis of Meigs who
scored 26 points, while Matt
Barnett took home .the boys
honors with 321·2 points. The host
Marauders flnlnshed Second In
both diVisions while VInton
County finished In third place In
tlie girls division and Federal
Hoeklng third for the boys .

· el Page 3

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·.

ellllla CoOI)Or, Heather Exline tJacklon)
M.l, 2. Metp 56.1, 3. Vlnt111 County 58.2
!OfiMetel'l·l. Wendy Bruotm tJa&lt;klaol
1:01.2. 2. Krllty Clark tVIDtlll Counly) , 3.
Katrina Turner (Melp)
300 Hunllet-1. Jenllll« Taylor (Molp)
51.0. 2. J e nntt..- Hlli1Jackle~~l , :1. Jomle
Eall tVlnom County)
8011 Meler •l. Kencla Clark (Vinton
County! 2: "-1. 2. Mldlelle Hart fFed..-al
IIQckh&gt;&amp;) , 3. 1(alrtna Tll""'r tMelp )
200lleter•l. Heelber Exll!le (Jocklllll)
28.0, 2. ROBDOI Davit (Melp)2t.l, 3. Kelly
Ro,. (Jackson)
3:110 Me1er1- Kanda Clark (VIIltoo
CounJy ) 13: 59.5, 2. Mldlelle HariiFederal
Hockinll) , 3. Nlti!Ole Oolel (Jadum)
. 16011 Relay·!. Wendy Bruntm, Kim
Lanharl, Brlllanl Phllllpl, Jenn~er Hill
(Jackson) ~ : 427, 2.. Vlntm County, 3.
Federal Hoeklns

,
.Bo,I.TMm-e
1. Jacksoo 147~ 2. Melp 93, 3. Federal

Hocking 8!1, 4, NelS&lt;IIvll~Yollt 69. 5.
VlnJoo Couaty 50, 6. Trimble 21, 7. North
Gall Ia 17, 8. Eas lern 9
t)lrlsTeam Bo0111t1
Pole VauiH. Mickey Cozarl !Federal
1. Ja&lt;Uao 130, ~- Melli' 121, :J. .Vlntoo
llocklnal 1~. 2. Cllrll Arllo (Jacksm), 3.
County 107, I. Fed..-al Hocklnl 68, 5.
Shane Brown tJackaaol
.Eutern 30, 6. NeliDivUie-Yori&lt; 25, 7.
Stiot Put·! . Jim Monk tNelsmvtlleTrlmble9, 8. North Gallta 6
Yool&lt;l 51-1 12, 2. Chad Cilmmln•
Hlp Jump-1. Deanna Haw tMelssl
· tNelsonvtlle-Yori&lt;
3. Heath O'Neal
U, 2. Jenni PlerSOII !Federal Kockln&amp;l, 3.
(Jacklcn)
Debbte Brooks tEulern)
Lo1111 Jump- I. Mike Cremeaas (Melp)
D!lcUs-1. Nancy Baker tMeiKS ) 86-11, 2.
1!1-11, 2. Tom Rled tVtnllll Counly), 3.
Jeney Pleroon (FedOI'al Hocking), 3.
Brlln Mayle (Feda-al Hocklntll
Lelltla ~!linger (Eastern)
HIJh Jump-StelaD Conner 1Nel100vllleLO~ .h nnp-1. Ronnea Davis tMelp) 15
Yo11&lt;) :;.s, 2. Micky Coraro (Fed..-al
·712, 2: AmY Wagner (MeiSS! - 3. Chrlsll
Hocklllll) 3. Andy Graham (VIntm
Tale (Federal Hocking)
· .
County !
.
•
Shot Put·l . !';elllna CO!ll&lt;r &lt;Jackson )
· Dtscus-1. Heath O' Neal 1Jacks"'i118-3
33-10·12, 2. U&gt;ra Hahn tJaci&lt;S(lll), 3. Nancy
34, 2. Jim Monk INelsonvllle-Yorl&lt;), 3.
Ba~OI' (Meigs)
Chad Cummlns INeiS&lt;IIVIlle-Yorlc)
32011 Relay·i. Tracy JiaiUI!, Linda
32011 Relay-! . Oeorge Colema n, TOdd
Dlxon, .J•ml East, Kendra Clark IVtntcrt
Bartm, Kirk Krlder, Kellh Eubanks
Counly)ll:oi.l , 2. Meigs. 3. Jacksoo
(Jackson) 9: 18.1, 2. Feda-al Hocking, 3.
100 Meter Hurdle&amp;- 1. Jennlfer Taylor
Melg$
tMeliSI 11.2,. 2. Lora Hahn tJacks"'), 3.
110 High Hurdl.,.. , Matt Barrell tJack·
Missy V•nover (Vlntm County)
soo) 16.1, 2. Tom Catnpbell ~NelSMvtlle-­
. lOOMeter•t. Heather ExUne (JackSon)
Yool&lt; l . 3. Chris Argo tJacksoo)
13.3, 2. KeiUDa CO-r 13.1, 3. Ronnea
100 Merers-1. Craig Jarvis (Federal
Dovl.o (Molp)
Hocking ) 12.2 2. Charles Peak !North
8011 Relay-1. KeiUna cooper. Wendy
Gallla i ,3. Jared Spencer tEaa.,rn)
Bruntm, Lora Hahn, Heather Exline.
1600 Meters-!. Jeff Roberts (Jackson)
Kelly Ro"' tJacksoo) I : !15.5, 2. Vlntoo
5:08.0, 2. Todd Barlow tJackson l. 3.
Cou,.y 2:00.2, 3. Meigs 2: 0:!8
Naohan Balay tMelp),
·
1600 Meters-1. i.lnda Otxm (Vintm
400 Relay-Matt Barnett, Keith.Eubanks.
County· ) 6;07.2, 2. Lee Ann Redovlan
Ryan Mapes, Chris Argo(Jackuon)41.1, 2. ·
(Easter.n) , 3~ Tracy Ratcliff {VInton
Meigs, J. Federal Hocking
County)
400 Mei:ers·l, ~urtl! English (Meigs )
. 1011 relay· . Kelly Rose, Jennifer IIIII, 55,5, 2. J&lt;ellh Eubanks (Jacksool, 3. Joe

DESPITE A sleady drizzle and cool temperatures, the elgbth
. annual Melp Invitational Track meet was beld Saturday with
Jaekson taking borne top honors In both the boys and girls .
dl\olslona.

•

42.0, 2. Tom Campbell ( N eiS(I"'Yill ~ Y ork,

Kurtis English tMeigs)
3200 Meters-Jeff Roberts tJ ackJ cn) .
10:072, 2. Todd Barlow tJacksoo l, 3. P .J .

3. Jell Conklin !Trimble )

Chad\1/elltMelgs),

Walker (Federal Hocking).

300 Hurdle5·l . Matt Barmett ~acksoo )

...

1600 Relay-1. Jas(ll Williams, Jeremy ·
Mas !ie. Tam Ftetd. Shanncr~ Jardari ~

800 Meters-1. Tom Reid (Vintcr~ County!
MU, 2. ShannooJorden (VlplonCounJy ),
3. Ceol'ge Coleman -(Jackstnl
200 Meters-1 . Mau ' Barmett (Jackson I
21.9. 2. Craig Jarvi$ !Federal Hocking) ,3 .

(V.ntoo County) 3 :51 .5, 2. .,T acksm. 3.
Meigs

.'

briefs· ---Whales 12-llln a Central League
game at Yokohama, Japan. Joey
Meyer, fonnerly wltli tbe · Mil·
waukee Brewers, sma~ed a
three:run homer and teammate
Jlrri Paclore.k ripped a solo
homer lor the Whales.

Tribe sweeps pair from Texas Rangers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
first game belonged to· the
hitters. In game 2, the pitchers
took oyer.
But whether they were using
their bat~ or relying on their
arms, the Cleveland Indians got
the best of the Texas- Rangers
Sunday. Cleveland swept a dou·
l)lelieader from the Rangers,
winning 'the first game 9·5 and
tak!ni the nightcap 3·0 as the,
Indian~ Improved to 13·11, ,their
be!lt record of the year.
There were seven home runs
hit In the first game, with four
coming from .Cleveland hitters,
Including two off the hot bat of
Candy Maldonado that ac·
counted for five RBI. Brook
Jacoby and Sandy Alomar also
homered for the lndlans, while
Rafael Palmelro, Ruben Sierra
and Harold Baines hit solo shots
for the Rangers .
.
In the second game, Jeff Shaw
pitched 6 2·31nnlngs to earn a win
In his !lrst major league start,
and Doug Jones pitched the final ·
D\IO frames to earn his ninth save
of .th.e year. Bobby Witt, 0-4,
struck out 10 and walked three In
7 2·3 ll!nlngs for Texas.
Shaw struck out five and
walked two.
t:eiJX,Fermln drove In two runs
with a second-Inning double In
the second game and scored In
the eighth on a single by Cory
Snyder that stopped an 0-23 skid
by the Cleveland right fielder.
"I really can't put It Into wortlll
how It feels," said Shaw, who
gave up four homers In relief

against Toronto last Monday.
"Get that first win out of the way
In the first · start and go frlim
there. I was a lot more relaxed
today than I was against the Blue

Jays.,,

Fermin's double c~e on 11
changeup with.the Tel(as outfield
playing him to hit to right field
ag~lnst the hard·throwlng Witt.
But the right-handed hl~ter waIted on the pitch and sept the ball
down the left field line to:knock In
Jacoby and Joel Skinner.
' 1He probably wishes he didn't
throw lt. I probably wish ·he
dldn' I throw II. He was throwing
a couple pitches better than the
changeup;" said Texas manager
Bobby Valentine.
"It wasn't a good pitch In that
situation," Witt admitted. "I
should have come back with a
. breaking l;lall: He had just. fished
at a slider out of the strike zone."
Tom Candlottl, 4·1, ·pitched
~ven Innings to pick .UP the win
in the first game, and Jesse
Qi·osco gave up . two runs In the
final two Innings to earn his
second save. Brian Bohanon, 0-1,
was the loser.
Maldonado's three-run homer
In the flrstlitnlng gave Cleveland
a 4.0 lead, with Carlos Baergll
getting the first RBI. Sierra hit a
solo homer In the second, Ju Uo
Franco had an l'tBIIn!leld single
In the third and Palmelro hit a
solo homer In the fifth as Texasnarrowed the Cleveland lead to
4·3.
.
In the bottom ,of the fifth,
Maldonado homered with

A FRIENDLY FACE IS BACK HOME
J.R. (Jerry) BIBBEE ·
GENERAL UNAGEI

•

(UBPSUI·III)
A Dlvloloe of Malllm ... lo lac.

every

Published
allonll)(ll, Monday
lllr'"'P Friday, 1U Court St .. Pomeroy, Oblo, by tile Olllo Valloy Publishing ConlpanytMuHbriodla, Inc.,
Pomel'oy, Oblo '57ell, Ph. 992·2156. ~
cond dna po~tage pald It Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Member: UDited Pnn International,
lnlond Dally Pr. . AIIGI!ialloUDd the
Oblo
Aoodatlon. NatloMI
Mvertli~DJ
reo•taUve, Bran~m
Now11J8pas; 133 T1drd Avenue.
Now York, Now York 111017.

"""';E

POSTMASTER: Sood- cllonpa
to 'llle Dally Salllod,

Pl&gt;meroy,QIIo-

m.Court St.,

!llJIII!CIIIPTION I.ATBI
•• , carrtor
.. -..............
· - .$UO
One Week
.... ... .............
One Month ....... ......................... .$6.10
One Year ................................. $72.80

liNCH.- COPY

PUCII
DoUy. .. ., .......... ......... ,........ , .. 211 tnt1
SUbacl'lberl not.doalrlqto pay tbocar·

8:/.. remit ln advance dl.red to

-· ...-..-··- . . . ....
oli~Seatblllona3,tor!J..-II

No aublerlptloaa by maD permitted Ill
.,.__looiMCarrllr-11
aVailable.

- -.. Daollr· at.x
.
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u,._-.-..Daoo~r
....................................JO

Spain's Jose-Marla Olazabal
shot a 3-under-par 63 to take a one
stroke lead In the third round of.
the $557,500 Benson 'anti Hedges
In ter118tion41 gplf tourJ!Bment In
St. Mel lion, England. Olaza bal.'
went to 206, lO.Under-par, ..one
shot clear o! Brtton Ian Woos·
nam, who also pos led a third·
round 69 for 207. Overnight '
leader Mnk · McNulty dropped
three strokes.tn the lastllve holes
to card a l-over 7.3, leavlng'hlm a\
7-under209.
,
'"
'
Soecer'
In Brussels, FC Brugge won
the 1990 Belitan Soccer League
ChamploDI!blp. The team ta:
tal led !16 points In 33 rounds.with
76 goals to edge AnderJecbt with
one. week left In the regular
season. .. . KV Mechelen con; ·
firmed that manager Fi Van
'
!fool slped to stay on one more
year and Dutch Rene Eykel·
kamp, form!!riY ·with FC Gronln·

gen,

ltped a three-year COR·

tra~;

E)'kellallllp wiD replace
John Bolman who llped with
PSV Elndh~~~~en, Is did hla
Mecllelen leamniate Erwin Koem&amp;... brother of FC Barcelona

mWJ lder Ronald Koeman....

Real Madrid eaded the SpaDIIb
10ecer LeiiiW' INSCII defeating
Ovle4o 5-2. Valencia took tbe
nmner·IIP 1pot, alne po1Dt1 ~
b~ 1\eti, after l!.e&amp;ttna Lb-

..........................., rrs.e
aw.-..................................
: p1111e14-0.
·~

--.·-

Baerga on base for a 6·3 lead.
Cleveland scored three more
runs In the e lghth on Jacoby's
two-run homer and a solo shot by
Alomar.
The Ranger£ got two runs olf
Oroscg In the ninth on the Baines
and Jack Daugherty's
home
sacrifice fly.
Maldonado aggravated a .
strained musclo: In his side In the
eighth Inning and left the game.
He did not play lil the second
game .
'"Every time I hit the ball I fell
a sharp pain," said Maldonado,
who Is hitting .337 'with seven
home runs and 20 RBis . " All day
long I wanted to use my hands
and swing hard at one pit.c h."
Candlottl said a 4·0 first Inning
lead allowed him to relax,
although he did give up the two
·
solo homers.
'
"I guess you can say as long as
they're solo home runs they 're
not going to hurt you," CandlottJ

said. ' 'They're good hitters with
pop. When you get ahead llkethat
early In the game you can Just "
concentrate on throwing strikes.

run

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

$2.75

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'l4 KARAT
GO.LD.&amp; STERLING.
SILVER SALE!
RESCHEDULED FOR

WEDNESDAY, MAY 9th
9:00 A.M.•S:OO P.M.

GQI

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The Dally ·

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baoll. Cieolli Will be pveti carr!• each

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The

By United Press Irilernatlonal '
Today Is Monday, May 7, the 127tb day of 1990 with 238 to toUow.
The·moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
Scottish philosopher David Hume · In 1711; English poet Robert
Browning In 1812; German composer Johannes Brahms In 1833;
Russian composer Peter Ilylch Tchalkovsky In 1840; Western actor
Gabby Hayes In 1885; poet Archibald Macl.ellh and Yugoslav leader
Jo~~ef Broz Tlto, both In 1892; actor Gary Cooper In 1901; -Edwin !!.and,
Inventor of the Polaroid Instant camera, In 1909 (age 81); actor
, Darren McGavin In 1922 (ap;e 681; actress Anne Baxter In 1923·

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The Daily Sentinel

Today in history

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Reuter; · Ambassador to Gallla
United States. government anq to . our,flag and th;it the present !lag
County, Robert Wingett; Ambasrepay this money on a: 50 year · would become obsolete. One
sador to Athens County, Maxine
basis. He further stated that the
possible solution -put the State
Griffith; Ambassador to West
of Meigs In the Southeast corner
United States government actu·
VIrginia, Wally Bradford; Amof the star representing Ohio.
ally gives millions of dollars to
bassador to Kentucky, James
Another !actor to be consicountries In Eastern Europe,
Clatworthy; · Director of Mentill
dered Is who would be qualllled
South America, Central_.A!ner·
Health, Dr. Will Childs; Envoys
for the State offices. All o! the
lea, Panama, Israel and otber
to the Vatican, Paul Simon and
members agreed that Lionel
foreign countries without expec·
Katie Raub; Wildlife Commls·
Boggs
should
be
governor,
lor
tatlon of repayment, so why not
,.
..
two reaspns.
asll the Federal govent~ent fo~ a
SlOI!!\r, ,HPf,~.~e, ~aJ;r;, !)IJ:!!!;Ior \),f 1.,
EPA, George (Jack) Warner; .
1) That he Is qual!.!led bY his
$2 TrUllon loan .or grant. It will
being the best bull-shooter In the · Secretary of State, Otis Knopp; ·
take less than two days for the
county.
·
i'ott Laureate, Jeff Hllleary and
U.S. to print this tnoney.
.
2)
It
has
been
embarrassing
to
Sup••.rlntendant
of Insurance,
Question: Who would finance
Do
Mullen.
Lionel
to
bow
to
his
brother
In
the Lithuanian Government In Its
law, General James Hartinger
because o! time lln'lltatlon the
pursuit of Independence? You
on each occasion that he sees
club voted to ~nslder at the next.
guessed It - Uncle Sam.
meeting Jhe following positions:
him. Now If Lionel Is Meigs State
Another question: Wouldn't It
Governor, General James Har·
State Auditor, two Uillted States .
be better to have this money
Senators, United States Reprelinger would have to bow whE:n he
spent on the new State of Meigs
sees Lionel. This would allow
sentatives, members o! the State
than the country o! Lithuania?
Lionel to regain his dignity.
Legislature and Supr~e Court.
Answer:. Yes!
Frank W. Porter was, by
Any suggestions any reader
Without the necessary funding,
may have as to qualified persons
all of the offices o! the State of unanimous agreement, the most
to fill these offl~;:es or to add or
Meigs would probably have to logical candidate for Secretary
serve without compen$atlon lor of War, since he Is a West Point subtract to the list of candld~tes
and offices, please contact any .
at least five years. Most, If not graduate. Porter's first ilppoln\·
all, would serve without pay for ment would be I. Carson Crow, as . men:tber ~f !be 9J¥'!G pub, P ,O. '
Box 668, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
the honors· Involved: What ari Adjutant Generiil, who would be
In charge .of the new Ohio River P)ease do not hesitate In express·
·honor this would be.
Anotber point which might Canal surrounding . the State of lng your views on this lmporlan t
decision otformlnga new State of
,
cause a problem Is that without Meigs' borders.
There was divided opinion as to Meigs.
the ne.cessary funding, any lndl·
GB&amp;G Club
vlduals on state welfare would who should be Secretary of Meigs
Tom Reuter, President'
have to be cut off due to the lack Navy. The majority voted for
of funds . This would mean the Dottle Turner as the new ~cre­ Fred W. Crow, .Recordlrjg
Secretary
county would lose about one- tary of the Navy.
Pete Shields was the approved
P.S. Con!uslus Crow once said
third to one-half of Its population.
This would Indeed be a terflble candidate for Secretary of Agrl· -!! 'you can't lind humor then
blow to the new state.
culture and Ted Reed as Chancel· Invent lt.
·· Fred W. Crow Is a Pomeroy
lor of the Exchequer.
It WOIIld appear that the United
States government would seThe following were approved attorney and 9CCas1onal contribriously oppose a new state for as outstanding candidates to the utor of columns to The Daily
many reasons. One Is that we offices:
SentinD.l.
Ambassador at Large, Tom
would have to add another ~tar to

In my public talks recently, I
Just now the environmentalhave frequently been asked to
lsts are having everything their
own way, and the cost of their
discuss the Impact of the end o!
the Cold War on the Republican
agenda Is seldom considered at
Party (or on conservatism; all.Even'someconservatlvesare
which Is the worldvlew that .bemused. , But'the cost Is there, ·
currently dominates the party).
nevertheless, and It Is large A lot of liberals are apparently
and growing. Before long, Amerltelling each othe'r that "anticans wUI notice they are paying
communism was the glue that
more lor their cars, because the
held the conservative movement
environmentalists have mantogetber," and that co~mu- . aged to lobby .through Congress
nlsm's collapse wlll therefore
hugely expensive limitations on
cause the movement to fall
emissions.
apart, with gratifying damage to
Abortion Is a more difficult
the unity and prospects o! the problem tor the conservative
GOP.
movement. COnservative act!·
Unfortunately the tnajor pre- vlsts have generally opposed
mise of lhat syllogism Is false. It abortion, save In the familiar
Is not antl-communlam but anti- "bard cases": rape, Incest, and
liberalism that has bonded to- to save the ll!e of the mother. The
getber the great coalition called GOP under Reagan andBusb has
"the conservative movement": Inscribed that position In Its
the traditionalists, the moderate party platforms.
.
libertarians, the Cold Warriors,
But there ha's always been a .
the neoconservatives, the rell· .large element In the Republican
glous right. As long as liberalism Party (as distinguished, In this
remains viable, or at least visible case, from the conservative
-In the Democratic Party; ln the movement) that bas privately
colleges and universities, and In favored giving the mother the
. the major media - the coalition final word. This Includes many
that brought ltlowwUJhavegood suburban .couples o! yuppie .Ill·
reason to survive.
stlncts and cblld-bearln&amp; aee. as
There are; howevw, a ~uple of well as their Eplacopallan mothrelatively new Issues that create · ers with blue-tinted hair, whowUJ
stres~~es within the coalition. One
tell you (or at any rate have told
I$ environmentalism; theotherls me), privately, that II abortions
abortion.
.., are not fr_eely perrilltted we will

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Our sources estimate that
restrictive Texas trucking rules .
cost consumers nearly U bllllon
a year. The red tape o! the Texas . ·
Railroad Commission, which '
regulates trucking, has resulted
In a virtual In-state trucking
monopoly. Sources told our associate Dean Boyd that 10 large
Texas shippers co,ntrol upward or
95 percent of the market.
The legal monopolies and the
state red tape across the country
add up to a serious handicap for
tile United States In the world
trade market. America's com·
petltors know that they can ship
goods to us cheaper than we can
ship them to ourselves. A recent
European Community study of
trade barriers In the- United
States cited In-state .trucking
. regulations as one of the one o!
the major barriers that Inhibit
trade In the \!.S. domestic
economy.
Rep . .l'. Dennis Hastert, R·lll.,
has heard the horror stories and
Introduced a bill to preempt the
states' rights and estbllsh· unl·
form rules lor taxing trucks.
The states predictably are
crying foul, claiming that small
rural shfppers will be pushed out
the market and that blghway
safety will su!fer.

Statehood for Meigs ?__·-----,-_

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robbery , If trucking regulations
were organiZed crime, then
Texas WO\Ikl be the godfather.

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.Jackson cops top honors in· Meigs· meet

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r;-t4iSS TJ{a CoHHieS.
daPaM BaSMilo.IG dUST
i$M'T Tfle 5aHe.1'HiH&amp;.

'

Jack Anderson

Antonio to Lubbock, Texas, 200
mUes ·closer.
In 1989, the Motor Carrier Act
deregulated trucking between
states, but In the spirit o! states'
rights, the Jaw · left In-state
trucking up to local officials. The
result Is that commerce moves
relatively freely on truckS.travel·
lng between states. But a shipment between two points In the
same state Is a nightmare.
Compa.nles that rely on the
roads for shipping say the state
taxes are tantamount to highway

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Scoreboard. ,

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OF~GGESTED
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5
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.,

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~' S...i Pri..lt Rooms

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llotictiv~• monu

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time pbysiallt.erljliltl

All'( •s.Mcll
lith• II I' llif.VUppawd

446-7ll2

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. · Gallipolis, Ohio

·

CHOOSE FROM ..... lings, ·Charms, Bracelets,
Earrings, Chains, Plus Much More.
_,...

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' PRESCiiPTION SHOP '
992-6669
217 leu II: S.COIICI
••••••,., Ol:lo

�Page ·4-The Daily Sentinel

- -. ,_' --.;'").-. -«:-]!kction day dinners ...,_........_
~- ....-

Calendar
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ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock church. 'Menu Will include ioup,
Springs Church' will Have an saridwtches, and pie. · ·.
election day dinner on Tuesday . '
Carryoutwtllbeavallable. Brlng
am er 0 .rnee . · · •
own _c ontainers. Menu will InPOMEROY - The Meigs
elude vegetable and bean ~oup, County Chamber of ·eommerce
sandwiches and pie. ·
·
will meet Tuesday at noon at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens,
RACINE .:.. The Racine United Center . Guest speaker will be
Methodist Women will have an Bob Huff, executive director for
election day dinner on Tuesday the Athens Area Chamber of
beginning ,at 11 a.m. at . !he Commerce. All members are
urged to attend.

·C'h

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
-The Columbia 1'ownshlp Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the fire station.
LETART TOWrfsHIP- The
LeiJlrt Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
office building.
'
.
RACINE -The Racine Vlllage
Council , will meet Monday at 7 ·
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

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VOTE FOR
.·&gt; WRITE~IN CANDIDATE

JEFF THORNTON
FOR

SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees wlll meet
Monday at .7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal building. ·,

.

MIDDLEPO~T-The OH KAn

se::~IPOLIS -W~en All~~

a.

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MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Local Band Boosters will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. In the high
' school band room.

Coln. Club will meet Monday at 8
p.m. at aur)leit Barber Shop In
Middleport. There, Will be a coln
auction and officers will be .
elected. Refreshments will ~ .

The Daily Sentinef-Paga 6

Monday. Mev 7. 1990

WINNER- Guy Eugene Bing II, Syracuse, son .
of Mr. ~d Mrs. Guy Bing, was the winner of the
contest to 'nlmle lhe Meigs County Bookin.oblle, He
cho~~e '.'Dream Machine. •' Students from all over

B.'

_the county participated In the contest. Presepllr!ll:
Bing with his prize Is Sharon Mattox, an employee
on the bookmobile. Bing received ·the ''Litile
Library_of Dinosaurs" by Isaac Aslmov. •
,•

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_lenn,erhasset topic . of herbal_ists;

· wlll meet Monday at 6 p.m. for a ·
mother-daughter banquet ·at · .' , Ray Swick, of the Blennerhas- County Museum with Janet . Park at Raven'sw~Od. ~.Va.
Dale's Restaurant iJI' Ga(Jip&lt;ills.. sett Museum and Mansion, pres- Thelus In charge.
Members were urgecf' to do ·
companion .planting such as
· Pearl Mays will be the speaker;· en ted a slide show ofBJennerhas'
.
settlslandat theAprllmeetingof
It was noted 'that now Is the planting garlic near roses or
, SYRACUSE - The Sl'~acuse . the River· Valley Herbalists held time to plant perennials. Annuals raspberries, which wards off the
PTO will meet Monday at ·7 p.m. · at the home of Jan . Gerhold, such as dill, basll, and summer Japanese beetle.
at the Syracuse Elementary · Ravenswood, W.Va.
savorycanbeplantedlnMay . It
During the meeting It
School.
• Conl!le Hill reported during the was stated that marigolds and noted that cooking with herbs can
business meeting that cookbooks calenzula can be used In ·soups reduce the need for salt, and
TUESDAY
are available_at the Pomeroy, ana sauces calllng for saffron, Connie H!ll reported · on the
POMEROY -Catharine New- , Ravenswood, . acd Ripley and that they add much 'to the progress of the mennerhassett
berrY will be'the guest speaker at libraries. ·· '
color. of your garden. 'li was aiso herb garden.
·
Tuesday's meethig of the PomeBobbl Karr reported on the noted that red bee balm makes a
Refreshments of !leer bread
roy Flame Fellowship at 7 p.m'.
plantlrig of the herbs at the.mlnl nice Fourth of July bouquet with -with herbs, vegetable dip, and
at the senior citizens center.
park in Pomeroy, and Heritage blue and white bachelor buttons. spiced cookies, were served by
Days, June 9 andiO, was noted
On May 22 the· Ravenswood JlllKnopp,SusieHIII,andDebble
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
and the group will have a display Grade S&lt;;hool fourth grade stu- Gilmore.
Springs Church will have an
of herbal Items at the Meigs dents wlll tour the Riverfront
·election day dinner on Tuesday.
Carry out wlil be available. Bring·
own containers. Menu will include ·vegetable and bean soup,
sandwiches apd pie.
confllct In schedu llng.
The Xi Gamma.EpsUon .Chap- seven-year-old boY In Atlanta,
i
' J
• ':·
" ... -- · -----Ga.
who
has-leukemia
is
wantlpg
·
ter, Beta Sigma PhJ Soror!tY met
·'
1
,CHESTER -The Chester
, 'I
recently at the senior citizens to be In the ,Gulness Book of
Town·shlp Trustees · will ,·meet
World Reeords for recelv.tng the
center in Pomeroy . .
Tuesday In the Masonic Building
most get well cards.'Cardscan be
·
A
thank
you
card
w'as
read
at .7: 30 p.m:
from Barbara Crow for the sent to Craig Shergold In care of
.
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wedding gift she received from the Chlldran' s Wish Foundation,
•RACINE- The Racine United
Methodist Women will ahve an ' the chapter. A thank you was Suite 100, 32 Permenuto Center .
•
received al'so from Susan Wolfe, East, Atlanta, Ga. 30346.
election day dinner on Tuesday
111 SecoRd St., Pomtro,'- ,·
.
The
next
meeting
will
be·
the
·a
·
student
from
Eastern
High
beginning at 11 a."'. at the
17
at
the
annual
picnic
on
May
School, who is at tending the
church._ Menu wllllnclude soup;
YOUR INDEPENDENI;
Goodwill Ambassador program home of Sonya Wolfe at6: 30 p.m.
sandwiches, and pie.
AGENTS SERVING
in Europe. She thanked the Members are to meet at the
London
Pool
to
ride
to
the
party.
·
chapter for Its donation to help
MBGS COUNTY
HARRISONVILLE -The HarIt was noted that the Mother's
her with expenses to attend this
I'Isonvllle Senior Citizens will
SINCE 1168
Tea has been cancelled due t.o a
progra111.
have a blood pressure clinic on
.
A letter was iead from InternaTuesday from 10 a.m. to noon at
!he jownhouse. The public Is tional concerning a college scholarship fund- being· formed In
Invited to attend.
memory of a member of Beta
. ·~ POMEROY - The Mwlgs Sigma Phi In New York. DonaCounty Chamber of Commerce tions are being accepted through
·
will meet Tuesday at noon at the the International office.
It was also mentioned \that a
Meigs County Senior Citlzens

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. RACINE :COMMinEEMAN .
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Paid for by Candidii~,Jefl Tltointiln, Box 154, 5th Street, Racine. Oh. 4ffil

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PONDEROS4
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,: S.TEA.KJIOUSE .

at
Memorial Hbspllal. HeresTina
Nelgler, R. N. draws the blood for tile teet.

CHOLESTEROL CIIJCK....., Fraaces .Roberlilof
• Raciae was olle of more than 210 who got their
cholesterol c~ecked during Sunday's ope11 house

~

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with the Rev. Clyde Henderson. Tbe resulla of the .
--test were available within an hour after the'blood
was drawn.
·

REviEWING RESULTS -Bobble' Bobstetter,
R.N. loag-tlme n•iM at VeteraasMemorlal, aail
Saady lannareiU of tbe Melp BrBIICh. Amerleaa
Heart Auoclatlon, review eholeslrollesl results

·was ·

Sorority chapter meeting held recently
~-

DOWNING CIQLDS
MULLEN MUSSER .

INSURANCE :;

'

~~ .Jo,B liiTE-- Bob BroWn, dlrect4;1r of the
. , Ohio Depiarbnent of Mental Retardation, while In
Melp· County receatly, visited tbe Subway on
West Main !lt., a local training alte used by '_the

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raised from the Easter bake sale
for work on the bell tower of the ·
church ·at the recent meeting of
proup II of the First PresbyterIan Church held at the home of
Mrs. Myron Miller. ·
: Catherine Brown, cochairman, corlducted the meetIng which opened with prayer. .
'
, Kathryn Miller gave roll call,
collected dues, and also gave the
treasw-er's report.

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'Lwnnle Haptonstall read from
the book of the Least Coin, and
the least coin was taken.
· Devotions, "The Chipped ·
Cross"·were given by Velma Rue
in theabsenceofDorothyMorrls.
The book study was gpven by
Elizabeth Burkett, "How to Han-·
die Rejection."
The closing prayer was given
by Catherine Brown.
Mrs. Miller served cake and
Ice cream to the eight members
present.
·

tNNER ONLY

•

·IDinillfl loom Only)

$ 3 25
·'

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

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POMEIOY, OH. •

F~rlng ~dly

fried Chick•

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Featuring delicious soups,
fresh garden salads and ·
saladlixing's, side dishes
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IEDDING GERANIUMS
lEG. '12 NOW S950

:· 4 IN. GERANIUMS leg. SJ.OO

' 85c EA.-

10 FOR 5710

H.URRYI Coupon Expires 5112190

·4 IN •. HARDY MUMS log. 11 .00
·NOW

85c oa. - 10

FOR S750

_ ' 10 IN(H HANGING BASKETS
: lEG. SSJO NOW $450 ·

Sirloin lips
Din•r .· ·
Includes potato .
garlic toast and Ponderosa's
All-You-Con-Eat Grand Buffee

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$5 75

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iiUIIAID'S GIHNHOUSE
SYUCIII, OliO

"Ciaire M. 'Ball, Jr. will be·an outstanding state senator for southern Ohio. He
will use.his talents and knowledge of state government to bring cittel}tion to. ...
the needs of his constituents'and his district ... '
William B. Saxbe
'Former U.S..~enator and U.S. Attorney General
'

,.

HI-J7n .

0

8-1· Sun. 1-1 .

P11 d lor h \ HHII!or

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Republicans' Best Choice For
Ohio Senate

furl~l

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'

ENDORSED BY:
.! Ohio Right To Life
.! Ironton Tribune
.! Ohio Assn. of Public School·
. Employees, Chapter 557
1
'.! Lawrence·County Republican Party
.! Former State Senator Oakley Collins
,.
'

On May 8

GALLIPOUS
UPPER RIVER RD. - IT. 7
(Auoss from tht Airport)

Vote For

.

* Lawrence County Sheriff since 1981
* President, Tri-State Law
Enforcement Cmmcil
* Director, Anti-Drug Air Sho~
* Graduate, Ohio University and FBI
National Academy
*U.S. Army ReserveVeteran
* Member: Christ United Methodist
Church; Buckeye Sheriffs Assn.;
Ohio Farm Bureau
* Lifetime resident of Lawrence'
County
*Married: wife, Janet; children,
Daniele and Tyler

as your next State S~nator

CHARBROILED

.£xperi.e nce is the diHerence/

.

Dan Hieronimus

Dan Hieronimtls

lEG. 16.50 Flab NOW 1511
:

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That's what can happpen if you elect

·

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···-~·-············

All B£DDING PL~NTS
3 PIS 5100

· Nojlrea of the State has been more neglected
th!ln Athens, Gailia and Meigs CoWlties.

Plild for by comrntnee far Mner ftre prOWot6on In Orange Town1hlp,
Lim• Lyo ... ChllrfNif'l, P. 0 . lox, Tupp.,. Pf•na. Ohio

(304) 675-1244

"·Legislator of the Year"-

-...... .................

:'2016 A,,l,_m,g $,,1,1 $1l1

Your continued •upporl will be very much appreciated.
Thank ~ou.

In Orange Township

Four Term County ·
Commissioner
Village Ooundlman
School Hoard .
Member&amp; Clerk
Tl&gt;wnship Clerk
20 Years Banking
. Experience
.12 Years Re.p!-'blican
County Chairman

•

Meo.ontolle&lt; Taa net onduciiO Yllod II
· IJ'flo0potl"'9t:ulons. Pncnma¥•8fJ

;.HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

\\WE HAVE HEARINC AIDS"

.

Richard E. Jones ... E?Cperienced,
Responsible Leadership for the '90's!

.Vote For A Strong Voice For
Athens, Gallia and Meigs .Counties.

' PLEASE VOTE
On ·A New Levy For

FIRE PROTECTION

.

Valid: Mon. thru Sot; '
11 am -.4pm
Coupon tOOCIIOf fii'Y peny tlze.CIMOI oe
used "con'bl'lat101'1 .,., lf'Y CJIIIef coupDI"' 01

In addition; "the drying up of
Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades has created a ,lot of stress
among gators because they're so
packe&lt;! together," In the few
areas Where there Is water, Hord
said.
About 1 million alligators occupy 6.7 million acres of habitat
In the state.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
'

•

•••••••••••••••••••
.
HURRY/
5112190

.

· PlEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

;

WITH COUPON BEL!)W

-~

JOHN A. WAD., M.D., lric,

•
'
'

'.'.

AII•You•Con•Eot

· ' The New Life Di·ama Team,.
Cleveland, wlll:present a special
_Service on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
at the Rejoicing Life Church, 333
1'1, Second Ave. , Middleport.
· The group consists of four men
imd three women dramatists.
the Drama Team Is a special :
•ministry for youth and wlll be
_performtng skits. The skits deal
·with peer pressure, morals, and
v,:arlous emotions and problems
j)eople may experience In dally
living.
1
• Michael Pangle, pastor, ln\oltes the public. For more
!ilformatlon call 992-6249.

·"

,

-. (JGW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

;Drama team
"to visit church

:.
'

.

FOR JUST

Served with whfpped potetoee. chicken ·
gravy, cole.-. hot rolland butler.
·
Sorry, no aubatltuteo except beverage
with addltlonal'prlcea. ·

.

and lakes-In residential areas.
April to June, Is tradltionalo/,Its
~
"This Is the onset of the most active. The alligators are
courtship and mating season, · expected to be even more visible
and that means alligators are than usual this year because
_
•, GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI)- . more active," said Lindsey many of their traditional wilder.Hortl, a biologist with the Florida
: Wildlife officers are warntng Game and Fresh Water Fish ness habitats have dried up
during a 21-l'ilonth drought. That
~ residents to be on the alert for
Commission's Alligator Manage- has forced them to seek out new
. amorous, thirsty and stressedment Program.
bodies of water closer to residen; out alligators prowling canals
The gator mating season, from tial areas . .

Watch ·out for
: amorous gators

0'oup ·II to donate to bell tower
' .
: It was decided to use money

Melp Industries job . placement ·department.
Here he talks with Kathy . Bogp, Subway
manager.
.

NIGHT
SPECIAL

~nter.

'

VOLUNTEERS HONORED
- Volunteers llonbred at Carleton School Nlltlollal Volunteer Week were from the left,
Helen Bailey ,foster grarulpar·
enl; SuiiiUl Burge~~~~, volunteer; aad VIrginia Hanson,
foster vandparenla. :r'hey
· were pretented with plaques.
Unable to attend were Ruth
Francis, another foster vand-'
parent at the achool.

11' Dan Hieronimiis
For State Senator

1111 I,,'!

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•

Page 6-lha Daily Sentinel

Mondly. May 7. 1990

A Salute To
Veterans Ment.orial. Hospital
"Count On ·u$. to Care''
.

'

(WI!EK)
MAY 8·12,1880

May7,1990

Classifie
.

~-

•

\

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

nTLANDniE
SALES Gnd .
SEIYICE

L L HOLLON

742-3018

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

'

Words

Day s
I

Rate

16

t4.00
ee.oo

15
15

3
6

.20
.30
.42
.eo

t 13.oo

15

· Mont hly

.

19.00

16

10

ov, r t 5 Worcll

t1 .30/ d ov

.O&amp;/ d• v

Wa~nr~lildrt·

CIIESlii, OIIO

•Tire Sal••

RATES

i

SER~ICE

TRUCKING

•Front End

Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work
MAIN SY., llm.AND

radiators· and ,
hlattr' c••· We con !
.
.
ahe adcl boll 01111 rod 0111.
out r.tiotors. We olio
Employment Serv1ces
rtplir Gos Tanks.
1111'1

Uood--. ·-·

PAT HILL fOlD

985-4422

·

~·• • ' .'' fo• con .. outill-e 'r uns. broken u p d.,. swill bt: c h ..-ged

• ft e !Ceive &amp;.60 di•count for edi paid in .-dl!•nce.

•frtelldl - Oiv. .wey and Found tell und• 11 words l(itill be
run 3 diVI It no ch•ge.
' .
• Pri ce-Of td for all capital l • t•~ iii double price at ed c·o at .
• 7 poinUint type only uMd.
;
•sem:met il not rel pons;t,le tor error s lfttr first diV - !Chedl

2 ~ 1n

•Ads that must be ptid in

Heppy .Ads .

In Memor iam

Yltd S•l•

Memarv

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

THURSDAY PAPER

-

Emplllyrllt'rll
SPrvtt:I~S

'

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY ·

Me igs County
Are1 Code 614

Aru Code 304

.
nl

992- MiddiCIOrt

675- Pt. Plea..

98&amp;- Ch • l•r

676'- Apple Grove
773- Mason

Pomeroy

843- Portland

468- Leon

Downspouts

32 33 3436 '31-

a. Fenil ~•r

71 - Auto l for Sale
72- Truc:ka for Sale

a. 4 VVD 's

76 - Boau &amp; Motors for S•le
71 - Auta Parts &amp; Acc•sori•
77-- Auto R•palr
78 - Cemp lnv Equipmftli
79 - Cimp ers 6 Motor Home•

MobileHomn for Sale
Ferms for Sale
Busin•• Buitdings
lots &amp; Ac:r..o• ·
Rul E1tate Want• d

$1695 4 Qt. Max.
niE IEPAII
MOVII lENTAI
CONVENIIICE STOlE ITEMS

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMIS &amp; GAIAGES

937- Butfalo

41 - Houns lor Renl

42- Mobil• Hom11 for Rent

434445•&amp;4748 -

Get Reeuftc Fast

~49•2160

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160

and

TRIM

14 - Eiectricl' Aefrlg.,-atlon
85 - Gentfal Hauling

MOVAL ·.

HUCK'S CAl WASH

.

*FIREWOOD

· If you've never had any experience with hospitals, perhaps, and
under~tandably, you may be fearful. Or you may have had a negative
experience with a hospital at some point, leaving you with a feeling of
skepticism for all hospitals. On the other hand, you may view hospitals as places where you .can receive quality care provided by compe·
tent, caring individuals.
.
At Veterans Memorial Hospital, the staff'o fhighly.trained profes•
sionals has been taking care of people just like you for over a quarter
of a· century. We like to think of it as "our family taking care of your'
.
'
.
.
family."
Veterans Memorial Hospital stands ready at any fllOment of the

day or night- 365 days a year -to provide you and your family with
.the qu~ity of service you would expect 'f rom ~hose who are dedicated
. .
·to serving in the health care field.
. The staff at Vet~rans Memorial-.... your hometown ho~pilal.- is
always prepared to provide such services ·as 24 hour em:e,rgency car~, .
an urgent care center, in-patient and out·patient .surgery, a complete ··
· range of laboratory work and radiology, a speeiald care unit, a skill~
nursing facility for long term care, home health service in your o~n
residence, and physical therapy. We have the latest state-of·the·ar'f'
equipment to_help us in your care and treatment.
,
· If we can help you with any health problems, do give u&amp; a call' at.
992-2104.
.
.
.

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This Page is Sponsor:ed ByThese Many Fine Businesses ..... .
.

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Public NotiCe

PubliC Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
'
: DEPARTMENT OF
• TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo. Ohio
AprH 20, 1 990
Controct Saleo Legal Copy
;
· No. 90.482
IJNIT PRICE·CONTRACT
, 8ealild propooelo will Ill
r..alvod at tlla office of tile
Qjroctor of tlla Ohio Dopert·
rMnl ofTranopo!Utlon. Col·
ulnbuo. Ohio. untl 10 :00 A. •
M.. Ohio ' Stondord Time.
Tjreoday. Mey 22. 1990, for
irpprovementtln : •
!Malgo County~
Ohio,
on MEG-7·110.58). Stole
Route 7. by r•urfacihgwith
.,phelt concrete.
.
Proloctend work length H .i36 twt or 3.3&lt;1 milo.
: Pavement width- 22- ,
The Ohio Deportment of
T;antportllllon ·hereby not~
fleo ell bl-o that II wMiofo
flrmettvely inauN then In
lillY contract entered Into

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT Of
TRANSPORTATION ·
Columbuo. Ohio
APRIL 27. 1980
Contract Soloo legal Copy

~

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,,

P.\lriUIOt tO thll

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-6454
992-6455
· POMEROY, OHIO

992-2556 ·

~THE · .

-GRAVELY
SYSTEM

.Gravely Tractor

Middleport, Ohio

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply· Co.

992·5.4!

992-6611

Pomeroy, Ohio

heritage house
992-5627
Middleport, Ohi'

Pomeroy, Ohio

INSURANCE AGENCY .
Pomeroy, Ohio

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY
992-2955

. Pomeroy, Ohio
I

tf CO¥+
......... ,,..,IICIS, 1V'S, n.o.

992-3671

Pomeroy, Ohio

Crow's Family Restaurant .

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
992-2342

992-2174 .

Ohio

K&amp;C Jewelers
•

Pomeroy, Ohio

Smith-Nelson Motor_s, l~c.

SALES AND SERVICE

992-2975

Pat Hill Ford

·992-3785

· 992~2284

BANK ONf. ATHENS. NA ' A IJAifrOF THE CAlf/NO rEAM

Adolph's ·Dairy Valley

992~2196

Fabric ·sh,p ·

.Eighteen
. Thousand-ONE
People Who Care.

992-2057

.

Pleasers

'.

Prescription Shop
•

I

Company ·
Chester, Ohio

Brogan .· Warner
INSURANCE

certified check or ca~hier' a
check for en emount equal
tC! five p01 cant of hlo bid, but
In no event r:nore than fifty
thoueond dolloro, or 1 bond
fof ten per cent of hio bid,
P,oyoble to the Dlroctor.
; Bidder muot apply. on tile
proper forme, for quallfice·
tione It ...., ten dave prior

Pat Hill

Ingels Furniture.

Chrysler·Piymouth~D~dge

\.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Suge1r Run ·Mills
POIHroy, Ohio

992-2635

Middleport, Ohio

.

--

'Ohio

··

..

Fruth'~

,992-6491

Pharmacy:
. .

Nancy Morris

..... bolh .................

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

m..-:

...,.

--·· -· _loo...

prollwtod, It T-et!, 1M I ,.,.,...,. to~ uholnl
Me1da a 3'11 W... UntoiJ ·
Strool, Athono, OH 4!17U1, 0&lt; cal

---luloyo, . . . . ..
-.

lor

EVENINGS

Announcements
3

.

.

.

lice of tho Dlotrlct DllfiUty
Director.
·
The Pirector reaervea the
right to rojoct any end ell
bidt.

'

Bernard B . Hurst.

2

(~)

lnMemory .

SEARS
711 N. 2nd
IIDDUPOIT

rtthlh"'• tnoln llli tho1ormlnoi...On 11m&amp; hlo .• him k llo glory.

mil•. tomorrow he' I go bee*; Ttt• record telll
ttte et'Ory.

Two hundred

"')a ·TRAVn .

" PURSUIT
(614)
742-2027
r

1

· "Your
Connection~

.T;;.:~~fTravel"

ll'ltlot 1110_,_ ho-n .. .hla IIIIo. 8onlorlly ...O&lt;II&gt;oway
. . . . . . . . . . .11:

Tho .,. he ..,lea. tho wey ho wollto: An onaln- II moro

u... - .

Tho po11on. . •d tho oldll.. .d. . . .lo... "'do. •.aport•ao
..

Thell'lllfiCIIkanlfterworkMIIctone-Th•'•wh•m•••
ontln•·
- All--

WIIeMdf8mlly

- . , _, DEADLINI: 2:00 p.m.

'"" doy Ill .... tile ... lo to lUll.
lkoncllf -... • 2:00 p.m.

Fridoj. illo!'*J odlllon • 1:00
p.IIL lllfiHIY.

Pt.PleiNnt

. . . ---- -

•glnao
Part• fof llomollte.

--~-.Tltntton.

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CUNlC

MAINTENAN&lt;E I IEPAII

13.. l'ewoll St. ~~lopor11l

IAcr.,lr..,lltl ... lllrlft

(6141 992-7143

SPRIIIt SPHIAL

CLEAN, LU. &amp; tm

.

S1816

I

'
ALL Vord loloe -'lo Pold In

• VICinity ,

u.

.......
- WY.
-Ollon
· AI.
Houdor_.,
-

eoll

....Ito 001.

~May

CONN.'S
OHIO IIVEI
HEDSaiHI

EVERLASTINGS
. OPEN:
APRI I t•u JULY I
HOURI:
ThuN.
Sun.
10

,_ In

Pl-an.

4-ti-t mo.

lno, _ , o1t1oon
ilpjolo .. WY Ifill

--= .,:

......•.,.==til.........
Ctwn
.... I CIIJ,
, . Ohio
work -••,

......

I ...,...•

~

jlllili..O, . _ In

H$11rEWOrll • !lCJADS
CUAIItG

•

1

Chain

ISSI Wilt lliln,
h••r•y, Dh•.

"-

- .ololho~

- , !leo

:10.

......... - d..

Sign_. •-• to take a tklng...l mllllt, Wllt ...now .... ,.. . all
· cl...
Onemareaurw, MdfM¥ we'rehom.,_ Mybu-IDithtl Hfe

PARTB AND" SERVICE
FOr Moot 2 lfld 4-oyclo

"lOW

Ched!: 1he Mr, the , . , , . on the panll; Keep the power
smooth eftCI IMJmmlng.
·
Check the tpeed egein ..... e brak-. Touch, hMdlightt mov·
tng towtrd:
Nolch thii Wortle beck. 10me more; H.,• comet trouble

......

GlASS CmlfiG SIIYICI
S..wko Center • IOC
Pam attd S..wlat,

•NEW YdiiiUN I

209 Seuth 4th ~1.
Millllleport. Oh. '

ooundo o -n!nf:

~~·
Fifty mfl•
to go. 1nd a.nlng d•k No two tripe ....-n. the

ECHO

USID MOWIIS ·

th••'•

·-·

"""'"'·
oduft clolhl[lll,
boyoHo
24. ...Cho,
., """·
olld gllllr oil•: 1-12. 22 V1folon

.
3 Family: 12 Evorw
Holahlo.

LNATIOII
DAVE'S SIIALL
ENGINE IEPAII

PIODUClS

. aomething new. ·
·
11 you could alt beekle hfm. ..hlt ..,..; 8h•p...iocuted on the
roldehMd;
Al.-t 11 fNWV IJ'Om-.c, watclllno aignlll: R•ldv to ttC!~J when
It tum1 red .
·
Worry "ebout ... tlme. .• 'lhelllhedul&amp; Faa•. .. -,.t kNII h•
within the rulw;
WitCh tor crO.~~ng, c•• end 1rudl:t, The bu11n with kldl on
Wly to echoole.
U.t1n for ,.,..._. nollet ...the eng.n-. .......the buUir

2 Family Corport lolo: lllay 7 a
I; ..,., rain 08ncele. Lamp,

Larga -

CENTER

Good Reteo
T:L.C.

Gallipolis
• VIcinity

...... - · largo

.._&amp;laarliFer
Slnlor Cltlz- aiiCI •

If vall coukl ..eln•id• tim..•tiaten· He.-... thethlnga he hie to
do:
I "
The prkle he h&amp; thelo.d he thOIIW.~; On w...-y 1rip

ye• ..., ye•.

= 1 INSTALLATION

· EUM HOME

BEHIND THE TIIRCITTLE
lt't not rhealot'- hewe•l ... hle tide Senlortty .. ,orthewav
h.. . . . . h.....;
The grip he c~rl•. the w1y he waiQ; An engineer tl more
th.ntha .

•

=

992-2

IN LOVING MEMORY OF
RONALD LESTON MILLER, SR.

'

Dlroctor

7 , 14. 2tc

Business
Services

In them~Or lnepeell th•train•..acirw. Ok., ... NV lheltlgln•

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
MY DEAR
FRIEND,
THELMA
,SINf:S, .
'
MAY 7,1989

•

thouund dollare, or 1 bond

them out. 1 little further. One lilt• mow ctn c .... 1
wrecll. ·
'

In Memory ·

4112.
.
Ecllolng Mood o Rooldontlol.
Conlot, on ICF-IIA 1o -~~~ lor• .
ollconood-1-.U.,·

lor ,., per cent of h!o bid.
poyooblo to the Dlreator.
Bidder muot apply, oq tho
proper lormo, for quollllca·
tlono at 1-1 - dayt prior
to t~o dote ott for opening
bido In eccordence with
Chapter 61126 Ohio RIIYioad
Coda.
Ple.na end e,8clfle~~tlon1
ere on file In the Department

Str~h

2

·

toflvo percentofhlobld, but

A hu"*ed Cn ofh..,yc•go., ;thl hnah, Ea1yl .. .. chlll run• .
up hlo nook;

Mid.eport,. Ohio

EARN IIONEV Roodl.. -

t30,0001yr 1 - pooonllo~
Dolollo. (II . _ Ext. V•

in no event more then fifty

992~2156

·.

'

TOOL

•-mr.

check for en an,ount eqUII

.

• Each bidder ohall be required to file with hio bid 1

:MAKE IT ARULE... .
''USI: WANT' ADS.
AHAMW'

tu-·

,or
....pen~lmll
- -.
.pllld
F•ntMIIc
a....·..

of Tren•portatlon•ndthe of·

fprth In tho bldding-propo·

..

Ewing Funeral Home

ISA
WANT AD

• ''The dete Ht for compl•
tlon of thio work ohall be oet

a:

AVON
All · - · e.ll -lyn
.,
. ..,• 304-882-2141.

Eoch bidder oholl be required to file with hlo bid e
cwtl!ied chedl or -Iller's

ecfvert-

bldo in occordMce with .
Choptor 6525 Ohio Roviood
Code.
· Plan• ar~d apeclflcetlona
iro on' file in the Department
of Tranoportatlon ondtheof·
flee of tho Dlotrlct· Deputy
Dlrev~or.
'
Tho Diroctor reoervoo tile
right to rojoct env end oil
bldo. .
Barno rd
Hum.
Dlroctor
14) 30: 15) 7 ; 2tc,

.

forth In tho bidding propo-

an

Middleport Trophies
992~6128

......

award.
, "Minimum wage rat• for
thi• projoct hovo bo• pre·
dotorminod ao required by
l• w and ere Nt forth In the
bid propoul."

'

EMPunER.

· to .

21~~ :

Pavement width - veri•
~·ne dete 1ft for completion of iht. work oh.oll be 111

race. color. or national origin
il)
con•kleration tor

......

992-62!~.~-~armo.

992-2269

Na. 90.1103
Tuoadoy, Moy 22, 1990, for
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
improvement a in :
8eoltd propooalo will be Gallla, Molgo, end VInton
recelvod at the office of tile , Counttt~, · Ohio on •ction
Director of the Ohio Depert· GAL-7·1.37 on Stele Routir
mlflt ofTranopo!Utlon. Col· 7 In Gollia County and other
um,!luo. Ohio, untM 10:00A . veriot.tt routes and tectiona
M., Ohio 8tendord Time, In Gelllo. Molgo end VInton
Countlea, by tile removal
and inlt811•1on of barrier reflectoro.
Projoct lanilth : 0 .00 feat
or 0 .00 mHo.
Work length - variouo
feet or various mile

THEBESl

510 2nd St. lllllllllporfl
For Appt. (all
992-6717 H01111 or
112

BILL SLACK

Public Notice

ment, minority buolneoo ... .
torprloeo wllllo afforded full
opportunity to eubmlt bido
In rnponn to thio Invitation
ohd will not be dlocrlmlnetod
ogolnot on tho groundo of

v

Ohio

992-6687

The Quality Print Shop ·
992-3345 - 992-3394
Ohio

·~

985-3301

Home National Bank
949-2210 '
......, .
. 992-6333
Ohio . . fDIC
Svracus•, ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Lu~ber

•

to the date Ht for opening

.

992-6669

Baum

Pomeroy, Ohio

.Middleport, Ohio

PubliC NotiCe

Moy

&lt;

RE -

*LIGHT
HAULING
.

87 - Upholltery

L••e

NO SUN!»AY

.

82-PI\olmblng • Htflling

86 - Moblle Hom• Rep1if

=- ~·

~algiiiNoodod. O.......

'* SHRUB· &amp; TREE

83- ~:lc.,•tinl

or lf4.7!W5tl -

llabplltor ·'" my - ..
3dapaweek,l11 418 21: • . •

••• . _ lltoit

"frM Eatlmat. ."

..

81 -· Home lmprowment •

hr'm a. tor Rent
Apart:ment for Rent .
Fyfhished Aooma
Spec• tor Rent
Wanttd to Rent
Equipm.nt tor Rent

C9 - For

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Day or Night

Se1v1ces

I

oVINYL,SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

"A I RtaMR..ilt Pric•t"

or Res.

CHISTD, OliO

45714. For. aPflllcotloll ond ,
lo-lon, ooll , _ . . . . , . , .

Al11 Triae•leel..
PH. 992·$612
• or 992-7121

PH. 949-210 1

St. Its. 7 &amp; 141

-loo

4--25-tfn

BISS.ELL,
BUILDERS

CHESTER
QUII STOP

AgE :lei. PO.Illon. ...,lng
-lotoly ond wlllllo fll1ed u ·
80011MnMdecl. .........h ~
ond orpollloa lr(
rwlonnt Hu...., lol¥- Por-;
-cal Col.,
Olflco,NeiHIMU.,
-~~~ TeclwllOhto ~ .

'-'Y Oltio

REPAIR

NO. SUNDAY

l;b1Dtnl

896- Lttlrt

IUSIIDSNINI
(6141 9'2·6SSD

949-2168

GREASE
&amp;
OIL CHANGE ;

Tr anspnrlal11111

31 - Hornn for Sal e
.

Phon•
Qable Billa Hwe

toCowltr
'
•~

D II I tnlllnlll of HuiMIII ........ '
Mid Child 8~ Enfoloee,..,. ~.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

flohi"l Suppll• · '

2·1-' 90'ho.

62 - Wanted to Buy
63- liv•alock
64.- Hav a Grain

73- Vana

lt. U4J

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

151 - Ferm Equipment

66- Seed

Ntw ~lion; .
161 North Second
Mlti ; 111, Oltio 45760

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

74- Motorcvcl•

247- Let•rt FaUt . 882-New Haven

949- Recine
7·2- RUtlend
667- Coolvitla

379- Walnut

What Do You Think When Someone :Mentions The Word, "Hospital"?

Mason Co .• WV

Wented

21 - Butin•• Opporrun it y
'22 - Mon~ to L.oen
23 - Pror.llonel Servic:"

tel~phone .exch~nges. ;·.

441- Gellipolis
387- Ch•hir e
311- Vinton
245-:Aio Grande
2&amp;8- GuVIn Dist.
643 - Arabie Ois t.

•

VETERANS .MEMORIAL HOSPITAL••• COUNT ON US .·To CARE

-

Classified pa[{es· cot'er th e '

.

•

- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDA Y

SUND4Y PAPER

Fnrm SlillliltP.s
&amp; livr:,luck

13'- ln•ur~nce
\
1 4- Buain• s Tre ining
1 15- Schcols lo Instruct ion
11- Radio, TV. CB Repair
17- Mis e.tlaneou•
1 8- W•nted To Da

2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY PAPER

Galli a County
A,.a Code 614

57 - Mu sic.. lns trument s
5 8 - Fruiu 6 V•v-•bl ..
59 - For Salt 01' Trede
.

1 2 ..:..S itu•tton Wanted

-11 ,00AM . SATURDAY
- 2,00 P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P .M. TUESDAY

following

56 - Pet a for Slle

9 - Went..t to Buy

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAT ION

MONDAY PAPER

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

56 - Building SuiiPh•

e·- Public &amp;•I • • Auct ion

1 1 - ~elo

.

c::.;:..N.!..t=~ :

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

PlU.NG &amp; HEATING

'ROOFING

53- An1iqutl
54 - Mil e. M., c h~ndiM

5- Loat 1nd Found
1 - Yerd Sele!peid 'in ldvln eel

"A eleu;titld ecN t rtilem.,t plac:.cl in Th1D1ily Sent Jnel lell·
cept - cl •sitied ditpii'Y. Busin•• Card and llffll not ic•J
will also appear i, the Pt. Pl . .ant Jlegiater and H1 e Ga lli·
poll• Daily Tribun e, r. .ch ing ovtr 11.000 hom••·
COPY DEADLINE -

-

~1- Houeahold Gooda
52- Sporting 0~

3- Annoucernent l

are

acty,~noe

Card ot Th ..'ka

1 'r

• - Give iWIV
5- H•ppy Ads

d_, tft., publicltion 10 m•• correction.

STAFF - A well-rotmded medical stiff nd oilier heal&amp;llcare personae! oa hud at veeeraas Memortalllollpltal to serve
*lie mecllcal aeedl of *lie Commualty. Dr. E. s. VllliDeuva, aveteran physlcaa at the Pomeroy hollpUal, Is plct~ afoae ofthe
aunlal&amp;tatlons. In the backvound Ia Sherrie Boull, RN.

~~;;;;;;·

1-13-He

a: pi ;we ..........
In

.Howard L. Wrltael

Mt:r clm1111se
1- Cerd of Ttltnkl

for l rrOf"s fi rs1 d~ ad runs ~ p~ ) . Ctll befort 2 :00p .m ,

STATE-OF·'l'IIE·ABT- i'IQ'..e.l e•na• 11ft CNI8t11it!J
aaderwl)' -' Veterua MemortallloaJIIIal In order to •l'OYide 1
more comfonable 111d pleMIIIt 1taJ for .,.Ueata. By *lie l&amp;llle
token, *lie 1110111 modern 1*-ie-of-lbe:art equlpmnt Ia beiDa
added to belp provide for eJ&lt;ceUOD4 patient. care. .b the pblto,
llollpl&amp;al AdmlnWra&amp;or ScoU Laeaa, rJabt, aad Mille ~.
leclullelu, are 10ea with • completely medern fuD bodJ' CAT
Scuaer, oae of *lie ._t recent pieces !If equlpnlellt placed Ia
*lie Pomeroy apUal.

.

Help Wllnted

11

ad• .

Plid.

.ROME HEALTH - Mrs. Ellulie&amp;h Smith, left, RN, heads
the Rome Healtlt Nuralng Service at Veterua Hospital. With
her I• Mn. IIIAbeUe Coach, IODIJ·Ilme secretary willa the - ·
vice. The Donie Health Nunla1 Service, eslabllahed •ome 18
yean ap; Is one of Ve&amp;eraas MemorW Bospllil's most nplclly
P'OwiDI aervlcea, The &amp;el'\'lce Ia deslped to lacrel8e the hospl. tal' s Involvement Ia the provision of Community Health Service
alld provides conllanl&amp;y of.c:are for the patient retul'llinl home
from the hospital Ia the residence of the patient. .

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

;

NEWLAID
'
ENIEIPII•s

DUMPTRUCK ·
Sind-Stone-Din

(614) 667-1271
G....tl. ....

8

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

DN'S AMIIIIa
SIIVICI
"I·SSU • 915-3561

=:"'
lloiil, "" '
'n.~-·:OOMIIe
0

PubliC Sale
• ·AuCtion

-

1:00 I'll .. ......, .... -

..-.

................. srt
_.,AL

.

. :·

• .•
\

.IIYICI .W.. lolory

- -----,.

,..... llol'--. lfllly lotoil~
........
lat.-.Clll "' .....,...;•

WlnledtO

-

Guile

Anl-w-.1

,

'Int . . . .

lion#. ........ ,.,......
'

........
.
.
.
IJollww-.........
..............
.
.
-........... ---In
....-.- ...
~

tor I :II I'll.

tr

"

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio'

Page-8- The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

45

Need money? Eam 10·50% wilh

Avon. Ovm products at a dl•

count. Free gift with sign up.
61H92-71BO.

Need aalu perwan to make per·

tonal le;ltphone contacts; halp
manage bowling lanes. Male or
tamale, young or ol_
d . If Intentstid ahd qualified contact Hayes
Realty 382 • · Second StrHl

' JUT 'N' CARLYLEe by Llrrj Wriabt

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Furnished
Rooms

tm ~D
Qll, 1 - . -new ·
qulok
dteccr-.teet
blcllhoe,
motor, aiiiiOM ,.... ..,.,. ~

&amp;looping , _ . wllh . cooldng.
Aloo lrdwopilce. AN hool&lt;-upo.
~II aft• 2:00 p.m.. - SOot-713--

...... 116,100. tM 314 1270.
2 ..,.. Olf'lmiO kMna, OOIPpiMe
wtlh
ICC Ill nile.
Dui1oln

-·• ..-_

·~

••

.•..•.

BORN LOSER

d

•••

-~.._....Yon,

........ .,

INdlcl, ,... air, . eo ~'

~J..~n

'•

.

'•

~CAll$
~-~;~

t-al

..

•

M

100 L.AW!-

I

JII7V.

Town

3015.

304-171-

Compground,
·
'

--

Pei'Ch St. Kanauga, Ohio, Come

In parson for t~lng, no phoM
calli.
EARN MOfr•iEY. R~ading ·a.oolcal

5~00 CD

McConnlc:lt

·. Wl·l't' WOULD TI-lE JUDGE

WANT TO SEE US ? ·
I

~

a-•

(!)

l-IE PROBABL't'·WANTS MV
OPINION ON SOME OBSCURE
POINT OF LAW ..
.

.

(J)

.

I_ I~ I
·

8

Qa ii(J) ABC NIIW8Q
Cll 8ocly EloelrtC

.

'

(!)3-2·1 ~Q
(121 CBS Nttwo Q
all Tllroo'1 Company
1211 T()p-Cerd
tD Hengln' In
6:35 Cll Andr Grtttlllt
7:00 ~ Sc:~rocrow I Mro. King

'

''

Stocky - Radio -Adult- Outset- OUTDOQRS

GJ Sport1ConMr

•'

Mollollon Fumltuno: Quollly
Fumltlft ond C.rpol, II low
polcMI C.rpot otonlng 01 ... 00

BOATERS

peryud. 814oo44&amp;olll44.

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

llovlng to omoltor - : Andque .....,, . p5atfDrm roc~\,
-machine,
a cholkltch•n
.., roellnor, -~~~~
taDIII, I
dlutlro, chltd'o !Oielllr &amp; cholro,
1to1&gt;y IIC.IIo, to~o box yom, In-

cubotor,

tolo onoo,

clutl,., -ko

Monte Clr1o, VI, CruiH,
ilofroa. laodo aood l ""'"

good,$1,711, ~II.

- I I , aood
oor, NOll. t M - r .
- 0111o Ontogo. - oft•lp.m.
-

lotdlng

oholi
w--..
otuff,

oppl-.
.............

Counly Appllo-, Inc. Good

u.oc1
T.V. 0011. 01&gt;on
I 0.111. to I p.m. Mon.-811. 814441-111!.. 127 3nl. .... Go~

-her

Dryor, Konmoro....._ f7!1; Bmoll
dryer, 20 1!\CII, ,,.; QE
a llryor, 1711 ooch. 1110 dryor,
Ill; - · 1111ge, 20 lnch, 1711;
. - · 31
Inch,
$711;
Ae~ltOr,
2
dr,
S71i
Aefrlger..or, ~ngte door, $75i
Ae~llor, tide x aide, troet
' - $12!1; Rol!laorolotL 2 dr,
llornOI aold, tM· ,,_.,

Rentals

UDrialtl, 1f cubic

llil, Ill;

· U.ln ·uealleM ooncllllon,

All

a

---------"7""-J-h- I g.-. Skoaatl
~-~~·~-ll'd,

'41 HousestorRem
LEASE WITH OPTION. Llf'lll
llmllyhomeNIIon!Fow to elx t 1 OOIM, lour

-..:a=

eztr~'at 114-Mt-aiO
"""""-.
· - n d or

:12154.

1br home, 1 112 mllol Rl 0000 USID APPLIANCES
7. · - Rlvervlow. 114-241roltlllt!rlloro,
8023.
r;:ar'
For rent or ule, e room hoUM CIMt IIGIIL C. lit ttl :n~~.

*•"- """""

R.:"'f.' ..~:.::;

North lloln, 30W1S-7187 or
304-411-11711.
-

.
Socurfty - . n FurnhuN

~-2--~.

nng Avo.

- • , m. Coli

..... -

WID

lahed full-btl I aenl.

bMha,

&amp; C.rpoto,

'-•In p _ _
oftorlp.m.

32 Mobile Homes
·for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
·
forRem

14•70 Klttlwood, !br, - ellc., MW oerpiil: In Ill

lronl ........... homo,
17,000. 114-241-iMi 114-2415401.

, ... Schulll 2 bod~,
-hoi
.....
··
- at :11111
Rl-14:1
:114No
ml off
Rt. 7ond MlzwoyTnem.

Quality

Child C.re, mull
provided, tenc.cf ~ck yard,
with rtferenc.M. Mon. lhru s.t.

1180 Schuttz 141111 ·mobllo
horne, 'TWo bedroom. balWNI

bor, ganlon tub, oil - ·
air. Undlrplnlng ' lncludod. 304-f75-41S8 oftor 7:30
PM.
l:onlr~l

REMODELING INTERIOR, EXTERIOR PAINT!~ ROOFING,
CONCRETE WOR~. ELECTR~
CAL &amp; PWMBING EXP. HAS
REFERENCES. .
ALL
INSURANCE CLAI~ ACCEPTED.
PLEASE CALL AFTER 5P.M.I14256-1611.

Financial
21

11187 llllyUno 8 -

A-

I pc. -

'"=•

M•lll, 3br,
- · 114-

Fer
Homo, Uppor
RI'IOr Ad. lfolllto
Rot. I Dopoolt, 11444W'I80.

-

troller lor ront 114-1112·

27113.

44

3

1br apll, wfiiOn a Mfrtoanltor,
no plio. f l - wof• ln-

ftOII .......... 114oo44&amp;o

porttotly lllml-, oiiil
corpooO&amp;t. Pow _, uUifttoo,

=•::ts.:O after
ltalhol ..... ,.1 i!lr, 23tl
p.m.
_.,..,...

requlrod. eon 114-H2dip;
--2101

-

D

VALL~~O~~TtsHING

-•no.

2 bedroom op10. 1w - . Clrlllfod. Ntco
laundry
llclllloo ovolllbll. Flrll _,.._
,..,. ovattobll 1w ·Hmftod
1110 Denville 141172, on ,..,.od limo only lo quolltlod _oplol. Toto! oloc., centro! olr, dloh- pltconlo. Coli 114-112-3711 EOH.
W.her, rock undMDinnlng. 2br,
2 full bath, unfuml.t.d, 111,500.
W.ter I
9r Bill otter l1'l tte 8117, 114- &amp;
2br,.~ . twn
tiHh hrm-.
..,_
448-820:2, 1..,. rntnlgll.
qul...t dl-'t requkod Uppor

Buslnne for ule. Allclne Cut
Rate Raclne.l Ohio. S.rioue lnqulrn only. o14-949-2t42.

own your apparel or ehoe atcn,

chooM trQm: Jeant'Spol1swear,
Ladln, Men's, lnfantJPretHn,

Large sizes, Petite or Matemhy
dept, Oancewear/ Aerobic, Brldil
Lingerie, Sock Shop or KC...

etore. Add ook&gt;r anaJ)'tla.
Brand nimH: li1 Clal.,.,...,
Martha Miniatures, Anne ltleln,
St Michele, Pinky, Bugle Boy',
torfte

Levi, Camp Beverly Hills, Leslie
brands,

also1 multi tier pricing discount
or flmlly shoe store. Retail
Prices unbelievable for top
quality shoes. Over 250 bl'l!nde

2600 otytoa. $19 900 to $29,900:
Inventory,
training,
tlxutM

airfare, gund opening, etc. Cln

Optll 15 day•. Mr. Loughlin 812·

888-4228.
Two Large ceramic kiln• complete w7accHtorln. Duncan
· paint• , &amp;: ceramic deoals, 11,200.
814-245-5811.

Real Estate

m:.::• tt.':l.l '';..,';""f' ~~.

........ F,.nch Cfty . - t o

Hom•.l,......__

·-~ · ~ -F
or -~:
·-· lfovo,
,.~., ........, ryM", AC, pole

281-1721.

,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT .
IUDOIT PRICII AT JACICION
ee"P'_...~
•--~- PI"
-

-~

••

. Wlfk to """" &amp;

underpennlng,

3335.

I .__,-

·

por-.
0

15

..

7li . Auto Parte &amp;
-

_4_

.

luclglt Trw• I Ilana. 30, 10,
•·
... 1 No-ldo, • •

=.t- "'!':"'\
lt4-a4S-It77. 114-m-

',

1114, 1!11 ........ ....

.... -

..:

~~~-~-~ :

. ..

··•)

'.

campers&amp;
MotorHomes

79

NIIOied ·lntorlor and
Pittobu'll Palnlo, lUI ond crol
_ . . , au.,... 2411
JIICUon Ave, Point PIMinl,
304.a75-4084.

.

=...

·'

.

.
"""'
ta-..r;r.:;as.
:·Jt
-lon.
. --:

1171 RV .D

-·-- n"

1177 C 'x:ao ,.,..,.. ,.,...,,
~~~~~~~~~

Tobo-JIIM. 2140 pounda, .B
cente pW pound, t1t ttlx0212.

-·

l1oWit.......r'l

.,

T - Sllvor Bull! llopltl

21
Ntr - · good
oond. ....... ""'
aya.._Nttllltl
·.-~
,

good

..

.....~

~.

1200.114-1112-34111.

"

.

. . ..

Awnlna- _, ••.
C
f
t
y
·
-....
... 1110
.
-.
""' Solo: 11171 DotlgiJ Chlmplctn
.:.

W. build big Dokoll Fonn
Hoft101, 134,111111 .... ~

7911.

WHrTE'S METAL DITECTORS
Ron Allloan. 1210 looond Avo,
Ort!Hpolll, 011114-441-4:138. .

llolotlOW
- II B··
tlon,
•••• ......-

111.1111

Sulldlng
Supplies

·~

.1

......

••

IIJTO PC:tliiCS

Pets tor Sale

h

·-It .

SWAIN
AUCTIOII ·I FUR~RE. 12

a

-Golding 11 ltondl,Englloh-W•Iorn. Good · oWl
~'"'!: &gt;1. Nloo !roll hom.
""' • 814-1112..wlllonnlnp.

-n . . . __.

wllh

Wlbb. Cllll1t ttl r431.

molt,_ &amp; bocldlng, Jenny Lind
CMnglng T-, IM-4.1120.

Ettt S-101H.

GOVERNMENT

--=

-lcloo, -

""' loto: -

Chollnul ,..,
1177 Du~llalh.... .;.;;;:!
-

I

loin.

'llottj:

l'or
Ono lin - h old,
-·U
HoltnRot!...
o ; l 1-1 4
Cltlonlnol. . . . . . . . . IM-m21:11-4p.OI.
'

-to,-

ooll polr. Yoortlng bull. .,...._
8110.

luy ar HIL A - Anllq..o,
112• E. Mllft Sl,.., Pomeroy.
Hour.: M.T.W. 10:GO o.m. to 1:00
~= 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.

~ - .

54 · Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

.._Ext..._.

lurpl
...
Guido Chonl.
(1) IIlii· lluyoro
CorvNo,

__......... _.

OCNE-1!111' SEIZED vohlcteo
Putliill•
8100.ond
-- alhor...
_Chovyo,
_...
~N&lt;~~~~rtllobut- guldo 1·

~ ond llldlng. Troller
10011 polnlod. Froo 0111-.

.......11o:;o
,.. ::=•
Frod

.

4

ot

""'

72

_.,

Aemalllflftt:

~

_,.,... -. '

Mobile

Horne

111 cl(toa~, plumblftl erpertae.ce.

Alifelel CII lnMrincl cl8lml
•a ;I d.IM....,1111.

-r

Plllnblng &amp;
Heating

Standard olzo Doohuncl
10 --.1110 old to v.y gooa
homo, 304·77Wm.

57

ondHoot
_
FourtltoridPlilo
!
Galllpoll, Ohio
114 ... 3111

Tri. nspotiJiton

f'

••,
;

STOP

kid;~=g
GJ
lpoclal
Cll Newowlrlclt

..,:
,.

. '..

(I) Local Nlln!H. Global
Ctoenga (PI 1 01 4) People

.

••

t .

,.

.EleCtrical &amp;

.

·Retng-lon

.

'

,.,

. •'

:

ll~~~~~~~2''

,..

BERNICE
.
BEDE OSOL '

·.'

130 ..,. IOrm, Solom Twp.
114&gt;1111 County, Ohio 3-4 room houtie;,
bam,
out
bultdlfllll 1.lrlo gotllnd Wllor. 211

. :

!Imber

ond
fl4/itoo.oo.
Coli
dip; 14-1112o2801

.

,

ll8r 1.1110

•

•

t ,

.

·•.

\-

\\:

Si!me,lllaJor ~~, •r• 'klly ljl;

·I~ •

......,llriMrllar.,..-ol rour \

a:•ttr.a11tm trllllf~a~

21

·,

lhla will become obvious lo your pee;a
When you accepf lhe blame lor mletakes the!
lheire and nOilfOUrl.
IAGITTAIIIUI (N'otr. 23-Dec. 21)
Something fortunate may deVelop for
maydoalllhelteayywor~lodayendput you lodey, but not -sanly lrom
you In a Jl9Sitlon - e you will beile!H wt~at you know but l;lecauae of Whol'OU .
from aornelhlng In Which 1'00'11 play only - - AI lOng u you come ool on ,the.
a minor role.
-· ·plul side, Who ceres.
.. '
CANC;IR (June 21-.lu(J 22) You may . CAPIIICOM (Dec. Zhlln. 1e) Oo not ,
have an opportunlly today lo get to let small obsl- dllull yc&gt;Ur hopliS!
know ~ .. better wlto hu beer! end ani...,_ today•.Tilly sltuMIOill ,
given 1 bad riP by an acquaintance of Win,be rnan~gNble 8I)Ci rou ·Q n:fulfill '
¥"""· Y®'ll discover 1!111 pereon. 11 yow expecjatlonell ~ lly.
_,., ,,
much niCer tha., t'IP.._ted. , • ·, _'
AGUMIIUI (olin. ..,ill..it) Therllro•,
LIO (.luiJ :13-AIIg. ' 21) Neaet)ve I ll)dleaUGna fOil can be lucider t.h!ln tJau.
lhougllla ert! likely ·to ~ 11\ 11 Yoo/1. 111 tOday ~ yrNt niallrtat lnteJM~a .
o-MIIyzo llluat~ today . . Swing ( . . -*.Don'lblttlrlld .loQOkW •'
_Into ICIIOillnll~; ' boo"1'111 ~·re a ,QOIII tau generally fell ertJ -~ ·;_
better clqer th.. llhlnker.. .
, • • . 1 YQ!a' reaoh.
-.
¥1180 (Aut. 21::~1111
,Nell (M. ~~2!.•_ Will ''
ment In wttk:h ~ptWQ~· .
· 1Jndyou.,en~ IGCII!y. j:
CQIIId lll!" ·lnto' ~ . .
.. baa •fllu'l
.._ ~ltiiiJt

are

.
..
ltiiiiA

=IIJ

:',;:u.; 0::.~ .
'"'
ilttttiMcl ,
pump•tcr IIPftl8lllll-::rw
•1r
o•"

•~:
· · • you do. K-. '!fllare to! thing laraai'. ·
. ,, -.' ; Don't be alrlld
lplnd
lo6lr
, _ _ and Jllu'H find 11. fM1 ICOflPID (oat. 14 Nuu.ll)·'f'bU ~ 'fundi .n you n UI!INd III'IIIINitllhg,.
,Aatr

·'.

r.,h Malchmlllter lnatantly
~

ce- · excalent_leaderihlp quallllao tocley an~ . lielter.
I'

, ..

.

.

Optimistic
Vibranl
Choice
Assail
Campus
official

DAIL\'CRVPToQUOII!S-Here'lllowtDworlllt: . srr
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

Ill Cnlolc • Cltna

10:41 (J) ~: Wltlch Way Ia
opt (R)'(2:00)
'
•
t r
11:08 (2) Hlrdelatla And
~

.........

(J) laHNII TonJahl

Hand.,

'I = !
i' ,.·

5·7
I

iTFXW~T

n:30!(JI 11111aa1 or c.,_

·. !to$~

'

118:

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RlciiN (2:QO)
-. :

YQAKV:

B_HV. KYQV
:

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I -. . . . . . . . . . . .
111011 (I) IliON: TltllllldU

-

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•

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BKMV

UT.LCYLS

. U'TLCYLS
- . .
.
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Nlglti--VInnle hla to """' out
• moll In . . !11011 10 piQIICI

lllaown-. •

. N ·y Q .

VY

1
:

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... .

, . . . , . .• . . . . . . _ _
.......... ~ • ...uo

•,! '

GoU,..,_. .-.

-

for tile three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leUers, 1
·apostrophes, the leflllh snd formation of the word! are all
.~nls. Each day the code letters are different:

McCIImtlct ·
•~ • • elll 111

•

.

..

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used

~

• !Ill ArlaniO ~ •' ..
IIJ MoiteVIIM.
0 Miami VIce
-.

.

40
43
44
45
48

• !lllllonnJ.!II .,_

t~PJ:'.~':~r'tv:'4 ~o:~~:- ~:1~ ~" ·:~-:
n

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z-

An=
· '·

ltllmiiiQ uP~ t~ ~~~~
(lapt.
1!1 pllr linin· you'N popultW; '_' . '
' ' .
;
1o~•1rt filfY tlli'ml. you'N
llllttlttvo~-...
llhif.-III'IOrl- .~
111111-AplilltJA
to ~Waomothlno qr..nota, l'OIJl • ly. Don'lattlelci!'
_returnllffOI/ ~,.bereqund•lnQi'dlr~ ntld ~ a1ty who operata on tha ....,. have 1n opport""lty to .111m tar - . . 1·prime_ 1M
ilrglj'.

. "'..

IntervieWS AreeniO Hall, Gene
Wilder about Gilda Radner.'a
bout wHh cancer and gotl ·
behind the scenes of a
famous murder
• aD Now Twlllgltl
l111 Evonlng Nowo
10:30 Cll MaUII8 Kall: On Tho
Verge Of Oilier Wortde

cue.

veala which slgns are romanlicillly perfeet1oryou.Mall$2toMatchmaker,c/o
thls newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
•
QEIIIIIII (Mey 21-June 20) Lady Luck

scarf

1 Brl!'s
"farewe""
.21ndlgo
plant
-·3 Baseball's
. Jim

cOnnie Cllung Connie Chu!lll

•,

.

DOWN

ill eiDI F - To Fact With

•.

'"

of

developing nations deftne
. their own problems and
solvtlhem.
-

33 Fanns for Sale

_..._

JaCk faeoerce'd Into taldng a

SPiiNICI.E.ll

;

In--+-+-

eC%1 a llllannon'• Deal

IN A MINUTE

. TATER If

Clly

woOd..

I'LL HAVE YOU
WRENCHED OFF

llllftSSLIN',

w'""'"

c

Doolgnlng
Mary Jo'a lalllt II restored
when she begins to date a
minister.!)
·
10:00 CD 700 Club Wlllt Pat
R.obeMCin
·

'1,

'•••

11111
_

84

I

I BEllER ,·
GIT-ON HOME,
LOWEEZ.Y !!
IT'S FIXIN' TO .·-

• :·

,.,.

C.rtll"'l Plumbing

"*"slcel
lnetruments

a e (J) MOVIE:

1:30 ®J. •

1.

Tl\lclc8 for sale

1111 1'-11 tlnd 1114 F - Fen!
· -· NOll. llalh.ll04-a71-11to.

a

urrr

k100'441M•:aeu .., 31711, -

I ""· :1

tumn...

aulloonlo,
qulno,
orlonto~
polnllfllll, ·::~ ......
Clill colllct
• Of . . .

IEIZED

fiOO. Fonll. 1101'&gt;

ACROSS
4 Inquire
1 The O'Hara 5 Pilgrim
planlatlon
of note
5 To plei:~s
6 Soft diel
7 Among
10 liqueur
· flavoring
8 Russian
12 Greek clly
hemp
9 Accept
13 Happy ·
as can be 11 Pass by
15 Beverage 14 Redacl
Yeslerdey's Anewer
16 Frull drink 18 Moye
··
17 Billy .:...
sldeways25 Aclress
35 Egyptian .
Williams
19 CQrrect
Balin
dally
18 Backbone ,
a teKt 26 Cave
37 French
20 Don'll
20 Dukakls'S28 Deal wllh
cheese
23 D~msel
party
30 Portugut~se 38 Greek
27 Slay _
21 Wagnerian song or
mountains
clear of
role
dance
39 Seaport
21) German· 22 32 Shoelace
In Ysmen
41 "Firsl" lady
. cily
volatile 33 Street 29 Promenade 24 Skill · 34 BreaiCwater 42 Ancient
30 Card game ..-..,........,.....,....31 African
beasl
33 F,Wnch
. •trfend"
36 Say further
. 37 Feather

'RIIIhleu Ptople' ABC
Mond~ Night Movie (Ri
(2:00) I
·
Cll ~ naldo Golllilcttav'a
USSR With Hoelrlclc Smlllt
(PI 2) The moet radical
reform Instrument In
Gorbachev 's USSR is
glasnost. C
®J. IIIIDI MurphJ Brown·
Murphy throws her back oul
during a ·stretlfl reduction
cless. C
• all Allen Notion The
Franciacos fall vlelim to a
psychotic human. C
o
King Uvtt-r ·
0 Primo Tlfl!l w-111111
1211 N11hvlllo .Now
•.

~--·

Conotl...GuidoCltovy~
:~u:o
a.,...
(1)

Plgolor - · Colll14 •• 11117.
_....,. Ull\!&gt;
tlnd

Antiquo

Top - CUlt pokl. Old

QCNERNMEHT SEIZED Vohlcloo
ftOII, Fonll. ...........

-

YI'RA FURNITURE. Scifl 7 Ct.lr
f28_t I up, rocll- lfortlng II
coliN
&amp; ond •
- Ill,
"'·"
IfH,MI.
'"'"'Mil
'4
..... 1:14.17 wlh purch... of ·~ l'ftlltnM Mt.
Porch gttdor &amp; 2 matching ct.lr
gl- IH 001, R~H, Magic
Chef frolt frM ,.
· or 81ut..
lng $:lit. ()pon do I o.m. • I
p.m •. - -. ._,'""" I p.m.· I Groom ond Supply Shop Pol
p.m. opon ..., 12-1. Rt. 141, 4
mlloo off Ill. 7, Cenlonory. 114- Grooming. AU broodo. Alllfyllo.
lomo Pal Food Doator. ~ulto
-58.

53

63 . Llveetock

M,OOO, 304471-

ocroo llrm tend, I Wl!lo &amp;
oprlngo, pond, ealtln l!lc~ In
- . JNr round - . .
24x41 ....... 11om, aul
build._, good huntJf!l, ........
ond mill ........ 1,100 IIi - llloiOII!II,
_ .......
Soriauo lnQulrol onlf. ff!!,OOO.
304-5'71-111' betueaan l :w ~~
ond 2:00 pm - , a onylono

0

LAST" YJiii,R He LEFT
IT MIN 1'HE

Prlco Rodueod, 2111$1, -lonll
dlop!IJ mociOI, ~~ml'f.!:
_'::
~:;""h
to
5
11340.

!NIIItlo,

.

:....l:i-Ro
":nur:' 1it~ Mf."4 - - · ..... -•1u1
mlloo off AI. 7.C.n-ry.Opon 7 chldo pot. Laura, - • ·
dip

by THOMAS JOSEPH

only
discover that the man Is his
lather. C
1211 On Siege
9:00 (%)
Hunter Hunter
investigates a fencing
operaiiOn. Q
GJ Pow.-t Racing:
Offlltoro ProfHiional Tour
From Long Beach, CA (T)

e

.:,:,_..:....:~.:..:.;....:.,::..:...,....,,....,
AKC
Min.
~Ired

CROSSWORD

ihires111an!l2iactor
Newltart Mlchaei
to

•••

lmprqvllillents

241-t121.

' HCIAJ 00 'rC&lt;J ~Xf'E.CT 10
8E- P~-SIDWT Of 1}f r M.lrt:ml
STA~S IF &lt;,ru .CAIJ'T E.VEkl
CL~IJ CJP 'lWR ROOM?'

S'lt)I'Pf:D ~ FmA GaiJG

1
l

'.•,
'•'
,.'

Home

81

IV£GA11VE. CAiv'\PA IG.UIIJG .

.

Serv1ces

. - . brtck, .._
......
-._llnlllo, ole. Cloudl Winlora, Hlo ll&lt;ondo, OH Call 114-

56

a.

OWn Your ·OWn Land? No CUlt
Down Poyment On Any •
II YO\' Quallly. Coli E1oN Homo
Clnlor: 1-40HZI-07!12.

Ff.

engagement. 1;1
Ol'tlmeNewe
till Murder, Sho Wrote Sticka
And Stones
1211 Goopol JubiiH
1:30 8 ell CIJ Working Girl A.J.
- wants to model a store chain
after Teas's lalher's gro&lt;;ery.

~ ...... Ndueed, 1110 '1'~

AIJo. . ·etn ..~u

+JU
+152

-i

·-~~.~

1m Torry
1011 - · • - .._obt,IUI0-114:;

Riding-· 10H.P..=,martt.
2 ,..,. old, good ....114-

•uu

By Jamea Jacoby

A college classmate of mine had a
so~
favorite brldge 'expresslon. "Aces are
+AQ95
meant to take _kings, • he_would happi,
910 3
ly exclaim, as he tiled an ace in jusl
HQ1S
e
that fashion. As witb eo many brld&amp;e
+KQ 10
tiDl eo a Joopan~y~ Q
maxims, one must he alert to tbe
a® M•A•t"•H
Vulnerable: Neltber
exceptions.
(!)) Croeotlro
Dealer: Soutb
deal
was
sent
by
lawyer
Today's
tDNightCoun
Steve Barcus of Orlando, Florida.
7:35 (I) Sanford And Son
W..l Norlit Eut
Steve was sitting West wben bia oppo- Saellt
INT Allpua
Paa
1
8:00 CD MOVIE: Tire ShOCiow
.-ts quickly bid six no-trump. He led ' NT
Aldara (2:00)
tbe sis of spades.
o - 1 d +a
e C%1 a Hogan Family
Declarer could count 10 top tricks
perung ea :
WUiie's girlfriend refuus to
and
knew
be
eould
pt
one
~ by
accompany him to the prom. _
leading up~ tbe K·Q of dla_monds. So little thinking after ~ dwnmy apR~cll'o lndlltnapolll
be won tbe -Jack of spades m dumm~ peared. He could tell that bla partner
- (I) !D MajOr League
and played a diamond t~ the kina.
did not llold more than 1 jack, and 11e
BaHball
West takes tbt1 a~ of d1amonda, _de- , was looking at the queen of beuli.
Gail 8(J) MOVIE: Yaung
clarer bas no. chou:~' except to first poorly situated for tbe clef-. So 11e
Rldero (1 :00) Q
..
cash the quee~ of dlllmond_s, bop1~g was ~Udy wben tbe declarer played
CD (I) Skyec....., (PI 1 01
.
that tbe ja~k wtll fall. When 11 doesn t, diamonds. Soutb played tbe kJDi, and
5)-The first epiSOde .
be will probably play out four club West played low without bealtatlotL .
introduces tl\a archHact of
trickJ and the mt of the spades. E~n- Declarer cashed four club tric:kl ud
lhe Worldwide Plaza. C
tiD) Ill tl2l Melor Dod C"asey
. tually his OI;IY chance for a 12th trtck then played another dlamoad from
takes care of a new schOQt
' will be to take tbe .h~rt lineae. Since dummy. •
be went up wttb tile
bully. C
the queen Ia 'llltltde, ~ slam will queen, West took tbe ace ud played 1
• (JD f1 Jump Street A
make.
.
diamond back to his partner'• jack to
senatoo's life Is lhreataned at
H
o
-.
Barcus
had
been
dotng
a
let the ciontract.
a high school ~ak.ing

'!•

tHl Muotona bodr ot porta lor

EAST
•• 42

T:30 8 C%1 Famllr Feild
GJ Motoo week IIIUIIJ'Itoel
• a.Entar1alnment Tonlgltl
(J) Mama'• Family

'•
•'

.... 114-'N24101.

tl084

+AJ7 4

7:06 (J) Jellorooni _

Accassorles
-,.,="""--,-,....-..,.-:- '· •

PAINT PLUS. love . 2K on

· Call Itt 11121111. EOtt .

r.:= J;r-" •

40 ltOI'• Pllhn, 10

3431.

;"~1141;·~::-::---:-;;===:-::

-

·

m=.;;s,'"'·

282 Mulberry, Pornaroy. Shawn

Apt. ot Rio Orondo, lla yud,
cobll T.V., nw Cllpot. 11'14--

Llmlod ~- Foctory lo you, ' Compllloly ' fumloltod, omoll
14•111. 2 or 3 bod100m, upgrodl houoo, oulloblo 1w 1 "' 2
carfiOiond ..•• Gordon tub
~both wfth ~· vln¥1 ofdrl.
lng.$13,900. 1
121-104s.
PMw England, 2 bedroom' bath
1nd half, hNipump, front deck,

I
OVO(IIfllll.

by oi&gt;POinlmont only. 3 bodroom: WIN holp finance. 814-112-

:lit,,_

wfth bo•, undlrplnnlng, porch. - oAo a
114-211M417 aft• I p.m., 'I&lt; 114- '"""

-

31 Homes for Sale

RI'IOr Rei, Rt. 7. ••~ 111 i'Mo.

total .a.ctnc. RUdy to move or
movo ·In on ronlod 1o1 I , _ upololro IJII, 4 , _
HoVIII. iil,ooo. 204-882·2411.
.... ope,
7572, -llp.m. I
1180.
1

llelrlgorotor $12.85

Work-. 114-44e-SIH.

tor Rem
cludlcL

group fl4.01 por

WMk. 4 ~·r blidroom _•ulte,
com~Ht• S15.2d per wwk,
dlnolut wllh 4 ~"' n~a por
Magic Clutf 14 cu. ft.

OllvoSt.,Golllpollo.
&amp;Uoocl
hrmlhn, hootoro, Wollorn

Apanme~

2 bod- 0111. lrl Mlcidtoport

3 bedroom, lrlg, ..... ond •••

OHIO
cO.
recommend• th .. you do buaj..
ness with people you knowhond
NOT to send money ttwoug the
mall until you have lnv..tfg..ed
the offering.

over 2000

-=

nt-

1-800--L
FIMI&lt;IIor
on on poo1o onlerodln
lloy.-

WY, 55

RENT TO OWN
814-446o3151

•"-a;:::-

Business
Opportunity

Faye, L.:ucla;

1877 Now

Trimmorw. .... &amp;1 Fann Equlpmem
,.... ..
120. to 180. PAINT PWI, ,..... ~~.:..:;::.::~~=::.::~~
_, a ... '""' nt, 104- 1 . . 1n1J tlllor 1100. Gmo!J POntloo , _ II! I 114n,410_ _ __
175-4084.
w f t h - 1100. IM-84114111111.
- - - Exooltont - - ··
OVAL POOL SALE, ..... Hugo
18124' pool 4' &amp;loop. Sun docll,
I fltt.r lnct.-. lnototta.llon &amp; flnanclng ovollobll. Coli

114-1112~211

uc. cone!. I
318 112t.

3117.

61~-44&amp;-0316 .

'112 mi.

Thlw Bedroom, unturrnhed

tu~ tolttl

MI.. Pa ula'a Day ~,. cantil'.
Safl, IHordable, chlldcare. M..f
6 a.m . .. 5;30 p.m. Ages 2 ·10.
Before, aHer school. Orop.IM
wtlcome. 614-446-8224.

:::.'~~~~~bli

103'x111' Iii - · 114-1413077.

H.._..,.

~.·-=
tM :111 I'"

11t t41 1123.

Carpeted, .3 b1dl ODIM, clnl~:tg

....

=r"i

Now on 11lo ol PAINT PWS,

• .,., ....

altor Bp.m. ...... ~on 11 C.rpot &amp; Fum~
814-182-eMI.
.
lure In Stoclll C.oh a Corry,
RemDdtlsd hoUM In ChMter. Flnanoe Plln Aleo, t14-441..JM4.

____

-

===------Gland Prix Ponloo, *'.-;

llghto, - · • 6
lng, toa_opiiHor, &amp; ......._ 114:!e-1157.

-y

FIGICMY lrolnod, loondoil. !'roc~ ,~
o1on lfolllto Morino. Wo oome to
yo&lt;~III14-25Mm.
:

•

Monoyllne

till !ltleml VJco
1211 Muolc Row Vldoo
tD Abbott I CoeteiiO
~11101.

+KJS
11AKJ

A concealed
weapon

l'ortuneC ·
• all Night Court Q
(!))

NORTH

BRIDOI

CD ~ MacNeil J:ehror
NllwoHour .
tiDl • a a wheel 01

,.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
_ THESE SQUARES

. Stew11rdess to passl;lngers, "Anyone who lights a
cigarene outside the designated are·a will be asked to
step OUTDOORS:
_ ,
. _ ·

• a e (J) Current Affair

.-

the chuckle Qvot.d ·

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

e

.· iS (2) PM MlgiZine

'·

E-...,,

My hu$band didn't want lo
anend the dinner party we had
been invHed to. He penned on
the RSVP, "Sorry we can't
make H. fortunately, I thought
in the missing words
you develop from stop No. 3 below.

{J) Sportalook

;·J·

I I-

-•

r-[_M_U_X_H-E.,.,
1-:- nsr-;.....::..r:.:....:rl....:.,l"''~ t;nc:,~~;e
1. 1_ 1. _ .
by filling

a...

I

~-~o:

p u .J M y

·· .

tD Chlrloa In CMrgo
8:05 (I)
rly Hllllllllleo
8:30 • C%1 a NBC Nightly Nowa

. HousehOld
Goods

I

I I I I, I

(!)) Wo~d TociOf

0

bf-

~

GEATA

llll

till He-Man

10189.

2

I 1 I I 1

• all Andy Gr!fllth

Merchandise

51

Q
•

1ho

~mt&gt;'- word1.

1

•a~
Sc:holllatle J.porta
Amertce
CD Wlltl AtMriclt The .
llfeatory ollhe unusual bird,
the woodcOCk, IS_told .J:I
(!) Reeding RainbOw Q

·-·

Abovo ground pcl!ll, 24ft. , .dock
&amp; evOrythlng fiOH II. 114UI3MS.
.

•

Detallo. (11 1105-1!87-6000 Ext. Y·

low to form four

Herdcaatla And

• C%1 • •

Complolo Alumln""' Sotollllo
dloh CHIItl.l300. IM 2111 Ult:

$30,000 yr. Income potential.

•

SCAMOI

.

llablto homO lolo lot ,.nl, Old

O four
Rocmango loffors of
ocromblod word1

EVENING

Co&lt;mlry Mobile • H - Park,

any ·type or tppllanc.. tnd
re.frlgeraUon . Growing bullntll
th at Ia e,cpandlng to thrH
eounlles In Ohio and Mason,
WV. See Delbert Swisher 31.t

MON., MAY 7

Mill

. t:l l &lt;JIJI) T\li,&lt;'·"!ll~ r l tW011t1 fX

R - S3, Noo1h of Pomoroy.
~~·to, porta, ..... Coli

NHd aomeone·that can work on

....

Television
Viewing

... f!,21)0.

.14-24... 1111.

48 Space for Rent

Monday. May 7, 1990

73 Yanll &amp; 4 WD'I

••

A

Roomo lorront.- ot month:
in;•
~~;z It 1120/11'10. O&amp;JI.. Hat II.
81.
111180.

515'1, Maton WV.

Pomeroy. 614·992-2403 or apply
In person w ith rnume.

Monday,

.

B_KMV

. LT - FYW~f ." -DTE

NYQ

CLMERWHE
: . yfti•
A GOOD BOOK IS
• THE BEST OF FRIENDS, 'fHE SAME TODAY AND
. FOR 'EVER. - MARTIN TUPPER

.-t·.i ea,.ia.P.e•••

\

!
I

•

�Warm weather ret~t·Its
to Buckeye State
.
.

HEART ASSOCIATION ·VOLUN'I'II!BBS - loaD Tewbb117,
Nora Rlee, and Do111111 Car~ left to rlpt, !If tile Melp
Brlllltlb ol tbe Amerlcu Heart "-lailea, repatered o.er IIQ
vllllton lor cbeleilterol cbeeb at SUDdiQ''I open belllie at Veterans
Ill~ Boapl&amp;al. Tiley aiH luaed name..- "rain cbeeb" lor
tile &amp;ella tllla week. Dr. WllmalllaDIIIeld, atandlng, Is prealdeat of
" tile local Brucb. .

.----Local news briefs...- - eontlnued from page 1
The Tuppers Plains unll and rescue, at 4:46p.m., were called
to Old Seven Road for Oakey Conley who was transported to
Camden Clark Hospital.
On Sunday, at 5: 36 a.m. the Pomeroy'unlt wen( to Mulberry
Avenue for Judy Sayre who was treated but not transported,
and at 5:45a.m. another unit went to Spring Avenue for Audrey
Arnold wbo W!IS taken to Pleas!lnt Valley Hospital. .
.At 3:38p.m. the Rutland unlt was called to Beech Grove Road
on an auto accident ln which Archie McKinney was taken to
Holl.er Medical Center.
"
The Pomeroy Fire Department and emergency squad were
called at 4:15 p.m. to an auto flre on Route 7. The vehicle,
belongtng to Carman Marshall, was a total loss:
The Middleport unit went to Race Street for Lore Hoffer at .
4:35p.m. wbo was transported to Holl.er,Medlcal Center.
The final call for assistance came at 11:39 p.m. wben the
Pomeroy unit went to tbe Watering Hole lor Douglas Jenkins
wlio was taken to Veterans.

..;.......;..-·Area

deaths~__,;.,_

Rev, 0: H. Cart

Eleanor Cart, Arcadia, Fla.;
Helen Cart Morrison, Hunting·
Rev. Okeyi, H. Cart, 86, Bailey ton, W.Va.: and Alzada Cart
Rlln Road, Pomeroy, died Friday Halfhlll, Cheshire; four grand·
, at Overbrook Center following a children, nine steperandcblldren, and several niebrief Illness. ·
•
Born Sept. 24, 1903 In MiltOn, ces and nephews.
1n
addi!Jon
to
his
parents·Rev.
W.Va. be was the son of tbe late
John S. Carl and Edna Leanor · Cart was preceded lndeatb by bls
Cartmlll Cart. Rev. Cart was first wife, Lyda, In 1978; a son,
associated witll tbe Holiness Jessie Cart; one sister and four
brothers.
Wesleyan Church.
Services will be Wednesday at
He Is survived by bls wile,
11
a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home
· · Odessa Car.t, Pomeroy; two sons,
with
Rev. Paul Taylor and Rev.
Harold Edward Cart, Col·
Wlsetnandle ottlclatlng.
William
llnavplle, Ill.; and Okey S. Cart
Jr., Manassas, Va.; two step. Graveside services will be beld
sons, Leonard Roush and Roger at 2: :rl p.m. ·at the Milton
Roush, and one step-daughter, Cemetery In Milton, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral
·Patricia fmQden, all of Pomeborne
on TUesday from 2-4 p.m.
roy; four sisters, Myrtle Cart
and
7-9
p.m.
Gl bson, Kansas City, Miss.;

One person has winning lotto ticket
CLEVELAND {UPI) - One
jackpot-winning ticket worth $3
mUllan was .sold In Saturday
, night's Super · Lotto drawing,
o4ottery commission spokeswo·
man Anne · Bloomberg .said
Sunday.
The winner will Collect 20
annual Installments of $1:io,ooo.
after mandatory taxes are
withheld.
In addition, 178 tickets were
'

Lottery numbers

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
day's · winning Ohio Lottery
)lumbers:
PICK-3

• 610.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,578,619.50, wllb a payoff due of
$e99,286.50.
38(11 ,

.

PICK-4

sold with five of the six numbers,
·for $1,000 prizes and 7,412 tickets
had four of the six numbers,· for
$75. .
'
Tlie winning numbers were 2,

·7, ll, 13, 23 and 40.

'·

The estimated jackpot In Wed·
nesday's game Is $3 monon.
Ticket sales for the weekend
game totaled $3,717,346 and the
total prize payout was $3,733,900.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, no tickets were sold with
the winning combination of
368570.
Two tickets ·had the first flve
numbers, In the correct order,
and are worth $5,000 each. In
addition, 59 players had the first
lour numbers, which pays$1,000;
657 had the first tbr-ee, wblcb
pays $100; an&lt;;l6,343 had the first
two, which pays $10.
Ticket sales ln the Kicker
. game totaled $703,609 and the
total prize payout was $198,130.

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
J303,677, with a payoff due of
5108,300.
Super Lotto
2, 7, 11, 13, 23 and 40.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,717,346.
Kicker
• 368570.
Kicker ticket sales totaled

Huff to address chamber

'

Commerce for ,three ye~rs. .
· Huff serves on tbe board of
durectors of the Tri-County Com·
munlty Action Agency and Is a
board member and vice pres!·
dent of I be Community Improvement Corporation of Athens
County.
,
·He serves as a member of the
WOUB Advisory Board, Regional Planning Commission,
Hocldng Technical College Bus!·
fte!&gt;S Management Council, and
'l'ri·County Vocational School
Business Advisory BOard, He Is a
member of the Chamber · of
Commerce Executives of. Ohio
and the American Chamber of
Commerce Exec.ull've
Association.
,
Tuesday's meeting will be a
noon luncheon at tbe Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy.

'

Meigs ...
Continued form page 1
James Carpenter, and Treasurer
Jane Fry.
·
Personnel , anjl negotiations
were discussed In executive
session '. following the open
meeting.

Tbe latest weather map
sbowed a ridge of hleh pl'l'flsure
extendlni frcm the Ohio to· tbe
lower Mlsslsslpl Valley. A low
pressure system was over North
Dakota with a warm front
extending east Into the Great
Lakes and a cold front trailing
southwest Into the central

Ju~ent awarded

John Anderson, Pomeroy VII·
!age Administrator, was given
permission at MoQday night's
meeting of Pomeroy VIUage
Council to hire additional tern·
porary help lf needed to complete
,r oad repairs within the village.
Repairs and fllllng-ln of potholes were to begin this morning
{Tuesday) ·and wlllcontlnueuntll
completed, pending the coopera·
lion of the weather. The first
repairs will take place on Condor
Street.
Council also accepted a bld
from Bill's Fire and Safety
Equipment to repair lhepumpon
one of the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department's trucks. The
pump, an older model, according

•urse

coming falr Thursday, and .
mostlY S!lnny Frljlay. Highs will ·
range 75 to~ WetJnesday, and'ln ·
the 60s Thursday and Friday .
Overnight IOW!l will be between
55 and 65 earJy Wednesday, and
In the 40s 'niursday. and Friday
mornings.

Soutb Cent;ral Ohio .
Clj!ar Monday nlgbt, with a low
between 50 to 55. Mostly sunny
and windy Tuesday, wlth ~lghs
between 8(1 and 85.
·Extended Forecast
Welllesdii,J lbrouJII FrldiQ'
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Wednesday, be-

___ Meip announ~menis _ __

Hospital news

.' ·

'
e' lENT ·•
Wallpaper Steamer

'

S1010PD lAY
Pick Up Friday·
IHp nl .nday

WALLPAPER AND
lUND SHOP

Judgment soughl

304-428-1065

In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, Rhonda· J,
Lyons, Racine, Is seeking a
judgment from the General MO:
tors Corporations, Cleveland.

I·
I.

VOTE FOR ACHANGE
ELECT

DEMOCRAnc CANDIDATE
· FOR ME1GS COUNTY "

The Perfect Gift For Mom
.On Her Special·Day!
.
Don't Forget ... Mother's Day, Sunday, May 13th
Ca•11al Outdoor

.

Faraltare
U.OYDJFLAIDEIS

/All-Weather Wicker

Will

B~

ao. 1111,50 LO~I CIIAII-••--SAII•7S.OO

Closed On

UG. 1131.00 •-uCI CUll-.......... , ...SAii sas.oo
UG. 1147.50 LOlliSAU 1115.01 .
SAU 1115.00
UG. 1265.01 1·1111 111111
,. ,
f 1 Otkar' fhlli a.
Wei

I..........

TUESDAY, MAY 8, "1990
We will close due to the office
being used ·for an Election
Precinct.
992-5097
Comer. of Union Ave. &amp;
. lt. 7,
Ohio
I

•

St•* _. •

OPEN
TONIGHT
'TIL 8 PM

·IBMIY ,
I

•

.

'

•

By United Press International
In addition to Olilo and North
A five-week string of primaries . Carollna, there were primaries
In which nearly half the country Tuesday for federal and state
Wlll choose candidates for tbe posts lh Indiana and West VIrgiNovember election begins Tues- nia - marking the first day of
day In four states, with much of multi-state voting In thl! 1990
the focus on whether Rep. Don political season. Illlnols and
Lukens, R-Ohlo, can salvage his Texas held primaries on separ·
career after a sex scandal.
ate days earlier this year.
Lukens, convicted of a misdeDuring the next flve weeks, 22
meanor last year for having sex . states wlll hold primaries, with
with a 16-year·old, faced three almost all of the others following
primary opponents and polls In August and September.
showed him trailing badly, with
New Jersey Is one of nine states
former Rep. Tom Kindness and that wlll hold primaries June 5,
stat!' Rep. John Boehner fighting but voters ln Atlantic City on
for the lead.
Tuesday were to cast ballots In a
Lukens, 59,ls In his fourth term non-partisan race for mayor.
In the House, but has been Republican lncumben't James
virtually abandoned by tbe GOP Usry, 68, the oceanside gambling
because of the highly publicized resort's first black mayor, faced
sex charges. In addition to those six opponents, even· tbougb he Is
difficulties,. it was reported Sun· under Indictment on corruption
day that. Lukehs owes $1,514 In charges.
state taxes.
.
If no candidate receives more
In North Garollna, meanwhile, than 50 percent, a runoff .w ill be
the main question Tuesday was held June 12.
the four-way Dempcrallc race
For the most part, the hottest
for 1he right to face three-term primaries Tuesday did not In·
Republican Sen. Jesse Helms, volve the main posts that will be
wbo . had no ~rlous primary at stake In those four ·states In
opposition.
•
November. Almost all of the
That bitter battle has been main ·candidates for those races
marred by verbal fisticuffs a11d, are ;i!ready known or faced only
heading Into the voting, It ap- token oppoSition Tuesday.
peared a June ·5 runoff was
In Ohio, the . key genera[
possible. Polls ,showed Charlotte election battle will be for goverMayor . Harvey Gantt with a n!)r, with Democrat Anthony
small lead, but tbe rfl.ce was Celebrezze facing Republican
considered extremely close.
George . Volnovlch, former
11he other I&gt;ernocrats are:
mayor of Cleveland.
'John Ingram, a former state
Senate races are tbe critical
lnsuranc.~ co~mlsal.oner, former
statewide contests In the other
state Sen. Bb Thomas and three states. In addition to tbe
Michael· Easley, a prosecutor.
. re-election bid by Helms, Sen.

1
By United Press Internatlonal '
Rain could return to Ohio later
this week after a good dose of
balmy, warmer-than-normal
weather.
Temperatures Tuesday after·
noon were forecastto be aboutlO
degrees \farmer, tban Monday
afternoon; with a continuation of
southerly winds.
Some . fair weather cumulus
clouds were expect~d to develop
by late Tuesday morning and
early afternoon, with tempera·
lures rising through the 70s and
Into the 80s across most of the
state. Winds were expected to
blow In the 15 to 25 mph range.
Partly cloudy skies will be the
rule across the state Tuesday

nigbt, with lows In the 50s and a .
sllght chance for a shower, the
National Weather Service said.
On Wednesday, there Is a
better chance for showers and
thunderstorms but Thursday wlll
bring the best chance for rain this
week . . Highs ' Wednesday are
expected to be tn· the 70s.
Monday night was quiet over
the Buckeye State with a clear
skies and temperatures mainly
in the upper 50s. Winds blew from
the southwest In the 5 to 15lnph
range.
On weather charts early Tuesday morning, high pressure
remained anchored off the East
Coast and a cold front was

Intensifying in the Plains States.
A warm front extended from a
low In Minnesota across Michl·
gan to central New York. In
between the l)lgh and the low,
winds from ·the south were
conveying moisture from the
Gulf of Mexico into the Mlssls·
sippi and Ohio River valleys.
Thehigh .lsexpectedtoweaken
through Thursday, allowing the
low ·pressure In Minnesota to
move east.
The cold front Is expected to
move east with the low, crossing
the Buckeye State during the
daylight hours Thursday, and the
warm front will push slowly
north to southern Canada.

Sunny weather greets. Ohio
voters for today's. primary
By Unite~ Press International
A four -way Democratic contest for attorney general and a
spirited Republican congressional race Involving a convicted
Incumbent In western Ohio top
the menu In Tuesday's primary
election.
.About 1. 9 mllllon voters- only
one-third of those registered are expected to participate,
according to Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown.
Although there are few Intraparty contests. on the statewide
level. Interest may be sparked by
school levies and other local
Issues, InclUding a proposed tax
InCrease for a new stadium ·In
Cleveland .
In addition, voters will be
choosing party nominees for
Congress, the Ohio House and
Ohio Senate. They wlll also be
confronted with 215 school issues,
Including . 51 proposed .school

.

district Income taxes , and count ·
less local contests and Issues.
The doors open at 6:30a .m. In
Ohio's 13,629 precincts. Voting
wlll continue until 7: 30 p.m.
State Sen. Lee Fisher, 38, of
Shaker Heights, endorsed by the
Ohio Democratic Party for attor·
ney general. Is spending some
$800,000 to gain the nomination.
John Rockefeller , D·W.Va.,
He is being contested by attorney
ma·kes his first re-election run
Charles Brown, 66, of Cleveland
and Sen. Dan Coals, R-Ind ., who
Heights, attorney Frederick Mid·
was appointed to flU VIce Pres!·
dleton, 43, of Shaker Heights and .
dent Dan Quayle's seat, runs In
MabOnlng. County Prosecutor
his first Senate contest.
James Philomena, 42, of
Most of the primary battles
Youngstown.
Tuesday were ·not expected to
The most controversial race
spark any surprises.
may be In the 8th Congressional
In North Carolina, eight of the
District, where Republican Rep·.
state' s 11 House members were
Donald Lukens of Middletown,
running unopposed. But In the
convicted In a 1988 sexual esc a-·
southeastern Third District, Re·
pade with a . 16-year-old girl, is
publican candidate Henry Mer·
fighting for his political life ·
rltt Stenhouse has drawn lnterna·
against three opponents.
tiodal attention because of his
Former Rep. Thomas Kind·
age -100.
ness of Hamilton apparently ls
leadiJig, judging from public
opinion polls, and state Rep. John
Boehner of West . Chester Is
second. Lukens Is third, having ·
been ostracized by party leaders,
Tests for additional census workers will be given at 10 a.m.
and Mort Meier, a Hamilton bond
and at 1:30 p.m. on May 14 at the University of Rio Grande,
underwriter. Is fourth.
, Six other House Incumbents
Student Center,. Room 112, Rio Grande.
face primary challenges, but
To register for the test 1 residents are to contact Cheryl Cox,
Lukens Is the only one shown to
U.S. Census Bureau District Office Recruiting Operation
be"iiehlnd In the pre-election
Supervisor at 18al Masslevllle Road, Chllllcolhe, 45601, or call
polls.
663-4733.
.
- ..
Attorney General Anthony
· Cox advises that the largest number of Jobs are for census
Celebrezze
Jr. and state Sen,
takers wbo will work In their home area. The jobs will last from
Eugene
Brans
tool of Utica likely
two to eight weeks, the hours are flexible, and the pay Is S6 an
wili
be
the
Democratic
nominees
hour plus 24 cents per mlle.
for governor and lleutnenant
governor. They face only token
opposition In the primary.
Their Republican opponents ln
the fall will be former Cleveland
Twenty-two atate employees, tour of whom are from Meigs
County, wlll be honored for outstanding public and community
Mayor George Volnovlch and
service, and 18 others for helping save taxpayers' money at 2
Rep. Michael DeWine of Cedarp.m. ThurSday.
ville, who have no challengers
The recognition ceremony , to be held at the Vern RIUe Center
within the party.
Continued on page 10
Celebrezze and Branstool are
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. · opposed In the Democratic prim·

Four states kick ·o ff primary voting

JAinL
HOWARD

·~'Flanders

Mrs. Powell attended the meet·
lng to ask permission from the
council to close Lynn Street and
Court Street for the Heritage
Weekend celebration of the
sesquicentenniaL
Heritage weekend wlll be ob·
served June 8·10 with various
activities, ' entertainment, and
concessions on both streets, Lynn
and Court .
.
Mrs . Powell also askedpermls·
slon that those same streets be
closed for the Ethnic .Settler's
Fest weekend on Oct. 6 and .7.
Members of council stated they
will see how things go during the
June weekend and possibly wlll
close the upper parking lot for the
October weekend.

'

will .

Memorial Bridge
Approach
on Garfield Ave.,
Parkeraburg, WV.

to Pomeroy Fire Chief, Danny
Zirkle, will be overhauled to a
"better than new condition." It
was pointed out however that
while the pump Is being repaired
and overhauled that the depart·
ment will be with only one
pumper.
Gene Triplett, of Triplett Engineering, attended the meeting
and presented the ptellmtnary
zoning maps for Pomeroy. After
reviewing the maps, council
gave .Triplett approval to com·
plete the zoning maps at a cost of
$800.
Als.o in attendance at Monday's
meeting was Mary Powell, chair·
man of the Pomeroy Sesqulcen·
tennlal Committee.

flooded causing, millions of dollars In damage.
The river Is expected to crest Wednesday. (See
s.tory on page 10)

·
The \8th annual Tri-County the Holzer Medical Center In
ties; checking the reaction time
Simulated Disaster Exercise to Gallipolis. · Lakin Hospital at
to respond; verifying the reacbe held Thursday evening In Lakin, W. Va. will a I so
tion time of the Individual bospl·
conjunction with National Hospl· participate.
tals to such an Incident along
J ,.l,W,e.ek w!l! f~J!!'us O!l re~popse to . . Jhl~,ls the pJ!e time oft!le year with handling of .patients for
a supposed traln . derallmen1 •1 that all join forces ""'*t •.fhe supjlosed contamlnatlolf." The
Involving tank cars at the cross- emergency preparedness of each disaster drlllls a requlrementfor
lng In Cheshire.
•
faclllty.
those bospltals accredited by the
The scenario for this year's
Joint Commission on Accredlta·
drlli, scheduled to begin at 5:50 . Industry r~presentatlves are
tlon of Health Care
p.m. Thursday, was developed assigned to be present at each of
Organizations .
by Bob Byer. Meigs County EMS the hospitals as . official ob· .
A written disaster plan must be
Director, and Kellb Hankins, servers throughout the drill. This
on file and that plan tested at
Gallla County EMS Director, for ls advantageous to both the
least twice a year. The coordl·
the Mld·Ohlo Valley Industrial. hospitals and Industry so that
nated efforts of the three area
Emergency Planning Council they may be better Informed· on
hospitals In staging a joint
{MOVIE PC), according to Tom how disasters are handled, and
annual simulated dlsas ter takes
practice their effectiveness In
Gooch, preslden I.
this stipulation far past what ls
InvC)Ived. will be emergency dealing with a simulated com·
required.
medical services, fire depart· munlty disaster.
The. combined effort of ihe
Communication Is the key to three counties ln the two states,
ments and law enforcement
agencies ln the Trl-County area successful planning for proper
their hospitals, Industries and
which Includes Meigs and Gallla response to a dls,a ster, Byer agencies Is·unique and requires a
counties and Mason County, points out. Public Service agen· great deal of time and coordinacles
activate the, plan,
W.Va.
tion. The chief execu live officers
All · three area acute care documenting notification times of the three hospitals , feel
hospitals.will bave the opportun· and . estimating their reaction strongly about the value of
lty to· test their emergency time to the simulated Incident.
working closely together, along
Byer emphasized three ob)ec· with MOVIEPC for tbe benefit of
department operations. They In·
elude Veterans Memorial Hospl· lives ln this year's drlll which all residents of the three countal in Pomeroy; Pleasant Valley Include: testing methods of notl· ties , Gallla, Meigs and Mason.
Hospital In Point Pleasant, and flcation among the three coun·

'

'

. Veteraas Memorial
Saturday admissions - M.ar·
tha Frye, Cheshire.
Saturday disc bar~% - Be a·
trice Blake, Doro&lt;r.:, · Higgins,
and VIrgil King.
Sunday admissions - none. .
Sunday discharges - AJJdrey
Gaffney.

ARKANSAS HOMES FLOODED - Little Rock
residents Doat down what used to be a park on the
shores··'Of the Arkansas River. Many homes are

CASUAL OUTDOOR . F.NITUIE

.,

1· S~ection : 10 Pageo · 2f; Cents
· A Muhimedia
Newopeper

More rain could return to
.·- · ,·· . · . Buckeye State la.ter in week
Annual.disaster drill Thursday

Solid waste meet
have Its mother-daughter ban·
There will be a solld waste , quet on Saturday at 6:30p.m .
meeting Wedn~ay at 7 p.m. at , Danee
the SoU Extension Office ,In
Tbe Senior Citizens Dance Club
Athens. All Me~ County trash ·, will have a dance Friday from
baulf!I'S and Interested citizens ' 8-11 p.m. at tbe sen~r citizens
are urgtd to ·attend. For more center. Music will be proVIded by
Information contact ROger Man· tlie Happy Hollow, Boy$ of ·
ley at 992-3194 or 992-3894.
.Attaens: those atten41ng are to
bring snacks for the snack table.
Cholesterol clasa
FJectlon d., dl-r
Cindy Oliveri ,·Will coilduct a
Tbe ~orest . Run Methodist
class on cholesterol at lbe RaCine Church will have an election day
Baptist Church on TUesd~ at 7 dinner Tuesday at tbe cburcb.
p.in.
The menu will feature bomeMotber·Daughter banquet
'm ade vegetable soup, bean soup,
The Racine Baptist Church will sandwiches, pie and cake. Take·
out orders will be accepted.

Ashland Oil ........... ,............ 35\11
Bob Evans .............. ., ........ .. ll¥a
Charming Shoppes ............... 9\11
Clty:Holdlng Co ................... 14
federal Mogui... ................ .19Y.z
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................35%
Heck's ................................. 2%·
Key Centurion .... :.... .. , ........14*
Lands' End .................... ..... l6~
Limited lnc ........................40%
Multimedia Inc .................... 80
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 2Y.z
Robbins &amp;'Myers ................. 16
Shoney's Inc .......................13*
Star Bank ........................... 20%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 4%
Worthington lnd .................21%

A representative from Con·
gressman Clarence Miller's of·
flee will conduct an open door
I*!$Sion Wednesday from 11 a .m.
to 1 p.m In the Meigs .County
Court House In Pomeroy. Anyone
with quesUbns concerning the
Fed~ral government Is Invited to
stop by ·to discuss them with the
representative.

•

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio. tuesday, May 8, 1990

wm

AT&amp;T ........ ,................ ... !....40%

Open door 8e88ion

••

WEATHER MAP - Scattered U,Uildlftbowers
lire aloag
and bebllld a cold front that Ia mak... Its way Into tbe Norlbern
l'lalnl. GuU moisture will begin to
IIOI'tbward tbroqbTexaa
and 011:ilb.oma, tt1uerlng llhowen aod a.uadentorma. Nortllern
New En1Jand will see • return of wlntr)t condllloM • local!)' beav)'
snowfall Is expected .wblle Soutbern pare. will aee a few
ralnsbowers. A surge of cold a1r Into tbe Nor11lern Reekles and
Cue adell will ·brlDJ localI)' beaV)' IDOW wltb hazartlous drlvlnJ
conditions.

Am Electric Power ............. 28%

A marriage llcense has been
Issued ln ·the Meigs County
Probate Court to James David
Jenes, 25, Pomeroy, and Karen
Sue Boggess, 25, Pomeroy.

Page3

Approve temporary
help for road repairs

Dall)' atock prices
(A• of 10:311 a.m.)
Beyce alid Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellil a. Loewi

MalT. liftnse

Low tonight In the upper Ills.
Chance of rain 28 percent.
Wednesday, high In mid 70s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.

54.30

Vol.40, No.263

Stocks

A Judgment has been awarded
to Floyd Reynolds, et al, tn the
amollnt of $10,000 from Clifford
Leroy Jones, Jr., In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.

Piek4

at

Continued from page 1
unless Celebrezze did.
Steiner predicted abortion
would be a maJor Issue tbls fall.
A u.s. Supreme Court ruling
las tyear resulted'ln state govern·
menta baYing more Influence In
establishing state laws regulat·
lng abortions,

A divorce has lieen gran ted In
the Meigs County COurt of
Common Pleas to Robert M.
Haley and Vlckl J. Haley.

···- ~ ·-'

· Daily Number
894

HATlONAI. WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EDT·I-HO

Poll...

Div9f'OO granted

Rockies.
.
The bleb ·pl'l'flsure ridge will
move to the Middle Atlantic
Coast by evening, wblle tlie cold
front moVH Into tbe central
Plains. The cold · front will
continue Its eastward trek and
puab . Into tbe Ohio Valley
Wednesday.

------Weather-~----

the Athens Area Cbam~r ·of .

· Robert Huff will be the guest
speaker at Tuesday's meeting of
the Melli!! County' Cbamber of
Commerce.
Huff Is a graduate of Purdue
University. He earned a ct~rtlll·
cate from Northwestern Unlver·
slty In bank publk: ~lations and
marketing, and a certificate
from tbe University of Houston In
organizational management.
Huff's baclq{round Includes
retail and financial service as
well as chamber of commerce
experience. He served as assist·
ant director of the Chamber of
Commerce tn Huntington, Ind.
He has been executive dlrect.or of

Tbe Pomeroy mayor's court
judgment of guilty of left of
center In the case oft he VIllage of
Pomeroy against D. Michael
Mullen was reverSed and dis·
missed In Meigs County Court on
April 24, 1990.

$703,609.

.

B)' United Pnu ._teraMto_..
days, but potentially significant
Another swing on the Oh1o rainfall could occur WednesdaY.
weat~er pelldulum will see · Dry weather · sliould Fe~urn
warmer temperatures this week, ThU!Way and Friday accompanfoDowing a week of cool tempera- led by cooler. temperatures.
tures, which followed a week of
warm temperatlll'l!!l.
Uvestock may not be com·
A ridge of b.lgh pressure over p~tely acclimated to warmer
the Ohio Valley was to move to weatheryet,somanagersneedto
the Middle Atlantic Coast Mon· be sure drlnidng water ts avalla·
day and bring warm air from the ble and th&amp;t contlnement areas
Gulf of Mexico Into Ohio.
are properly ventilated.
Vnder sunny skies, afternoon
The sandier sons will dry
highS Monday were to reach the
rather
quickly, and the breezy
7!1!1. Even warmer weather win
expected Tuesday and Wedlles· winds could pic!' up a fair amount
day, before the return of rainy · of dust behind equipment. Those
weather. ·
· . winds also will problblt mucb
.
Lows Monday night were to afternoon spraying. '
The
warmer
weather
will
acdrop Into the 50s, but highS
Tuesday and Wednesday were to celerate p~nt growth following •
the good drink of water most
reach the mid· 70s to mid-80s. ··
fields received late last week.
Looking ahead through the end ·SoU temperatures also will gain
·of the week, there will be a some warmth. Altai~ weevil and
chance of thunderstorms Wed· other Insect activity will In·
nesday and Thursday and It 1wlll crease, so regular scouting .
be clear Friday. Hllibs Thursday sbiluld remain part of the work ·
and Friday will be more seasona· schedule.
ble, lli tbe 60s. Lows will be 55 to
,65 Wednesday and In the 40s
Thursday and Friday.
For .farmer$, · the ·sunny
weather, and wind speeds ln the .
teens, will Increase drying rates
to one-quarter Inch Monday and
as mucb as three-tenths of an
Inch Tuesday and Wednesday.
F'teldwork should be able to
make some progress the next two

Ohio Lottery

Browning
.shuts out
St. Louis .

,...--Local news briefs___,
Census tests to be given May 14

Will lwnor 22 state workers

.

---- -' -------.-·-·- --

ary by the Rev . Michael Lord,
pas tor· of the Love Cathedral
United Chrlstlan Church In
Cleveland, and Judy WynnParker, a certified public ac·
countant from Ravenna.
Running on · the Democratic
side as write-Ins are Daniel ,
Clofanl of Cleveland Heights and
his running mate, Robert Galvin
of Galloway, and Henry King and
his wife, Sandra, of Lorain.
The other Republlcan noml·
nees, also without opposition,
will be state Sen. Paul Pfeifer of
Bucyrus for attorney general,
state Rep. James Petro of Rocky
River for auditor, Hamilton
County Commissioner Robert
Taft II for secretary of state and
former federal government off!.
clal Judith Brachman of Bexley
for treasurer.
.
Ohio Supreme Court justices
Craig Wright and Andrew Dou-- glas also receive free rides for
Republican nominations.
On the Democratic slde, Sher· ·
rod Brown, state Auditor Tho·
mas Ferguson and state T,reasurer Mary Ellen Withrow bave
no opposition. Judge Mary Cacl·
oppo ()f Summit County Court of
Appeals and Youngstown attor·
ney Stuart Banks are uncon·
tested for the Ohio Supreme
Court noinlnatlons.
Cacioppo has been In poor
health and has stopped cam·
.paignlng. The Democra,t s may
replace her on the fall ballot with
Judge Stephanie TUbbs Jones of
Cleveland. .
Two stale senators .- Charles
Butts, a Cleveland Democrat,
and · llen Gaeth, a Defiance
Republlcan - are being chal·
lenged In the primary. ~ut both
16-year veterans are expected to
win.
In the Olllo House, a dozen
Democratic lncumbenls and one
Republican member are facing
primary challenges.

•••
-=::..-!'

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