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Paga

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10-The Daly Sentinel

--Local news briefsEMS has five ealls Monday
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to live callS for assistance on Monday.
At 9:55a.m. the Ru Uand unit was called to Meigs Mine No. 31
for Harley Eblin who was taken to Holzer Medical Center,
AI 11:04 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Second Street for
Jenny WUiiamson who was transported to Veterans Memorial
·
Hospital.
The Middleport llDlt, at12: 17 p.m. responded to a calion Pearl
Street for Penny Rigsby who was taken to Veterans.
T)le Pomeroy unit was called to Route 681 at 4:44 p.m. for
Helen Conrad whO was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
·
AI 5:56 p.rri. the M!ddleporthunlt went to Mill Street for Betty
Stoner who was. tr,ansported to Holzer.
·

Lincoln Hill Road. to be closed:
The VIllage of Pomeroy has announced that Lincoln Hill Road
will be closed after 9 a.m. on Thursday from the bottom of the
bill to High Street for repair of the road.

Bidwell man injured in accident
A Bidwell man was injured in a motorcycle crash Monday at 6
p.m. in Green Township on Mitchell Road, .3 of a mUe south of
· the junction of U.S ..35, according to the GaiDa·Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.·
Edwin R. Hodge, 22, was taken by the Gallla County .EMS to
Holzer Medical Center, from where he was transported by
helicopter to the University of Cincinnati Bum Center, where he
was admitted for treatment of second· and third-degree bums
covering 21% of hiS upper body. At last report he was liSted In
fair condition.
Ho'dge, riding a 1980Honda 900motorcycle. was heading north
when he went·off the right side of the road, struck a culvert and
overturned. Hodge continued through two front yards until he
hit a barrel planter, at which point the motorcycle caught fire In
front of a tree. .
The Gallipolis Fire Department, which was called to the
scene, sent one truck and 17 men to put out the fire . .

Man dies following heart' atfack
.
.
.

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'

Catherine Gillespie. 67, of Crab Orchard. W.Va., was round
Monday afternoon suffering a heart attack In his CheVrOlet
pickup truck half a mile west of Able's'on u.s; 35, according to
Rio Grande Pollee Chief Ralph Steinbeck, who was among the
first to give Gillespie CPR.
Gillespie, whose truck was pulling a trailer, was traveling
west when he went Into cardiac arrest. He then pulled off the
road and stopped at the pobit where Steinbeck·and the Gallla
·
County EMS found him.
Gillespie was taken by the EMS to Holzer Medical Center,
where he died. Because Gillespie's heart attack was neither a
part of a crash nor the cause of one, HMC did not release any
information on the precipitating condltjons of G!ll~sp!e's heart
attack, claiming p~tien! coQ!kle!lliality.
,,

More rain o._ way

By BOB HOEFLICH ·
Perhaps, you remember readIng In this column recently about
VIrgil King,
Kingsbury,
well -k now
.Meigs
who suffered a
severe throat
laceration In a
tractor accident
near his b,ome.
II was thought at first that
Virgil had jumped from the
overturning tractor. However,
his wife reports that through
communication with VIrgil- it's
done by writing since Virgil is
unable to spealt - .that be stayed
on the tractor while It turned over
and was still on It when It became
upright again. ·
VIrgil was driven to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he_was
in Intensive care for several days
before being moved 1o a Columbus hospital tor specialized treat·
ment. · He Is now at Riverside
Hospital; Room 7004, 3545 Olentangy Road, Columbus: Ohio
43214, Virgil has , undergone
surgery there - his voice box is
fractured in two locations - but
IS still unable to speak. His doctor
feels that eventualll! speech will
return- the quality of his voice
will be different, according to the
doctor'.s opinion.
Incldentai~V, VIrgil will be at
the Columbus hospital for probably another week In case you
want to send along a card. Mrs.
King will be instructed In how to
provide proper ·c are for him
before he Is returned home.
Howard and Phyllis Chase
Russell, foriner Meigs residents,
will be observing their 60th
wedding anniversary on June 7.
Howard is a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Phyllis, a graduate of Pomeroy
High School and I!leY were
married just after their respective graduations 60 years ago.
Phyllls' fa'ther, John Chase, and
her brother, Glenn, Incidentally,

Continued from page 1
By United Press lnlernalloaal
slight risk of severe thunder- is of Demjanjuk.
Ohio Is In line for another round storms through Wednesday
The young man in the photo·
of significant rain Tuesday night morning.
graph has balding blond hair
and Wednesday.
Early morning temperatures while the rest of the men have full
The Nallonal Weather Service WE!re quite mild under a deek of heads of dark hair.
said ~aln would begin· to fall mld·level clouds. Readings
"When you have 'seven ,people
acr0$S Ohio Tuesday )light .as a ranged from the mid .50s to the with black .hair and one with
storm ·system frorri Texas to lower .· 60s. ·.Ut tie more than a · blond.ha!r and not much of 11. it's ·
IllinoiS brings heavy ainounfs of trace of rain fell overnight In the like putting a black am.ong seven
rain to Ohio.'
north. Some showers continued whites or a while among· seven
The weather service ~IIi .oil.\, . to linger al'ong the lakeshore blacks.'' Sheftel said·.
half to olle inch of rain would be from Cleveland east.
Sheflel also criticized the way
common statewide. bUt that
the
photo spreads were shown to
The ·storm system will be ·
under a thunderstorm or two the moving to the East Cnast Thurs- witnesses and the fact that
amounts could reach nearly two day. Strong high pressure will DemJanJuk was not informed of
inches. The northern. half of the then build Into the area on the proceedings and therefore
state will be most prone to the. Friday. The early signs of a did not h11ve hiS lawyer present.
higher amounts. ·'.
·
The defense attorney charged
pleasant weather w,eekend .is
that in violation of recognized .
In addition to the .rain, strong favorable.
practice, some of the witnesses
thunderstorms and possible tor·On the early morning weather
nadoes will encompass a farge map, low pressure was over the were told one of the pictures was
part of the Plain$ and Mississippi · Texas Panhandle with a warm of Demjanjuk.
Valley.
·
....
front reaching -Into southern
Some of these storms could Illinois, then curved back south
creep into Indiana and Ohio's to Alabama. A fast moving low
western counties Tuesday night. pressure center was over lower
Veterans Memorial
As a result of this potential, tbe Michigan with a weak front
Monday AdmiSsions- None.
westPrn · half of Ph!o is l!nder a trailing southwps I to Missouri.
Monday Discharges - Brad
Robinson, Thomas Crow, Teresa
Bartlett, Catherine Crist, and
c_o_n_tin_ue_d_f_ro_m....;p:....a.;;,ge_1_ _ __ Edgar Brewer.
dlclable weather can dramatl· nearly $7.4 million more In
To end mUJTiages
cally lll)pact the finances of a earnings.
company whose earnings are
Other non-operating items also
A petitiOn for dissolution has
extremely sensitive to the contributed $6.6 million to Coflied In Meigs County
been
weather.
.
lumbia's earnings, resulting in a . Common Pleas Court by Edward
"We base our .projections on ret.urn ·on equity of 18.6 percent. , A. Bell, Rutland, ana Dreama D.
what are . COnSidered normal. With0\11 those factors, Colum·
Bel~ Rutland.
temperatures In ' ohto,'' Tilley bla's ·r eturn on equity in 1989
Rebecca Ann Kloes, Pomeroy,
said. ''Major deviation in would ·have been 12.8 percent,
Is seeking a dlvarce from Jon
weather. both colder and Tilley said.
Walter KJ~s, Middleport.
warmer, significantly affect
The average return allowed by
earnings."
the Public Utilities Commission Judgment sought
December's temperatures, 35 of Ohio In 1989 was )4.2 P!!rcent.
percent ,lower ihan -normal, meStephen Ostrander, spokesA complaint has been filed In
ant temperatures for all of 1989 man for the Ohio Office of
the Meigs County Court of
were 3.8 percent lower than Consumers' Counsel, wb!ch bas
Common Pleas by the Leading
normal in Ohio. That meant more 1/Pposed Columbia's rate reCreek Conservancy District, Ru·
use of natural gas for healing and quests, · . disputed Tilley's
!land, against the VIllage of
assessment.
Rutland for 'faJiure to pay in ,
accordance with a water contract between the two parties.
.
'
Soulh Central Ohio ,
Leading :, Creek is seeking
Showers · and thunderstorms
Showers and thunderstorms Thursday. with fair weather $13,496.28 for delh!qlll!nt water
likely Tuesday night. with a low · Friday and Sat:urday. Highs will . blll.s, and all'" order mandating
In the mid 60s. Chance of rain 60 range from 65 to 75 Thursday, and compelling installation of
percent. Showers and thunder- from the 60s to the low 70s Friday properly approved backflow destorms likely Wednesday~ with and In the 70s Saturday. Over- vices at the ·expense of the
highs in the mid 80s. Chance of night lows will range from 55 to65 VIllage of Rutland.
rain is 70 percent.
early ThurdsaY, from the low 40s
Exlended Forecast
to the low ~ Friday and Sum sou@ht
Thutsday through Saturday
Saturday mornings. ~
Alpine Credit Union, Orem,
Utah Is seeking $3,538.60 from
Samuel E. McKinney Jr., Por·
tland, In the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
friend, Mary Lou Brown, Colum- ·
Kathleen
bus; and several nieces and , · LiM11!e&amp; iMued .·
Kathleen (Kacey) Jones, ·so, nephews.
Services willlhe held Wednesdied Monday at Mann Nursing .
Marriage licenses have been ·
day at 8:20 p.m. at Shoemaker
Home in Columbus.
Issued In Meigs County Probate
She was the daughter of Clyde Funeral Hoine, · 2830 Cleveland
Court to the folloWing couples.
V. Jones and Meld Bailey Jones. ' Ave. at Laka Street In Columbus.
Donald Reed Duval~ 21, Long
She was retired from National 1 Graveside services will be held In Bottom, and Beth Ann ~nman, 34,
Beech Grove Cemetery on Thurs·
Electric CoD In Columbus.
·
Chester: Stephen Aaron White, :
'
She Is survived' by two sisters, · day all p.m.
23, Reedsville, and Kenda K.
Friends may call'altheJuneral
Ruth Walters, Columbus; and :
Caney, 20, Middleport; and
home
on Wednesday from 2·4 Lawrence Randall Upacomb, 34, ,
Martha ~aggy, Pomeroy; .a :
brother, Durward A. Jones, ' p.m. and 7-9 p.m,
Pomeroy. and Jill Lorraine Law- ·
J"urriepa, Calif.; a very dear
renee, 37, Pomeroy.
.

Trussell...

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continued from page 1

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Ohio Lottery

Reds rally,
edge Pirates
in 11th, 5-4

~

the Middleport Housing CorporaThe vUiage entered Into a fire •
uon to own the property. The protection mutual aid agreement ~·
village In advertising the sale with tbl' village of VInton.
will reserve the right to reject
A discussion on trash handllnJ ·
any and all bids.
and the restrictions of the multi· ·
Appointed .to t~. Middleport eounty SollCI Waste District wai!
originally owned the lirst llle:a·
Racrl'~tlon Commission to !Ill held during the meeting and~:,
.Gilmore proposed.a.meetlng witli ~
Uon of WSAZ now in Huntington,
vacancies created by tHe local haulers apari~ from tb"·:
W. Va. Coincidentally, yours . the
reslgpat!on of Judy Crooks and
..,
truly lives In tha t Pom~roy
John' Hood, were Bob McClure regular council meeting to dis- :cuss the prob1ems.
,: ·
location Qn High St .
•
for the term to expire in De·
ceinber,
1991.
and
Rick
Edwards
Gilmore
suggested
the
poss
Mr. and Mrs. Russ!'ll reside at
for the term· to expire 1n ·De· blllty· of developing a com~
37 Buccaneer Drive, Lush!ng,
cember. 1993. Brian Conde Is the pile for· leaves , ·grass clippinp ~
Florida , 34788.
r
· and other nlateriafs wliich woullt:
o her me rl'l be r • 0 f 1 he disintegrate into mulch nl'ai' the·.·
·Commission . •
C. E. (Chuck) Blakeslee, who
The possibility lif installing a sewage . lagoon in lowet:·
served for many years as the
Middleport.
.
::
Meigs County Agricultural Agent
computer system was discussed.
The Middleport Recreation ne,..
and who is currently executive . It was noted hat the Manage- partmenl's .K run to take pl&amp;c(".' ·
5
ment Advisory Service of the
•
director of the Meigs County
Stale
Auditor's
Office
wilL
proIn
Middleport
on Sal\'fday wa~ .
Regional Planning CommiSsion.
vide consultation services for not noted.
·•:
wilt· be observing his 80th· birth·
more than $3,000. A representaThe mayor's report showeft •
day on Thursday, May 17. A 50
live of that office willcoineinand receipts ior April of $5,973&lt;:
year resident of Meigs County,
Attending were Mayor Hoffman; :
Blakeslee resides at -1636 Lincoln
evalu~te the needs of the village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, a"" .
·and then makff recommend a·
·~
Heights. Pomeroy. · .
lions, it w~s reported.
Council members, Dewey Hont:;
· The Meigs County Medical
Preliminary · 'plans Ior the ton. Jim Clatworthy ; Bob Gil; :
Middleport levee Improvements more, Paul Getard, Jaclt Satter~·
Society . has help an organlzatlonal session and the new
were presented by the ·ma:Yor field , and William Walters:
president is Dr. James Witherell
who noted that the proposed cost
. who ·succeeds Dr. E. s. Villani.: ' of the work excee&amp; ti:V $35,000 the
S
-~
eva. Other new officers are Dr . . $37,500· amount which Is avalla-·
.. ,.
•
Douglas Hunter, vice president . bleat this time to do the job. The
Dally stOck prices
::
and Dr. Wilma Mans!!eld is
village earlil'r this year received
(As o110: ....
... a.m.
· )
,'-•
secretary-treasurer.
a grant for the project from thl' Bryce and Mark Smith
-~
Ohio Department of Natural
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
:~
What's with the running ?
Resources, Division of
••
·,
·A
E
1
p
'
Roger Williams, Recreation. Waterways.
c
m lectr c ower ............. .. 3W'·.
11
Director for the Middleport VII·
o~nc ,voted to take an option
AT&amp;T ........... ,.... ......... ....... ,42*:
lage Recreation Department, ~~ ~ ~-property .owned by Dale Ashland Oil .. ........ ..... :........ .37~ ·
says that registration Is lagging
c o..,on adjacent to . Middle·
Bob Evans ........................ : .ll~f
0 ~lll$fe~ali. 'f\le selllng · Charming Shoppes .............. 10% ·
for Saturday's 5-K run being
staged by the departml'nt.
Pr eke s
• arid the village City Holding Co ................ ... 14.* ·
There wlll be a. number of 1oo a s1x month Sl,QOO option.
""
1...... .. .. ... ... . .. .20~)t.
· F edera· 1 .,.ogu
trophies awards in six age groups
The first rea,ding of a'\ ordl·
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ..... :...... ., ... 35~
for both men and women runners
nance regarding sick leave pol· · Heck's .. c.............................. 2*·
who are In the top two places in . Icy was given. It specifies that
Key Centurion ...... .............. 14~ ,
their respective age groups.'
·there wlil be no limitation· on'the La d • E 0 d
n s
......... .. , ............. 16
Participation medals will be number of days which· can be
accumulated
in
sick
leave
but
Limited
Inc
.................. ..... .4 5 ~
presented to all entrants in the
Multimedia Inc ................... 81'4
run which will begin at 10 a .m. at
~axbbRi
est&amp;auMrants ................ ,. 2%1
the corner of Walnut St., and ~:~~~~~c~ !~p~~~:e:no:e~~~~
o ns
yers ................ 16',!
North Second Ave.
ment can receive payment. The Shoney's Inc ........... ..... :...... 14~
If you haven't registered you · payment on retirement is limited · Star Bank ....................... .... 20%'
can do so by contacting Williavs to 50 percent of the accumulat!'d Wendy's Jntl.. .. : ....... ..... ....... 4 ~
at 992-6782 or you can even lime up to a maximum of 60days. ' Worthington Ind ................. 23')/~
I'egiSter.Salurday morning at the
site from 8 a.m. to 9: 45 a.m:
Pre- registration is $7 while r&lt;'gistration on race day is $9. :· .
There will be a speclaimeeting
Racine Legion to meet
There '?'ill be a r~gular meet· '· of theChesterTown,shipTrustee!!
Lancaster residents are suffer·
ing of the · Raclrle American on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
lng with the effects from the
Legion Posi 602 on Thursday ai Dance slaled
Tbe Bells and Beaus Western'
effects of the burning .of an
7:30 p.m. Refreshments wili be
served.
·
Square Dance Club wlll sponsor a •
estimated 1.2 million old tires
dance Friday from 8·11 p.m. at
stored In that city. Officials CCL to meet .
feared that the tires would one
The Middleport Child Conser· the senior citizens center in
day burn and as usual nobody did
vatlon League will meet Thurs- Pomeroy. Keith Rlppeto. Par·
anything !I bout II . Now Is that par day at 7,p.m. at thehomeofHelen kersburg, W.Va. wlll be the
caller. The ·dance is open to all .
for the courue or what? Do keep Blacku!OJ;l.
,
wester square dancers.
smiling.
Trustees to meet

Registration lagging
for Saturday's. 5-K run

Demjanjuk....

to Buckeye State
\

Tuesday, May 15, 1990

Pomaroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Beat of th,g Bend

-.-

Daily Number

908
Pick-4
4465

Page 3
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Pf'

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Vol.40.

2 Sections, 14 Pagn 25 Cent1
A Muhimedia lric. New111-s:-8r
'

.i;

Columbia ·denies it padded
•
pnce paid .for ·· natural gas

'

·'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Columbia Gas ·of Ohio denies It
overstated IIJe price II paid for
natural gas this winter during
state hearings on Its latest rate
_increase request.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Wll·
l!a m Spratley said Wednesday an
$11.4 million rate increase Co·
lumbia was awarded last month
. should be reduced by $3.9 million
beCause of the overstatement.
· :;lpratley, who has called for a
. $17 ·million decrease In Columbia
r!ltes, said the utility's wrllten
tes tlmony !nfol'med the Public
UtUltles Commission of Ohio on
Feli.'16tbat it used a priceof$2.10
for 1,000 cubic feet of gas ,in
calculating its capital expenses.
But on Feb. 13, Columbia's
supplier, an afflllated company
. called Columbia Gas Transmls·

•.

5

-----Announcements

' ·

SIGN SIGHTING - Tom Hazlett Slg~~~~ brought In a boom
equipment Tuesday to take a .red target board marked with an
•'M" for McDonalds high In the sky. The sign was taken to different
heights with McDonald olflclaly driving both sides of the riYer to
check lor Ylsablllty.

.

•

Hospital news

Cold weather .....

,.

•

a

• \ .0•

A long-term care ombudsman
program Is being Initiated In
Meigs County as a part of the
Options for Elders rural demonstration program - recently
started h\ eight southeastern
Ohio Counties. ,
As explained by Cathy Stevens,
local program eoordlnator whose
office Is Iii Marietta. the Regional
Long-term Care Ombt~dsman
Program , will . be working to
' improve the quality of life which
older persons receive In their
homes, in community-based set·
lings like adult day care fac!ll·
ties, and In nursing homes.
"Older American's Month In
Ohio Is the best setting for
recognizing what has become a
valuable· and dynamic regional
long-term care ombudsman program." ·said Stevens. ,

By United' Press Inlernallonal
Abortion loomed as lkey issue
in the gubernatorial campaign In
Pennsylvania and the U.S. Senate race In Oregon as primary
voters in those states selected
Republican and Dempcratic can·
dldates for the November
elections.
In addition to primaries · In
Pennsylvania and Oregon Tues·
day, Nebraska Democrats chose
between two candidates they feel
can defeat vulnerable GOP Gov.
Kay Orr. who is suffering from
very low popularity ratings.
In Pennsylvania, Democratic

Throughout most of the winter
Columbja paid very close to the
projected price, he said. By
mid-February, gas was cheaper,
and twas when Columbia began
paying the lower figure, he_said.
But Spratley said the rates
should be set according to the low
figure. "Rates are set for the
future, so we feel the most.
appropriate number IS the current number."
Columbia officials said Man·
day the ut!Uty hopes to Increase
the $11.4 million hike !I was
granted in ApriL The utllily had , .

program provides ·general,
Ombudsmen follow-up on coni·
plaints registered against lpng- consumer-oriented Information
about relatell services 'available
ierm care !acll!lles, like nursing
in the community . For example,
homes or adult care homes. as
advice on how to choose a nursing
well as with community-based
care services, like home health home Is available to callers
Ombudsmen services in Ohio
care or home delivered meals,"
formerLv !ocu~d on n11rs!ng
she explained.
The. toll free telephone number 'hom" care. As part Of the
lor the program Is 1·800-833-0830. recently enacted Eldercare lnltl·
All complaints and personal alive of the 'Celeste administraInformation remains tion, the dulles of the. regional
ombudsman programs
were
confidential.
Ombudsman services are pro· expanded to cover services provided free ol charge and the goal. vided In the community and in
advised Stevens, is to resolve the homes of older persons.
Community-based care in·
complalnty alter they are flied.
She stressed that complaints eludes nursing, home delivered
may be CUed by Individuals meals, adult day care, home
receiving services, family health aide, transportation as·
slstance, therapy services, and
members. or others.
. Stevens emphasized lhl!l the respite care.

•

·cov. Robert Casey triumphed
easily and Republican hopeful
Barbara Hafer won a s\lrpr(s·
ingly close victory; setting up the
gubernatorial election ra,ce.
In Oregon, Sen. Mark Hatfield.
R-Ore., and wealthy central
Oregon businessman Harry
Lonsdale, a Democrat, won their
Senate primaries and will face
each other in November.
In Nebraska, Lincoln attorneybusinessman Blll Hoppner and
Ben Nelson wereJn a virtual dead
heat for the Democratic guberna·
torlal nominal ion with 99 percent

of the vote counted. Hoppner held
a 44,272-44,037 edge over Nelson.
with both receiving 27 percent of
the vote.
Nebraska law provides for an
automatic recount if the candl·
date totals are within 1 percen·
tage point of each other. Elec·
lions officials said additional
absentee ballots will be counted
through noon Thursday. ·
Democratic strategists said
they were confident Orr could be
be~ten in November, no matter
which candidate won the Ne·
braska race.

Prosecutor looks into ·vehicle use

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) Madison County Prosecutor
David Picken Is_ looking Into
allegations that Attorney Gen·
eral Anthony Celebrezze may
have v!ol!lted the law by misusIng slate vehicles.
·
Picken said yesterday that the
allegations . against Celebrezze,
the Democratic nominee for
governor, will have to· be
"viewed and reviewed", the
StUiwater pollee Lt. Kirk ·Mit·
Cleveland
Plain Dealer reported
telstet. Evacuees were taken by
Wednesday.
bus to a shelter the Red Cross ~t
Picken declined to speclilate
up in a downtown building where
whether
Celebrezze broke the
power had been restored, offl·
law
when
.he used state vans and
cials said.
'
trailers
to
'transport old cars he
''There are homes )hat. the roof
purchased.
Celebrezze Ia said to
Is completely gone,'' sal() Crystal
be
a
·
car
buff who enjoys
Shedrick, a Stillwater re$khint.
restoring
old
cars.
"We· have several major gas ·
Celebrezze has admitted to
.' leaks in the area. You~an'tget to .
using
poor Judgment and paid the
the south .side of town. There is
stale
$700,
the amount he deter· ·
debris everywi!Elre." ·
•
mined
to
be the commercial
Ham radio operators reported
renlal
value
of using the
seeing large lrees snapped In
equlment.
half.
Because the vehicles Celeseveral other tornadoes were
used were maintained by
brezze
reportedly sighted ellewhere \n
. northcentral, northeastern and
western Oklahoma, and some
storms accompanying them pro- at London, Picken has jurladlc·
lion for any pi'Oieclldon.
duced golfball·slze hall.

~~:n~f~:,::.r::~ ~~~;~:::~

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HIGH IN mE SKY- The big "M" for McDonalds could be seen
tor miles ill the Bend area Tllesday Ill company olllclala came to
town for a sign sighting. t has been rumored for months thai
'McDonalds would be .~omlng to Pomeroy but yeslerday'a actlYity
was the flnt real sign of anything happening al the propoeed slle on
West Main. Ro&amp;eoe Milia who owns the restaurants In Ripley and
Spencer•.W. Va. Ia plallnlng the local operation and advised that an
anooUDCement wlll be torlbcomlngln about a week. He said that he
Is currently still In the "pennltllng phase." The old Pomeroy depot
Is on part of the land which will be .used for the proposed
COD811'\1CIIon,

By Untied Press lnlernatlonal
Torrential rain, tornadoes, hail
and floods !n!llcted damage on a
widening area of the nation's
m!dsE:Ction. while Texas. Arkan·
sas and Louisiana wearily extended their battles against roD·
!ng floodwaters.
In northcentral Oklahoma; two
tornadoes. hit Stillwater late
Tuesday, one Qf !bern bouncing
up and down across town and
injuring at .least 11 people. ·A
4-year-old was killed- during the
tornado; early reports ~uggested
he had fallen from a car speeding
away from the twister, authorities said ,Wednesday.
More than 200 people were
~tvacuated from damaged homes
)r from areas where power lines
)n the ground po~ a threat. sa.ld

Jones

.~

·'This is Important new evl·
dence and shows that Columbia's
rate hike was unjustified;" Spra·
tley said. "We are asking the
PUCO to look at this Issue
again."
Columbia spokesman Alan
Crockett accused Spratley of
trying to mislead the public. He
said Spratley is basing his
ligures on the Inexpensive gas

price Columbia paid starting in
mid -February, not on the price
Columbia paid during December
and January .
Crockett said Columbia's writ·
ten testimony was based on
.
'
projections made
In December.

asked for a $43.9 m!llion rate
hike.
Ronald Tilley , Columbia's
chairman and chief executive
officer, said the utility likely will
file a new rate increase request ,
its third in three years. later this
year .
TUley says Columbia Is
strapped financially despite 1989
earnings showing the company
made $45 mlllion - 50 percent
more than allowed by the PUCO.
Tilley said an 18.6 percent
ret urn on equity reported in 1989
was inflated liy one· third because of extreme cold In De·
cember and an accounting error.
He said the company expects to
make a 6 percent to 8 percent
return this year, and wlll cut
expenses by $10 million.

Long-term care·· ombudsman lleavy
•
prOgram to be initiated here ratns
pound
Ohio

Tornadoes, rain .i nflict more ·
damage· in Texarkana· region

--Area deaths--

l,

slon Corp., informed Its custo·,
-mers, including Columbia Gas,
that !I was charging $1.21 per
1,000 cubic feet, Spratley said.
He said the discrepancy al·
lowed Columbia to show $7.8
million more in capital expenses
than It paid. That resulted in ·a
$3.9 million windfall for Colum·
bla In terms of net· Income,
Spmtley said.

Governor, Senate contests top
.May primaries in . ihre~ s.tates

------Weather-----

•

•

a1

-~-

Stoe
: k·

·· Low ' tonlcht In mid 60s.
Chaoce of rain 100 percent.
Thurtlday's hich near 70.
Chancie of rain 80 percent.

Picken · said his .decision to
prosecute would be based on
whether the action was an
Isolated Incident or part of a
larger pattern - and whether
using the vehicles for that
purpose Is actually a crhne.
"If It Is, as he says, an Isolated
instance of poor Judgment, !I
likely will be paid for In No·
vember by the reaction of voters
at the polis," Picken said.
·'If justice Is what we are
trying to achieve, It would

appear to me that Justice is
served," Picken told the Plain
Dealer. "It's been served by It
becoming public. you folks prlntl~g it, and by his public admls·
slon that he used bad judgment.
"I think (hat has caused him
more personal 'damage than
anything else, •• Picken added.r
Picken, chall'man of the Mad!·
son County GOP. denied he had
been pressured by state Republl·
can officials to act on the
Celebrezze matter.

Local news briefs-Board ·approves three contracts
Three .employees were. given contracts and a substitute
tea~her was hired at the recent meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Education held In the board offices.
Given contracts ,were Nancy Carnahan, secretary, conl!nu·
lng; Faith Varney, multihandicapped class, twohyears
· contract; Shirley Wlllla, severely behaviorally handicapped
aide, two year contact. VIctoria Peavley was . hired as a
substitute teacher on an as needed basis.
· Textb&lt;i6ks for English, spelling and handwriting were
adopted and there were appropriation modWcatlons on the
Continued on page 7

By u.,tted Pl'l!lii!. lnlerna&amp;ioaal
Ohioans . whose only contact
with severe weather this year
was- watching television scenes
of the devastation in the Southwest were getting a flrst·hand
.taste Wednesday , with heavy
rains and a flash flood watch In
effect.
And even worse weather was
on the way: strong thunderstorms were pounding an area
from Missouri to eastern Indiana
at dawn Wednes(!ay ;with numerous reports of hall, torrential
rains and significant lightning.
The severe weather area was to
move Into the· Buckeye State
later in the day, wlthwesternand
southwestern· counties at the
highest , risk for severe
thunderstorms.
At dawn, a line of showers and
Isolated thunderstorms was moving across northwest and central
Ohio, With another line moving
over the southwest counties. The
National Weather Service said
those storms came from a
tremendous outflow of energy
from the more Intense storms
over 1ndlana.
Ear~v morning temperatures
· were In ll)e 60s. Overnight
rainfall totaled from a tenth of jln
inch to 0.53 Inches reported at
·
Dayton. ·
· Most areas of the state were
expected to pick up at least I inch
of rain, bu I the NWS Sl!id some
could get as much as 3 Inches in
severe thunderstorms.
In addition to a flood watch for
the entlre·state, there were flood
warnings lor the Tiffin and St.
Joseph rivers in northwest Ohio.
At mid-morning, the Tiffin River
was near Its flood stage of 11 f~t
at Stryker; while the St. Joseph
was expected to exceed its 12-foot
flood stage at Montpelier later In .
the day .
·
.
The showers and thunderstorms will be ending from th!'!
west Thursday and a falrbu I cool •
start to the weekend wUI beglri
Friday. Temperatures will be
mainly in the 60s on Friday and
gradually warm up into the 70s
and low80sbySunday.Overnlght
lows wUI drop into the40sand low
50s ~urlng the same period.
While the majority of OhiO Is
not in need of rainfall, moisture
reserves In east-central Ohio
sho.uld benefit, as the area WIIS
noting a mUd drought as llf
sunday.
Between showers Wednesdjly
afternoon. the high humidity and
mUd temperatures werre to push
the lives IIK:k safety Index Into the
alert category In the souih.
Whl1e some drying should
occur Friday and Saturday when
fair skies are expected. more
rain will return late Saturday
Continued on page 7

�{'

The Daily

Ohio
•

Commentary
f

t'

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•· DEVOTED TO THE INTERES:I'S OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
A~

film~

~-

.

,

.....,__..__,.., r-T"Sl!!c:::l•o=o

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
General Manager

fAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstnnt Publlsher/ControUer
A MEMBER of The United Press InternatiOII!Il, Inland Dally Press
AsSOCiation and the Ama'Jcan Newspaper Publishers Association.

.,.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
. name, address and telephone number. No unslped letters wm be pub•- Ushed. Leite's should be In good taste, addressing Issues. not personal!·
' 'ties.
'

.

.

:·old rules stifle
~:modem

~

•
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-

. . ..

WASHfNGTON - David Net·
·· · mann's life was already a night·
mare when we told his story In
February. The hapless Texas
businessman liad bounced some
checks while on a business trip to
Greece. Because of that, he
became a bargaining chip In an
American attfmpt to e»tradlte a .
terrorist from Greece.
After we reported the story,
Nelmann was freed from a Greek
j all, but not before hiS' nightmare
got worse. He had to endure
months In nqtor'tously brutal and
squalid Greek jails, with no help
from the American system that
he still holds dear. Atonepotrithe
was held for days with no food,
toilet or blankets.
The State Department could
have spared Neimann tl)ls ag. .

ony, but chOse not to. At the same- cashed three checks for $1,000
time that the Greek government each. He dldn' I know that the
was demanding Nelmann's ex· American company that Issued
tradition to stand trial, the U.S, hjf'l the checks wouldn't cover
government was askln' the them when the Greek bank got
Greeks to send a P~estl.ntan around to cashing .them months
terrorist, Muhammed Rashid, 10 later. Bank employees were at
America for irial. It would )lave fault, and later admitted It, but
been Impolitic io balk on Net· not before Nelmann had been put
marin and expect the Greeks to · through hell.
The ordeal has forced Netturn over Rashid. He Is suspected
In the bombing of a Pan Am jet on mann deeply Into debt. He los I his
a flight from Tokyo to Honolulu In consulting buslness·and his llome
1982. Rashid was arrested ·tn and even had to give up custody
Greece In 1988.
of his son while be was lmprlNelmann · was extr;~dlted to sonejl. While fighting extradiGreece by !lie'State Department tion, he spent a year In a Texas
In December. He had been , jail after his ball was revoked on
·
fighting extradition on the flimsy · a technicality.
bad check charge for years. In
Now that he Is back home In
19821 on a trip to . Greece, he · Dallas trying to put his life back

Senate

.. ,
By SHVE GERSTEL
.. • WASHINGTON (UP!) - Just before a frustrated Democratic
· leader George Mitchell put the Senate out of Its misery for the day and
· 1he week, D. Brock Hornby was routinely confirmed as a federal
:. judge for Maine.
A nostalgic Mitchell noted that he held the judgeship when he was
.. plucked from the bench to become a senator, the start of a rapid
. career on Capitol Hill where he now Is the Senate Demi&gt;crati~ leader.
" . •i"There are many days and nights when I, as majority leader, think
wistfully of my dl!YS as a· U.S. district judge for the District of Maine
• . -end tod&lt;~Y was one of them," Mitchell said. ·
.
:
"When I was judge," Mitchell went on, ''lttook only one vote to do
: anything. Nowadays It takes 51 and sometimes they are hard to come
'.- by."

Although Mitchell is by no means serious a bouj returning to the
• courtroom, his longing for fhe days when he could whack a gavel and
• get things done Is understandable. Especially on this particular day.
:
The Senate was engrossed In deliberation of a $2.3 billion dire
emergency appropriation blll with the most Important Item being
~

$720 million for Panama and Nicaragua.

·

.•
President Bush had been screaming for passage of the b!U so that
:: the United States could assist these tW()'Central American nations- ·
• one freed from the despotic drug rule of Manuel Noriega by the use of
• force, the other delivered !rom communism by an election.
•
The House, which has certain logical rules to process legislation,
: quickly passed the money bill. The Senate decided togo on Its Easter
•• vacation.
·
•
Once back on the campus, the bill was further delayed by .a
• tug-of-war between Mitchell and Senate Republican leader Robert ·
.• Dole of·Kansas .
.
, , , . ~,
·
;
Mitchell, who wanted the senate" ·o ham tt.l 'n~gotiators with the
; House on the child care bill, r~(used to ~an up the money bill until Dole
•• withdrew his threat to attach Bush's capital gains tax cut to the
• kiddie-care package. That took several dayi, ,.
: r&amp;ut.even when the dire emergncy l'llblley1illl tea!Jhed the floor, the
•• Senate did not seem to consider It an emergency, much less dire.
·· Three times -on the day that had Mitchell longing for thecourl.; the Senate voted to keep in'ilte.'lllfra:prb'&lt;i!st8ll' lhat the District of
:; Col~ll)bla could uSE! Its own revem,resJor''!lb6r,llqiis.
.• , •, Coservatives promptly retaliated by offering an amendment that
; would a!low.the Dis trlct of Columbia to met.e outthedeath sentence In
: d'ryurders. That too had stroiig'support ,showit when an attempt to
-;kjll the provisiOn failed by a wlf!~ m~n:tn. · ": , · -)( was at this point that Mitcnell decfde ctG adjourn, hoping that a
• . weekend would resolve the problem.
::::~ In a way It did. The following Tuesday, the Senate, by voice vote so
· that no one need be recorded, adoptedllfefortheunborn and death for
. · the living, clearing the way for passage of the bill two days later.
By this time, President Vloleta Chamorro of Nicaragua was In
. 9ff!ce a week, Panama's President Guillermo Endara was lobbying
:tor help In Washington and Bush was threatening to veto the bill if It
•Jncluded the abortion language.
,·
: &lt; A pragmatic Mitchell told reporters that the delay was a "product
of the Senate rules ... but that Is-pot a new occurrence."
' •And it wlli happen again, as long as the rules allow senators to offer
. apd debate amendments, such as the one$ on abortion and the death ·
penalty, which have absolutely no relationship to the bill, and as long
as leaders acquiesce In a•pollcy that all but removes Monday and
Friday from a normal workweek.
Unless 'there are chariges, the Senate will, In the words of an Irate
sen: Trent Lott, R·Miss., look like a "kindergarten."
'
..

~ :tellers to the editor
Grand Strand resort 'better than ever'
· Dear Editor:
Everyone Involved In this.
. .'!'hanks to your support, and to remarkable renewal worked
' opr rapid, broad-based renewal' . night and day with our visitors In
~~fort, Myrtle Beach, the hub of
mind. That's because, d'esplte
'South Carolina's Grand Strand thOse.winds of change; Hurricane
resort, Is bet.ter than ever after
"Hugo" built something new and
• Hurricane "Hugo". More than
permanef!t, yet Invisible.
: 50,000 room, 10,000 campsites
"Hugo" built a strong bond
and 1,200 restaurants are ready
between Myrtle Beach and cities
: ' for the 1990 tourist season.
like yours.
.Skeptics debated whether a
As we b!!gln our new tourism
nine-month refurbishing effort season, please accept our ongo:. ~uld restore ·enough front
Ing appreciation for your gifts,
. {!.t&gt;rches and golf courses to prayers and concern. We Invite
: satisfy our usual 400,000 weekly you to come see how well your
. : vacationers. Any doubters need caring worked. Myrtle Beach Is
.: : no1" only play a round of golf on fresh, sparkling and renewed.
· • any one of our 68 courses or sip a
Sincerely,
· : julep on any one of several.
J. Michael Pate, Chairman
· : tlJousand ocean-frortt balccn.les
Myrtle Beach Area
: •.to see that Myrtle Beack Is not Hugo Economic Renewal Task
:: only back; It's better than ever.
Force

.. .

~:' Today

in history

'
•
:
·
:
;

; .
By Unlled Press lnterimtlonal
.
·•.. 'Today is Wednesday, May 16, the 136th dayof1990wlth229 to follow.
:. The moon Is waning. moving·toward Its last quarter.
.
;. · 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
William seward, secretary of state whose purchase of Alaska from
, Russia In 1867 for $7.2 million was called "Seward's Folly," In 1801;
banker Levi Morton, United States· vice president under Benjamin
Harrison, In 1824; David Hughes, Inventor of the microphone, l.n 1831;
: .&lt; aCtor Henry Fonda In 1905; bandleader Woody Herman In 1913;
• ~ l!l)tertalner Llberace In 1919; former New York Yankees manager
::.; :Smy Martin In 1928 and actress Debra Winger In 1955 (age 35).

..•... .: .·'.-On this date In history:
....

-

·: • · In 1804 the French Senate declared Napoleon Bonaparte emperor.
; :;: : In 1871: U.S. Marines landed In Korea In an unsuccessfulattemptto
&lt;·open the country to foreign trade.
' &lt;~ In 1929, the Academy of ~otlon Picture Arts and Sciences awarded
the first Oscars.

Europe
·can
profit
by
our
.

'

...

Until recently one !lldn't have. a
full appreciatiOn of the extent of
environmental ravaging that.
whet on behind the Iron Curtain.
Not until recently did we learn of
the disdain such state run systerns have · fllt' their natural
surroundings and for tile health
and well-being of their people.
Yes, we knew of the Chernobyls and we knew of the grave
pollution p~oblems that exist
throughout much of Communist
China, but not until the Iron
Curtain was lifted on . Eastern
Europedldweknowthedegreeof
damage that had been !lone.
Profit might have been a dirty
word, but production was not. In
fact production was the only
concern. Whatever It took to
crank out tanks, whatever natu·
raJ resources It took to generate
the electricity necessary to run
the plants that produced such
products, could be justified In the
name of need. The need for more
mlsslles, more . planes, more
trucks,· was paramount. Little
else mattered.
What such policies have left In
their wake Is a countryside
pocked with scars, a 'landscape
that looks more liinar than
lifelike. The countries whose
natural environments appear the
most severely damaged are East

;

...'

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....'

HILL DOUBLE'S - Eastern's Toby Hill sends a Vlldd Noble
pitch down the tlllrd-base line and Into the left field plalllll lor a
double In the slxlh lnnlag of Tuesday's dlstrlci tournament game
agal1111t Kyger Creek. HiD's double was pari of a three-run rally
that served as lcl•g on the cake In the Eagles' lZ-2 blowout. ( OVP
photo by G.' Speaeer Oaoorne)

Oilers hands Bruins
3-2. loss in overtime

\

By MIKE TuLLY
UPI Sporta Writer
BOSTON (UP!) - Peter Kli·
rna's goal .a t 15:13 or the third
overtime Tuesday night gave the
Edmonton Oilers a 3·2 victory
over the Boston Bruins In the
longest game In the history of the
Stanley Cup finals.
Klima's goal ended a Boston
marthaon that lasted five hours
and 32 mlntues and gave the
Oilers a 1·0 lead ht the best-of·
seven series that resumes Friday
night In Boston Garden.
Klima scol;'ed from near the
right faceoff dol, capping a play
that began near Edmonton's blue
line. Craig MacTavish sent the
puck to Jar! Kurri, who fed
Klima for his fifth playoff goal.
Klima had not skated a regular
shift since the first period, but
beat goalie Andy Moog for the
game-winner.
Besides tnchldlng several ex·
cltln~ scoring chances In overtime, the game . featured a ·
25-mlnute Interruption because
of a power failure that dimmed
the lights In the arena In the third
overtime , period. jhe power
failure began at 12:33 a.m. EDT
and lasted until 12:58 - just 25
minutes or so before Klima sent
the fans home.
The previous longest Stanley
Cup final game was Chicago's 3·2
victory over Montreal April 9,
1931 that ended on ,Cy Went·
worth's goal at 13:50 of the third
overtime.
Boston defenseman Ray
Bourque's second goal of the
gaine tied ·the score 2·2 with 89
' seconds left In regulation, flip·
ping a shot over goalie Bill
Ranford from the left side for his
fourth goal of the playoffs.
Adam Graves and Glenn And·
erson cashed In the rare chances
Edmonton managed against Bos·
ton's defense, giving the Oilers a
2·0 enterlng.the third period. The
way ex-Bruin RaDford was playtni In Edmonton's net, that lead
seemed safe.
·
But Bourque at 3: 43ofthe final
period, then sent It Into overtime.
The Oilers grabbed the home·
Ice advantage In !he best-of·

The Daily Senlinel

Robert Walters

Berry's World

1/

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oii'tioiiU,...Oiiiiiif...

.-,3t

CINCINNATI (UP!) - "Baseball is a game of funny bounces
and the bounces are going our
way," Todd Benzinger of the
Cincinnati Reds was saying In
the wee hours or Wednesday
morning.
Indeed, the last funny bounce
·In a Reds-Pittsburgh Pirates
game that began ·two hours tate
Tuesday night because of rain
· and ended In the lltll, Inning at
12:32 a.m. (EDT) Wednesday
definitely went Cincinnati's way .
With the game&gt; tied Hand the
bases loaded with one out,
Benzinger hit a bouncer up the
middle that- give or take a ,few
Inches one way or the other could have either been an Inningending double play or a game·
·winning single.
·
As It turned ·out, the ball
sUpped ·through the infield and .
rolled Into center field for the
winning RBI In a 5·4 Cincinnati
victory that gave the red·hot
Reds their best record after 30
games (23·7) In modern team
ory (since 1900).
didn't realize It was that
g
of a star !for us," said Reds'
manage,r Lou Plnlella. "It's just
fun watching these guys play.
,,

seven ser\e~ and snapped Bbs·
ton's eight-game home winning
streak. The series resumes Frl·
day night at Boston.
The Bruins oulshot Edmonton
31·16in regulation, buttheOilers
outsliot the Boston 7·6 In the first
overtime period.
Cam Neely almost won the
game for Boston 1:56into over·
time when his cannon shot from
the left . side trickled between
Ranford' s pads and rolled to·
wa,rd the goal. But Ranford
reached bacll and stopped It with ·
.
his stick.
By RICK VAN SANT
Edmonton nearly scored at
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Jack
6: 50 but- Moog stopped Joe Armstrong, CinCinnati ., Reds
Murphy's shot with his glove.
pitcher, I~ finally living Up to the
Edmonton's Mark Messler "All-American Boy" nickname
missed a shot across the .,rease or Jack Armstrong, fictional
with Moog down on the Ice at
radio hero.
15:27 . .
After several false starts with
Graves scored on Edmonton's the Reds In previous seasons,
second ~hot of t~e game, and Armstrong' is' far and away the .
Anderson on the Oilers' third bid best starter on the Reds' staff so
of the second period.
far this season.
Boston outshot Edmonton 7-51n
Armstrong is sporting a ()ashy
the second overtime, and had
6-1 record and 2.23 earned run
most of the good scoring chances.
average. Victory No. 6 came
Defenseman Glen Wesley had
Monday night, whenhegaveup3
Ranford trapped under a pile runs the first Inning but held
· 2: 00 Into the period but his 12-foot
Plt.tsburgh scoreless · the next
backhander sailed over the net.
five Innings he pitched to help
At 4:20, Neely forced Ranford to make Cincinnati's 5·3 win
make a pad save and at 14: 30 the
possible.
.
puck squirted through a plll'
"A year ago," said catcher Joe
without going Into theOilers'~tet . Oliver, "If Jack had gotten dQwn
Moog stopped a wraparound
by 3 In the first Inning, he might
try by Martin Gelinas at 16:58
have gotten down on himself,
and Kurri' s stuff at 19: 18.
started over-pitching and gotten
Ranford, acquired with Geoff
Into more troubie.
Courtnall for -opposing goalie
•'The difference between last
Andy Moog on March 7, 1988, . year and .this year is that Jack Is
den'ted Boston sniper Neely twice
a lot more relaxed. He's ready to
In the first periOd and onae In the
let the other guys play behind
second. Edmonton backed Ran·
him Instead of trying to do 1t all
ford.by blocking shots and Boston
himself. He'sgotfourplt.c hesand
also helped by misfiring on
a lot of confidence."
chances and hitting at least three
posts.
Hlttin' Fools. The Reds lead
Ranford gave a hint of how he the major leagues In team
would ;Play ear~v In the first
batting with a .302 -average, 22
period, when the puck came to
.Lyndon Byers alone In the slot.
HIIUID'S GIHNHOUSE
Tile goaile rushed Into position
lind sent the puck 111to the corner.
On !mother sequence, Neely and
AU BEDDING 'PLANTS
Craig Janney worked a give-and·
3 PKS 5100
go In Edmonton's end. With
REG. 16.50 flats NOW ISJO
Ranford out of the play, Esa
liDDING GERANIUMS
Tlkkanen batted Janney's shot
JIIG.Ill NOW $950
out of danger.
Despite being outshot 10-6 In
4 IN. GEIANIUMS 111. S1.00
the first period, Edmonton took a
15c EA.- 10 FOI •7• .
1~0 lead. After surviving pressure
4 IN. HARDT MUMS
11.00
In their zone and despite being
NOW
SSe
•·10
FOI
$JSO
outshot 7-1, the Oilers counter10 INCH HANGING WIETS
attacked and forced a. scramble
lEG. tS.SO NOW $4 50
In front of Boston's net.
IIEG.
NOW $§75
Joe Murphy retneved lhe
puck, slid behind the net, and fed
AU SHIU.IY &amp; TREES
Graves for a 20-footer from the
. 20'/e Off
left raceoff circle. Graves' fourth
Solo c.ttn.s 11w• 1lwt lho s...n
playoff goal came at 9: 46.
HUBIAID'S GIHNHOUSE
· Moog sparkled on an Edmon·
SYIACISI, OHIO
ton power play late In the first
992·5776
period, stopping three shots· and
Dill 1·11· 8 n. 1 -II
0
receiving 11 ,break when a freak
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·

Driggs walked to force Gillilan In
being powered by Reed (2-4) , Hill
from third. Then left fielder Amy
(1-4 , double ), and Gillilan and
Murphy singled to d.rlve In Hill Murphy (both H ). The Bobcats '
and Reed to give the gold·shirted hlt collectors were Yon Ragland
Eagles a 5·1 lead. With right
(2·2) , Jennifer Nea l (1-1), Shaver
fielder Amy Well at the plate,
!1·2) and Julie Wamsley (1 ·~ .
Driggs attempted to score from
double).
third on a wild pitch by Noble, but
Eastern (17·2) wHI play Frank·
Bobcat . backstop Bobble .Jean lin Furnace Green Thursday a t
Shaver threw Driggs out at the 4:30p.m. at the Chillicothe cit y
plate to end the rallY.
park .
The Eagles would ·post three Score by lnnlligs
more runs before the Galllans Eastern ....... :... 014 303 1- 12-5-1
taclced up their last run or the - Kyger Creek .... 100 01Q 0- 2·5'3
season .In the fifth.
WP- E. Driggs
Both teams collected five hits l,P- Noble
each, with the Eagles' offense

Reds (23-7) off to best .start in 90 years

•.et·

tUSP814...l

HOUSTON (NEAl- What role · each In Austin, Lubbock, Wichita precluded from lnve,jltigatlng
did the Mafia and the Central
Falls, Llano, Cameron, Alvin and wrongdoing lhatls possibly being
·
Intelligence Agerlcy play In the
Kingsville.
conducted In t~e name of na- have attracted the aitentlon of
looting and collapse of savings
. "Eighteenofthe22wereelt1Ier !!anal sec.u rlty. Adds Monroe:
news media ranging from New
and loan associations In Texas
owned or controlled by people
How do you expect the ·~?;-ern·
York's VIllage Voice, the counand elsewhere In the country?
with links to organized crime, the ment to Investigate Itself.
try's leading alternative weekly
For almost a year, the Houston CIA or both. And In each
Because .both the CIA and the · newspaper, to National Public
Post bas been probing for
lnstlt'utlon's fatiure, fraud was a Mafia have to do their banking . Radio.
key factor," the paper says.
somewhere, their Involvement
But the nation's largest and
answers to that tntrlgutng ques·
"The evidence obtained by the with. comme:ctal banks and
most Influential news-gathering
tlon . J!s Investigation, conducted
under the leadership of veteran
Post from court documents, , S&amp;Ls Is hardly surprising. It has
organizations unfortunately resworn testlinony law enforce- only rarely been documented,
main reluctant to join Brewton In
journallst Pete Brewton has
produced disturbing result~.
ment records a'nd tittervlews however. ,
exploring the niurky world ofthe
"A number of sources, tncludwith key government lnvestlgaThe ·.ClA s alleged extensive S&amp;:Ls, the CIA and the Mafia. •
lng a former Justice Department tors and prosecutors sugifttS lnvolvementln a host of unlawful
prosecutor, have told the Post that the CIA may have used part opera~lbns financed throughAustheyareconvlncedtheCIAelther of the proceeds from S&amp;L fraud •trafla s Nugan Hand Bank was
masterminded · or condoned a
to help pay for covert operatiOns explored In a 1987 book, "THe
certain amount of S&amp;Ls fraud,"
and other activities that Con· Crimes ,!lf .P atrlots: A True Tale
says David Burf~ln, editor of the gress was unwilling to, support of ~pe, Dirty Money and the
spunky newspaper.
publicly," It lldda.
J ~
CIA, bY Jonathan Kwltny.
"The Post has round evidence
Brewton says bla-probe of S&amp;L
CUrrently pending In u.s.
· suggesting a possible link Ill\- ·failures "has found numerous .. District C,o urt In Baltimore Is a
tween the CIA and organized
links between organized crime civil lull flied by a former VIce
crime hi the !allure of at least 22 ,figures and CIA operatives, president of the First National
thrifts, Including 16 In .T exas," 1tncludlng some Involved )n gun Bank ol Baltimore, Robert Maxsays the first of the paper's running, drug smuggling, money well, · who alleges that his ex.·
reports, published earlier this laundering and covert aid to the employer assisted the CIA In
year.
. Nicaraguan contras."
Ulegally laundering money and
The S&amp;Ls 1n other states
He quotes Lloyd Monroe, a establishing secret accounts to
Include one apiece In Florida, former prosecutor with the Jus- •finance more than $20 million
Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Kan- tlce Department's organized worth of coVert weapons deals.
sas,LoulslanaandColorado. The · crlmestrlke'torce, assaying that First National denies the
Texas S&amp;Ls Include four In the federal age~cles mandated to charges.
,
"He't
Jtllit 0C11 I'IIC _ .
Houston, five In Dallas and one probe S&amp;L fraud are "being
Meanwhile, Brewton s reports

-to

'

.

Cong. Clarence Miller

Did CIA reap.·.profits from bank fraud?

~

' '·

•

run ' economy, are bleak, bleak
with respect to the environment,
bleak with respect to the health
and well being of the citizens
Involved, and bleak economlcally. So when the United States
sits down with Its free world
allies to determine the nature of
assistance that Is to be collec-·
tlvely provided the newly esta~
llshed governm!!Rts of Eastern
Europe, I think It Is extremely
Important that we Insist that
dramatic changes be Instituted
with respect to the means and
methods of production presently
utilized In these countries .
Given ·the Increasing awareness world wide of the onerous
ramifications that can result
from the misuse and abuse of our
planet's natural resources, we
must do everything within our
power to steer them In a new
direction.
And yes, the path I would point
them toward Is that path that
would lead them ·to a free and
unfettered economic system, a
system that would provide them
with the profits necessary to take
the corrective actions they must
take to clean their countries
up ..... bee a use the air they
breathe we breathP.

•

(

e~perience

Germany, Czechoslovakia , Po·
land and Romania.
What follows are some of the
dirty facts that have come to
Ugbt since the governments of
Ea~terr\ Europe have changed
hands: one-fifth of the water In
East Germany Is too polluted to
be used; one-third of all animal
and plant life In East Germany Is
thought to be In danger of
extinction; air pollution Is so bad
that the local branch of the Green
Party inMost, Czechoslovakia (a
European political party that has
traditionally been outspoken In
Its crttlclsm of nucl~ar power)
has called for the use of nuclear
energy as a cleaner alternative
to the systems presently In use;
on tlte average SO tons of
pollutants fall annually on every
square mlle of Czechoslovakia as
compared with but 2 tons per
square mile In Sweden; In terms
of natural resources the Eastern
European countries have ~n
consuming two and one half
times as much energy per unit of
gross . domestic . product and
twice as much water as their
Western European neighbors.
All tn all, the reports out of
Eastern Europe, aild .for that
matter· from alinost every state

f

•

on track, Netmann Is amazingly
philosophical. "I don't hold anything the administration. I love
this country. This Is my home,"
be says, Nelmann Is a Czechoslovakian lm.,Ugrant who fled to
the Unite!! States In 1974 as a
political refugee.
If he Isn't angry about the way
his government treated . him,
some of his friends are.
Eugene DoUglas, the former
u.s. ambassador at large for
refugee affairs, tried to stop the
State Department from extraditIng Nelmann to Greece. He
suspects the department was
engaged In a bit of "geopolltical
fantasy," expect lng to get Rashid In trade for Nelmann. "Even
If the trade-offs worked, you do
not. railroad an Innocent man,"
Douglas told our associate Dan
· .
NJegomir.
The Siate Department lawyer
who recommended Nelmann' s
extradition, Andre. Surena, offered no apology. "The. system,
on the whole, Is not perfect, but It
has elements that serve the
public Interest," he told us.
.
A source close to the case has
told us that Surena had lmplled In
prJvat~ · that Nejmano' s case
· WOuld be handled by the books
beCause of the pending ext)'adl·
tlon of.-Rashid. But Surena told us
the two CllSeS were not linked and
dentiid ever telling anyone that
ihey were. ·
.
He said he was merely follow Ing the law. Extredltlon procedure simply requires the Amerl·
can justice system to find
probable. cause that a person
· niay ·have committed a ·crime
and . that the country asking for
extradition Is serious about it.
The United States·ls not supposed
to second guess· whether the
· person Is actually' guilty.
Of course, ·the secretary of
stB.te haS the authority to re(Use
to extradite someone If he
sus~ts somethlhg !~miss.
That 'ii'appens when someone has
enough connections.. Nelmaon
apparently didn't..

c

Some environmental ze.alots In
this country are Inclined to point
their fingers at corporate Amer·
lea and Its devotion to capitalism
as the cause of all that Is wrong
with our ..na\iotl!!l :l!indscape.
Their arguments commonly go
as follows: Capltallsnyl!as no
I'9Q!ll for concerns .t hat do not
contribute to profits. If the
Implementation of certain benefIts or equipment cannot be shown
to add to the productivity of the
operation In question; they cannot be justified.
·.
.
The underlying conclusion of
such thinking Is that our free
enterprise system ·is the root of
all evil, and that If we bad a
system that was more concerned
with the plight of Its people and
Its environment, and less with
profits, that we would all be
better off. Such arguments In my
judgment, are naive at best, If
not an outright effort to distort
and dl~gulse the facts for the
purpose of advancing one's own
policy agenda. .
Let's look at some of those
countries In the world whose
systems supposedly are, or were,
devoted to common concerns, to
the plight of the worker If you
will. Let's lookatthosecountrles
with state run economies, economles where profit Is a dirty word.

In her final prep start, Kyger walked six for the victory, held
Creek senior hurler Vlkkl Noble the Cheshire nine scoreless In the
struck out 11 Reedsville Eastern KC second, Eastern bea&lt;~n the
hitters In Tuesday 's Class A third when catcher Lorrie Baker
district first-round softball game and third baseman Carrie Morri·
at the city park inChilllcothe,.but sey drew consecutive walks.
the 14 walkS she surrendered
After second baseman Lee GilUproved Instrumental In the Ea· lan grounded Into a fielder's
gtes' 12·2 rout .
choice at third base, In which KC
The Bobcats, who ended the third sacker Joy Skidmore reseason at 18·4, drew first blood In tired Baker, Eagles Toby Hlll
the first frame, only to see the " and Mary Reed walked to force
Eagles come back In the top of Morrisey In from third, breaking
the second w'lth a tally of their the tie .. But the Eagles weren' t
own to tie the game at 1-1.
done yet .
After Eagle pitcher Edna
After shortstop Tabby Phillips
Driggs, who struck out five and '; tt an Infield fly to shortstop,

-

Man wrongly extradited lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

The Daily Sentiner
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

•

• •

Eastem ·girls in district.finals :~:

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiQ
Wednesday. May 16. 199,0

We're not going for any record:
We just want to play good every

day."
· The Reds, who opened the
season with nine straight vlctortes, have now won ,lOofthelrtast
12 games. · ·
·•
"We got off to such a good start
that now we're just feeding off
that start," said Benzinger. "I
hope we don't wake up from this
nice dream for awhile."
But ltc.was a nightmare of an
11th Inning early Wednesday
morning for the Pirates, who
committed a costly error and
balk.
With one out, Chris Sabo
singled off Bob Patterson, 2-1,
and continued to second on a
fielding error by right fielder
R.J. Reynolds. Billy Hatcher was
Intentionally wlilked to set up a
double play situation, but 'that
opportunity Immediately ·van·
!shed when Patterson started a
pickoff thrOw to first only to find
first baseman Gary Redus play·
lng way off the bag. Patterson
was called for a balk and the
runners moved up to third and
second.
"Bad communication," said
Patterson. "We just messed up.
Mv. understandlmz was the bag

ramblings~ ...

points ahea&lt;! of seeond place San
Diego,and l'4j110eso1a.
.
Cihcinnati ·l!lso leads t!Je ~a'
tiona! League In runs, hits,;
triples. R:Jills, slugging percen'
tage and on-base percentage.

DOWNING .CH,I.DS
MULLEN MUSSER
.
'

INSURANCE

St., Pamtrey
YOUIINDIPENDENT
. ..AGENB,SEIYING
Ill S.Coiul

was to be covered."
Said Redus, ''The wrong sign
was given, apparently between
the catcher and pitcher. I'm the
one who gives the sign for a
pickoff and 1 didn't give one. "
' 'We're gomg to h!lve to look
Into It," said Pittsburgh man·
ager Jim Leyland. " Confusion on
the signs. Miscommunication."
The Pirates then set up another
double play opportunity by In ten·
tionally walking Barry Larkin to
load the bases. But Benzinger
bounced his single up the middle
to win the game.
· "I got Benzinger to hit the ball
on the ground and It could have
been a good double play ball had
It been over just a little further,"
said-PatterSon.
held a
his

the game, but refused .to tell
reporters what the session was
about.
"It was family business, " said
Leyland. "Anyway, I'm proud of
this club. I'm pleased witt\ thts
team. Tonight, we scrapped hard ,
and hung tough. You just get ~ur
heart broken a little bit every
once In a w)llie."
Tim Layana, 3.0, the fourth
Cincinnati pitcher. worked [he
11th Inning to get the win.
Cincinnati starter Jose Rljo
struck out nine over seven
Innings. permitting only three
hits and two runs. Pirates starter
John Smiley gave up five hits and
three runs over six Innings.
Pittsburgh's Wally Backman
was thrown out oft he game in the
. flfih Inning for arguing a called
third strike.
·• ·

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ED IAIIIU, GIOIGI HAIIIS, ·
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STOP IN A"D SEE•••• •o WALDI or J.D. STOIY

�.
.
;Lakers take ·earliest exit ·f rom playoffs m .nine years
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, May 16, 1990

.

• By DAVE ENGELDRUM
rebounds as Phoenlxrallled from Westflnal.
·
'The Llikers had a great
•
UPI Sports Writer
a 15-polnt second quarter deficit
"Personally, I hadri't beaten season, but maybe it's time for
• The Phoenix Suns have
while withstanding Magic John· them In the Forum since Lincoln another'team to take over," Suns
scorched the Los ,Angeles Lak- son's second' straight 43-polnt was assassinated," said Suns guard Jeff Hornacek said.
ers, to s~nal the dawning of a
performance.
Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, who · "We're hoptng it's us."
pew power in the NBA.
"I said to myself, 'What am I snapped a personal 37-game
. In otherp)ayoffactlonTuesday
- With Kevin Johnson scoring 16 doing out here?'" Majerle said. losing streak In Game One . "I
n~ht , defending champion DeOf · his career playoff-high 37 "I wanted to do soq\eth!ng in the can't believe we won twice at the troit defeated the New York
points In the fourth quarter, the . second half. I tried to take It to Forum."
Kn!cks 95-84, putting the Pistons
Suns sweated out a 106-103 the basket."
The Lakers posted a leagueInto the Eastern Conference
lriumph Tuesday night that
By capturing the best-of-seven best 63-19 record In the regular championship for the fouth
banded Los Angeles Its earliest Weftern Conference ·semHinal season but went · 4·5 In the straight year, and Portland outseries In f!ye games, Phoenix playoffs.
.
..
playoff exit in nine years.
lasted San Antonio 138-132 In ·
: With a five-game Joss to the
advanced to~he copference filial
," It's hard to swallow; It's very .double overtime.
Phoenix ·Suns In the Western
for the second, straight season. difficult to take rh:ht now,'' said
Detroit captured the best-of·
l:onference semifinals, the Los The Suns . Will open on the road Magic Johnson, w)to entered the seven series In four games, ' and
~ngeles Lakers have suffered
against either Portlllnd or San Phoenix locker room to hug
will face the Winner of· the
their earlier playoff exit since Antonio.
former teammate Kurt Ramb!s
Chicago-Philadelphia series ,
1981. They wiU not participate in
Plloenix, which won twice at after the game. "First of all I
The Bulls lead 3-1 and can clinch
the NBA Finals 'for the first time
the Forum In the series after never expected It , I don't take
It ton~ht with a victory at home.
alnce 1986.
falling to win there In 21 games losing very well, but we'll be
Portland's leads the Spurs 3-2
; Dan Majerle contributed all16 , since 1984, had lost all six of Its . back."
with Game 6 set for Thursday
9f hts points tn the second half · playoff series to Los Angeles,
But when the Lakers return,
night in San Antonio.
Including last year's sweep in the · they may be looking up at the
and Mark West grabbed 16
Pllto• t5, Knlcu 84 - At
Suns again.
Auburn·HUIS, Mich., Mark Agul·
,,

'

: By STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI·
ball well.' '
Rickey Henderson dropped a fly
•
·UPI Sports Wnter
.
Mattingly's home run was his
ball In the seventh Inning, allow· : The New YorkYanK:ees picked 100th at Yankee Stadllim, mak·
lng the tying and winning In!(!· ,
up offensive momentum on the tng him the lith player to
ans' runs to score. Cleveland
West Coast last weekend, and accomplish the feat. The last
scored four in the Inning to wipe
~arrled It back to Yankee
player to record 100 homers at
out a 4-1 deficit. Ceclllo Guante,
Stadium . ·
Yankee Stadium was Gra!g Net- 1-2, pitched one Inning for the
: Don Mattingly homered and tles, who turned the !lick April
victory , wh!!e Do,ug Jones
11rove home four runs and the 25, 1982, against Seattle.
pitched two Innings for hls 13th
Yankees collected 10 hits to
Chuck Cary, 1·0, allowed four
save. TheAthletlcshavelostrour
register a 7-3 victory Tuesday hits over seven Innings, striking
straight for the first ilme this
Qlght over the Minnesota Twins.
out eight and walking one tn his
• The Yankees, who went 5-4 In 1990 debut. He was activated ·
their West Coast trip which from the disabled list earlier tn
..
~;nded Sunday In Seattle, rethe day , missing the first six
Football
t.ui'ned to New York, where they
weeks of the season with lnflamRon Brown, a wide receiver
6ad lost seven of 10 games before mat!on In his elbow, bel!eved to w!th the Ralclets,-was named top
·IJ!av!ng for the· roacl. TM Yan,- · be bone chips.
·
·
seed for next Saturday's Subaru
kees' offense was tn a slump.
"I was· more nervous when I
NFL's Fastest Man competition.
. ''I was glad to score some runs
was sitting at home than when I The other seeds tn the eight·
1JI California (first opponent on came to the park," Cary said. "I player competition are Anthony
rood trtp), It helped our starting
just got Into my routine when I Miller of the Chargers, Ron
ll!tch!ng out," Mattingly said. got here: I felt real comfortatile Woodson of the Steelers and
''We were able to snap out of It a once I got to llle park and got on Wlllle Gault of the Raiders.
ilttle, the West Coast trip came
the mound."
Hone Racing
exactly at the light tlme."
''That was ·the best I've ever
Easy Goer, whose duels with
. Mattingly gave the Yankees a
~een hlrn throw," Minnesota' s Sunday Silence captivated tho·
3\0 lead In the first lnntngw!th his Kent Hrbek said of Cary . roughbred racing In 1989, makes
third horne run of the season.
''Maybe he should get hurt more his 4-year-old debut Wednesday
~teve SaX led off with a single anC!' often."
\
In the·$45,000 Gold Stage Stakes
(tole second, and Roberfo Kelly
Elsel!'here .!n the A:merlcan .' at Belmont Park. The Gold Stage
walked . Mattingly followed by League, New York defeated wll! be Easy Geier's first start
!Jetting a 1-1 p!t"h from"'' Roy Minnesota 7-3, Cleveland cUpped since finiShing second to Sunday
Smith, 1-4, just Inside the right- Oakland 5-4, Seattle _shaded To- Silence, tn the $3 million Breecifield foul pole.
ronto 4-3 lp 10 Innings, Chicago er$' Cup Classic on Nov. 5. ·
· Law
; "We scored some runs earLv edg!!11 ~ltlmore 3-2, California
(nd tllflt helped," New Y.Q'~k. lf«l.; lllhUkee 8-3 and Detroit
FourmembersoftheWashlngmanager BuckY Dent 'said. "We , defeated "I;exas 3·2. Boston at ton Capitals are being Invest!siarted swinging the bat welllln . Kansas ~ley was rained out.
gated by the U.S. Attorney's .
~attle and I hope it'll carry over.
CleveJall I, · Oakland 4 - At office for an alleged sexual
lt helps with Donnie hitting 'the Cleveland, Oakland left fielder assault of a 17-year-old . girl.

rre came oft the bench to pump in
25 points and ignite ·Detroit from
a 23-9 flrst.quarter deficit. Reser,VI! guard VIMie Johnson
added eight of his 14 points in the
decisive final quarter .
New York center Patrick Ewing made just one of 10 shots In
the second half but led his team
with 22 p(jints and 14 rebounds.
Gerald Wilkins scored 18 and
Maurice Cheeks added 13 for .the
Kntcks. Dennis Rodman hauled
down 11 rebounds and Bill
Lalmbeer had 10 for Detroit ·,
"The hi min&amp; polo t was when
they brought In VInnie Johnson
and · Mark Aguirre and they
played so wei~" Kntcks forward
Charles Oakley said. "V!Mie is
so strong. Aguirre made some
big shots and got a couple of loose
balls."
Bl-sl38, Spun 13% (2 OT) At Portland, Ore., Portland's .

to 7-3 w_in over

Mattingly's
four flBis p~sh
Yanks
.
.

Wedilaaday, May 16, 1990

'

TerryPorterscored38pointsand
Clyde O.:exler added 35, career
playoff highs for both, to spark
the Trail Blazers. The Spurs
rallied from a 22-polnt deficit late
tn the third quarter and San
Antonio's David Wingate sent the
game Into overtime With a 26-foot
three-pointer with 1.6 seconds
remaining. The Spurs were led
by Terry Cummings, who had 32
points, and David Robinson, who
had · 27. Jerome Kersey hit two
free throws with 11 seconds
remalnin&amp; In the second over•
time to seal !he win.
.
- "It was unbellevale,' ' Portland
coach Rick Adelman said. "I
can't belleVIl all the swings that
the game had. It seemed as If we
bad It In our grasp and did
everything right except make
some mental mistakes at the

..,
.;

end."

I

Twins

·

BIG .BEND •••

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.YQ~r Family Owned

...

•.

"

'

:-

"
':

•
SNOW.
WHITE
., .

.•..

. •' .

..EAUliFLOWER
.

..'
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,::

.

ENGLISH
ROAST .

~1'7'

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N- Vorl '7, Mla.11ota S
Sea&amp;llt' I. Ton..o 3, II lnllnaJt.

Transactions

Cln-eland I, Oalllud,-&amp;

Cllle... a.

lalllm•~

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. a... at K..u CltypJd. rata
r~llorllla K. Mllwaii•ll'! 1
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Mla. .o&amp;a {lt"tat "2-3} at New Yo ...
• !Lahhll ..... 1:.1t.r'8.
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O&amp;ldM. t W.tcll .._'! ) Iii Clt\ldllltl
... (SIIa• 1-1), 1;U , ,m.
41
8ultle (BoiiMII J..t} ~ Teroalo (Sf:ot·

; tWin)'ft' 1-J). 1:11 p.m.
•

atllan~a~~

*'

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~
•
•

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'

( HIIJIII!I'A S.l),l\: :a p.m.
"
Del roll (..-.-•WI at Ttxu (Jban

, ...... .,oarMK

SuUW .t hro.to

Football

·

-1%

.m

:

san Dlt~.-................... .11 11

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San Fruchtoo ............ .IS • .JN 11%
Boulllon ................... .... l! te -~ tl '
Atlanla ............ ........ ,... ll It
11
1'\IHdllfl Rf!ll.ll

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Dari'I'IIJ'o~•

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.bron PryM

1. Free Throw Sltootlnc Contest

\'M.

! . loalro.m.,
I . S ow I Toanae,1. P.I.G. Wlaaer

......

C•p n.a~

.,
,,"

·~····

pfaeecl with pla,en near,hll•wa &amp;~e aroap.' ....

Golf will begin at 9 am. on
Saturday, with a shotgun start.
Entry fee is $25 for members of the
Riverside course, and $30 for non·
members.
··

:The

Mar

re(reshments.

,...'

u

. PKG.

NESCAFE ·.

'

KAHN'S li'L
HICKORY GROVE

MT. BLEND 7 oz.
COFFEE · JAR

Boneless. Ham

ANGEL SO~T ·

BATH :
TISSUE

.

LB.

FOR CATS &amp;DOGS

Hartz.Mountain

Blockade

4 ROll
PKG.

AEROSOL
CAN

VALVOLINE MOTOR

(,_I

,. Jf

'

'

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYEIS,
REFIIGEIATOIS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

:

.

.

--

$1.49

,BROGAN-WARNER

SPECIAL OF 'THE WEEKI

.,

WRH ·FRIES ........SJ .14.,
._,

find

'

"At tile W ef filii
POIIIIOY," OliO

Win AFree
Disney Worl.~ ·.
Fa111Uy.~aeationl

.

INSURANCE SERVICE, INC•.·

'

',, -

DRAWING

Judy Williams, Agent

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEi .

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 Jrtl An., Wlpllll
PIL 446·16"
HOUISI I AJI..6 P.M.

SIRLOIN STEAK SANDWICH

Should you ever require an extended period of care at
a convalescent center, life insurance benefits of your
Grange Universal Life Policy can be used to help defray
·, the cost of your care. Convalescent Care Coverage can
be added to your Uni~rsal Life Policy for a small chjll'ge.
Ca)l today ~
out more.
,

SATURDAY

214 E. Miln St.
982-8887

•-ror·•-....,.

MAr. 26,
1990

PH. 992·2556

I

'

··-'

.
l)

oz.

.

:The

inleleSied in p;uticlpiltinj should conlact Bob Greene or
'I) Roush at Riverside, 773-9527,
~ore S J?.m. on Thursday, May 17.
There will be a "meet your team" .
pl'ty on Friday,
18, beginning .
at 6:30 p.m., wnh food and

10.6

, NEw.·• • •

~

~iverside to ho8t golf event M~y 19

~Anyone

.SANDWIC:H
MATE
SINGLES

-Convalescent Care
.Coverage with Grange ._ ·.
Universal' Life

,; ·:

Cincinnati 11. Pltlllhurrh .l, lllnllllllfl

26.

FLOWERS

20°/oo.,_ ~

..
"

C.\MP Ill LIMITED TO GRADES S·81NCLUSIVE. Eacll CiifilJ ... '\!ollbe .

It, AtlanU 2
St . J..oW-1 -1, Houfllont

Wlihama Class of 1970 is
hplding a 4-man scramble on
Saturday, May 19, at Riverside .
GOlf Course.
proceeds from this touma·
ment, according to Pam Simpkins,
cO-tournament director, will be
gi,ven in scholarship fonn to four
siUdents of the Class of 1990 &amp;oln
Wahama High School. The scholars)Jip will be awarded at the
Wahama Alumni Banquet on May

,,.

WIEATHS

,. •

(.-

.
'\&gt;.........

Howle caldwell, Do• 215, Radne, OH. 1m1

' Chlca~

"'

••

.cosT: Sa..lt. Cbecu made poyablelo;

~pm..elledlded

.1.

DAY

. ' '.

Molt}' 0. p Fl•l
ca~•r

MEMORIAL

,.

NOJIII'I~MhNik-d
NHL~ofr.

at.;

'

PLUS

SIRIDE RilE
'EUIOPI
'

WrUerM!I~~~

Ma41Ha, WI•. -

1 .117 ~.-u R%

n

.

--

/7)\
·-: TO ALL GUDUAnNG SENIOIS

EMIHII

Wttt

._ O•I•MU. .................. .U
.. ln~t "-lelf'H..... ............ll

..

".

PhlladeiJflla AI C11icap, Rp.m .
an;htJ

- ak'-.o ---··············· ..
•

'

BREAST
....__ QUARTERS

. ·...

MAXWEU HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE ....... !~..~!-.~~-~ ...:. $439
.WEEBOI ·
liDS ·
FOOIMAYES

99

c

HOLLY FARMS
GRADE 'A'

20°/ooFF
NilE
IEEBOI

·

3RD ANNUAL TORNADO BASKETBALL CAMP .
JUNE 211·29- 9 A.M.-U Noon .. , ,, ,.
SOUTHERN IDGRSCHOOL , _

.

NBA P1Qolf11
Co...ert:nce SemiHMIB

N"' York ................... .ll II .Ill ~~
···tt 11 .... 1%
'* 81. La ......................... t.a II .-IIR 11,1 '
•

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Baokelboll

NATIONAL LE.4.GVE
Eul
~· Tum
W L Pct. Gil
~ ' PltiNIIII IWh .................. .2t I I .11'1 •' Phltadelphla ................lll l.f .HI 1%

.1•

.

Chll!qo- 'DefPnll\lt&gt; lai!kk&gt; Ttin Ry11n
Mped a Mrim oll· )'l'ar codrad11.

:
,,

Me•ft'.l .....................lll II

REGISTRATION FORM:

Lan1 rl'lllped.

: bl!t,. "TI!Uii, al-

~'

Suattt-Nuntd~.C •.fOIII"'Ieo&amp;c hand

Bernie BlctlenU.II llud of player
llenlo... eat.
,
CoUep
M !!IDftl - Wonv!ll'i\ IOCC« coachTora

l-f:l , ll: 31p.m.

f,aiiiOnU il MIIWaullee
. . . . . . Jl Nl'W York. alillf
B&amp;l&amp;hn•l't' II &lt;'Ilk.... ••IN

........"'

later.t!.•l Le~pt (AM).

City

.., (Salwdul!IH I-3),11:U p. m.
1lol
CaltiOrllla (AbhDU 1·2) at Mllwaukfop
I'

hMMI]q Sports Tran•cOo•

Ntw Yo$ (AI.) ';.. Activated pltelwr
Churk Cu7from •illlbled 1111; opUoad
' pt&amp;c•er aiQ' Pariler to Col-IN• of u..

lalllmore (Mite rid 1-1) at Ollt'llla;e

., (btllerl-l).ll;lla.m.
. .~ (-...eker 1-S)
10

.

S..t.lt
'
.
llllwukee - Adl\latd plkber Tom
Flier .... dert.top IIIII .!!Jp ..... trem
411ablell Ullt; opUo•d plk:lttr lalnw
Navarro u• lalel.., Dale 1\'et~m te
Dfuer ol tilt -'mnic• .b~laUo11
fAAA.l; ret••d plklwr.lu• Nlew~~IO
BeJall If tl!llt' MldftAI Luaw (A) far a
rthabUIU.IIe• pr!Jinm.

,..
+

~ .-~.;oame~~

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• Oall.llu.l ...................... ll 11
* C11kace........................ttl II .IG
• Ml•~n.... ................... 17 IS .Sst

"'

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

~.40ii!loo~lhioreoll
s.........._.. .. ~ew Yorll

tnll''*""~-1· •rt• I·IJ at 51. Lollllt
r-1-I},I : Up.m.
Pd. GB
New V•ri: (O.olleil 2·3) a1 Su
.SRI ,....._._ (Garrtlb l·ll, S:JS p.m.
.181
Y,
IK
PllWeltllllla (fttweiiS.I) a.t8u Dlep
.Ill =
IWWl- ..... -1 :11 p.m.
.-1• 1
raw.,.. fDnbek 1-IJ.u a ..t.-...1
·•• s
(St'WIIII._ 1-t), 1: H p.m.
..su It
Clllup ( MaMix -I· II .. At .. ola
(8m .. z l-4J,1:.tt p.m.
.IIIII. . . . . fOanl•ft' 1·21 at lA• A-~ e.

.....,.. t!IIEiliCAN LEAGUE
EA11l

Team
W L
rei'Mio - .................... .21 l.f
Mlt...llee...................l7 II
- - .. ..........................1'7 ' 1-1
0~ .._
.................. 1'7 II
a..tllmore .. .................. u It
Nf'W Yori: .................... u 11

be on had to assist with camp ..
. Each day a special guest will
be P,resent to talk to the campers
. and among those already corn· m!tted are Charlie McAfee,
Former Athens High Coach and
memberoftheOhioCoachesHall
of Fame; Alexander High Vals!ty Coach Jay Rees; Coach
Doug Foote. theUnlversltyofRio
Grande Girls basketball and
softball coach; andTr!mbleH!gh
Varsity Coach Paul Petit.
Each camper will · receive a
T-sh!rt and basketball with his
registration, plus the:e will be
· Individual contests mcludlng:
Free Throw Shooting, One-onone competition, 3-on'3 compel!·tlon, and a P.I.G. contest.
Cost fOr the camp is $35.
Checks should be made payable to Howle Caldwell, Box 263,
Racine, Ohio 45771 .
The camp ts llm!tecl to grades
Also senior members of the 3-8 !nclu~w- E;ach camper will
varsity team. Andy Baer, Todd be place&lt;~ with players near his
&lt;\
Grindstaff, and Jeremy Rose will own _age group.

99

TENDERBEST WIENERS •••••••• !!.!~~JI~...

ON. ALL CHILDREN'S DRESS
SHOES, SANDALS &amp; TENNIS SHOES.

Coach Howle Caldwell . has
already announced plans for the
upcoming Third Annual South·
ern Tornado Basketball Camp to
be held June 25-29 from 9 a .m .to
12 noon at Southern High School.
Caldwell !no;Ucates that the
purpose of the camp is to feature
the fundamentals essential _to
proiluce wlnli!ng basketball,
many of which are the ones used
by the high school players.
Camp personnel w!ll consist of
most of the Southern High
Coaching staff, Including Head
Varsity Mentor Howie Caldwell;
Assistant Coaches Tony Deem
and· Scott Wtckltne; Junior High
Coaches Mlck Winebrenner and
' Jim Law.rence; Southern girls
coach Bill Baer, and Instructors
Gordon Fisher Marvin McKel·
vey, Brad· Maynard, Chris
Murphy, and Chad Taylor.

$

Boneless
.

SPRING FLING ·.

Annual cage camp June 25-29

.

SERVING THE TRI-STATE ....... ~•"n

------Sports briefs-------

.

'

nnlfersar

-LOW PlfCED .

•

....

.
, year.
ninth. Mike Schooler, worked the
was only their fourth In 1~ games.
Mariners 4, Blue· Jays 3 (10 , lOih tor his lOth save.
Qan Petry; 4-1, who started and
Inn.) - At Toronto, Mike Brull'\·
White Sox 3, Orioles 2 - ·At
won Tuesday for Del roll ,' has won
ley tripled and scored on Harold Chicago, Car,ton .Fisk hit a
three of the ' four. Kevin Brown,
Reynolds' single with one out in two-out, two-run homer In the 5-2, . allowed the seventh-Inning
the lOth Inning to lift Seattle. el&amp;hth IMing and Bobby Thigpen • homer to Fielder that gave the
Brumley tripled with_one out off picked up his tOOth career save.
Tigers. a 3·1 lead.
Jim Acker, 0-1, and Rey11okls Fisk's first homer of the season
singled through a drawn-In in- made a winner of Barry Jones,
field to make a winner of Keith 5·0, who retired one batter In
Comstock, 1·1. who pitched the rellef. ·Fisk stands 46th on the
aU-time homer list with 337.
Thigpen ,pitched · the ninth to .
become the second pltcl!er to '
District of Columblapollce said save 100 games before his 27th
they forwarded_ a complaint . birthday. Pete Harnisch, 4·1,
involving Capitals. Dlno ctcoa- took th!)loss for Baltlmore. .
relll, Scott Stevens, Netf Sheehy· · An«els 8, •rewers ·3 - At
and Geoff Courtnall to the -o.s. Milwaukee, Jack 'Howell blasted
Attorney's office. The woman a two-run home run and Mark
claims she was raped and sodom- Langston allowed three runs In
Ized by the four players after a seven Innings to pace California.
par.ty for the team at a sports Langston, 3-3, allowed two
earned runs and seven hits.
bar.
Milwaukee starter Chris Boslo,
Soj)cer
The Croatian government Is 3·2, allowed seven runs ...... four
demanding more Information earned - In seven and two-third'
from pol!ce . on r!Qdng_by fans innings. TheAngel_ssliappeda 1-1
that turned Into a violent show- tie on Howell's third homer of the
~ ...,, J,
down betw.e en Yugoslavia's two season1o tlie fifth.
,,TJ,eJoil,_, s,::RIIoprl·, t:- '"':';':, M
major ,inat'ional~t groups. The
riots Suliday and Monda~ left 138 Arllng!O!l, Texas, m11jQJ' ~~fgl!e,,
injured, 11 seriously .... England, hOme 1,11Jl,lel.'der Cecil Fl!llder l!lt ·
on a goal b,v Gary Llneker, beat his 14th of the season, a two-run
Denmark· ~ -0 at Wembley Sta· shot into a 25-mlle-per-hoilr-\\ind.
dlum In a World Cup tuneup ... . The victory ended .a tllrei!--game
Dynamo, Mc:is&amp;\V, o.ne llf the losing streak for the T!gecs and
-:
.. -"'~~., ".. 11 .....
Soviet UniOn's premier clubs,
wlil play a Northeastern Super
Soccer League team May 26 at
Hempstead, N.Y.

The

.

•

.
. . Na me: ........ - ..... u. ~~-··-~·-····':••np••·············tli:
'' . ' .
..·:.a.·"·····
Addreea: :....:..................................................

1
City:· :..............................................................
. I
.
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I
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S1a1e1 ····-·-··-··············-··-·········......................
·I
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.
I
Phone: .: ..........................................................

MUST BE 18 YEARS OR OLDER

f ~~=====~--=-=-::
I&gt;

28 oz.

..

-~

I
I

I
'I
I
I

12 oz.
CAN
lilllt One ....... Gootl Tlw •Y -19, 1HO
Pood ltempe end WIC

.\

Squeeze Ketchup

'

�•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Wtdn11dey, Mly 18, 1980

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

r---Local n_euis

. Continued from pa1e 1
adult basic education prORTam u well as the talented and elfte:d ·
.
programs.
The Mt!lp 'Medical Clinic Dr. Wllnia Manslfied and Dr.
Witherell, and Dr. Douglas Hunter and Dr. MarkO. Brown were
approved to give school bus driver medical examinations.
The dtscusstpn on formlne a business advisory counctl was
conttnue\1, and the board approved the·treasurer to attend the
treasurer's clinic to be held In Athens on June 4.

. . ..
Approving the list of graduating seniors at Melp Htg!) School
wu the only action take~~ by the Metis Loeal Board of
EdUcation In open seslion at T.uelday· ataht's special mtetlq.
In t!xecutive ~slon the bolird dllc)usaed personnel and
negotiations. Attendllll were SUpt. Carpenter, Treuuret Jane
Fry and board memben, Robert · Barton, Bob Snowden,
Richard Vaughan, and Larry Rupe. It was reported that board
mel'!ber JeffWerry Is confined to. a.Columbus hospital.
··
.

:

.;

.,.
., .
••

·.•

r

•••

!.~ I
~~

:.,
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•·~ ·

ALL BOYS', GIRLS',
MEN'S and
LADIES' .JEANS

/o

0

ALL LADIES'
TANK TOPS,

DISCONTINUED
ELECTRONICS
SALE 2.52 TO 2A.ot
Clock radios. compael
stereos and many more.
. Som. n..a ~-- Md/or . .emCir

IIF

a.s2 'ro 11.n
slyles and sizes. ·•
&amp;f.t'l L... EDt.P,_,.
....,. byafl:n

'

&gt;

Soutb.Cen&amp;ral Ohio
Occasional showers and thun·
derstomis Wednesday night,
with a low In the.mid 60s. Chance
of rain .Is near 100 percent.
Showers an4 thunderstorms end·
· tng Thursday morning and be. coming mostly.cloudy and windy
· with a chance of showers tn the ·
afternoon. ·Highs wtll be near.70. ,
Chance of rain Is 80 percent .

.

Middleport vtlliJge funds totaled $226,475.7J.in a!Uunds as of
April 30, acc;ordlng to the report
of Jon Buck cle•k-reasurer.
The general fund showed a
. balanceof$6,985.22wlthrecelpts
for the months being $86,683,24
and disbursements, $82,409.'75. In
the pollee funds there were
dlsburse,ments oC$14,974.96 and
In the tncome·tax disbursements
ot $2,236.33 with no receipts nor
balan~;es reflected on the repqrt.
In .the various ·other funds,
receipts, disbursements and bal·
' ances. listed respectively; were .
as follows: · street matnentance, ·
$24,828.10, $14,343.36, balance
$5,258.44; mtnt-golf $4,653.45,
$1,106.06, balance $2,599.36; fire
equipment, $15,115.66, $654.24,
balance, $21,396.43: fire truck,
$18,773.45, $10,530.28, balanee,
$7,140.74.

A heavy hailstorm In East Meigs and tilt! 'Rock'Springs areas
early Tut!sday evening resultj!d In little damage, according to
contacts wltb several J;e&amp;ldents. of both · areas. One resident
;descrltled tbe hail as being near ROlf-ball siZe.
I

;Lost· money tum¢d over· to police' .
l

~.

•

••

, •.

f.

· Money found near· KJnl BuUder's In', Middleport over th,e
·weekend Is being held at t11e Middleport Pollee Department.
The money can be claimed by tbe ow~ upon Identification of
the container, the denominations, the amount and the day lost at
the poUce department.

EMS .responds to seven

Extended Forecast
Friday· tbroucll Sulllla,

Two were fined on charges of were E . E. Knight. Middleport,
DWI wben they appeared In the assured clear distance, $43; Jean
court of Pomeroy Mayor Rlcl!ard Ann Pittman. Pt. Pleasant,
speeding, $47; David Dale Fore,
Seyler Tuesday nilbt.
Fined on ~he charge were Walker, W. Va ., prohibtled left
Harry Butcher. Pomeroy, and turn at Butternut Ave. $43; Greg
Ronald Dalley, Portland, each L. Nease. Syracuse, operating a
$375 and costs. Butcht!r was also motor vehicle without a valid
fined $63 and costs for expired license, $63; Barry O' Brien,
plates, and $63 and costs for no Shade, speeding, $47; Randy
operator's license. James . Michael, Pomeroy, Improper
Rhodes. Roseville. was fined $43 backing, $43; !'laney Hayes,
·a nd costs for a stop sign viol&lt;~· Pomeroy, speeding, $47; Stanley
lion, and Everett Gtbnore, McGuire, Middleport, assured
Pomeroy, Uleg~l right turn, $43 clear distance, $43, and no
financial responsibiUty, $50; and
and costs.
Forfeiting bonds ' tn the court Rita Tabor, Rockport, Ind .,
speeding, $48.

Fair Friday and Saturday ,
wtth a chance of . showers on
Sunday . Highs wilt range from
Marriage licenses have been
the mid 60s to the low 70s Friday, Issued In Meigs County Probate
In the 70s Saturday, and between
to Darrin Scott Cremeans,
75 and 85 Sunday. Overnlgllt lows Court
22, Racine, and Bethany Caryl
wtll be between 45 and 55 Friday ' I:iobstetter, 22, Rutland; and
and Saturday mornings, and in Herbert Douglas Noel, 26, Mid·
!he ·50s early Sunday.
dleport, and Kimberly, Kaye

H

•tal
ospt

nrw8

,.

Veter- Memorfa1

.

Tuesday Ad111lsstons .., Wll·
liam Matlack, Racine. · ·
Tuesday discharges - Mary

1

-~--Monthly stlllemena .released - - - -

H~ilstorm ~l~. Eqst Meigs area

'

of the country . Low pressure
centers were over North Dakota,
Iowa and Oklahoma. A weak
warm front ex tended east from
the Iowa low across Lake Erie to
northern New England. Another
warm front curved southeast
from Missouri Into the Tennessee
Valley . High pressure was offthe
East Coast and also over the
northern Rockies.

.;..·-----Weather-----

The Meigs County Mult!um ts seeklnl .t!xhlblt Items to be
· displayed during Heritage Weekend on ,Juqe 8; 9, and 10111 the
1
museum.
·,
•
·
•
. Items needed tnclwH: . salt and pepper shaker collections,
·antique tea services, pictUres from tht! 1880's, and cann~ goods
preserved with salt: .
'
-Anyone hl!.vlng any otthese ttems and-who wo.uld be willing to ·
have them displayed during the weekt!nd should cqntact the
. museum at 992·3819..
·
In order to liet up tht! display ihe muSt!um requests that Items
be at the mu~um IIY June .1. ••

·~

eavy:·· --~----,.--.....,.Continued rrom ,page 1
Pomeroy Court news

.'

Exhibit items needed for event
';

"

.0
fli .

and per;;te! into Sunday.
· Corn plan tlng, which at 80
percent complete ts slightly
ahead of schedule, will Ukety fall
behind normal this week. Above·
normal precipitation Is expected
through next week and the major
upper atr steering currents show
Utile signs of change.
·: On the early morning weather
map, a broad area of low
ptessure'covered th~ mtdsectton

MHS graduation list apprOved

•

_The Daily Sentinel- Page.:... 7

Pomeroy..:....Middleport, Ohio

ool~

EconpiTitc development
$1,380.03, $1,360.45. balance,
$5,000.47; public transportatfin,
$1,682, $12,666.93, balance, ,
$7,0&lt;.14.94;. water system improvement, $60,736.34; water,
$15734.95, $15, 468.92, balance,
$13, 9~3.40; _ sanitary s~wer,
$12,3!)3.63, $10,580.92, balance,
$9,01'3..84; swimming pool,
$2,356.23, $885.94, deficit balance,
$545.52; · cem,e tery, $9,226.08,
$1,896, balance, $2,676.76; water
meter trusts, $495, $468,01, bal·
ance, $16,960.22; arts council,
$440;$225, balance, $21,5. ,

STEAKBOUSE .
. .

'

Ju~ent rendered
A decree a! judgment. foreclo·
sure ll,nd sale has been ordered
by the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas In favor of
Farmers Bank and Savings Com·
pany against Richard A. Ftnlaw,
et al. The court· has ordered that
Fwrmer's Bank recover from
Flnlaw, et al, $105,486.57.

, Picnic date changed
.· Units of the Melp County Emergency Medlcjll Service
responded to seven calls .for aallstance on Tuesday. ·
.The annual picnic lor the XI
· ', ·• At 1~31 a.m. the Middleport unl~ Wt!ltt to Sixth Avanue for ·
· , · · KenbeUI Cale who was taken to Holzer Medical Center·. an~at
Gamma Mu • Chap1er, Beta
.:&amp; -1 ~ 18:20a.m. the~~~ wai called to'MalnStreet(or Lt!e.McComas, · Sigma Phi Sorority- has been
• .I also. t~ken to HolZer. ' ,
',..
.. · · , '· ,
changed to ruesday at 6 p.m. at 'Judgn,ena awarded
' The Ra&lt;;lne unlj, at 10:13 a ..m., responded to a call at Dr.
tile home 6! A. R. Knight.
•
J;Jouelas H11nter's offiCe In ";l)lch· Blll .Matlack was taken to
~ ··F
·, ·
Mercury· Marine has been
• Vetetans' Mtro1orlal Hospital, and· at 5: 22 p.m. the, unit was
Ire report
awardedS27,350.98fromLeonard .
called to Letart lor Edith sa!'tzman, .also -taken to Veterans.
·
, C. Lyons· In the Meigs County
At 8:40p.m·. tht! Middleport. ulnt went to NOrth Filth Avenue ,
A total of 58 calls were Court of Common Pleas.
..·
answered during the month of
for Gwlnnte White who w-. t.-.nsported to Veterans.
April including seven fire and
The Tuppers Plains unlt;at .9:38p.m., responded to a call on
Divorce granted
rescue and 51 emergency sltua·
Maln Street for Dale Welsh who was taken to Camden Clark
'
lions, Fire Chief Jeff Darst
Memorial Hospital.
• ·
A divorce has been granted to
reported to Middleport Vtllage
The final call' for uslstance came at 11:05 p.m. when the
Penny
S. Hoskins from Tho111as
Council. Vehicles were driven a
~aclllt! unit went to: Roj!te. ~J.C?r. ~lpb!l Stewart who W!'S
K.
Hoskins
tn . the Meigs Co11nty
·total or 1698.3 .miles during the
•
.transported to Veteran~.
,,.
. .
· 1
·
Court
of
Commpn
Pleaa.
..
month .
: ; ..

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.
l, ·Mi&lt;ldepo11 court news .
'

and INP1ANITS'
MOLDED SL1uc~1

Fllve were fined and three
; others forfeited , bonds In the
; court or Mlddleport·Mayor Fred
. • • .Hoffman Tuesday n lght. ·
.
Fined were Shawn Cline, Lo·
. 'well, $25 and ctllts. disorderly
•• · manner, and $25 and cosl.l.
: •~ •consuming
an alcoholic bevt!r·
.
· •· ,
·

tadies' full sizes 5·10,

girls' 1'1 ·3 . Infants'

5·10. REG. 3.99 pr.

Sft'IN ny dl'1 t1r &amp;tore

age In ll motor· vehicle; Kevin
Manley.$50andcosts,illsorderly
manner; Freda I. Wtlson, Scot-.,
town, $10 flnt! only on running· a
red ' lteht; Robert C. Beal~
Albany, .$100 and costs and 30
!fays probation on an assault
charge, S10C!'and costs on mt!naC..tng threats, and $100 and costs on
~'
' reslstine arrest; and Earl w.
1 __
IOC~Ut 'Wines, Middleport, $150' anlt
• •
. cost,s l!lld 30 ,days probatto.n on a
:~.·Dally at.,.;k prices .
chatee nt ·slfopllttlne.
, • (As of Ul:38 a.m.)
.. Forfeiting bonds were Daytd
~· Bryce iuad Mark Smith
A. Ferry, P.omeroy, $460, DWI,
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl ·
and S60 on running a stop sign,
Rhonda J. Wilson, Pomeroy, $460
Am El ec tri
. c p ower............. 30 % onIta charge
of DWI and also $60,
f
1
AT&amp;T .~ ............ :...... .... .. .. .... .42
~ ~ c~nter; and Terry Ml·
Ashland 011'. ................... :.... 37
~o:t~t'ner. ornery, $60, open
Bob Evans ........................... 12
Charming Shoppes .............. 10~
Police report
City Holding Co@ul14lio
, , Federal Mogul. ................... 2fl~
The Middleport Pollee Depart·
, Goodyear TAR ............: ......35~
ment made 46 arrests durin&amp; the ·
Heck'·s •••..•••• .,.: ••.••• ;••.••••••• •••• 23;4
Key Centurion ....................14~ month of April accordlq to the
·, ·'Lands' End ......................... I6% report n1 Chief of Pollee Sid
Little.
:~ Limited Inc ..... : .................. 45"
A tof41 of 11 acc,l dents were
Multimedia Inc .............. .-: ...:82
RaX' Restaur~~nts.: ............ : ... 2~ .lnvestlpted durlnl the month.
Parkin&amp; meter coUectlons toRobbins II Myers ................. 16
t~led $626 with the merchant
Shoney's Inc ........................ 15
pollee coUectlon bringing In
Star Bank .... : ...................... 20J's
another $106. There were 303
Wendy's Intl. ....................... 4J's
parkin&amp; tickets written.
Worthington Ind .................. 24

.
S
:- · .

OUR

.

99

ENTIRE STOCK BEACH TOWELS

t

SALE 1.78 TO 7.79 Terry. velour.

•

SryjH aflowrt ,,. fepresentttive ot

OFF

ENTIRE ST()CK BICYCLES

SALE 18.74 TD 111.88 Various styles.

a~

~. n0 f~.

i.W«J .. IIMI IIOcfc"

2 99
I

OUR REG. 39•·89.99

OUR

ALL FISHING EQUIPMENTrn

SALE 2.. TO 87.41 Tackle .
. rods,
more.

OURREG.
4.99

BRAND NAME
BLANK VIDEO TAPES
REG. G.n..a.n REG. a.n.. e.n REG. ••n ..1.n

33°/ooFF·

OUR REG. 90'·459.95

ENTIRE STOCK AUTO SOUND .

SALE 10' TO 308.18 Many ilems.
stylu ,.,. ...., by

•

~

.

•

'

''
•

...• ..
.

.
:·
-.
••

22" -75

•

.•••
••

IIT40111

~, 97.84 24aa~

19.99

GAS LAWN
MOWERS li1l
.....mbfy ftqtM/H

ELECTRIC STRING TRIMMERS

REG. 107.84

•

'IT1 0

REG. 279.86

39~99

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

REG. 22.99

REG. 49.99

BRASS DESK IDP121

19.99

·--

REG. 29.99

.·••
.••'-·~.
•.. ..
..•••

BUDONS AND BOWS

REG. G5:911

OSCILLATING FANS

,

,.,

ALL DIESSE·
S
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.

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MERE'S AN 'EXAMPLE:
ORIGIJWAL PRICE
21.00
CLEARANCE PRICE ••00
BONUS.2 5% SAVINGS 4.00
FINAL SALE PRICE 12.00

GIIAT FOI '111051 '
Uml Oil'S GUDUATION
AND IANOUm• .
UT IS MAll.SOCKS 10.
MAT(H FOI·'IIIAT miA ,
SPIOAL TOICII

..
·~

•

ALLIP Ll

•
••
•
•

..

~

I•

•c•CH
ROAST BEEF •••••~ •••••1:·
••••.S4.4 9:.
SW.IOIJIMIO
.
·RED
.BOLOGNA ••• ~•••. 1:-•• ~ •••, :~' 9, 5 c
DRI MAll'
COOKED HAM .....sUml
....11t. S1. H
. . . S2 19.
SHIEDDED.... IIt.

•

.

HOMIIIADE

MEAT SALAD.••••••••••• JI•••••• ~8.9·c .

QAn

GIAPE· ·
FRUIT .!."fP.."l,... 2/S 1.09

..

•

YELYEETA
CHEESE .........JUl- S3,19
UAVD YALIIY

MED. ·EGG5.5f!. SJ,19 '

GOLDIN HliQOU5

.

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

APPLES ,;...list,...,2/Jtc
.

WITH COUPON lfi.OW

"'

LEMONS"''''..""" 3/59(

,.........--:----; HURRY/
CHARBROILED

IANQUO

·BOIL
IN BAGS ••••••••. .s.•I/S1.29
110PICANA
..
ORANGE JUICE •••••••'l.Dl•· S1 ~99 ·
oaiTA
·GOLDEN FRIES .. ~•••• ,'z.o.~~.
~

Ribeye .
Steall Dinner
lncl~des

potato ond

QUICK OATS •••••••••••..-:.Of•• S3.19
CAIIPIIU'S
TOMATO SOUP ••••••• l:.o.~•••••• 99&lt; ·
u•n
PUMPKIN ••••• ~••••••••• l:.Of•• S1.29
•PEANUT BUnER
$4 .19
.,
VAll ca•P
·
lEANS ~•••1~.r:.. S.t.1
•
5
•••••••••••••••••••• $1••
.
.• , .
BEANS •••••••••':."!....... 794· .
'
Jj)ni-Q SAUCE •.•~••~:."!.. SI'.S9

....---7

~

.

• • •••••••••••
................
HURRYI

5126190

CH.A~RBROILED ,

Dinner

1101.

.

,

garl1c toast plus Ponderosa s
AII•You•Can•Eal Grand Buffet"

-

.......... .

'·

5126190

Includes potato anti '
!!C!!IiC toast plus Ponderosa's
AII•You•Can•Eat
Gmnd Buffef"
..

11'14 DJ.

~

Silver Bridge

..

•

•

QUAIEI

NOW IIID MAY 31

.
.

... •

"

·20°/o.·c;,,

•

_

•

.

Pl~a
.. , t.

.

.

•

•
'

'
•

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-

.BUUONS·
,,.~ BOWS
ttt-5177
210 lAST IIAIN

\

'

, ...........~............\\JI:. s

....
GALUPOUS
Upper liwer ld. - lt. 7
-llcrul ...... Airport)

�•

16, 1990

Wedn81day,

Ohio

Recuperating
.

y The Bend
-...

'

,;

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, May 16, 1990

..

·.

:,;

·.

.,

,Page-8

l

Rutland Garden Club plans ·show
Classes were drawn lor the
_ Meigs County Fair !lower show
at the recent meeting of the the
Rutland Garden Club held at the
home of Bernice Nelson.
. The hostess tead "Hands" and
"Blessed are They" lor devolions and roll call was answered
·With members naming a new
Easter plant.
· Pauline Atkins stated she bad
taken the club's arrangement to
Overbrook Center.
A report was given on the
recognition dinner held at the ·
'Gillllpolis Development Center.
Pearl Canaday, Stella Atkins,
Dorothy Wooda~. Pauline At-·
klns, and · Marcia DenniSon
·
attended.
Neva Nicholson reported on
the county garden club meeting.
Mariaret ,Belle Weber reported on the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs regional meeting
at Nelsonville. Attending were ·
Dorothy Woodard. Pearl Cana·
day , Pauline Atkins, Eva Rob-

. gllassware; b~~eli. lbe Rev. ~de Benllenm.
near Pomeroy, a Vlclorlu .,..lhullnl JIN\'Ided
by Stewarts' GilD ud Gift Sbop; Sucll Mlteb,
Pomeroy, a sel of ~la!nl-•lableware1 aad Edle
Sillson, Pomeroy, a decorator w.. l eleclt. Roy
Kesterson, Ru0811d, Winner ofaslud miller, was
unable to be present lor the pboJograp~.

•

WINNEBS-Wbmenofdoorprlzesawardedin
colljlllldlon wilt! the annual observance of
:! NII&amp;Joul Roapllal Week at Veterans Memorial
; ~ Roepltal were prese•led .tllelr.glfts by AdmiD"'·
.• tnlorSeoltLilcas,left. TbegrouplnciiMies,front,
;~ Ito r, PbyiiJs Poulin, Pomeroy, a coffee maker;
· ~ Marpret Ranla1, near .Pomeroy, a sel of

!

•

plus ind(vldual donations· were
number of electric lights In their
home to the OES home.
Helen Eblin thanked the group
for flowers sent to her while she
was In the hospital. It was
reported that sne is recovering.
It was announced that the past
mat reins meeting will be held
May 29 at 7:30p.m. at the home of

:_: June meeting. at the recent
; ; meeting of 'the Harrisonville
. ; Order of the Eastern Star.
; Janet Bolin, associate matron
, protem, and worthy patron Ro. ; bert Reed conducted the
· meeting.
'
·
:~ The chapter voted todonate$10

•A rtts• t' ' to VlS•' lt• chru

c
.
h

·~
,;;

•

·~

J

I

. ,

.

.

Go
•
~..
rdon Jensen, Nashville HarrJs, The lmperials, Dallas
· ;.~: Tenq. ·Wlll a~pear In concert ai. Holm, and The Cathedr&gt;~l
·· :: the Living Water World of Life Quartet. Mostpopularamonghls
Churc~ Albany • Saturday at 7 300 plus song titles Include ••r
:~ p..m, TDe~e Is no admission ' Sho,llld ~ave Been Cruclfll!d".
·~ charge.
·
~ •
~m· outShlneThemAll",
·: Jenson bas been a reco~ ·
·
tiol) Draweth Nigh"
.• arU.tand composer .for 20 ye,_.;. :;"and -"'SGI'Jielllnes They Cry."
: RebecameaChrlstlan!ilslx..an(l , Averaging 150 person'ai ap·
'~ by age 16
a member of a ~~anees each year Jensen's
:'! national Cl!r!stlan touring band toors have taken him ihroughout
~: which, Jater evolved Into Gofdon the
Canada, the
.:. Jensoa lild Sunrise.
1
West·
.- ·
.~ .
;,:&lt; Trafislated Into 15 different
on n~~o~~
:~ languages, Jensen's songs have
television, In.- been recorded In excess of 2,!XJO
Club and has
by .~ueh ~rtlsts as Lllr,l!d~ ·
st .

:·

was

Gracia WilSon.
Birthdays were observed by
Bernice Hoffman and Betty
Bishop
·
Stella Atkins announced her
granddaughter, Linda Riggs,
was married at Galbreath
Chapel on the Ohio Uf!lverslty.
Campus on Saturday.
Harold Rice announced that
the hall needed cleaning and ·lt
was decided that volunteer work
would be done on June 19.
Rice gave the bll'~sslng before
the group retired to the dining
area, where they wer.e served
reWshmentsbytherefreshment
committee, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Hoffman and Mr. al'd"Mrs. Fred
.George.
.
·.•~ ,,

r

-rd h ·

\..a

!

drinking. ·
Stella Atkins gave a hint on
proper care of evergreens. She
stated tha't they are probably the
most Important ' plant in
landscaping.'
'"
Dorothy Woodard presentl'd an
article on Dusty lfliller stating
that It Is virtually pest-free,
malntalnance free, and grows
easily in ordinary soil . The
flower may be started as a plant
'
or from seed.
Thl' next meeting will be held
at the home of Dorothy Woodard.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4574

Ractne
• · Grange .m
· eets

..~.'. Harrt·son'Vt.lle ·. QES · meetS--------...,.~~· • It was announced '!hat there
:~ wm be lnltlafory work for the

son, Marlca Dennison, ani,! Mar·
g&lt;U"et Belle Weber.
,
Elected to the · nominating
commlttee !pr 19.90·91 were Pearl
Canaday, Stella Atkins, an,d
Margaret Belle Weber.
Six inember.s planed a tree on
Earth Bay.
Voted Into club membership
was Kathy Dalton.
Eva Robson brought and discussed a ''sprtrig mass"
arrangement.
·
It was voted to continue the
civic planting of animals at the
two village planters.
Pearl Canaday hwd an article
on "Aitractlng Sprlpg Birds."
The migrant birds are warblers.
They make a riestand find food
from late April to mid-,May, and
need only shelter arid water. For
summer birds provide nesting
sites In evergreens, large shade
trees, or old hollow trees: Plant
material with seeds lor finches,
chickadees, and other seed eaters, and provide clean water for

story, lecturer,
pres·
enRosalie
ted the 'program,
"The Month
of May ~riJ!gs MemortaiDay and
. Mothers Day :: at the recen.t
meeting of .the Racine G~ange
No. 2606.
Earl Cross, master, presided
at the meeting and welcomed the
Hemloc Grange.
Readings Included "~other's
Home," by Leota Smith; "When ·
Mother Churned," by Naomi
Reed; "How to Know When You
Are Getting Old," by Helen
Qulvey; "Scratch as Scratch
Can," by Sylvia Midkiff; "Thrift
Tips," by ;Jenny Ward and Eva
Robson.
Geraldine Cross was the
wlnnerofthequlz,andMaryKay
Yost was the winner o·f the
contest ' tOdd Couple."
Helen Qulvey read "Changing
Time."

theLeataSmithwasthewtnnerot
contest and Rosalie Story
read "A Family." .• ·
. ·
Retreshmenfs were served by
Racine Grange 10 ten· visitors,
nine members , · and two
juveniles.
Members reported ill are Charles Alkire and Anna Hilldore.
·

A card shower lias been
planned for Bernice Wlllkord,
Qverbrook Center,. formerly of
~utjand, who will be celebrating
ber.90tb ·blrthday on Saturday,
may
sent to her at
~~:~·.c:enltei:·, 333 Page St.,

_________; ; ; ; ; ; :; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;:,; ; ; ; ; ; ;. .

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- &lt;:o •

•,' •

2 year Certificate of Deposit
.$5000 minimum deposit'

8.60%
8.;2

't

$
69
Round St ea... ....... 2 .·
$ 49.
T-Bone Steak....... 4 .
$
29
lunch Meats .•.... !~ 1'
BE~FkBOTTOMLB

USDA CHOICE

_us~A C.~Oi(E 8EEF LOIN

..

ITl imited T1me Offer! Get the Sav~ ~r's Special at any BANK ONE .
, o~ mA~, Perry, Hocking and
MeJgS counties.
,

9-cycle waiher

• EXCLUSIVE

has America's largest
usable capocity ·
• EXCLUSIVE
Dual-Action" agitator
• 3temperoture settings
• SeW-cleoning lint filter

Easy Loader door ·
• Aut.....,.ic shut-off
at fl"'sel drying level
• En&lt;J.of.qde signal

LB.

KENTUCKY BORDER

Wieners~
•••••••• :.o!~~:~.
...
1

.'

•.

Tomatoes .•••.•.•.. ~~ •• 39(

$1
6
9
2~/o Milk ••••••••••••••

FLAVORITE·

NEW COUNTRY

j

Was $339.&gt;46 (KH 68701)

· - , " W a s li-4311.. \1111 Natural gas $339,.46
~
(KH 287011
Was $379..46 (KH 78701)

t
i

$.(KH 89112)

SAVE $.10

-

with FREE Power Mote Jr.
for hard-to-reaCh areas

j $199~91 (KH 20391 I
l.! s11 Monthly'

'"

'

:Jearly withclriWal.·Annual yield ~ br ~ daly.

.... No. 22ADI4795

-

IUIT IN
DISHWASHER

$34879 l'lus Ta
Sl¥1'40.00

Modo! H!t· 2611MIUOI

.

HEAVY DUTY
• HEAVY DUTY
KENMORE WASHER KENMORE DRYEi
$354 46 ,.., , .. $2 75 55 Pluo Ta

REGI$TER'
TOWIN·A
DIEHARD
GOLD
BATTERY

$J210
Witt. Trode-in

ELECTRONICS•LAWN&amp;
'

•

BANK ONE, AtHENS, NAIA PART OF TH6 CAIIIMII'IAIIf
Member FDIC

MIDDLE!'ORT, OHIO
(

'

9:30·1:00 Mon., T..... Wed., Fri.
9:30-2:00 Thurs. • Set.

1

oz.

6

. 3.9peak HP
i Power Mate vac:/1//

OUR LOWEST PRICED ,
COMPACT IN 2 YRSJ

.

Yogurt ••••••••••••••• 4/

KENMORE
'" '"'~···· '

$211A6

'

'

'

$11 Monthly•

,

'

FLAVORITE· ASSORTED

3. DIAMOND

•

$1
09
Sausage. Links ~.:.o:~
.

SWIFT FLAVORED

PlASTIC GALLON .

$279.89

Effective Annual Yield

, Athon1, Ohio

•.

with remote, on-s&lt;re&lt;m
tinle/channel
GREAT LOW PRICE!

$10 Monthly'
Reor=er
(KH
I .
Sid.dis&lt;horge
380451

P~rts •••••• ~~ •••

THORN APPLE VALLEY

TV (KH 4209~1721

•,

'

59&lt;
.·
'49$1
Turkey Hams •••••••
Fryer

' A mini quilt clas~;, ~Mcred ·
: by the Middleport Art~, Council,
: will be offered
May
24 at ~t• 30·•'
'
J
'
; p.m. at the council's o.hamber 011 ·
1 Second Street In Middleport.
·
·' Bunny Kuhl will be'tbe Ina true·
; tor and the cost of lhf clas,s is $0.
• "Best of All" will be the Pl!ltern
• and when flntShed tbe ptececl
: block will be a wall hail'ging. A
• portable sewing' ,mli~hine is
: needed by each student.
: TO register and 'for the )1st of
· supplies, contact Marllyn•Meier
; at 992·5983 or Sue Baker at
: 992-7733, .

'•

There ill a IUbiiMrtial penalty

•.

I

~. Quiltclau
·
.

. ' Annual Rate

MIXED

LB.

David Michael Ebersbach, son
. of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebersbach, Syracuse, graduated Sun·
day from West Virginia Wes·
leyan, Buckhannon, W. Va. with
a bachelOF of science degree in
math and education. '
He was a 1985 graduate of
- Southern High School:
• · Going · to Buckhannon for the
: commencement program in ad: dillon to his parents and brother,
'• Chris, were Ills grandmother,
: Edna Roush, New Haven, W..,-,:
: Va.: Joyce Carson. West Colun\.,: bia; ~verly !(napp, .,Lelglta· ·
: Gregory, 4fart, w, ya and '
·• Libby Roberts, Syracuse. .
. ·e
o'

•

69
Cube Steak ..•..•! .. S2

'"

u

'

BUCKET

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,.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., MAY 13 THRU SAT., MAY 19

Senior Alrvan Michael L. Keney recently graduated from the
Noncommissioned Of!ice Pre.~ para tory · Course at Tyndall 'Air
.
· :• Force Base, Fla.
:;. : Keney, an aircraft fuel sys· ·
~ terns mechanic assigned to the
:'325th Component Rapalr Squad·
ron, Is the son of James W. and
--sandra A. Nelson, Pomeroy. He
- IS a graduate of Eastern ·High ·'
: school.
·.:; The courSe Is a required
~ Professional Military Education
··program for· selected airmen to
::attend. It prepares them for
::-future years as noncommlssi:::Oned officers iri t.he, U.S. Air
· r...F orce. T!)e .course lasts two
..weeks · B!ld .covers topics on
::le!ldershlp . and ' management,
~ llltary studies, communicative .
:;:!!klils .and world affairs:

Ebersbach gradUates .

1"""~~~~~~~-----~--....;;.

· 8 AM-10 PM

Keney graduates

Th~ Buckeye Travelers music \
gorup Will be performing at the
. Tuppers Plains VFW hall on
saturday at 7 p.m. There will be '
an au~Uon and fOod will be
avaialbe',' The program Is spon·)'lOr.ed by the VFW AuJ~Iliary to ,
help pay expenses to state
·Convention. ·
&lt;.

The Pomeroy Fire Department will serve chicken and rib
barbecue dinners at the fire·
house Sunday with serving to
begin at 11 a.m.

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

-Singers to perform

Barbecue p/anneJ

OWet'

Jo.hn Dean who was Injures in a
tractor accident on his farm on
Aprill6 is recuperating his Wolfe
Pen hOme where he was returend
recnetly from Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
Among his recent VIsitors have
been Mrs. Sylvia Robenstlen,
K~nny an!) Connie Smith, Cank·
ton; Mary. and Paul Paynter,
Mrs. Ardis Waggoner, Mrs.
Freda Smith, Mrs. Jolin Holiday
all of Albany; Mr. and Mrs:
. Garold Gllltey, Alhens; Mr. andlt
rs. Robert Rled, Pataskala; Mr.
and . Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
Racine; Rowla!ld , :Pais, Kings.
burg; Rodney· and David Rtied
' VIrginia Smith, Josha lnd Mlc~
Dawn; Pataskala; Harold Well
Bidwell; Glenn and Debbi~
Young, Racine; and Olen and
LgUise Harrison, Gold' Ridge. ·

TRAVIS R. EBLIN
•'

,

SWANSON

· ..

$

1

'·

Pii.eapple •••••. !~~~~ 2/$1

Fried Chicken ••••!!•; $199

DAD'S CANNED

SWANSON

s
Dog Food •••••:.&gt;:.~~. 4/ 1
-

.

.

•

·

Budgef Breakfast•.•

$

2/ 1

·\Eblin birth
' '
: Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Eblin
• Pomeroy, announce the·blrth of
: their. son, Travis Ray, on AprU 5
·. at Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
• The Infant welahed · nine
•pounds and three ounce&amp; and was
22 Inches lllllf. ·
,
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Eblin Jr. ,
Pomeroy. Maternal grandpar·
enta are Rev. and Mrs. Clay
Anderson, Union City, Pa.

992-2178

••

VAN

PORK &amp; BEANS
1•oz.

3/Sl.v•

·CANS
Gee!! 011y At ,.•••• s.,.
a.H s... ., n •llru s.t• ., 19

NORTHERN ASSORTED

'

BATH TISSUE .
4 ROLL

PIG.

8.9(v•

GoH 11tt1y At ,_••• s.p.
GIH S.., May U llw Stt. May It

RINSO DETERGENT

,'~:Z· $349,

v• -

a.! Oily AI ,_••• S...,
a.!
u lin s.t• .., 19

s... ..,

oz CAKE MIX or
11.3 oz. FROSTINGS

11

2/S)

�..

0

·-

•!P!age~~1~o~:The~~D~·:·~~S~e~n~tm~a~--------------------------.-_!P~~~m:...~ov~:!M~k~~~~~1f2·2~~~0NO~~·----------------------------~--~~~¥~a~~~·!•s~d~r~;~.!~~~1!'~1!9!90~

Pomona ·Grange meeting held
Pauline Atkins, master, wel- her blackberrY cake. Whitney
comed everyone when Pomona Ashley, 7, placed first for oatGrange No. 46 met :recently at the ; meal cookies. Bryan Caldwell
placed first In hls age group for
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
The meeting opened In ritualis- oatmeal cookies. Patty Dyer
tic form with the pledge to the . placed first In the youth category
flag and singing of the first for pumpkin cookies.
Members donated hearing aid ,
stanza of the "Star Spangled
Banner." "Sweet · Hour of hstterles and glasses. • Other
Prayer'' was sung with Chester donations were made to the state
and national deaf programs and
King as pianist.
Eldon Barrows, legislative to the state youth program.
Star Grange, Roclt Springs
agent, reported that "It's time
our Senators and those connected Grange and possibly the Hemwith state offices should start lock Grove Grange wlll exhibit at
the county fair.
Ustening to u.s ."
Patty Dyer, · lecturer, pges· .
Wesuna . Crabtree reported
that Norma ·L ee place first with ented the literary program,

.

.

Takes trip

"Salute to Mothers."
Reading Included "Thought sol
a Busy Mother," by NltJ Y.Gst;
"Where's - Mama," by Linda
Montgomery: "Dandelions," ~Y
Maxine Dyer; "Her Mother," by
Christine Nap~r: "A Mother's
Love," by Allegra Wlll; ·'Good
Fortunes for Mothers/' ·'Cookies
for All Mothers," and "SheWore
It Well," by Arthur . Crabtr'ee;
"Mother's Day Facts;· by Eldon
Barrows; and "Happy Moth.er's
Day" by Opal Dyer.
A slldeshowwas presented and
the· closing song was "God Be
With You." The Columbia .
Grange served refreshments to
~0 mPmbers and one juvenile.

.

GREG KENNEDY

JENNIFER KENNEDY

.

.:.Kennedy birthdays

di!Zner held by Troop

DI'S FLEA MARKO

·~ ~~~~?.:we~~~:~!!!~ ~~~~?"One
abo.ut ••neediework
:··memb~s
stuffeil'toy contests
s~vlng eye-

""'
N

glasses, and also those who will ·
exhibit at (he fair.
• ·
·. Opal Grueser gave thE&gt; leglsla• live rE&gt;port.
.
: Bunny Kuhl gave a report on
' the Adopt -a-Highway project.
The grange will continue to
!llaintain the spring area and
plant some trees.
.
., Plans were made for Star
Grange to visit during the June
·.;, mee!lng. A pt)tluck dinner will be
' held at 7ip.m.
, ' Members reported Ill were ·
·l- Leona Karr. WilHam Radford. ·
; Sympathy was E&gt;xtended to Bu-

'":n,

Solid Wood•
Corner. Guards
'

Unfinished, Stained
or Varnished
In Rich Oa,k or
Economical Beech

RACINE -There will be a
chicken noodle soup dinner at the
Bethany United Methodist
Church on Friday at 4 p.m.
sponsored by all churches on
charge. Sandwiches· and .pie also
will be served.
'

$1199 ·

°'

· ·

Available At: .·

of

~ Shrimp

· PUliLtC BID
. ADVERTISEMENT
Pur.....,totheprovlolono
of ·section
1113.011 ond
11i3.07oft"-oht Fl lied
·• Code. publl~~ otto! 1
0
that -ed p.:....uto wllt:
received by tho Dopliot Admlnlotrotlvo Servlcll
Dlvlolon of Public Woru:
Office of State Architect
Mid Engln-. 30 EutBroed
·• 8 trHI, 3 lith ·F-. Cotumbuo.Ohlo43251·0403untl
~01doy, Juno 14. 1990, 11
~0 ·p.m. Daylight Sovlnga
"!:!!e.t•"-~~lftopenedf lmmodla·
't-' ~~· "'·111 fumlohng ,.,. "!lttr .and Pill·
forming the tobor for lite ox·
:,, ocutlon end &lt;;clnotructlon ol;
Project No. 770-811-019
Sto5t~lclePHoolth lind
••oty rogrom
• PhooOohltl D Dlatrlct No. 10
o et~ortmont of
T-ljionotlon
Atlrona, Gattto. Melva,
Monroe. Morgan, Noble
' Mid -hlngton COIIntioa ·
Soporoto blda wHt be ro-

Protect Wall Comers...

StartAt

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
•'

MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH
ON GARFELD INE., PARKERS8URG
Mon.•Frl. H; Sit. 1-5:30

·~.-

1

°

SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1990
WEATHEI PEIMMING

SUPER SPECIALS!
t;;iiii(]

~.

MIDDLEPORT,

·.GraduationMemories,·

.

pr

•

Get ready for summet at Picway! Ught, airy
huaraches and gladiators with genuil),e leather
. "ppers help you beat the hear all summer long.
Santa Monieafl&gt; Leather Huarache
in white, tan or khaki. Women's
sizes 5·11. Also in wide widths.
Girls' sizes 12 1h·4 in white only.

,.

Refreshments were served by
Harold and Helen Blackston.
·: Pat Holter was the lecturer for
: the program. ShE&gt; read "My
.. Mother. " Kathryn Miller read
"' 'It's a Long w'a y to Mother's
Day ." Sarah Caldwell read "To•day 's Grandmothers." WilHam
· Radford read "The Old Timers."

banquet
:slated May 26
.•
. VINTON - The annual banoquet of the North Gallia Alumni
':As sociation will be held Satur~ay , May 26 at Bidwell Porter

!~=~~~~~~~. School on SR 160
~

,......_,

a

r:;

m-

.,.d

irra~ct! :l~i·~~"';:"~:applicable

Santa Monica® Leather
Sandal. Gladiator style
with snap. In tan.
Women's sizes 5 1h·ll.

· Santa Moolca8
Leather Gladiator
with T-atrap, buckles.
In white or black.
Women's sizes 5-ll.

Santa Monica®
Leather Huarache
in white. Girls'
sizes _8 1h·12.

'Remember a special time
the two ofyou shared? You
can make that' memory last
forever by putting it on a Speidel
Idem. You can choose from dozens
of styles, and your speP,al message can
make it one of a kind. Come in today and
put your feelings /""'_
into words. ~[

~;::::::::::::::::===:-r;::=~;;;;;=:;'lr.:=::====:;:;]r;:=::::;:::;;:;:::;jj;:=======:;r.::::::::::::::;

I

-

CHES1EI, OHIO
•GRAVEL

We flu• L!Jt.l•t•l

GAWPOUS, OHIO

111 UST••• ·

-.wt on your con·
11nued ...,. •.

"2·1715

Ellubath Horak

•

.•

tiM.,

· OWNEit: .LEO MORRIS ,
AUc:notiiEI: .Cal. W. Ieith Molden
614-74!-2041

IIEW LOOATIOII
DAVE'S I'M
aLL
_,.
ENGINE REPAII
.___

1-1
•

A

&amp;
4 Qt. Max.

'

ntl llPAII
MOYIE 100 Al

*LIGtff HAULIN~
t

•

1

•

'

CONVNNa sroctE ITOlS

*FIREWOOD

BILL SUCK .

CHESTll
QUill STOP

992-2269

St. lti. 7 &amp; 141
CIIISIEI, OHIO

EVENINGS ·

•M9tila''Home · '
Plir:t•

1

I

,jo

•MobiitiHome
Rllfltals

•Loto Renlt'la

.P -oy, Ohio •
.

SER~ICE .
can r~ir and rt·
cort radralori and
Metlr corts. Wt can
also acitl lloil and rod
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-7479
It. 33 Nerth of
1-12-'11-lftr

992·21
Middleport •

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAII
It

op

IIIII'S APPUAIIICE

SOYICE

992-5335 or 915-3561

•w YAIDIUII
&amp; KHO
PIOIIm

HOUFII; M·F 1-7
Sot. !1-11: Cia..,. Sun.

PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

ly•·•--s.r•.
a.• ..,aw.n,CMht
s...; ...........

··vour
Connection~

T:;.~~~ tiJ
Treval" 4-11-t· ma.

CONNIE'S
OHIO liVER
HEllS and
EYEILARINGS
OPEN:

Pl. 949-2101

....... 949-2160
NO SUIIOAY

•1

AM•• U..l, Oltlo
31'1011 mo.

SITEWORK • RPADS

Guttarl

NEWLAND
.
ENTERPRISES

2· I-' to' I riO.

..,,.. E.. m.t•"

247....035

- ROOFING

949-2168

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•r
H-.!!.

CUSTOM
I 'IAGES
"Af
Prlcts"
PH. 949·1101
....... 949•1160'
hy .. Night
NO SUNDAY

CLEARING

DUMP TRUCK

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

Sand·Stone·Dirt

16141 667·3271

Heating; Cooling,
hfri111alkM

Senlee

Roaidentlal lo
Commercial

CALL
992-5519

111·COUNTY RECYCUNG

omiS
3 LOCA'IIOIIS 10 SIIYI YOIPOMEIIOY, OHIO: At. 7a 1.1'1.'143

ALIIANY. OHIO: Fit. BOa S.R. 143 .
HENDERSON, WV.: lit. 35 Adj. folidenEqu...,_
NEWHOUIIS:
POMEROY; I a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Dev•
•
ALBANY: 10 o.m.-1 p.m. I O.,o. Clolod lluncWj
HENDERSON: 10 e.m.·llp.rri. IIO..,o. Ctooodlun.·Mon.
PAYING A8 OF TODAY. MAll . 13, 111t
,, Copper IIC per lb.;
CIHn
Aluminum Cane. 31C
lb.
WliiUY
ITAltTIRI,

ICIIAtt,

Stop In and See

DALLAS SAYRE

I.

AT

742-3011

PAT HILL ·

•TWSalea
•FIOIII End
Algtlllllftt
•Oil
• Lube

OIIYSUI-PLYIIOUnl
DODGI

........

llllll ST.,

HU.,HREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

5-11-'90-1 110.

n11

SALES alld
SEIVICE

HOURS:
Thuro. 1hru Sun.
10 a.m.· ll p.m.
WHOLESALE-RETAIL
St. lt. JJS, I M•·

DOZEI

FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
.... . _ lttllt

~

Boward L Wrlt-1

. Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•IILOWN IN
. INSULATION

APRl 1 THRU JUlY 1

992•2},l~mo.

NEW -IEPAII

4-25-tfn

' (614)
742-2027

•DD&amp;EPOIT

316/'to/lln

.. y,;......,••

~~

I

-""""!J; TRAVEL.
• .,PURSUIT

711 II. 2ncl

217 E. Soc. •-•Y
I'Oili?OY; GIRO

11. n4; .... _. Olilo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAI.

SEARS

A'a-... , ....... Office

lofart'P.""'"'" . . 1
4-11-'110-t mo. pit.

GlASS· CmHIG SIIYICI
S..wko c:..t., · !DC

INSTALLATION

992-5335.,915-3561

(614) 915·41 80

.· Garage

USIDMOWDS

In Or We

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES
Tokothoptin•fof ........
Lot "' da it for y-.
vaY IEASONMII
HAVE IEfEIIIICIS

Roger Hysell

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

. FREE
ESTIMATES

Pick Up.

_,.,.

Palwll I

AFTII 6 P.M.

Aa-oa ,,_ POll Offlco

FENCING

AlL MAKES

Bring

&amp;

.94.9-2969
3/ 281 10/ lfn

' '.

DUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME:PAIK·
,'1

lilt

vw. ·

•

*SHRUB- &amp; TREE
TRIM ancf REMOVAL·

CO~

IIIIIIOIIITDIOI
1 a1 ('--

-.

PARTS AND IEFIVtCE
For Moat 2 ond 4-oyclo
ongliloa
Stoclt Porto tar Homlilto.
W..daotor. TocumHh.
BrlfKII lo Strotton.
PH •

9 8 5•4422
I

111

.--roy,

•FILl. DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

•

UNDA'S
PAINTING I

,...110UIIeiH .

1531 West Main,

•LIMESTONE

~~-

Prices effective thru May 20

OHIO IIVEI PLAZA

R• L•
.
TRUCKING .'·

.- -----

OPEN NIGH'I'S
AND SUNDAYS

S-.

Business Services

ANTIQUE &amp;
COlLECTABLE AUCTION

~NGHS

The doors will open at 5 p.m.
· for registration and visitation.
' Dinner will be served at 7 p.m.
; Registration fees are $6 per
fperson and must be tumed into '
; the secretary by May 21.
•; Th e secretaries are: Bidwell
·Porter: Donna Broyles. 85 Lo, cust St .. Gallipolis. 45631, phone
446-2071; Vinton: Laura Cozart,
P .O. Box 293, Racine, 45771,
:phone 949-2195; North Gallla
; t58-69): Diane McCarley, Rt. 2,
-Box 48, Vinton, 45686, phone
:.388-8319; North Gallla 170-89):
·J ean Pel rie, Rt. 2, Box 208B,
Vinton, 45686, phone 388-9771.
An open house and reception
will be held at the North Gallla
:High School on -Sunday, May 2t
~from 2 to 4 p.m. so au graduates
"Of that' school can visit their Alma
··'Mater with their families and
,friends .
.
The address list Is limited anjl
,people are asked to notify any
;graduate of Bidwell-Porter, Vln·
-tlln or North Gallla High Schools
;of the date and •I me of the annual
;banquet. Also, any person who
.attended these schools but Is not
graduate Is welcome to attend.

-:nr.•

~=

.

ena Gruescr.

Ft-.

log
dealersh,lp

·

or

c:,:r..:.,,: ';..":.i

•..

•

·

!J"

na

·

•

0

____

TE"p·IN
' T
. Q SUMMER IN STYLISH
ND"
·
THER SA ALS ·- $

99

Public Notice

PUbliC NotiCe

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Architect, Richord E. Din- der ml'/ withdrow Ilia bid
SHERIFF'&amp; &amp;ALE OF'
ing on HHt Top StrHI or tho iff of Meigs County, Oh 1o, mor
within 30 dayo lfter the
Notice lo given thet MCt
REAL ESTATE
Old Flutltnd Roed over Unwithin thlny (301 dl'/1 from
Tho p&lt;lce wKI include otl ootual dolt of the o.,..,ing Tol-mmunlcatlono Corp.
coin Hill, oxunclngln depth tho doto pf conflrmotlon of
O&lt;otlon hoo filed on. .ptlco
THE STATE QF OHIO
. toword High Str~ wltho'n IOIO. Tho purchlltr ohott be tobor, motorlolo, tools. ond thereof.
t.._. w~h t•- Public Utili._:
PubliC Not'MEIGS
COUNTY
-•
mochinoo
rlquired
for
roH. In die ·opinion of tho
~· " ·~ of Ohio - -'
one Hundred
foot of r~qulred to PlY lnteroot on
,
Commlnlon
THE CENTRAL TRUST
tho unpaid bot.,.. ot the movinA oxiotlng Sponloh tlo ow-1. the occoptanc;o of lng outhority
' 10 fvrnloh In·
to . .d by 1 Sumy Compony
COMPANY OF
~~:~=~~~~~~ ~~::.,•":..~~= rote ol 1!)% per onnum from roof. rofl11hlng. rwfoltlng. tho towttt bid Ia not In the troatato long dlatance olttr•
mH!Ing the reljulr-ontoof
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
H
on Hill tho dote oflototo thedotoot •10n0df•..etoying tho Sponloh tile beOt lntoroot ·of otl con- netivo oporotor ooolotod tiiiArticle 2 of tholnotructlon
N.A.
poyment of betonco unt••
cerned. tho-- .n..,.oc- epheno _, .... In Ohio
to Stddora.
VS
Tofor relor.,ce ooellotumo IOid bet.... ahotl be pold In
Bido will be received for:
cept onother propooli ao
(Cooo No. 89-12Sfi.TPBl~ h .tt •·
t-• d
MAnHEWC.VAN
eight(B]doyafromthod.ato
lumpoumbld: ,
oponed.orrojectottpropoo ACEi A .
oddt - ~- ';t...on t
VRANKEN, ET AL.
1117. PlltOIUI, MolgsCounty of tho olio.
Plono ond •-'flcetlona oolo end odvonlao for other
ti ny '"'"'"":" per1
of A~mintat:'ttvo ~lc:.
CASE NO. 89 CL 2 4
~=~~co: volume
Jomoo M. Souloby :f~n'~o::.'':::~ ;:.":':; bl'l,'· 0
f h Sect
::;· .:;:Dlvlolon of Public Worb. of'~.\'~d=: ~~ ::'. ~~: 308.
pogo 729. Meigs
Sheriff of Moiga 11ounty office of thi Architect lllld
V rder 0 .,:.~Key":.~
cauot why ouch oppticotlon ·
Office of State· Architect· obovo entitled oction. 1 wit County Oood RIICOrdo.
Dougtoo M. Cowloo
Ubrory ond moy beobtolned
Moigs County Public lhould not be gr-.1
ondEngln-. 30EntSroed
bt'
Thio property 1o located ot Attorney for Plointlff
from tho Architect, Rlchwd
Ubrory llhoutd lito with . lite ComBINet, 35th
Colum· offer for u 10 •t pu •c ouc· 129 uncoln Hilt, Pomeroy. (61 9. _16. 23. 30; 161 6, 13 E D'
So h
million o w - otatomont
1
13
buo. Oh. 43211.0403:
tlon. ot the front doOJ of the Ohio.
ltc
. ittmor. nc., .
ut
till 9. 11 2tc
reMona on or
Fourth StreM, Z.nMvill•~
Tho Minimum Wille Rote CounhouM
Ohl0 1 1 h1 1In
bo Pomeroy.
-•
·Property · approioed It
Ohio 43701 • upon .._0111
before ey 30. 1HO. Un• n
Roquilemento of .Revvo nom~ *24,000.00 and c•mot -be
p bll N 1
f • 26 00 · h ~lu"
PubliC Notice
lou tho Commlolioft roCode Choptor 4115 ..d tiNt county. on Tueoday, Juno oold lor lou then two·thirda
u c ot ce
:...aunt
.minu':'':.o~• .,;
...... I wrttt.. itatomont
Equot ~mploymont .0ppor· ~!io~l~~ ~~,;::·,:. ::.~ of tho opproloed voluo.
tNFORUATtON FOR
ing refunded to oil who bid
NOTICE OF SALE
to that effect Md on IC•
tunityCBtd Condltlona1of3Ao9· toto, altU.ted In tlie County
TERMS O.F SALE: Tho
BIDDERS 00010
ond rotum plona within ton
Sotlobury . Townohip wilt comPIInying roq-t for- d1• 3°d6ro98ect
lono Gil ·5
of Meigs. ond tho Stole of auccnofut purchour, 10
Sooled Bido will be received doyo (101 of bid date.
offer for .. ,. at Public Auc- he•i!l~ · t'!.~~'!-'""'ttor, tho
.,.
• · 1 and the over'
Olllo
ooon 11 hia bid Ia occoptod by tho Moigo County Public . Bldd.-oaholl notothettho lion Jll one 1973 Chov. COlO wl1 1 -~-on lite
11
E~ocutlvo Order of
' tow '
·
lhott. be required to dopoolt Ubrory 01 z16 W; Moln St.,
II'
b
Flootoido Plclcup.TriH:Il.
beolo,oftholnformltia!lcC!n18~::'J:~~of
,
I~~~~:'.."!! 27, 1972 orooppli· . 0Sltuotod
in
Bumop',sAddion
tho
day
of
ulo,
in
cooh
or
.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
untM
f;;:,~
:::,uth":
Tho
nto
to
be
hold
at
Sol·
tolned
In the aPplii'Otion on.!,l
45789
thlo bid invitotlon.
:;, ,';0~00:r:b~~:':t!n o:f
by certified chock, payable 12:00 Noon tocoltjmo, May tnduotrlol Rliatlonaorototro lobury Townohip BuRding. affldavita aubmttt.d by the
Th~ Minoiity Sot Aoldo Number One Hundr~ end to tho Sheriff of Molga 21it,h, 1990 for roof ropolro. complied with throughout Rockoprlngs. on tlio 2nd dl'/ . olonpptlcont~-F~~!.';"' Inform•·
roquoromonto of Amended Eighty-nino 11891 end being County. Ohio, 10% of the for tho
8ronch Llbrory thia project.
of Juno 1990 ot 10;()0 A.M . t moy - ·-ned by conShuba1t11tu3tto HRouoo Blt~~~4of ott of Loto Number Ninatoen omount of ouch occoptod located at 178 S. Third Avo.,
Biddwo ohoil otao note
Sora Gibba. Clork tletCing the Publolc UtilltiM
t •
h ogutor .... olon 119) end Twenty 1201 -front- bid, but In no event lou thon Middleport, Ohio 46710. thot tho rutoo and roguto·
34048 Bolt Run Rd.
ommislioft of hio. 180
of tho General Aa_,.bly,
.• 1.000.00: Tho bolonce of according to drawings and tlono on Equol Employment
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769 E01t Brood
Columond opoclflclily tho roqulrotho purch•• prlc:o aholl be ipeciflcotiona on file lri the Opportunity aholl be
Ph. 992-7098 buo, Ohio 43268-01173.
1
montoofReviHdCoctoSec·
duoandpoyoblototheShor· officooftha Ubrory ondtho portofthiocontroct. 1\!ollid· 16118,23,30.
!6116,
1tc
tin
123.161 lcl 121
]3), 1---------..L..---------.J.,;;,;,;.;;;..;,.;;;..;;;;;.,;;,;.;;;.:.;:;;;,.:.;.;;;.J,.:;,;;;.;;.;.;,;;.;,;..;.;;;,;;;.;;.;.;...;.;,.;..;;,..L.
_ _ _ _ _3tc_ _ _.J..._
_ _ _ _ _ __
reloting to Minority' Buol·

_ Protee)lon .... f23,BOO.oo ..
to bid.
F
ir
et
to thia
HVAC .. :........
UIIB.OOO.OO
withdrillw
·0
~-lcol
.... ,conference
...1 :s3 •000wit
CSO)daya
HUCK'S CAl WASH
. EUM uoME
; . A PRE~Id
of tho
~
, .,. hlid., 1o,.oo o.m. on .
Do· 51 Oti'z 2nd St., Mltlllllpartl
1o011! &amp; BOard Far
.Juno1. 1!!80, Ohio Deport- puty
of .
For Appt. Call .
Sanlor Cltll- anti
• mont of Tronoportiltlon Dto, Public
[trict No . .10 Hoodquortora. righttowolvoony
i
· 992·6717 H- or·
. • Muotdngu"' Drive. Marietta; tin or to rajoct eny or ott
992·6244 Garage,
Good Rotoo
•Ohio.
bide.
•-tB·'BO-f mo.
; T.l.C. •
: Coptoo ol tho Notice to
Tho Deportment of
Z7Y11 E
BI.W.a. Form of Propo•t.
Adminiotrotivo Sorvk:oa
' xp,
Form of Bond, Form of ConOlvlalon of Public Worlla
Roforon;troct, EEO Bid Conditlona,
Coroto J. Olohevllly,
992·6873
. tnotructlono to Blddoro.
Deputy Director
- ·
Ponorot Conditlona, Plona, (Iii 18, .23. 30; '" 6, 4tc.
209 Seuth 4th St.
Spodflc.otlona end other -R.;;t;;;;:;;;;;;;.;;;:;:~l '
_:·~-Oh.
. Contrect Documontaoro on
Real Estate "-neral
"LOW
HOIU"
file and"'"" be ...mined at
....,
F!ubllc Nollce
the fallowing offlcoo;
: Department of Adminlatrotivo ilervk:oo '
REQUEST FOR MBE
; Dtv~ion ' of Public Worko
MIDDLEPORT
QUAUFICATION .
Office of State Arc~ltilct
,, and En.gineer
STATEMENTS
VCR CLINIC
Th.o Vittogo of Pomeroy.
3D &amp;at Brood Street- 36th ,
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR
Floor
Meigs Co~niy, Ohio io ro·
1
Powoll St. Millll,..art
quntlng quotlflcetlon ltlteColumbus, Ohio. 43266E . M.o~~llreltoall rr'lento from Stote Certified
(Au•• fr• ..._. JlwlftStwe)
0403•.
P()j\
, 0.
-or..:.
Minority Bullnooo Enter16141 :992·714~ .
992-2259 . - .
prlooo tMBEI to cleon ond
Bulden Exchange of CanSPRINt SPECIAL
paint two ateet con1tructed
tril Ohio
NEW LISTING - COURT pot8ble weter storage ten b.
Cotumbua. Ohio 43216
CLEAN, lU. &amp; TEST
STREET - Sulton Town- The ttorage tenk1 h.ve • ca-orS1816
ship - AP,prox. 53 acres ol peclty of
600,000 ond
Dodge Reporto/SCAN
Ct.....ond, Oh. 44116
vacant land witn utilities 150,000 gottonL Thia work
OPEN: MON.-FRI.
:...oravailable plus lree gas and ahlit conolot of oondbl•tlng
. 10 A.M.·II P.M.
• BuRden Exchongo, Inc.
Or By J!,ppoliltmont
royalties.. Owner, wilt sub-di· ond pointing the lntorlor end
exterior of both tllnb. The
5-1·1 mo. d.
' CI-on d. Ohio 441G 1 · •
iiide.:Call fbi- information
dNnlng orid poi!tting ol the .
-orF. W. Dodge ,
Unkl wll be in ttrlct accorNEW LISTING - COU~T denco with AWWA D102.
Cotumbuo. Ohio 43216
STREET - Sunon Town· Alkyd end vinyl point ayaCapita· of tho Notice to
ship -We havf2 ·one acre tema wll be uood.
: Blddoro. Form of Propoul,
.lots w~h rural water and
Tho quotlfication atate- .:.11:...:...:H;.:.e:.:!lp~W:.:a:::n;:;ted::,...:.._
•Form of Bond. Form of Con·tract. EEO Bid Conclitlono.
electric ·available. SuKable mont oholt inpluda; loner of
• tnltnletlona to Blddoro. Gonfor mobile home or home· internt with name ilnd eddr•• of company; brief de-·.
•orot Con-. Pl.,o. 8~
s~e. Call for details.
ICrlption of company: 1nd
ciflcotiOno end other Contlotlng of work experience
trect Documento togett.LETART ~ 15 mins. to and references. EKperience
with any fu- information
Richie B11dge. 7 room with AWWA point ayotemo
doolred, nroy be obtained by
UQUIIIT IIICOMII P&lt;JI1IIrW.
house, 3 bedrooms, I bath, •d water
Prime Controc_tora fram the
storage t1nk
·carpet throughout large
Offlco
of M·,E BUILD·
and painting •r• lnvcstmenl lOGS secured hy
lNG CONSULTANTS. INC.,
k~ch~n. living room, TV
rilodct homr. st~rting dl Sl.\.416.
1016 Eoot .._d StrNt. Colro,om and patio. Gas heat
·Retain ynur currcnl juh.
. umbuo. Ohio 432011. Til•
and hot water heat 2 car
Call Don llickman
phone tl14j 2118-4903. AI
garage. $29,900.00. OWN·
Toll Free I·XOO·f\.U·Of1 711 or
bidding documonto wit
ER WANTS TO SELL MAKE
Colle&lt;:t
h 15-~'19-17·11
be - - SHIPPING
OFFER!'
. CHARGES COLLECT upon
!·
·, rocolpt of a dopooM In the
. MIDDLEPORT - Ill story
: amount of •211.00 per HI Iii
,, fovor of M·E BUILDING
21 11 Murrrel!~~~"' RoJ
frame home with 4 bed·
CONSULTANTS. Tho doparooms, separate 2· car gar: oil wit bo refunded to bi.W.o
age with room above and
·, who retum the plan• end
extra lot, satellrte dish, and
• lpecificetion• in good conmore. $37,000.00.
a Public sate
: dillon within ton 1101. dl'/1
, lftor receipt of bldo. Tho
&amp; Auction
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
• co1t of replacement of ariy
PORT - Nice starter home
mi11ing 0&lt; demoged .docu·
m-owlt be -.cted from
for a youngcour.le. Some re' tho dopool!. The' law bidder
modeling competed. 3 bed·
• m.., retain tho plono end
rooms and I bath. Finish ~
opodflcotlono end .the
the way you
want.
· depoolt wMt be refunded.
$20.000.00.
· ·8ubcont1'1'Ctor11nd mitt·
SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1990-10:00 A.M.
•
+
rlelaupptlor 0 tnl'/lcqulrofor
POMEROY - Raally good
RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER, Rutland, OH.
their convenierce. P11n11nd
From Pomeroy, Ohio, take State Route .124
neigh: Sl\1 bedroom
Spoclflc.otlon• or portlono
thoroof by poylng for tho
WEST.to Rutlllnd. Sale Ia•on Main St.
mobilt ..ct&amp;DI"'G·e, sheds,
co1t of reproduction •nd
·
Sign• wnt ba poo1ed.
patio, n• ' o .. ler features.
hondting.
16,500.00.
.
SALE INCLUDES SEYEIAL PIECES FROM THE OLD
Contractor• requiring H·
RATHBURN DEPT. STOlE OF RUTLAND ALONG WITH
•tonco In oocurlng bidl
SEVERAL
PCS. FROI THE ESTATE OF THE LATE B. B.
POMEROY
This
neat
from c.rtlfled MBE oubconhome is ready for immediate
THOMPSON OF COLUMBUS, OHIO
troctoro and aupplloro ml'/
FURNITURE: Chippendale style cherry secretary w1c1aw
occupancy. Five rooms wrth .
cont.C. tho &amp;toto Equot Emand ball teet, 24 pane cherry breakfast cupboard. 6 drawer
3 bedrooms. large lot, other
ptoymMtt Coordinator by
cherry dresser w/BG mirror. 3 pc. bdrm. surte, dropleat ban· ,
coltlng II 141 41111·8380 or
features. $14,900.00.
the Minority Buolnooo Do·
quet table w/3 leaves.
·
...Ofll'lonl Dlvlolon by col·
POTTERY: 2 Roseville #103 6" vaes,. 2 Rosevtlle H741 4"
ANTIQUITY - One story
Mng ~41 481·11702 or Tott
vases, I Wetter #17 vase.
home with 3 bedrooms, and
Free on 1-800.282-10811!
ADVERTlSliiG &amp; POLITICAL: Clark 56 tube spool cabmet.
coal
furnace.
would
make
a
Eoch bid muat be occom·
Belding 26 drawer spool cabinet, Beldmg 3 drawer silk cabt·
great summer place, has 3
ponied by o BID GUA·
lots,
including
river
lronBoye needle display case, John Englis~ needle dtsplay
·net,
RANTY mlltlllng the roqulrocase, banjo and guitar siling display case. Phoenix Bulldog
tage. PRICE REO.UCEO. TO
monta of Section 1113.64 .of
the Ohio Ravlood Code.
box, White House box, Ohio Civil Rights Comm. NoticP dated
$9,900.00:
THE BID GUARANTY ond
1902, cardboard toy boxes, James 0. Mills tor Lt'Gov ..l926
CONTRACT BOND mllotbo
poster~ Hanna Paint pes., some metal and glass stgns.
CHESTER - 'NEW HOPE
MISC. STORE IT£MS: Dr. Scholl's Ped 0 Graph in oak box,
AD. - A. newer double
~
oak slat !911 pinned legged table, 2 oak pressed skirted tawide, 3 'bedrooms: 2 bath
bles. 2 maple ctbinets w/roll out shelves, oak IO'x5' glass
home, on over an acre lot
' 1 Clrd of Thlnkl
EleCtric F.A. heat, rural wafront back and ends showcase w/4 doO&lt;s •nrt 7 rtr•w•r&lt;
also a 10x6', 2-8' countertop showcases joak). oak store
ter and cable T.V. Call lor ap·
poinlmenl to see this one.
ladder on wheels, wood and metal hat and dress stands.
. Thank ' you V«Y
$31,000.00.
4Z'x35" titt·top.table (stands 18"), several displi stands and
much for your kind,
racks (mostly oak), lots of showcase doors w/ ass, several
HENRY R. CLELAND
noa and pray~ for
pes. old glass, shoe store foot rest, loot scale, c~oll's arch
992·6191
fitter, Mission.OaUbrary table
me when I waaln the
.leln TtUSSill .... 949·2&amp;60
COlliS, STAIPS &amp; CURIEIICY: 1851-0 2\\ Gold, 1903 liblilt Hupp ...:.. 949·2257
erty 5.00 Gold, 1899 Morgan Dollar. 1922 Peace Dollar,
Jo
Hill
...........
985·4466
your,
.. ,
1876 Sealed liberty Halt (Carson Crty),l911 Barber Quar·
Ofllt:t
............
992·2259
and
Mowing you ·
ter, 1902 Barber Dtme, 1853 Seated.Liberty Half Dime. 1907
tHnklng about
V. Nickle. 1898 V. Nickle. 1868 3' (nicklel.l853 3$ (Stiver).
OUR SALES VOLUIE HAS
me and . pr!IYing for
1864 24. 1852 Larae Cent, 1863 Alabama 1.00 bilL Georgia
BEEN GOOD AIID WE
• me Ill"!" · ma the
.Michanics 'Bank 5.00 bill, N.C. 30 &amp;40 Dollar Notes. Ger-'
STILL HAVE BUYERS
. atreng1h • I naaded
•man· &amp; Japanese pap• currency. Saveral Gt!fman and U. S.
LOOIIIIIG FOR· IE18S
$!amps. Sevt!fal other coins not listed .
• when thlnge ~ tlf·
COUIITY PllOPERTY.~F
ALSO SELLIIG: "Cast Iron Boston Terriet,approx. 100 yr~
YOU lAilT TO SELL C LL
flcult.
old.
'
CLElAIIJ
RfALTY·
Thing• - ltlll dHTHIS IS ONLY A PARTIAlltSTIIIQ.
1
TIOAYIII
. tlcult, but It .. good
litis •• 1M • 1-. oolo - PI• ta lfllllll
wltlt..,
to be horna and lam
EATS
CASH
. POSmVE •
: Ol&amp;lwlul to be able to

'

992-3614

Public NotiCe

Public Notice

· :::R:::r .E~1sf :.;.:~:=~~~~~~~
1

428·1065 .

· PORC-H SAtE
]I

• The Area's ·Number 1 Marketplace

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
CLOSED
Y

A Bea~tlful Way To

Piice~ .

992·21 56

MONDAY t~ru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

NOW•• :

James R. .Acree Sr. Invites the
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m .. Refresh·
public.
·
ments wfll be served.
SYRACUSE -There wlll be
MIDDLEPORT '- The Middlespaghj!td dinner on Friday from
port Child Conservation League
5-7 p.m. at Carleton School In
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Syracuse. Cost Is $3.50 per
the. home of H:elen Blackston.
persol}. .
.
MIDDLEPORT
- CheerleadCHESTER - There will txi a
lng
tryout~ for next year's elghtl;l
.
special meeting
the Chester
grade squad at Meigs Junior
· Township Trustees on Thursday
High wlll be held Friday at 4 p.m.
at 7:30p.m.

:·.. Jennifer and ' Gfeg Kennedy, ·Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Jody
·. children of' David and Deena Neece. Mr. and Mrs. Chris
Neece, Christy and Christopher,
d J i
d Jaclyn
RUTLAND -The Leading
·; Kennedy, Lexington, N.C .. recently celebrated .their sixth and Mrs. Rhon a ust s an
·•
Creek
Conservancy District will
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smith, Lindsey
meet Wednesday at 9 a.m.
.fou,rth birthdays, respectively.
and Josh, Mrs . Janice Haggy and
: Parties were held with the
1 d
·themes of "Minnie Mouse" and Alicia, Mrs. Phyllis Drehe an
POMEROY -Amerlcare·
"Marlo Brothers: · Cakes were . Shari, Mr. and Mrs. John ThoThe XI
ANTIQUITY; -Pomeroy
wlll have a pretty ·
mas Adam and Brandl, Debbie
Gamma
Epsilon
Chapter.
Beta
baby
contest
and
variety
show
on
.made by the children's aunt, Kenn'edy, M
. r. and Mrs. Chuck
Rhonda Justis. Refreshments
Sigma Phi Sorority wlll meet
Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. Resl·
were served and games were Kennedy, David and Steve, Mike dents will judge the contest.
Thursday for Its picnic at the·
played.
KennedY and Carrie Harris.
home Son:YJ~ Wolfe In Antiquity.
· · Attending the· parties Wflre
Sending gifts were Mrs. Minnie
Meet at the London Pool parkin~
MIDDLEPORT - A basket
·*their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Charles weaving class will be offered by
lot In Syracuse at q p.m. Picnic ·
•,Ed Kennedy and Mr. and Mrs.
Neece Sr. and Jack, Mrs. Kitty
starts at 6: 30 p.m.
the
Middleport
Arts
Council
on
. Mees, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Byerly
t Charles Neece; great grandpar- and ·zachery, , and LaReina · Wednesday at 7 P·m· In the
fe nts, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
FRIDAY
council chambers ·on Second
Woods.
:'s trauss and Mrs . Carrie
' POMEROY . ArherlcareStreet In Middleport. Instructor
-Pomeroy wlll have · an emIs Sue McGuire and the fee for the
ployee appreciation c9okout to
class is $12 To register call Susan
honor employees, volunteers,
Baker at 992-7733.
., The Racine Eioy Scout Troop Elmer Pickens for his assistance
and
facility doctors on Friday at ·
THURSDAY
noon.
;244 was treated to a shrimp to the troop.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Receiving award s were Group of A.A. and AI Anon will
' dinner by the Racine American
: Legion Post 602, which sponsors Jeremy Lvons, Charles W. Ro- meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY - The Bells and
: the troop.
berts, ·Jr.', Min tar Fryar and Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Beaus Western Square Dance
• Tom biddle prepared and Timmy Gheen.
Club wlll sponsor a dance Friday
For Information call
; served the dinner to the troop,
A s(iectal class was held prior 1-800-333-5051.
from s-u p.m. at the senior
' scout leaders, and guests, Pam to the awards ceremony tomake
citizens center In Pomeroy.
.. Diddle and Ann Scarberry.
the scouts aware of the use and
POMEROY -Amerlcare·
Keith Rlppeto will be the caller.
During the program the com- procedures in the. organ donor -Pomeroywlllhaveaminlsler's
mlttee~ were Introduced to t~e · program. All scouts received a
breakfast ,to honor all special
POMEROY - The Hlllsldr
troop, the charter was presented donor a\fare~!"ss patch. to be~ ministers who come to the ·Bapdst Church will have a hymn
sing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
_ fa~lllty on Thursday at 9:30a.m.
to \Y.F . ,Bearhs, first vlc.e CQm- '• worn}&gt;n their yn_lforms. •
mander, and the troop 1\fa~
The scout committee ln~ludes .. Af'lO a.m. there will be gospel
; presented to the legion by 'tt,e d' )'lrgll Walker, Diana Kay Ro- · sing with various groups from
OPEN Fll., SAT., $1111.
, Scarberry, scout master. ".; ,. •. berts, 1lillmer · Pickens, Thomas the comlnunlty.
·' A certificate was presented,!O l· E. Diddle, Fred Scarberry, MinlilY 'lth, 19th, 20th
.
· ·, ' tar Fryar, and Jeffery Mayne rd.
MIDDLEPORT
-"The
Trial
.
.
'
).
'
..
of Amanda Marie Locks" will be
HAmOID, W.VA.
pre.sented at Meigs Juunlor High
lt. 33 ltnt, 4 ..... above
School on Thursday at 7 p.m.
, _ . , lrldgl t
Admission Is .50 cents.
Man's
into membership at the rt\gi.Jar ' ~unk.'! Opal Grueser · read
s.ll, luy, Eat or ¥hit Us.
•·meeting of the Rock Springs "Lyme) ·Disease," and Pat .
RACINE -There will be a
, . _ 614·446·8231
1 Grange held recently.
Holter concluded with a re,l!jllng
regular meeting of the American
· Barbara Fry reminded "Flfty\\laystaSavetheEarth."
Leglqn Post 6021in. Racine on

TO PLACE AN AD

PubliC Not,_
.,...

Comrrlunity calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -The first practice and final sign up for
American· Legion Baseball wlll
be held Wednesday, rain or
shine, at 6 p.m. at Meigs High
·
School.

Classified

Mary Andrews, Long Bottom,
recently took a bus trip wlth a
group of senior citizens.
· The group went to Columbus to
the Buckeye Dinner Theatre for a
shi?W: They also visited the
French Market. Andrews stayed
In Columbus to at tend the wed·
ding of her daughter, Barbara,
on AJ;!~U 30. She spent the
remaining lime with her children
and gralldchlldren.

"' s. 'llllr4. ....... rt
'

992-6421

5-11·'90·1110.

'

1:

·'

(

•

I

�Page-12-The

Sentinel

\'INT ADS bring
Vacation Money

LAFF-A-DAY

--........... 1 H

Annol:ncorll''rlt-.,

~':.. 1111... llel(od. - ?

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FerNnLit 111111--0it
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""''Mobile
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22

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retired Ia you can1_.J)fUI
,.....,~------,problems at the~
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torRent

1:01 til kuczlt 111• •

1:301:=

wanted
78 ~·. Molont

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7 - Old ldll- 1 -11tlaor~1-l MIF !' 1'1' l1"ce I e aood
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pool!-.

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tel........ ar, I beth, LR, FR, t ~ aacm
Mlinldtoi'an.lcar- 171-11111.
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$411,100. IJ4.311.
1171.

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

-TIRI

.

FRANK AND ERNEST

~-·

I f /-~e you $Uilt

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Auto Pans &amp;

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·

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1:0511l MOVIE: Dlrl¥ Dlngua
Iii.... (PGI (1 ;.(fi)
.
(I) Major LA. . . IIHbal
a • e ()) IJoOtlle I low..,,

1:30

M.D. JeaiOuay runs rampant
attacking Doogie, Wanda,
and the How.... (R) Q

1:00

180nltap
e ,W 8 Night Court A

farmer iOCIJ t a 18 ciWged
with a-ull.

st&gt;

•Doogil
• (JJ
·•
M.D.

.

~--·
and andl
,

dleidllt'l time to
,,.
conaummale the relationship.

m'L

F111ci1Ciol

1ar111 Strilclno

Information abOUt the star
lh•t powers the earth.

-.=-.: .......
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biltara- r01111ntie ~ of 1

hornalall aldlwllk iklltc:h
artist. (2:00) St-. Q
I!J eo MOYIE: 'tltinda 01
A MuniiNI' CIIMcrM

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.82·

BARNEY
MAW II SHUT

(2:00)8-.
1211 Nalllvlle Now
1:30.(2) • .,.., ,.... "
divorce lawyer vllill tha

TH' HDUSE

THEM OADBURN
WINDERS!!

IS BLDWIN'

a

AWAY II

·

In the air Ill around
Brfta*PI-.Q

•

38 Color
37 Doctor's

-Who

1:10 (J) MOVll!: Tile
LoviCI c.t .,....... (I'G)

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35 Fuss

l.cMI Ia

(2:30)

Cut.............

10:00 (2) 700 Club With Pat

Ra••......,

-·LMIPIM
O..llp II. Ol:lo

... ·--• (J) ............ Dell
Shannon dafellda an IIIIQII
Maxlcln 111811. 1:;11 .--...

114 · · - · '

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klllng, 1 llltte glrf, Ia llraid to

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testify. Q

Frultal

mrtawaw• ·
iiJ EwnlnO Nawa

Vegetablaa
doratlnd wltat to do lo make lhe rela-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL ·

tlonllllp wor!&lt;. Mall $2 to Matchmaker,
p.O. Box 91428, CleVeland, OH 44101-

. 3428.

011- (Mar 1t1.Juna 1111 caution and

nat one and the - ·
tt:augh today you may blllave
them 10 be 11m11w. 'rllld Wirily, but da
·nat •llxhillhe hOpe In v- heart.
1111-doubt -

·-

CAIICIII (,_.:11-.ltllrll) Under ntoat
condlllonl you Wnd to lara- Wf!lln

eollec:tNI andaavara. Todly, IIOwevllr,
·It might be !Wtll to IIIOkl.pwtiefpltlon'fn
'

-17·-·

jOint - " " ' ·

UO (-IWILII II) Today I Jllllrequlred to llllka a )Udgmanl tllat II·
laalaii\CI4her . . . . . ~. dan't
da 10 In a CM'dlr lallllon. Major dlcl110111 mull be h ..... •Ill . ..
YMO .(-.
tl) YCMJ 111M
llllf'tllalll powaa
•- 1 V8llon IIIII
give you lllellblllrto , . . , u.lul crlt~
Ollm.llut todlr ............ IIJDth.
•• ,....--lllmlghtbetnON-·

:::'a

•••ua

·w. don't haw 1 Clll. lt'a lor
01( boll

wing

• • • (J)aiiW--

Plumbing •

1

11:1.

WIA ,..,.. • 0111 II) II
......... ,.... 1011111 &amp;I pI

eof!alrlclor."

,,Pr ··

·1

Openinclead: • 10

31 Divine
song

group and lnaplrn Kale, and ·
Jolin

Heating

58

.

o~~NDIICI

.1aoa...ott1~

All p1t11

1 Scalawag 45 "L.tiCly':!:... ,;,:
8 L.A. pro
DOWN "
9 Hawaiian
1 Done In
veranda
2 Long poem
10 Zounds!
division
·12 Poinl
3 Ire
of view
4 -de me(
13 Of' sound
5 Parti·colored
t 5 Resident
8 Rell'l8inder
,
of (suff.)
7 In the past
Y•ter._ay • Answer
t 8 Hit
8 Store . 23 Role
32 Asylum •
18 An ex
head
24 Filch
.33 Correct a
Sinatra
11 Enlertain 25 Tennis
scrlpl
19 Typical
14 Spltelul
great
34 Like beer
21- Understand 17 • - That 28 General 38 Oversee·
22 Indisposed
Jazz"
27 Trona or 39 "All About
23 Saucy
20 Explosive
lollte
- "
24 Bear
device
29. Greek ·T~41 Black cuckoo
27 Borgnine
film
28 Floor
covering
29 French
· shooting
malch
30 Building

TIMI Quell flor . . . . (PG)
12:001

,, alan: 14171. In o!M

3 NT

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
44 Incarnadine

-~~IICnlh
1Z1 MG¥11: lupa•an IV:

top,

overtrick~ .

CROSSWORD . .

Pl'tmeNewa
•
0 Munier, 8he Wrote
Chrtstaphor Bundy•Died On

114'

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CRI

.

'K U 4 3
tQH

=·

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s-. a
e
D olllle And'The
F - Jakll'a lnvellllgatlon
of the murder of a

.

EAST
.KIUI5
.QIOS2

WEST

tJ42

aave declarer II trlcu - a IOOd
enoup i'elult when a low ·heart lead
would bave held blm to three no- a heart lead would bold daWLI the OVI!rBut tournametlt playen are a tricks. Seciond, when declater bu all
y lot, and Soatb wanted more. So the tricks left but cme, it Ia riPt IDE'
be played the ace of spades ltDd tltetl blm to cub the ace ol apadea ulte did.
ran all his diamoDdl. At the fbtiJb, When ibe dtamottd suit ~ llubleq-'lY
Eut bad to either tbrow awgk!bf .1'1111, Eut will bave to throw ·~l tbe
of IJ)Idea or let p a club.
.way ~ kltll ·of spades to keep tlil! C!litlta
declarer made 12 trickl. ·
t.
nled.
"
There are 'tiro 1 - lier'e'. Tile &amp;1111,.,.,. JOCfii&gt;T~ -Jocollt • llrfiP• ~
fint 1J to lead your best suit 'apilllt '"•J-,oaCI:rtiGulel"lwriiii. .IIUa,_,
three no-trump 111 the ·~of ID"f 1 a':i•~==~-r-·":e·::f!/'
,clear indleltion o~~~ .
West~~~ ""'"-.·· .
.
. ,..

IntervieW~.

Motor Hom• ·

tAJIUIU

A club wu played to dummy'• jack,
Eut wllminl the ace. Eut now played
a heart. Declarer took ibe ace. Tlta~

•••me

l1ll

...
.............
··--

PublcSale

tiotJ of

Jim H111111011'1 Muppell and

Campana •

Serv1ces

1114 •

.

8INet
R-..IIIN Joe RIPDM Joe
Rapoeo Ia •....,.,..alble far
'cruting the. !ICiill1d of
Seume StrHt; thla program
IHturea COIIIICiy akelchla,

taw vehln'N, WIMmplr. ~
---.
,

..
oul oi!nlria,
11,000 ""· - - . ........ ""'
·
_.eldon. 114-1112_, ., 11M .Polamlno Pony, ·11411111DL
'
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Interior, rough
ma.~

.,

=

IIl IIlllntll

1110 Wlldern.e,1 1ft, ttwel

Ill -

IIJICronfn
Night Court
7:31 (J) a.nfonl And SOn
1:00 (J)'I.OYII: TIMI Proud Onea

she's moiling. 1:;11

1m Teny
- obr,
-Q.200.
- ""h
v., ewnlna
11114-

jii =:i.:.0.:\':oo_-tiw4j.

-

I tiiA!f.ros-rdyl Q

(JI TIMI Wonder .
·y..,. ·Kevin Ia dlvalltalld
whln Winnie announc:ei

, .....,..... atra, . . . Mllkta

~~~:=::.

32 Mobile ttom..
tor Sale

e(JJ Mama'af.....,

Unaalved
Mylt8NI RObert F.
Kennedy's IHIUination II
· examinee!. Q
·
(I) lllilljor Laague llaaltl'

WELL ,lOIW

r

l)on't ask why West selej:ted ibe 10 +10 3
clubs for an openin&amp; lead' aaainat
SOVTH
t• •• - -- no:- trump. Suffice It to ""Y that
tAl
••\J16 .
stranae thinp happen at the brldce
tK43
table .
tKQ42
Declarer played low from dummy
aDd won the trick with his kine when ··
Vulnerable: Neither
Eut lollo~ low. Tile llinl of dla·
Dealer: West
monds broulht the coocl ~~en that
·West held .the queen 1nd COttld be fl- : Solidi
W..t Nor.aeued out of lt. So it wu just a queaPaa 3t

.

•••-•-Tonight
(2:00)

I

+J 8$

I

e(I) (2)
Family Fauci c
. . _ Run Detby

e (2) e

HONEST, 1 COULD
U!E $OM£ HELP
ON lHE smtP:

C8mplng .
Equipment

79

7:30

,

,_..

By Jamet1 Jaeolly

:s•:

=.r-·

=-=~good caond,

1171 Dollal Coli:
.- . _ 1111, 1813'

,

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ao, ao,
or
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Nollon•ldo,
114-1~ .,_..

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a...·, , 1io __.

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3DW7I- ·

7340.

........ lifting

.

. . THIS IS GOIN6
TO HfLf1

. . • 'dlllod Ford .......... .
donn't ...... .

1111.

21

Ill Abbott l Coat8llo
7.:05 (J) ,.,..._,
•,

•

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A large matter
of overtricks

18 Mualc .... Vlclao

,

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NORTH
IQ76

ill MIMII Yloa Golden

17ft, , . hD. 17

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SCI•M LIT$ ANSWEIS
r"·l ("
·
Attune-Nomid-EIMIS- Tfflb/6-SEE ME
The IIOuble with doctOrl II that It takes 8 weekS to gat
an appoitt1met1t and when thav see you they ask, 'Wtr'l
did you walt 10 long to SEE M-1:''1"_.:;_
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UNSCRAMII:E AIIOV£ LETTERS
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eompe.te lho chuckle quoted
by filling in the miJiing werds
YO&lt;! develop lrom siep No. 3 below.

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TUOM810EXTROUS, BOT I

42

IAAN MONEY A· r 1' • loollal
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I st pp M ·a purr/n a · Dledl. ( )
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low to
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Television

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16.1990

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ca••clr Tw I-I

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AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter llandl for another. In ttU sample A Is tiled

for the line L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Sinale letters,
' • • apllea,·the len(llllancl fermatlan Gl the worcllare all
...... EliclldiJ the eodiWierllrt different.

catPIOQUOTI!
5·16

•

AJ

AW

GW

OAH

.IGXYW

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•

.

II THAT
Y••••.,·•
Canl•t•• ..• OF PUNS rT IS SAID.
ntOSE MOST DISUKE THtM WHO ARE
LEAST AU TO UIIER tHEM. - E.A. POE .

'

"

�•
Pege-14-The

•
Wedoesdav. May 16. 1990

Serttillel

.

Eblin, Mark wedding .scheduled
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carr,
Ames, Iowa, are announcing the
engagement and marriage of
their dauahter, Michelle Mark,
to James ·Eblln, son of Kenneth
and Donna Eblin, Rutland.
Tbe wedding will tal!e place

Poppy Days set h)' Unit

Sunday In ,Ames, Iowa. An open
teteptlon will be held on June 2 at
6 p.m. at the senior citizens
center In Pomeroy.
The coup~ will be residing In
Lancaster where they both are
employed.

Wahama Alumni 'plan for dinner

Daily Number
538
Pick-4
5094
Super Lotto

1

P~s

Pool passes available

wlll begin at 9 p.m. with music by
The P&gt;~rty Factory.
Tickets will be sold at Fruth
Pharmacy In MIC!dleport.
Farmer's Bank In Pomeroy, and
People' s ·Bank In Point Pleasant.
Mason, and New Haven, W.Va
Reservations must be made
by Saturday.

The Wahaina Alumni banquet
and daJIQI!' Will be held May ~6 at
the M~ Lodge In Point Pleasant, w.Va
.
A dinner of prime rib,
potatoes:·:Vegetable, salad,
rolls, dessert, coffee and tea ·
· Will be served at 6 p.m.
Tile Midnight Cloggers will
perform after dinner and a dance

I

poppy queen; Jessica H'amUto!\.
The Ladles Aux!l!ary of the
junior miSs poppy; Ashley HaDrew Webster Post Unit 39
milton,
poppy princess: and
AmeriCan Legion will observe
PQwers, little miss
Brittany
Poppy Days on May 24, 25, and 26
poppy
.
In Pomeroy. •
• ··
The poppies are made by
veterans ai Sandusky Sailors and
Soldiers Home and are made by
,
hand.
Pool passes to London Pool In
The auxiliary used the money
SyracU'se
will go on saleSahirday
donated 'for Veterans · at the
at
9
a
.m
.
homes imd In the hospitals, a~
The pool will OI!E!n May 26 and
well as for the children and youth
more
!nfm;matlon may be obof the area.
.
tained
by calllng Zane Beegle at
Poppy royalty for this year
247-4455.
Includes Grace Pratt, senior

Ohio Lottery

Guinther's
•
•
Jersey
IS
retired

1-5-6-8-22-30
Kicker 568731

3-4

•

Voi.40,.No.2410

I

,,•

~

,

.

•"

'·

IIBII'IUCY·Eodl o l - I C h w - - il ,_ired ID bo

.. AIMIIt
~ aYIIIble for ulo in-h K._ s..... '-'"' opeclfJcally notld
In thil ocl. t1 .,. do run OYt of an odlllrtiaed - · we wll- yau your
~of II tomPiflbAe Item, when •v•M.tM, ••ft;c:dltQ the 111M aavingl
'/' or a ralnchack which will onthlo Y'lU to pyr- the odllr1fn• 111m II
· ·· the ~ pric:o within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon wll bo
f_ oeeoptod per 111m .PY&lt;Chaao!l.

,,

~~ COPYRIGHT 1990 • .THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND.

C,

' ..

· PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, •MAY 13, THROUGH •
SATURDAY, MAY 19&gt;1990, IN POMEROY, OHIO

i

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

. Lawrence Couniles were adSenUnel Staff Writer
dressed . by Robert S. Baker,
·· Aspecls of six Meigs County manager of the Ohio Abandoned
and two Gallla County mine Mined Land Program, and rectar.eclamatlon projects at a pro- illation officials from the Athens
posed cost of $1,287,703 were· and Jackson offices.
·&gt;There was a slide presentation
discussed at a Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, Division of showing the various sites In the
Reclamation, public meeting .two districts which are under
held Wednesday night al the conslderatton for corrective
Athens County Extension Office. work under the current reclamaThe public meeiing dealt with tion plan.
problems crealed by surface and
Baker explained that Ohio coal
underground .mine sites a ban- operators have paid into the
doned .prlor to August 1977, a11d Federal Abandoned Mined
proposed reclamation once the.· Lands Program a total of $132
federal&gt;government makasfunds million but that Ohio has only
~,received $85 mUIIon W.ilh the reSt·
-available.
Projects In both the Athens and being held .In a "trust." &gt;He said
Jacksqn Dtstrlc~s. which Include that Ohio had gotten $15 million a
Meigs, Gallla, Washington, year up to 1986 ,but that funds
Athens, Noble, Jackson and have diminished since that time

and are now to the place where office', Division of Reclamation,
the state is looking at about $6 discussed the Athens District
million thiS year. .
projects Including the ones In
Detailing accomplishments Meigs and Gallla Counties. At·
since the program began )n 1978, tending from Meigs County to
Baker said that 97 mine shafts provide Input on projecls were
have been closed, 4,100 acres Meigs County Commissioners
reclaimed, 1200 underground David Koblentz and Manning
coal areas corrected and 5,900 Roush, Kitty Darst, Betty Gilkey
-surface acres restored with two and Charlene and Bob Hoeflich.
mUllan trees being ·planted on
Darst and Gilkey lalked about
reclaimed land. He said that one retaining wall problems created
third of all the major problem by mine water draining onto
areas have been eliminated.
their property on North Fourth In
Baker said that Congress is Middleport, wh!le the Hoefllchs'
110w in the process of allocating discussed the Wolfe-Swisher profunding ta the . states and 'that ject which relates . to . Legion
projects selected for reclamation . Terrace .and . the problems of
will be miide on t·he basis of drainage from an oldmlne!ri that
priority, with health .and saf!"IY area.
being the biggest priority.
The projects In Meigs County,
Mi.tch Farley ?f the Athens most of which are in the final

•

. Than A LOt" sips
throughout the store
, and stock up on the

_·,

•

NONRETURNABLE
CAFFEINE FREE DIET
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI, ..

I

0.6% LOWFAT

K
Skim

•KALJtA

Head Lettuce

Diet Pepsi ·
or Pepsi Cola

Gallon

Each

,, .•... ·'
.

-

'..

'
KROGER GRADE A LARGE EGGS 18-CT... 8110

B·u y ONE
FROZEN 6-0Z. FISH PORTIONS
OR 6.75-0Z.

Mrs. Paul's
Fish Sticks
GET ONE

THIS IS NOT A BuY ONE-GET ONE FREE ITEMI

· 12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... $3.48
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEMI

THIS IS NOT A BUY' ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM I

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12-0Z. PKG.

FROZEN 1-LB. PKG.

Armour ·
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house-to-house
check. of dog tags
.

14-0Z. PKG. WHITE, WHEAT OR ONION

.Buzz Brand
Beef Patties
GET ONE

Kailg•oo

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IN THE PRODUCE DEPT.

.BUY ONE
16-0Z. JAR ALL V1\RIETIES

I

.

Marzetti's .
. -Dressing
GET ONE

BUY
ONE
20-CT. PKG.

BUY
ONE
8-0Z. BOX

Kroger
Trash Bag;s
GET ONE

Kroger
Cheese Bits
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~

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18-0Z. BOX

•

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· Vaseline. . Intensive
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Care Bath Beads
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Renuzit
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Old El Pao
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MCCORMICK'S SALAD SEASONING 2.12-3.71-0Z.
. , . . . . . .I

,.

By JULIE E. DilLON
SenUilel Ne911a Staff
· · A couhty,-wlde holiseclo-house
.check of dog tags will begin soon
In Meigs County according t.o the
Meigs · County . Board Q.f
Commissioners.
. Commissioner David Koblentz, during Wednesday's commission meeting, .reporled that
message came from Meigs
County Dog Warden Wayne Roseberry because of a number of
complaints from county resic1ents stating dogs ar~ running

Pocket Bread
GET ONE

~-

leader. Above, Bob Jleer;le fl!lr;erprlllts ,Jesalea
Da,ls. other scouts llllfler.printed were Sarah
Kloes, Becky Houser, Sarah Ho-r, Melllaa
Houser, and .JesUee Johns011, left to right.

·Meigs Cou~ty ·d~g warden plans

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE ,

J

•

SCOUTS FINGERPRINTED - Tbese Pome-

Collllty Sherlfra office We
ay afternoon to be
flllflerprlrited. Havlnr; tbat done wu a pari of a
safety procram belnc:taur;ht by Terrie Houser,

.FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE'

. '·

Barn destroyed by fire

..

.,: roy Daisy and' Brownie ":~ vlsltf;d lhe Meigs

''

Wednesday just after the storm
Ughlnlng striking the transBy OVP Staff,
hit, and troopers summoned the
formers, high winds, and dOWQe\1
· UPI reports
trees on power lines. He went Qn
· ' ' Storms Wednesday night blew GaJUa County Highway Depart·to say that the outages were
down trees ·and fences, and ment to remove the tree.
Troopers were also alerted to a · widely scattered . J!..nd thai llie
caused spol electrical ·outages
largest outage involved four hi •
across· the region. leaving the downed tree at about the same
five customers .
·
time which blocked State Route
Ohio River on a rapid climb. ·
McDade reported thai all ser:
Among the hardest hit was 7, just south of Gallipolis.
Mason County, West Virginia, Workers from the Ohio Depart · vice had be!m restored by Thurs:
where approximately 1,800custo- ment of Transportation were day morning, except two wltli
with affected transformers.
mers In Mason County · were called to renrove the tree.
lhunderWednesday
night's
McDade slated thai customers
without power Wednesday night.
An outage at the SpQrn Subs ta· storms !eft some Meigs County served by the Gallipolis office, .
including P_o,meroy and Mlddletloq left ,peoP.Ie_ tr.tfle 1\ar~ In residents without power.
·
'Acroril:J~
~o
Ron
McDade,
pqrt, were 110t affected, but that
Hartford,; 1 N~ liaven, · Letart
Columbus"
and
Southern
Ohio
twiJ
· · lril'llf!lnners . had been
and Sandnlll Rolli!.~" ·.' ' '
Elect
ric
Power,
customers
in
the
~truck
· by lfptnlng.
Several areas remain without
TUppers
Plains,
and
Cbesier,
George
CopnoUy, of the Belleelect.rlctlly ·tpday, but a spokesRacine
areas,
who
are
served
by
ville
Lock
and bam, Reedsville,
mar for Amerl.can Electric
the
Athens
office
were
hardest
' Ihere has been 82
reported
that
Power said they are working on
approxi·
hit.
McDade
stated
that
one hundredths of an Inch of rain
restoration of services.
The GalllpoUs Locks and Dam . mately 50 to 60 In those areas fall between 7 a.m. Wednesday
· ·
in Eureka said the Ohio River were ·!eft without i&gt;ower due to arid 7 a.m. Thursday.
was climbing rapidly Thursday
morning.
A dam spokesman said the 10
a.m. reading on the lower gauge
was 23.5 feet, and was running 50
feet on the lower rollers. Regular
A large barn owned by Wayne Beal, 39285 Landacre Road. in ·
pool stage at the dam Is 12 feet.
the
Kingsbury, area was completely deslroyed by fire :
During the past 24 hours, dam
·Wednesday
evening.
• •
officl'a is have ·recorded 1.11
According
to
Pomeroy
Fire
Clllef
Danny
Zirkle,
the
fire
inches of rain In the Eureka area.
star.ted when the barn was struck by lightning during a storm. .
East Galli!!oUs Station has
The
department was called to the scene at 5:56 p.m. and the·
recorded precipitation during 10
Fire Department was called to scene for
Harrisonville
' of first 17 days of May totaling
assistance
with
water.
2.71 ln!:hes, Including .64 Inch
Zirkle
stated
that
the barn was filled wilh hay and also had a
during past 24 hours. The averrorn
picker
Inside.
He
wen I on to say thai the struclure burned
age fs usually around 3 Inches
•
'right
down
to
the
ground."
during May. The city's last big
Zirkle reporled that there were two olher buildings nea~by
May rainfall total rainfall was
.which
had to be kept watered down to prevenl the f!re from
5.98 inches, recorded In 1958.
spreading
to them .
Gallipolis City pollee reported
It
was
reported
that Seal did have some Insurance on the
tree limbs were down on Old Fort
property.
.
Trail off State Route 141 as a
The Pomeroy Fire Department had 14 men on the scene 'and
result of the hurrlcane-J!ke rainHarrtsonvJIIe had seven, according to Zirkle. Also on lhe scene
storm which hit the GaiUpol!s
were three Pomeroy fire trucks, one emergency medical·
area around 5: 45 p.m. Spot
service
unit, and two Harrisonville trucks. The department was
fiOQd!ng of .basements, fences
on
the
scene
until 8: 28 p.m. ,
blown . downr and tree limbs
strewn around the city were also
reported.
GallipoUs Is In the midst of a
Three Long Bottom residents were Injured In a one-car wreck
State Route paving within the the
at 6:15 p.m. In Olive Township oil S.R. 124, .4 of
Wednesday
~:tty llmts, 'and It is being delayed
mile east of milepost 55, according to the State Highway Pat rot.
due to the ·wealher conditions.
· Rena M. Chevalier, 23, Thomas·W. Parks Jr., 3, and Heather
The State Highway Patrol
·
reported a downed tree blocking
Continued·on page 14
Clay Chapel-Yellow town Road

Local news· briefs----

2-Liter

88

'
;

THIS IS NOT A BUY'oNE--GET ONE FREE ITEMI

damage, $54,850:
Red Bird where mine drainage : '
affects State Ro11te 7 creating a '
hazardous.entry;$20,1Ji01: ·
,
In Gallia County, lhe projects ·
under consideralion include:
:
Silver Run, a 24 acre site ln I he ·
Cheshire area, $337,880;
State Route 554 South near the
Kyger community, an area Qf 45
acres where road flooding Is the
primary problem, $301,748.
A · r~uest for funding to carry
out the Division of Reclamation's
overall work plan will be submit. ted to the Federal Office of
Surface Mining ~ec)amatlonand
Enforcement once all four public
meetings have been held, ·a aker
sal!). He indicated that work on
some of the projects could get
underway within 18 months alter
fundlnR approvaL

'

special "Save More

''Pouml

design and construction phase;·
and the anticipated costs are: '
Jesse Creek, extensive aban·
do ned ·eroding sti·Jp mine
acreage in Meigs an'd Gallla
Counties causing floOding Of
State Route 554, $525,500; '
Lyon, run off of'mlne drainage
creating flooding on €hestnut
St reel and Seventh Ave ., $12 ,200;
Neese, Bailey Run Road area
where a landslide Is with 25•feet
of the Neese residence, $35,000;
Thomas Fork, where some
reclamation has already been
done but there Is still some
flooding of State Routes 124 and
143, $31'5. design cost only;
,
Wolfe-Swisher on Legion Ter :
race and Salt Street In Pomeroy
where there Is continuous mine
drainage resulting in property

Mason area residents left .
without power following stonn

Prices" on these
items you buy the
. most. Look for the

Farms
Fryers

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpeper

reclamation projects . discu·s sed

Go Krogerlllg for
Low "Warehouse

savings.

..

'

B;,: CHA,RJ:.ENE HOEFUCH

l'

•'

2 Soctiono, 14 Pagoa 26 Conti

Pomeroy-M,iddleport. Ohio, Thursday, May 17, 1990

Mei~, . Gallia

...

'

•

al
Ccipyrightecl 1990

Clear tonight. Low In upper
fOe. Sunny Friday. m gh In
mid 708.

- .-

~

loos'e.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
~oberts ·and County Highway
Director Ted Warner reported
they had Investigated· a reque111
made ·by Bradbury resident,
Terry ·Garten, regarding re- .
placement of speed limit signs In
ljlat area and the possibility of
lowering the speed limit there.
Roberts repo~ted thai the jour··
nallzed speed for that .area,
which begins at the west corporation line In Middleport and
continues through Bradbury, is

40 mlles per hour. Roberts
·reported also that new speed
limit signs for that area have

been Ordered.

' ·-··

,

Warner reported .that approxt.
mateiy half of the du~t control in
Meigs County has been completed and that repairs to the
needed equipment had been
finished. Warner stated that ,hot
mix repairs to the .roads will
begin In mid-June.
In another matter, Koblentz
was appointed to carry out
Continued on page 14 ·

•

Thre~ injured in o'ne-car wreck

a '

•

Meigs graduation ceremontes set Sunday for 148 .sentors
Commencemeni exercises for
148 graduating seniors of Meigs
High School will take place
Sunday at 4:30p.m. In the Larry
R. Morrlson gymnasium.
Baccalaureate speaker will be
State ~nator Jan Michael Long
of the 17th District, a nallve
Melp CQuntlan. His address will
follow the processional and national an them played by the
Meigs High School Band under
the direction of Tony Dingus, the
Invocation. by Christopher MIchael Stewart, l'l!e!gs seniOr, the
welcome by Nonnan Randolph
Humphreys, III, class president,
and Introductions by Derek Alan
Cremeans, · senior class
treasurer:
Included on the' commencement program will be special
music by the Meigs High School
choi'Ull and band, salutatory
address by Walter Edward
Crooka and valedictory address
by Melanie Jane Beegle.

•

Fenton Tjiylor will present the means, Walter Edward Crooks,
Jacobs, Amy Relaine Johnson,
class with Robert E. Barton, Roxan Cundiff, Lisa J. Darsl.
Lee' a Nicole Johnson, Cecil Dale ,
president of the Meigs Local Aaron Joseph Davis, Christopher Johnston, Rebecca Jean Kauff,
Board of Education to present Alan Davis, Brandi 'DIIIon, Wil- . Melinda Marie Keesee and Dadiplomas to the graduates.
liam D. Doczi, Angela M. Do- niel S. Kennedy.
The graduallng seniors are:
nohue, Kelly LouAnn Douglas,
Kristin Marla King, Marsha
Laura Ann Aelker, Roger James William Durst, Shawn
Beth King, Kenda Ann Kines,
Christopher Alkire, John H. Alien Durst, Kimberly Kaye
Bracy . A. Kom, Eric Shawn
Anderson, Trlna LaRae Bachtel, Eblin, William J . Ellis, Amy ' Lambert, Karen DeAnn Lam·
Nancy Lynn Baker. Tract Ann LaDawn Epple, Todd Edwin
bert, Robert W. Lambert,
Barlels, John Barton, RaeLynn Evans, Cylinda L. Frederick,
Tammy Marle Lambert, Krys·
· ~aaham, Steven John · Bass,
Christopher Michael George, Da'
tina L. H. Lane; Kelly Renea Lee,
Melanie Jane Beegle, John Cary nya L. Gheen and Wendy Ann Tracy W. · Lee, Darrick E.
Betz!ng, Vlnda Jean Biggs, 'Gilkey.
McCloud, Tracy Lynn Manley,
Avanda Susan Bissell, Angela
Keith T. Hagen. Daisy Haggy,
Anthony Ryan Miller, William H.
Renee Black, Shelly Kay Black, Deanna Faye Haggy, Wlllla.m
Milliron, Timothy W. Molden,
Amy Joyce Blake, Debra Ann Dale Haggy, Lara L. Hail, Kelly
Rebecca Lynn Napper, Roberts
Blake. Bobble J. Blessing, Den- Renee' Ham!lton, Heather Ho- . Sue Napper, Shannon Marie
nl$ Dwight Boothe, Sean Braley, . ney Harless, Ryan William
Newsome, Carl R. Nicholson,
Amy Beth Brothers, David Leo- Harper, Julie Ann Hatfield, Ran- Renee' M. Norman, Scott A.
nard Buchanan, Jennifer Lynn dall Gene Hawley, Patricia MarOgdln, Luther Lee Osborne, Jr.,
Buck, Sherrl L. Carl and Heldt garet Hetzer, Shelby NapperMichael A. Parker and KimberAnn Caruthers.
Hoschar, Heather Ann Hovatter,
ley Sandrla Parsons .
. Kimberly Faye Chapman, Gerald Wayne Howard, Nonnan
Rebecca L Pearson, Theresa
Jerry Lee Cleland, Lora R. Randolph Humphreys Ill, Marty
Renee• PhUIJps, Wendy Jo Phil·
Cleland, Barbara Ann Coleman, R. Hutton, JQSeph L. Hysell,
lips, Latlsha Rose Price, Todd
Kerry Cox, Derek ·Alan Cre- Charles V. JackS, Sean Michael
Price, Richard E. RathbUrn II.
•

...

James E. Reynolds, Michael
Heath' Richmond, Robert W. .
Richmond, Joseph Allen Roush,
Aimee Cher Rupe, Angela Dawn
Russell, Terra Dawn Schoon·
over, Darlene Annette See, MIchael N. Seyler, Dee Shane,
Debbie Lanette Six, Donald Todd
Smith, Mathew Marvin Smith,
Anna Starcher, Cheryl Denise
Stev'ens, Christopher Michael
Stewart, Doug Stewarl, Ke)Jy
Irene Stewert, Jeremy Christopher Stonl).
ChriStopher A. Stptts, Jennifer
Rebekah 'l;'anner, John Willard
Tillis, Jr., Michelle TrlpleU,
Natalie A. Tromm, Stacy Dawn
TYree, Yalonda E. Van Cooney,
Danyel Pucal van GardereJI,
Eric Silane Walker, Michael
Eupne Walls, . Brian Keith
Warner, Tracie Richmond
Warner, Homer L. Welsh, Thomas Craig Werry, Sandra Gall
Whaley, Neal Andrew White,
Aaron L. W!Uiams, Ann Marie

- !\ ·- --·---

William's, Carl Anderson Cotb!n·
Williams II, James Williams, .
Roy Withrow, Tara Lynn Wolfe,
and Linda Wyant .

-·

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