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Tua1day. May 22. 1990

10-lhe Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs-- Ohio temperatures cool; cloudy skies ·continue
.

EMS responds ·to four rolls

Units of . the Meigs County Emergency Me.dlcal Service
responded to lour calls lor assiStance on Monday .
' At 12:32 a.m . the Tuppers Plains unit was called to Route 248
for Doris Deeter who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and at 8:18a.m. the unit went to the Arbaugh addition for Don .
Arbaugh who was transported to St. Joseph's HospitaL
The Rutland unit , at 8:50a.m., responded to a call on Hysell
Run Road for Guy ~rlddy who was ta ken to Veterans, and 111
7:U p.m, the unit went to Meigs Mine No.2 lor Terry Ward who
was transported to Holzer Medical Center.

Law)'er says court eiTed in Sinks case
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - A a new triaL
Sinks was found guilty last
Jai.-yer for a !flan ·convicted of
ltrangllng hls wife and bu rylng year of beating and strangling
his w.lfe, Judy , and burying her
her body ln the Dayton Dally
News bulldlng says the defend- body In a utility room at the
newspaper, where they both
ant dld not have ·a fair triaL
worked. He was sentenced to 15
Theodore Sinks' attorney, Denyears to Jl!e ln prison.
nis Bailey, argued Monday beTed Millspaugh, assistant
fore tile 2nd Ohio District Court of
Appeals that a surprise witness • prosecuting attorney, told the
court the errors were without
and Ineffective representation
merit and asked that the trial
are two of six errors that worked
court's verdict stand.
unfairly against Sinks. Bailey
wants the appeals court to opler

VA says vet's home too expensive
XENIA, Ohio ~UP!) - The
Veterans Administration says a
nw;tng horne where a dtsabled
veteran has lived for 17 years ls
too expensive.
Michael Quire, 43, a quadrlpleJIC, staged protests outside
the 'federal building II) Dayton
from his motorized wheelchair ln
an effort to remain at the Xenia
Hospitality Home East. But the
VA said Mollday It cannot pay the
home's $91-a-day rate, and told
Quire· lie wlil have to leave by

Friday.
Sue" Patterson, VA spokeswoman, ·s aid the home's ra.tes are
much higher than the $74 to $78
charged by slmUar · residential
care facUlties. Because of recent
budget cuts, the VA can no longer
afford the Xenia home's ~ales,
she said.
Quire .can move to any VA approved - home In Urbana ,
Springfield.. Fairborn or the
Veterans j\dmlnlstrat\on home
ln Dayton, .Patterson said.

-Area deaths---Ehnar L Thomas

Elenor L. Thomas, 68, 425
I..E!wls Drive, died Monday, May
21, 1990 at University Hospital,
Columbus. .
Sbe was bom May 11, 1922 at
.Red House, W.Va., daughter of
tbe late Joseph A. and Etta
Hurley Lulll.ai"t.
Sbe was a graduate of Rio
Grande High School, a member
of Grace United Methodist
· Chui'Cb JJ~d the Debrah Circle.
Sbe Is survived by her husband, Eldon Thomas, whom she
marrted Feb. 22, 1947 ln Cattles-

bura, Ky.

·

. ' Allo surviving ls one son, Kern
Tbom.a s of Lakewood, "Ohio; o•e
daUIIitE:~. Meg Thomas of Galll_polla; fow- sisters, Mary J .

'.

Phllllps, Margaret J. :;luUlvan
and Mrs. William 1Barbara)
Smeltzer, all of Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Charles (Irene) Weaver of
New Haven, · W.Va.; and two
granddaughters.
She was preceded ln death by
one ·son, Joseph In 1973 and one
sister, Marie Glassburn.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m. Thursday at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Wether holt Chapel with Rev. Joe
Hefner o((Jclatlng. ijurlal wlll'be
In the Tyn Rhos Cemetery, Rio
Grande.
Friends may call the funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.
In Ueu of flowers, contrlbullons
rnay- be made
. to the. Heart Fund.

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ByVnl&amp;ed PI'Malnter....loaal .
Tuesday was another cool day ·
across Ohio, with the sunshine
that had been promised for
Monday due to Arrive later In the
day.
Llght rain fell though the early
morning over the southern counties, while the rest of the state
was cloudy. At dawn, tempera·
lures were mostly In the upper
40s, except 50 In the southern part .
or the state.
Tuesday morning's cloudy .
skles were to give way to partly

cloudy conclltlons later ln the
afternoon, with high temperallll'I!S slightly a"bove Monday,
reachlq 60 to 65, except along
Lake Erie.
'
T·be partly cloudy skies will
remain through Wednesday ,
with lows Tuesday night ln the
low to mld-40s and highs Wednes·
day In the 60s.
,
Looking ahead through Satur·
day ·, the Buckeye State will see a
warming trend. It will be fair
Thursday and l"rlday, with a
chance of shower~-~nd thunder-

·.'Gon"e ···------~--~~---------Continued. from page 1
He has been Mr. Meigs Falr for
years and turned In a fantastic
performance, to_say the least. A
cog like Wally will certainly be
miSsed. Board member, Barbara Fry, has been named to fUI
the treasurer's post untll the next
election.

experience now's your opportunIty. It will cost you $20, but your
name will be placed on a brick
which will be used In the
construction of a shelter house at
the mlnl park on Court St. ¥our
name on the brick - you might
want to buy two- they're small
- wlll show to posterity that you
supported the project and could
· serve to let folk$ one day know
that you and Kilroy Were here.
The shelter house project ls the
baby of the Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee and years
ahead wlll be a blt of a memorial
to this year's observance.
Deadl1ne for getting your brick
or bricks for the project Is June
30. Contact Mary Powell at 204 E.
Main St ., In Pomeroy, If you'd
llke to participate.

Ohio Lottery

Cubs

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outlast

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stormsSaturday.J-ttghswlllbe"ln In some ~treas Thursday and
the mld·60s and 70s Thursday and Friday. Transplanted tomatoes
Friday and ln the 70s to low 80s may receive rainfall from .thun·
Saturday. Lows will be In the derstorms this weekend with a
mld·40s to mid-50s Thursday and frontal system moving Into the
Friday and In the 50s Saturday.
Midwest.
Drying potential was to be
The slx-to-10-day outlook for
moderate Tuesday In the .north, Sunday throughThursdayofnext
but was expected to be limited In week lndlcat"es temperatures t9
the south because of clouds. . average near normal over the
.Conditions· will Improve across . north~rh and western parts of
the entire state for drying wet Ohio, but below normal over the
fields Wednesday. Planting of . southeast. Rainfall is expected to
corn and soybeans may resume average aliove normal, lndlcatln some areas by the middle or lng potential delays In fieldwork:
later parts of the week.
First .c uttings of alfalfa made
Tuesday or Wednesday may. not
Lottery numbers
have enoUgh time to cure before
rain chances Increase this wee"CLEVELAND (UP!) - Monkend. Morning dew will be
day's winning Ohio Lottery
moderate the next few days
numbers:
across the state.
PJCK-3
High pressure will bring fair
053.
weather for fieldwork to resume
PICK-3 ticket sales total~
$1,21~.167 . 00, with a payoff due of
$344,692.- 50.
.
PICK-4
,• 3522.
Soulh Central Ohio
PICK-4 tiCket sales totaled
Partly cloudy Tuesday night, . $241,607.50, with a payoff due of
with a low ln the mid 40s. Partly
$104,200.00.
.
cloudy Wednesday, wlih highs ln
the upper 60s .'
·
· Seeks divorce
Extended Forecast
Thursday tbrcough Saturday
An action for divorce has been
Fair Thursday and Friday ,
flied and another granted ln the
with a chance of showers and
Meigs County Common Pleas
thunderstQrms on Saturday .
Court. Mary Uribe, Pomeroy h.as
Highs will range from the mld 60s
to the 70s Thursday ·a nd Friday, . flied for divorce from Jerry L.
Uribe, Missouri, while Paullne
and from the 70s to the)ow 80s
Gay
Labonte has been granted a
Saturday. Overnight lows will be
divorce
from Clell Labonte, Sr.
In the 40s Thursday . morning,
range from the mid 40s to the mid
50s ea&lt;ly Friday, ahd In the 50s
Saturday morning.

Daily Number
488

Reds, 2-1

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Voi.40, No.284

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thuslastlcally sign" the new bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio ~UPI ) He said. gun clubs and sports"the moment It reaches my
The Ohio House Elections and
men's organizations ln townships
desk."
Townships Committee late Tuesare ln jeopardy unless the
Because of poor attendance,
day approved legislation giving
res trlct ton Is made. .
townships limited self-governing
the new btU passed out of the
Luebbers predicted that If the·
13-member committee with a
powers, and sent the measure to
bill clears the House, the samebare majoruy of seven votes.
the Uoor for a vote Wednesdayamendment will be offered In the
At !lrst It failed, as Rep.
The House reconvenes for a
Senate.
Raymond Sines, R-Perry,
one-clay session at 11 a.m., and ls
Luebbers sald he was ''Inbalked. Sines trled to amend the
expected to forward th~ bill to the
sulted' ' by the restrictive amendblll to ·require a unanlrrlous vOte . ment made by Sen. Gary SuhaSenate, where the controversial
·Issue of gul) control may be · o! township trustees to regulate dolnlk, It-Parma Helgbts. ''I still
firearms. No one wan ted to . feel today th'at township officials;
Injected.
second the amendment.
-Gov . Richard Celeste vetoed a
are verycapableof handling any ·
After a brief private meeting, · lssqe that comes before them," ·
nearly-Identical township homeSines re-offered hls amendment . he said .
rule "blll earlier this month after
It was defeated, 6-2, and the blli
the Senate Inserted an am·endLuebbers said he had "nothing:
was· then voted out, 7-1, with
menl forbidding townships to
to lose" by trying to pass the blll
Sines voting ln favor of It.
regulate. firearms .
again; If Celeste vetoes lt he can
Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D'.'This ls strictly a gun control always try an override. He said
piece of legislation now," said time Is not Important. Townships
Clnclnnatl, elected to try to pass
the blll again without the fireTom Addis of the Legislative would have to vote for home rule,
Wildlife Fund. "The governor, and either way, it would be too
arms provision rather than overmade It that way with his veto." late for them to get the Issue on :
ride the governor's veto. Celeste
.Addis said be. will attempt to the ballotthls year.
·
hbnself . encouraged that approach In a Jetter to all House . reinsert the prohibition agalns.t
In (he Senate Ways an!l Means
townships regulating firearms.
members, saying he would "enContinued on page 8

Stocks

Meigs board hires personnel .
Substitute teachers, bus drivers, cooks, custodian~. and secretaries were accepted t or employment at Tuesday evening's
meeting o! the Ml&gt;lgs Local
$chool District_
Employed as substitute
teach~~~ for the 1990-91 school

' ' year were•

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FIFTH· IN STATE - TIK!se Middleport Junior
-Hlp School physical selence studenls placed llllh
ln llle state aad · 60th ln the 438 schools
· parllelpathig In lhe nation In lhe National Science
Ol)'mpald. Th~ composite ~ore was 441 out ol a
possible 500. II marked !he-second tbne In recent·
yelll'll for -the Middleport school to place In the
state and national compelltlon. In 1988, the
· Mlddlepor.t science students of Rusty Bookman

...

look a first In the stale and an elghlh In lhe nation.
Cerllflcates were presenled to the studenls oa the
selence team at · an awards day program
Wednesday alternoon. Pictured are, fr9nl row,
left to right - Tracy Fife, Danlelle Gray, Lori
Burnem, and Marlo While. Second row - Brad
Anderson, Tom Cremeaas and Jason Wllherell.
Third row- Andrea McDonald and Steven SmUhRear - Matt Clark.

SyTacuse police recover stolen car
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La~e County authorities were
doing reclamation work on Ntnotlfled, but declined to extradite chols Road In Rutland T9wnshlp.
the suspect, the report stated.
reported when workers. went to
The car's owner, brother of the work on Monday morning they
suspect, was notified by .Lake found the gasoline had been
County authorities and he ls taken from their dump trucks.
expeCted to come to Meigs
On Sunday morning at 12: 16
County to recover his vehicle.
a.m., Raymond G Cox, Hatchet
In other matters, Frank Porter Pass, Texas, was traveling west
II, Racine, reported Tuesday on Route 124 when his vehicle
morning that sometime during was passed by a motorcycle
the ·past two days, unknown operated by Terry Hutton, Beech
subjectsenteredhlssons'garden Grove Road. According to the
patch and stole approximately 20 report, Hutton'S cycle struck the
·
truck on the left rear and Putton
bushels of broccoli.
Qn Monday, 9 P-J!l-, Deldra left the scene. Hutton was located
Cross, Vance Road, Rutland, was later by deputies and was cltedto
west bound on Route 124 when . Meigs County Court for hlisklp,
her vehicle was struck by a large no valid ·operator's license, and
piece of tire that ~ad been lying falluretocontrol".Hls1S78Harley
ori the highway- According to the I)avldson motorcycle sustained
report the piece of tire was moderate damage as did Cox's.
thrown up by another passing 1990 Mltsublsl!l tr.uck. .
ve,hlcle. Crols' 1988 ford trilck . On Sunday evening at 6 p.m.,
SU$talned light damage. .
· deputies took a report of an
A contractor from CETM, Inc., accident In Columbia Township.
According to the report, Jacqueline Jeffers, Woodyard Road,
Albany, was ba~klng from a
prlvaie drive and struck a
hur~
PaSSing vehicle driven by Robert
S. McCail, Albaity. Both vehicles
Three northeast Meigs "residents wer~ Injured In a car-truck
wreck Tu!'sday at 3: 30 p.m. In Olive Township on Arbaugh
sustained light damage. There
street , acco rdl ng tot he oallla-Meigs p ost of the State Highway
were no citations or Injuries .
Saturday evening,. Wllllarn LPatrot
Marks, 21, Pomeroy, was
charged with fleeing and drlvlng
Richard L. Deem, 18, of TupPf"rs Plains, was taken by private
. car to Veterans Memorial HospitaL One of his passengers,
under su•""nslon. According to
Jennifer L. Deem, also of Tuppers Plains, was taken by the
,...
v
1
Bo h
ed d 1
the report, deputl~ were atj
M
C
EMS
t
t
o eerans. t were treat an reeased
temp"•wtos.topMarksforaloud
. egs oun y
for bruises.
•Noe
One of Richard Deem's other pas$i!ngers - Michelle n.
exbauat .when he fled ln a 1980
Laughery, 16, of Reedsville- was taken by the Meigs County.
Chevrolel two door. When Marks
EMS to Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., where
fumed of( Rgute 692 onto Gibson
she was treated and released.
· Road'llt lOit control of his vehicle
Neither RIChard Deem,.nor bls passengers were wearing seat
ln tl!egravel and his vehiCle spun
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around and went Into the ditch.
belts, according to the report. .
Richard Deem, driving a 1985 Mazda GLC, was traveling east
The drf\oer waa not lqjured but
Continued on page s
hi$ vtlllele sustained light
'-----~-----.;...;...":"'"_ _ _ _ __.. . damate:

The Syracuse . Pollee Department recovered a stolen vehicle
from FlOrida Tuesday evening.
According to the sheriff's report, a 1978 Chevrolet vim,
• reported stolen from Lake
County, Florldll, on Siuiday, was .
stop~ by Syracuse Po)lceChie!
James CDJIIIOII.Y on Route 124
near D &amp; M Pizza. ' When Carl
Hysell, dispatcher, ran the regis·
tratlon through the National
Crbne ' Information Center, he
discovered the vehicle was stolen
and sent a deputy an~ Pomeroy
pollee cruiser to Syracuse. .Con.nolly was out of the cPUlser and
· dld not Know the vehicle was
stolen . . . . 1
.
_ The dr)ver ., Traer Kllnkow,
· Lady Lake, Fla., was taken· Into
. custody and c~arged · with drtv.· lng under !he· lnOuen.c e ·and
having an open container. In the
vel!lde.

• £:S
LocaI news bne

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Three

Here'sagreatwaytosavealittJ.ebitof~andmoneyeverymonth.It'scalledBlueMax."WithBlueMax,youwon'tever ·
. h:M: toW?rryabout a bank chipping ~at your morn:rwith servjce charges. By simply keeping $2,500 or more in a

&lt;Dorsavmgsaccount,yougetno·servJ.ce-chargechecking,ano-annual-kecreditCU'dandevenaplanthatprotectsmoSt
tt')Wf~~- ~ theft or damage and extends thewarnm.tyuptoonefull~. You alsogetolirtimesaving
Jubilee VISA" Debit qlrd and a convenient consolidated statement that kfqJs track of all }Uir accounts and theiuctiviey.
Plus awhole lot more. So iftime and money are precious to you, come in and sign up tOr the best deal in towri, Blue Max.

CI9908ANCONEOORI'ORATION.111Asmustbcexdudrdli'Dmthlsolb-.Subs12ntialpenaltylbrcarlywi.......... onffis.lfboJouta,&amp;Usbdow~depoeit,amontl)lyscrvice~wllbc
dontoorlllurMax~account.
Cmlllomicrs !Ubjrct toapproo;al. to. PUrchase: Security and EXImlkd Proltttion,catain Cllllljltions, rcslrk:llons and exclusions apply. eo.cr., is iii dliei:t &amp; pwdwa made on or aftrr May I, 1990. Rdrrtoprogram&lt;kscripllon lbr conipkte details.

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in cat-truck wreck

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2 leetlon1. 20 P•a• 211 C.nta
A Multimecb Inc. Now-•

Township home rule
bill moves forward ·

Weather

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, May 23, 1990

Copyrighted 1890

And dear Mary Webster writes
that she Is very happy In her new
home ln North Pakota. .
Mary says the peOple ate
. friendly - and with Mary how
could they be otherwise? - and
there are many planned acllvltles at Riverview Place, a
location for active retired people.
Continuing, Mary reports that
lhEJre are people living there
from all over the country and of
course, the really good thing
about the location for Mary ls
I
--Dtd you know that 17 Meigs
that she Is slx mUes from her
Counttans recently were aboard
daughter,. Diane ·Meyer, and
the· Mississippi Queen for a
family .
week-long .trip. I'm green with
Although Mary has ]lved In
envy, They "were on the Queen In
North . -Dakota for · 10 months,
she's stU! getting first class mall conjunction with Bank · One's
forwarded to her from the Senior Champ program. Maxine
Middleport Post Office but that · Griffith of Pomeroy who plan§, MatTiage license!!
Dally stock prices
will only continue for another and handles all of the trip ln the
(As or 10:311 a.m.)
program brought by a great
couple of months. Mary' states
Bryce and Mark Smjth
Three marriage liCenses have
picture of the local group on been Issued ln the Meigs County of Blunt, Elllll &amp;. Loewl
that she tried to notlty everyone
board the boat.
of her address change but still
Probate Court. Issued licenses
Maxine, however, made the were · Terry Lee George, 35,
gets the forwarded mall from
Am Electric Power ............. 29%
mistake of bringing along a lot of - Rutland, and Vonda Annetta, -A._T&amp;T ··- ·· -· ··- · .................... 43%
individuals ln Meigs and GalUa
literature about the Delta Queen George, 19, Pomeroy; Rodney L.
Counties.
·
Ashland Ol! .: .................... 38~
and
tile Mississippi Queen to- Grlffln, 56, Tampa, F1a., al\d
So here Is Mary's address ln
Bob Evans .. ......... ....... ...... 12%
gether with Information Ol\ tours Sandra F. Brooks, 44, Tampa,
case you would like to get in touch.
Charming Shoppes ............ .... .11
thai are offered ln conjunction ' Fla.; and Jamie Lee .Wolfe, -20,
Mrs. Mary A. Webster, 5220 City Holding Co, ............ : ..... H~
12th Street South,' Apt_ 105, • with the boat trip~. I've been ·so Raclrie, 11nd Kimberly Kay
Federal Mogul- ................... 21~
engrossed with the Information
Fargo, North Dakota, 58104. Now
Goodyear T&amp;.R ................... 35~
that I've neglected to· make Ryan, ~~· Syracuse.
do put that away so that I can
Heck's, .... :. ·--·-'· ..... _............. 2%
arrangements to get t·he photo In
call you to · pick It up 'when I
Key Centurion -·· ·-· --- -- ··· ·- ··- ----14
the newspaper so that you, too, Hospital ~ews
finally get around to dropping
Lands' End·--··--··- ··--··-·· ····--16%
can see the happy group. Must
Mary a line.
-...-&gt;
Limited Inc ...... :................ .47¥,
·put that, down ln my things to do
'Veterans Memorial
Multimedia Inc ..... .. .. ........ 81~
list- my,. how It grows.
Monday admissions - Carol Rax Restaurants .......... ...... .. 2%
You may have had yOur name
Wines, Shade; Guy Priddy, Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ... ...... .. l7
engraved on some j!'welry. Or
I'VE' heard of stormy weather,
Pomeroy; Ronald Erb. Mason,
you might have had your name.
Shoney's Inc ·-·-···--·--······---14%,,
but this Is getting ridiculous, You
placed on a shirt, a lie, a hat or
W.Va.
Star Bank ................. :...•..... 20\i"_
keep smiling, anyways.
Inside your coat, but on a brick?
' Monday discharges - Natlte Wendy's IntL·-··· ---- -··-· ··-- ·--· 5%
Well, If you haven-'t had the
Zigler.
Worthington lnd .............. 23:V,

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se.

ClotiiiJ lonJcht. Low near
Hlp ftunday near 71.
Chance of rain 40 percent
tonlglll ud M percent Tbu.,._
day,

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Bernadette Anderson, Deanna
Apllng, Nancy Basye, Nina Btps,
Valerie Black, Judith Browning,
M~ry Canaday, Tammy. Chapman, Sham;lra Cobb, Larry Coon,
Judith Crooks , Deborah Davis,
James Dlehlo,I Llnda Dye, MIchael Edwards, Rick Edwards,
Marslta Egleston, Karen Faceroyer, Linda Fisher, Lucille
Haggerty, Carol Hare, Blll Hoi·
comb, Paula Horton, L&lt;lls Iple,
Rose Ann Jenkins, ChriS Judge,
David Kaufman, Kalre Kennedy,

Weather
stays cool
in Ohio
By Ul)lted Press internallonal '
The cool weather continues In
Ohio, but at least we're getting a
brief respite from what's been a
very rainy spring.
The state had clear skies
overnight with winds generally ·
light and variable. With clear
skies and calm winds the temperatures dropped Into the 40s with
some readings In the 30s In the
northeast part of the state.
Youngstown reported 37 degrees early Wednesday momlng,
but there were Jlkely even cooler
readings ln low-lying areas.
It was to remain dry Wednesday, but scattered showers and
thunderstorms were expected
Wednesday night and ThursdayClouds were to be on the
lriCrease, but for most of the day
there was to be lots of sunshine,
wuh highs In the middle to upper
60s.
Wednesday night and Thursday wlll be mostly cloudy , with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows wlll be In the
middle and upper 40s and highs
Thursday again ln the middle to
upper 60s.
Looking aheJ!d through Sun- .
day, there will be a chance of
showers each day. Highs will be
ln the tnld-60s to mid-70s Friday,
ln the 70s -to low 80s saturday and
ln the 60s 19 low 70s Sunday- Lows _
will be mostly In the mld-40s am!
50«.
The Increasing chance of rain
threatens to further delay tiel&lt;!. work over parts of the state,
especially In the south. Rainfall
amowus through Thursday, bowever, are forecast to average less
than 0.25 Inch. Thunderstorms
should become more numerous
somllf!me tbll weekend ahead ot
a low pressure system and a cold
front
Dryllll{ potential forcul1mrbay
Continued on page 8

.

Barbara Lawrence, Vinas Lee, Barry Crueser, Charles Leach.
Henrv Lewis, Betty Ann Lo!tls , and Charles Hysell.
Substitute secretaries hired
Beverly Lucas, Helen Maag,
Linda Mancini, Jenny Manuel, were Brenda Hysell, Lilly
Brent Marshall, Uhlrley McDo- Kennedy, Naomi Findley,
nald, Debbie McGuire, George Wanda Gardener, Cathy Lane,
McLean, Ina Meadows, Michael Marilyn Meier, and Melba
Mlller, Michelle Mallory, Kat- Shreve.
Substltute bus drivers whOse
hleen Parker, • Matgaret :Pa·r- contractswere
not renewed were
sons, ,S teve Patterson, Victoria
Donna
Bentley,
Denver Cotterill,
Peavley, Kathleen Payton, Max
Danny
Grueser,
Terry LauderPierce, Robyn Pitzer, Mary
mUt,
Vernon
Little,
Carl Muncy,
' Powell, Robin Prentice. James
Robert
Ramsburg,
Rgger
Smith,
Pyle, Charles Riley, Lori Rit Lisa
Thc!mton,
Larry
Tucker,
chie, Jozle Roberts, Carolyn
Robinson. Artis Salyer, Gayle Betty Wilson, and Carl Wilson.
Salyer, Ann Sisson, Mar,y B. Custodial contracts not renewed
Slaven, Jeanne Slawter, Carol were Jonathan Dunn, Doug Jen Smith, Linda Smith, Gregory kins, Steve Lane, David Lewis,
Spees, Deanna Spriggs , Paul · and Don Roush. The contract of
Stumbo, Sandra Walker, Terry VIcki Smltb, secretary, was not
Wayland, Elizabeth Webster, "renewed.
In -other personnel matters the
Ralph Werry, Helen Williams,
Kay Wilson, May Young, and board ~pled the resignation of
· sabra Ash for retirement and for
Bryap ;l:irkle.
Eniployed as substitute aides Leo Morris as bus driver;
were Donna Grueser, Judy Eb- granted .dock days lot Unda
lin, Connie Jones, Josla Mortlln, Morris for March 30, Aprilll and
Carolyn Nicholson, Tracey 12, all halt days, and for Joe
O'Dell, Karen Pooler, Janet Anthony for May 16 half day and
an additional half day.
· Simpson, and Dinah Stewart.
The board· employed Roland
. Substitute bus drivers hired
were Terry Powell, Deborah Eastman as a substitute bus
Grueser, Debra Burns, Carl driver for the 1990-91 school year,
and Kathryn Doldg~ as high
Morris, Tim Fry, Kay Ward,
school
cheerleader advisor for
James Vanaman, Kathy John1990-il.
son, Cynthia McMillan, and
Marjorte Blaie was granted a
Donna Stacayweeks extended service for
four
Substitute cooks employed
the
1989-90
school year; and one
were Shelby Davis; Lela Haggy .
year's
leave-of
absence to Kim
Delma Karr, Edrkless Karr, Eva
Oliphant
for
the
1990-91 school
Milliron, Dottie Scarberry, Kelly
year.
Hawkins, Pamela Howard, MarMike Staggs war. granted pervel Petry, Ethel Shank, Anita
lly lhe board loconduct a .
mission
VanCooney, Betty Williams, and
football
camp at Meigs High
Edna Davis.
·
Schol
on
July
9-13.
Substitute custodians emQn
filial
matters
the Harrisonployed were Jack King, Gerald
ville
sbllb
grade
tleld
trip was
Pullins Sr., Richard Thomas ,
approved
for
June
11-14.
Sam Morrison, Andy Batey,
•

�•·
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Commentary
.

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.Ohio

"

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•

...

Pome~oy---Midclaport,

Ohio
Wednesday,
May 23, 1990
.
.
.,

The -Daily ·Sentinel ': Summit Time --:----.__;_-:-""'"_.. . . ,__':"'--___
.

-:C~la-=re-=nce.:..;:..;.:·M.:..:.':::.:.ll:..:.;..er

c..,...ong--!;::,_
·•

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q

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Gorbachev, as 11n ' increasing appeal to their respec.tlve
The faltering Soviet economy
constl·
111 Court Street
number of Soviet Republics, c·a n tuencies w111 be no easy task.
Is badly in need of oUtside
Pomeroy, Ohio
for Independence from the Krem·
· As with most major poUcy
stlm11latlon, and Mr. Gorbilchev:
J)EVOTED TO THE J;NTERESTS OF TJIE MEIGS-MASON AREA .
lin &amp;!ld an Increasingly Impatient matters where there Is a marked
w111 be looking for us to ease some
Soviet public walls for the · dJffetence ·or opinion, comprom·
of the restrictions we presently
~lb .
.
anticipated beneiiis o.f glasnost lse wm be the key. For President
(
lmj)ose. on U.S. exports \o his·
~
-....,.....
m~~ r-r:"-''--r'"'-c::l•o=o
..
'
perestroika to filter down to Bush, compromise ' Is .rio
and
country. As touched on earlier,
V'"4:,1
;&gt;
'
"Main Street" Moscow. So, a stranger; to get anything done · the iss11e ot the Baltic States sits
ROBERT L. WINGEn .
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
successful summit Is something with his political opposites In the
there like an exposed nerve for
Publisher
·
Ge11erai ~nqer
Mt. Gorba.chev sorely needs to Congres~. compromise has . be- . bOth parties with President Bush
boost his .stock with the folks come a necessary · mode of
needing to stand firm for the calls
fAT WHITEHEAD
back home, and with the increas· operation. As a result, he no for democracy and tndepenilence ·
t\s81slant PqbllsherI Oontroller
, ingly crttlcal Soviet military, doubt wUI find It a lot easier than
being voiced by the leader,S''.of
· that Is upset with the diminished his counterpart, Mr. Gorbachev,
these republics, whUe Mr. GOrba·
A MEMBER of The Untied Press International, Inland DaDy Press
role thattt has been asked to play to gain public acceptance of any chev appears . l!DWilllng to .b~ck
AssociatiOn and
the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlort.
in Soviet society.
, ·
. . accommodations that are
.
.
down on lils lnsls,t ence that these
On. the other s'ide of the table~ reached.. President Gorbachev . s.t ates give'-c!!P ·their calls for
·. LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
President Blish wUI be pressed to on the other hand has to satisfy
Independence for 'fear that to do
words long. All.letters .a re subject·to editing and must be signed with
stand
taU on a NATO aligned the (jl!mands of a Kremlin that by . so · Y',ould .lelli:l to the rapid
name, address and telephone number . No 'unsigned letters wlll be pub·
reunified· Germany, and oil the ,nature Is autocratic and used to
llshed. Letters should beln gO&lt;Id taste, addressinglssues, not personal!·
unraveling of the Union of Soviet
ties,
•question of lndePen~ence for the g#!lting .its own way.
Socialist Republics. . :
• .
Baltlt;,States of Lithlianta, Latvia
Let's.look at the agenda u\ey,
· Personally, J 11m concerned .
and. Estonia. Obviously lor both will be'addresslng. Unquestlbnl(· :thaf the Increasing lntern;ll presleaders to come a*ay from the bly tbe issue of German reunifi·
sures coming to !)ear , on ~r.
table with agreements . that wUl cation will be high on the list of Gorbachev, w111 make It difficult
., ... -, ,
topics to be discussed. The U.::J. is for,. him to , bargain In earnest.
· tnsistent 'on Germany 's remain·
While he may want to be more
lng 'a key member of NATO,. accommodating on such matters
while the Soviets at least for now, , as START, German reunlflca·
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - Talk is cheap but reducing the federal
budget deficit Is' expensive, asPresident Bush has learned lately.
find a united Germany aligned !Iori, and Baltic lndepen~ence,
By United Press lnle~natlonal
~heap talk, Chapter 1:
. ·
· . ··
with NATO unacceptable. I'm afrllid he Is on a short leash
•
•
On .Aug. 18, 1988, in his acceptance speecli at the GOP national
Another issue sure to be ad· that will make 'f or a short leash
Today
is
Wednesday,
May
23,
thought
fqr·
the
day:
SQclal
convention, Bush said:
·
.
dressed is the subject of com mer· that will make for a Short list of
the 143rd day of 1990 Wjth ~22 to . ,reforrnr Margaret Fuller wrote,
"I'm the one whO will not raise taxes. My opponent [Democrat ·
clal exchange between the U.S. accomodatlons when all is · said
'.:Men for the sake of getting a and the U.S.S.R.
follow. .
·· and done.
Michael Dukakls) now says he'll raise them as a last resort or a third
The moon.ls w•nipg, moving ,., Uvlii, ·ror~, lo live."
resort. But when a pollticil!n talks like that, you know that's one resort
toward Its new phase.
. ..
:
hell! be checking into. ·
·· .
..
. ·
The
morning
stars
are
Mer'·
·
·
"My opponeni won't rule out raising taxes, But I will: Arid the . ·
Co'ngress wlilpush me to raise taxes and I'll say 'no. ' And they 'll push · . CU!'}', Venus, Mars and S8turn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
· and l'il say 'nd. ' And they'll push agaln.and.I'Il say to t!Jem: •Read my
Tt~ose born on this date· are
lipS - no new taxes."
·
·
under the sign of Gemini. Tiley
. Cheap Talk, Chapter 2:
.
Include
Swedish bOtanlst'Carblus
Seventeen months later, on Jan. 31,1990, Bush delivered his State of .
Llnnaeus, the father of modern
the Unl9n address with assurances that the deficit was under corttrol '
systematic botany, In 1707; "Ausanil that the fiScal year 1991 budget he submitted two days earlier
trian physician and hypnOtist
required no new taxes.
·
Franz
Mesmer .in 1734; social
'•'We've made rl'!al p~ogress. Seven years ago, the federal deficit
reformer.
Margaret ·Fuller In
was 6 percent of our gross.natlona) product - 6 percent. In the new
1810;
General
and u.S. Senator
budget I sent up two days ago. the deficl! is down to 1 per,~ en! of gr&lt;;&gt;ss
Ambrose Elurrislde, aflerl:wllom
na'tlonal product.
·
·
·..
·
··
sideburns were named, In 1824;
. :'The bugger brings federal ·spending•under control. It meets the
actor Douglas FairbankS Sr. in
Gramm-Rudman !deficit reduction) target, brings the deficit down
1883;
bandleader Artie Shaw In
further and .balances the budget by 1993 - with no new taxes."
1910
(age
80); singer Roserrillcy
Less· than four months later, Bush initiated a '.'bl!dget summit''
by
In 1928 (age ~~);
Clooney
with Congress In .which he agreed 'that all opflons, ·Including taxes,
actress
Joan
Colllns-ln
1933 (ilge
would be on the negotiating table to help cut the soaring deficit. '
57);
and
Robert
Moo)!.
inventor ·
!n Jafiuary, Bush pegged. the 1991 deficit a) $100 billion. But his
CHEV.
of
th
Moog
Synthesizer,
in 1934
budget director, Richard Darman, told summit negotiators last week ·
(age
57)
.
· •·
that the 1991 deficit .might be $188 ·billion, if savings and loan bailout
1
costs are included..
.
. ·
·
LTD
FORD
1985
$3995
GM238·A
36
'on this.date in history:
' if Darman is right. next year's deficit would be nearly double
•
In 1701, Capt. William Kidd
Bush's January estimate. However, the Congressional Budget Office
COLT
I DODGE
$4995
1987
,48
was
hanged In London·for plra:cy
.said the 1991 deficit could. be $249 billion with t.he.S&amp;L bailout cost
and
murder.
Included.
,. .
,'
"I
•
·
In .1939, the U.S. Nary subma·
l985 .~
. With tile 1991 deficit reduction target set at $64 billion, savings or
llt5-A.
·. ,S4495
36
rlne
"Squalus''
weilt
down
ott
-reve,nues totaling over $100 billion maY pe needed to meet it and avoid
. New llempshlre Jn 240·.feet of
.
harsh, automatic spendlqg cuts.
FORD
T-2
1985
36
S4495 '
water.. Thlrcy-three of the 59 men
So Bush finds him~if In a J!Vnd of his oWn m·aklng and Democrats
aboard were '·saved In a··llartng
are probably getting . perverse political pleasure w!ltchlng hi.m
1215-A
rescue with a diving bell.
1987
48
squirm,
,
·
·
S5495
,
In
196Q,Israellagentscaptuied
He painted a too-rosy economic picture and foreclosed raising
Nazi war crlmlmil Adolf .Eich·
taxes. which may be a necessary part o.f ·any deficiT reduction
1341-A ;.• 1986
ctiEV.
36
•
$5495
marin
In Argentina and spirited
package large enough to Qleet the l~rget. .
.
··
him back to Tel Aviv, Jsrael,
By taking the easy path early on lor political gain, Bush has made
856-A
DODGE LANCEI.
S54,95 ·
1985
36
where he was tried, convlced and
'·
his current choices hardeP.
1
hanged.
·
·ShOuld he ~bandon his "no new taxes '' pledge io get a de~icil deal
In 1988, Maryland Gov: Oonald
with Democrats? Will doing so undermine'his credibility and deprive
1488-A
- NISSAN STANZA
1987
48
Schaefer signed the nation's first
ihe GOP of a plitent election year issue'? •
·
.
banning the manUfacture and
Or should Bush buck!!! to'intense GOP pressure to keep his pledge
1400-B
BUICK
1
56295
36
sale
of cheap handguns, known
and, in the .process. limit chances for a successful summit?
as ''Saturday Niglit Specials."
Congressional ~mocrats keep urging lilm to go on television to
WAGONI
T-4
MERC.
1984
24
explain the prohleln and his proposed soi.ut1ons. Translalion: (they
want to force Bush to be the first ,
1440-B
WAGON
to call for new taxes so Republl·
1
S4995
24
•
cans won't beat uponDemocrals
this year the way Bush beatupop
. S4695
1329~A
DODGE ARIES
24
1984
Dukakis In 1988 on the tax issue,
Democratic negotiators have
CORSICA
CHEV.
GM249
1990
510,399
60
said IIIey would not bring up
taxes at the talks until Bush does.
"For some reason, he's relua. 510,599
CORSICA
GM-248
1990
CHEV.
60
. tant to use , the power of the
presidency 'to do more than go
CAVAUER
GM·204
1989
59495
lnto lthe Rose Garden .and give
THURSDAY, FIIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
athletes or actresses or Someone
CIERA ·
OLDS.
1988
else a moment in the son:" Rep.
59995
54
Vic Fazio, Q·Callf., one of the
mqre pa,rtisan House Demo·
oFF
CIERA
OLDS.
1989
$10,995
60
crats, s11id last ,week.
CASUALS &amp; SANDALS
"Ouqnessage to the president
BRONCO
FORD
1987
48
$9995
Is clear and unequival;'' he said.
Naturalizer, Hush Puppies &amp; JubiiH
.'.'This Is your deficit. This Is your
summit. What is your plan for
C-10
CHEV.
1514·A
$869$
1986
36
'
getting
our. nation's fiscal house
In order? When will you become
1324-A'
DELTA 88 ·( . $10,895
OLDS.
1987
48 .
the vital center of action John
oFF MEN's
Kennedy said our .p,resldent
59995
~houid be? When will the leading
1510-8
CHEV• . BLAZER
1986
42
man lead?''
: For ~rg~ Bush, the time for
SED. DEVILLE
CAD.
1985
36
.S8995 ,
c;heap talk Is over.
'

To set the tone for upcoming
.summit, let me paraphrase some
popular lyrics from George
Gershwin's Porgy &amp; Bess, "Sum·
mit Time and the Tensions are
, Easing." At the · end of this
month, Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev will Visit the United
Slates !or what many expect will
~ one of , the more significant
super power summits of our
time. Unlike past ·summits between our country arii:l th!!
U.S.S.R., where the focus was
primarily on the easing . of
.nuclear tensions, this surnmll
wUi be keyed to butidlng new
relationships between ·E!!st and
West.
· Thoug~ the moOd for this_ get
together .should be more upbeat
·· than it hils been. In tbe past, the '
changing w.&lt;;&gt;rld conditions have
added a sense of urgency that
equid color the outcome.' These "
are trying times lor Sovietle;~.der

.

· Bush budget .talk ·cheap,
i
I cutting deficit ·is •not

,I

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"
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'puJs TAX • nnE
•

Cubs outlast Reds 2•1 in
16.innings; Mets beat LA.

Pilga .2-n. Dilly S.ltinel

· · -

'

.

'

••

'

I

this point a better man to get th e phia"- beiH Sa,n Francisco 4-2,
Montr eal pounded San Diego 6-l, .
· UPI Sports Writer
base hit . He (CiarlO doesn' t get a
St . Louis defeated Atlanta 4·3,
CHICAGO (IJPI) - If Don chance to play every day."
Zimmer had to pick one player
The Reds , 26-10 overall, iostfor and Pit rsburgh Pul'ilmeled Hous- ·
· from the 20 he used Tuesday, only the fourth time In 18 road ron 8-4. ·
Mets 8, Dodgers 3 - The Los
Dave Clark was · the man · he · games.
Angeles
Dodgers likely harbored
would select to drive In the
8111 Long, 2-0, was the winner
regre
ts
· after ex-te!lmmates
game-wlqnlng .run. .
In one inniqg of rellef.
Mike
Marshall
· and Alejandro
Cliuk·hlt a bases-loaded single
' 'A lot of guys did most of the ·
Pena
contributed
a graqd slam
· wUh one out In the 16th Inning work. I just snuck in the back ·
to
NewYork's8-3
rout
and
a
save
Tuesday , lifting the Chicago . door, " Long said.
Tuesday
night.
Cubs to a 2·1 Victory over the
Chris Saba hit a leadoff horne
. The Dodgers traded Marshall
Cincinnati Reds, ending a game J'un in the Reds 13th, driving an
Pena to the Mets for :Juan·
and
that lasted four hours and 27 0-1 pitch from Jeff Pica into the
Samuel
In December. , ·
minutes .
. lett field bleachers. But Salazar
"
I
had
some great d;lys llere
"We · wen;; going to ' hang in tied the game J.lln the Cubs' half
for
the
Dodgers,
but now I'm .
' there," said Clark·, who had with his second home run this
trying
to
do
things
for · New
.
struck out to end the 14th 'in his season off a 2-2 pitch fromRandy
York,
"
said
Marshall,
who
previous at-bat against lo5er Myers.
.
played
with
the
Dodgers
fpreight
Scott. Scudder, 1·1. "I went up
The Cubs, blew two lat,e Inning
there trying to get . that run. l opportunities. They loaded the years. "The Mets have been
knew he (Scudder) was going to bases ifi lhellth and again In the super ·ror ine. The adjustment
was not that hard."
. have to give me something to 12th, but the Reds bullpen shut
Marshall bl.a sted .his seventh
hit."
· tllem down . Rob Dibble struck
"'
career
grand sliun and drove in
Jeq&gt;me Walton struck out to 'out Sl)awon Dunston and pincll
six
runs
at Dtldger Stadium. It •
'
begin the Cubs 16th - with the .. hitter Dwight Smith to end the .
•
lights just turned on at Wrigley 11th, and Tim Birtsas got Lloyd
· Continued on pal!e 4. . ,
Field. Ryne Sandberg then · McClendon to hit into a force at
•
slngledand't.ook thirdoriarierror second for the final 0\11 In the
.
The
Daily
Sentinel •
by sl:)ortstop Luis Quinones as ' 12th. Chicago stranded 20 tn the
Mark Grace's grounder scooted game; while Cincinnati .left · 12
(U8P8Jfi-HI)
between his legs. Andre Dawson men on base.
A DlviiiH of Mal&amp;bntlllla, be.
was intentionally waiil~d for the • The Reds missed several scor.
Published eo.rery afterDO(D, Monday ·
fifth lime, a major league record, ing chances ·a gainst Cubs starter
tbrwl!b Friday, 111 Court St., 1'0to lbad the bases for Clark.
Mike Bielecki, stranding one,
me&lt;oy, Ob19, by the Ohio Valley Pvbllahtng · Company!Muhlmedia, Ine,
Dawson's five free passes runner in all but the third, eighth
Pomeroy; Ohio 4~1t'l. Ph. 992--2156. Sebroke the previous mark of foul' and ninth. Innings . .and leaving . cond clan po1ta1e paid at _Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Intentional wai.ks set by Garry someone at third base in the
. Templeton on July 5, 1985, and fourtll, sixth, seventh and 10th
Member: Unlted-Prer.s International,
fl,oger Marls on May 22, 1962. Innings.
llllllnd Dally Press A!lloetatloJt and the
Ohio MewiJIIper ASsociation. Natlonll
Each was ·a 12-lnnlng game.
Bil!leckl gave up five ht.ts.over
Advertising ReprestntaUve, Branham
"What .did l do . to deserve 10 Innings, walking three. and
Newipaper Saleo, 733 'lblrd Avenue •.
New York, New York 10017.
that?" Dawson said.
striking out eight In !)is nl.nth
SETS WALK RECORD - Cubs' Andl't! Dawson
major league record. The .old mark was lour,
Dawson
had
one
hit
in
three
start.
,
heads to fil'!lt biiSI! after walking lnlenllonl\lly
·sh~~red by Roger ~arls lp 1962 and Garry
POS'I1IfASTER: Send
chllll,..
Reds starter Tom Brownlng,
durinc tbe gal'ile Tuesday. Dawson was lntendon·
to The Dolly Sentinel. W Court ·St.,
Templeton In 1985. Reds catcher Is Joe Oliver. .•official at-bats.
Pomeroy. Ol!lo «1769.
"He just came up with an open making his National League
(UPI)
ally walked for thellfthllmelnlhegame, setting a
base each time and iT's easier to leading lOth start, scattered six
SVBIICIIIPTION R.\TI!B
By Carrier or Mohr Ro•te
get the force out at home plate," hits; walked three intentionally
One Week .. ........................ ........ ,SJ.fO
W I
"
Cincinnati manager Lou Plnlella and struck out four ·in nine ,
One Month ..................................16.10
J~
said
Innings.
One Y.ear .............. ... ................ $72.80Rl~k Wrona and Luis Salazar
In other NL games, New York ,
.
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
.
·
.
.
·
also
were
intentionally
walked
In
beat
Los
Angeles
8-3,
Philadelh
•
"
~lly ... .. ,....•...... ~ · ··· ~· :····~ · · ··· 25 Cents
(G~IIf:lulo-il !.S), K:~ p.m.
MaJors
the
garneo
.glvlng·the
Cubs
a
total
ThUI'Mia)' Ga'"""
Subscribers n~t destrbag to pay'thecar"
.
. of seven to tie a major league
S.llll Fr!Uicl!Ol!O IIJ st. (.o .. fli
8)' Unll~d Prf'Ht&lt; la&amp;eriiUIOIIII .
rler may remit ln advance direet to f •
~Ali Allplf'irlo ai c•lt·~~
AMERICI\N U:A"GUE
,
·
mark. Houston also was · issued
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
.\ll£ala IAIFhlladf"' ..la. nlpt
E.. I
· . seven walks on July 15, 1984, in a
WASHINGTON I UPI)
basls. Credlt wUl begtvencarrlerH.ch
Saa Dtt'~ a1 N~w \'Orl, rtllfll.
Tum
., " ' L Pet. GB
week.
Cincinnati Ill M011tr~al. 11,1_,..
Washington-area hiVestorsTues·
16-lnnlng game.
·
Mll•au ...................... -22 I.J .sn -1"'Bo~&amp;o......... , •........•... ..•::!ll 17 .sn
:!': t
·day
announced
they
have
raised
Clark's
game-winner
landed
in
No subscriptions by mall permitted tn ·
, WPdnPMd!O'SPol'tllflll~IU'
ro
...o "~ " '"' '"""'''' '' '.21 !I .112 31,,
areas where hOme carrier service ll
BMI!Hb ..l
Cleveland ..... , .. ...... .. ... 18 II ,lilt "
"tens of mllllons ...ol doUars In an
rJght center and accounted for
!'II'BA r.olferenrEO Flmlli
Dttroll ............. ~ ..........ltl t:l .... 61"1
avaU~ble.
his first R,BI of the season on only
effort to bring major-league
W"wn Conlereacl"
lllalalmol't' .............. ;..... n ~~ .-1311 ,~.'t
''
111
Second
St.,
Pilllleroy
Pluw•b: al Portland, 11 p.m.
New Vorl&amp; ...... :............. u fl .U1 7
. his filth hit in 2'1 at-bats.
baseball back to the region. · ·
111111 8-rlpllol!l
" 'at
........ Melp Cont7
· Capital Region Baseb;lll Inc.,
"Thank' goodness Clark got the
YOUR INDEPENDENT
. "-hu !'ft Hll ... Mich. - i\niiUI ny ·ktrM
. o~ ..... .................. ,...:~. u .s~~-a· 13 w~s ......... ......................... $19.2t
V~;,
MI&amp;Uf'-1
kalaado.
I:!,
tiUJH"r
Chlup ........ .~ .............21 It .I l l 31,.
led by Mark Tracz. a real estate. . base hit,'' Zimmer said. "Both .
~6 Weeks ...................... ............ $37.96
lilhCwf'IAtll~~o
·
·
,MIRI'II!IUlta ....... : ...........21 1': .U,'\ 5
,AGENTS $EIYIIG
52 Weeks :................ .'....... ,........ $74.36
developer
and owner of the Class
teams had their chances, We just
Wldtr
PIIIM.
S,\',
Larry
8arnl'll
vs.
lilf'~tll' ..... . :....... ... ...... . .:lt u .4Kil i lfr
OUiolde Melp Ctlaii&amp;J
TexaN ................ .. ........ li ~'! .-lSI t
C&lt;ilo CarmoiU, II, w•ltto"w•IPt"'
MEIGS
COUNTY
·
A
Prince
William
Yankees,'
said
couldn't
get
th!!
ba'
s
e
hit
at
the
13 We&amp; ............. ...... ........ ....... $2lll0
·
·
fyt.ilnl( .
CaiJI.o~ ..................... , n .o~:m. 10
'
.
it will attempt to acquire one of
tight time.
KuMA CMy ................ ,J-1 t:l .:17tl IJI&gt;"! '
26 Weeks .... ,.... .. ...................... . l40.30
' Barl. lla.IJ - Tour of ).laly
SINCE 1168
TuelldlQ' RNjjl" .
'
, , Ge,H i;
,
52 Weelts ......... ......... .. .. ........ ..... $75.40
•
the.
two
National
League
expan'
•I
don't
think
you
could
pick
at
Jllllo• H~t.d . ~.&lt;; . - N'C:\i\ • ·•rnrn'!l·
Mllwau lie"~. Se.ttt.-·'l
slon franchises expected to begin
Olvlldon I tournament
O...._.S,Toro.-. ..
'
Hock e)'
Ne-w V orli, Chlcqo ~
play In 1993 OF 1994.
SllaDW)' (\lp F1Ralli
'l'nu I, Boi110a" •
. NEW AT \'OUR C
No Pml' Hbelhlll'tl ·
·' .
The lnves tmerit group said the
BaiUmcw It, Mh•~G&amp;M 2
Socur
C&amp;ltfenlaK, Oeweland ·3
team
.
would
eveptual~v
play
.
MISL rtay_,f..,
KuiiM Cll)lt, Delrotl:ll
~o ~ame ,..h.,...led .
home · games somewhere in
•·
•
-..ct.,.
Galnf!!l
.
Sollhall
'
Kait_,. t:ily (Sahtorhllkf'n t-Si al
Northern V)rglnll!-· . , .:
OkBherna ('lty - NCAA B'omt'n',.
fto,.ton Cllar~ .a-21. 1: S3 P;m.
Dh·lslon lto..-naTnf'nl.
·
· Thegroup'sotherlnvestorsare..
· Tennis
{blc~o CKI'Il( 2~1 •I llaltlmo,..
11N1111.• \\'eiiM, Calif, - ~C\A 01\'l!&lt;okln I
Cdolwlon 3-t),'i::J&amp; p.m. ·
Ira · Saill, a Fairfax, Va., real
· fhmpiOmllll*
Texas (.Jtlf~IIHJI at Dttrolt CDubol!i ·
estate
·developer ahd ·attorney
·
.
\hll(hiUftlnl(
,
l·-,1,7:3ip.m.
!'l.uajf'\'O. VUI(ofllavlu \\'~men',.
who is a principal owner of the
~ew Vork· t!--e&amp;lt'Y HJ * Mlntl!s•
a ·ortd CIILarnplonlhiJII'
cDr..nmond Nl, K:3l p.m.
Prince William Yankees; Philip
Mllwaubf' t~'f'IP"&amp;• :!-0) a1 Oakland
•
'I'Uf'Nda;y !-iprrb
Tra.n~toutlor..
(Moon&gt; 3-3), 11:11$ p.m.
Tierney
, a partner In the~lexan· .
By' .Unlw.d PUMM ..In •llolllLI
Cln•lnd(Biad. -I-I lilt "ll'Lildt' tHan·
drla, Va., law firm of McGuire.
. .
a!i.w·hMI'
liOn J.S ~ . ·ICI:IS p.m.
Holllllon - Snt outfielder f.entl d
To~o (SlWh a.-21 ill Callfornill
Woods, Battle &amp; Boothe; Bart
l'OIJIIIIi IO 'JutMGn •f lilt' P11clflt• foaKt
CAll hott '!--S).,II: :15 p.m.
Fisher, a partrier in the Washingl.eJ&amp;IU('
1•\AA
li
t•llllf'd
up
oudlf'ltlt&gt;r
.Jefl
Tlwl'ltll~ Galt'll'll
Bahtwtn from folumhu li of tht' Soultlt"rn
Mllwaulr.f'lll Oaklan•
·
ton laW firm of Patton, Boggs &amp;
Ll"apo tAA).
KIUI. . Cl_ly Ill Bo!iiOn, nt.-111
Blow; and William Bryant, the
·Lo11 .\n~ls- Adtvidf'd pl(c•Pr Pat
Chte:.ip .111 811 .. m.,.., nlatll
p,...ry fr.,.. thf' dl!lllhled llld: o~ ... d
T.xu a1 ~rol. nl«hf
owner of · Northern Virginia·
lnftr.ldl"r llrl... 1'ral:lf'r ktAituqllfrqueor
Nt&gt;.'f York lit Mlnne~. niAJ!i
based Bill Biyant Real Estate.
thf' Padfkfeul Lt-qw I AMI: moved
Cl.velud Ml Sf'ailll-. niKht
lnllfldrr.Jdf "amUto111lrom U.t·lf.dii.Y to
Toi"'OIIo ~ CMIIfeml., nl~t,l
Bryant. included on a list of
thf' Ud-.v dl,.'*'d lllll.
Monlrul - Tru!Ctrrt'd ptkhtr .JOha
S.\1'10NAL J..I!: ,\Gl'E
, Washington's 100 wealthiest pe&lt;)·
follll!llo from tb IJ.d _IO' diMNrtl lbii tO
EWd
ple by Regardle's Magazine, said
lht&gt; 21 tl~q diNI ,tJkod IW; ln•"'f'"n!d
Tf'ani
W L Pet. GB
plll:hl'l' Bnotl Glchnlrom lhf' 21-d~ lh•l
Tuesday he had ' comrnttted $5
Pllllii'Nrtt• ............
u u .it3 · lo. thlo 81-d~-.- lit~!; t~IJnf'd pllt·•lniJ
Pbladt!:lpllla ............ .. ..*t II .3il I i .1
m Ullon to the venture. .
prOIIptl'l MaU ro•y and Mhartlllop
Mo • .-.DI .....................:!1 Ul .3:11 :J
pNMP,ct Matt FrW.and.
NI'W .\'o~ ; .... . ,.., .... ... ._.. l!l II .3811 :t• .
Tracz estimated the total cost
KudlftJI: IEillslt'ra Lf'II.Pf'l - PIWher
('hiCilll:~·"'" ' "" ' "" ' " "" 'lt 'm .-IN i
the franchise and the stadium·
of
Plymouth Acclaim
-lolln M1·Lar•n l'fltlrrd.
st. IAul!l ........ ........ ...... ti ·u .1:11 i
san Franct.-.o - OpH.,rl:'d plk·her
would
be
between
$200
and
$25()
. "t'NI
J\i l di' L"q UippL-J. ll'lth
~HitquLflPtd . with
Rllllll~· Mt('"ITM'nl a..t l~ a&amp;chrr Mark .
flnl'lnn.atl .. ....... .. .........t4i 10 .it! • Dm·er~. air ~~~ . ·
• Dr i~·~ ~u r bag
mUIIon. Saul said the group has
Bat-.,· ao Pilo.nb: of lllf&gt; Pat.'ifit' roliHl
lAM :\nll"'ii('!I ............... ,.IJ tit .tK7
• 4~ ~nnJard fi.'Jture:&lt;.
• 2. S , I ~ter t lll!illf'
I.
Lf'lliUI'
(,\ ,\,\); llltlnh•d pkchl"'' Don
su Dil'aa .................. ,.lll !I .t'::t t1
"tens
of
milliOns
Of
solicited
• SO stand~rd tHrum .
1\Jpular f\lPtiOOrn.:b~::C"
R-INIMl• lr.m lhP dl-.~ lbll aJid
Allli••• , .. ,. ............._.... ta '!I ..132 1GI!
dollars In cash," but would not
int·ludL"
lbpular opoon pac ~.
piii'C'..-,d lhr t'Oril'llt~ ol PMcht'l' Gre1
su ,..._.,Hat . . .:........ n '!" ,.JIU 121:
Boolrr lr&gt;OID PbOf'•b .
oi Ai r ._:Lmd itlonmj!
.1nclude$
• Holll&gt;lll:oet~ .... ~ ........ ,.... ; .. . l-1 :!3 .SS;! 1St1
;;t~~.
give
a
specific
figure.
He
said
he
. .. . .hall
• i-.~ pl'I..J 11 u tomn t1 L~
• A1r L'OndLtLOfiL fljl
'hli'Hd" Rh•li
Al
..
nla!'l.:i11111Pd
Boh
W
'
..
I,;I'II'Gat'h.
Is
"highly
·
confident"
of
the
,
C'lttcacO t, On~: l ....lll, tlllnnllllN
rr.:msm1ss1nn ;lnd m&lt;J n.•.'
• rbwcr vrmdows and
'stciux FAIIM IC'BAl - ~amrd Knln
r ......
Phlllldf'lphla -1, ~an Fr:&amp;nchit'ft :C
locks and men:. ·
group's
.
ability
to
raise
.
the
Mt•Kf'n•
t"Ml'h.
Nt&gt;•- \ ' ort ll, l.G11 M.-f'l~ ;t
follt'Jt"
.
/
Tracz
said
the
necessary
funds.
Monlln-DII. San DI ..IIV I
Meull Oltw- ~IUTM"datUhamfii~IUI
.ttl!UI&amp;a :a. St. Loilh 3 .
group would wel~me additional
nwti'N' hwtkfolh lilt t1Dill'IL
PIIW.c•M. Holl!illon 1
N('..U.Plat•ed
IW!lt!rt
Morrirl
hwohl·
Investors and that negotiations
""~at Ga...
'au.
ball II' am on two,, .. .,,.. prabatlon.
l.G!i ,\n ....l"!'i 1\'alt••ta J..11 al (·'U
with some have already begun.
Price
'Football
l'QO tLiln&amp;:lllllfrJ.il, Z::!ltp.ol.
••rtd
I.R~
j)f
.\merltaf
Fo~hall-:­
If
an
expansion
team
is
acSm• Dlf'l((l tH•M 3--11 "* Morlll't".al
(Royd !-fl. i::lip.m.
!'liaWd ·ftr,., vaun~l ..-lt·f'
of ..
110,395'
qulred,by the group, Tracz said It
18,845 11,769 .
foodlall mdll•f"mfnl.
SM Frantof!lco IKIIf'PPf'r :.1-t) a1 St.
Brltlt~hfoiUIIIIblatffLI - Sipdwlch'
.... tMalh_I"~- ~~ ..JI.K:33p.m.
might
be
forced
..
to
play
in
l"'f't•ttwr 1'ony DNnil!l. ·
Pllb~Nnr;h '"'a lk .I·JI • ut Hou,.caon
Washington's RFK Stadium until
a stadium is built in Northern
Virginia .
Washington has not. had a
ma1or-league , baseball team
A large'fieid has already shown · "Backyard Volleyball' ' tourna- since the Senators left in 1971.
;Interest In the . second of two ments to ,be held .this Sunday at
The plan to build a. Northern
Southern High School, rain or VIrginia stac!lum If Washington
Sports briefs
.shine.
a ttalns a team has · not been
Chrysler LeBaron Coupe
Entry fee Is $35 per team of 6.- 7 welcomed by the D.C. Baseball
Chrysler LeBaron Sedan
,.
players. Each team must have at CommiSsion, which is trying
Mam· 1mponanr fcawrrs
' · Y11,~tlng
least 6 playprs.
.
acquire a team to play in the city.
&lt;:~ ~u ndard 1nrlud1ni
Peter Blake and his New
.,
• H).!ittr ,V~cnginc:
Indl\idual al\'ards will go to all
• A1r ~oochtlo run,
Zeaial)d , k,et~h Steinlager 2 won members of the top three teams.
, • Timtd 1lau
fhe . round· the-world race after ·
For further ,infOTnJiltlon pleasp
• Crut'&lt; control
Oriishing first in the sixth ana contact SHS football coach David
•Rt~r Window defrotttr
lillY " ......
• T1!t ~tmi111and m~.
final leg from Fort Lauderdllie,
Gaul at the high school949-2611 or
Fla .. to Southampton; England. at home evenings.
Blake required justt over 17 dllys
Friday Pvenlng will be the
t.o complete the 3,800-mlle leg. deadline for entering. All proBat
New Zealand's Fisher and Pay- , ceeds will go to the football team
Prict
f\el was·· second and Merit, the for equipment.
112,1.16
S'tlss sloop, third. ·
By Ct\RRIE MtJSKAT

••.•••

l

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Scoreboard ...

a-

TF/ash
. ;ngton.

grOUp -See tis

··
e.x.p.ans;On team

DOWNING CHID$
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

......

1.,.

t . .. ...

$12548E'r'"- ,750'....+.n

l'it!'

-1,000tc

'10,788::;',

'""''*"'

. Deadline for tournament nears

..

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f

_.,.....

=···
-'

~CB

·

• 'A first . wave of· 1,600 pollee
rl!lnforcernents charged • with
• Controlling English and Dutch
h()()llgans dur.lrig the World Cup
have arrived in Sardinia. Some
3,200 officers eventually will be in
plac'e on the· Medlterra,..,an
lslahd before lh~ World Cup
begins In Milan JIQie 8. .. .
Argentina belil fsrael 2·1 In
llrael'll,l a World Cup tuneup lor
the dl!fendlng champions,

GOOD USED

, FIEIIEIS
IIPIIGII'f . .

a.st

AIR CONDITIONERS

COUNTY
APPLIANC:ES
627 31'4 An.
Wpells .
PIL 446·16H
H--. t A.M.-6 P.M.

.

Hurry; offeren~s ~n!

l'

\,h ,lilt .l~~,l

[ l

l'l'\'
I I
'Ill''
l

See your~ !• •
....
dealer now.
'

- _j

,
Anocherrta~o~~wkvwe'reAIIIermV\af
· 'AJ!l.!nonci"i fm q111hfi&lt;d "'"I bu1&lt;" oh""'!h Ch,.,st.r C.dit on ""''90 dnln IIIXI. "Caoh bock on,.. '90 dnln l(l&lt;k. S.. d&lt;aln fm d&lt;tlilsand Gu..;,,., Claim fomL Caoh bock
diftal, from Ch ~&gt;ln Coop. 'Sdcklr pria. "'I"'"" tit"-""" and dlllinalioo ~ Aallllmlil pri&lt;e will "l'f ttSo\;np bool on sti&lt;l&lt;t pn&lt;t cl oplicN if po•'-1

- '1-

-PAT HILL CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH DODGE

Itt~ m~~
. v

•••man, ._

99t-Wt1

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Wednesday, May 23, 1990

Pomeroy-Middlap01t. Ohio

•

Detroit postS I 02-93 wtn over
Chicago in.·East finals ·
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Jordan played with bad wrist

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Ohio University puts three
on all-MAC baseball team
'
TOLEDO, Ohio
t UPI) -Players selected by the conference's
coaches lor this year:'s all-Mid
American Conference basebaW
and softball teams coaches are:

Catcher - Kim Henzler. Kent
State; senior.
Infielders - Rhonda King·
,.
Randolph, Toledo, senior; Beth
Bull, Central Michigan, senior;
'
Michelle Clagett, Bowling
'··..· ~
Baseball ·
Green, senior; Deb Mantz,
'
First team
Toledo, sophomore.
Outfielders - Pam Stanley,
. Pitchers - Brian Schubert.
•
Kent State, senior: Doug Martin, Central Michigan, sophomore;
~r Eas tern Michigan, junior: Bill' Pauline Maurice, Kent State,
.-; Underwood, Kent State, fresh· junior: Kelly Thayer. Western
,·' man: Brian Young, junior.
Michigan, ·sophomore.
;:r Catcher~ Roll Yelton, Miami.
Utility - Katie Jo yce. Kent
.,·~ junior.
State, junior.
;~
infielders - Tim Carter, MlSecond team
~· .._ .ami, junior: Darin Dreask:v.
Pitchers - Linda Milholland,
. · Central Mich igan, sophomoe:
Eastern Michigan, junior; Lisa
:;
Shawn Gillenwater , Bowling Hufford, Bowling Green, senior .
Green: senior: Matt Hudik, Ohio
Catcher - Lisa Williams.
•, UniversitY. senior: Jim Givens.
Bowling Green; se nior.
Kent State. junior: Steve Waite,
Infielders - Julie Llljeberg,
~· Eastern Michigan. junior.
Western Michigan . junior;
•;
Outfielde[s- Denny McNam· Shana Delp. Kent State. sopho·
, ' ara. Central Michigan. senior;
more: Tammy Yaxtheimer, Mi·
;: Jason Welch, Bowling Green, am!. freshman: De na Romstadt,
· senior: John Timko, Western Bowling Green, freshman.
·:
Michigan, 'junior.
.
Outfielders - Leigh Ross,
, Designated hitter - Matt Toledo, junior; Monique Abbitt,
:. ; Bauer, Central . Mi c higan .. Miami, junior; Deanna Fong,
•
1 sophomore.
Toledo, Senior ..
~~ 1
Second team
tJt ility - Pam Meyer. Central
•· 1 Pitchers - Bobby Robinson, Michigan, freshman.
:: . Ohio University, sophomore: Pat
~ ; Bojcun. Central Ml~higan , jun·
lor: Ted Ward, Miami. fresh·
·'
' '
man:
Bob Riker, Central Michl·
'. ' gan, senior:
Joe Long. Kent
State. freshman.
•
Catcher - Brian Hos tetler,
~ ; Western· Michigan, freshman.
.r • Infie lders- Scott MacGregor.
~: : Central Michigan. junior; Rick
•: ; Dzajkowski, Ohio University,
' • : sophpmore; Brian Koelling, Bo·
•: , wling Green, jpnior; Mike Gulan,
; Kent State, freshman.
;1 Outfielders - Matt Mteske,
;. : Western Michigan, senior; Brian
·•
•• · Saltzgaber, Western Michigan,
• senior; Kevin Grljak. Eastern
•
•: : Michigan, sophomore.
:: . Designated -hitter - Pat Rol·
.; lins , Kent State, junior.

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starring Paul Newman.
Graziano learned how to fight
as a street hoodlul'11. then as an
unlicensed amateur before turn·
ing pro in 1942. He l!ad a
professional record · of 67 v!cto-

•

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NEW...
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INSURANCE SERVICE, INC.
I

Judy Williams, Agent
214 E. Main St.
992-6687

.

Sports briefs

SkUng
The World Cup ski ci rcu it gave
preliminary approval for a plan
to pay prize money to race
winners. The move at a meeting
In Montrea·ux, Switzerland, could
pave the way for revamping of
International skiing, currently
caught in the grip of dwindling
support from the publ!c, sponsors and television ..

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Softball
First team
Pitchers - Darby Segrlst,
.Kent St11te, sophomore; Kristy
Burch, Miami, senior.
. 4

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MODil C506 • .CS

With

..,..,. 4'1111·- ···

SALE
JOYNER BELTS HOMER - Wally Joyner of
Callfomla, is congratulated by ChW Davis alter
· he hit a two run homer off Cleveland pitcher Tom

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.Candlottl In filth lnn,lftg action ol their game
Tuesday. Angels won
(U?IJ

Joyner's four RBis push
Angels to 8-3 win over Indi(lns
CLJ;:VELAND r UP!) - Wall:y home Snyder.
Canseco likes to spray his shots
The Angels scored lour run~ in around the SkyDome, lmproving
Joyner hit a two-run homer and
drove in four runs Tuesday night the ninth on two-run bases loaded on his distance and accuracy .
to lead the California Angels to singles by Joyner and .Johnny People still talk of his homer into
an 8-3 victory over the Cleveland Ray. t
the upper deck in the playoffs
Indians.
Elsewhere in !he American against Toronto last year bur
Joyner, 'Who went 2-for-2 wiTh League, Oakland beat Toronto Canseco thinks he can do better.
- an Intentional walk againsr 5-4, Milwaukee shaded Seattle
"Hopefully next time I'll hilthe
ClevelahdstarterTomCandiotti, 3-2, New York downed .Chtcago scoreboard , "
Canseco
improved his career average 5·2, Texas edged Boston 5·4, announced.
against the Indians knuckle· BalTimore mauled Minnesota
He ranked· the slam second on
baUer to .450 in 20 at bats. 10·2, and Detroit outscored !{an- his "bes t homer" Ust.
Candlottil~ll to 4-2 with his first sas City 9·8. •
''I'd rank this as No. 2 behind
start off the disabled list .
·
A's 5, BlueJays4 -At Toronto. the one I hltln the 'World Series,"
Chuck Finley. 6·2, ~ave up six Jose Canseco's grand slam in the Canseco said .
•
hits and three runs in six and sixth inning and his RBI single . He was referring to his first
two-third innings for his third accounted fqr all of the Athletics.' · ' grand slam, in th¢ openinll gilme
straight triumph. Brian Harvey •'uns Tuesday, lifting Oakland· to of I he 1988 World· Series against
retired the last seven batters' to a 5·4 victory over the BluE' Jay s. the Dodgers.
earn his fourth save.
"I like this ballpark, it's
"I don't rank them by distance
The Angels took a 1·0 lead on a electric." Canseco said. " If I hut by Importance," he said. ·
passed ball by Cleveland catcher played here all the time. 60
Canseco's eight RBI in the two
gi me series boosted his season
Sandy Alomar with th e bases homers wouldn't be sale.
loade.J. They added a run In the
Though the · Athletics only • total to 39. tops in the American
second when Dante Bichette retilrn to Toronto once more League:
doubled, took third on a passed during the regular se~son, Ma·
.. Canseco's heroics made a
ball and scored when Donnie Hill . r!s's record still may not be safe. winner of Curt Young, 2-1. who
singled.
Canseco's fi rst career grand ga"e up . three hits - all solo
Jovner's homer, following a slam -playoffs excluded -was home runs - over five and
slngie by Chill Davis, made il4-0 his 15th homer of the year and
two-third Innings. He struck out
in the 'fifth. The homer was the moved him one behind major one and walked none. Dennis
filth of the season lor Jpyner .
league . leader Cecil Fielder. At
Eckersley , went the final inning ·
Joyner just m issed another . his current pace thp· slugger for his 11th save.
homer off Cecilo Guante in the · would have 64 hom ers by year' s
While Canseco scored_tour at
once · Toronto blasted four solo
eighth when Cory Snyder caught. e nd.
his high drive at the top of the
"It;s a grPa t park to hit in,"
sho~- two by Kelly Gruber and
Canseco said. "Line drlv~s will one each by Manny Lee and
right field fence.
Cleveland rallied for three go out."
Junior Felix. The Blue Jays
runs iri the seventh. Carlos
Canseco's smash wt&gt;n t to the c&lt;impiPted a disasterous 1·7
Baerga singled, took second on a deepest part of center field .. off
homestand.
wild pitch .by Finle~· and scored the third deck restaurant win·"
· ·:Thett&gt;' s no Feason to panic ,"
on a double bv Candv Maldonado dow . OnP da~· ear lier. he belled a
Gruber said. ' 'We can't put too
much ·pressure on oursplves."
to make· it 4-1. Cory Snyder's three- run homer O\'er the left
double scored Maldonado with
field fence to help sl~k Toronto
·
two outs and Alomar sin·gled
4-1.

1991
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240 Grain Lead SWC. Reg. '11.50

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1990

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"At the lnd of the P-roy·•- lrldge"
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PH. 992-2556

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'·

TREMENDOUS SAYINGS!

I

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MAY 24TH 'ttiiU MAY 27TH

·~

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the cost of your care. Convalescent Care Coverage can
be added to your Universal Life Policy for a small cha1ge.
Call today to find out more.

GRAZIANO DIES - Former middleweight champion Rocky
Graziano 'died Tuesday In a New York hospital of cardl&lt;&gt;pulmonary failure at the age of 69.1n this 1988 photo, Graziano (R)
and Jake La Motta, also a former middleweight champ, try their
hand at thumb wrestling. AI center Is wresdlng promoter Lou
Albano. ( UPI)

MEMORIAL WEEKEND SALE!

&lt;
'·•
!;

Convalescent Care
Coverage with Gfange
Universal Life

•

'

ries, 10 defeats and six draws,
· with 52 knockouts when he
retired in 1952 .
Graziano is best .remembered
lor three .sava~te middleweight
Continued on page 6

BROGAN-WARNER

I

STEWART'S
GUN
. AND GIFT SHOP

.

.

B«rung ·great Rocky -Graziano ·dead at 69

.

I

Cubs~.~

Contin ued from page 3
was his first slx·RBI game since
1984.
Marshall drove In l(elth Miller
In the first and filth Innings with a
determination."
J,ohnson converted a three-point · sacrifice fly and a single to put
the Mets up 2·1. New York added
VInnie Johnson added 18 point's play to bring the lead roeight and five runs In the sixth off reliever
.off the bench for the Pistons.
Detroit the outcome was never in
Mike Hartley, four coming , on
ScoTt!ePippenandHoraceGrant do~bt after t~at.
.
each scored 17 for Chicago.
The Bulls committed ~hem· Marshall's belt over the center
fence.
The Detroit defense was again selves to involving players other field
Bob Ojeda,1·2, gave up one run
stifling, holding the Pis tons to 31
than Jordan. in the offense in the c
of ~6 shootlng .from the floor (41
first )lalf and suffered {rom the on four hits and no walks while
striking ·Out three over six
percent). The Pistons were also : strategy , The All-Star guard,
the mort~ aggressive on the
showing 110 i ll eflec.ts from his Innings In his ~cond start of the
borads. outreboundillg the Bulls · bruised hlp in Game 1, ~ook jUst season. Pena pitched the final
· 44-35.
five shots from the flelll In the ·three 1nnlngs for his second save.
Tim Crews, 0-1, las ted Into the
Jordan .made his Impact felt
openlngperlodandconvertedbut
Inning of his first major
fifth
for tbe first time since the first
one.
league
start, surrendering two
half of Ga,me 1 as he paced a 15·4
For the half Jordan had seven
runs
.on
eight hits while walking
run to open the third period. points on 2-of· 7 shooting from the
one
and
striking out two .
Jordan scored 6 points and
f!eid. The rest of the team was as
"I
got
tired," Crews said. "It
Stacey King 5 in the surge that · !neP,t . hitting just 12 of 34 shots
was
not
so much a matter of
brought Chicago within 57-53 . from the . field (35 percent) and
throwing,
but my legs got tired. I
with 7:00 left In the third.
trailing 53-38 at .Intermission.
was
happy
to go as far as I did."
" He came out in the second -'. "H~'s not shootln~ the ball
grand slam was the
:
Marshall'§
half very aggr~sive," Daly sai!l. well, Jackson said. Y '!U could
second
In
two
consecu live games
•'He was finding guys all over the tell from the start. fie hurt his
for
the
Mets:
Kevin
McReynolds
pla'ce," .
.
writ.~ In that fall that hurt his
belted
another
against
Los An·
A thre~point basket by Craig hlp. ·
geles
Monday
night.
.
Hodges gave th·e Bulls their first
Dumars guided the Pistons
Ph!Wes
4,
Giants
2
At. San
lead of the game at 67-66with3: 35 atta~k In the first · quarter •
Francisco,
Ken
Howell
allowed
remaining. But Detroit held scoring 10 po~ts In a 13-4 run that
three hits over seven and twoChicago scoreless from the field helpted Detro)t to a 27·18 advanthird
Innings and Len Pykstra,
the rest oft he period and led 74-69 tage after one period. Chicago
the
major
league's leading hit·
entering the final period .
continued to be s_tym!ed by the
ter , contrlbu ted two doubles and
"Wep!ayedourtypeolgamejn Detroit defense m the second
RBI . to pace Philadelphia.
an
the third quarter," Chicago period, while the Pistons r~
Howell,
5-3. struck out six a nd
coach Phil Jackson said. "Bu t at serves took . over. Of the 26
walked
four.
Roger McDowell
the end we came back down and Detroit points scored in the
pitched
the
final
inning for his
played to the ir defense."
quarter, 16 . were by reserves.
11th
save.
Rick
Reuschel,
2·5,
Dumars. hit two jumpers and Johnson led the way with 10
took
the
loss
.
·
Mark Aguirre sank two free points. ·
. . .
.
.Expos. 6, Padres 1 - AI
throws , to put J;)etrolt up 80-69
The Bulls will have until
Montreal:Tlrri Walla&lt;;h hit a
with 10:28 l~ft. Grant hit a Saturday to rectify their deteriO·
three-run
homer
in the first
jumper, the Bulls' first basket in rating outlook. But Grant s trtJck.
Inning
and
drove
in
another run
over five minutes, to start a 9·3 an omtnious note as the team
·lor
the
Expos.
Mark
.Gardner,
surge to cut the Detroit lead to prepared to fly back to Chicago.
2·2,
gave
up
one
run
on
four hits
83-78 wiih 6:34 left !n the game.
"We have some guys who don't ·
·
over
seven
innings
for
the vic·
Two free throws by Jordan know what the playoffs are
tory,
striking
out
four
and
with 4:42 left again brought the about," he said . "They know who
waiking
lour.
The
Expos
bias
ted
Bulls within five points, but they are."
Ed Whitson. 3·3, for three runs In
the first •.

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
AUBURN HILLS. Mi ch. 1UP!)
- Through two games of the
Eastern Conference finals. the
best guard has not been the
flashiest or the one with the
biggest media presence.
In fact, the best of the back·
court man has been the quietest
- Joe Dumars. .
Dumars scored 31 points and
again provided sol!d defense on
Michael Jordan Tuesday ntght.
leading the Detroit Pistons to a
102-93 victory over the Chicago
•'
Bulls and
2·0 lead In their
••
Eastern
Conference
final series.
The best-of-seven series
•••
· ; switches to Chicago for afternoon
•
'
• games Saturday and Monday.
The Bulls are 5-0 in the playoffs at
••
Chicago Stad!\lm.
Dumars, who scored ·27 points
••
In Game 1, held Jordan to just 20 .
•
points. Jordan entered the game
•••
averaging 40 points, but has
•
scored just 28 'ln the last six
••
quarters against Detroit .
'
In the first two games Dumars
•
has outplayed the more visible
'
· guards- Jordan and.teammate
Is!ah Thomas. Dumars has
••
scored 58 points on 24 of 40
shooting from the floor. Jordan
•
has scored 54 points (17 ol 43) and
,•
Thomas just 18 (5 of 21).
. "I've had two r~ally good
OUCH! - Chl~ago l'ulls' Michael Jordan appears to run Into a .
scoring
games, " Dumars said.
· brick wall, a.k.a. Detroit Pistons' Bill Lalmbeei' and loses the ball
'I'm
ina
pretty 'good rhythm and
'
In the first quarter olthelr playoff 11ame' Tuesday . '( UPI)
the guys are going out of .their
•
way to get me the shots."
•
"He'sgettingalotofopenshots
and putting them down, " Detroit
a bout his subpar performance, 5 coach Chuck Daly said of Dum·
.•
By RICHARD L SHOOK
of 15 shooting plus 10 of 12 free ars. "He's got desire and pride
··.
UPI Sports Writer
throws lor 20 points.
.•
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UP!)
a n d h e ' s go t g r e a I
He also had seven assists and
• . -As Michael Jordan goes, so go
seven rebounds but really was
• the Chicago Bulls. And Tuesdav
: :.~ night, Michael Jordan wasn:t
only a factor in the third period.
• ' going so well.
·
whi&gt;n Chicago outscored Detroit
31·21.
'·
Jordan
played
with
a
swollen
;
, . right wrist in addition to his sore
"I ain't got no time." Jordan
' left buttock and the injuries
said before rushh\g hurriedly
NEW YORK t UP!) - Rocky
said. "Graziano died of cardio·
·: : clearly' h!lmpered the Chicago from the locker room to the team Graziano,
who
rose
from
a
pulmonary
failure,' ' she said. .
.•. guard.
bus . . ·
troubled childhood in the slums
Graziano, born Rocco aar·
·suns coach Phil Jackson re"I think he' s disappointed in to become al) enormously popu· bella, was a poverty-stricken
vealed the wrist injury after the our effort," Jackson said.
ghetto kid who spent a major part
.tar middleweight boxing cham·
•. Detroit Pistons' 102-93 victory
Jordan has only beer( himself pion and television per~onal!ty, ·ol his early life In confinement.
;: over Chicago that gave them a 2-0 in the first two quarters of Game died of heart and lung failure. He After retiring from boxing, he
lead to take to the Windy Cily 1. when he had 26 points and was 69.
finally earned publ!c res peel In
~
when the series shifts for Games Chicago had a 43-39 lead.
Graziano: who held the cham·
the unlikely roles of a TV
·• 3 and 4,Saturday and Monday.
Since then . .when his buttoc k plonshlp in 1947 and 1948, died at
performer and crusader against
::
"He's not·100 percent," Jack·
and wrist stiffened .up on him at New York Hospital at 7:24p.m. juvenile delinquency.
•: son said. "That 's pretty obvious halftime. he has 28 points on Tuesday, hospital spokeswoman , Graitano's errors as a young
• ·when VInnie Johnson beats him 8-of-28 shoor!ng and Chicago has Diana Goldin said.
· New York hoodlum and his
• on the dribble off the left .hand.
played like an ordinary team. An
ile had been brought to ,thF career as a brawling lighter
::
"He. was not shooting t)le ball ordinary team is nul going to beat hospital AprilS, suffering fro!fl a -.-&gt;J made lor a best-selling book.
welL His wrist was sore. He fell
the Detroit Pistons.
stroke ~nd was Initially treated "SomebodyUpThereLikesMe."
on the wrist in the falL You could
"Jorda'n was not aggressive in an intensive care unit, Goldin . and a· movie with the 'same title
at the sta'n of the game he
the first half." Detroit coach
•••' see
wasn't going to be able tq snoot Chuck Daly acknowledged. "He
,. the ball welL .
was very aggressive . in the
,.
"The ball didn't have good
second half - finding people, · I -...., \
rotation. It didn' t have that snap, hitting people on the wings.
) \Ill hill\•
·, It looked more like a shot-put
" He was feel!ng his way the
:: thanashot."
fitst half. It looked like he was .. ,,
·'
Jordan had nothing to say at all trying to get warmed up.

The

Ohio

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.
~
n.,. •••••• ·~· ••.,..

GIFT SHIOP
SAVINGS

50~/o OFF
CONCRETE &amp; POnERY
ORNAMENTS
BIRDBATHS

$1 ooo

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ALL Gin ITEMSI

STEWART'S GUN AND GIFT.SHOP
HOURS:

MONDAY·SATURD~Y

10 A.M.·I P.M.
P.M.

614-742-2421

I

�•
·

..

Wedneadav. May 23. 1990

•

"leiiWt' . . . . . . _.. ~....

......
'
..•,., : OVERALL WINNJ!;RS ~ Jell Steele of Patliot,

.

.

wu tile mea'• ovarall winner and Demaris
Crawford of MIUwood, W.Va., was the women's
'!WraU Winner Ia last Saturday's Mld!lleport 5-K

run. Pictured lett to rlaht are Dave Nlerat~ of
Wellstom who finished ~~econd 1!1 the men's
division; Steele, Crawford 1111d Debbie Bren- of
Pomeroy who was the runner-up In the·women's·
division.

PICNIC SURPRISES
.
\
Let's Co 0 k 0 at this eekendl ·.,_
-~ - ·

-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . QI,IMI)'
.,., ,.a. ,. .. peQijt ~

\"":.'1
!.c..}':' .

Middllport, OH.•Corntr of Gen•. Hartinger Pkwy &amp; Pearl St.•992-.3471 '
AGE GROUP WINNERS- Reeelvlqtrophles
for their reapectlve aae grou... Ia Sat~ 's
Middleport I- mn.were,Jft to rtaht, Dick Burehard
· '(3nl, 110-$8); Darren H&amp;fes (lsi;, I0-29); John ·
I ,

Harrison (20-29); George Nichols (lst, 40-49),
Sam Levert (2nd, 50-69); Jac Van Garderen (1st,
110-59); Morris Adkins ( lsi, over 60), and .Don
Roush (2nd, over 60).

..

·suPERIOR·

Continued from page 1
'
••• __;==-::.==..;;____;,
_ _ _ ___,....____
Bo"",-vl·n'g· great
Steele,
Crawford
cop
top
.
Horne
and
Marty
Servo·
.
Gates
of
fight
of
his
career
the
title fights with Tony·Zale lnl946,
In 1952, Graziano and Sugar Ray
1947 and 1948. Those bouts were $100,000 were rare In those days.
honors ·in Middleport 5-~
As
an
ex-champion
in
1949,
he
Robinson
drew $252,237 at Chi·
thrillers and none drew less than

-HOT -DOGS

next·t~last

_

JEFF S&amp;eele of Patriot waa

;:::,:~- tile . overall winner In lhe
~- ··Micldleport $ K I'UII Saturday.
~"··· : S&amp;eele Ia shown er-t•l tbe

:~ ; flalllllllne with a llmeoll9: 22.

..,_·e .
~· r

.

s:KIO,OOO at the gate.
Graziano was knocked out in
the sixth round of his first
attempt to take the 180-pound
title from Zale at Yankee Stadium, won the cr 0 wn from Zale
on a sixth-round knockout at
Chicago Stadium, and lost it
again on a third-round knockout
in Newark, N,J.
The three bouts still serve as
the standard lor middleweight
fights.
Grazlno was among the best
drawing cards In middleweight
history. Before his first shot at
Zale, Graziano had drawn four
consecutive gates of more than
SlOO,OOO each at Madison Square
Garden against Freddie Cochr~ne, Harold Green, Sonnv

and Charley Fusari at lracted
$135,117 at the Polo Grounds. In

~

~Pryor won't be on

1

Mn.WAUKEE IUPll-Aaron
Pryor's comeback attempt in
: • :Wisconsin, the only state to give
•, 1he former junior welterweight
_( champion a permit to fight. was
~ set back TuesdaY. when a promo?;: ter said he rejected J&gt;ryor's
,. '&lt;request to box on a card next
..,.,month.
Pryor scored · a three-round
~ 'knockout of 'Daryl·Jones May 16 ·
"'' ln Madison. He ·said after that
,t!Jout he would fight June 2 at
•
Lake Geneva, Wis .. on a: card
~ lnch!dlng a comeback attempt by
·~ heavyweight Jerry Quarry.
,.! "Aaron Pryor and his man. ,.~ ager, Don Ellis. have both
~ ... approached us in regard to
"» fighting on Jerry's comeback
;:--.;.. debut card," said John Ellis, a
~ ·promoter of the Quarry fight.
-"- • "However, given the status of his
-;· &gt; vision there's ·really no way we
·-: ~ could allow that 'to take place.
· ~ . ''There never was ;my inten~~tlon of having him fight here."
l A doctor In Nevada declared
..!! Pryor legally blind in his left eye
~ and three other states would not
~' UH him fight because of the
_: ~ impairment.
The State of Wisconsin can~ celed the flghtthe day of the bout
::::· on a technicaiity, .but about two
' "":' holirs before the scheduled light
""' time a circuit judge ruled the
;t:,· match could take place.
"!:!. The bo~t-, promoted by Diaha
·[ Lewis of. Madison, drew nation.:t_ wide criticism of state officials
- - end prompted Gov. Tommy
'-:!' ThompSon to call for revival. of
'1hestate boxing commission,
oWl which had been abolished. .
,..,... The Wisconsin Department of
·:;:!leguiatlon and Licensing Is
::::; ~viewing Quarry's application
" · ·to fight and may make a decision
~·..: this week. Questions have been
,::• ~alsed a bout the long layoff of
.~•.:Quarry. 45. who has not fought
· :·!:·sJnce 1983 and who fought only
' three times In the last 13 years.
.:;. In addition, some wonder
&gt;;.a.bout possible brain damage and
•peurologlcal damage from the
.J:many punches Q4arry has taken
~ lo the head.
·~,, Milwaukee-based promoter
;:~ -non Collison said· he would not
' oJI: rule out using Pryor on a card In
X the future .
'i~: "I was kind of sympathetic
~!owards the physical state of

1':

I

Wisconsin card in June

Pryor," he said. "I ha\'e never
gone aldng · with the boxing
establishment."
The fight involving Quarry,
whose opponent will be named
Thursday, was in the works when
the Pryor controversy began.
"The Pryor thing was in the
works but we were assured by
some promoters that it wouldn;t
come off," Ellis said. "It's been
sort of an uphill battle since
tlnding out about that."
Pryor, 38-1, was the 140-pound
champion from 1980 until 1985,
but suffered from cocaine addiction. He was inactive from June
1984 untll August 1987, when he
returned to loSe by knockout to
Bobby .:toe Young in his only
defeat.
Quarry, 53-8-4. has said he was
willing to take part in an)"
recognized neurologicat assessment, and that could delav the
·
light a wee~ .
'

.

The Nevada State Athletic
Commission in March voted 3·2
to turn down Quarry's application for a boxing liCense In that
state.
"WI)at he wants ,to do Is fight
George Foreman," said· Chuck
Minker, the executive director of
the · Nevada commission. ·'The
key points that came up 1before
the boX!ni: commission) Is he has
basically been retired for 13
years.
"A couple of commissioners
fold him It is 'a hard call' to make
because they were fans. but tbe
overriding issue was he has not
fought In 13 vears. That Is
basically what ti came down to."
Quarry was knocked out twice
by Joe Frazier and twice by
Muhammad Ali in the ~arty
1970s. He has fought only three
times since being knocked out by
Ken Norton in ·the eighth round
March 2~. 1975 .. in New York.

lj ;..

• Mama, Jr.

;;('' The second leg of- 'this open~

I .

•

1

·

Jeff Steele and Demaris Crawford took borne the top honors In
Ill~! Middleport 5 K run Saturday .
Steele of Patriot, completed
the course I~ 19:22 to become the
men's ovarall winner, while
Crawford of Millwood: w. Va.,
ran ' the race in 19:46 to win the
women's·divlsfon.
·
Runners-up in the overall race
were David Nierato of Wellston,
for the men and Debbie-Brennan
of Pomeroy in the women's
division.
Other trophy winners in their
age groups were:
.
Darren Hayes (1st, 20-29);
John Harrison !2nd, 20-29): '
George Nichols (1st, 40-49); Jac
Vac Garderen ilst, :;&lt;1'59); Sam
Levert !2nd, 50-59); Dick Burchard i3rd. 50-59); Morris Adkins (lsi, · over 60), and Dgn
Roush !2nd, over 60). .
The 5.K rue was sponsored by
the Middleport Recreation Department with Paul Cljadwell
serving as race chairman ..
TM Meigs County REACT
Team . served as spotters and
traffic control personaL The
following businesses sponsered .
trophies for the race in the
various age groups: .
Fr~th Pharmacy, McClunes of

8CJC

r~

Middleport, F.O.P, Averf~a.n Le-gion Post 128 of Midtlleport,
Lions Club, Meigs Chlrdpractlc
Clinic, WMPO Radio, Leesa
Murphy and Associates and
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
·

t-----.. .--•-•-t
SEE US FOR All
YOUR PAINTING
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SUPPLY NEEDS!!
r

GROUND CHUCK

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The NCAA placed Robert Morris's basketball team on two
;vears' probation and ordered the
school to return as much as
$186,000 In NCAA Tournament
money. The team also Is bar ned
next year from playing during
postseason and appearing on live ·
tei~vision .

Cycling
Italy's Fabrizio Convaiie won
the fifth s1age of the Tour of Italy.
Gianni Bugno of Italy retained
the overall lead for tlie fifth
straight day.
Field Hockey
The United States, Canada,
ltat~· and Trinidad-Tobago will
participate in the first Four·
Nations men's field hockey tournament at Madison. N.J.', Aug.
23-25.
.
Football
. The , Philadelphia Eagles are
courting free-agent quarterback
Jim McMahon for a baCkup role
and have offered him a contract,
The Philadelphia Inquirer' reports. The oft-injured McMahon
was released during the offseason by the San Diego
Chargers .... Jerry Vainlsi. an
NFL executive with Detroit and
Chicago for the past 19 years, has
been named vice president of

wheel series will be at Jackson
County Spaedway in Ripley, WV,
Another LM invitational will be
on the agenda with a $1,200 to win
price tag.
Skyline and Jackson Co. have
gone together and will add a
bonus of $600 to any driver who
can win both nights, making
possible a $3,000 weekend to
some lucky driver.
Last week, after a skirmish
between leaders Tim Newman
and Harold Redman, Steve Daniels of St. Albans came home the
victor, followed by ·Meigs County's very own Benny ,Hickel.
,; ,

3 LIS. OR
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football.. management for the
World League of · American
Football.
Honors

Chlto Martinez of the Omaha
Royals has been named Howe
Sportsdata's Minor League
Player of the Week. He accowlled for six homers and 13
RBI In a three-game · series
again~! Iowa .... Boston College
hockey coach Len Ceglarskl will
be awarded the Lester-Patrick
Trophy June 4 in New York. The
trophy is awarded annually for
"outstanding service to hockey
in the United States."

FRESH FRYER.
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The Symmes Valley Vikings
became District baseball champions recently with a 5-4 win·over
Crooksville In the Dlst,;lc.t boys ·
baseball tournament at Un!Oto
High Uchool. Symmes Valley Is
now 16-4 going Into the Regional
this Thursday at Portsmouth.

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two outs In the fourth Inning as ·
the game went Just-five frames
because of the mercy rule.
Green, meanwhile, hit .pitcher
Edna Driggs the hardest of any
team this season, and the only
team to get double-digit hitting
off the EHS hurler.
McMackin led Green with
three singles, Cartee had a.home
run, double, ani;! two singles,
Vaughters a single, Maynard a
single, Deerfield two singles,
Mal;ldpx a single and double, and
Dyer a single: ,
·
Eastern fielding did not have a
good day as the usual~v tough
Eaglettes yielded with 10 errors
and did not have a stolen base,
Meanwhile, Green registered
just a neverse; no errors and nine
stolen bases.
The winning pitcher was Kerrle Maddox with catcher Nikl
Dyer backing up behind the
plate. MAddox hurled a one-hit
shutout walking none and fan ning ten.
.
Edna Driggs with Lorrie Baker
behind the plate, fanned four:
gave up 15 hits and 1'-'alked just
three.

•

.

{}MCA open-wheel feature at Speedway
:, ' The long-awaited coming ofthe
,.,t IMCA open-wheel.modlfleds is
-~~ckly approaching as the new
.indiana-based organization
_,. 'Comes to Skyline Speedway for
-~:·.. Jhe first ever vlult to Southern
~.:,Qhlo. &amp;jso a giant $1.200 to win,
00 lti start
Late Model
~Jilvltattonal Is an the agenda
; tilong with a regular show for the
~~her three classes.
~- wt week alone, over 40 Late
:MOdels jammed the pits for the
.,..JJarl HID Memorial won by
;;.t
. .ndlng track champlori Bob

cage Stadium. Robinson.knoc.ked
out Graziano In the third round.

Eastern girls defeated, · 2~0 ··.
The powerful Franklin
Furnace-Green Township Bobcats lo an early lead and never
looked back _as they rolled to a
staggering 20-0 victory over the
Eastern Eaglettes at Chllilcothe
City Park tn the girls softball
Dis trlct Finals.
Green advanced to the regtonals with a 22-3 record. Eastern
bowed out with an excellent 17-3
record.
Eastern's LeeGIUllan pounded
the lone Eastern hit, a single wit-h

.••

'

Wednesday, May 23, 1990

.DDING GEIANIUMS
liD. sn NOW S95D

4 IN. GERANIUMS leg. •1.00
ISc EA.- 10 FOI SJ•
4 IN. HAIDY MillS .... SJ.OO
NOW

•

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S7JO

10 INCH HANGING IASIITS
lEG. ss.so NOW S4SO
lEG. '6'' NOll! SS75
All SHIU.IY &amp; IllES

20'- Off

·,

·:i:,-..;w~~~=
SYIACISI, OMO
ftJ.J176

n Dall 8-11· Sun. 1·

•

Meigs counties. ·.

~'!&gt;

·'

'

PEPSI C-OLA

I
•'
'

••

There isa subBtartial penalty b' early withdriWIII.. An~ yield taqllrttd by oompoundingdaily

BANKEONE.

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'

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11 OZ. BAG - ·REG. S2.19

GERANIUMS
POTS .

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Bii.NK ONE. II. TIIENS. Nil.!A I'AliT OF THE CAll/NO TUM
AlhMo, OhiG
Mom~r FDIC

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FOR THE GARDEN OR
THE HOUSE

4 INCM

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Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.

2 .LITER BOTTLE

SNYDERS

·(
9.

EACH

�..
WedneeCI.iv. Mev 23. '1990

. ..
Page-S-Tile Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. May 23, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

·- -Local news briefs...--... Weather
·
Continued from page 1
.
In a left-hand curve when he went left of center and had a
head-on coUislon with. a 1984 Ford Bronco II driven by Kevin W. ,
Wilson, 26, of Coolville. Wilson was wearing his seat belt, and
·
was not hurt.
Richard Deem was cited for failure to yield and not wearing a
seat belt.
•

No one hurt in bus accident

;

No Injuries were reported as the result of an accident
involving a Meigs Local School Bus.and a car this morning.
Accordi,ng to ·infol·mation. the accident happened on Myers
Road, just off SR 143. There were four students from
Harrisonville on the busat thetlmeoftheaccid!!nl. Driver of the
bus was Juanita Lambert. The mishap Is under Investigation. '

.!

!

The Meigs CoiiJ!ty REACT will be at the southbound roadside
1
11
park on Route 33 starting Friday at 6 p.m. and continuing
.• around the clock untll6 p.m. on Monday. Memorial Day.
:
The team will be servi~g coffee, pop, doughnuts, etc. to all
travelers
who stop at the rest area on Memorial Day Weekend.
•

.•
;
~:
~

pag~

1

through Thursday will be'moderate across the state. ll?ornlng
dew wiU be light Thursdl!Y. New
cuts may not have time Ito cure
the next few days before ratn
chances become greater1 Afternoon humidltle$ will &lt;jrop to
around percent Thursday.

Jl

rMeigs REACT to assist motorists .
•

Continued from

r~mains

Rutland lans Fou_rth celebration
·p
·

.

:ti~

cool...

I

Town~h:tp .. ~

Spraying conditions Will be
best during fhe morning and
evening hours through Thurs- .
day. Wind speeds should averageless than 10 mph Thursday night,
and scatt!'red rainfall may wash
chemicals off foliage Wednesday
night and Thursday.

••

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I'" 1tack

t,.. . JJI.C!!S C OSe .

t

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k

IS wee .

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e

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a luxurious saxony plush texture
• S·year stain resistance warranty
from Armstrong, plus a 5-year
.lim~ed warranty against defects
• Soil-h"!ing nylon
• Available in over ~0 contempora,Y colors

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sculptured saxony carpet .
. • Armstrong's limited 5-year carpet warranty
• FuUiabl'asion resistant.
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' • Available in 8 wonderful colors

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'

' Pflddirlg, inJtalt.lkln "!)! ineiUdeq.
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~d;~~~~~~~-::::::::::::::::::::~:~

PEPSI PRODUCTS
I 24 PACKS ·I

Limited Inc ............ .. ..... .. ... 48\1
Multimedia Inc ..... .......... ..... 81
;'; Manley's lt!!CYCllng Center, has announced tnat Its offices will
Rax Restaurants ....... .. ......... 2y8
~· be closed Saturday. Mol)day, and Jun.e 2. · ,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16%
L:..---~~-----~-----------.1 Shoney's Inc .... ................... 14%
Star Bank ..................... ..... .20%
Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 5%
Worthington Ind .. , .............. 23~
W ntts of the Meigs County of Dr. Hunter for Maurice Lott,
(Ashland Oil is ex dividend
Emergency Medical Service re- taken to 'Veterans Memorial; at today) .
'sponded topcallsforassfstance 2:16 p,m. Pomeroy to SR 143 for
Tuesday.
. ·
Gladys Tuckerman; taken to
At 2:06 a.m. Rutland was Veterans Memorial; At 4:11p.m.
called to Mine No. Two for Middleport to MLU Street at
In Meigs County Comm()n
Nprman Shaner who was taken to Manley's Recycling Plant for a
Pleas
Court, a divorce has been
O'Bleness; at 3:·37'a:m. Rutland fire contained to a wall caused by
to Crystal D. Richmond
granted
to Horner Hill for Irene Osgood. a cutting torch, there were minor
E. Ri~hmond . Jane .
from
Larry
tak,en to Veterans Memorial damages.
Ann
Coates
has
b'een gran ted a
Hospital; at 5:23 a:m. Middleport · At 5:01 p.m. Pomeroy to
from
Roger ' David
divorce
to VIllage Manor for Sar11 Boyles, Arbaugh Street in Tuppers
Coates.
·
taken to Pleasant Valley Plains for Jennifer Dean, taken
Hospital.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
At 10:24 a.m: Middleport to At 6:01 p.m. Middleport to
Railroad Street for Dorothy Russell Street for Kenneth RIRoush. taken to..Veterans Mem· chardson, taken to Pleasant
oilal; at U: 01 p.m. Rutlalld to· Valley Hospital; at 10:'19 p.m.
Mine No. 3 fQr Hubert Wolfe. Pomeroy to Union Ave. ,.for John
taken to Holzer Medical Center; Wilson, taken to Veterans
at12: 12 p.m. Racine to the office Memorial.

·. s m
. ak
. es
EM

.

TRUE DELIGHTS
Ansa V Worry Free Carpet, featuring

·'!'here will be a pie baking and cake decorating contest at the
i
annual Rutland fourth of J11ly Ox Roast.
of Blunt, Ellis ·&amp; Loewi I •
:
Cakes and ples'must.be In place by 1 P·!fl· atld will be Judged
,
Am EleCtric Power ..... .. l..... 29.1JS
• a~!J auctioned off at 3 p.m. Prices for pies are $25 for first; S25
: for second; and$10 for third, and for cakes the prizes are $50 for
AT&amp;T ........... ................ !.... .43%
; firSt; $25 for second; and $15 for third.
,
Ashland 011 ........................ 38~
"
There also will be contests for the kids and adults through our
Bob Evans ........ ~ ......... :.!...... 13
the day. such as eeg toss, three legged,race, bubble blowing,
Charming Shoppes .. .... .... .... 10%
and others. For the adults there will be tobacco spitting, ·a
City Holding Co .... ........ •..... 14%
mouchtache contest. cow calling, and oth!!rs. · Prizes will be
Federal Mogui.. .. ................ 21%
~ award~.
·
S1'
Goodyelr T&amp;R .......... ... !.....34%
~
For !!\Ore information. ,coata~t.:Jo~ fewart at 742·2421 or _ .Heck's ........................... ...... 2l's

~ OKil~;rly~illflord atd742-2h1~.

MostlY cioudy and a chance of
shower~ and thunderstorms
Wednesday night and Th11rsday .
Lows Wednesday night will be
near 50. with highs Thursday
near 70. Chance of rain is 40
percent Wednesday night and 50
percent Thursday..
'

·Armstrong Car_pet Studio

I

Your.Community Minded,
LOW PRICED · .
SUPERMARKET

Extendell Forecast
Friday through. Sunday
A chance of showers each day.
Highs will range from themld60s
to the mid 70s Friday, from the
70s to the low 80s Saturday, and
from the 60s to 1he low 70s
Sunday. Overnight lows will
range from the mid 40s to the 50s
through the period.

Choose your new cc;~rpe( from Sears ... your

Continued ;from page 1
Committee, initial tes,tlmony
was heard on. &amp; pair of .Housepassed bills providing f~r local
curbside recycling programs
and establishing a • "lifeline"
telephone service for l.ow4ncome
individuals and families. 1

n

South Central Ohio

SEARS

·

BIG BEND•••

------Weat~er----­

' '

'

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

13'runs Tuesday

Divorce granted

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

9:30-11:00 Mon .• Tu.... Wed .. Fri.
· 9:30-2:00 Thurs. &amp;. Sat.

. 992•2171
I

'

RUFFLES
POTll.O.
CHIPS

Pomeroy coutt news
I

'

Six defendants were fined and
ntne others forfeited bonds in the
'fllesday night court of Mayor .
Richard Seyler.
Fined were Clay Fahner, Middleport $63 and costs, open
container; Jeffrey_Cundiff, Rac~ne. $25 and costs. failure to
appear; Robert Borer, Bloomtn'gdale, Ohio, $46 and costs,
speed; Robert Montgomery,
Parkersburg, $43 and ·casts,
illegal tu!J!; Tommy Szereml,
Racine. $G3 and costs. driving ·
uader suspension, $G3 and costs,
no license plates; Ct~v Furnia. .
Pgmeroy, $53 and costs, speed,
$~3 and . co~ts, expt ~.ed

registration.
Forfeiting bonds were. Jeffrey
Basham, Coolville, · $63, open
container; Linda Dickens, Pomeroy, $63, traffic light violation;
Theodore Fisher. Pomeroy. $43,
assured clear distance; .'Kevin
Bradshaw, Belpre, $63, expired
vehicle registration· Robin
Gibbs, New Haven, $63. expired
registration; Dale Jacobs, Middleport, $43. assured clear distance; Ruth Lu.theran. Toronto,
Ontario, $43, failure to yield at
Intersection.
·
William Todd Zuspan, Mason,
$63, traffic light violation; Alian
Johnson, Mason,' $47, speed.

SHOWBOAT

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Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Clara Osgood,
Rutland; Agnus Boggess, Ra·
cine; Maurice Lott, Racine;
Gladys Tuckerman, Pomeroy.
Discharges - .None.

five days confinement. driving
ullder suspension, $100 and costs,
possessiop of marijuana, plead
not 811ilty to a DWI charge,
transferred to. county court;
Joseph R. Gilkey, Middleport,
$10, noheye protection; Vincent
LaudermUt . . Mlddlepoprt, $10
and costs, Improper backing;
Harley Barton, Pgmeroy, $100
and costs, assault; Kim Dowell,
Middleport, $25 and costy, disorderly· manner; Kevin Roush
Mason. $10 and costs, falure to
maintain control.

Judgment granted

I

-Purchase

lift DOZEN

88&lt;

11

CT.

GGS

I

It
I

.

•

OFF

ORIGINALLY f99• TO 5.29

.ENTIRE STOCK
POTTING SOIL
SALE &amp;&amp;• TO 3.54
Variety of mixtures and
sizes for houseplants

OFF OFF

ORIGINALLY

6'g•

TO 39.99 .

ENTIRE STOCK
LIVE GOODS

SALE 48' TO 28.79 Many
shrubs, plants and bulbs
for indoor or· outdoor.

Limife&lt;F IO ltort SIOd

l.iniiH to ..,. stoc:A:

AU MEAT 12

ENTIRE STOCK
GRASS SEED

FREEva~idthru
Wi
t
h
liiiiii
family.

Lmitlld !Ostore stoc\

CoupOn. Umit 1

ALL LAWN, GARDEN
CHEMICALS

SALE·1.88 TO 18.74 Many .
of the best brand names •to
meet your needs. r
/JI'ItiNtl

.

Chicken
leg Ll.
Quarters

FOODLAND BUNS . 1m1 I

II

.

I . CT. PIG.

•

··

:.~rs.

•:

.

·.

.

Chicken Breast Quarters.......

99 (

"V•Wie"

·I

FIISH

1

Head

$ QO
.

V81id ttwu

Lettu'e
.

59EA.C

11/28/90

La.

Umit 3 Per Femlly wlltl CoUpon • AdltloMI Purchaee

SIL.YEI BIIPGE PLAZA - GAWPOLIS, OHIO

"

6/26/90

I \'l\1\'\ IIHIII\ \ \ I l l ill I ' l l \

HOUY FARMs GlADE 'A'

ro ercw 11oew

.
coupon Per

HOLlY FARMS GRADE 'A'
·.

bRIGINALLY 2.49 TO 24.99

.

GET ONE

SALE 2.00 TO 13•39
Wide variety of grass seed
mixtures for healthv grass.

OFF

C!ID

BUY O~E PICGe

ORIGINALLY 2.99 TO 19'.99

00

oz.

ARMOUR HOT DOGS

~

Mi~leport Alumni

M jdieport High School Alumni
As iatlon has !·Shirts sweatshirts, and ·bats for sale ;.,lth the
Middleport Yellow Jackets enslgnla and in school colOrs. The
sale of tile items will continue
throughout the Memorial
Weekend. .
Th.e items are available at
Locker 219, Corner Collections,
and Dairy Queen in Middleport.
Meellng changed
Due to MemoriallDay the
Izaak Walton League Ken Ams·
bary Chapter will meet Tuesday
Instead of Monday
·
.Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees will hold a special meeting
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Ru Uand Fire Station.

.

FOODUND GIADI'A'

Meigs announejments - - - - - -

Decorating party
~lddleport High School gradu·
ates are invited · to join a
"cjecorating party" at · Meigs
Junior High School Friday anytime alter 3:30p.m. Cinda Harris
is /he chairman and advises that
foOd will be provided for tho5e
as~l$tlng .
,
S~~Dday service
Cradua tes wiU be honored at
till! New LlfeCovenantChurchof
God. Chester, at the 6 p.m.
· Sunday service at the chur~h.
KarenShanewilibethesololstat
th~ servl ce. Discipleship classes
art held at 7 p.m. at !he church. .
Rtllurns home
Brian Houdashelt has returned
to 'hi~ home In Las Vegas after
spending a week with .his parents, Bob and Marcia
Houdashelt.

I

t

.

A !confirmation of sale orders
for deed akd distribution has
Issued lirense
bee~ Issued In the caue of
A marriage license has been
Dia?'ond Savings and Loan Comissued in Meigs Cgunty Probate · panJ versus Don C. Becker. et al,
Courtto James Nolan Hosken, 24,
and a deficiency judgment has
bee~ granted to Diamond Sav. Chesapeake, and Tiaa Renee
Riffle. 20, Pomerov.
lngs and Loan
for $6,311.62.
'
.

.

I

LB.

.,
Limit 4 With

I

$

oz.

CANS

.

RIES

~ sT

BUY -ONE,
GET ONE

I .

'

Middleport court news
·Two defendants forfeited
bOnds and six others were fined
Tuesday night In the court of
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting bonds were Dennis
L. Kirby. Gallipolis $60, expired
tags; Dallas W. Sayre, Ga!Upolis, $60, running stop sign.
Firied were Todd A Melsen·
helder, Newark, S.lOO.and costs,

CALIFORNIA

;

-

'..

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

_

.

_ .

.__ __·--- ,...._.
!,

-·

~

~-

~-

�t

Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May pl. 1990:

~~~~:;:~~~~!.~e1~.:!~~~~"- MiddlepPrt Garden Club meets
Hillside Baptist Church recently . . ing the work session for all who • Members of the Middleport Mlidred Beeson on her 1910
participated to celebrate the Garden Club answered roll call graduation consisting of llly of
The program was headed up by
the assistant pastor Mike WIJlett. · completion o( the flnal phase of for the May meeli!lg by descrlbthe valley, buttercups, and vi·
The rails were installed onJhe
the bridge.
tng arrangements they had made olets. and prepared by Nellle
bridge by Dan Hood, Ron Clonch,
Those attending were Mike for the meeting when they met at
Zirkle; a basket with purplE&gt; Iris,
Joe Humphrey.
'
Willett, Angle Willett, Greg Wll· the home of Mrs. Mary Skinner.
yellow and white mums, marl·
· The young people gathered and
lett, David ohnson, and Ryan
Arrangement subjects can· golds an red carnations prepared
by Mrs. Gudren _ Schaekel; a
put on the finishing touches with
Clonch.
slsted of traditional May baskets
a coat of silver oaint.
and other items. The use of hanging basket of red and purple
!lowers was also ·explained and
petunia by Allee Nease; a small
Included expressing thanks,
basket given to Mary Skinner by
sympathY, or even a romantic
her granddaughter at Easter
message.
·
which was filled with violets; a
Richard Jones, Meigs -Co_u nty on June 8 with the theme "Tin, A
Arrailgments consisted of a basketofmarlgoidandplnksand
Commissioner. spoke to the • Colonial -Craft," ~ith Dan, the basket of lily of the valley and one of purple and white clematis
· Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Tinker. from St. Albans, W.Va., foliage In a basket by Lennie • prepared by Rae Reynolds; two
Daughters o! the American 'Reas
Hap tons tall; a fan carried by nose.. gays ·prepared by Betsy
. ' the guest speaker.
,,
voiu'tion, when the group met for
its May meeting af tlie home of
Mrs. Betty Milhoan.
Jones · 'reported that Meigs
County is not tn financial tllffl·
culty as are many other counties
in Ohio. Jones stated that there ·
.,
have been many improvements
including the modern hospital
facilities, Infirmary, doctors offl·
ces, mental health, T.B. and
health departments, senior cltl·
zens center, and elderlY boilsing
units creaied on · Mulberry
Heights. . .
·
He pointed out that in 1!176
there were no nursing homes,
and that now Meigs County has 80
miles of hard top surfaced count.y
roads with 30 miles more to be
completed this year.
Jones went on to say that
regardless of the pol!lical party .
in state offlc~ .- thls part of Ol!,lo •
has been neglected l n maliy
ways. mainly hi·way construe·
lion and educational improve·
ments. He stated that there must
be a way to .negotiate for more
money 1or education from the
state. Using the Eastern Local
School District as an example, he
pointed out that a one mill levy
would generate approximately
$35,000 while just 75 miles away
the same one mill levy wou)d
equal $600,000. He stated that
students here should be given the
same quality education as the
rest of Ohio. A question and
answer period followed his talk
Mrs. ·Rae Reynolds, regent,
presented Jones two books on the
)lis tory of the DAR ·
Vrs. - Eileen Buck, chapla[n,
and Mrs. Mary Yost led the
Amerlcan's -Creed and Mrs. Pat
Holter gave the secretary's report from the previous meeting.
The national defense report,
A. GAS STRING
A. 12'x12' given by Mrs. Reynolds, was
TRIMMER [iJJ
taken from a reprint of an article
IST145. REG. 99 .99
in the Washington Times, "NEA
•
8.~ftT10
·
tine mesh screen .
Subsidizes Artistic Elite." She ~
,
IIEO. ll.lt-,...- ........11.81
8. AIIERICAH CAIFER
read that collective culture was
l'x12'
ao.oo ~!!~ICL·110iil
institutionalized In 1965 when
TWO~TEHT....t
• President Johnson created the
National Endowment for ' the ·
1
Arts. ' The agency's iul~llal
budget has ballooned from 12::&gt;
million to more than $1,70 million .
She stated : that some artists
are deliberately . creating and
· displaying obscene work, and
that they want to show they have
the freedom to do whatever they
wwnt in the name of "art." She
-,stated as an example the Mapplethorpe exhibit, supported by
$30.000 of tax doUars and consist·
lng of photographs described by
Time · Magazine as "sadomasochistic and homoerotic," lnclud·
• lng nude children in prQvocative
poses. She went on to say that
Time Magazine stated ·•s·ome of
this work ,is s~: graphlc that if
authorities 'had chosen to do so,
• t 1\ey could ha,·e _prosecuted him
for child pornography ."
She continued by saying that
'
any effort to establish standards
221N. QAS '
ALL OUTDOO"
for recipients of this money
MOWER IUl .
GAMES 1nd
ALL
CAMPING
1
drawls hOwls of indlg:n_atlonJrom
3 /r. H . P~ motor.
BASEBALL
NEEDS
Ill]
WBP250.
the so called "custodians 'of
OUR
REG
SALE
911'
TO 80.29
'. '
OUR
REG.
GLOVES
.
SAVE
REG. 227 .97
·
StyiM _,. ~lti!IM/ve
culture." who say this would lie
99'·59.99
SALE 88' TO 40.18
,AI~ ,.qulfed
21;ea
1.49·89.99
'"''"........
Style• .,. ,~,..tnl•ll.. curtailing artistic freedom .
Day Low Pric• ,.,,
• . Assisting hostesses were Mary
' Rose, Heidi Elberfeld, Frances
• Roberts. and Peggy Moore.
.
The las t meeting for t11!'·ye11r , :
will be held at the Rlvarslde
Cottage of Mrs. Phylls Hackett

DAR meeting held

l

7

I

gg

4

san

''

I
~
I

I

aa~~~.~~~r!~~~s.

·33'f.OFF

.].99

33"'OFF
•

0

Dinner guests
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Bissell and
famlly, Pomeroy. were Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Gr,oenveld , and
. Tommy, Worthington; Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Miller. Westerville;
Terri Shipkowski, Powell, Tara
and Terry .Quber, Galloway:
Mae McPeek, Ada and Kennett!
Bissell. Long Boftom.

SMAll
WANT ADS

fM&lt; .
ABIJ Plf£Hf ·

.

·-

-

992~2156

oOFF

REG. 2.99·29.99

.

ALL LADIES', MEN'S,
GIRLS', BOYS' and
INFAN 'SWIMWEAR
SALE 2.00
figure styles .

OUR REG. 1 .99·17'.99

mty

*)'

a

A.

366

UI:LUJI.I:

GAS GRILL l1il
46,000 BTU. 757 sq.
in. cooking area _
6440t8005.
8. 3 SHElf CART

OUR REG . 6.99

GAS GAILL....... 157.74
AN. . . ,.qu/nd

SALE 2.00 TO 1

by 1141'.

MEMORIAL
FLOWERS 1Zi1

Crosses. wreaths. vases .
spra ys. Potysilk. Colors.
REG. UI... ......., .......... Q.66
FLOWER BUSHES
REG. 1.00 oo ....4 FOR 3.00

50~FF
' OUR REG.

3 .99·7 .99 ·

gaa

SELECT
LCD
WATCHES !iii

SALE U8 TO 3.89
Men's. ladles· .
Sirles may

VIII')'

SAVE

a.oo

by SIOft

OFF

z,o5 Slyles. sizes. colors.

LADIES'
CASUALS
Leather. Kiltie moe.

6·9. 10. REG. t4.99
SIMILAR WIDE WIDTH
REO. 15.91..........8.9t

OFF

REG . 5 .99·28.99

ALL LADIES!, INFANtS'
DRESSES and GIRLS'
SUNDRESSES .
'

SALE 4.01 TO 19.42 Slyles. sozes and color s.
·. :·

Slyltl INY

'1St)'

by 'store

GALLIPOLIS ~ Silver .Bridge Plaza
"

Here~s
..

information,
not ·some Hemingway

By BOB HOEFLICH
This column has been in
existence about 40 years. It Is not
an earth
ing jourmtllsm
venture Hemingway,
ain't, but' after
all, I didn't
promise you. a
rose garden,
The column Is rneant to in·
form; to recognize people for
various accomplishments; to
share thoughts; to hit upon thE!
way we were and the way we are- and, heaven forbid . even at
times to entertain you. I have
enjoyed· .sparing so ' much with
you for so long.
However, llist Thursday someone.decided to make it ralnonmy '
parade through a scathing,
highly critical note. The contents
stated . that, the "colu111ns are
pat_hetlc" 'and ''his senile nostal· .
.gla is unbearable" .
·
I know YOU will understand
~hen I say ihat·most of us sooner
or later do learn to accept
~rlticism.
By the same token,
most of us also have our boun· dary lines. I have no argument
with a critic who feels that I write
poorly or lnaccuratE'ly. but I find
comments of pathetic and senUe
highly personal and offensive that's hitting below the belt in m y
hook.
Lei me thank all of you JoVIJO
have managed a good word about
one colunin or. another over the
. years. The bottom line, however,
' is thati look upon this column as I
look upon an obscene book or any
offensive material. If It offends
you to the point of viciousness do yourself and even me a favor
-don't read lt. ' After all, it's not
required reading.

Out of four classes some two
students expressed an interest In
journalism and as I reflected on
It, that made sense. I hadn't
latched onto the gist of day . Why
would I or anyone expect seventh
and eighth graders to have a •.
carved In stone idea as to wh at
career they might want to follow
after graduation some four or
five years down the line? :Young
people didn't think that way
yesterday and they don't think
-that way today.
It's logical - thoSe years that
loom ahead seem forever and
career decisions will come when
they come.
Meigs Junior High Guidance
Counselor John Arnott organized
Friday's activity and It was a
good one. The Idea. I'm sure, was
really to introduce the students to
various career-possibilities .... to
plant seeds .to grow as the young
people move along through their
high school yearu.· I hope John
puts me down on the list fbr next
year ~ my insight Is Improved.
So - my organized list was
quite useless. Have you ever
faced a classroom full of seventh
and eighth graders without a
list? Wow!. ·
.
However. I did have the
opportunitY. (o stress the lmpor~
tance of ,_English cpurses which
give students,. know how In
.getting thoughts down on paper
effectl-.:ely. They'll always need
to know how to d_o that no matter
what career track they're on.
The experience also allowed me
to express to the students that
Arnott and the junior high staff
are performing quite a service in
bringing in representatives of
various professions and busl·
nesses to give students informa·
lion on what's out there. Too
many times in the past students
Moving right along, let me tell !rave been left without lnforma·
tlon and as a result feel com·
- you about my Friday .
·
I was one of 14 .people on hand
pletely lost when decision time
at the Meigs Junior High School does finally arrive.
·
In Mldilleport . to speak · to stu·
Local Pomeroy High' School
dents on Career Day.
You know me. I went prepared alumni have rolled out the purple
and white carpet in preparation
-well,' kind of. !had thiS i)eat set
of noteswhicl\ were really going for the annual reunion activities
tO help rrle Whiz I through (OUf coming up this weekend.
The out of town alumni should
half-hour sessions · with the
really f~l pleased as they come
students.
It was a piece of cake. I would
back home.
Welcome home
tell them a boul what they will do· banners have been placed over·
' as journalists, what they need to head on Main St., there are
study, where they can get train&lt; purple and white flags flying In
the business section, window
· ing and what they can expect in
displays
of memora billa are
· the way of a starting salary when
featured
and
the mini-park on
they have it ali wrapped·up. And
Court St., is all done in purp)e and '
1 had this cute opening for ail of
the budding young journalists white flowers.
·
· The purple and whl te may have
that I was . going to face:
"If you're looking for a 9'to 5 given way to maroon artd gold,
but the great memories linger on .
job wiih big pay, journalism Isn't
for you:"
And do keep smiling.
However. I was in for a jolt.

'

'

'

Beat 'of the Bend

Roush earns Arrow
.of Ligh~ _ award

Stpn m~y 1'8/Y tl)' 1tore

~·.·

Wednesday, May 23. 1990

· ---

ALL LADI~S', GIRLS',
BOYS' and INFANTS'
SHORT SETS

SALE 1.33 TO 12,.05 Slyles, Sizes. colors.

••

Horky made ol colts tail ferns
the hostesses Mrs. Mary Skinne~
and pink clover; and a dried
and Nellie Zirkle. '
!
arrangement of purple and while
The table was covered with a,
combined with white lace dontes.
white lace linen cloth and the
It was announced during the
table arrangement was of yelio"'
business meeting that the ama·
and purple iris with white lllacl(
teur gardeners had sent a check
ln,a crystal bowl on silver tray·:
to cover the share of the costs for
Mrs. Rae Reynolds presldfi!d a~,
the Ch rls tmas decora ling
the coffee service.
•
contest.
A birthday card was slgned,!lY
The meeting concluded wltlj
members for - M l 1d red . members being treated to a
McDaniels.
period of · music by Mrs. Mar~
Officers were named and will · Skinner at the piano.
:
be installed at 'the Octob~r
::!'he June m~tlng will btj a;
meeting. .
'
· ·
plcplc at the, home of Alice
Refreshmimts
were.
served
by
Nease:
· '
..

17.99

ALL MEN'S, GIRLS',
BOYS' and INFANTS'
SHORTS and TANKS
~

."

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•
'

'

•

'

'

)

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- -- - --. - _______ ...:____
·~·

Community _calendar

Friendly Circle meets
Dorothy Woodard presented a
Mother's Day program at the
May meeting of Friendly Circle,
Trinity Church.
She told of Ann Jarvis' efforts
to establish a day honoring
Mothers. Tbe idea had its begin·
ning in her special observance
honoring her own mother. The
carnation, signifying purity and
the many other splendid charac·
teristlcs of motherhood, was the
flower Miss Jarvis used to honor
her mother. Each member was
given a silk carnation. in red or
white.

God. She closed with the admoni·
lion "when you can't sleep, don 't
count sheet, talk to the
Shepherd."
Gay Perrin presided at the
meeting In which JoAnn Wild·
man, wife of Pastor Roland
Wildman, was welcomed.
Officers and committee re·
ports were given, and upcoming
projects were discussed.
A church ice cream social will
be held une 7, 8, and 9 with a
variety of flavors available.
· Orders will be accepted.
The sick were noted acd a card
was sl~ed for Elizabeth Flck,
Following the offertory
long ilme faithful member .- Bill
prayer, Mrs. Woodard read ex· Matlack is a patient at Grant
cerpts from "Gifts Through Hospital and Mary V. Stewart
God" by Marilyn Morgan Helle· -has been Ill at home.
berg. She stated that "the gift of
·Marte Hauch and Pauline'
God's grace Is ours, freely given, Mayer. served sandwiches and
unmerited favor and love of salad. The refreshment table
God." She went on to say that it was decorated In a spring motif.
must be accepted and fully Favors were note pads and
experienced as a precious gift of candles.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -The last day to
purchase tickets for the Pomeroy
Alumni Banquet is Wednesday .
RACINE -The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednes·
day at 1 p .m. a f the home of
Connie Ifill. Bring glass for
recycling.

THURSDAY
,RACINE- The RacineAmeri·
can Legion Auxiliary wlll meet
Thu~S&lt;)ay at 7:30 p.m. at the
legion home. Rafres ~ents will
be served between 6: 30~7 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m.
Officers will be installed and a·
potluck meal will follow .
MIDDLEPORT -There wlll·
be a special meeting Thursday at
7 p.m . lor all Meigs County trash
haulers at the former Royal
Crown Bottling building on Mill
Street next to the American
Legion bulldlng. All trash haulers are urged to attend.

FRIDAY
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
have .a round and square dance .
on Frldav from 8-11 p.m . at the
senior ciilzens center. Music will ·
be provided by C,J. and Country
Gentlemen. The public is invited
to attend. Bring snacks for the
snack table.
·

· MIDPLEPORT- A mini qullt
c'l ass will be conducted by the
Middleport Arts Council . with
Bunny Kuhl instructing on Thursday ·at 6:30 p.m. In the council
chambers. CalliMarllyn Meier at
992-5983 . or Sue Baker at
992-77$3.
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Tpe Women's
POMEitOY
-A teen dance '
Fellowship _ of Meigs County
·
will
be'
held
Satllrday
at the ·
Churches of ChriSt will meet
Locomotion
.
The
dance
is :
Aaron Laudermllt, so of Mr. cape andwork experience. His Thursday at 7:30 p:lrl. at the Zion
planned
to
honor
all
graduating
and Mrs. Lewis t.audermllt of agrlcultruai program consists of Church.
seniors of all surrounding school ·
Racine, was recently .named garden, firewood and placement
districts.
•.
·
winner of the 1990 DeKalb In production. Following gradua·
POMEROY ~The Pomeroy
Agricultural Accomplishment lion, Aaron pial1s to become a
Group of AA and AlAcon will
RACINE -The Southern High
d welder.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Award. The award, sponsore
As this year's winner, Lauder·
School
Class of 1975 will have a :
Sacred Heart .Catholic Church.
nationwide by DeKalb-Pklzer milt receives a pin and certlfl·
picnic
on
Saturday at Star Mill .
Genetics, is presented to the cate and his name will be Cali 1~800- 333-5051 for
Park
in
Racine.
Lunch will be
information. ·
outstanding senior agriculture lnscr. lbed on a special plaque
served
at
noon.
·For
more lnfor·
student demonstrating superior
,
mation;
call
Tammy
Hill at
scholarship. leadership and su· displayed in the Agriculture
REEDSVILLE- The Eastern
949-2815.
Education
Department
at
South·
pervlsed agricultural program.
Th DeK Jb Local School District BOard of
Presenting the award was FFA ern High School. · e·
a
Education will meet in regular
BASHAN -There · will be a •
_
Award, often considered the session on Thursda~ at 7:30p.m . .
advisor Aaron Savre.
weekerilt meeting at the Red ·
Laudermilt attends Southern highest honor that .a vcrag In the high school cafeteria;
Brush C)lurch of Christ on .
High · School, where he . has . student can :receive on the local
Bas han Rood on Saturday at 7:.30
received awards in forestry. level. Is presented at nearly 3,000
POMERO'J: ~ Preceptor Beta
electrtflcatlon. turf and lands- schools annually.
Beta 'Chapter. Beta Sigma .Phi p.m. , Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m . with.\ Denver Hill, Foster, :
Sorority will meet Thursday at
W.Va. as speaker. The publiC is ·
the home of Clarice Krautter at
ln\1ted
to attend.
•
6:30p.m.
.

·Top agriculture student named

Reedsville UMW meets
~

Officers were chosen at the
recent meetinghof the Reedsville
United Methodist Women when
the group met at the home of Mrs.
Grace Weber.
Officers are Mrs. Frances
Reed, president; Mrs. Nina Bos·
ton, vice president : Mrs. Joan
Lawrence. secretary-treasurer;
Mrs. Sandy West, devotional
leader; and Mrs. Lillian Pickens,
reporter.
·
Mrs. Nancy Buckley presided
at the business meeting and Mrs.
MamieBuckleygavetheopening
prayer.
_

Twentv-nine shut in calls were
made and a get well card was
signed.
It was announced that a yard
and bake sale will be held Aug. 4.
The group voted to order
letters for the outside of the
church and paneling for the
church entrance was chosen.
Potted !lowers were given as
favors to those attending.
Refreshments were served to
the abov!" named and Mrs. Sally
Brown. Mrs. Pearl Osborne,
Mrs. ·Diane Jones.
Mrs. Nancy Buckley received
the door prize.

Lottery winner loses
cash :to child '·support
INDIANAPOLIS iUPil - ,An,
Indianapolis man who Won $7,000
on t)le Indiana Lottery's weekly
television show never saw a cent
of his winnings.
The money wound up with his
ex-wife for support of their three
chlldren. minus 20 percent for
federal taxes.
''Obviously. we were hoping he
would hit for a little bigger
(amount) bu't the custodial par·
ent is thrilled to be getting
anything," said Jqhn Owens.
director of the chlld support
division for the Marion C_ounty
prosecutor's office.

Jason Albert Roush. 10-year·
old son of Kenneth and Usa
Roush, Bailey Run Road,Porne·
roy, and a member of Pomeroy
Pack 249, Webelo Scouts of
America. is the recipient of The
Arrow of Light, the· highest
award given In cub scouting.
Jason's participation in scout·
lng began in 1984. He advanced
·, from bobcat to woll where he
earned · a. badge requiring 12
achievements, and the~ went on
to earn one gold arrow point and
three silver arrow points requiring completlon .of 10 additional
achievements each.
··
Later a~ a trtem!Jer of the bear
den which Is a two year program •.
Jason fulfilled similar require·
ments to earn his bear badge and
a gold arrow point and a silver
arrow point. As a weblo, the
youngster earned his conserva·
Jason Roush, awarded
lion patch after compietln·g a tr\'e
1'he Arrow of Light.
planting program and a study on
various aspects of conservation.
Jason's webelo rank was.
achieved through various actlvl· pinewood derby and attended
ties, · religious study ~.nd a. pro· Camp Arrowhead. · .
'gr,am which displayed hi,.S kno'\'1· . In addition he was Involved in
edge about sc~~Jing. · ,
· · .. the adopted ·gran!) mother prp.
To earri The Ar.row of · Light
gram with Tina Jacobs, a patient
Jason complet,ed requirem~tnt~
at the Extended Care Unit of
for five activity badges. The one
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
for citizenship required that he .Even thO!Igh the program
1nten1ew elected officials and ' through which the grandmother
·'prepare a written essay· He also
relationship with Mrs. Jacobs
earned 19 activity badges, scient·
has long been completed, Jason
ist, citizenship. ' engineer, natu·
remains In contact with her.
ralls!, sportsman, artist, family
Among the other awards whiCh
member, athlete., forester. scho· Jason has. earned are the com·
Jar, communicator • outdoors· pass point bad~;e and the God and
man craftsman, fitness. ~eolo· Country pin In 1988. F:or the past
' gist,' han!lyman , readytnan, five years he has assisted the
_,
Amerlcan Legion Post 128, Mid· •
traveler and showman.
qther requirements for The · dleport with placing flags In local
ArrowofLlght Included the scout cemeteries for Memorial Day,
maintaining- an active member parades and special ceremonies.
status with his post, keeping and durtng the hoUdays visits
records of all meetings attended, many elder~v and shutln persons
·
Increasing his knowledge about In Mason County.
the boY scout program. and
In 1988, he was awarded the
attending various scouting Cub Stout of the Year Award.
He Is currently a member of
events. Jauonattendedj&gt;rpartic·
!paled In many district events Pomeroy Troop 249 of the Boy'
Including the spring camporee, ~uts of America under the
overnight campouts. Klondike direction of Scoutmaster Bob
derby, Cub olymplcs, bike rodeo, Armes.
-·-~·~

The Daily Sentinel Page 11

Pomiroy-Middleport. Ohio

Riverview Garden meets
Maxine Whitehead presented
the program on Earth Day and
Arbor Day at the recent meeting
of the Riverview G11rden CI ub
held at the home of JaniCe Young
with Mrs. phyllis Larkins and
Klla Young assisting.
· In her presentation, Mrs.
Whitehead explained the correct
way to plant a tree, and that
watering and mulching are two
important steps In planting. She
stated also that most trees need
to be anchored.
.
,
Bette Huffman and Joy Sauer
from Carleton School presented a
slide show of activUies at the
school.
.
,, '
Marltine Putman presided at
the meeting and cards were
signed for several friends .

Machinist Robert L. Cooper,
won the money on May 18. The
welfare department. however.
had ·p reviously provided the
lottery with the names of thou·
The Middlep~rt Literary Club
sands of people more than $500
Its last meeting of the year
held
behind on child support pay·
recently
by going In a group to
ments, and a computer check
.
the
Hocking
Hills.
·
told them Cooper would be
A catered box · lunch was
appearing.
enjoyed
at noon.
Each contestant on the show is
This
was
the last meeting for
guaranteed at least $3,000.
the
grOup
until
the new year
Owens said Cooper fell more
begins
In
October.
than $17,000 behind in child
Also attending was Mrs. DosupPort following his divorce, but
nald
Mullen. a guest . _
.
he had been making timely
pa;:-ment~ since 1987.
·

Literary Club meets

Devotions were by Ella Us·
borne on "Nature." Roll call was .
answered by . naming a flower ·
that members enjoy growing.
Plans were made to tour ·
Connie Hill's' Greenhouse on ·
Thursday followed by a short~
meeting - ~, the home of Ella
Osborne. •
Refreshinents of apple pie, Ice
cream. sandwiches and punch:
were serYed to .those named and
Mary Alice Blse, Betty Bogg$,
Janet Connolly, Mary Grace ,
Cowderv. Delores Frack, Mar£
garet Gl'lllsnlckle , Gladys Thomas, N~cy Watcher and Sarah,,
Grace Weber. Nola Young. Opal
Harris. Pauline Myers, Ruth
Anne Balderson, and Ka~· Long
and Courtney.
·

lAdies Auxiliary
has meeting
It was announced that an ice
cream soCial will be held June 1~·
at 5 p:m. at the May meeting or: ,
the Bas han Ladies Auxiliary. :
Ten flavocs of ice creani will be
served along with pie, san&amp;·
wlches, and cfrlnks. There alsO
~.will. be uve .entertainment. '
' Beck,v Pullins presided at the
meeting and Lou Pitzer gave tbe
treasurer's report.

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�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

.'

Wednelday. May 23, 1990
·Wedneeday, May 23, 1990

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The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Pomeroy- Midcleport.. Ohio

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716 North
. -Stc- Avt.
Middleport

PhOM
992-6491

�.

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. Page 14 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 23. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

..

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Wednesday, May 23, 1990

1

e

Greyhound wor~ers. _Howe passes bill to assist the disabled
~er w· ork .return ·
Th~·
Of11

·More patrols in Jerusalem; violence ebbs In terr1tones
JERUSALEM iUPI) -Israel
reinforced Its security three-fold
Wednesday -In Jerusalem to
thwart vlolen~ erupting over the
weekend killh1gs of seven Arab
workers as thousands of Jews
celebrated the 1967 ouster of
Jordanian rule from halfthecity.
The violence in Israel and the
Israeli-occupied territories has
.. subsided since Sunday 's attack
· on the seven Arabs by an Israeli
gunman but the Gaza StriP
remained tense as black flags
still flew from roofs. Palestinian
sources said.
In neighboring Jordan, ofllclals reported relative calm
except for ·'a few small demonstrations" in some Palestinian
.. refugee camps alter two days of
.. violent clashes· that left at least
two people dead and dozens
Injured.
Israel's former Defense Minister Yltzhak .Rabin indicated
three days of bloody rioting In the
' Israeli-occupied territories ' · sparked by the workers' slaylngs
by an lsra.eli posing as a soldier
: · - must be viewed against the
, background of the country's
· 2-month-old government crisis
: and the halt in the peace process.
"I have no doubt that what has

•
•

J·
•

happened In the last period over
two months in the state of Israel
- the failure of the political
system to function .- also contributes to our enemies with the
illusion: 'Here Israel Is to be
found in a crisis and withOut the
ability to make decisions,"'
Rabin told Army Radio.
Violence in Israel · and the
occupied territories subsided
Wednesday alter three daY.s· of
bloodshed In which 19 Palestinians were killed ~ Including the
seven Arabs slain Sunday- wjth
hundreds wounded and several
soldiers Injured.
Police and paramilitary
border police were deployed
throughOut Jerusalem to prevent
violence on " Jerusalem Day .' ·
which marks the 1967 Israeli
capture of the walled Old City
and Arab East Jerusalem.
In remarks opening Jerusalem
Day celebrations at the Western
Wall Tuesday night, acting
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamlr
vowed "no power on Earth can
separate the people of Israel and
the capital of Israel." Many
major countries, including Israel's closest ally, the United
States, do not recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
'

PREPARING FOR SUMMIT - President Bush meets In the
Oval Office Tuesday wllll Secretary of Slate James Baker. Baker
just returaed from Moscow, where he met with Soviet President

· Army Radio reported the po- it wlll take a generation or two
llee presence was relnfo~ed until the city Is united.
' 'There will be better periods
thre&amp;-fold but Jerusalem Pollee
Commander Arye Bib! simply and worse periods.- and one must
said, ' 'We have reinforced our . not think that It Is possible to
forces." Scattered s lone- solve the problems so quickly."
throwlng. incident s were he said.
·Palestinians in the West Bank
reported.
Celebrations throughout the and Caza Strip also were called
city were planneil to commemo- on to observe a general strike.
rate the Israeli victory, with although mostQf the major ·West
more than 5,000 students from . Bank towns, U.N.-run refugee
around the country spending the camps and nearly the entire
Gaza Strip; · remained under
day in Jerusalem.
At the same time, Palestinians curfews.
Since Sunday 's fatal attack .on
In East Jerusalem observed a
the
Arabs In the Israeli town of
general srrlke to mourn the
deaths of the sevenArabworkers Rlshon Le Zion, most of the
from the Caza Strip killed by a casualties have been In the
21-year-old Israeli who pollee densely populated Caza Strip
and political leaders described where the workers lived. Gaza
pollee also detained an Israeli
as deranged .
civilian
suspected of kUling a
When asked by Army Radio If
·
resident
of Rafah city during
he believed the city was "once
violence
Monday.
again divided." as before 1967.
Since the start of the 29-monthJerusalem Mayor Teddy KoUek
old
Palestinian uprising, at least
Indicated several Incidents, l.n·
673
Palestinians
have been killed
eluding the recent Jewlsti ta by
Israeli
soldiers
or civilians.
keover of a church-owned buildPollee
in
the
northern
Israeli
Ing In the Old City's Christian
city
of
Haifa
were
Investigating
Quarter, were detrimental to the
the stabbing of a 55-year-old
city.
Jewish
man who said he was
"We are the vast majority. We
attacked
while entering his ·car
must act wlth wisdom," said
late
Tuesday.
It was not clear
Kollek, mayor since before the
1967 Israeli-Arab war. "And then

Mlkllall Gorbachev In preparation lor the upcoming summit
meeting In Washlnpon, In !ale M~. (UPI)

Qudget negotiators discuss new·pack~e

WASHINGTON !UP!) - Ad: minlstraliO!I -and COngressional
• budget negOtlaiors have lnfor• mally agreed that any credible
deficit-reduction package they
.• approve ml!SI save up to $600
• billion over live years. partlcl• pan'ts said.
'
;
Negotiators said Tuesda~· that
• talk during the nearly threerhour
: · closed door session dealt with a
: . ' live-year deficit-reduction plan
ranging from $450 'blllion to $600
' billion. One participant suggested a $700 billion plan.
•
A $600 billion deficit-reduction
; package wo!Jld contain roughly
• double the amount of five-year
•• savings contained in the $1.2
.trillion budget President'' Bush
• sent to Congress last January lor
fiscal year 1991, which begins
' Oct. 1.
,
It would also be significantly
• more than the $374 billion in
reductions over five years contained in the fiscal 1991 budget
plan passed last month by the
House, and more than the over
~ $400 bUIIon in five-year reduc" lions containled fn · the · budget
plan approved recently by the
• Senate Budget Committee. ,
•
"We were all in the same
ballpark," said House Budget
• Committee Cha.lrman Leon Panetta, D-Callf., referring to the
.. desire for a · five-year plan by
•, both congressional and· administration negotiators. "We're be• , ginning to narrow thedlscussions
to some of the key targets.' '
Although there was no discussion during the third session of

slon ' also said administration
"It's a number that they
officials told negotiators that,
cannot nan down," Panetta said
of administration attempts to
under one possible deficit scenario among the dozen or so that
determine additional S&amp;L costs.
He said thOse costs will be
were presented, alk!itlonal costs
connected to the savings and loant discussed in greater detail at
bailout could add up to $61 billion. • Thursday's ' fourth round of
to the deficit next year.
budget tal~.
'

talks about the possible need to
raise taxes to cut the deficit.
Panetta said Democrats believe
achieving savings that large
would take rnore defense cuts
and !JIOre taxes than Bush has so
far been wllllng to accept.
"You can't reach those kinds of
numbers without doing a significant package on defense and a
significant package on revenues," Panella said of the
proposed levels ol deficit
reduction.
Senate Budget Committee
Chairman James Sasser, DTenn . • said, "It would appear to
me that if we're going to develop
a five-year program to bring this
budget into balance, we're talkinJ; somewhere In the nelghborh09d of about a $500 billion
package over five years."
Sen. Pete Domenlcl, R-N.M.,
ranking Republican on the House
Bu.d get Committee, talked In
terms of a $450 billion to $500
billion fiV!l-year package.
"It seems to me that we're
beginning to see some daylight
.that might be do-able," Domenicl said. "We're moving toward
a common set of ground rules. "
The . Cramm-Rudman balanced budget law requires that
the fiscal1991 deficit be trimmed
to $64 billion. But the actual
deficit next ye;.r is likely to be at
least double and perhaps four
times that amount, depending on
whether administration or congressional deficit es tlmates are
used.
Participants at Tuesday's ses-

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\
officials said, "presumably tbere
would be further bargaining."
At the same time. If the
company accepts the union's
offer to return to work. It must
bring worker s back In order of
se11iorlty, meaning that the4 ,000
replacement drivers Greyhound
has hired In Its eflortto bniak the .
strike prObably would have to be
dismissed to make room lor
returnlng workers.
.
"Under the law. we have to
make an unconditional offer
which the company has 10
refuse," said Earl Putnam , the
Amalgamated Transit Union's
general counsel.
If the company refuuses the
offer, it would change the nature
of the dispute from a strike 10 a
lockout. It also would allows
strikers .to apply for unemployment benefits, Putnam said .
The union's new move.grew out
of an announcement May 14. by
the National Labor Relations
Board that It would file a
complaint -against the company
alleging that "the current strike
Is an unfair labor practice
strike."
- Putnam called the union move
"an important additional ele. ment" in putting pressure on the
company, especially In view of
Us financial difficulties.
on Monday , the company_ In
an effort to stave off ba~kruptcy
- offered to buy back some $225
million of its debt for a little more
than $100 million in cash. But It
did not say how it would finance
.the buy-back and last week It
reportedly missed a $9.8 million
interest payment-.
In addition. J. Michael Doyle.
Greyhound's chief financial officer. has predicted that costs
associated with the strike could
be as high as S75 million to $100
mutton.
. Putnam said the company has ;
five days to respond to the union
letter before the back-pay clock
begins-running but, he said. "ihe
preliminary indications are out
there" that the company will
reject the union's offet .
In early May. Greyhound officials boasted they had a strike
fund large enough to cripple' the
union a'nd called the' strike
"irrelevant." adding: "From a
driver's point of view, the strike
Is over. or at least Its irrelevant.''

WASHINGTON (UPI) grams . not receiving federal
House passed landmark legis Ia- money .
Uon ouJiawlng discrimination
The House rejected, 192-227. an
againSt America's 43 mllllon attempt by Rep. James Sensenmentally and physically disabled brenner Jr., R-Wis., to limit the
people. promlsiDg 8feater em- legal remedies tor. victims of job
ployment opportunities and In- dlscrlmlnaflon to those currently
creased access to public available under the Civil Rights
accomm\l(latlons. '
Act . These Include getting a
"This Is a significant and court-ordered Injunction ~galnst
historical step forward lor the bias and ·the awarding of back
• disabled, " Reti. Stimy Hoyer. ·pay and attorney fees .
D-Md .• sal&lt;! Tuesday.
•
Instead, the House will allow
The House b111. approved on a disabled victims of dlscrlmlna 403-20 vote, must be reconciled lion to take advantage of whawith · a somewhat dliferent tever Is provided In the pending
Senate-passed version before the Civil Rights Act of 1990. Under
. legislation gets final approval consideration Is a proposl!l to
and Is sent to President Bush.
allow monetary damages for
One of the most controversial victims.
differences Is House language
"The Sensenbrenner amendaimed at people with contagious ment looks IO·thefutureand says
diseases who handle food, which If the remedies for minorities and
critics saw as Playing on fears . women victims are · strengabout AIDS.
thened, these remedies won't
The Americans with Dlsablli- . apply to persons with dlsabilities Act would protect the dis- · ties," Rep. Don Edwards, Da bled from dl~crlminallon on the Calif.. said. "This Is gross
job, on public or private buses or discrimination In advance. " .
trains; and irt publiC places such House members defeated an
as restaura.nts and: theaters. attempt to modify a provision
Hearing- and speech-impaired that requires all new ran. cars
individuals also would be pro- purchased or leased by Amtrak
vlded access to special telephone or commuter trains to be readily
service~.
accessible to the disabled.
The legislation builds on the
Rep. William Lipinski, D-Ill..
1964 Civll ·Rights Act, which does suggested that oneaccesslblecar
not address the dlsabled,and the ·per commuter train would be
1973 Rehabilitation Act, which sufficient, but Rep. Cardlss Coldoes not speclfical.ly deal with Iins. D-Ill., said that would be
p~blic accommodations, private segreg~tlon.
sector .•employment apd , pro"What disabled AmeriCaf!S

seek is The dignity that can onl)'
come wiTh the full recognition of
their civil rights. To be segregated Is to be misunderstOOd, "
Collins said.
.
Last week, the House narrowly
passed a controversial amend·
ment allowing employers _to
reassign food handlers with
communicable or infectious diseases "of public significance."
The debate focused on the fear
that people with acquired im!DUne deficiency syndrome could
spread the disease 'through handling food. but opponents contended the amendment panders
to unfounded fears about AIDS
transmission. Health Secretary
Louis Sullivan had said such an
amendmenl Is not medically
·
necessary.
To protect the disabled, the bill
would require .employers to
make "reasonable accommOda-

tlons" unless It would Impose an
" undue hardship."
The employment require·
m.e nts would become effective
two years alter enactment and
would cover employers wtih
more than 25 workers. TWo years
later, emplOyers with 15 or more
employers would be subject to
the measure.
The blllalso would bar discrimInation in hotels and retail stores
as well as In restaurants and
theaters. Small businesses could.
under an approved amendment ,
phase in tbe prOvisions. which
require, for example, newly
constructed buildings be readily ·
accessible to the dlasbled . .
Also, telephone ,companies •
would be required to provide ,
relay services allowing people
with hearing and speech Impairments to place and rec~lve-calls .

..

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.Rx·for measles: Have more
vaccination programs·available
-

NEW YORK IUPI) - U.S. drop the recommended age for
measles cases are up sharply for vaccinations to 12 mdnths.
In the face of· im es tlmated 5
the second year In a row.
underscoring the need to extend percent vaccine failure rates, the
' mandatory vaccination to pre- . Immunization Practices Advisory Committee now recom- ·
school children, a report said.
Thl\re were about 17,000 cases inends that children be vacci·
o( measles in the country In 1989. · nated twice• · .
The
article
recommended
that.
·
up from 3,396 cases the year
before; and the latest numbers In area~ where there are recurfor 'this year show a continued ring measle· outbreaks. the first
acceleration, according to the do~ should be administered at 12
'
. Bulletin,
'
Statistical
a quartenv months of age. tollowe~J by a
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
magazine publiShed Tuesday by second vaccination between the
the Metropolitan Life Insurance ages of 4 and 6.
Co.
·
·In other areas, the initial
The average age of those vacdnation can be held off until
catching the Infectious disease 14-15 months, the report said.
"
If'S tuam . . S10a
lt also recommended that
ha,s dropped from earlier years,
SERVICE ~ SIZE • SELECTION
with about 40 percent of 1989's coilegf and .. other educational
cases occurring In preschool institutions require all entering
children under 5 years of age, the s):\ldenfs born alter , 1956 be
revaccinated If they do not have
report' said.
i .
"T.hrough February of this proof of twa doses of measles
•
year.
there were over · 1.600 vaccine alter age 1.
• •
J11easles cases compared with 600
at the same time last year," sal&lt;!
"
Dr. Charles Arnold, MetLlfe
LAS VEGAS; Nev. IUPII- A "agonizing, suffocating death·. "
Medical Director and editor of
Bergste'd t's lawyel'. Jack the bulletin.
31-year-old quadriplegic who has
Cherry,
has petitioned District
been hooked up to a respli'ator for
• more than two decades has filed Judge Donald Mosie~· to issue a
He said the Increases· were
papers in court seeking an end to precedent-setting order affirm, mainly in Chicago, Dallas . Los
his "painful:' existence, a report . ing Bergstedt's right to die.
Angeles and Milwaukee.
said Wedneday .
Cherry wants a ruling from the.
' 'This 250 percent increase is
The Las Vegas Sun said Ken- judge on se,·eral issues never shoc)&lt;ing for a disease believed to .
neth A. Bergstedt, paralyzed before litigated In Nevada lnclud-. · be virtually eradicated nine vear
from the neck down since a lng: that.Bergstedt has a right to .. ago," Arnold said, and warned,
swimming accident, submitted make the . decision to refuse
the papers to the Clark County life-sustaining treatment. ttlat ~J~~~:.':?ay be even wof'e news
District Court In April. He wants Bergstedt's de&lt;'ision to end his
Arnold listed what he said were
·
to be given a sedative, have his life would not be regarded as
the cause~ of the current meas 1es
life-support system turned off suicide, and that anv.one wh.o outbreak:
and be allowed to die in peace. · helped him shut oil the ventilator
-Low tmmunuatlon rates for
His adopth·e father. Robert or gave him the sedative would _preschool-age children, which
Bergstedt. 65. a retired steel not be. prosecul('d on criminal "Indicate that parental lgnorworker whq lost a leg in an charges :
ance and apaThy are ·indeed
Industrial accident, Is relucMosley. who can't recall a factors."
tantly supporting the decision. similar case in Nevada. said he .
-State laws that require childihe newspaper said.
expects to hold an evidentiary ren ro ·be vaccinated before they
In a five-page court affida\'it.
hearing on the petition June 8 can enter elementary school, but
Bergstedt said he has "no happy . before making what he calls a allow the same kids to enter
or encouraging expectations to difficult decision, the newspaper preschool programs without
look for from life. receives no said .
vaccinations.
enjoyment from life, lives with
-Public Immunization clinics
The Clark Count)' District
constant feats and apprehen- Attorney's office Is -h~lplng ease that are hard to get to or have
sions -and is tired of suffering."
Mosley's decision.
tong waiting lines.
·
Bergsiedt_, who Is mentally
Both Bergstedts, through
-Working mothers from the
alert and capable of speaking. Cherry , de c lined · .ro , be innercltleswhocannorgetthelr
was rendered a quadriplegic at lntef\1ewed.
children to daytime clinics.
the age of 10 when his spinal cord
"They're very, very private
The .c urrent measles outbreak
was severed In an acclden r at an people. "·Cherry said.
has caused medical exp!'rts to
Indiana swimming pool on July4:
1969. A Y.oung girl doing a
"cannonball'' . dl\'e landed nn
him.
.
He told the court his adoptive
'
mother cared lor him until she
died of cancer in 'November 1978.
fils father, his ~ole surviving
. '
........ •oet ~-ro.-lole ca•••l t.ndtan o• ••• -n.t." O•w - ·
famll~- member. has been caring
KINDERGART~f4
.
clutfe "P-e-Widl...- "provW. . • .......,...- f • ..• totlllltodv
for him on a 24-hour basis since
co..ton
etape c-1-- elt•lo. . liou8 18 , ......
then.
Bergstedt spends most of his
• day on a gurney. has no control
111•
111• •345.00
' over his extremities ·below his
neck, must have help going to the
Lo·back Chair .......... Sale '76.00 3-Seat Glider ........ Sale '236.00
bathroom and can function without a ventilator for only 10 to 15
HI-Back Chair.......... Safe •8&amp;.00 Canopy Swing ...... Sale '248.00
minutes·.

Chapman Shoes

.

Quadriplegic ·seeks court

/1;.&gt; :•1

il'

SWIFt ECDICH

~ ~~U

.

TURKEY BREAST •••••••1.-!·. S2.99
SUPEIIOI BULK
WIENERS •••••••·•••••••••••If. •• $2.19
SUPEIIOI JUMBO
BOLOGNA •••••••••••~ •• ~.~.~••~···· 9 5c
DIU MADE ,
COOKED HAM
SINGLES
CHEESE ..........UJ. SJ.39
BLUE BONNET

. rtEW CABBAGE ,,.,\9,,25c

SPIEAD.......... U!\$1.~9

HEAD

CAUFOINIA

ORANGES ..TJ.s:t.. 2/59c
LEnUCEM•••• ,;.:t••.•···-·S9c·

WHIP ••••••••••••••·.~l• $1.29
IHMS
NOODLES
•••••••••••••••
~1.2!• $1.59
ftOPICANA
.
ORANGE JUICE •••••• ]1.2!• S1.99
BATHROOM TISSUE ....:tt S1.69
PRINGLES ••••••••••••• ~ ••!.!!-. S1.49
KOOL·ADE •••••••••••••~.9~ffi S2.69.
DillE 24 CT.
PAPER PLATES ............. S2.39
unuJUKY
FRUIT DRINKS •••••••••uf. 3/39e
AIMOUI
•
VIENNA SAUSAGE
•••t'' .!!· S1.19
WCIY LEAF
.
SLICED APPLES ••••••••\~~.~. S1.19
IALUOfli
.
COOKIE CRISP ••••••••• ].2!• $2.99
lOYAl CIEn ASSOIUID
24 OJ. $1 09
••••••••••
•
4

perml-Sston to die

,

.

WHITE "'UIIU

·COMPLETE STOCK

•

SnLL GOING ON
'THRU MAY 31st

I'HIClS Lll l CIIVt lllHLI SAl. i'¥1AY il1.

Mm. EGGS ....P.9lv. SU9

CANDY

The advertisements tOld consumers the chance of finding a
malfuctlonlng MagiCan "Is. extremely remote," but directed
anyone who finds a malfunct.ionlng can to ~all a toll-free
telephone number for Its "MagiCan Information Center."
The full-page advertisements.
which carry a large headline
saying "Take a good look," told
consum,ers to look lr'lslde CocaCola cans to make sure they
contain cola, and to listen lor a
rattling sound .Inside the defective.cans.

RUTL AND
DEPARTMENT STORE

IIAVR VAILIY

TABU

WASHINGTON IUPI)- Striking Greyhound workers have
made an unconditional offer to
return to · work and end their
12-week-old strike. putting additional financial pressure on the
economically beleaguered · bus
line. .
- In a letter Tuesday to Anthony
. Lannle, Greyhound vice president in charge.of labor relations ,
the Amalgamated Transit Union
announced Its "unconditional
offer to return to work
lnimediately."
"Please advise us as to when
employees should return to
work,'' said the letter from
Edward Strait, president of the
Amalgamated Council of Grey hound Local UniOns, which represents, some 9,300 striking
employees.
But the offer was unlikely to
settle the bitter; violence-marred
labor dispute Involving the na·
Uonal bus line. Instead. it put
-more pressure on Greyhound
management - and the company's creditors - to return to
the bargaining table.
The unconditional offer to
return to work was required
under the National Labor Rela - ·
lions Act as part of the process in
which a union makes its case that
an employer is engaging in
unfair labor practices.
&gt; In .effect. the .offer put tn.
·- motion a ·back ' pay clock that
could cost the bus cornpany up to
$10 million a month between now
and when a new contract Is
signed.
In Dallas, Greyhound spokesman George Gravley said tht'
company expected to respond to
Strait's letter this week, but said
the company had no intention of
allowing the striking drivers to
return to work iii the exl&gt;ense of
replacement.
"We are not going to fire the
replacement drivers who· were
hired on permanent jobs. So the
rest of the' Istriking) drivers will
be put on a preferential Jist and
would be hired when jobs occur,"
he said. He added that the
c&lt;impan·y currently has only 10
job openings.
If the ·company accepts the
offer, returning employees
would be working under the
same terms as when they went
out on ~trike March 2 and. union

.Coke ads wam consumers
·of contest can malfunction

SWISHER-LOHSE

RUSSELL STOVER

•

Rabin, a paten tlal challenger
whether political motives were
Shimon Peres for the leaderto
behind the attack In the mixed
ship
of the Labor Party, also said
Jewish-Arab city, where dozens
Israel
must form a broadly based
of slogans attacking Israel and
"decisive
government."
and
supporting the Palestine Libera"There
was
a national unity
tion Organization were written
government
(with
Llkud and
on walls In the Jewish residential
not
able
to take
Labor)
that
was
quarter.
.
neces.sary
decisions
outofltsown
Rabin told Army Radio he
believed the Rlshon Le Zion Initiative." Rabin said. " Our
attack, which he described as attempt to form a narrow govern"the murder of Arabs in cold men !failed. I see tnat the Llkud,
'blood by a madman, " was used · Mr. Shamlr, · is also having ,
by Palestinian· activists to "re- difficulties In setting up a narrow .
kindle the fli'e that to a large government and It seems to me
extent ·had died down' • in the that any n_a rrow government •.
territories over the past lew either of the Labor or the Llkud,
Is deep trouble."
months .

By United Press blternatlonal
Coca-Cola purchased full-page
advertisements IJI newspapers ,
across the country Wednesday,
alerting consumers to a possible
malfunction of the cash;
containing cans used In Its
newest promotional-conies t.
The ads In the The New York
Times, The Washington Post,
The Los Angeles Times and
several other major newspapers
explain bow to ·identify the
so-called MagiCans, which are
designed to pop out prize money
when· opened. ·
The ads said prize mechanisms
may jam In some cans, and
showed side-by-side diagrams of
. a properly working MagiCan and
a malfunctioning container.
The ads said the mechanism
•'In a very small number of
MagiCans" detaches from the
Inside of the can, preventing the
prize from popping out. "Rest
assured, however. the mechanism can't come out of the can,"
the ads said ..
The MagiCans. disguised to
look- and sound -like ordinary'
Coke cans. contain chlorinated
water instead of cola, the company sal&lt;). The adve~tlsertients
did not say whether the chlorinated water ·was dangerous, but
said the liquid "should nor be
accessible and Is not meant lor
drinking."
The company said more than a
dozen people have reported defective cans and an 11-year-old
Massachusetts boy said he accidentally drank the chlorinated
•water used to give the ,can
weight, the Atlanta Constltutlpn
reported Wednesday.
•

The Daily Sentinel Page 15

Pomeroy Midcii!POi'i&lt; Ohio

I

.. .

Casual Oatdool' Farnital'e

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ·

GRADES

&amp; 1 THRU 8

••d

Meets All State Requirements
- Minimum Standards

REGISTRATION NOW. OPEN FOR
1990-1991 SCHOOL YEAR

:. In the affidavit, the newspaper
• reported, he told the court his
: only entertainment or "diversion
~ from
boredom" is reading,
• watching television or writing
: poetry on a computer controlled
by a special mouth-puffing
, device.
,
He said his greatest fear Is
1 - . being placed in an Institution
: with less personal care when his
; father. who has high blood
' pressure and other physical
·• ailments, dies.

•

He also said he fears that his
system would mal\ function (!ne day when no one was
! p~sent. ,.causing him to die an
1
1

llfe-~upporl

snuo
.... suo.oo
.... •2u.so

.... •uuo
.... •ao.oo

...; 1265.00

.... 190.01

2~SNt

Cocktail Table .........; Sale '89.00

Lounger ................ Sale '186.00

For Information and Manual
Write or Call

Glider ........ Sale '185.00

.

End Table ............... Sale '69.00

lllmus a• u.IIUA TAlLIS Ill ASSOIIID SliD ALso ofJ SALE.

614-992-6249

)

.REJOICING 'LIFE
C
T!AN SCHOO~

7 COI.OIS - 5 YIAI w•Arm

lf(rfN-.tQK ~·

333 North Second Avl.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

FlEE
DEUYUY ·

RMnllf. APPIWICES, 1Y'S, ROOI COVEIIIG
992-1671
NlmiOY, 0110

IIIIDO•w•~NJmow-ltl
·I

••

•

�16-.:The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

.,

Wednesday, May 23, 1900

17

The

Classified

III!.:~~C~OPYRIGHT
1990 · THE KROGER CO. 11 :MS AND .
PRICES (lOOO SUNDAY, MAY 2!1. THROUGH
SATURDAY, MAY

Appointm..,t

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SO~D TO DEA~ERS .
-:;:;.,~...
PIIUI:Y-Eaoh of th-ldlltrtiood komslo required to be readily •••liable for
'::.
oaloln N~h K,_r Star,, oxcopt 11 opoclflcaAy·notld In thlo ld. If wo do nm 0&lt;1t cif an .
ld.ertiold Item, wo will offer you' y&lt;&gt;ur choice of A comparable Item. whtn avallablo,
reflecting tho umoiiO\Iingl or a ralnchack which will ondtlo you to purchaN t h o - kom at tho price within 30 days. Only one •ondor CO&lt;Ipon will be accepted por

TO PLACE AN. AD CAU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. .fa 5 P.M. ·

3 '
6

y

10 .
Monthly

. ou•wa• Met.. : Oelll• 0t M•on oounuai mu.:. be _,.

Earning .For learnin9

Hid.

""·~ rlltV ••

run 3 dan .. no ct'a•fl·

....,.t......

.PURSUIT·

1 - H~py

Adl

1-L.oat tnd founcl

7-Y•d StlttD..dtn act.tenctl

''Your
Connection

l rnplovment

tht Galli·

Fmn Siilli'l'f",
&amp; ! IVtSiiiiJ

Sr.rv1cr.'
1 1·-"-tg Wen1ec1

'

, 2-kutt'C»n Wenlla

1

.

.

exchan~es ...

Matfl Co..mv '

Maon Ca .. WV

Arta COde e 14

Aree Code 304

18-W•rued To Do

1&amp;-letd &amp;

458~Leon

115-Ch•'-'
143-Pon•nd'

&amp;76-Applt Gro~
773-M•on
•.

2&amp;7-LMart Falla

112-Ntw "Ht¥en

848-R•Dflt
742-AuiiMd

137-luttllo

115-~llr1

· 31-~ma tor Sttt
32-MobifeHom.. for S11e
33-'•rms tor-6•••

loi-Bu•m•• lufldlnvs

35 - L.ou &amp; Aer. .ge
31......-Aut bun a w.,ted

s .. ,

7&amp;-lo•ts • Moton io'
76-Aulo P•r.l i • Ac~••••

77 -Auto RtDit.r

CALL

iautDm.nt
79 ":""' Gtmp•s &amp; Molar Homes

Fast

992-

Public Notice

Serve 'n' Save
.Wieners

~: = Red~ Ripe

.r:·: California
-

..... ~

"

1-lb. Pkg.

nor' I Executive OrdOJ of
January 27, 1972 are appli&lt;:able to thlo bid lnvhetlon.
The MinoritY Sot Aoide
-orrequirements of Amended
F. W. Dodge ,
.
SubltituteHou•BIK584of
Columb&lt;ll, Ohio &amp;321 5
the 113th Regular S..lion
Copieo of the Notice to of the General AoMn)bly,
Bidderl. Form .ol Propoul. and opecillcally .the requireForm of Bond, ·F onn of Con- ment• of ReviMd Code Sec·
t,.ct, EEO Bid Condlti0n1, lin 123.1151tcl 121 end 131.
ln1truetion1 to Blddlra, GenM rel8ting to Minority Busi-eral Concllions. Plana. St» ne.. EntwpriH subco,_.
cific.tton1 and other Con- ttactl and meter~l purch1e
Met Docurnent 1 togett. and lervlca tupply conwidt arry further inform8tkm tracts. are applicable to thi1
dealrld. mey be ob,teined by invitation to bid.
.
Prime Controctora froin' the
No bidder moy withdraw
Office
of M-E BUI~D· hio bid within a!Jcty 1801 deys
lNG CONSULTANTS, INC.. efttr the actutl dote of the
1015 EMtBroadStreet. CO~ opening thtr!IOf. The Doumbuo. Ohio 4320111 Ttl• puty Director, Divialon of
phone 111 41 258-4B03. All Public Woru, ,....,.. the
bidding dOcuments
will right to waive any informeli·
be forwo- SHIPPING ti" or to "'ject any ow 'all
CHARGES COLLECT upon bida. .
receipt of a ..,.,.. in the
The Depenment of
amount of $21.00 Per let in ·
Adminlltrative Servk:n
' Fred Hoffman, Mayor fovor of M-E 8UI~DING
· DlvloiOn of Public Works
,VMiage of Middlepon CONSU~TANTS. The depoCarole J . Olohevtky,
(51 22. 29, Ill 5, 12. 19,
oil wll be r.tunded to bidders
Deputy Director
26
who rotum the pleno and 161 18. 23. 30: (81 6, 4tc
opeciflcationo In good condition within ten 110) deys I--:P_ub_l_lc_Not_;,;;.lce;.;;___
Public Mollet
after receipt of bida. The
cost of replecem'"t of ony
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
PUBLIC BID
mining or damaged docuREAL ESTATE
ADVERTISEMENT
THE STATE OF OHIO
Purauont to the provialont montowill be deducted from
MEIGS COUNTY
of Section
t 53 .08 .,d the depoait. The- bidder
THE CENTRAL TRUST
1113.07 of the Ohio Re.l1ed may retain tlia pleno and
and
the
COMPANY OF
Code. pulllic notice i1 given opecificotiont
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
thot ...led propoUio w~l be depotit wHI be r.tuncled.
Subcomractoraand mate·
N.A .
received by the D.partmen1
rial tupplilftntayacquirefor
VS
of AC:tmin•trat~ Servfc11.
MAnHEW C . VAN
Dlvioioll of Public W0rk1. thOiirconvenionce, Planund
VRANKEN, ET AL .
Office of State Archilect Specifications or portions
CASE NO, 89 CL 214
and Engin-. 30 Eo1t Brood thetoof by paying for the
cost of reprOduction end
In pur1uance to an Order
St~. 3111h Floor, Columof Sale directed to me in the
buo, 0~43216-0403 until handling.
Contr11ctors requiring 81· above entitled action. I will
Thurldoy, June14, 19!!0. ot
2:00 p.m. Daylight Sa•inlll tisllnce in securing bids offer for aale at public auc·
Time. and apen.cl immecfta- from Certified MBE lubcon· tion, at the front door of the
in Pomeroy•
ttly t"'!rellfler, for furnish- . tractors and suppliers may Courthou•
ing t"l' """eriel and per· contact the State Equal Em· Ohio. in the above named
forming the labor lor the ex- ployment Coordinator bY county, on Tuuday, June
19, 1990 et10,00o.m .. the'
ecutio,i'i a,.d conltruction of: ceiling 16141 488-8380 or
the Minority Bu•in•• De- following dM~ibed reai n·
'Projec1 No. 770-88-019
velopment Oivition by cal· tate. situated In the County
Statewide Hulih and
ling 18141 468-6702 or Toll of Meigo, end the S..,e of
• Safoty Progrom
Free on 1 -800-282·1085 .
Ohio, to wit:
Phne II - Olotrict No. 10
Each bid must be accom~
Situlted in Burnap' •AddiOhio Department of
penlld by a BID 'GUA- tlon to the VlMage of PoTransportation
AANTY meecing the require~
meroy or subdivilion of Lot
Atheno, Gellle, Mei91,
menta of Section 1113.54 of
Number One Hundred and
.Monroe. Morgen, Noble
the Ohio Re.iatd Code.
Eighty-nino 1189lend being
and Wnhington Countiet
THE BID GUARANT~ and
all of~~~ Number Nineteen
Seperate bldl wll be ro·
CONTRACT BOND muot be
1191 and Twenty 1201 front ·
ceivad for:
EST. of ioawd by a Surety Company ing on Hill Top Street or the
CONTRACT
COST mooting the r-lrement1 of Old Rutland Rood over UnArticlt 2 of the lnetNCtion coin HAl. extending in depth
File
toward High 'Street within
ProteCtion , ... t23. 500.00 to Bidden.
Bidl ohall be aHied and one Hundred 11001 feot of
HVAC .... .. ..... 1358,000.00
Electrical . ...... . 1 33,000.00 addrnled to: Oepanment taid High Street and both
Iota havino a frontage of One
A PRE-bid conference wll of AdminJnrative Servic81,
Hundrld 11001 feet on Hill
be held at 10:00 o.m. on Divltion of · Public. Worko,
Top·&amp;treet .
June 1 , 1990, Ohio Deport- Offlca of State Architect
For reference toe Volume
ment of lfranaponatian Dia· and Engineer, 30 Eeat Breed
1117,page51.MeigtCounty
trict N'l· 10 Headquarter•. Sti'Ht, 315th Floor. ColumDeed Recorda .
Mutkingum Drive, Marietta, buo. Oh. 43286-0403.
The Minimum Wage R1te
Deed Reference: Volume
Ohio.
305,
pege 729, Mei91
Copies of the Notica to Requinomet1tt of Revload
County Dead Recorda.
Bidder,, Form of Pr-1. Code Chepter 4115 and the
Thi1 prol&gt;tr1Y io loceted et
Form of Bond, Form Qf Con- Equal Employment Dppor.
!unity
Bid
Condition•
of
Re129
Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy,
t.roct~EEO Bid Conditiono,
Ohio.
lnlt tloflt to Biddara. vioed Code Section• 153.69
Prooertv
approiold et
Gon I Conditiono, Plano, and 1 U.ll9t .and the GoverSpeciflcotiont and other
Contr1ct Documents are on
file end - b e ueminld ot
lb. ·
the following C!fll-: .
DepertrntM of Adminollro.tive Strvlcea
Dlvioion of Public Worko
FRESH
GROWN
Office of State Architect
end Enginear
30 E01t Brood Streot - 36th
Flooi
Columb&lt;ot. Ohio. &amp;32~6·
0403
. .

KROGER

Hot Dog

Buns

'

r.~. Strawberries

PUBliC NOTICE
Bido w~l be r-vtd tt
Middl_. Vllloge Hall, 237
Rece St.: Middlepon, Ohio
46710, untU 3 P.M. July 9,
1990 f'r the folowing describedJr..l ntate: ·
The north 36 feet. more or
l•o. Qf the won holf of lot
No. 13,4 in Philllpo Jon•
Thlrd Addition to the Village
of Midclopon. Melgo County,
Ohio, being 35 - . more Or
- leta. c1n Third
tending l i t - width -.Jy
58 feet and • incheo tc! ...
of uid lot No. 1 3&amp;
in llllid VII- llein\Jtho,ume
property ~bed on Volume
132. Pogo 77. Melgo County
Deed Reooodl.
~ Deed Ret. .nce: Volume
203. P... 479,
Mei91
County Deed lltaDrcll.
The • • • ,...,.,.. the
rigllt ul Nject eny or all bidl
a!ld to waive any informati·
ti• in bidding.

8-Ct.

s.-. ........

'•

-lin•

•"
"

~·•

•
~ ::

,,•
•

•"
',&lt;

."'.'

"
''

CUT HALVES OR QUARTERS

Red, RiJJe
Watermelon

KingsfQrd
Charcoal

Pound

tiJ.II. Bag

r:. " .•
,

,~·
"ao , , I

.
.,...

MATCHLIGHT CHARCOAL 8-~B. BAG , , . t3.49

'\

. . - -~

~ - 1:

••
••

:~

'•

••'!..-~....

..."
....,,

' n•

B
Fried Chicken

...•

tN

~

.

·FREE! ·.

~

'
~-

......'•
...
...
••
·'

. 10-0Z. BAG

.Ruffles Brand
· Potato.Chips
GET ONE~

28-oz.

'·r.1 .•

•

J

I

88

...,. ..

~

'.

Polar Pak
Ice Cream
~-Gallon

c
KROGER SHERB.ET li -GA( . . . 2 FOR $3.00

KROGER

Homogenized
Milk
Gallon

Cl..aiond. Dh. 4&amp;1 15
-orBuilderl Exchange, I~ c.
Cleveland. Ohio 44131

WEDDING MINTS •• S4oo

Kellogg's
Rice Krispies

Custom flnttd to Match Color Scheme
HOME

13-oz.

STRAWBERRIES .......Sl so ar.

'

l

•
•

.

,

~-Of-

CHEESE TRAYS - MADE FRESH
Meclium ••••••••••••••••••••s1500
Large ........ ~ ..............s2soo

'

BuHdlrt txchenge Qf Control Ohio
ColumbVo, Ohio 43215
1
-or- ·
.
Dodge Aeporto/SCAN

Trail lologna ..............................S3.•60 lb.
Baby Swiss ...................;............. S3.S 5 lb.
(oll:.y .......,•••~•••n•n••••n•••u••••••••••n~2.75 lb.
Hot Pepper .................................12.85 11.
Fariiiii'S........................................ 3.00 •·
Sharp .................~........................13.40 lb.
Smoked Cheddar .........·...............13.00 lb.

1919 IHOMPSON

221 CABIIA
CUTTY CAIIN
New $15,900
WAS •23,0o0

Marblt......................................... s2.1S lb.
Amish Iutter ..............................13.00 ~b.

VIENNA
MAliNE
304-295-7927
304-195-6767

OHIO VAWY BUll FOODS

51.t

'

lad....

•-•rey, Oh.

Ht-6910

· :;,

We Accept ·

F-' St

thall be required to depo1~
on the day of. .s•le. i n c =
by certified check. p ebl
10 the Sheriff of
eig1
County, Ohio, 10% of the
amount of 1uch accepted
bid, but in no event 1811 than
•1.00.0.00. The belance of
the purchao price ohell be
due and peyebletotheSher111 of Melgo County, Ohio,
within thirty 1301 deyo from
the dote of conftrmllion of
ule. The purchMer tholl be
required to .,.Y lme,.t on
the unpaid- balance at the
rate of 10% per annum from
the dete of ule to thl date Of
p•yment of balance unle11
1aid balance 1hall be paid In
eight 181 cloyo from the date
of the aale. ·
Jomeo M. Souloby
Sheriff of Meioo County
DougiH M. Cowleo
Attorney for Pleintlff
151 9, 18, 23. 30: 181 8. 13 .

Ole

.. Fr• Eltlmat•"

PH. 949.280'1
er 1... 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

POMEROY - Double w1de
trailer. 3 bellrooms, 2 balhs.
carpet. FAelec. heat. Bui~ in
corner cabinets and bar in
k1lchen. ready to move into.

$34.900.00
LnART - MANUEL ROAD
- Mobi le home s~e. one
acre landscaped for mobole
home or buildings~e. Asteal
at $3,500.
SYRACUSE - A beautiful
bi-level home in excellent
cqvdition. 3 bedrooms, 2
b\!hs, a large family room
w~h . lireplace. Att1c fans.
storage workshop and
fenced yard . All th1s lor only.

$47.000.00.

.

SYRACUSE- Nice modular
on corner lot. 3 bedrooms, I
bath, laundry room, carpet.
Patio and close to school.

$21 .900.00.
POMEROY -

2 lots with
Seplic and
elec. available. lots ol shade
possi bil~ies 1

trees. $3.000.00.

Our Salts Yolumt Hos
lilt! Good llld Wt Still
...,. lurn loeldng
For Mtlgs C.rty
Preptrty.
tF YOU WANt TO S(U,
CAll ClELAND IEAlrt
TOOlTill

Jo Hill ........... :915-446&amp;

Olfict..............992·2259

A

SJ695 4 Qt.

•ctOWAYE
OYEIIEPAII

Max.

AIL lUllS

Brillg It In Or Wa
Pick Up.

niEIIP&amp;II
IIOYI!IINTAl
COHVMNa SfOI£ ITEMS

CHESTD
QUII STOP .
St. Itt!. 7 &amp; 241
CIISTEI, OliO

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335 Of 915-35111

915-3350

............. Office
217 I. S.C. Pner•y
I'OIIIIOY, OliO

OHIO .YEI

EWI .........
HOME
._,

311/'90/tfn

S......Citl-111111
Oood ""1•
T.L.C .
27 Yr1. bp.

APRI. 1 TIIRU JULY 1
HOURS: .
.,.,,,_ thru Sun.

Rat...ca

992-6173

·I

, 209 South. 4111 sr.
Oh. '

. JOHN TEAFORD

o..... .

46317 Sc..l

.....

SIDEUNES
SPOil CAIDS

Jlewartl L Wrlteael

Trade

NEW -IEPAII

. Buy- Sell

51,'11 2nd sr. M"'''f'tt
Far Appl. Call

"&amp;OW

.DDLEPOIT
VCI CUNIC
IUINIIIWKI 111PAIII
~~·~,
-'
1Acr•lr--11wlflll..l

......

ROOFING

(6141 992-7143

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CIHning
.Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

SPIIMISPEGIAl
ClEAN, lUIE &amp;HST

Sl 8111

949-2168
..
2-J.'-.J 1110. Pl.

992·6717 H01111 or.
· '92 ·6244 Goroat

4·11~'10-f mo.

PUblic Notice
REQUEST FOR MBE
QUAUFICATION
STATEMENTS
The Village of Pomeroy,
Meigo County, Ohio it re·
quwtlng quallflcotion statemenu from State Certified
Minority

IU•in•• Enter·

pri- IMBEI to clean and
pelrit two stMI con1truc1ed
poub:le water 1torage tlnkt.
The lltOflge tanka hwe a ca·
pecltY of
1100,000 and
1110,000 gollone. Thlt work
""all coneilt Qf undbl.,ing
and peinllng the interior and
exterior of both tenkl. The
ciNning and pel.._,g of the
tankl wHI be in lllltt accordanca wllh AWWA 0102.
Alkyd ond vinyl pelnt oy•
ttmo wll be ueld. .
The· quallft..lion . otat•
men1..,... Include : letter of
intereet with name end ad·
dr••t&gt;f oompany: brief deecriOtton ,of compMy: and
Aatll)g "' wO&lt;It uperionce
and ,m.encea . Experience
with A-A pelnt eyotemo
and ,..,er
otorage tank
cl-ing and pointing are
........ory .
Outllflcatlon otatemontt
wllbe reoeived untl June 1,
1190 et the Office of . the
Mayor, Village of Pomltroy,
320 Meln Streat, Pomer.,Y.
Ohio 141711. Attention: Mr.
Johh , A. Anderton, Village
Admil'iltNtor. ·
y order Qf the VIllage of
1
Pomeroy, Ohio .
!Ill,, 111, 23 3tc

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHIS1Dr o•o

*SHRUB -&amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL ·.

eGRAVEL

*LIGHT HAULING

•LIMES:J'ONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING .

*FIREWOOD

BILL SUCK

AT ALL

992-2269

98

EVENINGS

4-f.lt-lhl

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. l241 , _ . , Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REP AI~
AI•• Trl. .lnl••
PH. 992·5682
· or 992-7121 ·

1'1.-ING
lltw&amp;..lioa
' .. lllrtll Stclllll

MIMI,trt,

Oltlt.45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
w. c- Fll'*'tl lluppll•,
Your Phone

11111 Here
PIIDIII

a

PubliC Nollc:e

We .... Llttllttl

HEMRY E. CLELAM6
. 992-6191
Jtlll T111ssell ... 94t-2660
Mat Hupp ........ MS-2257

&amp;
OIL CHANGE .

OPEN:

'S CAl WASH

POMEROY '- CommerCial
Site. Excellent location. All
util~ies available. Ask for details.

,92-2

EVEII.ASTINGS

5·21-'90-looo.pll.

MIDDLEPORT Picture
your family in this beautilul
home. 2 slory, 3 bedroom ,
carpet. all electnc and fireplace. Dishwasher. $39,900.

711 •. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

HEllS and

367-0588

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

SEARS

(61.) 667-3271

...........

Real Estate

E.~;,n&amp;.l

FREE
ESTIMATES

GnmA.

BISSrLL.
SIDING CO.

IUCCellful
purchller, a1
lOOn H hit bid it ICCtpted

H6-'90-l md.

Sand-Stone-Dirt

$24.0110.00 and cann01 be
eold lor leo11han two-lhirdl
of the apprai1ed value.
TERMS OF SA~E ' The

Public Notice

..-rl

992-6421,/ ;

'\

DUMP TRUCK

PubliC Notice

. . . . . . . .Aim

•

399 S, 1'11irtl; Mld..

NEWLAND ·
'
ENTERPRISES

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

USED AI'PI.IM(ES

DODGE ·

•

DOZEI
CLEARING

71-C.,mptnp

Oet Rttt

MAIN ST., IUtLAIID

CONTROL

Commercial ·

CHIYSUI.ftYIIOUTH:

•Front End
Alignment
•Oil 'Change • Lube
•Brake WOrk

•

•

PAT HILL

•Tire Sales

SITEWORK • ~US

ltfrigeratien
S.rwke
Residential •

72-truclla lOt Stle
73-VInt. 4 V(O "s

.

AT

7U·3011

CUMATE
Heating, Ceollng,

71-Auto• tor '-''

DALLAS SAYRE.i.

SERVICE

HUMPHREY'S

Tr J r1sporl a111111

Oppo"un'-v

22 -MoniV 10 L.o1n
23-ProfllltONI l"v1ces

Travel"

Ft"il~;t•r

74"~-Motorcvc:l•

.lt12-Middl.-on , 175-Pt. PIN11ft1

Pomercw

17-Mtacttlltneoua

21-lt.t~entts

telephone

·

11-Seheota • lnltruc:ltDn
&amp; C8 A_,tit

1t-RICieo. TV

I 1 -ftrm Ectutt:tm.nt
12-Wanttd to lll'f'
13 - LNeltOc.*
84-Ht¥ It Grtln

llhhhliijil"

Classified pa~es· cot'er the
t)Win~

13-lnturence
tol-lutina• Trattuna

To All -""""'
·. Types Of

Stop In and See-

RUTLAND nRE
SAUS and

(614)
742-2027

1-Pubhc Silt • Awc:ttDn
1-WtmiCI to Buy

COPY DEAOLINI DAY •EFOAE 'UIUCATION
MONDAY ~A~ER
-11,00A.M . SATU"OAV
• - 2'00 P.M . MONDAY
TUEIDAV ~APeA
W!OJIEIDAY PAPER
- 2 :00 tt.M . TUESDAY
THUII8DAV PA~EA
- 2 :00P.M . WEOHUDAY
~IOAY · PA"A
- 2 '00 P.M . THURIOAV
lUNDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P .M . Ff'IDAY

U.S .. INSPECTED

)a efiAVEL

t:

4- Gtvtaw-av

CIP1 _...,. ct•IH•Id.. ...,._.•. ButinMt Ctrd end legal nottcetl

"•...m 1111 ......, •net
polls D•ilv TribUne, rllehtng owr 11.000 ·hom•

OHIO

.Oil/Clay

3-AnnOUCtmlfUI

.,,,,_. Ad1 .
Y•dSOI•

will etio ..,,.., tn tht Pt .

WIIJal(tchiNf(•, Sips

.10

, -C.rd of Th~nlu

•A Cl~aaiftecl 14t¥ert..m.nt pla0ecltn Tilt Qtity Sent...- ,.._ •

We 1nuat Jl.ave au reoei:pta no l!lter t:b.an J'riday,
June 9tll.. How many ·free computers with printers
will YOUR school ea.rn?
·

IU .OO
11.30/dey

.2-ln M-.ory

7 POtnt 6tnt tVD1 onty UIICI .
,·
•sem:iftet ts not retPONiblt for error&amp; afltr fira CIIY'. ICfltdltor .,,or, first d8¥' Ml run. in.,..., ~, C.ll before 2 :00p .m
e..- tn• DUbltc.totOn 10 mlkt aorNC'Iion
•Ada Utll mult t.t -~~~In ldvMce ere

.Card or Th..U
.In~-

18.00

30 Stslions-530
Co. Rd •.21 ·.

ov., 15 Wordl
.20
.30
.42

AIIIIUU II r;ernc 11 IS

:P,.~ot, q fOr 111 CIPMII•••• • doubl•tw•cf ot ad"cott .

J

SPECIAL

Rate
1&amp;.00
11.00

" • • trt tor con.;.cutNe run1. btDIIen updwt witl be c:h. .at

,

•fllecewe 1 .&amp;0 . . -.m tot ICII ...id 1n .Hv•nce
.. ,.,., .as - Oweew1Y' and Found adl~o~nder , I word1 _.II be

With the end of the program only throe', weeko a.way, we 'd like t o '
know What kind o.f progress you a.re mt.ktng. Please ha.vo your
progra.m coordlna.tor to contact your s)lOnsor store ma.nager with a ,
.total on a.ny receipts not yet turned in.

Pound

,

949-2794

s

RA
Warda
16
15
15
15
16

DIY I

, 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY ·

"""" DUrchuld.

Holly Farms .
Mixed Fryer Parts

OPEitiNt
SOON
Call Now To Mike

• The Area's Number' ·1 Marketplace

ze, 1880 INPOIIEROY, OHIO

Attention Karnln' J'or Learning Participant&amp;:

FOIEYEI liON%
TANNING

P1L 949·2101
~

..,.

.......2110

". NO MIIAT

SEaiCE

Announcements

•• mn rltleir and ,.,
awe rfllllcttan and
hMtlr car11. We con
.• acid .boU and rat!
out rldiotors. We oha
npalr GIS T..a.

PAT HILL FOlD

3 Announcements

-ry.

aAddloan

Annual
Reynalcll
llaft, Mer lith.•,

-18-

... at the

992·2198

Middlepon,

t--·
....---4

G~

1 _ , 4x11c wind
2 - - : 4 n . l l l. - -

I:OD.

�.,

Wedoesday, May ~3. 1990
Pomeroy-

Sentinel

LAFF-A-OAY

32 ·Mobile Homes
for Sale
lwlttuM• .....IM I "nOr ~tuft
wlh ...,..... wtn'fl ~

::•o?':~..!!.!.'.P :1:

Would lu•..,.',";.;"r.....;d 0
u.
Aaaln, 114-1 ·
dop. or
a.rwm-mgo.

..... -.-t--~ ..

femllll ..... ~. Cd

_.,..

-

North -

SALE.

M.S. Clooo Rlnt

- Homplon.
a=141D
o~ 114 1• 1321, tMo
~--

"·

- . ...... lol, tii,OOO.
.

lank_,.- np

ood tQ7II 1117 -

1.

-

421-7121.

33 Farms fot Sale

Yard Sale

t30 .... ...... Twp.
llotgo Counlf, Ohio S-4 bod- . tom, out
li lilngiL.Iroio ... ond - · I I
-1111; .
IIIII
-1 ... IGO.OO. Col
tu • 1111 •rei iM-11:1 2101

Galllpolll
a VIcinity

t-

-.....

VEAL FARM ~~~ IIALI or !Oooc
Willi option tc ""J. 114-2415411.

-.---t.

•

~

I Rata

fulnliMcf · lfftllanar,

tiU,

.,.....

.....

1

1

(l~((·l--.i

Omnlm• ltvlllg. 1 Md 2 .,_. .

!JM!ae
lllw..-.lilo

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

. . . . I -:nit-·1'1.- ~~;:::~;;;~~;~~0~~;~
114-4*

51

Hou11hokl
GQocla

llo- A!lll!o Ale, lroo t•illlllck

,., 1IUnilrY - . -.
Ilia _ . - . C1.- lo
. , _ and o1oto. PoJ lull
-urtly ....... ond tilt I
lftDnthllfrMI'WII.104-m.IIOl
0no • • _ , .,... 1ar - ·

Potp I •
-· -

Rentals

1133; 11• 1110011 - -

58

•AIIC'T1DII I

Fruita 1o
Vlgltablel

FUIININIII. a

ou.. •· tortp41o - a l*d ~----~-:-..;..;....,...,.,.
lumll- ~-a ilun"'"'n ~ ,..... Amloll
............
·
,..,...,.... hltl fruit• and
VI"RA PUIIrii'TuRI. loll 7 Ct.k \J ret'm 1G lie. pa!al...
tilt a ""' 11111111a 11 "·"' ,.... o11 oflr 111, EMI of
• · - a .,. -.11 ~·~~~;•n~,.~l1~4~-~·a~•~Pii!nia:

an. IAWI7-lll0.

45

_,You

t 1t t1t 6i4t111wlp&amp;

..-to. oa,oo• ,.....
_ . ottor 1 p.m.
. Ton T-•• AJoott-.
Bogoa1211r,a-,ti1114ll.t
'In! Nlll. CNCH, dWoseeher,
I ;: 1I ', plllvgrouna. I poole.
.-.a -tncNdocf. 11or1

a VIcinity

lnat~ments
Y- o1on0 nol _ , tuMid
Feb.
nood uol
Hoi 11*. or .1111 · 1111 Wood
I. A l l - . . 1a
. Wllloo ~

:..::; :"iiu1:..t"~ ~

Fumllhed

of ""'
....
""""' .atldor
a 1 ..101.,. .~.,
.
••

Room•

-

..... ,,••.1.

_,

IIIII
..-ton:
H.a. -- ·
Locllton:
liZ "" -~~~ DIIWI Rd. on

='-=¥-'=
~~~~H~·~
~=~or:.:o-·-·i~:: :::av!a.c:=,:;:,o:.

· ·~;:=:ray

CAMP TillS

t114 . _ , Ed:\!~ .!!!."!Lodllton,Pd-·-~ '

VEAR .•

.Top Cerd

,

- .. -lor~
- -· 114·1112·2317
or 114-1112·

=.

,
Hondo

·

~;
=-~~
'

,

v.e 111""' ...
t110 DlllunTK.wn-.

s--·

.

Caillier I:GO PII30W71-'IQ2.

-.-wv.

a Auction

!Ill •·o . e~01 ·

1111 Ka....W KilO, UNCI one
yoor, aood conct. 1750. 304 1a
:Mttollore:ao Pll.
·
tlllt Hartoy Dovldoon • . . . ,

0

.

101! 1111. 114'~4.

.

-to

luy ............ Ant. . .
tt24 I. lloln
Pill•""'·
"' "' POiiMCJ. Hcln: II.T.W. LIIL bj 1:00
~;.~ pW. - . Call.
1:00 Ia 1:00 p.m.

c:-.trr·

H - Porlc,

r:-a"=.

a-.

24- · ·

oloo:

~ kl.l!:_.4 ......... S100 fhm,
· '

75 Bo
ata 1o Motors
_,,...,._fo~rSate '

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

-

_;. ·f"OT .. O~t..y /)Of$ . IT
. ,ffAVi i.oW' /tfll-iAG~,

.,

-e:

..... w.wral'rln• '~· ,,........Jrs
·~·~~!!!!"!!4;..._*-'..,.;.••_n_27J.:,·_....-_
.~
54 Mlacellaneoua '
Me1chand1se

Real Estate

Mlrchancllae

•

0

'

ttiNG TtJWEi&gt; J.

..

a•

-hoii:..=:s- -it::::=

Gion (G)(2:00~

""' Klft11· PIG. 4 d.._ chool
.... Gun Cablnlll 1, I, &amp; tO :!::=--~----­

-

_.., -~
lor . IIIII
T....,
l30Wlllo

Employment Services

43 Farms tor Rent

11

Poolonlcr ,..., 30U71-1104.

HelpWinled

gun. ...., mon- ae a -... W I - ;
$45,' llod ..._
as. - - aiding: • • •. ftbor
81• ae a 111na tromo ..._ Oaod iigt~~-~L~tt~4~-~·~·~L~=
ooiOOIIon of ......_ OOIIIoO, .!
·

I

Serv1ccs

::.!"~ 'ir""-iF"oot.: ~ =.,~:

=r-=~~

~~""rOO:~
;;:;~ oM~IIc now, ..
Goo
Atrl50;
FOIIIId
S7S to ..110:, Woll

run-·

m.

:.:,::=..;.::rJII::;I::,•~---llollcMn Furnllure: Ouollty

Hung BothrOOm Sinko, now,'tto
a-nt• . on
ond Carpol, II ocllo ...-1 ~ ~ II tLGO

_~~, . (30 day
-oyllllngl Wo

Fum•'"

on ony oy.- ., · - Wo ~,..,=,-=l.;.IIM-441';.;.,.;.;.;.,.;.'~~~~,;.;4.:;t.___

,.,.lr
111J typo ill _...__
W.don,cho!Prout.iroonlnc

,. lor

anr

l - I o n ollo&amp;il

-

_, olio 11 N1NT PUIS,

--tty.=

Mglolrotlon

\t - t o - -

=~.·.::~~=
,_10.
Pu..-

~ lullo, 114-

ond -

•·

In lanllh "'"" ••lillna
Clhor brondo. collo,
oppllonco _1.._

,

'

·t::.l6.'1) AND...

-p.

1

:4:·~n!':. dims:.""=· &amp;::· ~-~---~~·~·~~~·
~i;i;· _._~,
~

llpollo, ...,

Tr an sportat 1011

-

Olio ,

~.
-I '
'Y ot .. _ tccl
ng.

wolll cconplolod ::.mt.oz.- ond _..too,
-

Autos for Slife

- -·

'

· -HAVE·YOU GOT
ANY JUICY .OSSIP
·FER ME, ELVINEY?.

rAAkup,

....

:
,.,..,, '!'""ft!!,
•ooncrelo -wwk,•:

1

1112-2112.

••nt.

Plumbing &amp;
Hilling
Coflor"• Plumbing
·

ondHMIInt

83

· Excavating

.

,.

I

I

...

14x70, lbr, 211111

....

. 11:00
. ·. ~ b~row .l

·.·
,

lcllulz ....... hoino.
.Ma'"l1 IIIia - , ""'"''" ·

,how to IChleW your

Reclno. ~

·Old lntereell will be dl..,.ded In deter·
ence to ,.. .ones In llle yew ahead.

Tltlswlllgreatlyenhanoeyour~bll·
ll'&lt;CI a bocl •you won't be l

- . _ M trolnlng. Call 114-'NI•

ant -1::10 p.m.

.... -

.............
...
.._.
_
,_
......
_,.
waffoillll-w F II larCIIIel

ob~

YounG Cocklllolo, rwdy to 10o ~~-4_244
,.,. ...... ILT oc. lt4o
____________

today: ,

Whit makee IUCCIII probable Wlll .be
your ability to 11M t'-ltlrtbutel. ,
iJIIRA fleilt 23-0ct. »l P.l- you are

.,

.-

...

pable Of produotng Cllllrable ,_Ill,
the unwortcablel: : The importMithlng 11 to 11e them rnto
11-.lPro]ecll or l ectlon 11 early u poeelble.. . ,
: ·
~~g~~g~~~lnltlate
or i· ICOIII'IO COol. 14 Now. II) .Y011r 1ft.
thtn ...,_ , lllinCII tor uncovertnglllddln !nfOrrita.

.

=belen

.

'

(I)

·

ae C«=-ely
...... r1811on Willi ll!nl1h
Tonlglll

• • a Ill~
m~- Ail l'arum
., ·~t..t~

. ''

I !f.*"

yOu'W

-

lltrltng III)'INI'Il , __

·'

Nlglll Mel II C!01e1Md wllll 1
lupposed. vOOdoo delth

. ·.. · lcuroel:._tr;..~:

oommuntaatufloDIIt.tJ.YOII.......,Sbe
_
able to..., your ...., to s&lt;
with:
any._. or pocwoiUIIcM you a--.
11:50(J) MOVIII·Ciunl 01 The
TAUIIUI'(Apll.
J II)
Knoulld~ .· 11:00
·, ClliiOVII:
nm•erlllldCIIIIMICike
(2:00)
you·..•-llly · 1XI eel
Dill be utili*
(2:00)

...

I== '

l'rutii'J~
~

•

...

..

;~

'

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~"

-

f. .

:

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

5123

w.-.. :

•I

AXYDLBAAXR
J1L_ONGFELLOW

i.

One letter stands (Or anohr. In tiU sample A II Uled ::::.
. for the three. L'i, X for 'the two O's, etc. Sinlle letten, ..,
apoatrophes, the length.nd fortllltlon ol the words are all .
,...
hints. Each day the code let.ten are different.

caYnoQucm

·

Cll Late .

T

· Y

'"

I

· 11:30·~ . . . . . Oicar-o
'
(J) lp a ttCo-

Focua on I tton othlrs-*lllkoto hldllrom you . toyound•nt guttiiiiii!Mtor.t._
on lhOM \ Ia ratw remartcable today. Frllndl w1111 ·;your ,.... ......., • • Find waya to 111111'
• bro' roeiQ notlllng can be gained lly p11rtng . yGIII' thought~ Into pnlllt.
·
• . •
Allro-Gi!BP.h M8tcl&gt;- , coy.
,
.

W ••
8.....,.

4 Pilcher.
, i
D._ILYCRY IOWUinl 1 ES · H-'•'"-lo -'"It

TVevangetlsllln ,unholywar.

. ~:vellllnwortclrll can beflntllllecllll
your tllllfllctlon. f:tnllll whet

•o •til

.Kinll

M
.
rs.

· SteriO.

(ltiiiNIII1-Aplll111 Your .,..,
.,-tlytonnulltJngareaoundtndC.· . . . ~today .. your 1111t11r..,

Coati ....... olD North
Put=
~-~

·. 191 z_estl.._

l&lt;lng

-

• llJ AfMftlo HIIR .
, 0 Ma,.rto,.
. 0 Mlllnl VIce Crocken,
Tutibe Caught be!WMMIVII

'
.'
clattl .wll rwcognlle yGIII' helllllw!Mtc. .
YlftGO(Aul-23-lepi.:DIYoupoaeoca PIICU(M.IOMIOUO)You',.now
the llllrl'- and -- .ary know-' n a cyctewhere-11 tlllnglon Wlllc:li ·

-

2103.

,

. maker can help you to understand what SAGmAJUus (Nov. aa-o.c; 21) You "
--;--...;._---, to do tom
. ake the retatlonshlp work. •m"'ht '~ your P&lt;*tlon today,... ,
,...
'Mall $2 to · Malehmaker, P.O. Box ,,g;'dtngaQec;lalonyO..tookalolofllme .
,11428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
working lhrough, ~M you will""
CE
· CANCER (Juno 21-JuiJ 221 TOday you altemattv. you prevtou&amp;ly overtookec!aERNI
., mlght ·flnd yourlllf In thl middle ot a ' C~ORN tJ)ec. ....,_, 1t) MUCh
BEDE OSOL.· . hotly contested, competitive develop. can be accornpllshed today, provldld
ment. Don't frat, IHic••• your,abllltlao · you de'lote yQK oil- tnd energlel t~
to ~tr~lze will be •bellerthan your ' · praetleel llllgnmenll. Tllll coufd be
opponent 1.
., 0neol ·- . . ClaylcWhen you won't"1.110 (oluiJ
221 lnvol....m.nts ,' ally down tlmt for 1r1W10U1 pursutt1. ·.,
with cl- frlond1 will haye an uplifting, AGWRIUI (.lift. 10M. 111 l!wry~
affect on yOII' outlook today. Thay ·II!I"'I.VOUdotoclaywtllbe118Mpedwlth·
mtghl even be able to enc:ourage:yC!U to ~ .,.,_.. Imprint OWing to your
. undlrtake -'hlng you've been lilnlqQI lllCI tn.10VIIM IOIJCII. A-.

a -. . '•

...
,,.......111
c-mpo
- ......
· Ia--. N...i
. .h ....,..tmeril.... your . . .

,

afraid to leck!J.

" ' - or on ntoo

.·· OK

12 Tempo

..13

-

;

. , ··

:13--

- --.lol In

shape

'

S
.
truaale

•• a ~ho~#a!'llnnlnO.
2
.............
~, ·fM-

-

A,CROSS
51ncl~de
1 Au nature! 8 Allar
5 Jewelry
constel·
lerm
lalion ·
10 Fre!lhly
7 Roster
11 Cig!lr ' · .8 Celebes

·
.. '

·'

.-

· ............ 111100. 114446-1114.

llor oo -

··

'

•.

· ~

K~

~ONIN'II

ctalme :.

·-· '

1171

:;

'··

Fourth IIIII Plno

Oolllpolla Dlllo
114-4411UI'
'

'

,.._:'r.!:. · ' · ·

&lt; BACK TO
T:H'DADBURN
' WASHIN' AN'

I WAS HOPIN'
.YOU HAD "SOME
· FER ME

a FI1ence. '•

=~·~

HouM tor .... In 1•1111aput. 2
~ I ~ 00111 1 bllth, ~ fuM
. . . aut •
n6oi ..........

club to dummy's 10. (U Eut bad oaly
two clubl, It was odda-olt that the~
would be with West.) Whea that woi!
the trick, dec1arer bad the reR. .
Well·pla:yed, but do you .--nl!,lr
. the. opeaiDg remark about attenu111!111? U West coven tbe 11pade _ .
with tbe 10, declarer bas to wiD tile
trick 1D dummy. He li tbeD ID ~
Wl'OIII b8ad •od can no loDger play~
clublto take all lour trlcb.
.

1

'·

Crwii .Rd. Parte. · ~ ·
~. dollvooy. 114-:.

eiHtnca~, pi~

. .-

..,...,+.,.....-1-

:

DH HQNIHUI.

Ou~

71.

:l· .

~t\"J.o;~Im=t~=~ ·
Joe-.
••VM ..,.,,.
o.vta

•Ans

...· '

==-=---==-==+-- *-ZSII
wv .
Dlllo 114-441 2484. •

IIIIo oorvlco. Dolbolt - · · An, Plo
•· 104l*ds.-•· -loncoo, Porto ond :~'~~:.:=.0::14=·:.._;_,____ 30 ocrw mlud lloJ' RI.IIO, Vln·
,_.,, -Corner or Rend and
ton.l14 tU ltll.
.
Pon:h St. In K.onougo, Dhlo. 114- MINT PLUS. 2ft on
+II-'N'I3.
ooloctod 1ntor1or ond olllorlcr I ocrw lloJ' to bo cut, 304-882·
CcuiiiJ Appllo- InC. 0ooc1 =a':~ ":'oo"d~ ~~ :,2401.~=--.-----.-,...,.-::-:::UOod opplloncoo, T.V. .._._ 0p0n
Avo Polnl til1,
ooU oftor 7:00

+JH

•u .

..,.,
. Arthur's
. (Indulge)
........
'-10
.... .
.Yesterday's Anawer
CD lex, Tille And"'T- ··.·. '
·, reJ!OSe
15 Hebrew
l!l Amertcen PlllrtoouM
14 Wroth
lyre'
Denizen~ of Broadway
·•
.l .. F II
•v a
17 Caulton 25 English
. 35"British .
lll"!&amp;r.8t Mi\1:a restaurant •
for 8 .blowout. 1:30J.2
· .
· behind·
18 Actress . river
composer
91.... 0
![!:'To ,
17Th ' l
.
.
.,
Murdet A MIIIIQiieiN'.CU. · ·'·
' .
esp an ' Jack~ 28 Graned
38 Break
.'
Movie Sllecllll (2:00l.I:J ,
, · 1 : 19 Dried up ~0 Dutch
(her.)
bread
"
.
0"'-'r King 1,1ve1 . •
. 21 Bec!Jarm .. cheese '28 Veloclly
38 Fellow
\?:'::;,::~Reck~
23 Finished ' 22 Mottwtr 30 French clly 40 Furious
.'
• ~~~~ville Now
-·
..271Aeglster
(Fr.).
32 Subatanllal 42 Colton9:30 • C2J a Niuht ~
.
28 Plund~r 24 Prelude 3A GYI'ate
43 Have lunch .. ·
Chrjstine is taken· by aurwse
29 Dlkdi.~, ,,
·whenTonypo_!)allle • ·
·
·,,,,e.g.• ' .,,·,,
question. (R) g ·
:.
10:00 CJl 100 Club Wltii .Pil: , .
30 Jeremiad ·
.ll.......:on
·
31 ExtJde ·
· • • •(I) Twtn,.....
33 Ceddoan
:fn.~man and Cooper·a··
invastigatiqn reaches a
Indian
lirrttylng cqnc~uaion. g ·
34. Lamenta~(I)
37 EKcluslve
li'.:..~New~~,...
39 CNet · I
D News ·
41 Immense
' '
10:05 ~" MOVII!: Saddle The Wind
44 fnsllnctfve ·, I--I-.:.4-4--1(1:4S)
,
· .
45 SeiE!(:tlon .
' 111-.30 Dill e Dear John John'1
1
...
••
\,
blind date announcn IIlii
r~
;·. .
llhlls movlilJI In with him. (R)
Verdi:
~
For Denoaao.ay
48 Penrii\EJSS
Patrick Wa~ upk)m the '
47 Confined
corn.ctl!ln belwllll wealth
DOWN ·
1nc1 dlmocraey. a
\
1
s~'e
(!) Ttytng Tlmee MOiling day/
brings helptaa toyatwta tor
2 Wom n's
.. optlmlllic dlvoraoe. g ,_
n'ame
..
.,
· •Qllllennr "• 8llow
3·Siaugliter L...L.....I...;...I-.L.• •Crook l Chel8
,\

H 1( I Til-( 10 MAic:E
A,N!:W FRIEND ~y

~-~··~·~··.-:~~;:1~;;: llnfl.
~~~,:J ~~ .
:ti""""
Ouotlor 1- . ::=:":-c:::-~
· .,..---.,.-:-• - - lion.. TV ~ opoolot.!:.:'J ·
,;;;;;;;;.;;;ll';;;cU;;;:'.;.IM::.;;;311;.;.,.;.111;;.;;.

Hi_..
,.,.,_._
....
·HayloG-In
ao. ID $10. MINT
PUll, Jocll· 84
••

·

Rotitn. ~~
a. . . · . ·
G•
&lt;llla~ra . · . ;

IN. IAcol refeNncM tum-.
FIM 1111...... Colt cot•~ 1

-

.

Ill On l1aoe , ..

..... - ·

·

.

·

tella.sam abo,UI her
JIIIIIIOnate evening with

._:EEiioa._. ·

SOOTH

·

e:oo•(Jl a cne.a'Rebecca

----773-1550.
-

Rl Q ·

..

by THOMAS J051EPH

prdqect tq lhi .Spic:e , , .

c.n•.

•.

~~~~~~~~~

old, .,.,

their

9i •
iy&lt;tner Sydney's
~':=:. ~r of being

- .. - - . - - 1 3 0 ,., .... --- .
Md up lo $15.• dly1 •me a ==.a::,::~ ~ twkJe,
- h with - c u o d - 3 mi.
·Home
81
out
lutowlllo
Rd. Doon
A.ll.lo
- : tld'
._
I P.ll.
lion, lllru
llol. Ic:.n
..,.., ,.,
bullcl,...
,.., a adon ... wllh
ImprOvements
4414322.
bicwn lrlm: Call oftoor lp.m. on
Auto. W.•hetro. llocL 0 ~,., • ht t a.~
Llfnouain oowt • calvee of • · AU. typee of rMIOIWY, brick.~ ,. . .

IIIia
Fu,_

CROSSWORD
·
' . .
.
.

c

~.~.~i:'.~:-&amp;,%1f:ke

,,

"'· ond 111. Ouoon- S2111

-n-·

:

"8:30WMefOtL•qu8aM.bal

or

+Hn

..

8:05 (I) MOVIE: Dar 01 TJie Evil .

bcuprlngo lull or lwln '"- 11rm ,

••

+itQ72
jumpeil to 'tbree DD-triuilp.
Al\boullt this wu bUll-ID-a~ . ·
viiiDerable: Neither
bidding. 111 ,atte!llpl at more
•
Dealer: West
cation would bave NUlled
tile
s...a
. . . Nortll Baal
same li!IJI ecia~' .
p- ••
,.
.,, West led the lieart ~and declllmJNT
Allpo.
pla)'W ·Iow frOQI ~y;.winDia( tile
.ace: Dec:larer Jed'aapade ·to dummy's
Opening lead: " J.
klag and it spade bac:lt to 1111 )lid, not·
lilgUie
East's· 8-ttbeu beart
Westnlnf,
won ' - - - : - - - - - - , - - - - the ace..fall
Westo1continued

· The er.ckdowtt"IR\ (2:00)

C

-. .K7U
• KQJ 101

.JIOU

the .

a:!,

,... ohol,. 1211to SJII. O.u
&amp;

For-OIRo
lol
- i y.• -....bolf&gt;. t l!ilo
110m
114-1112·
znt. 241,

;o +A IOU

and declare&lt; pf4yed low from dummy.
Seaver household. (R)
. (It was quite plausible that~ mlgltt
. t;l) Cll AIDS~ IDS
have started with·oolY. three bearts to
~ljents are forced to find .• : the l&lt;ing.) Wes.t carried. oo wltb tbe
care at ~
- -city pUblic
heart 10, East · wiulling 1111 IIIDC.and
' hosplllle.
··
·
••
dJa
. - ·• _
,,. N"""
c~slling. his ·seven u SQuib ...rew . ·
""' .,....
monds. Next came· the diamond klag
. · _Comedy•'"'·ll!looPeo\11
. E surs
IV
to South's ace. By thla lime declarer,
· ~Qll
F : ..!*""~
'hating n!ad East for live diAmoildl
. · (2:00)
. or · ~ 1 1
and four be8rts, knew be would bave
· O ·PrtmeNewo
;.
tci do some nimble steppiD1to take tbe
.IIJ Mulder, liM Wrote One . : rest. So. he led tbe seven of apaclel.
Wh~e Rosa, Of Death
.
When West played low, declarer
aIll Conversation
With Dlnato . . dueked In dummy and !ben played a
MOVIE: ~ Willi 4: ·

ch..,. ,-

...

EAST

WI!ST

•"I

. "j

irlg, So~tll

1

M~Cll
•
1111
• Confu&amp;lon and P4~ie g~

....

+AIU

· 'l':lortl!'sverymlaliD!lllloectab'opeD-

llallbell .
orowt
' · .P IInl

~

•Qu
: .
. . 52 .

c.u.e

\ ·~m.t:\.2o..:

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sctoo ond
1oom
hillel ..... ToiiiH IIO'ond up
lo ..21. H I - - N10 to
11115. lleciiRIN a21 to t37S.
. Laotpo
1o 1121. Dlnlll"
ond up tc MIS. Wood table

blbr- tttO

Night Court

NORI'II

+KQH·

This deal ~d
~the'*'
.of us to do !1ilme soul-rcbln&amp; aiJoat
'our attebtl~ at.tlle tallle. Afllr ..
Eaat's ' logleal · ~ owteall o1

g

'll'n·

.,

C'·lt. .

'

·By. Ja~
Jae.by
.

Myllerle8nuestoA.IIwomarchan,f~r "·r'
conti
~ ••

Gooda

1141 up to

"

7:35(J) 88ntord w 'Son
8:00 ()) MOVIE: O. . . .e (2:00)
r
• C2J Ql llniiCII..cl

'

WAS' Wlfl/.i IT WA$

Household

"ot

,M~A,!Bl_.JoOpllrdyl

WI

·0 Crosaftce

. JuT .MOJT 0 fTifAT

f ,J'In Suprl•r',
&amp; L:vr·stock
------- --

4211.

g

•

.

· · att~ntion

. ,

e (J) Mama'al'~

~ ANSWIII

.··.'Paying

.

• • Entetta'-'!Tontaht

Homo·Spoooln OoUipolo Top Coah pold, 014 1um11...
a l t f - Dlolrlct. 114 4113117 '
"do, ......._
. - · ""'""' ... IN. ap.lll ......
Addtoan • - ,...,......., lop, or
-

-

'·'·

7:05 (J) .Jetrersonl '
. ·.' 7:30. C2J Family Ftioid
W HOllie Run Der

---- ----- ··· .-

/,, BRIDGE ·

ai Muak: Row VIdeO .
. .0 A - And Collellci ' .

.._
'

Tillar..

.

~--:-:1

bolow.

. Mayhem- Wound- Hiker- Squash - SHIN~S
My
friend C41'18 back frQm the west coast with this ,·
1
cute bumper.slicker on her car... •smog Makes Haze
· While The Sun SHINES."

assigned to traCk down a
g~ of udlatiC .tlllevH.

.....
""""' 1111. .. ...,
..
~Ill......_, CUII•I••
II 11 a"Ill. C.tllkwa,.:: clii.,

Ilia l

..--~

;

UNSCRAM81.! ·AIOY! lEITUS
TO GfT ANSWU

·-·

·

~~,_Court Q

I

.

0 M'-mfVIce Croc:ketl.ls'

: . = =r--

--..a,_
Priolellfl-1117

Newlltout

I

•rr

/

:

~

I' I* .Is r I' .r I
I I I I I I -1

I

P,RINT "1\JMIUEQ UTTERS IN
IHESf SQUAllS
'· ·

'6

c - AHilt

0

'

•
·

you d...lop ·from 11op No.

I

'

llacNell ......, . ,,

0

.t..
'~"~:;
IIZ_.,_Dttvelld.on

53

48 Space for Rent

.• (I)

i:loQ.

... 1M. Rt. 141. • ""-1114 ... 1111
llnplng rooma with coaldng. P.M.
A*t .......... Ait ltupe oil IlL ~ - . . . , . 114- ,._, _, .... ,, h'r Plllnl8t
...........
Col ••• a:ao p.111., _.,.,..

PubUcSale

• •

ue. - . • -

tmo - l p.m.

·

.. •

(l) (f)

t1117 Harter D o -

L

eCJlPM,......
.\.
lportaCellllr . . ' . .
(J)

.

t

LUTMUT.
1e· Complo"' ,,,. chuckl• quolod
1
.
I
I'
11
-1....JL...,..l-J..,....1....J
. by fillift11 in lha milling -ds

OHa,....'fn ..

.

'

Is

. 1:35 (J) Andy Ortlfith
. 7:00 li/lcarecrow ~ Mrs. King

lollinG

-

I

My boss once related this
bll of wiedom, "When you aim
t:, · fo( perfection, you usually dis.---- - - - - - . cover It Is a moving-·-."

...

' i~-;,=~.g
i
Ill Tll-'1 CCJI!I.-nY

Motorcycles
till 7BO 74

(

.

0 A F 0 L,

a&gt; 110c1y Eteclltcr

fl!c"'·

I' I' I. 12 I
;........!1

• • • (I)MC,.....g

till Ford luH 11M - - . n,2011 mllol,~
Call.
aft•lp.nt. 114 ••• 44•. '

2110.

=:::..-..:::~ J .:::::• l·llll--·'-illh-l-l-il_ll_4_11_1_-_.

aa

11

Musical

S1

TOS\1~

PRATEC

GI:THE

.OIW-Men

NOTT060

Wll~had~
Vlln fw porte toao.

Avo,

WOtdl .

.. 1---rl:...:,...1,::....r:-1

,. IIJ.WCiflel Toelllr
. G Ct.Ma In Charge
. t.-G6 (J) levelly HIIIIMihl

~roplo

lha·
boo

I
I
I• I I I I Ic:;

(J) ' 1111

•

·•De
...... I
(J) lnelde The 'POA Tour
_QRn... R......-g
11J Anc1r ClrHfitl\

SECONDS

I DECIDep

c=r&amp;AtJ:~·:..~.....
ond

I

.I

TOO~ THREE

fumllhld b 1rNm .,.,...
.... ... ...... , '1. Prtvltl

111-

'low 10 fot111 four

.

g

a 'It

• (Jl • •

VES, IT •

...lol, t ~ 7111 """""· boitlpollo,
11....... ....... 7p.m.
'

UtPolcl, 'Ill 0 'II 1111 111 t11 1111.

23 •

(I) llegnoul High Arthur
· developa a crush dn Caitlin.

1111-

~--

-- •....,... .......,._lor

' Middleport

IIDCa

.

t

- · · a .....,..,

pomerOy, .;,

1:00 ~
HAnlcattle -

.::r.~~.!.·.:
,_

..

.Roar._
........ cf
four ocrclnblod words

EVE NINO

'

••a.

NlooolyfWnlolood-lol Clly, ca. ooll llo, U _,..,

a VIcinity

WED., MAY

II'MII

•olnlll-

Pt.P~

•

r--__,.,,~_..,

- ":. :;;M"·ooo-

p,JIIO,

. . . Col hi

F1nanc1al

....1\Qi:t.Wf'l.i...J..;u

-.-lar1or2

rooM

35 "Loltlo

ft.lrniiiMd.

'lily

WJ!M;U.,

- - . AC, PI, P8, AILfll
. . . , - . ...... pollll,law

IIAUTFIIL APAIITIIINT1I 1:1
·IIJDGIT PRICU AT ,.,ION
UToii'IU;
. · u
Ul •. n'lun ,...
flltJmo;
1o ohoo
,...._
Callt14- 4tl 1111.
IOH.I

C'Oa··

-·----

REWARD: '-tho -.n of ttH

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 19

Television
. Viewing .'

,..! TRO;;r '«X&gt;

72 Truckl for Sale

KIT •N' CARL\'LEII by~ Wrlpt

Aplltment
• for Rent

llnlhol Ollor, _ , .. ,...,

-~: -llooltond

.

Wednesday. May 23. 1990

Ohio

Pom.oy-Midtlap_ort. Ohio

5·13

.. IXNNXJ
'

·1N

v·v. .·
'

IXNNXJ

"

NXLV
IN V V

BVU
BVU

DSVV.-XNU

AD

AD

JAN N

'

.I ANN

,,

VVZNAKS

..
'

p

s c wv

...•

, Ywt-d119'e Ca;pto,tlolel SPICE A DISH WITH

LOVE AND IT PLEASES EVERY Pt\LATE. - LATIN
PROVERB

'-.

"

�..

.•

Page-20-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 23, 1990

IY--Middlitport, Ohio

REG. SJ.99
.,

.Dodgers

RUFFLES
'

Cubs, 4-3

Super Lotto \
.
11-13-21-22'-3 I ·34

..

8 AM-10 PM

Vol.40, No.211
Copyrighted 1980

I

By BOB WEBSTER
UPI Bushtess Writer .
WASHINGTON- The nation's
economy grew at a sluggish.
ariilual rate of 1.3 percent, or
$13.9 billion, during the first
quarter .and Inflation topped a
9-year high at 6.7 percent, the
Commerce Department reported
Thursday.
The department's report is
preliminary and reflects a
downward revision of0.8 percent
from last month's estimates of
gross national product growth
and an0.2 percent Increase In the
price Index. Tne lin!ll report is
due next month. ·
'
During the fourth quarter,
GNP grew at an annual rateofl.l
percent, or $11 .2 biiUon.
.
The GNP fixed-weight price

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USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

s.

Ru·mp .Roast •••••••L:..

DIET RITE

9
7
1

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$ 69 R. C. COLA
2 LITER BOTTLES
., Beef Steak·...... ~•••• 2

. BUCKET CUBED
'

. .

.HOMEMADE • .

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Sandw1ch Spread ••• ~~.••
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CUBED

79&lt;

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99 .

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ARMOUR

LB.

LEG QUARTERS

5 ()Z. CAN

Chicken
49&lt;
Chicken •ti·~:~~·:;;)249
SUPERIOR
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.oz.
Baeon •••••••••••••••••••• 99&lt;
LB.

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mim1't!ornman~er; ~iSli'l&lt;!! illlm·

DUNCAN HINES

mander, county commander and
post commander. He is a veteran
of the U.S. Marine Corps and was
on active duty during the Korean
War.

'

MIXES

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CAKE

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18-18.5

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PLASTIC GALLON

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DOZEN

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CHICKEN··
THIGHS

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BIBB

CAMPBELL'S , ·

DOMINO SUGAR·

TOMATO SOUP .
ID.75 OZ.

3·1$1

5ll.
lAG ·

$169

BATH TOWEL
or

oz.
. 136
-,

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BATH
SHEET
Onlr at Powlll'sS..W
,1IGood
__________
_ Yalu
Good Thru Sat. 111ar 26, 19,90

G..,1 Only At Powlll'1 5441• Yalu
GOIII Sun.. Illy 20 tiii'U Sat, Mlly 26

Good Ollly At Pow···· S.,. VU,
Good Sun. Mtty 20 tin S.t., May 26

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crirrie and drugs on "the mls·
guided social policies of the
1960s" and on ''family breakdown" caused by the collapse of
family values.
"We have got to get even
tougher on crime and dru'gs,"
said the vice president. "We need
tough new Jaws," he added,
citing the president's crime bill
now In the Senate.
"Let's resolve to spend a little
more time worrying about the
rights of the victim and a little
less time worrying about the
rights of the criminal."
On other matters, Quayle said:
-It is difficult to balance the

eD\1ronmental concerns and the
economiC needs in an air polJU·
lion control bill, but the admlnls·
tratlon's Senate·passed bill is
"as good as we can do."
,-The fact that Taiwan has
urged the United States to
upgrade Its trading status with
mainland China Is a point in
favor when President Bush decides that issue later this week.

Former Meigs County resident ·

Cooke to head Australian division

lB..

0 OFF

BurUngham Services
Memorial day services wUJ be
held at -the Burlingham Church
Monday at 1: 30 p.m.
'The honor guard from Fenney Bennett Post 182, Middleport w111
be . joined by the youth of the
Burlingham camp of the Modern
Woodm!ln of America for the
cemetery service.
Guest speaker will be Madelan
Poston, a former prisoner of the
Japanese during World War Il at
th~; Sh···Th~&gt;~~s :u.nJ~~r$1!¥ a~ ·
Internment Camp In ManU!'.
Music will be provided by
Denver Rice, Frank O'Brien.
Laura Guthrie, and Floyd and
Colleen Brlckles.

'

'2' I $1' BANQUET-28-32 oz.
Lot sa Rop ••:.'!~.... · · · Family Entrees •••• $14 9 ·.~: -PO-W--E·-LL'-;~~~;~;
'

declln!! of $~4.6 billion in the
fourth quarter. Industries In·
valved in !rade and the manufac·
turing of non,durable goods also
·saw slimmer profits during the
quarter.
.
Financial companies posted a
profit gain of $7.5 i)illlon in the
quarter after profits slipped $4.3
billion In the previous quarter.
Profits also Increased In the
durable manufacturing, trans·
. portatlon, public utllltles and ·
non· manufacturing industries. .
Real · pers11nal consumption
spending increased $15.9 billion
during the quarter, compared
with a gain of $3.6 billion In 'the
previous quarter. Purchases of
durable goods, those blg·tlcket
Items intended to last three or
,more years, increased $15.3

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Tom Cooke. foriJler Meigs
County resident and son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Cooke of
Middleport, has been named
Director and General Manager
of the Australian subsidiary of
Lallier Business Systems World·
wide. Inc., formerly HarriS/3M
Company.
Lanier Worldwide globally
markets, sells and services a
sophisticated line of office equipment and business communica·
lion products including copying
svstems, fa~slmlle units, laser
ridnters, dictating equipment,
document processing systems
and telephone systems. Annual
revenues exceed $1 billion and
theyoperateoutofl,600locat!ons
to service customers In more
tb4n 50 countries worldwide.
.Cooke, a graduate of Meigs
School and Ohio Unlvetslty,
ted his career In 1911) as a
es representative In Daytona
Beach, Florida. Since that time
he has held. positions
In corporate
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sales training, sates manage- Trent, will be relocating from the
ment, District Manager In both Chicago area In July to Sydney,
Milwaukee and Chicago and Australia.
Region Manager in boftl Detroit
at\d Chicago.
For the last three years he has
been the Midwest R,eglon Man·
ager for Copying Products b~sed
In ChiCago with responsibility for
sales, technical support, and
administratiOn for 12 midwestern and western states with key
dlstrlbu lion centers In Pitts•
burgh, Detroit, Chicago, and
'Denver. · ·
·
·
In this new assignment, Cooke
will report to the Intercontlnen·
ta1 Division and have responslbll· ·
ity lor all direct product sales
di.9trlbut1on, dealer distribution,
direct and dealer techniCal sup.
port services. maJUllement In·
formation systems, marketing,
administration, and cu1tomer
support services.
He and his wife, Beverly
(formerly Beverly Brainard of
Bridgeport, Conn.) and son,
TOM COOKE

A Muhimedlo Inc. NOWIPIIPOf

rll"St

quarter ·

billion after slipping $16.1 bill\on falUng $7.1 billion In the fourth
in 'the first quarter.
quarter. Investments in non·
About two-thirds of the first· re21dentlal buildings gained $1.4
quarier gain came from In· blllion after slipping by $100
creased motor vehicle sales, the million In the previous quarter.
department said.
Residential fixed Investments
Purchases of non-durable Increased $4.8 billion after dec·
goods decreased $7.1 billion after lining $500 million.
Increasing a slight $300 million In
Purchases by the federal gothe previous quarter.
vernment of goods and services
Services expenditures In· Increased $1.9 billion after fa!Ung
creased $7.8 billion in the first $2.8 billion. National defense
quarter compared with a gain of purchases slipped $600 million
$19.3 billion In the fourth quarter. compared with a decrease of $4.4
Home heating expenses slipped billion In tile previous quarter.
$13.1 billion after gaining $8 Non-defense-related purchases
bUlion In the fourth quarter.
Increased by$2 .3 billion from an
Jn other components qf . the Increase of S1.7 billion.
GN.P, real non-residential fixed , Sales during the quarter in·
Investments increased by $8 · creased 4.1 percent, or $42
b!Uion In the first
after billion, after gaining 1.1 percent,
or $10.9 billion. in the fourth

quarter. Business Inventories
took away $28.1 bllllon from the
first-quarter change In GNP
after adding S300 million In the ·
fourth quarter.
During the quarter. businesses
reduced Inventories by $5.9 billion alter increasing their stockpiles by $22 .2 billion worth of
goods In the fourth quarter.
Gross domestic purchases, the
nation's purchases of goods and
services, gained 0.7 percent, or$7
billion, in the first quarter after
Increasing 0.1 percent, or $1.4
billion in the fourth quarter.
On the trade front, the nation
imported $40.4 billion more than ··
it exported ... during the first
quarter, an lmpr?vement from
the fourth quarter s Imbalance of
$47 .2 billion.

Contract hearing
scheduled May 30
by commissioners
hearing to renew a contract
permitting brine application by
J.D. Drilling was set for May 30
at 1 p.m. durtng Wednesday's
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners.
Other matters Included: ·

' A

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'AlOMA!' ~~JR;L

Weather ·

heads back
· I•dent' s position
· • to nornuil
Q.uayle defends pres

CANTON, Ohio iUPI) - Vice believes.there will be a $90 billion
President Dan Quayle.said Wed· natural growth In revenues with·
nesday that the-federal govern· out a tax rate Increase.
ment Is spending enough money
He S!lld that although m111tary
on · education, and that any spending reductions will head the
''peace dividend ' ' should be used list In helping , balance the
to ·keep the national defense budget, "the president continues
strong and balance the budget. · to support an adequate Invest·Meeting with reporters follow· ment in national defense."
"Let us not forget that We have
lng a visit to a high-tech steel
factory. Quayle defended Pres!·. peace today because we have
dent Bush's position to negotiate Invested in national security," he
a budget settlement without any said.'
"I think funding in education Is
pre-condition that higher taxes
will or will not he part of the adequate," said Quayle. "We're
solution.
·
spending more money for educaLater, addressing a Republl· tion at the federal level than
can fund -raising dinner, Quayle we've spent in our entire
declared: ."The dividend we've history."·
earned from our national secur- · The vice president told an
ity is peace itself." lie said .estimated 400 Republicans at the
research on the Stmtegic De· $250-a-plate dlnnt;"r that quality
tense Initiative should be con· education, choice, accountability
tlnued because "a 'strong Arner· and parental Involvement are at
least as Important as the amount
ica is a safe America."
of
money spent. 1
The vice president was asked
about a possible tax hike In view
Quayle won applause from the
of the fact that the projected cost audience when be called lor
of the savings and Joan bailout "tough new laws" against
'
plan has been raised to $130 criminals .
blllion next year. Quayle. said he
He blamed the Increase in

69&lt;
lettuce ................ 2/Sl

He also serves as a trustee of
the A!Jierican Legion Buckeye
Boys State and acts as the acting
secretary of date In the election
of state officers.
Joe Struble w111 serve as
master of ceremonies and Jerry
Rought will serve as parade
marshal.
At 11 a.m. members of the post
will be at Sacred Heart Ceme·
teryi 11:30a.m. at RockSprings;
at 1 p.m. at Memory Gardens; at
1:30 p.m .• at .cliester•Ceroeter~ ' .
at 3 p.m. at Hemlock GT&lt;l\ie
Cemetery and at 41p.m. at Wells
Cemetery.
·
1)..11 persons and groups are
invited to take pari in the parade.

· · Drew Webster·Post 39, Ameri·
can Legion wlil open its Memorial Day services beginning with a
parade at 9 a.m. on Monday.
Memorial services wlil be held
at 16 a .m. on the parking lot in
Pomeroy.
Guest speaker at Pomeroy and
Chester services w111 be Thomas
L. Gabel, past · national vice
commander of New Knoxville.
Gabel is a member of· Washing·
ton Post 444, New Knoxville.
':f?.abetr~~~ 1~1!r,v~d · ·a~.:~~pan ·

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index, a . measure jot lnfl;ltiOn, .
re,acbed 6.7 percen . durtng the
first quarter, the highest reading .
since 7-,7 percent In the fourth
quarter of 1981.
During the fourth quarter, the
price Index gained 3.6 percent.
About half of the first-quarter
increase was attributed to higher
load and energy prices in Janu·
ary after December's unusually
cold weather .
,
The department also reported
a prellmln~ry $1 ,9 billion !Jt
crease i.n first-quarter corporate
profits to an annual rate,of$287.8
biUion. This Is an •Improvement
from the fourth quarter's decrease·of$9.3 billl~n.
Pr.oflts for non-financial corpo·
rations slipped $700 million in.the
quarter, an Improvement from a

Memorial.Day services to
begin with ·parade Monday

$) 99. ~ork Stttak ..... ~~.•. $269. ... VIENNA
.
Round -Steak........ . . .
SAUSAGE
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2 Sectiono, 12 Pogu 21i Cent•

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 24, 1990

GNP grows sluggish 1.3 % in

132 OZ. BOX

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Partly cloudJ loaJcbt.

ill tower :101. Partly cloudy
Friday. H11h In 708. Chance of

rain fO

RINSODETERGENT

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..P.OIIEROY, OH.

· .. _ .

..........

99&lt;

298 SECOND ST.

CHOI~E .~EEF...

....

6830

CHIPS
10 OZ. PIG.

" STO~E HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

,:

Daily Number
618
Pick-4

slip by

POTATO

...

Ohio Lottery

By United Press International
Slowly but surely, Ohio's
weather is heading back towards
normal for the month of May .
Under general~y sunny skies,
temperatures Thursday morning
were mostly in the low to mid-60s,
and were headed lor highs in the
70s - close to normal for this
time·of year.
. It will be partly cloudy Thurs,Aa)l night and Friday, with a
r Chance .of showers In the south
Friday. Lows Thursday. night
will be In the ri1id-40s to low 50s
and highs Friday will again be in
the 70s.
There's been a Jot of rain In the
Buckeye State this month- 4.79
lnch~s through Wednesday in
Cleveland, which is about 2 1h
in!:hes more than normal.
But If you think that's an
exceptionally high amount, you
have a short memory: rainfall
for the month of May i989 totaled
9.17 Inches, the highest May total
on record .
Looking ahead through Mem·
orial Day, there is a chance of
rain Saturday and Sunday, while
Monday will . see clear skies.
lilghs each day will be In the 70s
and lows in the 50s.
The drying weather pattern
will help ·Ohio's farmers, . as
outdoor work should proceed
Thursday and Friday. However,
. a developinl! storm In the Great
Plains shoUld bring some scat·
tered showers to OhiO Saturday
and Sunday.
Light dew should fom• overnight as mercuries fall
between 47 and 55. Sunshine will he
more limited Friday. and a
scattered shower Is possible late
In the day In the south.
Scattered showers should become more numerous Saturday
afternoon and linger into Suooay.
These showers will likely suspend fieldwork for about 24 hours
as scattered rain is pQsslble
throughout the day Sunday. Tbe
preclpltatlop should leave the
state tate Sunday, allowing fair
conditions to prevail Monday.
The slx-to-10-day forecast lor
Tuesday through the lollowirlg
Saturday Indicates nearnormal
temperatures and above-normal
precipitatiOn across the.state.
On the early morning weather
map, liJgb pressure extended
from the upper Great Lakes
through' Ohio to' the Atlantic
Coast.

to

-A resolutton of participation
was passed by the commiSsioners endorW!g thte economic developmeill activities of the Buck·
eye Hlils . Hocklng Valley
Regignal DeYelopment District.
The resolution states that the
commiSsioners actively support
and currently participate in the
.
activities of the district.
-A request to transfer
$1,166.09 to workers compensa·
tlon and $2,200 to engineer's

expenses from the Meigs County
liighway Department account
was approved .
-The board accepted a bid
from Boggs Pest Control in the
amount of .$740 lor termite
control in the old courthouse
building in Chester.
In other matters, 01 request
from Phil Ro.berts. County Engl·
neer,. ~ac&lt;;!epted.' (O advertise
lor bids lor various grades of
asphalt concrete for the Meigs
County Highway Department.
'Roberts reported that due lo
recent rains, dust control on
county roads has not be4!n
completed. He also said several
of the roads .are In need of
grading before dust control can
begin.

Clean air blll passes
House by 401-21 tally
WASHINGTON iUPI) -Con· smoggy cities now lace "very,
very stern inconveniences, In·
gress took another big step
eluding
such things as getting to
toward cleaner air with House
work
and
taking your car for a
passage of legislation that would
Saturday
night
drive."
halve acid rain emiSsions, limit
However,
Dlngeil
added, "the
' toxic releases from factories and
publiC
wanted
it
and
I think the
cut smog-causing pollution from
liouse
responded.
'
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cars and industry.
Jubilant environmentalists
The far-reaching clean air bill,
said
the House bill wol!ldgofar to
approved by a 401-21 vote Wed·
better
protect the ·health of
nesday night. would Impose at
Americans.
least $21 bllUon per year in
"We're having a small celebra additional pollution reduction
tion
here, •' said Melanie Griffin,
costs on a wide array of Indusspokeswoman . at the Sierra
tries, ranging from giant cbeml·
cal and steel plants to the corner · Club's Washington headquartei'S. "I •think Americans can
dry cleaner or gasoline station.
breathe easier for thiS."
While praising the bill as a
With the Senate having passed
sound prescription for improved
Its clean air blll last month, the
air quality, House leaders said It
spotlight now shifts to a Housewould infliCt economic pain and
Senate conference committee,
major lifestyle changes on
where legislative leaders wlll try
AmeriCans.
to work out differences between
"I think everyone Is going to
the two chambers.
find clean air is not free," said
Although the conference Is
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.,
expected
to be dllficult, the
prtme sponsor of the bill, who
House and Senate bills are
warned the legiSlation likely
similar In many Important rewould cost thousands of jobs and
drive up prices of many consu· ; spects and legislative leaders
hOpe to send Bush a clean air bill
.mer items .
before the fall . .
lie also said people llvlitg In

·Local news briefs
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Pomeroy Council signs ordinance

Pomeroy VIllage Council, In special sessiOn Wednesday
evening, signed an ordinance for a flood variance for
McDonald's Restaurant. The proposed location for McDonald's
Is next to Pizza Hut, on property now occupied by the old train
depot.

Deputies probe·complaint

An Illegal entry ot the Rutland Elementary School complaint
Is being Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
Accordlne to the report, scbool offiCials notified the sheriffs
office Wednesday morning they discovered someone had been
In the bulldltli durtlli the night. Some change and keys were
reported taken from a table tn·the kitchen. The keys were found
later on the roof by a custodlari. The case Is sWI under
lnvesti~ratlon.

Rutland plans Fourth celebratiOn
There will be a pie bakJna and cake decoratlna contest at tbe
·annual Rutland Fourth of J~¥y Ox Roast.
Continued on page 12

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