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:

•

Times-Sentinel

June3. 1980

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

Ag exports to fall .
Filter strips reduce erosion
COLUMBUS, OhiO ' !UPil Agricultural exjxlrts til tbe 1989losses, improve "water quality . 90billion
trade year should.fallabout$1 ,,
shOrt of last year's etaljt-

.

. 'I

MYSTERY FARM - This week's..Ji,ystery
farm, featured by the GaiDa SoU aft Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
GaiDa County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the . GaiDpoUs Daity Tribune, 1125 Third Ave.,
GalDpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a SS cub prize from the 0-lo Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, adilreu aad telepholle
number with your card or letter. No telepbone
calls will be .accepted. All contest entries should
be turned In to the newspaper office byfp.m. each
Wednesday. In CI!IU! of a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery, Next week, a Melp County
farm will be featured by the Meigs-SoU and Water
Conservation District.

Gallpolis. FFA ... _ ___.:C~{In~tin~ue~d.!!.fro~m!.!D~-1-'-----~---

I,

and Mrs. Lanny Leste~ of
Gallipolis.
During the ceremonies'the five
outstanding member . awards
were announced by advisor Tim
Massie.
Awards were presented to the
following FFA members: The
, Star (;reenhand Aw!!rd, to Jon
' Watson, son of Mr. apd Mrs. Dale
Watson of Crown City; The Star
· Chapter Farmer Award, to Jim
Baughman, son of Mr. arid Mrs.
Jim Baughman of Gallipolis;
Outstanding Vo-Ag III Award, to
Chad Pope, son of Mr. and Mrs.
f?onovan Pope; The Dekal b
Agricultural Accomplishment
Award and The Terry H. Oliver,
Jr. Outstanding Senior Award ·
was presented to Roger Evans,
son of Carolyn Evans o! GallipoUs. The,star award winners were
selected based on total points
earned during the year.
, Prior to the award ceremonil!jj
, the chapter announced the recipIent ·of this .year's Honorary
Chapter .Farm11r Degree .' Joe
Foster of Gallipolis. This degree

Is conferred upon a member or
members of the commuility who
has supported the FFA Chapter
by providing opportunities for
chapter members to learn ·and
grow as they proceed through the
local Vocational Agriculture and
·FFA programs.
This year's honoree helped In
various ways throughout the
years and most recently served
as president o! the newly formed
Gallipolis FFA Alumni

Association.
Members George Alderigl, Tlf·
fany Wetherholt and Chad Pope
presented door prizes.
Activities concluded with the
Installation of new officers:
Chad Pope, president; Jim
Baughman, vice-president; Tiffany Wether holt, secretary; Eric
Lester, treasurer; Matt Church,
reporter; Denver Garber, sentinel; and George Alderigl, stu·
dent advisor.

The ·
selection
method

.....

I

GALLIPOLIS - Do you have
cropland adjoining a stream,
creek, river or other body of
water? It so, you might wish to
_consider !be benefits of establish·
lng filter strips along these
areas.
Water runoff from cropland
may contain soli, crop nutrients,
pesticides, animal wastes, and
other organic matter. The Joss o!
nutrients and pesticides from
cropland can lower crop productivity, reduce pest control, and
Increase productiOn costs. In
addition, the water holding capacity of reservoirs Is reduced,
Increasing the risk of flooding
and reducing recreational
opportu!llties.
By establishing !liter strips of "
grass, trees, or permanent wild·
life plantings on the edges of
cropped land next to water
resources, you can:
• reduce soU erosion losses
• Improve water quality
•· provide wildlife cover
Filter strips help to reduce tiJI!
leVels of sediment, crop nutrients, pesticides and other
chemicals i11troduced Into our
surface water resources. Both
wildlife and peOple benefit as a
result of the lmpr.ilved water •
quality.
'
·
Other benefits also are realIzed. The vegetative cover lllong
the waters edge supplies Important breeding . ground for birds
and other wUdltfe, especially ·
waterfowl.
You and your family may also
benefit In many other ways, with
the passing of time, you 'II have
the opportunity to enjoy and
share the aesthetic beauty of
trees, plants and wildlife that
your eftorfs made possible, The
filter st~IP may serve as an
Important nature· "classroom"
for your chUdren and grandchildren. You may even discover a
, productive fishing hole or a qul~t
spot under a shady branch to just
be alone from time to time. In
addition, the filter strip will
serve as a constant reminder
that you're doing your part as a
good neighbor to those who live

$

. year high of $40 b!Uioa.
Dennis Henderson, agricultu·
raJ economist at OhiO Stale
University, says tbis would be ··
the fl~t downturn In exportl·.
since 1986.

downstream as well as to those
who inhabit the water and the
cover you have established.

Subml«ed by
Patty .Dyer
District Conserva&amp; IDnlst

"''

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

Why do so

LARGE SELECTION

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

~$10

~

'

495
'

New 1990 ~issan King.Cab

2.4L, 12 valva 138 HP engine,
5 speed transmission, power
steering &amp; brakes, jump seats.

speed, power

s'te~ring,

rear defrost.

Sale ' ~3995
87 DHge Daytona
5 speed, air, stereo, tilt
wheel, aport wheels,

power stee~ng.

Sale ;'5295
87 Pontiac 6000 LE
Wagon, VB, autorriatlc;, air,

ca..ette. power windows
&amp; locks, tilt, crulsa, more.

Sale

57995

•

'
stAn u.a.

A

Slate Farm Mutuel

Automobile lnalrwtee Company
Home Oftlco; ~lngtoo , -

•

•

ATTENTION,
OPEN MEETING·.
.

FOR

TOBACCO GROWERS AND
QUOTA HOLDERS
'
MONDAY - JUNE 4, 1990
8:00PM.
LOCATION: SENIOI ClnlEN CENTER, ST.RT. 160

TOPI(S: CURRENT TOBACCO CONCERNS
AND

. .

.

LEASING PROCiDURES .
PLUSE IRING A FIIIND 01 NEIGHibl
EVERYONE WELCOMi-F- IEFIISIIIENIS
. .
SPONSOIED BY THE GAWA COUNTY PIIDE IN
TOIACCO ASSO(IAUON
.

.

New 1998 Plymautll SundaiiCI

NO MONEY DOWN
Sentra XE

Sale ·57424
M::.y
Per
Down
Mo.

$16 9

Attfomlllc, air, AM/FM stereo,
tilt wheel, tinted ·glass, rear
defrost, p_ower , -steering,
DRIVEFlS AIR BAG, more.

C:l~~·

;$8,995
Vayager

NO MONEY DOWN

3.0L V6 engine, automatic, llr,
7 PASSENGER, tilt whiel, ,
cruise, electronic stereo, rear ·
defrost.

Sale 5 7424
Per
Mo.

86 Chevy Nova

C:l~ ·$14, 799

86 Ford Mustang
speed, stereo cassette

87 Dodge 600 .SE

4 door, automatic, air,

4

eeeklecan stereo, powtir
steering &amp; brakes,
'

with equalizer, power

tilt, cruise, wire wheel

lrcks;.cruise.

covers.

Sale ·s4995

Sale s3995·

~lL USED I.Ml~ ARF
• 1r-~ '-, r-' 1 1 • r !1
• !I ! \
1 ~~ I l ' I ' t
i•
~ I l I T t, 'I l r j
• W /\ 'x: I [l

•WAfHlAN If I D

88 Nlssan King Clb
4x4, 5 speed, air, stereo
cassette, cruise, special
st~pea.

Sale 5 5995

Automatl.c, Sir,' cauette,

Sale

'

'

84996

85 Nlssan 4x4

86 Nlssan Pulsar IIX

Sport Truck, 5 speed,
chrome wheels, sliding
rear window, sport seats.

5 speed, air, stereo,

Sale 55495
88 M1"1 626 LX

Automatic, llr, ppwer win·
dows, locks &amp; sunroof,
cassette, loaded.

Sale 89495

1 Section. 1 0 P1goo , 2&amp; Cttnto

sunroof, rear dolroat,
sharp sports car.

Sale 55495
'
88

A

Multimedia Inc.

Teen held in death
of elderly Ohio man

CAIOU SNOWDEN
Comor ef Third
AvL &amp; St11t1 St.
Gallipoll~o OIL
Phoat 446-4290'
Home 446-4511

·~

Clear toalghl. Near record
low In mid 408. Tuesday, '
IDDDY . Wgh In mid 70s.

•
June 4, 1990

Prices after rebate, payment with rebate down - 66 months, approved credit
Hatchback, air, 'stereo, 5

. 3-5-13-27-32-37
Kicker 079623

Page ·4

.,Ask one of them, then give me a call.

i~r$169
85 NISSIIJ Sentra

SupeF IAtto

~-~

By Gail DeGarmo
Earth Team Volunteer
Automatic; air, AM/FM stereo,
tinted glass, rear defrost ,
power steering &amp; brakes ,
DRIVERS AIR BAG, more.

Pick-4
1623

manyofyour
aeighbon Insure
their cars with
State Fann?

New 1990

HONORARY AWARD- Vice-President Chad Pope presents the
,GALLIPOLIS - Of all the
Chapjer Farmer Degree to Joe Foster, at the recent
Honorary
harvest methods. the selection
Gallipolis FFA Spring Awards banquet •
,·
method may be the most dlf!lcult
to Interpret. The selection method Is used to create or maintain
. an uneven-aged stand. A stand 1,
considered uneven-aged when i1
contains at least three welldefined age classes.
In the appli~ation of the sell"!,tlon method, the mature timber
Is removed either as single
scattered trees or in small
, groups at relatively short periods
of time.
These cuttings are repeated
Indefinitely with the deliberate
purpose of maintaining the
uneven-aged stand. The whole
method depends on the establish- ·
men I of reproduction at ilitervals
'Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored
·and thus the new age classes.
granites; Whatever your raquiremenu ITNIY be. complete
Since this metho!l has such
satisfaction is a•urad with Rock of Agas.
MOf1., Tues., Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9:00 1.m. 'til 4:00p.m.
wide variables In Its' many
interpretations, trying to deterOther Hours by Appointment-446-2327 or &amp;93-111186
m:ne wh,lch trees to cut can atso
be difficult. The characteristics.
which are considered Include (1)
352 Third An.
PH. 446-2327
Wlpolls, 01•.
age class, (2) size, (3) vigor, (4) . . ._ _ _ _111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111•..;............~. .
.crown clas.s and (5) quality.
One tnten&gt;retatlon of the selecPuzzle on Page C-6
tiOn method Is the diameter limit
harvest. In a diameter limit cut,
the trees to be harvested are
determined by only one characteristic - their diameter.
Just as the explalnatlon of this
method can be dlfftcull, so can
the explainallon of 1he advan!APS and disadvantages.
What makes this difficult is
lhal uy certain advantage or
d'-P.dvaritage may not be necessarUy true. about any- particular
extremfi: modification that Is still
considered a true selection
method.
Therefore, the following advantages and disadvantages are
those found whl!ll comparing
· sJnile tree selection system and
thole forms of group selection
Involving sm~l groups to forms (..!:!..J.E.~-1.!.!.
oC even-aged management that
distinctly uniform
,f jjta11ds from na~ural regenera- .f-L.j..2..
methods not more compll- ·
than the two-cut shelter- ~~+-0-J..!:.
metbod.

l&gt;aily Number
888

'

UST TH
EST P
BEST CARS AND TRUCKS IN TOWN

New 1990 Dodge Spirit

Ohio Lottery

Reds up
lead to 10
full games

Clravan

Automatic, air, ateroo
cassette, special, strlpu.
Gr:eat fdr vacation. ,
8

Sale ; 9495

.®

SPECIAL MuSIC -Tbe senior m~mbers of the
Eastern Wgh School Choir petformed "Maybe
Someday We'll Meet Again," during combined
baccalaureate and commencement
exercises for
.

lbe 1998 claaa' of Eutern School on Sunday
· evening. The choir Is under the direction of ·Mrs.
Margie Bartee. The choir ,was accompanied by
senior Susan Wou:
'

'

Eastt:.rn graduates ·65

•

sen~tors

· , By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Seatlnel News Staff
An elderly Canal Wlnchrster
man who had returned to Meigs
County to attend his high school
class reunion was killed In a
bizarre Incident Saturday night
outside the Chester Elementary
S&lt;;hooi.
.
Dead Is VIctor Will, 82, who
was struck by a pickup truck as
he started to cross the highway to .
a parktng ·tot on the other side.
· Charged In the incident with
aggravated vehicular homicide,
abuse of a corpse, and tampering
with evidence Is Jason Riggs, 18.
of State Route 7.
Also In custody Is Doug Harris,
26, Skinner Road, Pomeroy, who
has been charged with tamperIng with evidence. The investigation is contlrtu!J\g, Meigs County
Sheriff James Soulsby reports,
alld additional charges may be
flied, he said.
Initial hearings to set bonds
were held this morning In Meigs
County Court before Judge Pa·
-~

Celeste declares state of
emergen~y in Southwest Ohio

seniors received their diplomas
Sunday evening In combined
baccalaureate and commence-

ment exercises.
The -high school gymnasium
was filled with family, friends
Slxtv-flve Eastern
and faculty when the graduating
seniors t09k the stage as the
Eastern band, under the direction of Wlllla!D Hall, played t)le
processional.
~
Joe Hoskins, pastor of I he · · By United Press International
Success Road Church of Christ
Gov. Richard Celeste, after
gave the. Invocation followed by
ylslting tornado-stricken southwthe Eastern choir singing "Shine est Ohio Sunday, declared the
Down," under the direction of
area a state of emergency, the
M'11rgle Bartee.
second time In a week that he's
"Preparing to Care" was ,the
Issued the declaration alter adtheme of the baccalaureate ad·
verse weather.
dress given by Rev. Don Archer
The governor's declaration
of the· Alfred. Chester and
was for Hamilton and Butler
Tuppers Plains United Methodist
counties in the Cincinnati area
Churches.
where tornadoes hit late SaturDuring his address, Rev. day night. This follows ,the
Archer pointed out to the seniors
declaration for Athens, Hocking,
that it Is not was has been, but Lawrence and Perry counties
what is to be that Is of Importance after last week's flooding.
for them.
Ohio Emergency Management
Rev. Archer stated that the Agency officials said Monday
graduating seniors are tomor·
they planned to ask for federal
row's leadership and that they, assistance to help storm victims
as a graduating class of this new recover.
dec!J,de, will ha-'e opportunities
to do many challenging things
which their parents lll)d grandparents never thought of.
He pointed out however, that
many times there Is too much
stress placed on graduates to
decide what they will do after
graduation, stating that parents
do
not want to hear the phrase "I
SALUTATORY ADDRESS - Shawn Louis Bullh delivered lhe .
don't
know ."
salutatory address, "Greeting the Future," during combined
Rev.
Archer stressed to the
baccalaureate and commencement exercleea for lhe 1990
seniors the Imporgraduating
Deputies of the Meigs County
graduating clua of Eutera High School on Sund,a y evening.
tance of planning to care and that Sheriff's ·Department Invest!·
a lack of caring plagues eve- gated a breaking and entering of
cyone. He pointed· out the 1990 a building at Star Mill Park In
graduating class was quite capa- Racine on Saturday.
ble of caring and he stated their
·According to the report, Ra·
concern with the environment as cine village clerk Jane Beegle
well as economic justice.
had gone to the bulldll!i, which
Rev. Archer concluded by · serves as council chambers and
saying that It doesn't matter who clerk's office, to check on the
the graduates work for, or what building to prepare for'the park
they do, or what they become, but board's first evening o! free
rather that they eontlnue to care. entertainment when she discoRev. Archer's address was · vered the en try.
followed by' the singing of "A
The folloWing Items were re, Better World" featurln• senior
ported
taken; a Bunn coffeechoir members Deborah Marie
maker.
a Packard-Bell color
Brooks, Crystal Dawn Kaylor,
television.
a fan, a microwave,
and Amy Jo Mul'phy.
and
half
a
box
of frozen hot dogs.
Thomas Patrick Morrissey,
It
was
reported
that the jamb on
president of the class, welcomed
the
front
door
had
been damaged
the audience to the ceremony and
during
the
entry.
Mary Magdelene Parker, vice
Later In the day a resident
president ot the claas, Introduced
notified
officials .t~at a subject
Shawn Louts Bush, salutatorian,
was
seen
carrying a miCrowave.
and Greta Lynn Riffle,
Officers
responded and recovalediCtorian.
vered tbe stolen microwave.
During hi$ salutatory address
Bush pointed out that the seniors After obtaining permission to
search, officers went to the
Jui.d seen many historical events
apartment ot the suspect and .
. take plaell, sucb u Hurricane
Hugo, , the San FJ:anclsco-Oak· recovered the televtslon, fan, and
land earthquake, and m01t lm· frozen bot dogs.
Jeaae V. LaLone, 21, and
portantly the operilng of the
Tammy
SzeremL- 22, were arBerun Wall. He stated that "as
rested.
It
wu reported that two
1990 bes come Into·our lives, It Is·
chUclren
were
ta¥o lllto custody
easy to see that tbere will be by cblldnn'a~ervlces.
LaLone Is
more greathcballges to come
VALEDICTORY ADDBI88- "The Road Not TabJII' wulbe
·
belnll
be..,
In
tbe
Metas
Councy
maktDI thiS world a better place.
tbimteatGretalllfDe'•valetlctoi-J~IortlielM~
Jail
and
Szeremlla
beiDa
held In
Busb Jtresaed to his fellow
ctau ol Butera Bleb ScllooL Comblaed biiCCIIIaureate ud
the
Gallla
County
Jail
on
charges
classmate&amp; that "ali we move OJI
commencement exere~ were held Sunday evenltiJ a&amp; the high
of receiving and dl1J11181ng of
Conllilued oa page 5
school,
stolen property.
'
JULIE E. DIU,ON

SEN11NE&amp; NEWS STAFF

trick O'Brien. Riggs's bond was ces personnel along with many
set at$70,000 with 10 percent cash concerned citizens continued
or the full amount secured by overnight Saturday and Into
property. The bond for Harris Sunday . A helicopter from the
was set at $20,000 with 10 percent OSP was bro11ght In from Columcash or the total secured by bus to assist In the search.
property.
The body was found by officials
The preliminary hearing was over a steep embankment on
scheduled lor 9 a.m on June 8 In West , Shade Road just past
Meigs COunty Court.
Spencer Ro~d. a bout seven miles
WiU was leaving the Chester· from the scene· of the accident,
Alumni Association reunion about 5:30p.m, Sunday.
about 10 p.m . and had started
The truck. which had been
across the road In front of the burned, was recovered In Athens
sehool when he was struck by the County on a lownshlp road just
truck.
. off State Route 50, a few miles
The body. according to Dwight
east of Athens.
Milhoan, an eye witness· to lhe.
According to Sheriff Souisby
accident, rolled up the front and the truck was traveling west on
over the top of the cab. While he Slate Route 248 apparently at a
presum~ the body had been
high rate of speed when the
thrown clear of the truck , It did, · · accident happened.
. In fact, land In the bed. The
The Tuppers Plains unit of the
driver did not stop.
Meigs County Emergency Service was called to tlie scene and
. A se~rch by )he Meigs County assisted the sherlff and other
Sheriffs . Depariment; Meigs - officials In a search of the-area hi
Gallla,AthensandJacksonPosts front of the schooL The viCtim's
of the State Highway Pat rot, and
·
Depar~ent of Natural Rest)urContinued on page 10

Celesie toured the town of
Harrison that straddles the OhioIndiana border In Hamlltop
County where a tornado hit late
Saturday night. He took an aerial
view of Butler County that was
also hit. Several homes and
businesses were damaged, but no
Injures were reported.
But In Toledo, high winds and
heavy rains Sunday knocked a '
tree over onto a van, killing a
mother -and her two sons. Tlie
victims were Identified a Mary
Herman, 36, her son Devon, 6,
and Infant son Taylor, 6 months .
. And ' In Lickhig County, a
teenaged boy fishing with h!s
father In Buckeye Lake was
swept Into the lake and drowned.
The body of Chaun Shi was puUed
out about 90 minutes after he and
his father went ln . The boy died
about an hour after that, and the
lather was taken to a Columbus
hospital for treatment.
The Ohio Emergency Management Agency said Monday it will
ask federal authorities for a

federal disaster declaration
from Jhe weekend storms. makIng Ot&gt;lo residents eligible for
low-interest loans.
State officials were tabulating
lnfonnation from the tour and
from officials In Hamilton and
Butler counties.
Ohio EMA officials worked to'
set .up a Disaster Information
Center In Harrison where rest·
dents who suffered damage will
be able to obtain lnforamtton
~
from state agencies.
It was just Saturday that Ohio
sought the federal declaration
for flooding In southern and
southeastern Ohio the week before. Two Chillicothe teenaged
girls drowned In that flooding .
"We are doing an addendum to
that request which went out
Saturday. for the victims of the
tornado," said Stacie Gllg, spokeswoman for Ohio EMA.
She said her agency should
soon have a toll-free number for
victims of both the floods and
tornado.

Deputies
probeB&amp;E
Saturday
Sixteen ·people die on
roads over w.~kend

\,

'

'

--·

......

•

Sunday
By United Presalnternatloaal ·
Alvis H. Rowe Jr .•
Cardington:
At least 16 people, lncludllli a
17,
Cardington,
kDied when the
Toledo mother and her two small
car
he
was
riding
In crash In
children, were killed this weeMorrow
County.
kend In traffic accidents p Ohio,
Cleveland: Arthur Pllparlnen,
the Highway Patrol said
40,
Cleveland, killed when hlscar
Monday.
was
hit by one that ran a red light
The count showed one death
at
a
Cleveland Intersection.
Friday night, 10 Saturday and
Toledo:
Mary Herman, 36,
five Sunday.
.
Devon,
6,
Tyler Herman, 6
The Patrol said tbreernembers
.month,
kUied
when tree tell on
of the Toledo family were kUied
their
van.
·
when a tree fell on their van .
Four o! the victims were
motorcyclists and one was a
Kent: Roy E. Marcum, 33,
pedestrian.
Kent, kUJed when his motorcycle
Victims Included:
crashed on a Portage County
Friday algbt
road.
Washington CourtHouse: Mar·
Toledo: Rebecca A. Cloclnskl,
tin L. Prindle, 20, Blomming- 40, Toledo, kUied when her truck
burg, killed when his car crashed
collided wltb •nother truck that
on U.S. 62 In Fayette County.
ran a red ltebt.
. llaiurday
Athens: WIDiamJ. Sergent,37,
Paulding: Jessie Landrum Jr.,
Athena, kUJed when his motorcy19, Pauldlfti, killed when his car
cle blt a tree atona Ohto 78 In
crashed on OHio 637 In Paulding
Att!eu County.
·
County. (seat belts not In ~se)
· RaveJ1111: Helen E. Klem. 64,
Dover: Ralph Festl Jr., 22, Newton Falls, kUled when the
Dover, kUJed When hiS motorcy- motorcycle ahe was riding oil
collided with a car on Ohio 44 In
. cJe struck a pole along a
Tuscarawas County.
Portaae County.
Clncbmatl: John B. Magella,
Gallipolis: Tamara D .
McGuire, 16, CroWn City, killed 19, killed when bls car hit a tree
In a · two-car crub on. Ohio 7 In alclq a Hamilton County road.
Pomeroy: VIctor L . Willa, 82,
GalUa County.
Canal
Winchester, kUied when be
Findlay: James Bickel, 23,
was
hit
by a truck u he wu
Findlay, kUied In a one-vehicle
croulng
Ohto 248 In Metp
accident on a Hancock County
, County.
· road.
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�Monday, June 4, 1990

Colnmentary

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Announce winners of recent
Brickles Memori_al tour11ey

p8ge-·2 -The Deily Seottiloel
Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 4, 1990
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The Fourth Annual Middleport
Horseshoe Tournament went
across recently without a hitch
recently at Dave Diles Park In
Middleport, where this ye ar the
event was held as the " Toad"
Brickles Memorial. The event
will continue from now on In the
late Brlcltles name.
In the "A" Class Jim Knicely of
Bremen was· the w'lnner , Lawgence ·Miller of Chillicothe second, and Dave Holmes, Charles·
ton, third.
In B-e lass Jim . Cooper of ·
Columbus was the winner followed by Parkersburg's Jr.
Jacque, and Ravenswood's Jr.

Unwanted imporl ____Ja_c_k_.A_nd_er_so_n_a_n_d_D_a_le_Vi_a_n_A_t_ta

The Daily Sentinel
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO mE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
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ROBERT L: WINGETT
Publisher

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen~al Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/C!&gt;nlroUer
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·· A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he l.Ss than300
words long. All letters are subJ~I to editing and must he signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll he published. Letters should he In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.
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Celeste, Celebrezze
ignore polls

WASHINGTON- They quietly
Invaded the. Great Lakes a few
yea~s ago aboard ships and have
rapidly mUltiplied into swarms
that now threa,ten to choke off the ·
water supply and squeeze out
rival aquatic life nationwide. .
It has the ring of a scl-fl
matinee, but It Is real - the
thumbnail-sized Invader called
the zebra mussel. The first of
these shellfish were unwanted
Imports from Europe, dumped
with the ballast of visiting
freighters. They have a penchant
for clinging with an Iron grip to
just about anything, and their
multiplication rate puts guppies
to shame.
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They attach themselves to .
. smooth surfaces, : such as the
iri51de of Intake pipes carrying

water from the Great Lakes to
homes, power plants and Industry. The shells accumulate by the
mDllons, clogging !he pipes and
·restricting the water flow. •
Now It seems everi nuclear
power plants are feeling the
pinch.
Nuclear plants draw less water
than coal-fired plants, but they
pose a much greater risk. The
mussels reproduce In the sub·
merged Intake _pipes that send
water to replenish the nuclear
plants: critiCal cooling systems.
Experts note that nuclear
plants have elaborate contln- .
gency plans to avert possible
disasters, and the mussels are
not now threatening to cause a
meltdown. But thebuJidup of the
pesky shells nevertheless ·re"'

quires. action to prevent clogged pressure water guns.
"We're still new at this," a
pipes which could shut down a
Perry plant engineer told us.
plant.
Some plant operators are "We're seeing a definite threat
working against time as they join and we're figuring out how we
other Industries Iii seeking a way &gt;can deal with it. "
As the relentless mussels pro- .
to curb the foreign Interlopers.
'"These (power) plants .are JIP literate, they are botching up
against a wall. They've got to do everything from sport fishing to
something and they've got to do It city water supplies. Some mussel
fast," Ohio State University watchers predict they could
biologist Fred Snyder told our Infest Jakes and rivers all over
America by the end of the
associate Dan Njegomlr.
Lake Erie Is Infested with decade.
That should serve notice to the
zebra mussels, and the Perry
nuclear plant near Cleveland nuclear power IndustrY to start
draws water from the Jake. 'The planning for a mussel· ambush
plant Is one of several that Is that has already hit the Great
seeking perm Its to fight the Lakes.
"It may be (Ohio's) problem
mussels w(tl\ chemicals lq., the
water. Another method Is to 'blow now," Snyder told us, "liut before
the mussels off . wltp. high- long It will be a problem across
..the country."

BRICKLES CLASS A MEMORIAL WINNERS
- Brlckles Memorial winners are shown here In
an awards presentation with presenters Francis
Asher and Carl Searles. The A-Class winners are,
1-r,- Dave Holmes, . third; Lawrence
Miller,
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Letters to the editor
Taxpayers money at work
Dear Editor;
~rringer Ridge Road T -30
Lebanon, township was paved in
1987, and resurfaced again just
p~lor to the November 89 general
·
election.
l'he job was so poorly done that
r~surfaclng Is now In progress

with limestone.
Taxpayers money at work?
Who was the Engineer on this
project?
James W. Hayman
33300 Hayman ·Rd.
Lebanon TWP
Long Bottom, Oh!o 45743

Berry's World

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e 1tto 11y NtA.~nc.

second; and Jim Kulcely, Bremen, Ohio first
place were all lop perfonners In the Toad Brlck~s
Memorial Horseshoe tournament. Miller and
Knicely are former World.Champlo.ns.
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kept Jordan from completely
taking control as the Pistons
posted a 93-74 triumph over the
Chicago Bulls In Ganie 7 of their
E a s t e r n C'o n f e r e n c e
~hamplonshlp. ·
"It's the best game I've played ·
this series," said .Thomas. "To·day I felt good, even though some
shots were going In anp out. It's
to.ugh to get a shot off against

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Are COnServatatiVeS angry -----~-W....,..il_lia_m_R_us_·h_er
There are enough rumblings In
Westerner as a "usefu l Idiot." It
the underbrush these days to doesn't take much Imagination to
justify the conclusion that the guess what Phillips must think of
conservative movement Is unBush &amp; Company, but it's hardly
happy with George Bush.
fair to cite him as representative
The liberal media, always on of conservative opinion.
the alert for ways to .dlvlde the
Still, there's just no doubt that
opposition, have chimed in with .. the natives are restless. Brent
stories supporting this conclu- Scowcroft's champagne toasts In
slon- though as usual they have Beijing, Bush's refusal to give
overdone .it. Interviewing the stronger support to Lithuania's
Heritage Foundation's sagacious Junge for Independence, James ·
vice president Burton Yale Baker's compromises on arms
Pines, and quoting his telling reductions In· Moscow, and percriticisms of Mr. Bush, Is one haps above all the hints that Mr.
thing. Asking Howard Phllllps, Bush may be preparing to agree
chairman of the Conservative to new taxes: These add up to
Caucus, his opinion of the Bush troubl,e.
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administration Is quite another.
I am Inclined to think, though,
It's a little like asking John that conservative discontent
Wilkes Booth whether he has with Incumbent presidents; how:
grown dlsutustoned with Prest· ever conservative their credendent Lincoln.
tlals, Is just about Inevitable.
Howle broke with Ronald Rea- Conservatives are by definition
gan about 1983 for caving In to the "keepers of the tablets." A
left, and immortalized himself In president Is, . to borrow the
1988 by asserting, in a speech, central Image from one Of Harry
that Reagan qualified for Lenin's Tru111an' s best aphorisms, a chef
description of a. fello"':·travellng

In a crowded, noisy and overheated kitchen.
Nixon all but totally Ignored
the conservative movement
while he was In the White House,
and might . have destroyed It
entirely If the late, great congressman from Ohio, John Ash. brook, hadn't kept the flag aloft
by running against him In New
Hampshire and the · other early
primaries of 1972.
·
Nor was Howie Phillips the
only or the most Important
conservative to'toseco.n51derable
faith In Ronald Reagan· during
his years In the Oval Office. I
know of at least one major
maln,- llne conservative function,
planned for 1985, whose sponsors
were reluctanno Invite Reagan
the necessary year In advance
because "We may not be for him
then."

So George Bush, howe~~er mad
at him conservatives may be, is
.the heir to a long tradition. We
may, I think, be quite sure that )le
is aware he has trod on some

tender conservative corns, and I
don't assume 'he Is callously
lndi'fferent to the fact. But he
dates from Herman Hickman's
years as Yale's football coach,
and - undoubtedly remembers
that old fox's advice on how to
handle the alumni: "Keep 'em
sullen, but not mutinous ...
The question for conservatives, then, Is: Is It time to get
mutinous? Don't a~sume that I
am necessarily a dove on this
question; I refused to vote for
Eisenhower (let alone Stevenson) when he ran for re-election
In 1956, and did the same thing all
over again when Nixon sought a
second term In 1972.
Bt something tells me we
conservatives will all be out
there rooting for Bush In 1992. His
job Is different from ours. He
may break our hearts from time
to time, but the conservative
movement will outlive George
Bush. Meanwhile, It almost cer- .
talnly Influences him more than
we realize.

SLAM DUNK - .'l'be Detroit Pistons' John Salley slams one
above Chlca1o Bulls' Bill Cartwright (L), Horace Grant (C) and
Michael Jordan during t.helr seventh game of the NBA Eastern
Conference fbials, which the Pistons won 93-74. (UPII

'Smoker's rights' a smoke screen
I've been receiving a great
little magazine lately -InterestIng articles, well-written, good
- color reproduction. The May- ·
June Issue even had short pieces
by two of my favorite humorists,
Tom Badelt and Fran Lebowitz .
I get Phillip Morris Magazine ·
free and unsolicited. The city's
newspaper and television sta·
!Ions also receive free collies.
That's because one of the magazine's purposes Is to generate
"good press"; to put a good face
on tJ:!e tobacco Industry.
Another of Its goals Is to
support "smokers' rights." Ed I·
torlals, letters to the editor and
reader essays let smokers air
their views, and a Jot of the
discourse runs to how shabbily
non-smokers are treat_lng them
these days. one viewer in the
May-June Issue complained that
a non-smoker had claimer to be
"allergic" to cigarette smoke
when sitting next to her on a
plane, but then the same person
sat right next to her In the
"smoking'' section of the airport
lobby when he couldn't find
another seat.
I have nothing against smok·
ers, truly. One of my brothers
smokes, one of my good friends
smo~, my parents smoked, and
I used to smoke too. There Is stm
disagreement In the scientific
community about the hazards of
"secondhand smoke," even

though the Environmental Protection Agency recently Issued
liJI opinion that It Is much more
dangerous than we thought.
But even if you 'believe the
scientists who downplay smokIng's dangers more than you
believe the EPA, what I cannot
understand about all this "smokers' rights~· hoopla Is· why some
people think they have. a "right" '
to do something as Irritating as
forcing another person to
breathe their cigarette smoke.
I can undersland the right-tosmoke folks being a little confused. If you're not bothered by
ragweed, It's difficult .to understand the effect It has on someone
else. Get me too close to the
wrong perfume or a cigar, and
my nostrils swell up and stop
taking In air. Cigarettes, on the
other . hand, don't bother me
much.
However, when they dl,d say
something, It .was 'nut! said for
me. I learned
sorts of tricks to
avoid Inflicting my smoke on
them: opening a window and
sitting by It to smoke, going
outside to smoke and even iyes! )
not ""oklng In their presence!
Ob, wonder of wonders, I found It
entirely possible to not amoke for
hours at a time. I then discovered
how even more delicious the
experience was when I'd waited
a little longer for it.
As I aald, I stopped smoking.

all

I'd been thinking about it for a
while In 1979 when my father's
emphysema - brought on by
smoking un!Htered Lucky
Strikes since he was 15 worsened. My 'brothers and I
watched him die a protracted
death, "drowning In his owq
lungs" as my brother put it. I quit
cold turkey.
But this Isn't a!l anti-smoking
message. This Is an aritl·
s mokl ng -In-som(!9ne-else' s-face
message, and a level-with·
yourself message. It's not that
difficult for smokers to find ways

Sarah Overstreet
around inflicting their smoke on
other people, and It's not even
that difficult to walt a couple
hours to smoke If you have any
compassion for other people's
discomfort. I know, because I did
.ft. Get a prescription for nicotine ·. '
chewing gum II you have to, but
cut the whining when the "no
smoking" light goes on. Your '
rights really do end where
someone else's lungs begin.

Today in history
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By United Press International
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Today Is Monday, June 4, the 155th day of 1990 with 210 to foDow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
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The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Jupiter and Pluto.
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Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
King George III, who lost England's American colonies · In the
Revolutionary War, In 1738; actress· Rosalind Russell in 1912; opera
singer Robert Merrill In 1919; actors Gene Barry In 1922 (age 68),
Dennis Weaver In 1924 &lt;age 66), Bruce Dern In 1936 (age 54) and
Parker Stevenson In 1953 (age 37); and singer Freddie Fender In 1937
(age 53) .
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On this date In history:
In 1896, Henry Ford wheeled his first car from a brick shed In
Detroit and drove It around the darkened streets on a trial run.
In 1940, the World War Two evacuation of Dunkirk, France, was
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completed. A flotilla of small boats spent near~v a week re-crossing
the English Cliannel to rescue nearly 350,000 British. French and
Belgian troops from advancing German forces.
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their half-court defense."
The Pistons have earned the
right to defend the.l r title starting
Tuesday night against !he Par·
tland Trail Blazers In the NBA
championship series. The Boston
Celtlcs and Los Angeles Lakers
are the only franchises to have
won -back-to.back titles .
The Trail Blazers, maktrig ·
their first final appearance In 13
years, defeated the PhQ!!Dix Suns
. 4-2 In the -western ·Conference
championship.
The Pistons who won for the
first time In five ·s eventh-game
appearances, held the Bulls to 28
of 90 shooting (31 percent) from
the field. The 74 points allowed
. was a Detroit playoff low:
Chicago lost despite Jordan
scoring 25 of Ills 31 points In the
second half. The Bulls, held to 14
points In the second period and 15
In the fourth, also extended their
losing str'iak against Detroit to
eight games as the home team
won each game of the series .
"Naturally I'm disappointed,"
Jo~dan said. ''It was not meant to
be. We're still in a learning
process. It's tough to lose. As the
leader, it's my job to show them
how to -relax and stay calm. "
Chicago has .been eliminated
by Detrolt the last three postsea·
sons; losing In five games in the
second round in 1988 and In six
games In the conference final In
1989.
The Pistons outscored the
Bulls 8-2 to open the final period
and bulld a 77-61 lead. Jordan
twice hlt baskets to bring Chlcao
within 11, points, the last time at
79-68 with 5:35 remaining, butt he
Bulls never were able cut t)le
deficit to a single digit.
Thomas played 44 minutes in
his longest stint of the series,
coDectlng eight of his assists in
the second hall.
"!slab played maybe his grea·
' test game of the year," Detroit
coach · Chuck Daly said. "He
penetrated and dished the ball off
. and created problem~ for them
defensively. He set up a lot of
easy baskets.
Detroit, wh.lch also received 15
points from Mark Aguirre, 14
from John Salley and 13 apiece
from 'James Edwards and Den;
nis Rodman, ran off an 11-0 spurt
::~~m~;hthe game to ·seat the ..

Akron nines, .Bucyrus capture·
state softball championships

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ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI) Akron Springfield beat Perrys·
burg 4·2 In ·tbe champlonsh'lp
game of the Division I girl's state
· high school softball tournament
Saturday.
·
Akron Springfield ended the
season with a 25·3 record, wHile
Perrysburg· was 31-3. ..
Akron's winning pitcher Saturday was Shelley Freeman. who
had ari 18·1 season record . Losing
Perrysburg pitcher Jenny Naumann ended the year with a 27-3
mark.
Perrysburg, trailing 4-1 going
into the las·t inning, loaded the
bases with no outs when Amy
Woods singled and the next two
batters reaclled base on !l
catcher's Interference and an
error. Sandi Snyder hit .Into a
fielder's choiCe to score. Woods,
but Akron Springfield escaped
wlthou&lt; further damage by getting a fly ou&lt; and s tt;lke out to end
the game.
Bucyrus 2, Talbnad1e I Brandy Markley scored on a
Julie Ray wild pitch in the bottom
of the seventh tn·ntng this weekend to give Bucyrus the Division
II state )llgh school softball
championship lflth a 2-1 win over
Tallmadge.
Markley Jed off the final inning
with a triple Saturday. and. with
runners on second and third and
one out. the Tallmadge coach
Instructed Ray to Intentionally
walk Rhonda Young.
Her second pitch was wild,
though, giving 27-2 Bucyrus the
tjtle.
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Patty Surlna, 23·2, was the
winning pitcher and Ray, 13-3,
the loser.

Tallmadge finished the season
274 .
Akron Manchester 7, Fair·
banks 0- Lisa Frederick pitched
a perfect game and struck out a
state playqff record 1,7 batters to
pace Akron Manchester to a 7-0
win over N,lilford Center Fair·
banks in the Ohio Dl\•lsion III
high school girls softball cham·
plonshlp game Saturday.
Frederick, whose 23-2 record
matches her team's record this
season, faced a minimum 21
batters in the seven-Inning game.
Akron Manchester got only
four hits but was helped by seven
Milford Center Fairbanks' errors. Second baseman' Stacey
Cugel and third baseman Amy
·Scheiderer ·committed twa er·
rors apiece..
.
· Collecting hits for the wl11ners ,
were Shawna Brown, Julie
Baughman, Jenny Bennett and
Debbie Myers.
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Kim Headings, 17-2, pitched
the distance for Milford Center
Fairbanks, whicli finished Its ·
season 21-3.

Horace Grant' added 10 points
and 14 rebounds for ·Chicago.
All-Star forward Scottie Pippen
was suffering . from migrane .
headaches and ~cored just two
points.
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"I was on~v about 75 percent,"
said Pippen, who was bothered
by blurred vision during the
game. "I had a hard time
visualizing my teammates; I
could see them but I couldn't tell
how far away they were from
me."
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Jordan· .took , over the . third
period, scoring . 12 points and
coDectlng four- .assists as the
Bulls reduced a 22-point deficit to
69-59 ent.e ring the final period.
. Thomas sank a three-point shot
to give the Pistons a 61-39 lead ·
with 7: 45 left. Jordan · then
started a 12-2 run with jum(ler
that · brought the Bulls within
63-52 with 4; 58 left.

tuESDAY

POTATO SOUP .... '1.30
· BAKED HAM ....... '4.8&amp;

BAKED CHICKEN ... '4.715
CttEF SALAD ....... '3.7&amp;

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DOVER, Del. &lt;UPI) -Derr1ke :•
Cope silenced his critics Sunday
by winning the Budweiser 500 at •
Dover Downs International :
Speedway with a record average
speed of 123.993 mph.
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Cope, this year's winner of the
Daytona 500. took the lead for
goOd on the 446th lap, blowing .
past Rusty Wallace In his Purola·
tor Chevrolet and holding on as
Ken Schrader tried to close ln.
Schrader finished : 1; 43 behind
when the checkered flag fell.
.
Rounding out the top five were
.pole sitter Dick Trickle, Mark .
Martin and Sterling Marlin.
"I drove hard as I could and
boy those guys 1the pit crew)
they busted their liltle tails as ·
hard as they could and it all came .
together for us," Cope said, •
stressing It was his fast pit stop
toward the end of the race, In·,
which four tires were changed In .
under: 20 seconds, that proved to
bet he margin of vll!lory.
'fhe win was sweet for Cope, whose victory l!-t Daytona was
viewed by some as a Duke since·.
the front-running Dale Earnhardt, last year's Bud 500wlnner;
hit debris on the track during the•.
final lap, allowing Cope to
maneuver Into the winner's •
circle.
Sunday's win . sDenced the
critics, with Cope, from Spana· ·
way, Wash.,leadlng92lapsoftbe
Bud 500 and staying right near.
the top all day long.
"It was Just like I dreamed
about; being there at the last ... I.·
was hustling that old girl and she
·
was nice," Cope said.

(tJift1t.... )
A Dlvll... of Mall-o, lae.
PublishEd. every alterDOCII, Mondly ··
through Friday, Ill Court St., Po-

meroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Pub- •
IIJhlng COmpaay/ Multlmf!dla,

Inc.,

Pomeroy. Ohio 45768. Pb. 9!12-21!6. Se- ·
cond class postage paid at Pomergy,
Ohio.
Member: United Prer.l latematlonal,
lnlalld Dally Press A-lation alld tlie
Ohio Mewapaper Aoaoclatlon. National
Adverttllng Repreoenlatlve, Branham
NOWIPIPOI" Saloo. 733 Third Avea110,
New York, New York lllt)17.

P&lt;l!'IMASTER: Send . - cb.,. .
to The Dll1Y SenUnel. Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, C»do 45788.
$tllltlaUPTION IIATDI

D.CLASS WINNERS - This trio of Pomeroy Horseaboe
specialists claimed honors In the D.Ciass of the Toad Brlclllea
Memorial. Roy Holter, seated was the second place finisher; to bls
right was winner John Wolf, and lhlrd, .s tandlng, was Tom Mankin,
shown with carl Searles, tournament represenalat~ve.
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Urbana wins AA baseball crown

DOWJING .CHUS
MULLEN MUSSER
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The Daily Sentinel

INSURANCE
YOUIIIDEPINDENI
AGIIITS SEIV.G
MIIGSCOUm
.SIKIE 1161

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tournament.
ToDiver's 14 strikeouts Saturday were the most ever recorded
by a sing!·. pitcher In the AA
championship.
Robert Trainer went two for
four at the plate with three runs
batted In to help Urbana finish
the season. 24-3.
Indiap Valley ended up 19-9.

Ofte Weeii
......... ;............
B7Corrt.
- - ............
· -·JUO
llfte Month .................................1&amp;.10
Ofte Year ...... ............... .... ........ $72.80
IINGU:COPY
PIIICI!:
Dally ................................... 25 Cot!to

Subscrlbera not deJlrlllg to pay tbecurle' may remit Ill aclvanoe 111re&lt;t to
The DaUy Sentinel on a J, 6or 12 mOIIIb
basil. Credit wUI be glven carrlereacb
week.

No subscriptions by maD pennltt!d Ia . ,.
afeas Wbfft home carrler ltf'VIee II

avallable.

MallWioerlfl-

-e 'Melp~

13 Weeks .............................. .... SlUI

; 26 Weeu .................................. m.•
52Weeks .................................. S7..31
O.IIIIMIIolp~

13 w..u .................................. DI.ID

26 Weeks .................................. MO.II

112W..U .................................. m.l!

.: VEGAS NIGHT
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6 ·
JAYMAR GOLF COURSE
7 P.M. UNTIL 10 P.M.

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PRI.ZES GALORE
Color TV's, Golf Clubs, Police Sc:ar.ws, Golf lalls
•WhHis of Chance •llackjack
•Cr~ Table
flO AdmissiOn includes Fr• Rtfrtshll*!ts ancl..., ·

GOLF·SCU-U
YHUISDAYI JUIE 7

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111 Second St. Pomtroy

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Paddle ;Boat Racing
Paddlers frOm a Canadian
women's team overpowered !\YO
~quads from China's Guandong
province at ·the International
Dragon BOat Races In Hong
Kong. False Creek Dragon Boat
Team, the defending women's
champion from Vancot,~ver; Canada, took the lead midway
through the 2,100-foot race In
Victoria Harbor, paddling Its '
way to a time of 2 minutes, 46.56
seConds.
'

Located lerose the StrNt From Home National lank
Third and Pearl StrNt In laclne

MONDAY

C.CLASS WINNJ!:RS- The C-Cl118s Brlckles Memorial winners
were Harold McNeely, center, J.R. Furr, standing; a,ndR. Former
shown Wtth a toumameni representative. More than 30
participated.

_ _ Spo118 briefs. __

. - .KOUNTRY .KITCHEN .
OPEN MON. 'rMRU SAT. 1:30A.M.-8:00 P.M.: SUNDAY 8 AM·3 P'!

B.CLASS
- The B.Ciass Brl.ckles wlnners were Jim
Cooper, Jr., Jacques, and Jr. Acree, shown with State 8ecretar~of
Slate Francis Asher.

· COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPil Anthony Tolliver set a strikeout
record and allowed only three
hits In going the distance this
weekend and leading Urbana
over Indian Valley 8-1 In the
championship game of the ClaS'S
AA state high school baseball

a

DAllY !PEC/Al$

Park, with courts open to the
public, are open every Thursday
at 6; 30. All Meigs County res I·
dents and area residents are
welcome. A tournament spokes·
man says, "We have extra shoes
and our shoes fit all! "
The tournament was run by
Francis Asher. Sec. State of
Ohio; and Car I Searles of Middleport, vice-president of the Meigs
County Ciub.
Scorekeepers were local girls
from Middleport.
More than 30 pitchers from
Ohio and West Virginia pji!rticl·
paled In the event. Including two
state champions.

Cope is
Budweiser
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wtnner

.

· . By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer.
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UP!)
- With Michael Jordan spar·
kUng In the. second half, Islah
Thomas provided the steadying
Influence necessary to send the
Detroit Pistons back to the NBA
Finals.
Thomas delivered 21 points, 11
assists and eight rebounds and

•

Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze, who wants to be governor,
likewise told supporters at a luncheon not to worry about poDs
showing him more than 10 points behind Republican gubernatorial
nominee George Voinovich.
These are just the time trials, said auto racing fan Celebrezze. His
campaign machine Is merely tuning Its engine and getting the feel of
the track before bursting through the pack In the final laps to take the
checkered flag.
Celeste's reaction was not surprising. Accepting counsel has not
been the governor's strong suit during his 7 'h-year reign. Evidence Is
the ethiCal trouble his administration has repeatedly courted.
·And ever since his days on the ballot were ended, he stopped putting
his finger to the political wind and became more Intent on voicing his
own personal views.
Celeste said, correct~y. that "people couldn't care less" about him;
that they are Interested in issues affecting their health and welfare.
He cited his recent business mission to the Far East, where a
Ctnclnnatt·businessman signed a $2.5 million contraci to furnish wood
flooring to Japan.
"They don't care whether the governor is popular or not popular,"
said Celeste, adding that he has an Internal "calibrator" that tells
him , "Celeste. you're doing OK."
On this, the .governor misses the point. The people have a
calibrator, too, and more than half of them said he's not doing so hot.
Just as ce'leste pays attention to people's views when he's up for
election, he also spends $5 million to $6 ,milllon to market himself. It's
a sad commentary that an expenditure like that can take a
politician's popularity from 37 percent to 60 percent !Celeste's 1986
election rating).
Celebrezze, addressing a gathering of Democratic Insiders, also
shrugged off the surveys, comparing himself to stock car driver
Darrell Waltrip, who "would drive a very conservaUve race, take hiS
time, get the feel of the track and make sure his car was performing
Well."
:"We're not going to waste our fuel. we' re not going to waste the
organization trying to get out In front In the early laps," said
c'eiebrezze. "It's a long distance race. What counts is who crosses the
fl~lsh line come Nov. 6."
•The problem with that analogy Is that in politics, if not in auto
niclng, the early laps count. If one candidate gets too far ahead, all
tl)e smart money goes his way .
. Celebrezze told his supporters he'll have to raise another $6 million
td beat Volnovich. That's $300,000 a week from now until mid-October
,.. a tall order. for someone who's been coasting In the early laps.
.Celebrezze also may have made another miscalculation. "We've
t4ken some of the best shots the other side can give us, and we're still
right up In there," he said.
:There's 09 way to. predict that. The "best" shots ma,y be still to
c(lme.
·For the attorney general 's supporters, the good news is that .he's
flilally gotten in the car and is pushing the pedal to the metal.

Acree.
Harold McNeely of Huntington
was the wlnner In C-class followed by J . R. Furr and R.
Fortner.
John Wolf of Pomeroy won the
D-class event over other Pomeroy aces Roy Haller, and Tom
Mankin.
Jim· Knicely was the World
Champion Aillllt In 1987 and
Lawrence Miller was World.
Champion In the Senior division
in 1985, underlining the fact that
the Middleport tourney had a big
draw and top names In the
country.
Practice at the Middleport

Pistons down Bulls to reach
•
NBA championship series

By. LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Two top Democratic state officials were confronted
by poD results last week and both chose to look the other way.
'Gov . Richard Celeste, at a news conference, brushed off reporters'
references to separate newspaper surveys sl)owing his approval
ratlng at 37 percent and 42 percent among Ohioans.
"I don,' I worry about that," said Celeste. "I'm not running any

more.

The Daily Sentinai-Pege-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

11 :30 lunch
.

hOO PM Shotgt111 Start
· ALL KINDS OF AWARDS
STEAK DINNER AFTER GOLF

SSOIIdu .. heylll z ... hM:'' t.W'
'

.

I (•Yizll ....

CALL JAYMAR FOR DETAILS 912·8312

AI proaaoda go to lrrlption ayltem at Jovmar

•

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Poomlroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. June 4. 1990 . ·

Reds beat Dodgers 2-0-to take 10-game lead in NL West
LOS ANGELES IUP!) -In the
four-game weekenr;l series
against the National League
West-leading Reds, the Dodgers
took one step forward before
taking three steps back.
Los Angeles captured Thurs·
' q~y·s opener to pull within eight
games, but after Sunday's 2·0
loss to Cincinnati, the Dodgers.
now trail baseball's hottest team
~by 11 games.
' Reds' pitchers Tom Browning
and Randy Myers limited their
opponent to just four hits on the
day the Dodgers stgned manager
Tommy Lasorda to a two-year.
contract extension.
The Dodgers were hitless
against Browning, 5-4, until Fernando Valenzuela doubled In t~e
sixth. Two Innings later, Brown·
!ng, who has given up only two
earned runs In his last 331nnlngs,
allowed a· single to Alfredo
Griffin and a double to Mtke
Sctosla before giving way to
Myers.
With runners at second and
third and norieout, Myers retired
Mike Sharperson on·a shallow fly
before striking out Kirk Gibson.
Kal Daniels walked to load the
bases but Myers got Huble
Brooks on a come-backer to end
the threat. Myers then pitched a
hitless ninth for his 11th save.
Valenzuela, 4-5, allowed two
runs and nine hits .In seven .

Innings.
played and we:re well aware of believe I can be thrown out."
"All three games that we lost that, " said Cincinnati manager
Coleman, Smith and McGee
we had a chance to come back,"
Lou Plnlella. "We have to keep are no strangers to stealing. The
said Lasorda. "We had runners our mind on business and that 's three are Nos. 2, 3, and 4,
at second and third In the eighth
the hunt for Red October. We've respectively, on the Cardinals' ·
and we couldn't get them ln.
executed well and we' ve had lot all-time base stealing list, continFernando pitched well enough to of unselfish players. That's why uing the team's tradition for
win. We'll get a good win streak we' re winning."
speed. Hall of Farner Lou Brock
going and hope this thing doesn' t
Elsewhere In the Na!lonai stole 888 of his major-leagueget too far out of hand. "
League, St , Louis beat Chicago record 938 bases for the club.
The Reds, who own the major 7-4, Philadelphia trounced New
Sunday's performance was ev·
league's best record at 33·12,
York 8-3, Montreal edged Pitts- ldence of a new attitude accordImproved their lead to 10 games
burgh 4-3, San Francisco Ing to St. Louis skipper Whitey
over the San Diego Padres.
slammed Houston 7-3, Atlanta Herzog.
"They goi the key hits when ' dumped San Diego 4·2 In 10
"We went Into Ho.uston last
they needed them. That 's why Innings and Cincinnati blanked . Monday with our heads down and ,
they 're In first and we're not,"
Los Angeles 2·0.
we looked like we expected to
said Daniels, a former Red.
Cardlilals 7, Cubs 4 - The St. lose," Hermg said. "!.called a
"We've got to control our own Louis Cardinal's base stealers meeting, and I told them that we
.destiny now. Hopefully someone burned up the basepaths of Busch aren't dead yet.
can beat on their heads the way Stadium Sunday afternoon, light·
"We've· played better since
they beat on ours."
lng a fire under a struggling theri, and we Were . aggressive
Cincinnati took a 1-0·Jead In the team.
today ,"
sixth Inning. Bllly Hatcher
The Cardinals pilfered eight
Starter Bryn Smith benefitted
doubled but was thrown out bases, a single-game high since from the offensl'lli!' expolslon.
trying to · take third on Barry the team's World Series season of Smith Improved to 6·4 after
Larkin grounder. Larldn took 1985, and Tom Pagnozzl and Milt pitching six and one-third Innings
second on the play and advanced Thompson each homered as the and giving up four runs.
'to third on Eric Davis' groun- St. Louis raced to a 7-4 victory
The Cardinals used a home run
dout. After Todd Benzinger over the Ch[!:ago Cubs. ·
plus four stolen bases Into five
walked, Joe Oliver stroked an
Vln.ce · Colem;ur swiped Jour · runs, and a 5-0 lead, In the third.
RBI single.
bases, Ozzle Smith three and
Reserve catcher Tom PagIn the seventh, the Reds made Willie McGee one, and the trio nozzl led off the Inning with his
It 2-0 on three singles. With one
sparked a·five-run third Inning.
first home run of the year, and
out, Browning singled,' advanced
"I like' the heat," Coleman first since the 1987 season. With
to second on a single by Billy said, crediting the weather for one out, Coleman, who has won
Hatcher and scored on Larkin's
his performance. "i feelfa~ter on five consecutive NL stolen base
RBI-slngle.
the_basepaths. I have. an arro- crowns, looped a single to center
''There's a Jot of baSeball to be g;tnce out there .and I don't and stole sec&lt;;~nd. After Ozzle

Smith drew a walk, the two Innings to lead Philadelphia.
Philadelphia's Lenny Dykslra
executed a double steal.
Kevin mankenshlp, 0-2, Ull· went 3 for 4 to extend his hitting
corked a wild pitch that allowed streak to 16 games and Improve
Coleman to score and moved his major league-leading batting
Smith to third. McGee then averag&lt;' to .413.
Expo11 4, Pirates 3 - At
walked and stole second. With
runners on second and third. Pittsburgh, Mike Fitzgerald
Pedro Guerrero hit a sacrifice fly singled In pinch runner Spike
to left, scoring Smlt hand advanc- Owen with the go-ahead score
ing McGee lo third, who scored during Montreal's three-run
on Terry Pendleton's RBI single. ninth Inning, rallying the Expos
The Cardinals scored tl!elr to victory. Blll Sam pen, 3-0,
final run of the third Inning on worked one Inning for the vicThompson's run-scoring triple. . tory . . Tim Wallach singled to
Coleman, who leads the major score Tim Ralpes with the tying
leagues with 28 stolen bases, run.
, Gfants 7, Aatroe 3 - At San
stole . second and third In the
Francisco,
Robby -Thompson
fourth.
belted a three-run homer and
"It's going to be tough to get
Kevin Mitchell added a two-run
lOQ," said Coleman, who stole 100
or more bases his first three blast to power San Francisco.
seasons: "But If I'm getting on Allee Hammaker, 4-3, gained the
victory and· Jeff Brantley retlase four or five times a game,
corded
his sixth save. Mike Scott,
I'll try to steal four or five times a
2-6, took the loss. Glenn Davis hit
game."
his fifth homer In three games
The Cubs scored their first run
and
drove In all three Houston
In the fourth on an RBI-slngle by
\
Mark Grace. Thompson belted a
runs.
Brayes 4, .Padres 2 ( 10 Inn:) two-rurl' homer, his third of the
At
San Diego, Pinch-hitter Jeff
·year, extending St. Louis' lead to ·
Treadway
doubled home the
7-1.
go-ahead·
run
and Ron Cant
Chicago added three runs In
delivered
a
run-scoring
single In
the seventh to chase·Smith.
the
lOth
Inning
to
lift
Atlanta
to a
At
Phlllies 8, Mets 3 victory
.
.
Reliever
Charley
Ker·
Philadelphia, Von Hayes hofeld, 3-2, worked the eighth and
mered and knocked ill four runs
ninth for the victory, Joe Bqever
ant~ Pat Comps,.3-5, allowed only
worked the lOth .for his sixth ·
three hits In seven and one-third
save.

.'

GALLIPOLIS - Walter R.
Chambers was named president
and chief executive officer of The
Ohio Company Thursday. He
succeeds Donald C. fanta, who Is
retiring from the post he has held
for 20 years.
Chambers' appointment was
announced by .J.W. Wolfe, chairman of the Columbus-based
Investment firm.
Chambers, 59, was elevated
from the liDS I of senior executive
vice president, a post he had held
with The Ohio Company since
19!!7. He was named an assistant
vice president In 1967, vice
president In 1971, and executive
vice president and a director In
1973.
' A former director of the
National Securities Industry As·
sochltion and financial adviser to
the Ohio Water Development
Authority, Chambers joined The
Ohio Company as a municipal
bond trader In 1961.
Chambers, a native of
Amanda, Ohio, ·In Fairfield
County, Is a 1952graduateofThe
Ohio State University. He attended ifaduate school at OSU
and graduated from the Securl·
ties Industry · Association's Investment Banking School at
Wharton School of Finance.

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•.

. CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN - Dodger second·
Valenzuela picked Duncan off first base In the
baaeman ·l uan Sunuel,ls aeen applyla1the tag on · · fifth lnnlllg Sunday at Dodger Stadium. The Reds
Cincinnati' • Mariano Duncan aa Duacan tried to - won 2-0. (UP I)
steal aecond baae alter Dod1er pitcher Fernaado

Georgia trounces Stanford; 16-2
I.

OMAHA, Neb. (UP!) - Jeff
and .J.R. Showalter to open the
tntenttonaf walk. In. It's 11-run
Cooper and Bruce Cl!lck each
sixth and then ·struck out Brian
inning, Mississippi State used 16
scored twice In the sixth Inning
Jester. C!llck singled in a run and
batters, getting nine hits, a walk
Sunday night and the other seven
Doug Radziewicz collected a a hit batter and three Georgia
Georgia starters also scored . In
base bit. Ray Suplee gave Geor- Southern errors.
·
the Inning, hoost1ng the Bulldogs
gia a 3-2 lead with a two-run
to a record-tying 11-run Inning
double and Terry Childers
and 16-2 victory over the topchased Musslna with a run·
END OF THE SEASON
seeded Stanford Cardinal In the
scoring single.
CLOSEOUT ·SALE
College World.Serles.
Joey Alfonso welcomed reJlfll 4 thru ·JUNE 9
The 11-run rally tied the CWS
liever Brian Sacklnsky with an
RBI single and McKay Smith
record for runs In an Inning. The
9:00 A.M.-5;00 P.M.
feat was accomplished three
gave Georgia a string of six
CLOSED SUNDAYS
'
times In the 44 years of the . consecutive hits and a 6-2 lead
'
tournament before Sunday when · with a single. Cooper was IntenAI
and
Mississippi State scored 11 runs
tionally walked and Showalter
lants
In the first Inning of Its game and
chipped In a run-scoring
.... SJ,SO
Georgia then tied the mark In the
IIOW $400 filii
groundout.
second game Sunday.
Jester drove In a run with a
AU Hanging laskttl
Georgia, 50·18, move into a
base bit and Chick's single
.... SJ.SO
llow S400 Flat
Wednesday game In which they
scored another and · led to . a
can wrap up a berth In Saturpitching change. Radziewicz
4 Inch Potted Ger.-ullll,
day's national title game wlih a
ATLANTA (UP!) -A 16-yearsingled to right and first.Mums, Ntw Qilleno
victory. Stanford, 57·11, drops
old Atlanta youth has been
baseman McCarty· cut the throw
l~~~patlens
charged with murder In the death- Into a Tuesday elimination game
off and tried to get Chick at third.
with Mississippi State, which
of Clifford Anderson Hudson, the
The throw was wide for an er.ror
used Its. record-tying 11 runs to
brotJu'!r of major-league baseball
and Chick came across with a
AI 1rHs I Shrullllery
post a 15-1 romp over Georgia
player Jerome Walton, a.u thorlrecord-tying run.
Southern.
tles said Sunday.
,
The Bulldogs added five more
The suspect, whose name has
The Bulldogs assaulted six
In the nlnfh on a run-scoring
1;
Stanford pitchers for 17 singles
not been released because of his
single by Alfonso, Smith's RBI
among 19 hits In the rout,
age, was arrested Saturday, said
single, a two-run double by
Mike Rebhan, 12-5, allowed
Atlanta homicide detective R.S.
Showalter and a wild pitch.
992·5776 Walden.
four hits- three to Paul Car!!YGeorgia sent 15 players to the
SYIACUSE,
OliO
In picking up the victory. Mike
plate'lmd collectedll hits an~ an
Walden refused to · discuss
Musslna, who struck out eight
details about the slaying.
through the first four Innings,
Th~ suspect Is accused of
was touched for six runs, took the
shooting the 31-year-old Hudson
·
loss and fell to 14-4.
.
In the back on May 25 outside a
Carey singled home David
carwash In southwest Atlanta.
McCarty
lri the first Inning aand
Before he died~ Hudson, who
hit
his
iGth
hOme run of the year
. worked at the carwash, gave
In
the
fourth
to stake Stanford to
details of the fatal shooting to
a
2·0·
lead.
Musslna
carried In a
pollee ·officers.
one·hltter
Into
the
fifth and
Hudson Is the brother of
survived
a
bases-loaded,
one-out
Jerome Walton, a center fielder
jam
In
that
Inning.
for the Chicago Cubs who was
He gave up singles to CQoper
named Natlonal League Rookie .
of the Year last season:
Walton, a graduate of Newnan
--Spo118 brie's-IDilllll._ Onlyl ONLY ,
FOI JIST
High School who still lives In
Newnan, described his relation·
Badmlnloll
8erved wllh wfiiPped pot8t-. chicken ·
China swept the finals In both
gravy, cole 118w. hot roll..,d Jauuwo.
ship with Hudson as "really
the men's and womens's dlv·
Sorry. no lubetllutM IXOePt Mvlrtoge
close."
wllh eddltlorwl prta..
"Any time somebody dies In
lslons lor the third consecutive
NOW
FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL
you family, It's tough, but this
year. The men captured the
was really hard to take," Walton
'i'homabs CudpfforlntheMtl!lrd year tn
..,
. Bl!!·,said. "It was Jl\sf somebody
a row y e eat g a 1ays1a 4-1
"'lS
. being crazy. I guess they felt like
and the women claimed a record
PH. 992·5431 ~ ·
POMI~Y, OH.
they had to kill somebody, and It
1_'•-.•-··-•...
by
happened to be my brother.~·

leddi:'J

Suspect is
arrested in
Hudson death

v........

soc ...

50°/ooH .

HUIIAIDS
GIEENHOUSE

tUESDAY
NIGHt
SPECIAL

$3 25

J-A··AfiT

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J

•_r__,_,...._·_Chlcll
___..__"~-...;.1

Eastern ...

taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At 4:17 a .m. the · Racine Fire
Deparlment was called to the
Scott Wolfe residence on County
Road 28 for ap electrical fire.
The Syracuse unit, at 4: 34a .m.
went to College Ro.a d for Helen
Harris who was taken to
Veterans.
'l'he Racine unit responded to a
call at 7:46 a.m. on Oak Grove
Road In which Howard Ervin was
taken to Veterans.
At-10: 12 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Blake · Hill Road (or
Nancy Mogrls who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center, and at
2: 38 p.m. the unit was called to
Bear Wallow Ridge Road for
Doris Eastmond who was taken
to Veterans. ·
. At 5: 12p.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Department went to Route 7 and
33 for an auto fire. The vehicle
belonged to Mlklj Eakins.
The Middleport unit, at 6: 17
p.m. went to Beech Street for
Marleen Oiler who was treated
but not transported, and at 9:56.
p.m. the unit went to Stories-Run
Road for Tainmy Shartager who
was taken to Veterans.

Chambers is appointed
()hio Company president

Boston beats Clevelqnd 8-2

Scoreboard ...

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service re·
sponded to 15 calls for assistance
over the weekend.
On .Saturday at 12.: 07 a .m . the
Rutland unit was called to Route
1~4 to assist the Middleport Fire
Department. Daisy Haggy was
transported to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
At 1: 24 a.m. the Middleport
unit went to Diamond Street for
Christopher Rayburn who was
transported to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit, at 10: 56
a.m.' weri t to Amerlcare for Mary .
Hoffman who was taken to
Veterans, and at 12:59 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit was called to assist
the Chester Fire Department on
an au to accident on Route 7. in
w!llch EIJzaheih Well was t;tken
to Veterans ..
At 2: 11 p.m. the Racine unit
went to Bwshan for Sadie Trussell who was transported to
Veterans.
On Sunday at 12:51 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to Route 7 and
33 for Tina Carpenter who Was
taken to Veterans. ·
.
·The Middleport unit responded
to a call at 2:53 a.m. on Page
Street for Walter Crooks who was

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio

EMS has 15 weekend calls

After game-opening brawl,

lected himself and got a big play
Blue ~Jays 7, Brewers 4 - At
from Luis Rivera that Morgan Toronto, Pat Borders belted a
UPI Sports Writer
two-run home· run and Tony
The Boston 'Red Sox used a 90 felt was the game's big pia)'.
''That was the turning point," Fernandez collected three hits to
mUe-per·hour Roger Clemens'
according to Morgan, talking of lead Toronto. Dave Stleb,. 7-2,
fastball to send a message to the
Rivera's stab of a liner by Steve scattered nine hl)s befpre belne
Cleveland Indians.
Clemens, who struck leadoff Springer that ended the Indian lifted In the seventh and Tom
first Inning threat without a run Henke notched his seventh save.
hitter Stan Jefferson with a
scoring.
Mark Knudson, 3-3, gave up ten
fastball on the first pitch of the·
Clemens answered the call for hits In 'tour and two-third Innings
game, · triggered a bench·
the Red Sox from that point on.
to take the loss.
clearing brawl In Boston's 8-2
Royals 8, Atllletles 2 - A\
victory Sunday over the Indians. . "I ·was assured that" they
needed" seven or eight )imlngs Kansas · City, Mo., Jim Elsen"I'm going to try to pitch
from me," said Clemens, 9-2, reich's two-ruQ homer· hlghllgheffectively and do what the
.situation calls for," said .Cle- ' who went eight jnnlngs for his ted a four•.r un fourth Inning
fifth straight 'victory.
Kansas City pounded Dave Stemens, 'referlilg to the pitch he
"By the seventh. I was dead wart for seven runs, en route to
threw In retaliation of a brushtired," he said.
Its seventh Win In their last nine
back Incident Involving teamThe right-hander rung up 11 games. Mark Gublcza, 3-5, almate Tony Pena In Saturday's
strlkeouts, his 40th lO·strlkeout lowed t.wo runs and four hits over
loss to Cleveland. ''You can take
game of his career, and ran !its eight Innings. Stewart fell to 8-3.
·that anyway you want."
lifetime record over Cleveland to
Tlcen 2, Marblers o - At
Pena, who got a big hit Friday
,off reliever 'Doug ·Jones In Bos- 12·2.
Seattle. · Frank Tanana allowed
· John Farrell, 3-3, took the loss three hits over eight and oneton's victory, had·a pitch thrown
after allowing four runs, lnclud- third Innings and Lou Whitaker
.• at his head by Jones In the ninth
lng two unearned, on six hits In homered and doubled to lead
~ Inning of Saturday night's game.
two and one-third Innings.
Deterott. Tanana, 4·3, earned the
Boston manager Joe Morgan,
Dwight EvansandWadeBoggs win and Mike Henneman picked
-who made no attempt to disguise
his team's Intention to retaliate,
each hit two-run shots and Ellis up his 13th save. Erik Hanson,
Burks hl.t a solo homer In the 5-4, suffered the loss, allowing
· ninth.
·
. ·nine hits over six and on~ third
Elsewhere
In
the
American
' Innings.
pitch: . .
~
"!He got even, didn't we?," League, Baltimore bounced New
AD&amp;els 7, · Ran1ers 4 - At
Morgan said. ''We voted 34-0 that York 4-3, Toronto topped Mllwau· Arlington, Texas, Dante Blchette
kee 7-4, Boston bounced Cleve- drove In a career-high four runs
It would be such. I loved it."
• Cleveland manager John
land 8·2, Kansas City crushed with a solo homer and a three-run
McNamara was not suprlsed by Oakland 8-3, Detroit silenced bloop double to power California.
the first-Inning events.
Sea(tle 2-0, California clipped ,J im Abbott, 3-4, allowed five hits
"] thought there might be Texas 7-4 and Chicago downed over six Innings and Brian
retaliation today because of Minnesota 5·2.
Harvey earned his fifth save.
pu$hlng Pena off the plate last
Orioles 4, Yankees 3- At New Charlie Hough, 5-3, suffered the
nil!hl (Saturday)," said York, Mickey Tettleton smashed loss, 'yielding four hits over six
McNamara.
a two-run homer In the eighth and two-third Innings.
After Jefferson was replaced lnnlng,hissixtboftheyear,tollft
White Sox. 5, Twins 2 - At
by pinch runner Mitch Webs'ter,
Baltimore to viciory: Bob Ml- Chicago, Sammy Sosa hit a
Red Sox first baseman Carlos lack!, 3-3, gave up eight hits over two-run single~ the fourth
Quintana booted a grounder by seven and one-third innings and · straight hit during a four-run
Jerry Brown jo put Cleveland Gregg Olson earned lils 11th second Inning, to lead Chicago.
ruriners on the corners.
save. Mike Witt, 0-4, suffered his Jack McDowell, 2·3, notched his
~~ that point, Clemens colfirst loss as a Yankee since being first victory since May 4 and
traded from California.
Bobby Thigpen collected his 17th
save. Allan Anderson, 2·7, al·
lowed 10 hits over six and
one-third Innings to take the Joss.

Monday, June 4, 1990

..

'continued from page 1

"

• to a new decade of computers and have something that you want to
other advanced technology, It do, do It. If you have something
will be our job to be the leaders." new and exciting to try, 1:0 for It.
ff you want to try something
He pointed out that · whether
do It ." She urged the
different,
events are good or bad they have
class
not
to give up on their
thelr 'reasons for being and that
dreams
just
because !t did not
the graduates must live their
work
the
first
time. ·
lives to the tulles t.
concluded
by ·urglng the
She
"We must greet the future with
graduates
"
not
to
follow where
a firm grip and be willing to
the
pathway
leads,
bu t to go
accept the challenges., changes
where
there
Is
no
path
and leave
and the rewards the future has In
traiL"
a
store," Bush stated.
Following Miss Riffle's valeBush concluded his salutatory
dictory
address, the senior choir
address by saying "We must
members
· sang ''Maybe Some·
have the wisdom to recognize
day
We'll
Meet Again."
·
what Is Important In life; the'
Charles
J . Moore, principal at
confidence to pursue It; and the
the
school,
recognized the top ten
good fortune tp attain it ."
whO
are, Susan Renee
scholars
During her valedictory ad·
Wolf,
Mary
Mag!lelene
Parker,
dress, Miss Riffle sta~ to her
Kymberlee
Diann
Mcintyre,
Dafellow classmates not to )Je afraid
niel Vaughan Tripp, Amy Jo
to do something different or out
. of the.ordinary.
~
· Murphy, Robpn Lee White, RoShe used as an example two bert Ernest Baker, Sharon Eliza·
beth Bryant, Shawn Louis Bush,
friends walking on a deserted
and
Greta Lynn Riffle,
. country road. When the two
The
class of 1990was presented
friends came to a cross road each
by Moore and accepted by Daniel
wanted to go a different way. One
Apllng, ,Ph ·. . D.,
wanted to take the most traveled · L.
superintendent.
road and the other wanted to take
Ray Karr, president of the ·
the 'road that offered more
Eastern
Local Board of Educa- ·
challenges. The two friends went
tlon, conferred the dlpiomas and
their separate ways. When they
the turning of the tassel was
met a few years later the friend
who had taken the more fre- · conducted by Deborah Marie
Brooks and' Crvstal Dawn
· quently traveled road had reKaylor.
mained the same, but the friend
The Eastern High School Alma
who had taken the c hallenglng
Mater by the band, ano;l benedicroad had acquired great riches.
tion by Hoskins concluded the
Miss Riffle pointed out that the
graduating seniors were about to . exercises:
In addition to the recessional
begin the same journey as those
march, the Eastern band also
two friends. She stated that the
graduates "are about to make performed during the program,
"La Banca Nascente," "lndecisions that will affect the rest
of our lives,'' and t~at "some of victa," and "Heatherwood
Portrait ,"
us wlll make mistakes." She
pointed out however, that "the
worst mistake any of us could
make would be to choose a Dissolu~ion granted
profession or way of life because
A dissolution has been granted
one our friends Is doing the same In the Meigs County Court of
thing or because It's what our
Common Pleas to Barbara Ann
parents what us to do."
Stone
and Ricky" Noel Stone.
Miss Riffle stressed, "If you "

.

The new president Is a member
of the boards of directors of Ohio
Equities Inc, and Insurance
Ohio Company Agency, and
president of Midwest Parking
Inc. He served on the board of
trustees of the College of Wooster
from 1982 to 1988. He was a
founder of the Public Securities
Association and has been active
In the United Way campaign and
the Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges.
"After 65 years of continuous
growth, The Ohio Company will
maintain the tradition ol strong
regional Investment banking a·ctivlties linking the needs for
public and corporate capital wlih"
the needs of the Investors In our
six-state marketing area,"
Chambers said.
Fanta, 61, Is retiring after 30
years with The -Ohio Company.
He attencled Miami University
and served In the U.S. Army
Counter·lritelllgence Corps dur·
lng the Korean War.
The retiring president Is
member of the New York Stock
'Exchange; president of the lnves tment Dealers of Ohio; director and past chairman oftbe Ohio
Chamber of Commerce; arid a
past trustee and chairman of the
board,of Miami University.

..... '

WEATHER MAP - Cool Canadian air will spread Into the East
brlnglnl fair ~kles and seasonally cooler temperatures.
Thunderstol'll)s will generate along a now awakening cold front
along the Atlantic and Gulf CQasls. Another batch of
thunderstorms Is likely In north 1'e"as and Qklahorria along a
warm front and surface trol as guH moisture hegins to return.
Spotty showers and thunderstorms In the North and Northwest
aiong a quick moving Pacific frontal system. Elsewhere, mainly
lair and mUd.

I

------Weather ·- - - - - South Central Ohio .
Tonight, mostly clear. A near
record breaking low In the mid
40s. North winds 10 mph.
Tuesday, sunny . High 70 to 75.

Edended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of rain Wednesday and
Thursday. Fair Friday. Highs In
the 70s or the lower 80s. Lows in
the 50s or the lower 60s.

..

Two winners will split jackpot
CLEVELAND tUPil - The
Ohio Lottery Commission said
Sunday two players will spilt the
$6 million jackpot in the weekend
Super LoHo game.
They held tickets with the
wlnnlqg numbers of 3·. 5,,13. 27, 32'
and 37.
The players. one from
Fairfield and the other from
Lorain, will" each receive $3
million paid in 20 annual
Installments of $114,750 alter
the mandatory 20 percen I
federal tax and the 3.5 percent
state tax are withheld .

In addition to the top prizewinners, 149 tickets were sold
with five of the s ix numbers to
win $1.000each,·and 6,828 pla yers
selected four of the number s to
win $75 each.
Ticket sales in the Saturday
game totaled ·$4,256.362.
. In the accompanying Kicker
game, a player from Ironton will
collect the $100;000 grand prize
for ha\'lng the correct combination of 079623.
Sales in the Kicker game were
$775,205 and the total prize
payout was $329,320.

,

.

a

Lawmakers prepare to deal
with several major issues
COLUMBUS, . Ohio &lt;UP. I) '
Selected state lawmakers will be
meeilng this week · to grapple
with legislation on drugs and
campaign financing, but a proposal to encourage solid waste
recycling ~pparently has been
scrapped until fall:
·An Informal ,Senate-House
panel will meet Wednesday to
continue work on the provisions
to be Included In a drug-fighting
bill now in the House. :
And Sen. Robert Cupp, R·
Lima, Is scheduled to ~elease to a
Senate task force Wednesday
morning the Republican versJon
of c~mpalgn flnancll)g and lobbyIng regulation bills. already
passed by the House. In different
,
form.
There are no voting sessions of
the House or Senate this week.
The two cham~M:rs will be meetIng next .week to finish business
for the summer.
Sen. Richard Finan. RCinclnnatl, chairman of the Senate Ways and· Means Commit· .
tee, said late last week he's given ,
up for t.h e time being on a ·

House-passed recycling bill in his
committee.
.
"I don't. think we're ready to
vOle on It," he said. "Is till have a
lot of unanswered questions."
The bill In question, sponsored
'by Ohio House Speaker Pro
Tempore Barney Quilter, DToledo, Is· an attempt to promote ,
curbside recycling of metal,
glass, , plastic, yard waste and
other refuse.
But Fil)an complained thaJ the
Quilter bill. backed by a large
coalition ol retailers, manufacturers. labor, and beer and soft
drink bottlers, doesn't co1'er the
problem of used tires an~ doesn't
·provide enough money to pay for
the recycling.
,
Finan's ·committee already
has approved · a bill rllQuiring ,
deposits on cans and bottles, but
the House has Indicated it will not
pass that bllt, so It Is stalemated
awaiting com prom lse.
.
"I think we have to let It
mature a little bit," said Finan of ·
' the Issue. "Over the SUfllmet,
we'll have to sit reasonable
people down and let them discuss
it ."

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of It: 30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............ :29%
AT&amp;T .................................. 43
1\shland 011 ............ .. .......... 361'.
Bob Evans ........ :.... : .. , ......... 13 1Ao
Charming Shoppes ......... .. .. .10%
City Holding Co ............ .. .... 14%
Federal Mogul.. .... ... ...... ., ... 2ll'o ·
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ..... .. ... ....35%
Heck-'s .......... .. .... .. ..... ..... ~, · · 3%
Key Centurlon·... .. ............. :.l4~
Lands'. En,:i .. .... .... ... .'.... ....... l4~
Limited Inc · ......... .... ,.......... 50
Multimedia Inc .........
.. ...... : .Sl~
c
.vt
Rax Restauran s ..... .. ........... 2"'
Robbins~ .Myers .... :........... 19*
Shoney's lnc ...................... :14~
Star Bank ...................... : .... 20~
Wendy's lntl ........................ 5Jt '
•u
Worthlngt on Ind ................. l ""'
(IJmlted Ia ea: dlvldelld today.) .
. \

'•

.

Meanwhile, the Senate Judi-.
clary Committee will meet Wednesday and may report out
House-passed legislation officially creating the state Office of
Inspector General.' ·
Th~ office has been operating
under. executive order of Gov.
Richard Celeste for more than a
year, but the governor wants to
make It permanent, and legislative leaders. have agreed to pass
the bill this mont!l .

Hospital news
veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- Ora M.
Sinclair, · Pomeroy; Sadie Trus·
se11, Lo ng Bottom ..
Saturday discharges - Linda
s. George: Janet Jenkins. ·
Sunday admissions - Helen
Harris, "Syracuse; Howard Erv1n, Rac1ne.
Sunday discharges - Pauline
. Cunnlneham.

___ Meip announcements

The neon golf hat is free and so is playing in
entry fonn for the Thumarnent are inside the special
the 1990 Vantage Ultra Lights Night Par-3 Golf ·
cartons of Vantage illtra Lights.
Tournament on July 7.
So pick up acarton of Vantage illtra Lights. And
Just look for the display in yo11r participating
take ashot in the dark at the Vantage Ultra Lights Night
supermarket. Yo11r free hat and official rules plus the
Par·3 Golf Thurnament.
Participating Courses:
Lake Gloria Golf and Fishing Center
Golden 'lee Golf Course
10511 Pippin Rd. • Cincinnati, OH · · 2241 Sharon Rd. • Sharonville, OH
Drm't miss the KROGER SENIOR CLASSIC, presented lrj Fifth Third Bank, July 11-15.

s

5 mg. "tar", 0.4 mg. nicotine ov. per cigarette by FTC method.

I

lbumament participation ltHmllld .

SURGEON· GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces ·Serious Risks to Your Health.

FOr edutt111!10k81a21I'Hfl'ol age Of otdlronty.
AH prornotiOnat COlla paid by m.nutacturer.

i
I

l

~

Traatee. lo meet

, Will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at .
The Olive Townlhlp Trustees
the Reedsville Fire Ho118e,

Q

.,

. ,.

••

•
,'

.•'

�.....___
Classified

Monday, June 4. 1990

By The ~nd

The Daily Sentinel
~-6

People
, in the news

The seven children of the late
Hartsel and Garnet Loti Wind·
land gathered at the (lome of
Leland and Margaret Wlndland
Parker, Pomeroy for a family
reunnlon, Sunday, May 27.
Those present were Biondenna
Wlndland Markley; Columbus;
James L. a.nd Lauretta Blanche
Wlndland Cook, Largo, Fla.;
Dale and Ada Grace Wlndland,
The Plains; Robert aJ!d Betty
Wlndland, Coolville; Wilbur,
Inez, and Sunshine Wlndland,
Guysville; Karen and Dawn
Dayle, Athens; Rose Marie
McCulre, Sarah Holmes and
Kendra Evans, Morgantown, W.
Va. ; Dave and Janel Lonas. Toni

ROCK "AND FDU£: Dennis
~llol.

the drummer for the rock
band Forelper, and h·ls wife;
lona, ·had to abandon ship off
F.ort Lauderdale, Fla .. Saturday
after their boat caught fire. Iona
discovered a fire in the engine
room of the Charisma III and
Dennis was unable to put It out
With a fire. extinguisher. "We
r!!ally don't know . what hap·
pened," he said. "It was so
sUdden and unexpected." The
ElUotts radioed the Coast Guard
with a mayday call, giving their
location and saying IIley were
going to jump overboard. A Coast
G11ard plane spotted them a bout
20 minutes later and dropped a
l'J!{t Into the , water: They were
later taken aboard a freighter.
ferried by Coast Guard helicopter to the Bahamas and then
flown to Florida.

'

ON THE RIVER - This voup of Melp
CounU- recently spent a week aboard the
Mlaelillllppl Queen, a (rip planned as a part of
Bapk One's Senior Champa program. The group
viAIIed famous sites In New Orleans before
hoarding the ,iteaintio.a t. ··nurtng their trip they
.vlslled In Natchez, the cliy of many anlebelhun
homes. The Melp group plcl.u red !'board th'e

C$rol OhUnp!r, Teresa Fields, Linda Zarnock,
Suzy Carpenter, Laura Sailer, Sblrley McDonald,
Carolyn Colllas, Adell White, Renee lljiKhar,
Marce FetQ-, JuUe Randolph, Jo
Hqes,
PauUne Horton, Betty Ann Loftis, Mary Beth
Museer, Janet Peavley, Meg Smltll, Cheryl
Haley Mar1aret Johnson, Sharon Edmonds, and
Eddte' Whaley. Pictured are CrhlaUne Dowler,
VIcki H111hes and Debbie Mlak all teachers from
Meigs Junior High School.
·

summit .leaders fall .to make
the vade

Ann

CCL meets
The Middleport C::hild Conser·
vatlon ·•League met recenily at
the home of Helen Blackston.
The meeting was opened With
Becky Broderick, president lea"d·
lng the , Pledge and ' Mother's
prayer.
The secretary and treasurer's
report were read followed by old
and new business. Roll call was
giving of a favorite craft or
hobby.
·
Devotions were led by Nancy
· Morris and plans were discussed
. for the annual' family picnic
which Is to be held In June.
Pt. was reported that Nancy
Broderick was the mother of a
new baby girl and D)embers
enjoyed a handcraft auction. The
traveling prize was won by Tracy
0 Dell and Helen Blackston won
'the hostess gift . Refreshm.ents
were proveded by Nancy Morris
and Peggy Houdashelt.
Attending were Nancy Morris,
Helen Blackston; Tracy O'Dell
Clarice Kennedy, Tammie Mash
and "Becky Broderick.
Members were asked to re·
Mlsslalllppl Qaeen Include: front, from left, Joaa .
member
their secret sisters over
' Corder, Vlrlfllla Caldwell, Charle!l G~fl&amp;h,
the
summer.
Maxine Grifllth, tiip planner for the &amp;elllor •
Ch~JIII provam; Rachel Downie; b.act. BetQ- •
., T!tomas, 81113' rhomu, Maida Mora, Doni Mon,
Barbara VanMeter, Vlfllnla CatiiQII, Pal Holler,
Roy Holter, Mildred Gaul, Jake Gaal, Dayld ;. ,
Neue and Jean Nease.
'
··

JANET'S HAIR-GO-ROUND
MASON, WV.
773-5404 '

JOHN ·~. WADE, M.D., Inc. ·
PLEASANT VALLEY HOS..ITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARINQ AIDS"

__

1

15

6

15
15

10

15

3

Monthly

15 .

be pre·

4'1:.V ••

2 - ln Memory
3-Annoucemenrs
4 - Give.way

5 - tlappy Ada
6-a.ost and Found

~:~.,. ·af'l• publicltion to mike correct ion.

•Ads thlt must be paid in advenu are

7- Y•d Salt!Piid In advancel

Cerd of Th.nka

Happy Adl .

In Memoriam

&amp; - Public S1la &amp; A.uct ion

Yard Sales

9- Wantld to Buv

'

reaching over 18.000 homes. ·

. . .11-Help W,anted
1 2 - Situatlon Wanted
1 3 - lnturtnce
· 14-Butineu Trtin ing
16 - Set-tools &amp; lnttruction
16- R•dio. TV S. CB Aep1ir
·17- Mtscellaneout
, a-wanted To Oo

ru•~u711nru:

446-Gallipolis

. (304) "675-1244

Mason .Co .. WV

Aru Code 614

Area Code 304

23-Prof•aionll S•vices

992 - Middlepon

675 - Pt. Pleasant
458-l:eon

Pomeroy

388-Vinton
2415 - Rio Grande

986 - Ch.lter
843- Portland

643 - Arabi 'a Oist
379 - WIInu·t

.949 - R8cina .
742 - Rutland

Real Fslale

,

31 - Homn tor Sale
32 - Mobile Home~ for Sale '
33- Ftrms "for S•l•

34- Buoiness Building;

576 - 4pple Gro"e

773 ...... Maeon
882 - N.W Haven
896-letart
937 - Buftalo

667 - Cootville

Real·

41-Houees for Rent
42-Mobile Homet for Rent
43-hrms tor Rent

47-W.,ted to Rent
48-EQuipment for Rent

49-Fo• Le11e

Public Notice

Plena and apecificatfona

MIDDLEPORT- 6.09 beau·

tiful country acres dose to
!own. .3 bedroom mobile
home, small b,,rn, and a
12x65 2-liedrdOm mObile
home with all hookups. Live
iii one and rent the other.

$21.900.00
II IDOL EPORT.- 19 78 Modular Home silting on 21ots
in town. 2 car garag~ NGFA
heat. garden area. Also has
self contained A/ C unit.
Many other features. All appliances go wrth the house.

$39,500.00.

HENRY R. ·CLELAND
992·6191
Jean Trussell ... 992'2660
Mae Hupp ........ 949·2257·
Jo Hill ....... :.. .. 985·4466
Office ....... :...... 992·2259
OUR SALES 'VOLUiiE HAS
BEEN GOOD AND WE STILL
HAWE BUYERS LOOKING
FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROP·
ERTY. IF YOU WANT TO
SELL . CALL . CLELAND
REALTY TODAY!!!
1990 Ohio Houalng
IIIUI Now AvaiiHla.
FIXED RATE 7.76%
11t yr., 8.26% .
through 30th yr. Cell
Claland Rulty tDday.
We will help you find
• qualified home
from our exiltlng
Inventory.

MOTHER'S CUPBOARD
COUNtRY STORE

. uc••· o•a

Sy-n Growe, St.lt. 124

RACINE CUT RATE
UCINE, OHIO

We Ntt• Llttl•e•l

A

For . ...,.. lnforMatlen ·
·. Call 949·2942 or 949·2542

I

&lt;I

a ••'chali t o • J

lo~

_,-·I

oor1
old. Good Willi .......
'1144.....
'

are on file in the Department

oflran1portetion and the of·
lice of the Dlatrii:t Deputy

57-Music .. lnthumeritt
58 - Fruitt • Vevetabl•

11

PAT HILL

59-For Sale or Tflde

Fmn Suppltr!s
61 -Farm equip~ent
62-Wanted 10 Buy
63 - livfltOc:i(
64 - Hay S. Grain
65-Sud &amp; FertWiLet

71 - A'u tos for S.Je

73- Vans a 4 vvo ·s
74-Moiorcvcl•

7e-Auto P1n1 &amp; Acceuorie~~
77-- Auto

•LIMESTONE

79 --Campers 6 Mo1or Homa

•ANYTHING

"•p•ir
78 -, Cemp ing Equipment,

AT ALL

81 -· Home lmprowments
82-Piumbing • Ht~tlng

..

Expanding physician office needs
· a receptionist. Duties include ap·
pointment sheduling. typing (50
wpm). filing and medical insurance billing. Qualified applicant
should have appropriate experi·
ence or education.
Send reaume with salary requirement to :
Medical Receptionist. P.O. Bo.x 729D, Po•
mero'(, Ohio "6769.

•

J

THE BEST

SER~ICE

We can repair ciild retort radiators · and
heater cores. We can '
PubliC Notice
also acid btiil and rod
lion 4.5·1(4); (f) or conflict " out radiators. We aho
with existing local laws or
repair Gas .Tonics.

ordinances.

The.Board of Appeals and
the Mayor hereby gran1
rlance to McDonald' 1 Cor·
poratlon for !he construe,

PAT "ILL FC)ID

• 992 · 21·96
· Middleport, Ohio
.

tfon of • rasteurant within

··----- -.

EUM HOME

•sHRUB-&amp; TREE
TRIM ancl REMOVAL·,

· - &amp;loardf•
Sellior Chi•- and

•LIGHT HAULING

•fiREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

resuklng from-the reduced
lowest floor elevation.
Dated: .May 24. t990
Richard Seyler. Mayor
Village of Pomeroy. Oh.
Brenda Morril, Clerk

-1 1o2 -

0UIIIl211, . - .. ,

e. Boalq••· ....,_, ...._,
3 Fomlly Yard Sole, 2141Eul..,
Awe. Tfiurodoy, F-, 1:011 ~
toi:OO Pin.
ALL 'ford lleloo ~ lo Pold IIi ·
- · DEADUNI: 2:00 p.11.

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

=' ..:::: ·~«~. C:-ti i
i
p.m. ......y.
FUmtl-. ololhlna.

·J

.....

·-

--·_____. . . ...
-----:-Dr
•.a.Mil!;
H.

• OUI At. ....
E - Rd. . - 1,2

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

'

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia given that Amari·
fax, Inc .. dbo FAX. h11 filed
on oppllc.o11on wbh the Pub·
lie Utilhlel Commloalon of
Ohio (Cue No. 90·222· TP·
ACE) requHtlng authority
to furnloh lntraa11te Inter·
exchange
tefecammuni·
cation oervic11 etatowlde In
Ohio. Any lnterHted perlOll, fltm, corpDrotion or e'n·

ololhoo,toyo.

"LOW IIKOMI HOMI"

'

3-28 -"IC).Ifn

.

EAGU RIDGE

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WABAIITY

SMAll ENGINE
CENTER
SELLING

.ouT

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE

"Free E1tlmate1.,

PH. 949·2801
.or Res.· 949 •.2860

MOVING!
-S:M.f 9·7

Sot.

992-5335 or 915-3561

•·5

Closed S...,

Acrosi From Pod Office

949-2969

NO SUNDAY CAlLS
· 4-16-86-tto

1-31 · 1

mo.

Pt. Plelsant

a VIcinity

tity 1 who

CUMATE
CONTROL

CUSTOM BUI.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949•2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

misaion • wiitt•n atllteri1ent

MIC-ROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

cetvet a written atatement
to that effect and an ac-

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

ella will be decided on the
b11i1 of th, information con·
tolnlll In the appllc.otlon and
offidavka aubmltted by the
appllc.on1. Fur1h6r lntormo·
tlon mey be obtained by con·
tae1ing the Pubtl_c Utllhlel
Commloolon of Ohio. 180
Eut Broad Btreet. Colum·
bus. Ohio 432811-0573.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

&amp; VIcinity

MORE.

614-742-2772

5-11-'90-1 mo.
... . ·.

lOWE
POWEIWASH
SDVICE

Roger Hysell
Garage .

ALL MAlES

Middleport

STIAWROWIIS: Dwtlrl
&amp; Toll; PAMPAS GRASS:
Pink &amp; White; FUSCHIA,
IASIIETS, !IRIS and

CALL
992·5589
.-

Pomeroy,

OPEN MON;·SAT. 10 h 5

Reaidentlal &amp;
Commercial

can ahow good I ~~-~-..,!#;!.t,!!!!J

couee why such application I·
lhould not be granted
ohould fllo wl1h the Com·

Paulin's HillhtwHn
Rutland 01111 Rt. SS.

Heating, Cooling,
Refrigeration
Service

Rtasonabl. Prices"

.....

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

HUMPHREY'S

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"At

-

992-5042

4-6-l~ttn

-

Tue.,l:»?

..... 411, ............. foil \1M
St.)
Ftimlt-.
pl.,h 4t;

1tc

;. PubliC Notice
'

...

209 South 4th St.
MidiiiJHII"I, Oh.

BISSELL ,
SIDING CO

surance will be commenaurate with the increaed risk

I

_

Good -Rotoo
T.L.C .
27 Yra. Exp.
Referencea

EVENINGS

Hl-ttc

the Village of Pomeroy flood
plfin on the real Illata t-_.......___,.......,.,
known u the railroad depot
•VINYL SIDING .
propol1y.
.. .
•ALUMINUM SIDING •
Notice io hereby given. In
•BLOWN IN
compliance with the Flood
INSULATION
Demoge Prevention Ordl·
nonce, thotthea1ructure wilt
be pennltted to be built wHh
a lo-t floo• ......t."" be·
low the bae flood elevation
·
•
and thottha coat of flood in·
New H_. lullt

581 S. F_.. Atrt.

Aur6 &amp;TR'u'CK

REPAII\
Al10 Trl..•llllos

992-5335 or 915-3561
Aao- p,_ Past Offlca
217 I. Sec, P-oy
POIIDOY,

PH. 992-5612
• or 992-7121

I

4-.25·11•

(8) 4. 1tc

Business
Services
.

I

• COUNTRY
"MOBILE
HOME PARt(

lt. 33 lertll of
•-roy, ONe

CONSTRUCTION

OPEIIIMO
SOON
Call Now TD Make

elewH-n

•Gar••
•Complete

Appointment

........c...""',_

949-2794

SPECIAL

Ca. Rd. 28

Walch Far Signs

RACINE, OHIO

DOZD
SITEWORK • RPADS
ClEARING

NEWLAND
.
EitERPRISES .
\

•

DUMP TRUCK ,.

ru.NG I i1El111NG
..... '-mtioltl
161 Nlrth SlnM

llldlt,lrt, Ollie 45760

SALES '&amp;SER91CE
w.c.y_,....,._

....

YourPholl8
llllwtt..e

I '

1511 ,........

''-::J"it!IIVICI
011.

PARTS

. .........

....... , . , _ . . . , llunllold.
tara. - I ' ...

lt(l!lk Pwtalat HotMIIta.

..~une-...::Jak.l

RUTUND DIE

WANl ·
ADS
WORK!

SALES and
SEIVICE
742·3011
•Tirt B11ta
•F:ont End
Allgnrnlflt

BODY SHOP

SPOITCA.$

FLATWOODS, ROAD

.Trilla

912-1603

Buy· Sell

POMEROY, OHIO

367·0511

l/1i1

ENGINE REPAll

FrHEstl.ates
915-4473
667·6179

Sand·Stone-Dirt ' ' •OU Change • Lube
•BI"Ike Wortt
(614) 667-3271
MAIN ST.,
G..... A.

VIC'S

DAVE'S SMALL

Q .....

&amp;-31·1 mo.

5-17·'90.1 -

ftWLOeATIOII

'For M081 2lrld ~a

Stap &amp;

30 S.sslons-130

. ····Mo~~ -Ren•l•
•.:O.llwnlf!l•·

BISSEll &amp; IUtiCE.

FOREVER BRONZ
lANNlNG

•Mobile Home

• 992·7479

ISA .
WANT AD

·~

87-Upholltery

'

.........:
-........ 1111,..1111.
- -~
aiho!
lion!!,
H. lM ~

1:11·90-·lfn

83-Eatlll'lting
84- Electrical &amp; Refrig•atlon
85-Gen••l H1uling
86-Moblle Home Aepal'

,I

Yard Sale

7

I

&amp; VlclnHy

985-4422
..

the PouiMOf FJoww Shop.

Gallipolis .

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 &amp; S.R. 143
. NEWHOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10a.m.·6p.m. 6Daya,CiosedSundey
PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb.;
Aluminum
· 36C per lb .

•FILL DIRT .

''

., "
' -' ............
-Pool ... tor
In - "'

RECYCLING

OFFEIS 2 LOCATIOIS TO SDVE YOU.-.

•GRAVEL

75 - Boett &amp; Motors for Sale

companying requnt for oriJ
hearing in thla matter, the

Helj:l Wanted

TRI ·

CHES111, OHIO

72 - TtUc;ks for S1le

(81 4.

DODGE
Third. MWdleport
5·16•'90c1 mo.

R. L
TRUCKING

LMI &amp; Found

"-"1: -VIolenlool.....

s.
. 992-6421

399

&amp; Lrve~lock

Services

6

CHRYSUI-PLYMOUTH

detailing the •-one Dn or
before June 18. 1990. Unlelo the Commloalon ro·

Director.
The Director marvel the
right to reject any ond elf
bldo.
BERNARD B. HURST
DIRECTOR
(8)4. 11.2tc
.-:

AT

515 L 8uMding Suppli•
56 - Pete for Sah1

Public NOtice

'

$21.500.00.

--· --T J aMepol=l',1~

DALLAS SAYRE

54-Mite . Merc:hendiae

ORDINANCE 11588
NOTICE TO .
VARIANCE TO
CONTRACTORS
E.M~i11W..
. StATE OF OHIO
CbNSTRUCT IN A
POMEROY,O.
FLOOD PLAN
DEPARTMENT OF
An opplloolon for no.,nh"l
992-2259
TRANSPORTATION
"to develop In a
Columbus; Ohio
POMEROY - Brick Ranch
Mev ze. 1990
a rei has been flt~t~•:h the
Home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
ContraCI Still Legal CollY Village Mayor" a
After careful · conoldaracarpet, nice front perch:
No. 9fl..873
tlon. the Pomeroy Board of
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Garage wrth door· opener.
Sealed propo10f1 will be Appeals end 1~1 Mayor find
Heat pump. Realt1 nice
received
at the ·office of the that 1he conditions of 1 vorl·
home and well"taken care of.
Director of 1he Ohio Depart· ance aa enum. .tad In the
See this one. Call for more
men1 of Tranoportatlon, Col· Village of Pomeroy Flood"
informatio.n.
umbu1, Ohio; un1110:00A. Damage Provontlon Ordl·
M., Ohio Standard Time. nance are applicable 10 _t.,.
RUTLAND - 3 1ear old . Tuaadey, June19, t990.for conltructlon of • mtaurant
on t~ r..t e~tate known u
house with Iar.Re garage, ' lmprovementein:
.
fiee gas ·to hou;;e plus a· . Atheno. Meigs end Vinton tile railroad depot property
Countiel. Ohio. on various on WHt Main Street In the
1978 Holl1 Park trailer
sectlonl of State Route 32, Ylltaga Df Pomeroy by tl)e·
14'x70' with Expando and
Atheno. .Melgo ·and Vinton McDonald's CorpOration, In
room added on .. large metal
, Countie1, by . resurfacing 11111 McDonald' a· Corpora· ·
barn. satellite dish· and
with aophel\ concrete.
tion ~
.
•
many other features. Mu st
(11 has shown a good and ·
Project and Work lengthbe seen to be appreciated.
87,&amp;31 foot or 12. '79 mile. 1uHicient cause; .
All in good c~ndition.
(21 hu ohown that a fai·
Povement width- 2 ai 24
lure to grant • veria,_ce
feet
"'The date 181 for comple- would r•utt In eMceptto11al
SYRACUSE - A beautilu I
hardlhip to McDonold'o
tion of 1hia work shall be u
bi- level home in excellent
CorjK)ratlon: and
:'.!f~h
in
tha
bidding
·
p
rO·
1
condition. 3 bedrooms, 2
13) hu ehown that tile
baths. a large family room
Eoch •bidder shall be re- granting of a variance wHI
wrth fireplace. Attic fans,
quir&lt;td to file whh hio .bid 1 no1 r11uh · in (a) lncr-ed
storage workshop and
certified chad&lt; or cahier'a lloDd holghta beyound tha1
fenced yard: All this for onl1
c:heck fOr 1n amount equal which Ia p81mltted if! 1he
to five per cent of hil bid, but Flood D - - OrdlnonC.!
$47,000.00.
in no event. mora than fifty (b)oddhlonol ihreetato pub·
thouund dollara, or a bond lie safety: tel extraordinary
TUPPERS PlAINS- Would
public elljHinH; (d) create
for tan per cant of his bid,
100 believe you could lind a
payable to tho Director.
nula~ncH; lei cau• freud
3 bedroom ranch with tull
Bidders mua11pply. on the on .,, victimization of lhe
basement in great condition
proper lormo. for quollfic.o· public oi ldont~led In Sec·
with that 2 acres 100 want for
Ilona at leat ten deya pilar
"elbow rOOm? lndude a heat
10 1he date eet for opening
·bide In . accordance whh
pump. central air, garage,
Chapter 5625 OHio Rovi18d
and" large st{Jage shed and
Code.
··
this is for 100' $4"3.000.00.
cabin sitting on HI acres
wrth a view ottheOhioRiver.
Newly remodeled, carpet,
eleet11c heat. ret. an~· range.

$1816

3&amp;- Real Estate W1ntttd

46-Furnished Aooms
46-Sp.ce for Rent

General

LONG BOTTOM - 6 ioom

rr~-m.;

A Great Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO 1HE EmA IIlLI"...
992-6810

CLEAN, LUBE &amp; TEST

53-Anliquea

35 - Lou &amp; Acruge

44-Apartment for Rent

ALSO SEWNG-SHILVIS, GLASS CASES, &amp;fllD
CAID CASES

3rd

Meigs Courny

256- Guyan Dist ·247 - Let•n·Falis

STOREWIDE ITEMS

Location ....

21 - Busineu Opportunity

telephone exchanges...

387-Cheshire

' _ , . - " ' .... -.Jo

Stop In ·and 5H

Transporlalion
22 - Money 10 Loan

FINAL REDUCTIONS .
25°/o -10 50°/o OFF.
Come See Us
At Our New

OAV BEFORE PUBliCATIO"N
- 11 ,00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 ,00 P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2' 00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P.M. FRIDAY .

Classified pa/(es· corer the

CHICAGO t UP I) -Presidents
George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev are dominating the news,
but neither made the list of the
most requested lilographles
developed by Encyclopaedia Britannica's Instant . Research
Servl.c e ..
The top honor for the first f,our
months of 1990 went to the- late
President John F . Kennedy, who
also topped the list In 1989.
Other key figures on the new · c
list, released Sunday, include
Sigmund Freud, Michelangelo,
Martin Luther King, Jr.,,Mohandas Gandhi. Joan of Arc and
Napoleon.
Neither Bush nor Gorbachev
ranked among the top 15, but they
were In good compa~y.
'
Jesus and Einstein, among the
top requested profiles for 1989,
also dropped from the top. Others
falling from the list Included
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore
Roosevelt, Nostradamus, Ben·
Jamln Franklin, John )'&gt;(aynard
Keynes, Winston Churehlll and
Charles Lindbergh.
·
Instant Research Service provides an assortment of heavily
researched topics spanning a list
of 10,000 reader· ready titles.
service Director Margaret
Mottler was unable to explain the
fall of Jesus and Gorbachev from
this ye;Ir's list, but said It may
have to do with study requirements of young people, and tl!elr
need for supplementary material
for school reports·. . ·
·
The new top 15, in order of
preference: Kennedy; Freud;
Michelangelo; Gen. Douglas Ma·
cArthur; U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor;
Thomas Edison; Adolph Hitler;
King; architect Frank Lloyd
Wright; Ghandl; Nelson Mandela; Joan of An~; Napoleon;
Josef Stalin and Gen. Robert E .
Lee.
'
·
·
·

SPRIMO SPECIAL

51 - HouMhOidGoodl
62-lport'"e Ooodt

Employment
Sl!rvrcr.s

•A clauifi~ acfvertitement placed in The Daily Sent ine4 (81 ·
.cept --:- CIIUifitd displey, &amp;usin•• Card and leg~ notices) .
will also appeat in the P1; . Ple•anl Regitter fM'ld the Gall•·

.

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

GIEG BAILEY

Mel charnlrse

for •rrora first d~ ed rune in paper! . Cell before 2 :00p.m

COPY· DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

1S61l'owelt St, Mi....,t

2 .....,..., 14 ..... old. To .....
HoMe:.l111tl 11 .
- -

ldl.

1-Card of Th*'kt

•Sentinel is not rHponatble for erroraefter first day . !Check

Tri~Juna,

K and J CONSTRUCTION

· =.::r:=1......._T

.

3 dl¥1 1t no ch•ge.

polil Dally

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CUNIC

•r• for con•cutive runs, broken upd-vewiH btChll'gec:l

ada - Giv . .wav and Found ads under 15 Words will be
·
.
•Price of ad for all c•pltlllen•r• is double price of ad coSt.
•7 point lint ftt'pe oniy uMd.
·

run

"We're Moflng Sale"

Eshelman and son.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
spent a recent weekend ·In
Michigan to help celebrate their
brother•ln-law's 80th birthday.

~-

__. .

mult

:~.··~." 1 .!0 discount for •d• p!lid In advance.

RACINE CUT RATE

In Washington, C.H. and attended the high school graduation of their daughter, Lisa.
·Mr. and Mrs. Michael Price,
Otway, Ohl9 visited her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. ~ussell

HAIRDRESSER NEEDED

Meigl, Gall if or Mlton count ieS

Quirks ·-in the news

Harrisonvitle happenings._ _ _......__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Mrs. Faye Cotterill as returned
to her home here after spending
two weeks with her father and
sister In· Dade City, Florida.
John and Ann Williams entertalned John's brother and sister·
ln·law from Largo, Fla.. last
!A'eek.
Mrs. Geraldln.e Ross of Ona, W.
Va., visited Duane and Hazel
Stanley and relaiives In Athens
County.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Phillips
visited his son,VIrgll and family

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to s"P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
SUNDAY

Glvellwllr

Lilt.
r:.::..:.J.... :;. :"Ia:""*'

1614) 992-7843

Ov'r 1GW«&gt;rdo
u .oo . '
.20
. u .oo
. 30
$9.00
.42
e13.oo·
.eo
11 .30/ day
.011/ day

Page 7

2-.. . '" 4

lla .. tr....-... llwlfiSt . .t

.
Rate

Words

Days

Daily Sentinel

MAINTENAfKE &amp; IEPA.

RATES

fO,PLAC£ AN AD CAU 992-2156

Wati and Jackie Wlndland, New
Marshfield; Sherr!, · Jeremy,
Crys_tal and R,onnl Wlndland,
Albany; Jim and Sandra MeDOn·
ale, Columbus; Donald Eugene
and· June, Teresa, Amanda,
Wayne and Anita Wlndlllnd, and ·
Nancy and Ashley Kline,
,
Delaware.
Leland, Margaret, Joe, Mike,
Chuck and Chris Parker, Pomeroy; John T. and Patty Cook,
Shade; Jeff and Kathy Moore,
Russell Point; Jim and Angle.
Parker, Chester; Emma Carleton, Pomeroy and the Rev .
William Mlddleswarth, Racine.
A hayride was enjoyed by those
·
·
·
·
attending.

c

Nothing good about sunbathing·

' . Evelyn Ingram and
Mrs.
·daughter, Jame O'Neil and her
sons, Dustin and Tim all from
Columbus, Ohio visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and family
ewer the weekend.
- Mrs. Ethel Orr of Chester was
II dinner guest of the Lees on
Sunday.
• ·There were 51 present for
Sunday School on Sunday, May
27.
· Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watson
tram Kent, Ohio spent the_weellend with Mrs. Mary Roush.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Family reunion held

By United Press International
; ,.fANE AND TED: JaJ!e Fonda
" Is a cut abtlveTedTumer's usual
girlfriends, bls daughter says.
Laura Turner, oldes I daughter of
tile communications mogul, told
People magazine that "she hasn't
afways approved of Turner's
women, butsays Fonda Is OK. "'I
think they're appropriate · for
each other," she said. "TI\ey're
both Independent and exciting.
Dad gets bored quickly. Usually,
be needs a whole stable of women
to keep up with him, but they're
not always the brightest,"
TUrner says he was the first
person to seek a date with Fonda
after sbe split from husband Tom
Hqden, but she turned him down
at" the time. "I think I said I
WORKSHOP - Melp Local School District
wasn't feeling so hot, that he was
recently
held a Make-It Take-It Workshop. The
an Interesting guy, too, but I
workshop
was paid for ,by Tri·County In
wasn't feeling peppy," Fonda
Nel110nvllle
and
a grant fr~ '11tle II funds. Kelly
says. Now that she's feeling
Kellou
and
Reba
AckiiiOil from Tri-County and
peppier, Fonda says the relation·
Wendy
Halar
from
Melp Local hosted the event
&amp;hlp with Turner "Is a natural,"
with
the
fDUowlng
pardclpanta:
Carolyn Smith,
even though both claim to be
VIcki
Hughes,
Debbie
Mlak,
Christine
Dowler,
djltlng other people too.
Sandy
Butcher,
Jamie
Blaettnar,
Kathy
Haley,
.•CLEANSHAVEN EWOT: Tl·
'7'iotlly Bnsflelcl plays a naval
officer In the Broadway play " A ·
Few Cood Men," which means he
iil.d to shave the "red beard he
~ars on "tlllrtysomethlng."
Busflekl told the New York Daily
DEAR READERS: Summer is
News that the beard was merely here and it's going to be a long, hot
&amp;. gimmick to help him get the one. Millions of you will be lying
Elliot role on "thirtysomething." on beaches, around swimming pools
''I know I look young and, when I and in your own backyards, trying
auditioned for the part four years to get a tan. The darker the color the
ago, I wasn't even thirty· better you think you look.
IOmethlng," be said. "I was 29.
Most of you will pay no attention
But I wanted the !lart, so !figured .to the following, but qn !he outside
one way of making myself look
ejder was growing a beard.l kept chance that a few might, I am printPullin&amp; off an audition unlit I ing this leaec. lt was sign¢ "ILD.R.,
thought It w.as full enoiagh. Now I Miami."
Dear Ann eanders: I returned
guess I'll have to start growing It
recently
from an American cancer
again."
.. Society seminar and just ran across
::ROYAL BIRTH: Marina Mo- the notes I took. As I read them I
wldt, the 23-year-old cousin to thought, "This information could
Quen Elizabeth who caused a make the differenre between life and
r6yal uproar by becoming preg· death. I should trY to ge(.it before as
n1111t out of wedlock, has given many people as possible." Then I
b"li-th to a daughter. Mowatt, who thought of you, Ann.
· Here are the facts. Please find
I&amp; nth In line to the throne, had a
baby girl last weekend after space for this info~TI~ation in your
column.
•
·
~ret~v entering a N)ltlonal
Health service hospital In West . Dr. Darrell Spencer Rigel of New
London, British newspapers re- ·YOlk :University described malignant
pOrted. Mo~tt made headlines mel;milma. as a deadly slcin qmcer
_last year when she IU)nounced that is killing 30 percent more·
khe was having the child of her Americans today thsn it &lt;Min 1973.
boyfriend, photographer Paul The reasons are: I) the growing inMowldt, who she married In tensity of SIJ!IIight because of the
February. The heal.thy 7-pound ·,,depletion of the earth's protective
girl, whose name has not yet been
abnounced, Is the first g'ran· ozone layer and 2) the trend in swim
daughter of Prlnceils Alex~ wear to expose more and more of
and Sir AnpJS Olflvy.

Carmel notes

. ,,

Monday, June 4, 1990.

.

· · GLIMPSES: Charlton Heston
opce played MoSes, and now he's
portraying God In Paul Ho1an 's
new movie, "Almost an Angel."
"This Is· a serious God;" Heston
said. "Otherwise, they could
h,a ve used Geofle Bufllll" .... The
Branford Marsalis Quartet .has
three gigs set for . the Soviet
Union. Through a grant provided
by the U.S. Information AgenciV.
the group will play the Moscow
Jazz Festival Monday and Tues·
itay as well as a show In
)..enlngrad Thursday .

.-

Poma"o¥-Middleport, Ohio

1-11-,..1

llllneriiiiN....,.IIr.....-•

......
.,_
_.,
.....
w..--.
Teoumaeh.
....,.,a-,. en
....... • ·lllwllllli,
81%

PH.992

;\·111CIIIH • Ill&lt; 11h

8

Public Sale
a Auction

�.·

BORN LOSER
Plt'OI.D!

·-- CAll·~

....

Television
Viewjng

•

WAATIWPI~
1t&gt; PICLOLOl

41 RPII ~lorgo ool....

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9 •.

Pomaoy-Middl~ _Ohio

Monday. June 4 1990

•

Junk ...., with or without
tna1ora. Alctwd GI_Df'Oirno

-·

MON., JUNE 4

I&amp;MI

O lour
loarrango ietlers of
ocrambled - ds

belaw to form IO'Jr olmpie -do.

•

8undly ............. · -

DIESEB

Junk Clf"' wHh or · without

-

SIII

I I ·II I I I
I' I I I' I . 13

EVE NINO

· CaN Llwy Uvely l14-

~~~

1:00 (I) ~. . . And
McCumdcll: Q

Employment Serv1ces

• (J) •

•

• (I)

e!D aNew•

.

1111

1:~=:=-Q

Help Wanted

AVotl • All o r - Call llorllyn
WMver304~-2MI.

T~E'I'

AVotl I All Arwoo I Shlolll)'

SAID M'i
WESTERN PAINTIN65
AREN'T WESTERN
ENOUGH: ..

FumloMd Ap! , tziO, Ulllltloe

,_,., 304-111-1421.

Po~ 1br, 101 Four!h, GIIUpollo,
11Ptl11111fler7p.na.

PA)NTIN65
FOR SALE

.

WESTERN
EASTERN
NOR'THERN
SOUTHERN it
...J:Ic-. WHO CARES ? .

_,'

1 1
'--"'--'--L......L--' ..t

a NBC Nlglollr New1

8:301!Jl

Ia
• Cll ABC ..... t:;1
Cilllody Electltc

I I I 1

(!) 3-2-1 Contacl t:;l .
1111 • Gi C8l Nftll t:;l
• ([JI 'lfitM•e Company

Mustc81

-.---

·-.
I'Mrn...,
............
Yoow...,..

noc · -

Yeu WNIM IDMll-

1a
IIIG Dodao Alln. ~ mllw
11»;
1 1_._.......
1 1 8 1 - - - ond .-y eloon. tii,OOO. 114-MI1111. ,lllh

Eloclrlc
~ry
R~~Wthomo and -

Orpn.
'llli\ch,
mint oonciHion. Firm iMO. 114-

..

1124511.

· Fruits &amp; .
Vegetables

'orm.

11112.
111G Oldo Cultloe 8upnme, 2
~ CNIM, til, c ...n, ~

8:351]) Andy Orllftth

~- -

7:00 ~ SceowcntW 6 M,.. King

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
,.,
Horror- Quilt- Nasal-Inward - SOIL WHAT
"You should stay hefe on the farm and till the soil."

(!) MIICNall Leh..l
NeweHour
llll e!D a Whoet or
Fonunel;ll

•

now,.._._

a,_at~ -~11.DIIdliz.,
~

Other VIa..,_~-.

PrlcMII:rw. UK.

.

R_.e ..1 • - Dloldnll
,_,
a m1too bock Iii ""'"
Howon, WY nut to Union Camp
Orounci,..Uinordoro,NoSunUyo,.30WC-IIZil

Loft hondod HI ot WI-

·-

~~~ .

.

aiiabailw, You *II M we
....._ TIIYior'a hny Potch. K-

aOif R,ocl. IIOI&gt;f'~: 8o.m •.fp.m.. Bot:

~~~14-~24~41-~11~1~1~.a;i;;;~
· ~-;;i;;

.,

e

DQIIE~Tonlght

e Cll Meme'a Femtty
till • a a .~eopardJt g
Ill ([JI M'A'S'H

!

---.·

- -·

1112 Aly trovot trolllr. 33 ft . ••

long. All HI up on river bonk lol ·•
wH~

porch ond boot - . 1111 ,
Palomino told oomplng ,
troHor.
Cal
114-112-3111. ,

up I$
powr-tl
·

up

ANP

e

. ..

=E""""'":-::--7:-'-::-:-- -:-::-----: '·
23 ft. Air St-m trollor, gocd ''

.\

AU

. ·.

. 30 ft. " " " - . . . ........ .
tully .... . - . - . . ._

•liD

~ttlon,

end 1114 ~111m ,
Royal pickup truck, Elol11n1
-lante 114-3'114711.
puU " - · ,
tl\000. Phono

1117 Co...... lroc Z, loodod, T·
PS~ AIIIFII 'II Chov. l!octory c-......, RY •.
cuutte, and morel ac:rlftce Van, low mii:Mge, malor, body
priM, ...000. 114-&lt;1414711.
top ohopa. Alklng hOOO. 114- '

topo, elr, tilt, oruloo,

=-~m. ~--. 114- 1117 Oroncl Am 4 -

'
'
AC PS, 117-01524.
. PI, _ . . w~:ilowa, AJNiij, tift
MOTORS, Eoll.,. ,
llllton ...... btk wHh rod lfttlrior, 110 Avonuo, BpacDIZing In lftollftlng ,
concl._!l,aocl. 30M7NIM oftlr 11 typao trollor ~ llrolci

. . IWboc rloooplollld.

-.-,-.1-.zzlll.

aita......_: Pick

~

own,

CaH Claudo Wlntero, 114-24111121.

f ,, ill Sur;!··.,·,
.\ l ,•,co lock

4;00 .... '
;
1117 Ponlloc Orolld Prtv, lxlni
otwp, till, llr, AIIIFII oo-1,
-ilicii.tM
IIIIer
tlroo,, ........
4tl1711.

- -~ ~ 17,000.,

"·*· -

1117 !JCIIIII PJekup,
- -. OOiillllcKI. 1171 FGid
p1o1n1p. MG0: IM Ill r7 A11C GfA, 1\000
- · Lilli now. t4IOO. 114-371-

:::".:=..·~:tu:-.

.

'

.. ,

a

Services
81

tUl Mator
~··""
.
ID
League B11ebatl
7:351]) Sanford And Son
8:00 (I) MOVIE: The Tin Star
(2:00)
-..
8 (J)
ALF ALF
jeopardizes his covar by
luring tablold writers into his
home. (R) C
® CoHege 'llaHbllll
Dill
Cll MacOyver
MacGyver comes to the aid
ol his high school
sweetheart. (R) Stereo. C
Cil W Skyllinlper (PI 5 tlf
5) The evolution of the
American akyscr~r over
the last century. Stereo. g
llll 181!21 Metor Decl Polly
suggests that they seek
family counselln&amp;,~ C
21 Jump
tA
college basketball star dies
ot a drloverdoee. (R)
Stereo.
·
tUl Prtma ewa
8 MUrdll, She Wrote Death
Takes A Dive·
Qll Ooepol Jubll"
1:051]) MOVIE: To Have And
Hive Not (1 :55)
1:30 8 (J)
't'be Hogen Fallllly
Mark tries to keep Willie trom
getting in trouble at his ne.w •
Job. (R)
till
sydney A reporter
interviewing Stney takes a
liking to Matt.
Ill TNN Mulfc
Nen
Country Awerdllorianne
Cook and Charlie Chase hOst
a preview apeclal prior to
this special teaturlng a loOk
at the nominees. (l)
1:00 8 (J)
MOVIE: 'Double
.
Stanctard' Nile Moncl8)'
Nlglit At 't'be Movlea (2:00)
D 8
MOVIE: 'Her
llecNI L.He' AIC Mondlly
Night Movie (2:00) Stereo. t:;1
(I) (1J ltaltn Stalin Is '
examined .a a planner and
mllilary leader. Q
·GJ e1!21 Murphy Brown
Corky wins the coveted
Humboldt Award from
Murphy. (R) C
.
• tiD Allen 161tton Sikes and
George totlow the trail ot a
. mysterious Tanc:tonese box.

a

---pOVVN

-

•'

114-'IU·!atsortn4-'J!I2.Z131.

BRIDGE

exhumes some bitter
memories trom Vletnall\.
Stereo.
·
Qll Muelc Row VIdeo
1D Abbott And Coatello
7:051]) Jeffereonl
7:30 (J) Family. ~eud

AoiUII mlloogo 37,101. .....,. '

cone~., w1n toutrode. ~ !·
2111.
.
Cut- Clero Brougham
- I LciNn, toodocl. Sell or pay 31 ft. camping troller. Soli-conott. A- :lpft, 114-4011-23011 or tolned, aciocl - f a n. 11100. •

111112.

.. llount
~
DIM-

Rd. Rd.
lo ""
by
•riiii'Oid In lklwlll.) Calllllll,

' olubo . ond bog I'll. 304-(15'
. .,

u...,

Court t:;l

I!) Mleml VIce Crockett

!!._000. Sorlooio oallo anly 114- •.

11-, olr'-"1. :JOU"I!I-4103.

advised the farmer to his well educated son. Perplexed
the son asked, "Till the .SOIL WHAT?"
.

aJl Moneyllne

~ liQ ,·

~~·~

([JI Night

•

1ttl 30ft Shenandoah compor,- '
root olr1 lull oln . bod, all opo
tiiG LX. No MI. Body Ilona, 1•,500. wllllroclo, 30U111·
I
ond lntlrior, IIIII now. 13,500. 1010,
21111 3nj. 81., Syroc-, OH.
1t82 22ft Wlfdem•• e1mper •
1ta Lincoln· Towne Clr, nice, llleopo 8, • - ond tub ,_ •

Duroravtn Fruit
JUII olt If
0140,aft•l,l14-4~.
· Firm- · 1'14-4*1t1 Mot ot , - , . 1..._ -loc
Onncl
Prix,
11,000
1311.
...,..~,
Amloh
10 1111. ot
-· mlloo, aood
tolr cond,
tt,'NIO. 080. 3044711-1822.
12.11.
wo ....... ·~,~~~~~~'
1M.4 C....... po,Db. ond ~..........., _._ RuM OnCI iooko _.t.
Old Lralllon: AoraM from 12.21111 • ottw. 311{.7J3.
Notth Qotlla H.l. L.oootfan:

112
Lift,-

·-· .._ •.fully-·-.......
..- . . .. 1~
II. y~ -or.

•ac

Home

tmprovemems

a

go

.,

·a. ·

e ())

•

IJI-J~TEL.'f,NOE!!ODY

L1NDCRSTAND61HE ·
PHIL.OeC&gt;PHERS.

(R) 1;11

.

. tUl urry King Llvet

w..

0 Polma Time
atllng Jim
Brunzell vs Dlno Bravo ·
Qll TNN Mulle CIIYCountry Awardl Barbara
• Mandrell and Jimmy Ovan
co-host this special trom the
Grand. Ole Op!Y House In
Nashville, Tenn . (l)
8:30 tmJ eo Dellglllng women
A scheming niece trias to
have.Bernice declared
incompetent. (R) t:;1
10:00 (I) 700 Club With Pat
Roberteol•

BARNEY
TIME TO
CHECK MY

TIME FER
"WHAT?

SO THEN SAIRY
SAYS TO ME,
SHE SAYS--

CORN BREAD!!

I'M RtGHT IN
TH' MIDI&gt;LI! OF

MY

STO~Y!!

I]) Andy Qrlfttth

m-.atcll
(1J USSR Art

Ill

e

tal Newftlrt Stephanie
aiiPI·.a HOUMrd and
Iandi In jaM. (R
• liD New
I!J EvenlngNewl .

z-·

10:30 (I) M$r L1ag111 II.....M
Cil L.ocel H-a, Otoblll .
. Change
.

1.:.f Due Tloomaa

"

.

•11]) ~nny Hltllhow

Schools &amp;
Instruction

15

--ngl~ntlng,

Holotlllolot
monogomont,
AlrtiM tr11v.t, Nurwti AJCt, Trwctor Trollor trolnlng, Rollltudy. flnoilollt oklo
1¥1lllltlllf$tPIUIR*"
_ .......,
lctuul1 toeM offtoe 230'7
mclen Ave,
Pa~Mnburg, WY 1~

11

85 General HauRng

::::"·

ltl lt11.

,...., wllo. ~--t,odo or
~....,. CoN-

Mo72 F - - . totol -rio,
CcoiJoGe
- ot poll
8ummor
job.
llltl ~~IIIII 01111
whtll

=.:.~.:

tarU..

'

II l I I - BoiVIoe. - . olo-

Wanted to Do

you're on ncaUon, 111J home or

- ...,.,

Polrloll'e Wlllt Houtina, - o r •
liQOO goL I'Mll, llii- l
Weill, r 1 1111 ~

Zii!La, _
botho,
wlk-111.,.,..
-·
ultMIY
, UpgrHo
In

Wo-'1

" Iir:ll::l

living _., on rontod lol, pool

-

- . 2,000 to 4,000 • f

~-·~

1¥11r.bti,I~IOO.

=.

Jiooutll!lo

~ Vllluml dli-

heavily on your hunchw th•n you(.loglc.
tlcally peri!K:t:tor you. Mall $2to Match· Today, howevw, could be an exception,
maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box so don't dilcOunt how you feet about
.BERNICE
91428, Cleveland, OH 4'1101-3428.
something.
·
CAIICI!R (.luna 21-.luiJ :12) If there Is a CAPRICOIIN (Dec. 22-Jen, 1t) Good
BEDE OSOL ·, ·, member ot the oppotlt~ Jjender you're thing• could happen lor 'lOu .today In
.. . dftlroua ot irT~preutng, be a little stand· your Important one-to-olle Involve~ . ottlah today. Let the parion make the ·menta wHh othe,... tt
rac:;e-to-lace ·
· ..
.. meetlnll II p811ed tor, don t uae a
early movea. •. ·
LIO (JuiJ a.:Aug. :12) Pr.IIS lor a cloae 1·· surrogate.
'
1t) DOn't be
•
today Mthefe 11 an lmpOrtllllt matter you 1 AGUAIUUS
want to flnallze. You could be rather dllturbed today If you get drtiWII [~to a
1 competitiVe lnvalv•••ll with rether
~
'1buJ'~
.
= n gettlrig jullt wllllt you want.
(Aug, a,tepL :121 Some Inter- high lltlk• lither -tonally or mateettlng dl'illopmenll mlglit occur today ~ rllliY. YoulhouldcloWIIIIncompetltlon.
that witt tleYate-yow liopea and expac· 11'11Cie I'*' • " Ill . , Your ex1 tatlona. Jusl bectluae they eound too pectlnt. optlui!IIIC a.IIIOOit. II your
June.s, 11110
.
I 1good to be true Woti't dilute thelr l• .g-teet II!"~ IIKI" 111111 be"IMCI
Much progre~~ 11 likely In the year I potential.
: :., .
·
to llreoti\•Jiur1hlr your PllfiCIIW 111•he&amp;d, beeauae you will be capable ot I ueM
II) You !"• now · ,..._ ~ tlgntflcant negettv. will· be
realiZing ambitious objeCt- you .- tn 1 cyde WhJirl YtlU could rMCh your mlnlinllld.
·
labllah tor youraell. Move onward 1111d 1 ftniiiCIIII llqiiiCI.tla(ta. Gift money I AIIIU PC cloi1-Aprl1t) P.aple .upward.
' mitten top llfklriiY liod l!llke
·iiiCIII..cl to Ill auppcortM of you today,
QEIIN (..., 21-.1- 20) FlniiiiCIII I lprt to fllltlfyour bMk ICCOUnl
. provided tilly UlodOIIItalld ' - tilly
' trendalook wry encouraging for yoli to- SCOIIIIO .(001. ....... Ill Projeela blnlllt !ram a coMuttve lnvalli-l
day, otpaeialty In mattera.where you are ' you 011811 lila or JIIIIDIIIIIY. direct have 1,'8Ptll OU1 1ft of the dll8lll.
.
'
prwpmcl to work lor whit you hope to •ciMintelllnqlllofiUDCUdlng In th11r1TMIIIM
ThllllhOuld
receive. Think big 81111 work hlrd. Know i time.,_, IIIJiielan, 1 ' - wl1lch- ·• be agooddliWioM · - I m k11110t t.ot
where lo lOok lor romiiiCI lriCf you'H 11 braid pulllo IIPIMJII.
- t t . floe Mr to IIIIU I J Ill . .
nncr n. The Aatro-Grapto Matcl•tlilker IMITT_,. . (tM. II ~ 11) 'be ltllllilly to yllld equal beolllllts to
,ln.t..,tlymn'l wtotctutgnu" .._.. ISam;tto:J!!i!
U!JW!toe..to r-'Y more bath

c-. ..,.

·

,..,._.-.oo,t,

-vat-.

wttt:

(Ald.::'.,

2 Ill trolllr. 114471-:mt ...._
-1llp.m.

" II you study hard, you too can learn the
technique lor hogging the highway."

.

---------'---'-~~c~--

... • ··•-- -~-'

-.,.

· ~ ..,_.

~Newt

...
I

.n:•

.

•

..
1 ll!f1l".

"

II

·.

·,

I

,.

(J) •

. WEST
.10986

By James Jacoby

.7 6
', 8.\KQIO

-··- -."tiD kieiil01Iilr
tiJ) .._yllne

0 Mtlml VICe A cowboy
•

reporla

the theft Qf

trrepl_.ble buiiii8J1Hin.

Stereo.
• TNN Mutlo City Nlowe
Cao obt Atnnll llartoara
Mancrr.tl and Jimmy Dean
co-hoat thll lj)ICiallrom tht
Grand 011 0pry Houu In
. NaiiMIIe, Tllfll'. (l)

11:30e(J) e 11ett 01 e -

..

....

CROSSWORD

..,

.-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
7 Highway
1 Residence 8 F~
5 Yule tune 9 Wanton
10Pimola
I~
12 Peerless . 11 Infuriate
13 Russian
14 French
novel .
• painter
15 Caustic
18 Moisten
substance
the roast

,18 Kind

19 Dodge

of deer
17 German

• .. • I

· ~ ··

•.

...
Yesterday's Anewer

20 Spoil
21 Macaw 30 Miffed
·article
22 Small
32 Old
. 18 Vermont
drink
33 Syrian
. city
24 One
blsoop's
20 Contrive
- time
· title
34 Farm
· 231mmense 25 Rest
'D Revon
26 Foot
building
28 Proportion
member 35 Egyptian
21 Engrossed 28 Repartee
sun disk
30 Reserved
31 Ham It up
33 Arab '
garment
38Gold
(Sp.)
.
37 tala, e.g.

tht owner of
DMd ~:- ... (1'1) Q

::=. ...... ...

.

45 Irritate
41 Selling

hazard
DOWN .
1 Ululate
2 Palm leaf

.......

3Bogdown
4 Wagnerian

heroine

..

&amp;Prank
8 Beverage .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's !low Ia •orll II:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILON.GPELLOW

.'

'

'

One letter alanels for another. In thlll wnple A Is used
for the three L's, X for the hfo 0'1, etc. SiJIIIe letters,
apoatrophes, the lencth and formation al the words are aU • .
binla. Each day the code letters are different.

CDI'IOQUO'IE8.
6-4

LRWRKKRV

HZIDL

~. .L~
w•ocur H

.,

44Conclse

YGPRK'G N YRCLRH

...... VInnie gall

...

43Money
(al.)

P R K

lg*Lm

37 Phoenician
seaport
38 Assuage
39 Hebrew
latter
41 Philippine
peasant
42 Over
(poet.)

40Melee

s-.

® lportaCenllr

,

1•u3

•

(J)IIeeNIITOIIIght

..
..

Trump management is the theme of 1
SOUTH
'.today's deal. ··Since much of bridge ;
.• AQJ7t
education COD$iSts of learning from
.AKS
mistakes, let's first watch Willy Nilly
t7
. .misplay four spades. Diamonds were
+QJ94
led and continued. and Willy ruffed ..
Vulnerable: Neither
He played a spade to dummy's king
Dealer: South
and a spade back. Oops, a bad trump
split! He now tried the club finesse.
West Norllo East
East won the kinB and played another
Pass
Pass 2•
diamond. Willy ru(fed and later had to
All pass
lose a trump trick for down one.
Opening lead: • K
So how can trumps be manased better? After ruffing the sec:ond di~mood,
declarer should play the queen and
jack of spades from his hand, leaving
the spade kin&amp; in dummy. Whenever
trumps split :1-2 nothing will matter,
but keeping the spade king in the follow. Declarer then cubes the A-~ ·
North band can be crucial wben of bearts, and fortune srrules u West ,
trumps split badly. When declarer bas to follow to both hearts. South CU ,
sees that West started with four ' now play b1s last club and ruff with .•
spades, be plays no more trumps. In- ckimmy'a SI)Ade kiD&amp;- Yes, Welt will:
stead be leads the club queen, finess- still make bls tone trump trick. Unforing. East wins the king and plays a tunatel~ be_bas to 1118 It to ruff bll::
third diamond. Declarer ruffs low and partaer a wiDDID&amp; beart, and declarer
then plays tbe A-J of clubs. West has to South makes 10 tricks.

,.,. &lt;ll 1111

•

NORTH
.K32
.842
.H43
.,. 10 7

Keeping
control

· 11:00 ~ Scaoecrow 6 M,... KlnQ

e

. ·
m
-

.•

Qll Top Card

1m lnt....W 2111. oo11 · - ,;:
talned, ~room, mow., tur- '·
- . l'llrlaorotor, hill out ·
owning. P,IIGO. :J04.t7Nia2.
,
Dodao
IDool- f
IIlii

Juned
...1

I

1D Hengln' In

roof, ..an- l""':olct"'" •
collent h...Ung campor.
1111 •
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lnatrumems

One co-workur to another:
"My vacation was so-so, bUt
I'm really enjoying the vaclationthe ---- is --.·

6
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by f• ll •ng 1n the m•SSing words
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Pom&amp;ot Mldclaport. Ohio

·-

--Area deaths-Gladys Hysell

Smith-Buick Pontiac Qf Galll!KIlls In 1967 and was a World War II
Gla.,Ys M. Hysell, 82, of Wes· Army Veteran. · "
He Is survived by two daugh·
tervllle, dled,Saturtlay at Manor
ters,
Jackie Wolfe of Westerville,
Care Nursing " Center In
.
Ohio
· and Roberta Hartis · of
Westerville.
'
Gallipolis;
three sisters, Ruth
She was preceded In death by
Jewell
of
Coal Grove, Ohio.
her husband, the late Clyde
Alberta
Haning
of Nelsonville
Hysell, formerly of Meigs
and
Olive
Smith
of
Pomeroy.
County.
..._ '-"-· She Is survived by two broth·
He was preceded In death by
·era, Denver and Giles Salser, one brother, Max Brlckles.
Westerville; three sisters-In· law .•
Memorial services will be held
VIolet Hysell and Genevieve ·· 11 a.m. SatUrday, June Sat Beech
Burdette, and Rose Hagey, · Grove Cemetery.
_ Springfield; and several nieces
In lieu of' flowers, the faml~v
~d nephews In Meigs County.
requests donations be· made to
&lt;Funeral services will be held at
the American l!eart Association.
2
Wednesday at the MoreJ;'uneral arrangements are
Jane! Funeral Home, 55 E.
under the direction of Ewing
Scllrock Road, Westerville. Tbe
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Rev. Eugene Griffith will offl·
elate and burial wlll be In Robert Barber
• Fancher Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home 2 to 4 and
Robert Barber, '59, Route 681,
'T to 9 p.m on Tuesday.
'Reedsville, died Sunday at Grant
Hospital In Columbus.
Robert A. Bric~es
Arranlll!lllents will be announced later by W.hlle-Biower
~· A. ·BrlckleS, 65, bf Funl!i'al Home In CQ!i\vllle.
Augu&amp;ta, ' Ga., died Saturday, .
June 2,1990.
---------He was born July_18, 1924, son
Tbe laraest collecUoo of parrots 1n
of theo late Eugene and Ethel
'
the
world CAD be found at Ilulcb GarBrlckles.
·
1
dens In Tampa, Fla.
r.tr. Brickles retired from

,

'JI.m.

j

Teen...

Monday, June 4, 1990

eonunuecl rrom pa~re 1

shoes and 111asses were follild,
alq wtlh a part of the grill frDm
the truck, the llherlff reported.
The hunt for the body and the
truck continued throughout the
night with officials on the scene
searching outlying roads. ·
Sunday morning, . Sheriff
Soulsby said that
call was
received at his office reporting
that a truck of the same description that bad hit WIU had been
stolen from the Riggs Car Lot,
State Route 7.
The names of Riggs and Ha,rri~
as having been. seen In a truck
like the one which hit Wlll kept
· coming up during the lnvestiga·
tlon and questioning of wit·
nesses, the sheriff said. Sunday
morning the two were called In
for questioning by sheriff's offl·
clals and Meigs County Prosecu·
tor Steven Story and his assist·
ant, Linda Warner. Both Riggs
and Harris were later released
until reports of their Saturday
night actions CO.uld be verified.
Since there· were ·cllscrepan·
cles, Harris was brought back In
Sunday afternoon and·· under
further ques tlonlng told what had
happened and where tbe body
and truck were located. He was
taken Into custody Immediately.
Officials from the sheriff and

a

prosecutor's offices 11nd Coronor
Doug Hunter went to the West
Shl!de Road site to recover the
body which was taken to the
Franklin County Morgue for an
autopsy•
The truck wu found In the
location given by Harris. Details
of how II got there and how the
two returned to M;etgs County are
still being determined, the shetiff said.
Rl'ggs was taken Into custody
about 8 p.m. Sunday night after
had returned frO!JI Eastern
High School commencement. He
was a member of the 1990
graduating class.

Environment said
· ohio~ top problem

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Issues.
environment has beeome a high·
It Is also un clear whether
ranking concern of state rest· environmental Issues will re·
dents, an Ohio Poll released main lmport~nt to Ohioans over
Monday shows.
time, he said.
In a .survey of 628 adults.
The environment is the top
pollution was named by more concern for some whites, but no
than 13 percent of the respond· blacks, according to the poll.
.ents as the most Important
· Slightly more ln.an 15 percent
problem facing Ohio. Moret han 5 _of the white respondent.s cited·
percent of the respondents "Pollution as the top problem and
named solid waste. dls)lOSlll as 5.9 percent named solid waste
the rnost critical problem. · · .disposaL
Combining the two Issues
Among blacks, none cited the
·m eans the environment Is
ranked second lplmportance by environment, while 47. percent
Ohioans, behind drug and alcohol named drug and alcohol abuse as
'
PICK-3
their primary problem.
abuse.
888.
Among all respondents, · the
Substance
abuse
was
cited.
by
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
Issues
and· the percent naming
·
20
percent
of
those
surveyed
In
$1,569,379.50, with a payoff due of
them
as
the top problem were
the
poll
conducted
April
T1
to
$2,577,550.
substance abuse, 20.2 percent;
May
4.
The
poll
was
taken
just
PICK-4
days after the 20th anniversary education, 14.7 percent; unem·
1623.
ployment, 13.5 percent; · pollu·
of
the first Earth Day.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
Al!re&lt;J Tuchfarber, director of lion, 13.2 percent; landfills, 5.2
$:ll9,179.l;i0, with a payoff due of
the survey, said II Is difficult to percent; and homelessness, ·4.9
$ll4,100. '
..
tell whether media coverage of percent.
Super Lotto .
The
environment
was c-Ited ·
Earth Day Increased cancer!!
3, 5, 13, 27, 32, 37.
most
frequen
t~v
by
younger
Super LotIn ticket sales totaled about the environment or
people,
with
27
percent
of
those In
whether the media Is only re$4,256.362.
the
18-to-29
age
group
listing
11 as .
sponding to Increased demand
.Kicker
their
top
concern.
for coverage of environmental
079623.

Ohio Lottery

Giants
unload
on Reds

Daily Number
347
Pick-4-

Page 4

•

he

Lottery numbers

.

Vol.40. No.272
Copyrighted 1890

tsy JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff ·
New road construction at
Kerr's Run Intersection will not
be completed this year, accord·
lng to Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler during Monday night's
regular meeting of Pomeroy
VIllage Council.
·
' ·
Larry Wehrung, council president, asked Mayor Sevier If he
'had. any n·eW Information on· the

'

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Up To 60%-70%

$399

With Bed, Dresser, Chest
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Tent SMI
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Table &amp; 6 Chairs

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(Maple or Oak)

Tent Sale Priced

Cherry Roll Top Desk
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Box Springs · ·
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YOU'IBt Able To ChooH
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80

81

B~OWNSVILLE, Texas tUPI)
Strlke-besei Greyhound Lines,
CLEVELAND iUPI) - Just
Police said Thomas Clark
the
nation's largest Intercity bus
hOurs after receiving their diplo· drove the car that bit a curb on
filed for Chapter 11
service,
mas , three St. Joseph High Euclid Avenue about 2:30 a.m ,
bankruptcy
protection to save Its
School student-athletes were Sunday, straddled It forabout43
assets,
maintain
profitable
killed In a fiery one-car crash.
feet, then smashed Into a utility
routes
and
stave
off
creditors
A stunned silence settled over pole and burst into flames.
·
until
It
can
repay
Its
mounting
faculty and students at the
Lt. James Blrk of the Cleve·
debts, company officials said.
570-student all-male Catholic land Accident Investigation Unit
Filing for Cli.apter 1l protec·
. school on Cleveland's east side said the youths .had been cele·
lion
Monday In U.S. Bankruptcy
when they heard the news. St. bratlng In the Flats. Authorities
Court
In J?rownsville,'the Dallas·
Joe's will hold a memorial had not yet determined whether
based
company and five subsl·
service Tuesday to mourn ille the auto was speeding. ,The.
diaries
and afilltates also asked
deaths of the graduates who had coroner's office Is testing the
for
an
Immediate ruling so
all planned to go on to co liege.
victims to see If they had been
customers
holding advance·
Killed early Sunday morning drinking. ·
purchased
tickets
could use
were Steven Clark, 1.9. Thomas .
One of the first to arrtve on the
Greyhound
services
.
Clark, 17, and Fred Blaine. 18. scpne was Emergency Medical
"We have taken this action to
Thomas Clark was Student Coun- Service technician Frank Gron,
enable
Greyhound Lines to concil president. All were football also an assistant wrestling coach
tlnue
operation
of Its total system
players who helped the Vikings at St. Joe's. He was stunned when
with
Its
full
team
of employees,"
win last season's Division II state he recognized Steven, also a
said
J
.
Michael
Doyle, Greyfootball championship.
wrestler.
hound's
senior
vice
president and
Head football coach Bill Gut.
Cuyahoga County Coroner Ell·
chief
financial
officer
.
brod said, "My God, just hours zabeth Balraj said Thomas Clark
"Greyhound's
value
to Its
after graduation. and they're . and Steven Clark, both of Clevecustomers,
employees
and
,api·
gone," The Cleveland Plain land but unrelated, died of chest
tal
providers
Is
maximized
by a
Dealer reported Tuesday , "We Injuries. Blaine of South Euclid
were successful because of these died of burns to his entire body.
kind of kids. "
Ervin of Cleveland Heights
Also injured In the crash were suffered a fractured pelvis. Doc·
graduating senior Eric Ervin,l7 , tors are observing Greenwood of
and his cousin Larry Greenwood, Warrensville Heights for a pul·
SAN . FRANCISCO iUPI) 16, a ninth grader at Warrens· monary contusion. Both were
Soviet President Mikhail Gorba·
ville Heights Junior High School.
listed in fair condition at St . chev blended an eloquent assessVincent Charity Hospital.
ment of thawing East-West ten·
slons with a bard pitch for
American Investment to bolster
his country's troubled economy.
Gorbachev wrapped up his
six-day summit visit on Monday
with a tour of San Francisco and
the Silicon Valley. He spoke at
,Stanford UniVersity and to a
group of American business
MANSFIELD, Ohio tUPI) take several davs to find an an
Jurv selection will continue Tuesimpartial jury In the community leaders and . met with Ronald
. day' In the murder trial of Dr.
shocked by the bizarre and much Reagan.
Just before leaving for MosJohn Boyle. accused of killing his
publlc)J:ed case .
cow,
Gorbachev sat down with
wife and burying her body In his
Prosecutors and defense lawySouth
Korean President Roh
new home In Erie. Pa. - but the
ers spent much of Mon&lt;jay trying
Tae-woo,
who Indicated hope that
press has been banned from the
to determine whether any of the
both
countries
are moving to·
proceedings.
69 prospective jurors had been
ward
normal
diplomatic
Richland County Common
influenced or prejudiced by pret ·
relations.
Pleas Judge James Henson Mon·
rial publicity.
In a speech to 250 business
day granted a defense motion to
Boy)e Is charged will) killing
executives
at the Fairmont
bar the public and press from the
his wife Noreen, 44, New Year's
Hotel,
Gorbachev
said, "The
remainder of jury selection beEve then burying her body under
winds
are
now
blowing,
flllljlg the
cause he said prospective jurors
the basement of his new home In
process
that
places us
sails
of
the
would be "intimidated" If reporErie, Pa. The Boyle's, parents Of
on
a
path
of
cooperation.
and
ters were present during
two children , were In the midst of
without
any
regret
we
are
saying
a divorce.
questioning.
Reporters , st&gt;eclators and
Names· of about 15'0 people farewell to the Cold War and I
prospective jurors jammed hal·
have been submitted as possible think and hope we have entered a
!ways and elevators lrr the
witnesses, about evenly split long period of peace."
He mixed those words with
Richland County Courthouse
between the two sides.
confidence
about perestroika, his
Monday In the first day of jury
The judge may allow the
program
to
reform the Soviet
selection for the murder trial of
couple's son Colin, 11, to testify,
economy
d_
u
rtng
~ t.lme of trethe prom lnent , Mansfield
but there are · doubts that the
mendous
political
and ethnic
osteooath.
daughter, Elizabeth, 3, wllltake
Attorneys have said It could
upheaval
that
has
challenged
his
the stand.

Judge bars press
from jury selection

Mattress
::~

A curbside recycling pilot io separate newspapers. mtscel·
• program will · get underway In laneous cardboard boxes, such
Middleport on July 1, Roger as cereal containers. glass,. and
Manley, owner-manager of Man· plastic containers and tin cans.
ley's Gecycle Center, announced The container will be emptied on
· the same day the trash Is picked
today.
Plans- have been made to up and will be left with the
Initiate the curbside recycling t resident for use the pext week.
The curbside recycling project
with 20 volunteers on Front,
Second and Third Streets where will· continue for two or three
· months. After that , it will be
trash Is collected on Fridays.
Residents who want to partial· evaluated and expanded If it has
pate In the pilot program are · .proved to be effective In decreasasked to contact Manley at Ing the normal amount of trash.
Next week Manley will meet
992-3894 as soon as possible.
Each participating resident with Middleport VIllage Council
will be supplied with a recycling to discuss the project. It is
reported that grant money is
container, a large red basket.
They will be asked to use paper available from the Department
sacks Inside the plastic container of Natural Resources to buy

f! J
.-"-~ -~~fYice __nes

•

full-system operation, that Is to
say , by serving the maximum
number of towns with optimum
frequency.
"We asked creditors for pa·
lienee so that we could devote all
available resources to running
maximum service during the
peak summer travel season."
Doyle said.
The five other companies that
would be affected by the ruling
are Eagle Bus Manufacturing
Company, based In Brownsville;
GLI Bus Operations Holding
Company; BusLease Inc.; Trail·
ways Commuter Transit Inc. and
GLI Food Services.
Greyhound has been strug·
gling on a reduced schedule since
March 2. when about 9,300
employees - Including some
6,000 drivers represented by th e
Amalgamated Council of Grey hound Local Unions of the
Amalgamated Transit Union went on st-rike.

••

Gotbachev makes pitch for U. S. lnvestments

$58

PINE BEDROOM SmTE

DO.

malntatmid as iar as cu ning
grass and removing trash and .
debris. It was noted that council r
has the authority to issue ell·
allons to properiy owners 1\'hO
fail to maintain their residences
and properties under an ordl·
nance which the village enacted
some time ago.
During the discussion of complaints from resid ents who warit
properties within tt1e village ·
maintained it was noted that th~
cost of the recent trash pickup
that the •1llage made available to
Its residents totaled $607.76 In
recycling baskets for the entire dumping fees alone.
In other mat ters. Mayor Seyler
community should Council decide to make curbside recycling
presented a proposal to restore a
road on Mulberry Heights to its
available to all residents.
Manley 's Recycle Center has
original condition.
moved from Beach Street in
Betty Ba ro nick, council
tower Middleport to the former member, stated she had received
Royal Crown Bottling Co·. at 503 several complaints from resi Mill Street. The company condents on the road ' who want it
restored to the-way It was before
tinues · to buy plastic, aluminum
cans, copper. brass , radiators.
the new waterline was Installed.
batteries , and clean aluminum . The estimate which Mayor
S.eyler obtained was for $3,500
They do not .buy but will accept
donations of newspapers which
and Included all concrete. and
are tied in bundles, cardboard,
sealing materials for the job. No
and tin cans.
action was taken on the matter.
Matters brought before council
The center is open from 12 noon
to 5 p .m . Monday through Fri- by member Brian Shank In·
day, and 9 to noon on Saturdays.
eluded the repainting of "No
Loitering" signs in the village
parking lois; the replacement of
a grating cover for a storm dra in
on Wetzgal Street; and the
need_!!_&lt;;! re~atr on Lincoln D~lve of
a~n
undtr the road which has
1
pu
' 11 e ·'u"ar
~"'"" . ' ,
Blll Young, council member,
reported . that he had received
calls from residents on Breezy
}:!eights
who would like to see
The dispute has been marred
traffic
restricted
on that hiU. The
by violence, Including the death
residents
reported
to Young that
of one picket and numerous
traffic
near
the
water
tower has
shootings Involving Greyhound
"the
young
been
heavy
and
that
buses. Company officials estl· .
people
are
going
up
there
to
mate the strike has cost at least
party.
"
Some
of
the
residents
on
$75 million In lost revenues and
increased costs, such as training the hill, feel a "No Outlet" sign or
possible ban'lcading of the tower
replacement drivers and In·
area
would deter some of the
creased terminal securlt'y.
traffic.
Young reported also that
Greyhound and Its employee
residents
living in Naylor's Run ·
unions have not negotiated since
requested
a "Children Playing"
May 5, when the company called
sign
'or enforcement of
caution
for a four·year wage freeze and
th
e
25
miles
per
hOur speed limit
the elimination of about 4,500
In
that
area.
union jobs.
Young voiced his approval or'
Michael Holden, vice president
the
job the street department has .
of ATU Local1205, representing
done
In replacing some of the
striking drivers In New England,
street
signs within the village. ·
said Monday the organization's
Tbom·as
Werry, council
leadership Is " really pretty exmember,
reported
lha t a drain
cited'· about the bankruptcy
sewer
near
the
tower
part of
lling.
Union
Avenue
had
bursted
and
"What it says is what we 've
needed
repaired
but
that
he
was
been saying all along : The man's
uncertain as to where the source
been lying," Holden said, refer·
of
the sewer leak could be
ring to Greyhound Chairman
located.
Fred Curry.

;;den; die mWf~-· ror·· Cii;P•er •·rprot~~~~~

GREAT SELECTION!

Wall Mirrors

REG. 1499

The representative also told
Mayor Seyler that the project
would 'cost somewhere around
the $1 mllllon range, and that
estimate does not Include the
necessary concrete work.

~ ·e··"".v"''·-:...1 ,. · · -~·. . . ~·.· Jo--:e
~
·.. ~ ___ ~~..-J;~Y. __9UD..

!
. t •.·,

Tent Sale Priced I

Hide-A-Beds
Tent Sale Priced
In The
.Main

T~=

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED - About July 1 a volunteer curbside
recycllag program wlll11ei underway on Front, Second and Third
Sis. In Middleport. Twenty residents of those streets are being
asked to volunteer to participate In the pilot project. Here Roger
Manley of Manley's Recycle Center displays one of the bright ·
recycle baskets.
·
'

II Dining Room
Furniture

Beautiful"Bassett

REG. 1300

..::J. ...... ,.

ltnu In The Tent And
Showroom Are Discounted!

3 Pc. SuiTE
T~'!:le

pppduJt.

In another road and proper ty
matter, council agreed to meet
Monday at 7 p.m. to tour streets
within the village to determine
which streets should be repaired
professionally and wh ich ones
could be rep~ Ired by the village
street department.
Also on this tour council will
determine which p roper ti es
within the vllla·ge need to be

Seek· voluntee~s for program

Scnnelt..SAt
Or Below Wholaale!

EXAMPLE:

· project. Seyler stated be had
talked to a representative for the
project who said that the only
work which will be done this year
is the installation of new sewer

'

ID'I'heTeat
.AnciiD'I'he
Sbowwooaa!

SCOIJinted
.

2 Sections. 12 Pages 26 Cent&amp;
A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

Kerr's Run road project will
not be .cOmpleted this year

It Bepns At 9 a.m. Tomonow • Rutland Furniture's Annual Tent Sale
On The Lawn 01 The Old Rutland High School .O n Main Street
.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 6, 1990

1
.

Low tonight near 55.
cloudy. Wednesday, high
lower 80s. Chance of rain
percent.

0795

*2300 Tent Sale Prfced At 0n(J1 $1188

•Financing Available
(With Approved Credtt)
oOI:I-Site Service Department

Stop In And , .
Save This w·'BBk

-

----~--,

.. _._..,

_________

--

!E:adershlp at home.
"American business should
look for ways to enter our market
so once the ( U.S.-Sovlet trade
agreement) Is ratified, we will be
able to use all the potential
Inherent In that agreement," he
said .referring to the trade
package he received from President Bush during their four-day
summli In Washington that
ended Sunday.
Gorbachev said Industry leaders who hesitate to Invest In the
Soviet Union will face being left
out In the cold In years to come
when the economic picture may
be 'improved.
"We are watching those who
risk something to cooperate now
and thOse who stand on the
sidelines. Those who stand on the
sidelines will stand there In years
to come. That Is only fair,"
Gorbachev said.
John Sculley, chairman and
president of Apple Computer,
said many business leaders will
heed Gorbachev's warning a bout
inveslment delay.
'~Apple lias been involved In
the Soviet Union for several
years ... we are very Interested In
some projects there," Sculley
said, calling Gorbachev's speech
"a real turning point."
Gorbacbev suggested even If
his own leadership Is seen as

shaky, the market reforms
sweeping his country are
Inevitable.
·1 During his talk, some 2,000
. demonstrators gathered outside
the hotel demanding freedom for
Lithuania , waving Armenian
flags and chanting "Free The
Baltics." Inside, the American
business leaders wore a lapel
emblem of crossed American
and Soviet flags .
Anger over Moscow 's crack·
down on Lithuania's bid for
lndependenee could hamper final
approval of the trade agreement
by a reluctant Congress.
The agreemen I Is seen as a
precursor to most-favored·

nation trading 's tatus for the
Soviet Union. which would be a
m·ajor boost to a Soviet economy
that bas failed to meet the basic
needs of its citizens.
In an address at Stanford
University earlier, the Soviet
leader declared. "The Co ld War
Is now behind us, and let us not
wra,ngle over who won It . .. :
.There can be no winners In a cold ·
war, just like In a nuclear war . "
Echoing the theme of Gorbachev's twin messages of glasnost
and perestroika , South Korea's
Roh said Improved relations with
North Korea, hopefully with
Soviet help, would end the Cold
War forever.

Sheriffs ask guns be put out of reach
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) ' Sheriffs are asking adults this
summer to make sure firearms
are kept out of the reach of
children.
At least six children died In
Ohio last summer In accidental
bandglin shootings, the Bu,ckeye
Sheriff's Association said
Tuesdav.
'
The association, calling
summer the "killing season," Is
alerting parents to the dangers of
leaving guns within the reach of
chlldren. The association Is dis·
tribu ling public sevlce announce-

ments for radio stations featur·
lng sheriffs from most of the
state's metropolitan areas aimed
at persuading paren ts to keep
guns In locked boxes or to Install
trigger locks ,
Handgun accidents seem to be
more prevalent during the
summer because children have
more free time to play around the
bouse, said Robert Cornwell,
executive director of the BSA.
Cornwell said the message the
association Is trying to get across
Is simple - "If you're going to
have a gun , then keep It safe."

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