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Pomeroy-lllddleport--Galllpolla, OH Point Plu•nt, wv
Page DB Sunday Tlmee Sentinel
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Benlate appears to be contaminated with herbicide .
ofKenwetythrouglitheofficeofthe
Kentucky Slate E~ol~giesL
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~h~lotlSideDiifJedbyan
11 digrtserialnumber..Some 16.secd
GALLIPOLIS - A directive to lots have beenquatlllllined under the
stop the salt and useof"Benlare" has assumptionthattheyllllybeinf~led
been circulaled lfCtlntly. According at vecy low levels. The vanety
"Kennebec" which is common in
to company infor·
GaUiaCountydoesnotappearonthis
mation the reason
particular listing.
appears to be that
Blue Mold is already in Florida
the products are
Tobacco. Weather pauems in Florcontaminalcd with
ida and other area5 of the Southern..
hezbicide. Ben1ate
.U.S. are favorable for "Blue Mold"
isafungicidct.Yi>i,.
cally used ·by
. . development thus increasing the
greenhousegrow- .
. · chances that we could have problems
·
ers, fruit growers and turfgrass mail- later this season.
According
to
Dr.
William
agers. .
A quarantine against the inuo- Nesmith, Plant .Pathologist, at The
duction ofPVY:N in Canadian Seed
Potatoes is active in Kentucky due 10
die threat of the virus tO tobacco. The
PVY -N disease is very destructive 10
tobacco and is esl8bhshed in cenain
canadian seed potato production areas.
The Canadians appear to have
lllken strong action to rninmize inuoduction of the virus. All of my information has come fiom the University
By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Aaent,
AarJculture & C.N.R.D.
.Jr..
Univmity of Kentucky, producen
need to h&ve fwlgicides in ~lace before the f~ spores m~ve. The
follOWIJig IS 1 ~n:->' of the Blue
Moldcootto1funpadeprognun recommended by Dr. Ncsanith: 1) At
seeding time apply Ridomil 2E at 4
teaspoonsper100sqllll'eyardstothe
soil: 2) Make weetly foliar spray~
with Rldomil2E 112 l"'spmns per
100 squue yllds plus a pnliCCUIIII
typefungicidesuchuFerbern76WP
at3-S tabJe~C pllon srarlinJ
SO days afta'
g. Use 3-5 gal·
Ions of spmy tnaterialto assure adc·
quate covcnac. 3) In the field make
a preplan! inc:orJxnted soil applicalion ofRidonill2B • the rate of Ito
pecacredim:todtodleSOilandincor·
poratcd 11 finl1 Cultivadon. .
. The~uaiddliryprices
will coobllue to flllllld Congressman are concaned that rel8il prices
arenotfallinganequaliiiiOUIILAsst.
Sec. Gardner Slid retlil prices bave
droppedinmostpartsofthecounDy
andsaiddlebestexpllnltionforthe
widened fann-IIHelail price m .
is a delay on thepanorftrms waiang
10seeiftxicesllabilize.Anewstudy
by u.s.D.A. on how to improve the
dairy program is not expected out
until June 1~.
The Ohio Bull Tesuale at Belle
V8lley will be held April20 starting
at approximately I p.m. Some 1252quartsperacre,fo~by .lquart ISObullsthatmetdleminimumSIIII-
I
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ninety percent of Ohio's original
wetlands have been lost, primarily
10 development and agriculture.
Robert L. Vertrees, natural
resources policy specialist at Ohio
State University, says using the
state police power may be the best
way 10 .proJeCI remaining wetlands.
A stare permit program could pre ..
vent additional losses.
Prior to settlement, Ohio had
nearly 5 million acres of wetlands.
Scientists now recognize the yalue
of wetlands to nurture wildlife,
purify polluted waters and prevent
flooding.
.
Many of the estimaled remaining 482,800 acres ate proJeCted by
two federal programs. The Clean
Water Act applies only to impacts
, upon wetlands that result from disposal of dredged or fill materials.
The "swampbuster" program prohibits draining wetlands on fann- ·
land owned by farmers who want
benefits from federal farm pro-
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ten bead on rest (Angus, Charo~, {
Pollcd Hereford and Simmenlal) bad 1
nearly the~ breed averqe tat '
pin. Their gun range was4.02-4.05 '
-ilie'fiidf1ftl!ill'Withliil!r!lllliR pounds przday. ·
;
dlnls will be sold. A total of eiJht
bulls out of die 196 beadwmplebllg
the test pined liiOle than5 pounds
prz day over die 112 day ICSl period.
M ar·k et
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c1111t~~~udjrolft D-1
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· On the American Stoek. Exchange, the Amex Market Value
index rose 1.16 to close Friday at 366.63, up 3.22 for the week.
Declines led advances 428-418 among the 1,014 issues lnlded for
the week.
Amex volume iotaled 81,128,740 c~ed with 87,062,576
traded a week earlier and 58,480,535 ttaded m the same weelc a year
ago.
.
Flllit of the LoQm led the Amex actives, rising I 518 10 IS 3/4.
The Natiooal Association of Securities Dealers composite index
~S.8210endthewedt8lSOl:62. ··- -... · .. -
f
Pick3: 547 .
Pick 4:3170
Cards : 9-H, J-C
9-D; 2-S
'
Super Lotto
l
>
18-19-27-28-31-34
Kicker234791
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Low tonight in mid 40s.
Tuesday, sunny.
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1 Section 10 Pegea 25 cent•
A Multlmedle Inc. Newepeper
Shoemaker urges
group to get involved
Just for
YOU
~0
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Sentinel News Staff
t-A0~1t\\.'f
~~~lA~~1S
A challenge to "get involved"
was issued by Stare Rep. Michael
C. Shoemaker, keynote speaker at
the Meigs County Democratic
Party's Jefferson-Jackson Dinner
held Saturday night at the Senior
Citizens Center.
Rep: . Shoemaker
(D·
Bourneville) was n01 only calling
for those altending to get involved
in local politics, but to become
knowledgeable about what is happening on the slate level, aware of
bow aU these things will ultimately
affect their lives, and then do some-
'1\\.
thing.
The state representative made
particular reference to the proposed
cuts in the governor's budget which
.
SHARING CONCERNS • R~p. Mary Abel
their conrerns. Here sbe'tatks with Mr. and Mn.
he said will have a "disastrous"
talked to muy or th011e attnding the JelferaonBill Cozart, Raeine, on soeial and economic
effect on many.
problems racing Meigs County.
. Jackson 'dinner meeting Saturday nlgbt· about
In a hard-hitting speech, he
repealedly referred to ·the promise
of Gov. George Voinovich to pro. KEYNOTE SPEAKER\. State Rep. Michael C. ShoeiDiker (D·
vide "more with less."
Bourneville) was tbe keynote speaker at the Meigs County Demo"You can't have· more for less,"
cratic Party's Jefrei"SSOI·JaE Dinner held Saturday night at the
: LOS ANGELES ~UP!) - . was f ? ilmaleur Clmaa"Use your mind, your lnarching said Rep. Shoemaker. "A decrease
Senior
Citizens Center. Pic ·
with Shoemaker are rrom the left,
· E.rnbattled Police Ch1ef Daryl man and
a ulional outay. feet and your dollan intelligently," in research money, funding for
Sue
Malson,
party
clliinna
~and
Rep. Mary Abel.
. Gares ill cllling fa politicians, the
"Put
your guns and pick Jackson told worshipers. "Don't teenage pregnancy programs,
· media and his critics to move up your cameras and expose the give up. Stand up."
school dropout prevention, ttaining
1Q stay in your horne community sjleaker as a man concerned about :
: beyond the police beating of a madn.e ss, '' Jackson said ln a
At a rally held earlier Sunday by for iHose out or work, elimination
·
where there are no jobs .... and the working people of Ohio.
. black motorist and allow his speech to Sunday services at th~ Gates supporters on the steps of of general assistance, no increase in
Rep. Abel also spoke at the din- '
· depaubnent to "get on with it." ·
F'lfSl AME Cbun:h in South Centtal City HaD die police cheif mterat- funding for education, decre~~sed · unless you .Jive in Meigs County
and you want to set thele from here ner meeting attended by about ~ .
· . !3u~ Jess.e .J~ckson ~nd oth~r · LOs Angeles.
.
.
ed his beiiefJ)Iat the police pum- propams to help the elderir s,laY in
hundred Meigs Countians, as well
-that's
hard IQ do."
.
c1vll rights acbYISIS cooanued their .
He also caUed for II' 11111011wide meling of Kin·g during a routine theu own homes - is thiS more
. C~.P/11 011 the ~ilosophr as several out-of-county visi!Qil
vigil op behalf ol Roaney King, .~ of.LCI.AIIIIIIel. ··~ 1illlt&: stop was an~-"'· ·for less'?"
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The' emphasis of her comof
die DeriKICnillc Party, 'he said: It
who family !Derti~fsay· Slill uses" 'tfiai groups pfanifng on oldlng l: ' "We had 'one Incident. Let's··'
He COii<:ede4 that something has
ments-two
main issues, ~ phashas
81ways
been
to
"help
those
who
a cane and wheelchair as a result of conventions m the city be encour- isolate it and deal with it •• Gates to be done about the budget defic1t,
ing
out
of
the
Options for Elders
his Marth 3 beating. The incident aged to: choose another city.
said.
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that some hard decisions have to be
'=An not help themselves."
program,
and
what
can be done to
"That's what we're supposed to
made, tliat there has to be some
preserve
the
jobs
of
the Southern
do," emphasized the speaker, who
flexibility in how the deficit is handled, and tpat cooperation is essen- went on to commend Sen. Jan Ohio Coal Comjli!!Y.
She was cribcal of the proposed
tial.
Michael Long and Rep. Mary Abel
The state representative refuted
for "speaking up for southern cuts in the governor's budget and
charged that the recommended
charges that the blame lies with the Ohio."
former administration. "That
The role of Presidents Thomas reductions will be disastrous to
administration is no more to blame Jefferson and Andrew Jackson in many programs. She spoke particularly of Options for Elders which is
than anyone else. We all wanted
~arty were detailed by the
scheduled
to be phased out by 1993 :
that tax cut," said Rep. Shoemaker.
er at the dinner named in their
·
and
the
effect
it will ·have on the ·
He went on to describe Ohio as • honor. Rep. Shoemaker described
participating
nine counties in '
a "land of opportUnity - unless
them as "advocates of freedom and
southeastern
Ohio.
.
you want to swt a small business,
for equal rights for all."
She
charged
that
it
is
not
in
the
unless you are unemployed, unless
The speaker was imroduced by
. you are a minority, unless you want Rep, Jari Long, who degcrihed the ·
Cdntinued on page 10
.)\)\.~\
:LA chief seeking respite
grams.
"But there are gaps," Vertrees
says. "Current federal programs
biiSed on federal police pow~r or
the threat of withholding farm program benefits are not comprehensive enough. If we truly want to
protect all wetlands, we should
consider the stare police power as
the cornerstone or all other
cffons."
Police power is the inherent
authority of a government to
impose restrictions on private
rights for the sake of the pubhc
welfare. Vertrees says that compared to some other stateS, Ohioans
118ditionaUy prefer .to be free of a
101 of regulations, especially when
it comes to land use.
Knowing how public powers
have been used in the past to pro·
JeCI wetlands could help determine
how they may used today. Vertrees
and Shennan L. Frost, adjunct professor of natural resources at Ohio
State, have compiled a chronology
of state and federal policies that
apply to drainage and wetlands tilal
dales to 1750.
One way.Jovemment has used
its power 1s by encouraging
landowners 10 donate ecologically
valuable wetlands to the stale.
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OPENING CEREMONY • Pomeroy Bear
Den 3 and 6 or Pack 249 under the direction or
Cub M..ter ~ale Thoene conducted tbe opening
ceremony alld presentation or the colors at the
New
area...
Continlltd rnim
J
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slxtb aii!DUII l'ublon sbow or tbe Pomeroy Merchantl ~iation as Sandy Butcher san1 ''God
Bless the USA." See additional pbot01, story on
page 5 and 6.
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Today is D-Day for
D-1
Kent State University and after
-worki~veral -years ·at ihe
Columbiana County Communtiy
Mental Health Center, he moved to
Douglasville, Georgia. ·
In Douglasville, Dr. Shroad has
extensive experience providing
intensive long-term psychotherapy
for children and adolescents in a
holpital setting. He also haS significant experience in psychological
evaluation and assessmenL
Ms. WhiiiiCy has been providing
mental be81th services 10 residents
of southeastern Ohio since 1977.
Working as a psychology assistant
IIICI menlll health counselor under
lhe supervision or licenses professionals, she has received many
years of training in the areas of
jJiydlologicalJeS!ing, crisis inter.ention IIIII individual psychotherlfiY· She panil:ularly enjoys work. WI'th""'......
lftl
Ms. I aqcr resides in Lawrence
County, Ohio and has worked in
die atlintal heabh field since 1985.
Malt I'CIIXIIIly J)IOviding services as
a
1 s 21ir In Gallla. JIICkson
Ms. Langer
11
auiswtt and
filing '9,0 tax returns
any or all or the money due the government - can
By BUD NEWMAN
help taxpayers avoid a severe late payme~! penal~y of
UPI BUSINESS WRITER
S percent of the tax due for each moqth 11 s due. The
WASIDNGTON - Today is D-Day, whicll for penalty
is not allowed to e~ceed 25 percenl.
the lnlernal Revenue Service means Deadline Day
Schnellrnann
said roughly 73 percent of all tax·
for filin$ your 1990 tax return. And if you wailed this
payers
get
refunds
and that the average refund ch~k
year unulthe very last minute to file, join the crowd.
.so
far
has
been
$902.
But the longer someone Wilts
The IRS says you're one of 27 million taxpayers
to
me,
he
said,
the
longer
it lakes ~ get the refund. .
- roughly.one fourth of 1.13 million returns the IRS
Procrastinators
who
file
in Apnl mal he.ve to wilt
expects to receive this year - wbose filing will
about
six
weeks
for
their
money
but )'OU ~
~h IRS processing centers sometime this week.
bly
going
to
get
your
refund
faster
by fli1ng m
What do you do if you owe the government
moner but you're short of cash and cannot pay by February.
Pilings 10 far this year bave •aoUowed'. the same
today s deadline?
.
"File'for an extension (of time) to me," said IRS pattern as last year, he said, with one exception. The
number of taxp.yerS taking advantqe of eleebOIIic
spokeslllln John Schnellmann. "If you owe money,
filing
hiS ~lied nearly 7 million .so far this year send as much as you can," but be 1111re to me your
79
percent
J!Jmp over the number of people who
a
return, whether or not you send money with iL
.
UJed
the
speedier
but costlier filing system last year.
He urged taxpayers who can't pay all they owe to
Piling
elecnonically;
wbl~h ~osts about $3~. can
"attach a brief note of explanation' '1md then ·offer to
get
you
a
refund
check
in
as liltle as twO weeks if that
pay it on tbe installment plan - perhaps $100 a
·
check
Is
sent
directly
into
a savings or checkina
month on a $1,000 tax liabUity.
account
and
about
three
weeks
if die refund is mailed
How the IRS will respond to such a proposal
to
you.
Regular
processing
can
take up to twice IS
"depends on the individual circumslanCea," Schnelllong before you r,t your refund.
mann Slid.
As of April , the IRS had gotten more than 66
The IRS said that "taxJI!IYers who end u p : ·
million
returns and the agency had sent ~ ~re
·more than they can .,.y etthec did not l!ave
than
45
million
refunds worth IIIOI'C than $41 billion.
taxes withheld from ili\!ir paycheck or failed to
Last
diy
filers
with tax questions can call the ~
lllfficient quarterly estimaied Ill! pa)'IIIC!Its.' ' ·
toll-free
information
number, 800-1129-1040. The hne
Filing a timely tax J:e!mll- even without sending
will
be
open
through
early
this evening, the IRS ,said,
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ftfs Is .Just A Portfllll.fstlq Of S•lelt..,..f
ASON
wilh children
2ND STREET
URNITURE
MASON, WV
(304) 773-5592
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Ohio Lottery
Woosnam
captures
Masters title
1991
pLUS···
Police power
maybe best
way to ·
protect
wetlands
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Authorities continue search
for motive in shooting death
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NEW YORK (UPI) - Authori· going to be a real big problem," late on reasons for the ltilling."
ties are trying to determine a the News quoled one law enforceA nephew who appnrently did
motive for the suspected mob hit or ment sowce saying. ,
not hear any shots fli'Cd or see the
the driver for reputed Gambino
Borriello's body was discovered shooters discovered the body, said
crime boss Jolm Gotli.
,
by his nephew about 7:30 p.m. Sat- detective Joe Gallagher.
But the Saturday shooting of urday lymg next to his 1991 Lin"The nephew who was inside
_Bartholomew "Bobby" Borriello,' coln Town Car in the driveway of the house said he heard a commo46, in Brooklyn has set.off fears the his home, police said. He had been tion so he went to ·investigate,"·
slaying might be the opening shot shot several times as he got out of Gallagher said, adding thai it was
in a new mob war.
his car.
not known whether the nephew
Several theories were beirig
"It looks very much, by the lived with his uncle.
cited for the killing: that Gatti's style and -circumslances, to be an
The victim's wife and two chil-·
· ri va\s may be movinJ in on the .organized crime. hit," detective dren were home at the lime of the
jailed Gotti, that a nval family Emil Ciccotelli, chief of Brooklyn slaying, police said.
ordered the hit, or that Gotti him· deteclives, said at a news briefing
Investigators found 10 shell casself sanctioned the shooting.
Sunday afternoon.
ings at the scene, and believe all .
''We won't really know for a
"He's a longtime reputed orga- bullels fired hit their mark,. Cicwhile, unless someone was 'up' on nized crime figure," Ciccotelli said coteUi said.
a wire that caught people tallcing of the victim, who was described liS
Gotti has been in jail since his
about the ltilling," the New York Gotti 's ''longtime associate."
arrest in December on racketeering
Daily News quoled one law
Borriello had been arrested at charges, including accusations he
enforcement official saying.
least six tiines for weapons viola- masterminded the slaying of
Borriello has been described by tions, assault, larceny and gam- Castellano. Authorities say the
investigators as a possible hitman bling, Ciccotelli said.
murder consolidated G01ti 's power
in the December 1985 rubout of
When asked for a motive, the and made him the nation's top
Gambino crime chief Paul Curel- chief said, "I don't want to spec~- mobster.
Iano, New York Newsday reported
Monday.
The newspaper said Gotti may
have feared Borriello could be
press~ into lellifying about his
role in CasteiiiiiO's murder, which - Authorities are continuing to investigate a Sunday shooting
elllblisbed Goal's rilo to power .
which !efta Pomeroy man dead.
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NeWiday also aid the Brooklyn
AcCQfding 10 Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy Jeff Miller, Walter
districllltonley'a oftice lias been
Mullins, S4, of Kingsbury Road, was pronounced dead at his home
investipdng Borriello.
shonly before 3 p.m. yesterday by MeiSs County Coroner Douglas
BptTiello bepn his career in .
Hunler afJer suffering a sin$1e gunsi\Ot wound to die chest.
·
orpnlzed crime wldl the old Gallo
Mi~ repon,s that Mullins' wife, Helen, was outside of tbe coumob but shilled to the Genovese
. pie's home when she heard il single ·gunshot and went into the house
crime family after the killing or
where she found her husband in a back room.
Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo. He
Also responding to a call into Meigs Emergency Medical Ser.
moved to the Gambino crime flmi·
vices were EMS uniu, Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby,
ly aftr:r the
C~~tetlano.
Deparunenr lnve•ig•ror Raben Beegle and Ohio Bwtau of CrimiBorriello had
lleell rcpdarnallnveatigation Agent John Perry.
ly wilh Goai bt the last fiVe years,
Hunter refused to comment Monday morning on whether he
servin& as his bodyauard and ·
believed the gurqhot to be self-inRicted,..stating only thai his illvesq~
chlttlfeUr.
galion was &till pending. The shoriff' s department did not indicate
"You've got to think that this ia
thai they suspected eny foul play.
·
,a real slap 11 Jolut and that there is
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Police probe fatal shooting
alayio::O
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Monday, Aprll15, 1991
Commentary
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Aprll15, 1981
The Daily Sentinel
Soldiers face greater peril at home
. Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
111 Court Street
W.ASIDNGTON • The soldier medical Je8C81'Cb Md law enforce· fie accidCnts·every day in the Unit·
who survived Operation Desert ment that could have made home a ed States (128 on the average) than
were killed in combat in the Gulf.
Storm only to be killed in his safer place to be,
The death toll from Only two days year, more members of the armed
hometown
of
Detroit
last
month
The
few
American
casualties
I was die first of what will no doubt .. from the war surprised everyone, of household accil\ents (62 a day forces killed themselves (256) than
be many sad ironies. In the Persian including veterans' hospitals that on the average) surpassCd the com· were killed in the entire Gulf War
Gulf, die soldiers only had Saddam were geared up to tal:e more thai!. bat death toll from Desert S!Orm. in combat and non-combat deaths.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hussein 's million-man army to 25,000 patients: Hospitals in die according to the National Safety
Life in the armed forces is
Publisher
G•erlll Maaapr
worry about.
\
war zone were ready too, but soon Council.
. becoming steadily safer and health·
The National Center for Health ier over the years. J usl I0 ·years
They were safe from· drunk · found that their grealeSt contribu·
Statistics
says that more JlCOI?Ie die · · ago, the death rate or military perPAT WHITEHEAD
drivers, household accidents, dtug tion would come in treating Iraqi
AM!Itant Pablllber/Conti'GIIer
of
pneumonia
every day tn the sonnel was 112 for every 100,000.
overdoses, venereal diseases, street and Kuwaiti refugees from die w.-.
punks with Uzis, jealous lovers and
The tl\reBiened use of chemical Umted StaleS (207), than died in Last year it was 17.
A MEMBER ol The United Press Interna tional, Inland D.ally Press
alcoholism.
weapons by Iraq never malerial· combat. And what about urban
·. Reporting casualty mmben is a
Assocl•llon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Their loved ones back home ized, nor did Saddam 's promise combat Ill home? An ave~e of 60 dicey business for die l'eiiiJIIOII. In
worried about whether die soldiers that thousands of American sol· peOple are murdered every day in Korea and Vietnam, the military ·
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome: They sbould be leu than300
.
I
would survive die war. But it was diers would swim in their own the United States, and another 83 held back the actual number of'
words long. AU letters are subject to edit In& and must be.slgned with
the
soldiers who should have beeil blood. Even the 39 Scud missile kiD themselves. ·
deaths. 1'housands of missing men
• name, address and telephone number. No umilped letters wUI be pubwhether
the
folks
attacks
against
Israel
were
more
If
the
540,000
American
solworrying
about
were not listed in caallllty &epcits,
. llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addreulng Issues, not personal!·
back home would survive the bark than bite. More Israelis died diers, sailors and airm~ of Opera· and die l'ellllloo was &ductant 10 ·
ties.
increasingly treacherous life in die or heart attacks and misuse ·of their tion Desert S!Jeild and Desert compile non-combat casualties. ·
--- ······ -- .. ..United S181CS.
. gas masks than frOm a hit by mis- Storm had been home going about
In Vietnam, the enemy casualty
their usual business.
than 200 numbers were ~dded 10 make a
One of the lessons·of thjl Gulf sile debris.
·
War is that a decade of heavy . The latest official .U.S. casualty of them would i)ave been expected losing proposition look better.
del'ense spending produced a weD- toU is 330 wounded .and 242 dead. 10 die from ·accidents; illness, mur' Almost all Vietnamese tilled in
equipped military machine that Of the dead, 115 were killed in der, suicide and small combat mis· actioo, civilians and military, were
could roll over 111 enemy and leave combat. Our associate Melinda · sions during the sill mooths that the . lumped IOgether as enemy dead. In
American ttoops nearly unscathed. Maas surveyed what was happen· operation spanned. That figure is the Persian Golf War, die Pentagon
For anyone with a loved one in the ing at home during die months of based on the number of deaths refused to even specillato-on the-'
armed forces, it was worth- tbe Operation Desert Shield and Desert reported in the armed forces last total number of Iraqi solmers and
By HELEN THOMAS
UP1 Wblte Roue Reporter
price. But part of that money was Storm.
. year • 1,574 in a military popula· civilians killed, calling it a distaste·
. tion or just over 2 million. Last ful business.
extracted
from
social
programs,
More
people
were
killed
in
traf.
WASHINGTON - President B111h returned from his work-and-play
·
vacatioo with new energy and rarin' 10 go.
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· After fishing in florida and Jlllfmg at swank Newpon Beach, Calif.,
the president ·plunged back mto the White House routine with a
vengeance, P.ledging.to devote more time to domestic issues, especially to
"fast ttack ' trade issues to open free trade mllrkets with Mexico and
other countries.
He had five separate m¥lr appoinanents on his agenda his rust day
bick.on tbe job after a 10-day ~eve.
. J'{ol that die Persian 6ulf cnsis is over. The postwar problems have
been l'll8lllified with the flight of the Iraqi .Kunls by hundreds of thousands and the fact that Iraq's Saddam Hussein remains in power.
, Bush aides say, howev~. that he will be on tbe road again constantly
in.the days allead with a number of college conunencement addresses on
tap.
Pomero:r, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE8T8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON ABBA
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Backstairs at the
I White House
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m<re
----
'The hundreds of guests ut the reception for the unveiling or Kiuy Kel-
, A new book. "Flight of the Avenger" which tells the story of
"Oeorge Bush at War" is insightful or the president at a younger age an~
his inherent courage. He enlisted in World War D at die age of 18 and as a
bOmber pilot had many dangerous enci)UIIIers, the main ooe he lived to
tell about was when he was shot down in the Plcific by the Japanese.
, The Bush that is depicted by foimer war conespondent Joe HyiWIIs is a
yclung man who was born to wealth, but who loved to share and who
made friends. war buddies easily.
. When he was discharged on SepL 18, 1945, sbM!y after die Japanese
surrendered. Bush had compiled 1,228 hours of flying time, 126 carrier
landings and 58 missions.
'i'be While House is subtly revving up President Bu&h 's ~lection .
campaign machinery and putting its ducks in a row. But the actual formal
announcement that he is running again will not be made unlil perhaps as ·
· !ale as January 1992.
And it will just be a formality since no one doubts that he will seek a ·
second term with his popularity polls riding so high.
.
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Berry's World
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Options for Elders invaluable for Seniors in SEO
Study after study indicates that
the fasleSt jpOwing segment of our
poptlill.tion m Ohio is oW.. die age
of 60. At both the federal and state
levels there have been programs
implemenled to deal with the spec~ needs o~ this expanding population. In Ohio, the G'eneral Assembly pas~ landmark legislation last
year that established the Options
for Elders program ,in Southern
Ohio which serves our community's seniors.
The purpose of Options for
Elders is to provide individuals
who are over the age or 60 with
alternatives to nursins homes and
other forms of institutional care.
The·Options come in the form of
coordinated systems of in-home
services designed to help seniors
POLICE.
MISCOMOUCT
CLOSIT
\
remain in their own homes, living
as independently as possible for as
long as possible. The services ·
available under the Options pro·
gram include the following: information and assistance, adult day
care, home-delivered meals, per·
sonal care, assistance with transportatioo, housinJ assistance and
mental health serv~ces.
However, with th<: proposed
Governor's State Budget, the
Options for Elders Program has
been targeted for elimination by
1993 and presently has beeil forced
to freeze the enrollment of its current client base.
As our elderly population
increases, so does their need for
health care and related self SUStain·
ing services. Without the services
Sen. Jan Michael Long .
provided through die Options For
Throu$.h die State Budget pro·
Elders program, many seniors will cess, it will be the responsibility of
have no other alternative but to the Legislature to conect some
enter institutional care; the most enoneous fiscal decisions made by
expensive way to care for the elder- the current administration. Hopely.
fully our Seniors and the Options
Conversely this will greatly for Elders program will be die ben·
impact the State's budget crisis eficiliries of 11 closer review of this
with a greater burden placed upon · current budget proposal.
As always, please feel free to'
the State's funding of Medicaid
payments. Institutional care !~!ready . call or write me. State Senator Jan·
consumes nearly 44 percent of Michael Long, if you have any
Ohio's Medicaid budget. The questions or comments about these'
action to eliminate Options for or any other issues. My number is·
Elders by the Voinovich Adminis- (614) 466-8156, and my address is
tration will only lead to worsening the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio
this already burdensome fiscal situ· 43215.
ation.
Is it worth ·all the work for a rebate?
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The last time I did it, I swore on
a stack of expired coupons I •d
never do it agam. I might have kept
that promise if it hadn't beeil near
Christmas lllld I hadn't been a little
shy of cash.
I walked into the auto depart·
ment and pointed to a carton filled
with eight sallons of antifreeze
bo..tfl]'arked, "SAVB $1.50 PER
0
N" .
then proceecied to tbe cash register and paid regular pirce for it.
Yes, that's right, I said ·regular
price. OK, you ask, if the stuff was
$1.50 less per gallon than it was
SUJIIl(ISed to be, why was I paying
fuh· price> Simple. All I'd have to
do, they said, was send oflto the
company for my rebate, and I'd
have an easy 12 bucks!
I'd forsouen there's no such
thing as an easy rebate. The last
rebate I sent in had me saving
35mm film pacta&"" for a year to
get a plastic watch I have yet to
receive, •though the compmzloog
B¥0 canc:eled my chect for shipPill& and hlndling chll)es."
. So, yes, I pesa I f~~~t was
Chrisanu, I needed an
, and
I needed 12 bucb.
. "How bad can this be?" I rationalized u a 111111 rougbly die size
of a John Deere lawa II'ICIIII' wres·
tied the ca1011 of mtiliea:e into the
bact of my Jeep. l could have
bought the 8lllifreea wben I need·
ed it !lite a normal penon inltead
of in bulk, but then I wouldn't be
saving $1.50 a whack, would I? 1'.!!
just fill out the little blank form
hanging off die neck or one of the
bottles, send in the receipt and
voila! Easy money!
Still, it was Christmas and I ·
wanted to believe. I trusted that the
folks back at th.e antifreeze plant
wanted me to have that extra $ i 2
for my Christmas shopping. But
once I had unloaded the antifnleze ·
jug by jug • I discovered that if I
wanted my rebate before Christ·
mas, I'd have 10 act now! Before
relinquishing any moner.. the company demanded each foil seal from
each jug ci antifJeeze. I either had
to drain the old antifreeze from
each car and pour in 'the new, or
tear off the foil seals and put plastic
wrap over the opened jugs and
screw dleir caps back on.
.That doesn't sound like much
trouble.·yo~~ sa'fl. wen. bow about
coming back mto the house and
filling out four forms • one fot
every two jugi • requirins myname,
address, name or store where the
antifieeze was purchased, and ye$',
color, mate, model, mileage and
vehicle identification numbers
from the cars into which the
antifreeze was poured (Do you
know those by heart? Add 20 min·
utea to go look up the car titles or
two hours if the ndes are in a bank
safety deposit box downtown). I
checked the fine print 00 dJe JdJale I
blanks carefully, fisuring perhaps
I'd overlooked the part about
~
'
changing the antifreeze only wider
a full moon while a voodoo priest
sang "Winter Wonderland" and
filmed me.
Manufacturers of the world, take
note: I have retrieved, cut, pasted,
packed and sent and envelope full
Sarah Overstreet
of trash to your for the last time.
You can ' take all your seals,
receipts and fill-in-the-blanks, and
stuff'em. I'm buying another
brand.
·Today in history
On this dale in history:
'
In i861, President Lincoln sent Con~ a message recognizing a Stale
of war with the Southern staleS and calling for 75,000 volunteer soldiers.
In 1865, President Lincoln died of an assassin's bullel Vice President
Andrew Johnson was sworn in as chiel executive.
In 1912, die luxury liner "Titanic" sank off Newfoundland. About 1,
SOO lives were lost.
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In 1985, U.S. officials in Seialtle indicted 23 members of a neo-Nazi.
group called. The Order for robbery and munler. 10 pna members later :
were convicted and sentenced to 40 to 100 years in prison,
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A thought for the dar: author Henry James once WIOle that "an witboutlife is a poor affair.'
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The Daily Sentinel
(U8P814i-ltl)
A lllvllloo ol Jllolll..,..la, ....
Publis hed eVery aherDOOn, Monday
ihrough Friday, l11 Court Sl ., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubIIJhlnc Company /MuiUmeclla, Inc.,
PomOI'oy, Ohio 15769. Ph. 992-2156. Second class postate paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.
'
Advertlslna Repretentetlve, Branham
NrwJPaper Saln, 133 Third Avenue,
Today is Monday, Aprill5, die IOSth day of 1991 with 26010 follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its first quartet:
1
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Sawm.
· The evenihg stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
·
Those born on this date are under die sign of Aries. They include Ita!·
ian painter and inventor Leonardo da Vinci in 1452; British polar exp~
Sir James Clark Ross in 1800; aut.hor Henry James in 1843; painte1
Thomas Hart Benton in 1889; radio aCtreSll Marian Jordan, who played
"MoUy McGee," in 1897; country singer Roy Clart in 1933 (age 58);
and actresses Elizabeth Montgomery in 1933 (age 58) and Claudia Cardi·
nate in 1939 (age 52).
.
The Meigs girls softball team
recently lost two of three games to
even it's rc:tord to 3-3 on the sesson
·
·The Marauders defeated Miller
19·5,-before losing to Trimble 9-6
and 10 powerful Columbus DeSales
16-3.
In the game against Miller, the
Lady Marauders pounded out 22
hits and they rolled to the victory.
. Chrissy Weaver had the big hat for
Meigs, Weaver went 5 f~ 6 at die
plate slammin~ three d~~bles., a
triple and a smgle, Tr1c1a Baer
added two single.-and a tnple, .
Krislen Stanley three.singles, Maiy
Compston two doubles, Verna
Compston, Sarah ~ullins and
Chrissy Taylor two stn!!,les each,
Missy Sisson, Ginger Findley and
Tara Gerlach a single each. Gerlach
was the winning pitcher limiting
the Falcons to only four hits.
In the game at Trimble the
Marauders jumped out to a 1-0 lead
in the top of the first, Verna
Member: United Preta International,
lnlsnd DaU y PrfH ANodatlonancllbe
Ohto Newspaper A llo:latlon. National
By United Press International
.
s.
!?~~.~1n~e~1r~a!:1~:r~
in going the distance for
innin~s
MEIGS SEVENTH GRADE CAGERS •
Tile Mell(l Junior Blab sev.:nlh grade basketball
team Is ptdured above. First row, 1-r, are Israel
Grimm, Jake Ganaway, Willie Johnson, Brent
Hanson, Travis Curtis and Paul Pullinl. Second
row !rom left to right are Gary Stanley, Travis
Abbott, Bert Mash, Corery Darst, Donald Y~I.
Celtics outlast K_nicks, 115-102
v
New York, New York 10017.
PO!n'MASTER:
Send · - challaw
to n.. DsUy Setttlnol,
111 Court St ,
Pomeroy, Oltlo 45'nlt.
lu.a!IP'I10N IIATBII
IJCuri•••-- .
One Wook .... .. ...... ., ,, .... " .,., ......... $1.60
One Month .............................. :.. 16.1111
one Year ........... , ., .................. 183.20
IIINOUCOPY
r•cz
Dollyo.. ., ... ., .. ., ..................... 2S cenu
SultacrlbenlWI-riBitopaylllocu·
rter may remit Ill sdvuce 4lrecl to
a
1br Dally Sealbllll>tt • 3, or 12 -tb
bUll . credit will be at ..n carrlrrHdt
....k.
No tubocri!JIIattl D)' maO porml- Ia
ai'HI where llonW c:arra. ..-vier t1
avaUable.
w-.-·--==
.. .
w-.. . . .,. . . . . . . . . ,.,..,
M..t
13 WeeltS .................. ... .. .. ., .... , . I2UI
•:Ill w.......""'"'"""""" ............. $43.16
52
.,,.,,.,., ,, .,.,,,.,,.,.111.71
· Molpllotltllr
13 w...................
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:Ill Weoluo •.,.,, .,., ............. .,....... SIUO
M
ato
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:~:
By United Preu International :
If the Los Anaeles Kings win ;
the Stanley Cup. they may have the :
·Vancouver Canucks to thank.
.
"We knew it was soing to be :
tough right from the beginning," :
said Wayne Gretzky after the ,
Kings defeaie4 Vancouver 4-1 ;
Sunday night to advance to the ·
Smythe Division final s. " II was :
tough .but maybe it was some!'ling :
we needed. I'm sure it'll help us •
going iniO tile next round.''
i
The Kings have always been ;
known for scoring goals, but the •
Canucks forced them to play disci~ :
plined defense 10 puU out the best ;
of seven sem ifinal series fou r ,
games 10 two,
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"This year we had a good •
understanding that' you .need ;
defense to advance in the play-.'
offs," Kings Coach Tom Webster .
said. "You need to score b,u l-.
everyone needs to be conscious ot:
their OWn end of the ICC.
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"But you have to give Vancou~ .
ver a lot of credit, they played at
very good series," Webster added.'•
Gretilcy, who was held off the
score sheet Sunday but stiU tallied
10 points in the series , echoed
Webster's sentiments about taking
care of the derensive zone,
.
"Even though we bave a lot d( ·
guys who can score, you need to
k~p the puck out of your net,'' h(;, : .
satd.
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Larry Robin son, who was,
named the first star of Sunday '•
11ight's game, said the !Gngs m~t a .
team that seemed to thnve on bemlt ·
the underdog, much like Los Ange· .
les did last year in their upset or J
Calgary in the first round.
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:'There is no such thing as an . ·
· easy game in the playoffs. Ever)":
game and every team you play now
is tough," said Robinson.
Canucks Coach Pat Quinn said .
Vancouver began to falter when ,
thel started .to get too fancy.
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' It was tight checking at bodYends until we started gambling and..
makin_B fancy plays and they kiD~ :
us " Quinn said.
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'But it wasn't die Kings' vaunted';
snipers that speUed the trouble for
the Canucks, 1t was the checkers. :In other games Sun~ay night-, ·
Minnesota ·stunned Ch1eago 3·1, ·
Calgary clipped Edmonton :2-1 il! ~
overtime and St. Louis shut out ·
Detroit 3-0.
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Flames 1, Oilers 1 (OT) . _
Ai lldmooton, All~rta. Theore!l'·
Fleury broke out of his series scor~ ·,
ing slump with an unassisted goa\
in overtime that lifted the Flames '
into a 3·3 tie in their Smythe Division semifinal series. 'Game 7 is
TueSday night in Calgary. Fle~f:
jumped on an errant pass Edmon·
ton's Mark Messier threw away 8t"
center ice and skated in alone on
goalie Grant Fuhr. 3tuffing a shot •
between his legs at 4:40 or over;
By ERIK K. LIEF
the ftrst time s.ince 1989 •. Don
August, 0.1, suffered die loss.
UPI Sports Wr~er
Anplll9, Twins 4
· As the playoff matchup between
At Minneapolis, Gary Gaetti the .Boston Celtics and New York
drove home four runs and Chuck
·
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Finley posted his sevent!l_straig~t_ be~ins to come mto v1ew, t e
vi~ over Minnesola 10 fead die Kmcks are seeing green but the
signposts for success are all red. ..
Ange :. Finley, 2-0, allowed four
New Yolk, which is struggling
runs and five hits, SU1ICk out five 10 find a winning formula before
and walked five over seven the postseasOn arrives, suffered i.ts
innings. Jack Morris, 0.2, gave us . ninth Joss in the last 12 games m
eight runs and 13 hits. in taking die Sunday's 115-102 defeat to the
loss.
Celtics. In addition, they concluded
Royals 5, Ymkeet 3
their season series with Boston at
~ Kansas City, Mo.. Ki&k Gib- o. 5.
son hit two home runs and drove
The two teams are potential
home four runs to lead the Royals. · first-round playoff opponents for
,_• ,
Gib11011 belled his first heme runs the second straight year, as the
for Kansas City and posted die lOth Knicks battle the Indiana Pacers for
multiple-homer game of his career. the No. 7 spot m
· the E.as 1 wbile
Mike Boddicker' 1_1, allowed four BosiOn
and Chicago fight for the
hits and. th.ree walks over eight top confe{Cnce finish.
shutout mm.ngs. The loss went to
"This learn has ple.nty of talent
Andy lfawkins. 0.1.
but right now, we're ,l! .li~ ~~
R11111en 15, Orioles 3
up a little inqonststent.' sa1d
At ~rlington, Texas, _Rafael Knlcks forward iGki Vandeweghe.
Pal~e1ro stroked four hits and .. All you can do is hope it gets
drove home ~ runs to ~t the cleared up by playoff time."
Rangers to thetr first wtn of the
The way New York is going,
season. No~ R~ , ,1·1, allowed a the better do more then hope.
three-run, ftrst·mnmg bomer.to Unl~ they drasticallychange their
Sam HOt!'. and dlen . ga~ up .~nly . ways it-appears unlikely that die
one more hit·over seven innmgs:·· Knicts will be able to score a
Jeff Robinso~, ~-1. gave up five .repeat of last )'ear's opening-round
runs over two mmngs.
knockout over Boston.
"I'd like tO say we were on a
roll going into the playoffs, that we
were winning die games we should
win, but unfortunately it's not the '
ease," added Vandeweghe.
.
Boston, playing without Larry
Bird for the fourth straight game,
Compston Icid off die game reach· received 28 points from forward
ing on an eiTOI' and later scored on Kevin Gamble and 23 pomts and
- time.
a base hit by Baer.
11 rebounds from center Roben
Trimble scored two runs in the Parrish . Reggie Lewis added 20 .
bottom of the first to take a 2-1 points while Brian Shaw pumped
SPRING VAll fY CINEMA
lead but Meigs scllled three runs in m 17.
·
446 4514
.
the third inning to take a 4-2
"They continue to show w)ly
advantage. Compston walked, they're the favorite to win the NBA
Weaver relicHed on an error, Baer championship," New York Coach
then singled 'with two outs and John MacLeod said of the Celtics.
Stanley followed with a double to_ "They have speed and quickness
score the runs.
and at the same time the~ have the
• •
But the Lady Cats Scored two older players with expenence. We
runs in the bottom of the third, did a few things well out there
BROWN SCORES • Boston guard Dee Brown scores on a
three in the fourth and two more in today, but you can't just do .~ few
layup
In Sunday's 115-101 NBA victory over the New York:s
the sixth to hold a 9-4 advantage.
things well to beat the Celucs at
Knlcks. New York derenders Maurice Cheeks. _(1) and Edd1e
Meigs scored two runs in the home"
WUklns (45) loon on. (UPI)
seventh inning on a single by
~ Celtics shut dOwn much or
Weaver, a double by Mary Comp- New Yodt 's erratic ofrense, eltcept
who missed his sjxth sttaight game
· Bullets 101, Heat !Ill
ston and a single by Baer but the for center Patrick Ewing, who ha4
beca11se
of a strained left knee. The
At Landover, Md .. 26 points by
33 points. Trent Tucker added 18
rally short.
76ers
got
30 points from Hersey
Harvey Grant helped the Washing·
Baer led the Marauders at the points and Vandeweghe IS.
Hawkins
and
27 from Ron Ander· •
plate with three singles, Weaver
Boston put the game away late ton Bullets avoid another ~().Joss
added a triple and a double, Mary in the third quartet on a,l 5·6 "!n· season for at least anodler day with son.
Compston a double and Verna which featured Gamble s 3-pomt a vi'ciOI}' over Miami. Washington,
Compston a single.
play with two seconds remaining to. which IS 29-49 with rour games
DeSales rolled into town to play make it 94-78. Gamble hit for 9 ,left, went 31· 51 last year and have
the Marauders in a noil·league coo- poipts in the quarter 0~ 4 of 5 not had back·IO"back 50-loss sea·
test that enabled coach John Amott shooting. For the pcnod, the sons since the team was based in
c-.J><VJ
to play some ci the younger players Celtics connected oo 68 percent of Chicago in die early 1960's. Sher· .
man Douglas posted 26 points for
on the team. DeSales juniped out to their shots.
·
,
a 2..() lead in the 'first inning and
Elsewhere in the NBA, Wash· the HeaL
Tlmberwolves 96, 76ers 88
rolled to the 16-3 victory. The in~ton trimmed Miami 101 -96,
At Philadelphia, Tony Camp~ll
Marauders had seven ·hits led by Mmnesota dropped Philadelphia
Vema Compston and Weaver with 96-88 San Antonio downed scored 23 poiniS and Dous West
.,
two singles each, Stanley added a Phoenix 109-101, Indiana pasted added a season-high 17 points to
boost
Minnesota.
Philadelphia
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double, and Tara Humphreys and Detroit 125-107 and Portland
played without Charles Barkley,
Baer chipped in with a smgle each.
pounded Orlando 139-119:
Meigs softballers drop ·
two of last three decisions
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CJS)II
•,Many WashingiOn reporters and photographers who were in Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait to cover tbe w• are back home now lind telling their
war stories in the White House press roorrl . Many are up front enough to
say they saw very little war, it being a high-tech air war.
;, But their hackles rise when they report that the Joint Information
BUreau (JIB) officers freely confiscated dleir film and had no qualms
about breaking their cameras when they appean:d at the front outside their
guidelines.
.
One photographer who got 10 the scene of the Scud attack on a bar·
niclcs in Dharhan was anesled in taking .shoes of the casualties, American
servicemen and women, who were being treated Ill the scene.
.
Ironically, weeks before the milit.y officers had proudly ,simulated to
photOgraphers and repOrters how quickly they could treat and evacuate
caSualties if a war occurred. When die real thing happened, IIley banned
press coverage.
. \
One informatiqn officer brought some film to a wire. service photo
sniu: and asked thai it be developed. The film twned out to be photos of
same border qJerations that had 6een talt'tnDy a tepOiter and ·confiJCilell:. , Reporters also found out later th3t some of the so-called information
officers were really intelligence offiCials.
.
ley's unauthorized biography of Nancy 'Reapn beaan to take a second
IOQ!c at each other when the author said that many rl her sources were on
hiiJld.
'
During the brief program, a congratulatory telegram was read from
SPeaker Tom Fol~y and his wife, Heat'!er.. .
.
In some ways n appeaied to be the mYitanon of the year. Book parues
are weekly events inWashington, and they are usually held at bookstores
on in the homes of friends.
But Kelley's publishers, Simon and Shuster, rented the ballroom of the
National Press Club and it drew a capacity crowd. ·
·
: The only high-profile Reagan Wliite House associate on hand was forrrrer political adviser Lyn Nofziger, a friend of the author lllld the Rea. gins. There were no big name Bush administration officials milling
a4Jund,
,------------------------~
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One week into the season, .
Albert Belle has shown no signs of
slowing down from his springtraining pace.
· The Cleveland outfielder
slarilmed a pair of hOme runs Sun- ·
day and drove home four runs,
leading die Indians 10 a 6-0 victory
over tl\e BosiOD Red Sox.
·
Belle, who won Cleveland's
starting left-field job in spring
training by hitting 11 home runs •
already has belled three through die
rust week of die seaslin.
The muscular Belle has been
one of Cleveland's top prospects
for the past few seasons, but
showed inconsistency at die plate
and instability off the field, He was
kicted off the Louisiana State
· baseball team in college and was
involved in a few scrapes with
authorities while in the mioors.
The problems stemmed from
alcohol dependency, something
Belle rUIIlly came to grips with last
season by entering a rehabilitaton
center.
·
•'I'm more relaxecf now and it's
a lot easier to play ball when
you're having fun," said Belle,
who was called Joey until he
reverted ba~k:.IO his given name of
Albert last season. " '91 is a new
y~-a new start..'.'
·
·
·. . . . . ... B~l!c; gav~ ~}~~el~~ 11 2-0 lead
in the first inmng. noston starter
Greg Harris, 0.2, gave up a two-out
single to Carlos Baer~ and Belle
followed with a blast mto the left·
field screen.
The outfiClder boosted die Jndi.
ans' advantage to 3-0 when he led
orr the sixth inning with his third
homer of the season, also into die
left· field screen.
"The pitc~er made a couple of .
mistakes and got it out over the
plate ... the first was a curve, the
·second was a slider," Belle said.
"This year I've been able to tal:e
advantage of pitchers' miSI&ka.''
Belle added that he will hit
home runs ''as long as I get die ball
up in the air. Here .(in Fenway
l>arlc), with tbe short ~h (in l~t)
you've got a chance of 11 carrytng·
out. If I go up there swingin' for
the fences, I'll strike out a lot.'
Cleveland starler .Tom Candiot·
ti, relying llirgely on .a dancing
knuckleball, i~roved hiS record to
2-0 by scattenng four hits o':"er
seven innings, striking out nme
while allowins three walks.
Candiotti said ~e threw the
knuckler "75 to 80 l!Crcent of the
time and it was movmg Within die
strike zone. The hitters saw that
and knew they had to swing at it.''
With BOSIOD trli1ing 5.0 in the
seventh. Boston Manlier Joe Mor·
gan was ejected by llomc-plate
umpi&e Tim MI:Ciellllld after voic·
ing his displeasure about a fan·
interference call involving Sandy
Alomar's groulld·rule RBI double.
Mo&pn tried to make a pitching
chanse rigbt after being ejec~.
but McClelland and .the other
umpires blocked hil!l from walking
up onto the pitching mound. Pitching COli)Ch Bill Fischer ~r came
out to change p~hers.
In other American League
action Sunday. Toronto blanked
Milwaukee 9- 0, California
thumped Minnesota 9-4, Kansas
City ripped New Yodt S-3, Texas
hammered Baltimore 15·3 and
Oakland nipped Seattle 7-6. Qlicago at Detroit was postponed
because or lain. ·
In the National League, it was:
'Atlanta 12, Cipcinnati 1; Chicago
6, Pittsburgh 4; Houston 7, San
Flancisco 2; St. Louis 11, Pbiladtl:
phia 7; New Yodt 7, Mootrea1 1;
and $an DiCIIIO Los AnaeJca 3.
. Blue J&J19, Brewen 0 ·
At Toronto, Jimmy Key pitc~
a two-hitter and Devon Whtte
drove in three runs to lead the Blue
__
Kings in
division
finals
'
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
·- _. ....
The Dally sentlnei-Page-3
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Belle slams 2·homers
in Indians 6-0 victory
Page 2 The Dally.Sentinel
...
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Special Savings
Ill 1•1•4 11 1 I I
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Wallace wins crash-marred ra~e
BRISTOL. Tenn. (UPI) Rusty Wallace came from two laps
down to win die crash-marred and
rain-delayed Valleydale 500
NASCAR race Sunday. The race
saw 19 caution flags and a record
40 lead changes as 18 or the 32
cars were involved in. crashes or
spins.
The worst crash of the day sent
Sterling Marlin to the hospital for
treaUnenta of blms. In his second
erash of the day, hi& car burst into
. names after striking a wall· near
tum two.
,
Following Wallace's Pontiac by
just a half-car length was Ernie
Irvan '1 Ford. In third was Davey
Allison •s Ford, followed by Mark
'Martin's Ford and Ricky Rudd's
Chemllcl
DaireU Waltrip was sixth in a
Chevrolet, followed by Dale Jar·
rctt's Ford, Jimmy Spencer's
Chevrolet, Terry \-abonte' s
t.'
Oldsmobile ~nd Morgan Shep·
herd's Ford.
Wallace lost two laps in the rust
100 laps because of unscheduled
pit stops. but adroitly made them
up dunns die caution periods. After
·, one hour. 12 mi!lule rain delay
that began al 4:30 p.m., Wallace
held a one-car lead over lrvan
goillg into the last lap.
On the last backstretch, Wallace
got boltind Rudd' s lapped car and
IMn Clllllltl up. lrvan taPPed Wal·
1at:e'1 Pontiac in the tall as they·
entered tum three, and it forced .
Wallace inlo the upper pove of the
~lin.
lrvan tbea pulled alongside
Wallace aad the two ears banged
coming out or turn four, but Wal·
· lace - able 10 squeeze ahead oo
the final suaight-away to take the
cbectered fla&.
.
"I had evr:ry tire oo that car Ht
\,
~
with smoke ~ing to .get to ~e
fmish line first , ' Wallace said .
"We had a whale of a race today,
no doubt about tliat."
Marlin was the only driver
injured in die crashes, and he was
reported in stable condition at the
Bristol Regional Medical Center.
"I'm burned,'; he told NASCAR
offiCials at die hospital. "It's worse
than· any sunburn I've ever had.
l'm okay, just real hot.''
The 40 lead changes was a
NASCAR rc:tord while the number
of laps run under yellow caution
flags - 134 - was one shan of a
tying a record. The average speed.
67.67 mph, was the slowest in track
history.
Rudd, by finishing fifth, held
th6 lead in the driver'• points
ct.mpionlhiiJ. ""- II leCOnd. fol·
lowed by Dile Elrnla1lt, who fin·
ished 20th, Martin and Wallace.
" '
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Il l 111!1111 ' 1
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NEW 1991 PATRIOT YORKTOWN
o.
taoo oq. ft . llillrtt ·· 3 t JCMto, 2 """"· - · oleollronl -·A· II
_
... In raal, llilallllnt · 7~t fl.,... wola,
. ".. . '27'750
::::.~~=;:=~'· ~.
Completely •t·up w!tll concrete loolell, vinyl lkirllllfl, one Ml of
slepe, 4x4 deck, up to 20 ft . of matertll lor each hOok·up, hut
lape and lie ~-
Savings on _
this homa and
other lot models up !o .......................... :.....
•S , OOO
Stop In And See Jolm Smith Or Dick Cole For OelaMa.
COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
. Located 5 Ullel Eat Of Rt. 33
on AI. 50 Eaet. Att1lns 182-1872
'"
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4 The Dally SenUnel
Page
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
llond8~~115,1991
\
Woosnam captures
Masters title-with 277
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WOOSNAM RECEIVES TRADmONAL
JACl(ET - Def~ln1 Muten chUlpiOII Nick
Faldo EJII)and (top) presents the 1991 cham·
or
AUGUSTA, Oa. (UPI)- Ian
Wooa118111 kept bis poise after a
clr*ful ttJe shot at lbe 13th hole
Sunday and went on to win the
Mastm by one stroke for his first
·~~P·l
The 5-aoot-4 ong- h'.
tiling
Welsbman ICCURid bis victory with
a six- foot par pun on the 18th
green. This marked the fourth
sttaight year the ~rs went to a
British player.
Woosnam, who has needed only
a 1JU1ior title to join the ranks of the
world's great rlayers, survived a
dramatic due with Jose-Maria
Ola•abal and Tom Watson with a
round of par-72. It was a round
fiUed with the kinds of peaks and
valleys that usually make the final
' ploa Iaa W-aam or Wales tile traditional
day
of the Masters one of the most
green jacket after Woosnam '11'011 by slnkln1 a
thrilling
days in sport.
.
pat·7Z putt 011 the 18th bole. (UPI)
·
·woosnam. Olazbal ll!ld watson
all went to the 18th hole standing at
-11- under and only Woosnam, lhe
one-time l)oxer who has twice led
the European Tour in earnings.
·
could manage par.
Faldo had a pull that is often found at the Augusta
Olazbal, who lite Woosnam
National Golf Club, one in which be was forced to
was trying for his first major
aim about 15 feet right of the cup in order to get the
crown, suffered a bogey on the
ball close to the hole.
final hole, fust pulling his ttJe shot
After striking the putt, Faldo began foUowing the . in a fairway bunter and from there
ball as it eased up a slope. made a left tum and began
hitting his approac!l into a greento drift down the hiU toward J1te cup.
side trap. A poor shot out of the
Suddenly, Faldo began to imitate .the technique
bun1cet brought about a bogey.
· used by participants in a curling match, who brush
.Then Watson and Wqosnam
the ice with specially made brooms in order to ease . came to the final hole with Watson
the lh of the "stone."
. hitting a JIO!)r drive into the trees
'.f:e ball ftnished two feet away which allowed
right of the fairway and Woosnam
Faldo to save par. .
producing 110 immense drive over
the fairway bunters and into a wide
Nine Masters ' -'rookies," made the cut in this
expanse of grass usually populated
year's tournament, an unusually high number, and
only by members of the gaUery.
the best scores among them were turned in by leadWatson's second shot fmishcd
ing money winner Rocco Mediate and Steve Elkingin a bupter and Wbosnam also
ton.
,
missed, the green, leaving bimself
Mediate shot an even-par 72 Sunday to fmish at 4with a 35-foot pull through the
under 284, the same score shot by Elkington after a
fringe. Wa&aon sclf-deslrucred, hit3-under 69 Sunday.
..
tipg his bunter shot 25 feet past the
In addition, first-time Masters participant Billy
pin and evcntuaUy tlucc-pulling for
Ray Brown shot the week's low single-round score. a
a double bogey.
5-lllldtl- 67 on Friday, and another rookie, Jim GalWoosnam's fii'SI pull skittered
laghe{, shared the fli'SI-round I~ with Lanny Wad- . six feet past the hole and he needed
kins and Mark: McCumber.
it to avoid a playoff with Olazbal.
The pull looted good from. the
Tom Watson's fight to regain the fonn which won
instant he hit it and with the victory
him eight major championships has been applauded
Woosnam won $243,000.
by a lot of players, none more than by Ben CrenOlazabal shot a 2-under 70 Sunshaw.
day for his his 10-under 278 total.
"I admire Tom," said Crenshaw, whose bid for a
Watson's lapse at the final hole left
Masters tide fell two shotS short Sunday. "I admire
him at 9-under along with late-day
the way be plays. He's a nonsense player. He never
challengers Lanny Wadkins, Ben
complains and everybody respects him.'·
Crenshaw and· Steve Pate. Jodie
Watson, however, has been plagued by putting
Mudd, Andrew_Magee and Ian
problems fer years and the man who won !he Masters
Bater-Finch finished at 8-pnder.
Sunday said tt was .that part of Watson's game lhat
The popular phrase at the
let him down again. ·
Augusta National each year is that
"If Tom had had a hit more confidence in his putthe tournament, "begins on the
ter, he would probably have been the one here (being . tenth iee on Sonday.'~ ·
interviewed after bis victory), said Ian Woosnam.
This year, it began a linle later
Masters notebook .
I '
I
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI)- As the 1991 Masters
ended, some very familiar names were not yet
assured of being back fer 1992.
Lee Trevino finally ran out of exemptions and has
almost certainly played his final round at the Augusta
National Golf Club.
.
In addition, Tom Kite has yet to do anything that
will' assure him a 1992 trip to the Masters. Kite is
cumntly a member of the top 30 money winners on
the I'GA Tour, but his game tS suffering. If he should
drop out of the 10p 30 before the year is over, does
not win anodler tournament, does net r.e well in the
remaining major events and does not mate the Ryder
Cup team, lie won't be back ~t~ear.
Not only that. but Greg Norman is in danger of
' not having an c~templion for 1992. Lite Kite, he.
must perform weU in one of lbe majors or win a tournament on the POA Tout in order 10 mate sure of his
retwn.
'
MasiCrs officials. however, reserve the right to
invite non-American players who are not otherwise
exempt 11114 since Norman is from Australia he could
receive one of those special invitations. No such invitations are issued to Americans, which could place
Kite in jeopardy.
Phil Mickelson beat South Africall Manny Zerman in the ftnals or last year's U.S. Amatetlr championship and Mickelson beat Zerman again Sunday in
, · their rilce ror lhe low amateur honors at the Masters.
· Mickelson had a three-shot lead on Zerman as the
day began and·shot a 2-over 74 for a 290 total. :i!:erman finished at 299 with an 80.
Mickelson won· a silver cup and an engraved silver medal. Earlier this year he won a POA Tour
event in Tucson and his 3-under 69 fired in the fust
: round this year was the lowest one-round score ever
~at the Masrers by a left-bander.
.
Nick Faldo did not win his third straight green
jaclcet at the Mluter$ Sunday, but be provided some
laughs for the crowd gathered at ,the par-3 16th hole.
Scoreboard
-
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Sl. Louilat ~ 1:3S p.m.
New YM. at Pit\lburah. 1:3S p.m.
HOUIIOn It Atlantl, 7:40p.m.
.
Cincinnati at San Dicto, lO:OS p.m.
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Don-
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10
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'
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Newest and hottest
·fashions, accessories
displayed at show
'The newest selections in fashion
and fashion accessories were presented at the si.Jtlh annual fashion
show of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association held Friday evening at
·Pomtroy Elementary.
• Over 300 people attended the
show to see the lateSt iiCms avail, -able rrom Buttons and Bows,
Chapman Shoes; Dan•s, the Fabric
· .· Shop, Clark's Jewelry and K & C
·Jewelers.
.
. ' The patriotic theme of the fash. ion and musical revue, "J{eartland
of America," was carried out in the
• decorations with red, white and
blue balloons accenting the stage
and runway. Numerous colorful
flower arrangem1nts, donated by
· Francis Florist and Pomeroy Flower Shop, also lined the stage and
runway.
Susan Clark, show chairman,
:coordinated the activities and
worked with other merchants to
direct the fashion revue, Lenny
Eliason was emcee for the show
·and Annie Chapman again narrated
the entertaining evenL
Special presentations were featwed by Pomeroy Bear Den 3 and
6 of Pact 24? under the direction
of Cull Master Dale Thoene who
conducted the opening ceremony
and presentation of the colors as
Sandy Butcher sang "God Bless the
USA:" linle JessiCa, Hannahs clogging to "U.ankee Doodle;" the
Southern Junior High "Hoopsters"
who presented a fasCinating basketball routine to "Sweet Georgia
Brown;" Jean Trussell singing
"Crazy;" Shirley Quickel and Julie
Buck dancing to "Vogue;" Cindy
Oliveri and the 4· H Fashion Boaid ·
who presented clothing they had
made; the Shady River S~ufflers
clogging to "Bonanza:" and the
Trinity Church Choir who performed a special arrangement of
"This Is My Country."
Numerous door prizes were
awarded during the evening by the
panicipating merchants who also
presented di'scount coupons to
everyone attending.
Banlc One, Pomeroy, also intro- .
duced ·its new Christmas ornament,
the second in a series, from which
proceeds will be donated to the
. Pomeroy Merchants Association to
purchase new Christmas decorations for the downtown business
district The ornaments feature the
Remington Hotel (Meigs IM).
s..--~ 7'30p.m.
Ollcopa ~ BOp.m.
- l i L A Oippooo, 11>.10p.m.
-·OoldooiiN,JI>.lOp.m.
Jim and Gail (Moxley) Swatzel
·arc announcing the birth of their
ftrst child, ~ daughter, T~sa Rae.
on Dec. 30 at Springbranch Medical Center in Houston, Texas. ·
Maternal grandparents are Phil
an.d Fran Moxley, Pomeroy , and ·
Linda (Moxley) and John Carson,
Pataskala.
-Paternal grandparents are
William Swatzel; Pomeroy, and the
late Ten:$8 Swatzel.
The family resides in Houston,
Texas.
-All
egg
was
Letart Fallll. Pictured with the buany ar,, froat row, Jaae .IIIII,
Jeri Hill and A•tumn Hill. Back row; Mallory HIU held by Doa
Hill. The wiDDen o( the egg ·buat were Deak Michiels, AUie Rees,
· Josh Smith, Autumn HUI, Stacey Lyons, Dustin Miller, Mike Craig
aad Wesley Hau..
·
.Willing Workers meet
days of April are set up as days to
quilt:
. . .
Hazel BamhiU donated a "Dresden Plate" quilt top which the
group will do together in the faU.
lOOm.
.
The family dinner -decorating
Evelyn Spencer presided at the
comtifittee
are Joanna Weaver~
meeting
wilh
a
scripture
reading
on
scrapbook. Reva Vaughan; publici"Judgement'
Within
the
Church."Bulah
Maxey,
Mildred Brooks and
ty, AM Rupe; and sunshine, Ruby
Mae
Vineyard.
The dinner with a
Othet
reading
were
given
by
MilBaer.
dred
Brooks
on
sp,mg,
Mae
Vinepatriotic
theme
will
be held May 16
Members were informed about
at6:30p.m.
·
·
yard
on
prayer
and
friends
by
JoanFounder'$ Day to be held April 25
Thirty
sick
calls
were
reported
na
Weaver.
at 6:30 p.m. at the Sportsman in
Speci~l days celebrated this and it was noted that lhe bake sale
Athens.
.
·
month
were for Doris ,Koenig, in March was a bij! success ..
The summer picnic will be held
Others auendmg were Glenna
Maiy
Jamison
and Edna Honnan.
May 23 at 6:30p.m. at the horne of
Sanders
and Mildred Caldwell.
It
for
the
The
Maple
Leaf
Qui
Joan Corder.
·
The
next
meeting will be May
is
being
quilted
at
the
pre,
Bazaar
Betty Ohlinger reported lhat the
14
at
the
church.
sent
time
and
Mondays
and
Tuesgroup has been requested to sell
shelter house brick~ for the
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee.
Refreshments were served by
Charlotte Elberfeld and Roberta
O'Brien.
.
Secret votes were lalcen on Girl
of the Year with winner to be
announced at Founder's Day.
Preceptor Beta Beta meets
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, held at the G~ Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
Officers are Velma Rue, president: Joan Corder, vice-president;
Ann Rupe, secretary; Rose Sisson, :
corresponding secretary; and Jane
Committees appointed were:
program, Jean Werry, chainnan,
Eleanor Thonuis, Nellie Brown and
Mary Morris; service, Betty
Ohlinger, Norma Custer, Rl!bY
Baer and Lillian Moore: soctal,
Jane Walton, chairman, Clarice
Krautter, Charlotte Elberfeld, Rose ·
Sisson, Shirley Beegle and Roberta
O'Brien: ways and means, Joan
Corder, chairman, Maida Mora,
Donna Jones and Vera Crow;
TRESA RAE SWATZEL
The Willing Workers of the St.
Paul United Methodist Church of
Tuppers Plains met recently fer an
aU day meeting in the church social
The mother-daughter banquet group will meet Thursday to tie
was amiounced for May 10 with quilts.
the theme "Mothers Are a Sennon
The next meeting will be helq
in Shoes" and the recent meeting of JWle 6 at the home of Hazel Stanthe Circle of Helping Hands held at ley and the Bible word will be
the borne of Lucile Allen in Port- "kindness." Each is to bring a
land.
poem about Father and a rememd, Members responde<ftOfoll carr !!ranee about their own father an
with Bible verse containing the also a grab bag gift for exc.hange.
word "promise."
. For the program, Luelle _Allen
Peggy Bole had devotions about had a game aboul.anttque Jtems.
a church secretary !hat had made a She alse read an article about the
STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Adam Riffle was selected as StucroSs using the words of the song . ~ld ~ys ~emben~g sand boxes,
deat
or tbe Week at Melp Junior High School for readlnl and
.
"In the Cross of Christ J Glory.'' .unfotl, staung, malcing paper dolls
spelUng.
Pr~ntlng the certlftcate ~ teacher Suzanne Bentz.
When asked about the trouble it from catalogs, kicking the can, doll
took to fit the words into lhe shape buggies and lemonade ·stands. She
of a cross the lessOn was j!iven that also read a poem "The Flour Sack"
. people netd to shape therr lives to and showed some old flour and
Sorority to meet
fit God's purposes. She 8lso read a sugar sac~. .
,
Seed dlstribudon
The Xi Gamma Mli Chapter,
poem "Whosoever."
Attemlmg were Dorot~y .
Seed distribution applications
It was announced that a jello Reeves, Ida Murphy, Kathryn wiU be W:en Tuesday and Wednes- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
dessert was taken to the county Johnson, Peggy Bole , Evelyn day from 9:30a.m. 10 I p.m , These Tuesday at 7:30 p.tr., at the home
are the final days for distribution. of A.R. Knight in Pomeroy.
infirmary .at Easter and that the . Thoma and Marge Purtell .
Applications may be purchased_ at
Pubins personal
.
the Meigs Methodtst Cooperauve
Spending Easter Day wtth
Parish, 311 Condor St in Pomeroy. Theodore and Becky Pullins were
Tom and Stacie Pullins, Doug,
Dinner planned
Terri and Justin Browning, Donna,
The Southern Junior High Susie, Zach and Chuckie Pullins
Booster Association and staff are and SbeUy Hill, Vic, Denise, Mike
having a chicken and ham dinner at and Michelle Laughery and Scott
. Southern High School on April 21 McDonald, Jean, Angie, Chris
rrom 11:30 a.m . to 3 p.m. The Spencer and Bill Osborn.
menu will include homemade nooAn Easter egg was held aqd
dles' 8nd homemade dessertS, eat-in home videos were W:en.
or carry-ouL Proceeds will be used
toward the purchase of gym lockers
ror the jonior high.
.
a
---Announcements-·- -
WEDDING PARTY • Tbe wedding party or Mr. and Mrs.
David (Mindy Spencer) Barr modeled at Friday evening's fashion
show or tbe Pomeroy Merchants Assoc~ation. The bride's ivory
satl1 gOWD made by her mother, Judy DJXOn, featured a full front
lace panel,'Glbsoa style sleeves, run floor-length skirt and .detacbable ealhedral train.
BALL BOUNCES OFF GLOVE - Dnrin1 Sunday's pme II(
Riverfront Stacllu•, Clacla•atl's B1rry Larkin allows ball to
bouKe off llilalove Ia lbe llfdi laalng. T• conlest wu Dllrkecl by
nnmero• errors by the Reels, wllo snffered their third stral,br
home loll, 12·1. (UPI) .
•
Bashan Ladies
plan ice cream ..
social fund raiser
JOHN A. WADE, M.D., ·Inc.
Plans were made to have an ice
cream social on June 15 at the
recent meeting of the Bashan
Ladies Auxiliary.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE & THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
·
S1M1thi"'
"WE HAVE NEARINS AID$"
(304) 675-1244 '
....,._
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1
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DRESS . ANP JACKET
ENSEMBLE • !flaryln WJlcox
created this royal 11d wblte
dress and jacket euemble wblcb
she modeled at Friday's fMhloD
sbow the Pomeroy Merehaatll
Assoc:llltiiiD.
.
U42
I
Would you llkt to ,.,chan a 50x100 ft.ltuild·
ing lot in a good location for only suoo?
Would yot like to build a new home ancl ·pay
· go real estate taxes for 15 ynrs?
Would yoa lllce to haYt up to ssooo FlEE
for site inprowtmtnts o" your building loti
or
Quote ·of the Day
IIttlle,....aflulll!'llleVIIap _ I
.I-ntu--=ll!PI••IhU
. .. ~ ...........
a.._..
Olloe.. .........
.
. ,, '
IIADY POR SUM~ER •
: Brandl Melldowa Ia ready fer
••••er Ia Iter outnt tllat aile
• •odeled Frlcla7 ·evealaa at tile
- ~ -~~~~ I'!JII'oa 111ow 111e
:ro.,J.,
Ma , · • AlloclldollJ'
Slle Ia wearlll l1ee 1cceated
·allorta aad 1 pocketed t·ablrt
'wiUlllltldled blttaa.
•
or
...:snt, ••••111rt' Yll.p iHfktt
,,,
JEWELRY MODELED •
Modelilll 10me tH lalest Items
avallahfe In jewelry at Friday
nlllll'• raslllon sllow or tile
Pomeroy Merchlnls Association
was Mayla Yoacbam. The slxtb
anau1l show, "Heartland of
America, Fa1blon and Musital
Revue," was beld ,at Pomeroy
Elenieatary.
or
MEIGsCOUNTY RESiDENT"f
~u
,,I
· Swatzel birth
is announced
.
If you do,· Contact Jean Trus•ll, Housing
. Specialist, for further information.
Pho111 (614) 992~6712
Miomi11TNo,;ti~p.m.
... t.lo
•tl .. · ~lf~~l).(l) ...........
.
Mil-·~·
Monday, Aprll1 !5, 1991
Page 5
.
Circle of Helping Hands meet
l'orllondl:l9,0dondol19
111-'"7Go.
Much of the dramatics was supplied by Watson, a two-time MaSters champ who has won only once
during the last seven years and who
_battle4 throughout lh~__w_eek t!l.
show bis long slump is over.
Watson .feU three shots behind
early in the round. but came bact
to lnlii by one going to the lith. He
boge~ !here, however, ·and then ·
his tee shot on the par-3
tnoc
12th hole iniO the wat«. Suddenly
he was four shots 'behind Woosnam
and seemingly out of the chase.
But the Masters seldom allows
anyone: to escape without pressure
betng brought 10 bare and Watson
came bact to put pressure on
WOOSDIIR by mating an eagle on
both the 13th and the par·S 15th to
dmweven.
.
Olazabal, meanwhile, moved
. into a share of the lead early in the
round OOiy to bogey three straight
holes starting at the eigbdt. But he
birdied three straight holes sl&rting
at the 13th to again move into a
share of the lead.
Without the bact-nine rallies by
Woosnam and Olazbal, any number of players might Iiave won the
tournanienL
---:----
·
Sica M ll...
h,lp.m.
- 1 1 - I O p.m.
Do11oo a LA Lok•, 10,30 p.m.
kt.iiii.MUI'e 7
NowYoat7,,...,.....1
. Son Diooo '· Lao Aftllloo 3
.. ,....
By TOM WITHERS
three.
UPI Sportll Writer
The Mets, who entered the game
Franlc Viola showed New York leading the inajor leagues in walks,
Mets,management Sunday why he received seven more from MOntreal
feels he should be paid on ·a par pitchers to run their total to 55 after
' wilh teammate I:>wight Gooden.
seven games. Entering Sunday. the
Viola, unable to get the Mets to Mets had more than twice as many
match the multi-year, multi-million walks as the next closest team in
dollar contract given to Gooden, theNL.
'
tossed a complete game five-hitter
Brooks had three RBI for the
to lift the Mets to a 7-I victory over Mets, Keith MiUer had tw doubles
the Montreal Expos..
and Elster, who underwent arthroViola'~ performance came a day
scopic surgery on his right shoulder
after Gooden went the distance and last September, looked fit in his
struck out 14 Expos in a 5-3 New return.
York triumph.
"I was able to wort the ball betIn other National League games,
ter inside than in my.frrst start," StLouis leveled Philadelphia 11-7,
said Viola, who had a no-decision Houston stopped San Francisco 7in his first game. "I'm not over, Chicago ,,__. Pittsburgh ~.
powering but if I spot the balllilce I 2
~1'1""'
did today, I'll be effective. " _
Atlanta trounced Cincinnati 12-1
. , Hubie Brooks and Rick Cerone and San Diego dumped Los Angedelivered two-run singles in the les S-3.
first innin$ and Kevin Elste~ had
In the AL it was: Cleveland 6,
three hits, mclading a homer in his
Boston 0: Toronto 9, Milwaukee 0;
flrst start since Aug. 3, to pace the California 9, Minnesota 4; Kansas
·
City 5, New York 3; Texas 15. BalMeIS.
6
· Viola was in control throughout,
timore 3; and Oakland 7, Seattle ·
keeping the EltpOS off balance with
Plldres 5, DOdJen 3
·
alternate use of his fastball and
At Los Angeles, Bip Robens
breaking pitches and by moving his doubled home the tying run and
pitches around the plate. He also scored on Tony Femandez'two-out
had excellent control, stayed ahead single in the seventh inning giving
in the count, and walked just one San Diego a tll!!lC-~ame sweep of
batter while striking out three.
the Dodgers. Ed Whttson, 1-0, gave
The left-bander, who defeated up three hits and no walks in six
the E~tpos thlee times last season, innings. Craig Lefferts recorded the
upped his career record to 5-l last four outs for his second save. ·
against Montreal.
Jlraves 12, Reds 1
Chris Nabholz, who tossed a .
At Ctncinnati, Tom Glavine
one-hitter against New York last limited Cincimati to five hits over
Sll85on, took the loss and feU 10 0- six inninfs to. lead the Braves.
I. The left-bander yielded four runs Glavine, -0, struck out six and.
and eight hits in six-plus inninp. walked two in outduelling Cincin·He walked four and struck out .nati'a Tom Browning, 1·1.
·
l:lowcon 95, Swaws
Now Yail!l, Ma<JDMI 3
.-
.299
on
By The Bend
Padres sweep LA;
Braves bomb Reds
U\&h 12J , o.n..t10
O.W... Slllo 132. O.U.. 114
21(.!
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N:.fnlphh '4, SL Louil2
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y.O.W.. S111e ......41 31
y-Sualo. .. ........ 40 31
u. CJ;ppn ....... 31 47
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l<l....._. ....... tlll.
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Eat
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• -Ponlond .........61 II
.m
y·U. Loken ..... 56 22 .711
..
than thai. It began wben Woosnam,
one or the lOngest bitters of the golf
ball in the world, hooted his ttJe
shot on the acenic, par-S, 13th hole:
The ball carried into the small
creek that runs down the left side
of the fairway.
"We must have had to wait 30
minures 'the tee (because of slow
play in front)," Woosnam said.
"And I was·going to give it a g~
bash over the trees. I guess I JUSt
got a little quiet.
·
"After that, I needed to stay
cool...
He had stepped to the tee on that
hole with a two-shot lead on the
field and fully expected to mate a
birdie that mtght have vaulted him
to acomfortable victory.
Instead, he wa)ted off the green
with a bogey lhat suddenly brought
a crowd of players back in I\) the
tournament
For a brief moment after Woosnam had played the 13th hole, Watson; Olazabal, Wadkins and Pale
were all a shot behind and soon
after Crenshaw joined \hem with an
eagle at the 15th- one of so many
dramatic shots hit on lhe Masters'
final day.
The Daily Sentinel
j
r
· By United Press Iateraadonal
Byelorussian Vice President .
Stantslav Shushtcvich on Soviet
Presidenl Mikhail Gorbachev:
"Alas, he is not a sufficiently
FOR PLAY OR CASUAL ; stilled doctor to cure the country ,
Five ye1r old Me1baa Hayaes without major surgery.''
cllole thll two-piece jUIIIle print
outnt nltable for play or cuual
we~r wlllcb abe modeled Ia the
slxtb ..nal fashion sbow aponSenate Democratic leader
IOI'ed by the P-roy Merchlall George Mitchell of Maine on U.S.
Alloclatloa OD Friday nlpt. Her efforts to help Kurdish refugees:
"If the objective is 10 permit
matehlaJ sunvlsor will rome Ia
haady·on those brl1bt summer survival, it is not being done at the
cumntlevel or activity.''
daJL
'
f,i~l
DOWNING CHILDS
. MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pamtrey
YOUIINDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIYING
. MEIGS COUNn
SINCE 1161 ·
I
Alw•yl &11kir&J At
MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT
RT. 33
MASON, WV
NEXI'TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL
Homestyle Lunch Specials
Monday-Friday, 11 am-3 pm
•
NOW OPEII FOR TIE
SPIIIII SEASON .·
c......t. 1.1ne ••
V•talllt 111111 laddlnt
.....................
Plallfl; . . . . . . . . .
Fralt ............ Tr-,
Sltnlll.. AI. ...
................
......,...............
o• ·
lely Tnea.
SYUCISI,
Ht-5776
••s, s.. 1-5
•
"'onday .Creamed Clllcke!l on Blseults
Tuesday •Fish and Chips
Wtclnesclay • Meatloaf Dinner
Thul1day •Cholet of any atyle ~rger with Soup &Frits
Friday • Spaghetti Dinner with Salad and Garlic Bread
I carry Out Orden Anll1ble (304) 773·1SS21 II
VISA • MASI'ERCARD • AMEJUCAN.
\
ACCB:P1'ED
l
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.Page 6 The Dally 5entlnel , · .
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
:Monday, Aprll15, 1991
OhiO
JN"ew JFK.assassination film
~9Uld open old wounds
.
•
Classi 18
· r! DALLAS (UP!) - Dallas rcsi·
ents are fearful lhat lhe movie
cadcmy AWirtl·winllins cli(eclor
liver Stone's is filmina allout tbe
~~· ~
. 'nalion of Joh_n ~Kennedy
. td prompt Amencans 10 again
tcef?alb!sas '"l'''!'Cityofllate."
~. · FtlmiDg begms Monday on :
l't'JFK," a film about the in'Velligas into the November 1963,
der of President Kennedy • .
of a libcral chief executive.
fOcuses on the jJhysjcal effects of
Many felt the city was a hotbed rcpeaing paillfu1 memories, found
or rigbt-wingczs so virulent that. in sevaa1 that wm: not aceounted tor
the words of business lcsder SliD- by Olher factor.!:
ley Marcus, they mad\\ "John
Dallas 'deaths from heart disBirchas loot like IBYing liberals." cases went up 4 percent between
Stone is making a conspiracy · 1964 and 1969, at lhe same lime
film. ~won't say whal tbe plot is, · the iiBtionalratc declined by _2 pcralthough he docs ~Y it will offer cenL And suicide rates in Dallas
altemare scenarios. It is clear, bow- -.increased by about 20 percent in
ever, that bc,is using .much of the 1964, compared
. with 4.S percent
ykeylocations~~ .city .theory . SJIU~ by forme~ New e~bcrclnlhci)~S~
tare 10 be USC!d and certain bmkl!ngs qrtcans ~~ AltOmey Jun Gar~t-assassinauon vOUOJ! pat~ave been tcmJ)Oiarily clrcssed to nson, who m the 1are 1~ unsuc- terns 10 Dallas gn;w more liberal,
as they did in. 1963.
l
. ces~fully proscculed a Louisi~ donations to the United Way .
· Controversy arose when Stone busmessman fill' conspiracy to ldil increased and C011S1nJCtion of futur.
ught permission frqm the Dallas Kennedy.
istiC skyscrapers I'OCi'eiCd - all of ·
ounty Commissioners Coun to
James 'Pennebaker, a psycbolo- · which Pennebaker partially ·
· ilm from the sixth floor of the gy pofeasor at Soulhem Melhodist attributeS to an attempt to crease ·
uildillg fmnerly c~ the Texas un,ve~sit¥ in Dallas, say_s the . guilt over Kennedy's death.
chool Boo~ ~pos1tory. It was assass1n. a_uon war !J'aumauc for
. "While we want motion picthat. building that Lee Harvey Dallas residents. "
.tures to come to Dallas and (we)
swald fired the. fatal shots at
"Families were refused service lippreciale the sums of money tllilt
.en~y •. the invest!galing Warren at te~urants and .~lling stations are spent; it is still a little bit of a
ommJSSJOD derermined.
. . . (o. u.ts1.de Dallas), Pennebaker hcanbreak to wonder whether. or
Only after lhrcc close votes did wrote in a 191!8111Udy of the assas- nol Dallas might be accused in
. ·commissioners agree to Stone's sination 's effects on Dallas. some fashion. I just hope we're not i
request to film around the "Long-distance operators discon- hurt," Said Martin Jurow, a movie i
::s~.iper's perch,':~·~ part of _the necled lhoircalls. Scb~hildren · producerandSMUfllmJ)IO{essor: 1
Stxlh Aoor EXbibit . of marerials threw rocks at cars wuh Texas
Stone has become tamous m !
penalning to the assassination. ·
license plates. Students from Da1ias recet!t
for such conl!Oversial; .·'
- ' In the weeks following attending out-of-stale colleges were anti- VJetnatn War movies as "1'111- !
•Kennedy's death, much of the houndedbythelrpeers."
. toon" and "Born on theFounb.of
: n~ Canle 19 feel Dallas foslered
P.e nnebater's study, which July."
!a clunate cond.ucive to the murder
·
•
· 'Re~ttiVtt
'Ftee Ht
1
rears
M•un
Wordl
, .
3
I
10
MOIIINY
counli • .,,lUll be ...
'' 14.00
16
. 15
15
1& ··
11.00 ·
. 1!1.00
t13.00
.~1 . 30/day
diV
.
jo/lowitiJ{ · ,.,,.,,h,illf'
'Ads that must ~e t»id "' alhr•ncv •·~
Card of Th.,h
Hilppy Ad10
Yard 5Mhl5
•,1, CIHaslftod a•t~rliMtlflttnl placl.ld m The Datly
cusn
,.
.
\
1
Sm•t•usl I•• ·
d•i11had dtsplay. 8usin .. s Cmd ae•d luu• noticnl
wtft 0111so app11~ n .thv Pt Plu.oi!..tU Rttn••ttn omd ttia Gflllt ·
I;>ally·Tubu n11. ur;;~hmg owur 18,000 ho1nn.
poi••
G~li1 County
MeigaCounty
AraaCo.:M 114 .
A ..e Coct. 114
317
,3 1'
245
2111
643
379
tary. 'rbeir unlfo~ were purchased and constructed frOm materialavaUable from 'local mer·
cbluits. Members -of the team are Ryan ,
Williams, Jay McKelvey, Erin IJoback, Mason
Fisber, Paul Chapmau, Grant Clrde, Cass Cle- ,1
ll!ncl, Ryan lfilland Brian Allderson.
'
'
~ts ~itty .Kelley's turn to
W••••••UJ
41
1. ·.'
112 Middl_.
Ch•. . •
· Po~•crr
Yintan
, tn Cll••r
Rio Gtondo . 143 Pon~ Oiol.
247 Lot ... l'ollo
Arlibi•Di8t ta fhtc::iM
,W ...,I
742 Ruliind ...
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People ·in the news
·
112 , NeW Heven
.
.
t
~3
51
Hou•ho~
Oaods
12- llpotlinePoo•
81
St Peu tor life
,.,,.
.
.
tt..atng.
·
84 . Eledrlc.ll • Re,rtg.-aHon
8ft , Gun•el Hsutit:~g
86 _Mo))ll' Home fb.Pair
67 Mulinllnstruments ..
61' Fruits • Y•tttlbl• .
61 for S•l• or Tr1d8
'Prot•lionll S•vlces
Home lmruovement s
12 · Plumbing 6
··l hc!i'fating
87' Upholstery
'
.
'. KELLR'S (USTOM (IENDING .
· We .Hove Chfllll!ld Our hcafhln To
· 11/J Mllll Eaaf an IJ, 241 thrOugh
Chtstll', Oh.
tl MIN/I,,
·"····rt
...........................
for
j'
••
llld
••
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•i
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Bono came under criticism last~'
year after the organizers of the•
internationally Icnown tennis eventl
~hose his facility .from a slate of1
nearly a dozen proposed as the site!
of lhe 1991 toumanient· .
1
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i' .
Handmade
Holiday Treasures
.
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.....-..r\.~prifl8
~
Edition
&turday,
.!
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SjloiiWtll By
.,•
1
••
.• .
•Muon CountylixtiNion HomeDtoluin
Cultunl Altl CommiOub. """Vo-Tech Cenk!r
I
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PubliC Notice
PubliC Notice
,
I
•
llong uld E111llne of 8ug1r . 1111 ooutll oiCie which Ia·
Run Sir- to tlw Boutll~
doocrlbtld. In Plroei No. 1l
corner of oold Lot 401. belrta
¥
·'
• po'nt even with lhf loutli
line of llld Lot 400utentlld
through lo luger ""n
St~ !hence Mltlrly •
diltence of
foetolonglhe
lOUth line of Aid Lot 401,
Md • d~ of 21 IHI
olong the loutllllrte of uld
1.01· '409. end tile IOIItll 11M
of Mid Lot 400 ~d. to
the pi- of btlnnlng.
za
Reforence Duedo: Yoklne
211, Po.. 411; Volunie
248, Page 48; """ Volu!no
294, P•o• _278, Molgo
County Died R-rdl.
,
PARCEL NO. 2: lltuotolrt
tho VIlle.. of P..,..roy,
Coutlty of Metp. end llota
of Ohio:
ltlng lhe Iouth helf of Lot
No. 408 In Pollleroy A!IMX· .
olton, excepting 10 - off
eov..
Rolorenco R_ , YOiu-1
277. Peg• ?17: 1nd
U4, Peg• 278, Melgo,
County Deld R-.te.
r
DIID REFIIIINCio Yo·
101, ..._ 77,' Molgo'
County Doed A-do.·
Tho ........ tleoorlbtcl ....
- - H ldMtllfted 1ft th•i 1
Nconlo of lhe Ahlp CjHinty'
Auditor by Plftlel Noo. :l
11·00380 end 111-00311 . •
llld reel -te w• opprolud Ill: 128.800.00.
Tetrno of lllle: C8oll.
Roll -connOibeoolcl'
for ton thin IWO·thlrdo of'
the oppaj'lelllf Vllltie . .
Jomea M. loulaby.
'
Shorlll of Mllp ' .
c-ty, Ohio
.
(411.8, 11.. 31c
Yolu"""
..
NEW liSTING - RIVER FRONTAGE! This little 2 bedroom
home SitS close to the.river for living year around or just ava·
cationing spot. Has a garden spot, outbuilding, and a nice
size klt! Near the old boat landing m letart! "IWIGAIN
PRICED AT'' $7,900.00.
NEW liSTING ·_ Want to be .in the Resllurant busmess?
Well, we have one lor you! Great Volume~ Great Potential.
CALL FOR · MORE OETAihS.
If YOU WAIT TO SELL :•• SEE US! WE HAVE BUYERS WAIT. I~G FOR NOOSES A~D PROPERTIES Of All KINDS. LIST·
INGS URGENTlY IIEEDED. FOR A"GOOD DEAL", AT THE
BEST PRICE AMD PROIIPT ACTIOII, LET US HEAR fROII
949·2161
•Remo~llngand
POIIYD 1101111
PIOM T~NNING
10 JOB TOO SMALL
. FlnESTIMAm
· 992·6641 or
t
minority 1Mtolnl11 •tor·
NOTICE TO
pr._o wit be tffordld ful
CONTRACTORS
o-rtunltv to .,ltmlt bidl
STATE OF OHIO
in rnponM to IIIIo lnvll8tlon
DEPARTMENT OF
ond will not be'clltllllmlnated
TIIANIPORTATION
111in11
on tile tioundt of
Columltuo. Ohio
•-· aolor, or notlc!nal origin
Mlfcll 28, 1891
In conlldorlllton lor .,
Cont- llllet Laaol Copy
owerd.
•·•••··
In
No. 81·381
"MinifiOim w11• rato•lor
1. ,....
of
UNn PRICI! CONTRACT
thio project hive PM· R_.... rr1 Doedo of
IRZ-POZI11
-nnlned eo IICIUhd ~by County,
"'""w• Ohio.
,IMIId prapDIIII will be
·
I
rtoolvtd Ill tN offiae of the low end .,. Ill
n ·Parool No. ~ 11111111 tile reel
bld~polll." • R•
Olrector of tht OhiO Depon·
eatete oonwawed by s,
'
doto 1111 for oombe
· Pll· 8~. 11 11., to ...,he
mem oiTr_.ution. Cof.
•• T.,;ell by doed - •
u ....... Oltlo. unll 10:00A. tton of lltlo werlt 111111
lllltlllrlh In .... blddillll pro- October ; 1' 1832 lrt .,..
M .. Ohio Stondlrd nnw,
.
look No. 117, ..... 117
T•ttdly, Aprl 30, 1111 , for po•l."
EMI! bidder lltal be ,.. Deed lltollrde. Melli
tmp~ovomento tn: · Mete•
qulrlll lo flit wllll hlo bid I County Ohio . ....o funliior
Court~¥. Ohio, on 8 - n
ME0·14J..14.74, · Bloto otrtllltil chiCik or ceoltilr'l · Nil . . . . ~ by
Route 143 In Colu..... c:heall far en ""*'nt equll Rolph 11. lny4er- Lorene
Townlhip, by drlinlng, pov- tollveper-tofltloltld,but Snyder to lorthe TIFNII by
tnorl thin fifty doed rocotdtd ao- 11,
11111 with oophelt conore• on · In 110 • bllumlnouo oggregote thou•rtd dollro, or • bortd 1132, In DeN IIOok No.
ten per cent of hie bid, 1 • 1 · 41 Deed llebeN In pen. roourfllol!fll iar lltle
to ttw' DN111t.
·•·1.
~- - - . Meip Coumy, Ohio.
wlthiiPhllt·- ...etn,.,
rnai11 -1y. on ,,..
- - ......_ ~ 11 d tnc1
and It'/ eo-IIICtlng: Blld..
.:•::-PoiCII
No. MIG-1 ..1·14'17 · I proper forlllt. ;;;' quollflol· ~";.;;""'
*'!..lll-lullllllltonfor~~~
Ncp.
14·00-.000
by tile
I - - COntl!fUOUI roln·
.,_
..,.....
Mllp C-'V Trouu11r'1
forootl-uleollbon roln·
Olflce.
forootlconorule oappocl pll bldl lrt oualdlnile wit
ChoPIIF
1121
Ohio
Reolold
Panoe1 No. J: The follow·
-nta and pilra (....,.1
tng ~btcl Nil , 32 ..... 0 inclln . 40 fNt . Code.
,...,. lllld epociiiCe.-.1 oltueud In lollolturv
o lncllil, 32 IMt · 0 lnollee;
roldwey 32 IMt · 0 lnchel .,.'OftfilllrttheDepoo1-nt T-ohtp,eltdbtlngt.otNo.
bltuul1n .,...,lila). .,., ofT~nllldtlwof· 20 in llldlord'e llll'ftY,
lol of tlw Diotrlct Deputy . Townohlp No. z In R11111
I . . . . .,...,
,
13, BoCIIion I. Ohio COlli,.,.. . . . . - 110.00 lin D -.
Tile Dnator N l l l - tllo :::::;• l'!lrallue - Aid tot
-orO.OICJIIIII.
10 1N1 by 100 Worltlonlllh -111.00 lin. r1a11t to Njliat lilY end all
blilo.
IIIli 1111!111 pen of tile Nil
fiNt or 0.111 mas.
JERRYWIIAY, dtotlld bytlwCoutt
..__, wldlh
DIIIICTOII
OF
of
"-·mfOin
........ In-~ fDr
~~ . . IIIII ....... It
TI'IANII'OIITATION llldM
....
Ito
.-10
te ..... (D
....,_...,- A.O. 1•7
IM....... ~
I (4J8, 11, Ztf
IDM••o-tolno ... for
cettlllltl • Ollt
dhosoe.....,.JohnDennll.
dlnot wllh tho ,.....,_
PubliC Notice
Uniform II•·
" llllmony.
Wne tfti ,.-ltltl
fNTHI
looltlall A•••••n Aat of
...,.,._,.._.byJonett
COMMON PLIAI
1117, IIIII 48 CPII. "-:.~
. .A= .......... to •~
COUII'rOP
.
entl ClltiiiiiiMI 10 bid
_,
'"""
...,
MIIGI COUNTY. OHIO
ODOT under Cltlfil• 1111
.
27tll.
A. doed
D. 181...
tllld
of lhe Olllo Rwtotd Code-of GIG III M. Calllttt,
T
- by
dltld J..._.__ Cou!rtY T - o r
-nledln Vof. 111 ..._
Tilt Ollie
.........
.
Pttlnlltl
2M. Mtlet ~my. Ohio,
lloedll-.d. .
vs.
Paoot1No.3bellttltlwNII
RrflllllWr ....... dull .. _
lltety'lv-.
I
....... ...,., IntO ,..,. ColtltrMI •
I
_...,. . • Levi
T - to ~ Temll by
- 1 0-tlllo . . . .- . lid lop art, Ohio 411710
•.,.
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
GOlF USSONS- 110 cict •
uoo.oo
·•-c
-v....._
Dltadwtl=
"C:.tv "';
T,..,..,.,.....,
OC""
~1=-~~.::.
\l
"'"
c-. ...4/JitM.
t.WOfftho.,_Ott
,.. eor-.,
.n ............
7 &II. 141
. lt.,_,,Ollie
-·
.....,
" ....1-S I I'
~O.OOIIIIH.
'
.
. . na&IIIIIS
~ Open F.or 8prl•1!
............
.,....111.
·- .........ln.. '
...............
c......_ Grqw _
you own
-f
•
•Out!-..,. Work
•Free Eltllllltle
•C•r.rm:•• Feat Dry
.......
Floor Flnltll
Ml IIIIlS, OW•
lt.
,WHAUY'S
AUYO PAll'S
. ......... Iii
411~/'ltlt -
a.n
I Dll.
c..... ,,_....., .
NEW. UBID PA!tTs
FOR ALL MAICIB •
MODit.a · '
•11•
.........
ov•
........ Or ••
DII'S~·a ·
1-100-141-0070
DAIWIII, OliO
' 1/t
J&L
·GROOM
ROOM
,,.tt
c..
Gr~~m111
fer ......
INSIUIION
•VInvllltlnt
·"=:-'
•Roollnl
.
•'-lltlian .
IIIU I sil
Ht-:rnt •
Owner & .,.,...
614·94rZ•IIIZO
SliM S. L Ill,
-
n1e
etflgh GloM on
IIIUE .IINAI .
147-4131
'
CAB
..
1Hf.'90 tin ·
141-1: IIIII. 12·1
"""""*"
CAIPI1'
01 TCJilfiB
Opan11t.,._ IIIIV let.
=~=~~
1
·ti·SUS • tiS·U"
Acnll ,,.. r.t Office
I'OIIIIOY, OliO
t0130fll ,.
.01110 • • · -
ua
•••n••lt Prlas"·
, .. 949·2111
.., .... 949·1160
• Day flf Nilht
NO SUNDAY CAW
CcHriii'S
Counlv. OltiO. an . . . . NM. MIG-7>024., 1.11. 7,
...,.
MIG-7-oaa
ani.II.7,IIIIIDIII.U. ...
M. .1A-47118ini.II.1Z4.
.'.·.· · :"'llci1111. .
ttallan "
"' • •
II·
"':=wdlllld• • •
.
llnllh-0.001111
....... ~ :... o .oo
..,... -'.."'
.
"At
· or 992-SSS:I
Poiitny,Ohle
•
·CUSTOM IIILT .,
HOMES & GAUGES
992-7013
.ft2-621S
............
.., ......
...
-= ,._
-c ....... WOfll
Y. C. YOUNG HI
mutt"'"·
••+Uaua:ES••
lltllltwl ond l'lu'!'binl
BISSELL
BUILDERS
•RIIIOIIIble Rllt•
SERVICE .
.
1 1110. pd.
i111111U
KEN'S APPLIANCE
........
-~-··
·(FIIIE llnMATEIJ
CONTIIACTOIII.
BTATE OF OHIO
OEPNARTMINT Of
TRA IPOIITATION
Columbuo. Ohio
.,
April, 1H1
Contreat ..... Leael Copy
No. l1·41t
tor "" .... - of lilt .....
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
P11Y11t1t tu 'ttw Dlrtotor.
...ltd P..,.....l will be
llddar
on tlw·
rtoohed et tile oflloe of the ~forml.-·oclllol·
Dll-oflheOIIIoDeport· 110111 et Iaiit . . . , . prior
ment of'fnll ... oiUtttan. !:*
.. _ ......... lllltli
Ulllbuo, Ollie, 11111110:00 A,
M.. Oltlo BIMidlrd Time, 1 .2~~
Ohio lle,wiMII
Tlllldly,Ajlrfl0,1111,for
tliUIIS-$115 •
iiOio 11¥111S-$7t • .
· -lleelne
"'The- HI lor ODIIIpll- 1J1 tNe WOIIt illt!U be II
111 IDrtll In t1w ltlddlng propolll.••
1aa1t biddlr ohan be ,..
qviNd to ... with hlu bid •
-ulltd ohiCik ~ ..........
....... fDr - -~~~ .......
to five .... - · of hlu ..... but
"" 1 1 0...._
-......
fifty .
tfiOIItlnd
ar
I ltond
_....;..;;N.;;OT.;;.;_IC.;.I.;;T.;;O.;.;._ _
UIIIIS---$12~
...__
CAU fPI PIICIS
Pubic Notice
....,.IIUnT
YOUNG'S
CAIPEH1'n SERVICE
JlaamAdfl_.
...
~
doll,._. - """ """'
1·12·10-tfn
for IIUmtnum,
f ..............
to
....
of the
- ·oum
-lion
of entry
Mit. bel
!Ill the
of
13.111 .72:
" - M. Bou'"b¥
• - of Mete• County
(411,8. 11,3to
USED 'IAILIOAD TIES
.
WAIIIIIS-$100 •
11\'IS-Sit •
Mf IIIATOIS-$100 •
4·1·'"'' - ·
............. ......,.,_..
""'"'·-............
,............
Porfnl -
992-2269
USR APPUAIIOI.
SP.EEDY VAC
Quality
Sweeper·
Repair
698-6591
WtlllldJ.
Md ~t ...HI' pey..... IUbee·
.,.nt ID tho delivery 10 tile
0011"'¥ pro-tlng llltomeY
of tile dellnq- lind ...
wadllaate or ......, lilt of
.
JO·R~I
s.t
Clttlfw
Tli-COUNTY
IECYCUHG
"""""' alt..... ,..........,
t
BILL SLACK
, liOI'IIIIS • PlAiMS
UDGES .
•••11411....
. .1_.
1 4·00381. 000
.1.110.00
.
'.
14-00387 . 000'2.030.00
1or a totel of 11.no.oo.
11 Till tolllomount of tile
=~_.bytheCourt.
n.. '
.lo
~
eLJGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
Brektn Cl. llllflirid
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'nL 7 P.M.
• JOII den .. ,_
pnlon
wt
.3·1· '91.
IEMOVAL
NEW G..S-........... 14
VERY IIASONMU
161'41 . 915·4" '
TBM-.d
,,. sss
. paltlill•·
Let 1M do It •• you.
HAW IIFEIENCH
SHill & TIEE
.
TII.COUtm
I ICYCLING
_,.....,..
14-00388 . 000
915-4473
667·6179
Ill
COUNI'IY CWI
NO SUNDAY
llle, ......, ... •-termo
•d ooltdlltono of tlw flrlt
... lltlhe ...... ,._ of doy
•d 1111 ptooe, on
Fridey, tile 10th dey of Moy,
1. .0. for ., amount thot
equlloetw..t:
AI 'a f. fllllrlllll VIIUI of
FREE E8TlMATI~
,,.. lsthwlltal .
•VINYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM 8tDING.
•BLOWNIN .
IN8ULATION
Pl. 949-1101
., .... 949·1160
lflijiOI.Ul&DI
li•Jdlt•
Sfolt & Ct4ar1
fOIIVII 1101111
"F'" Elllmo1.."
bid.
Itnot.,..,
lor
- belleted
· IUfllalent
PUbliC Nollce
Take the pain out ef '
usu••t.. .
13,1111.72.
Thlo etlt tholl be on tho
21th dey of A-"', 1 111 It
10:00 ...... If ..,. ..., ..
•
et1••hte , ..
COIISTIUCtiOII
Call 949·1116
.... Appt.
··-·filii- ..,. ........
OFFICE •...•.........•..•.................. ~ .... 812~2218
i . . . . . . ...
LINDA'S
· PAiffJING ..
& lUilE
10 SESSIONS.,.. $10
~ONSTIUctiON
to the
of
lion
ofentry
Mit, being
the lUll! of
JEAN TRVSSELL ........ .... , ....... .. .... 949·21eG ·
.JO HILL . ................ ~ ...................... 9811·44118
BENNm'S.MOilLE HOME
HEAnNG & COOLING
H·ll-tllll.
CEDAI
of the do!Jinqutm lind ••
certltlcete or _.., lilt of
ltllln•u• trecta 8ftd prior
HENRY E. CLELAND ••... ...•...•........ 992·11191 .
ALl FUINAU PARTS
.........
'' .s....... .
•Painting
county ~lngettoiiiiY
YOU.
MOillE HO. FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS .
_,AL
ht 50 Higll School
eSldlng
public
· -ltldder
· the
-·ID
.
. NOI!elt
of tlw followinl•-:
AI A folr filii~ Yllue of
Moll perat!:
..
14-oom.oo- t1oo.oo
1 4·00381.000
11,110.00
t4·00387.000
12.030.00
for • totel "' ... no.oo.
li The totll omount of tho
.fln~.::tlled by 1M Court.
•-· -•
tncl
fllllnll. ..................
llld I n - - b t l ......
qu.t Ill .._delivery to the
lttolt/1
.. Gutterl
· Qownepoute
Gutter Cleening
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
PO.IOY, 01110
Home Repalra
•. • ,ooflng. ' ....
Now•.• tho,.,.. public
IIOIIof lo .,_by - - thlt I,
JetnN M. loulllw, lhlrttr
of M...o Cc!unty, Oltio,' will
~., ........~..· ~~~·~,r.~~~~~J~~~~~~~~
Public Notice
. April 20, 1991
JO a.m. - ~ 6.p.m. ,
Point PleM>ant
Junior High .
"
••'
NEW- IEPAII
N•w I•
.ROOFING
4-11·1l·l•o.
... oucll .... ~:.~ ••
'"d .
•VInyl 8idlng
992-5526
..,.....,. .
,,
mMe ••
BewaniLWrltMel
·1. L. MASH
CARPENTRY
ordlra ..........ptoperty to
be oo1t1 by t1w undontgnld
to oatt.fythe tottl-11111 of
.,ell Judi-: And
.tlwl Milt ........ be
aadBnt!m•te
PH. 614.·915·3949 IIOBIIR aua
47269 St. lt. 1411
..... lllfllll. 011. 4574ll
•Room Addition•
i'GII'egn
•Kitchen• • letha
•Aea!Orltion .
wtt.neo,...., Judl-
Come aad !lee Ui J'or A J'ree lnapeetloa
3/tS/tl/1 ...
·ollepltir Work
•LancleCiipln9 •Oredlng
I
.
1, .
Sonny B·ono selling:· his restaurant !
has time to oversee the restaurant.
"And ~ lhink Sonny was very
· uncomfortable about having his
·feet held tci the fJtC O't(cr lhe conflict ohnterest of the Virginia
Slims (tournament) being held ·
lhere."
com •• .,llowo:
bou......,
1
Merch1Jnts As,oci~tioq· on ,Frtday o:leb~at
Pomeroy Elementary.
·
·
. .
IIIIIIMintl•
Porool Na. 1: The fallow.
l!fll -lltulttld lrt the
County of Mlllgo. In .t ile
· - of Ohio. lllld In tile
Townohlp of 8 .. 11~. oncl
end d11arlllad u
fallowa: hitlnnlng
tHt
;~
·and Musical Revae,l' ~poliSoted b11be Pome~y
taKII,
Do.
•
•Cultoin Blilt Exhault Syatema
•Compllte Une of Exhauat Supplie•
•Handle and lnltall Monroe Sho.cke
-
614-ftl-1311
We ~tty Whit
We Do Whit
SPECIALIZING IN ••••
105 N. S.C... Sir..
.........,.,, 0110 tSfM
Offici 614·992-1116
H1nd Tufting
Cultom D,.pe•
36 v... l!xpwtea.
-,_,did
DelenciMt
.
NOT,CE OF BALE .
Whereeo. judg-nt hel
bMn Qt\dorlld 111t1n11 - ·
ttln 1*0111·of Nil PIG Pit I)
~I
•
tl'l!fll:<ii 'IIISP.
21 lusin,.s Opporaune'tv
22 Monw lo l.Rn
,,, ht••
t37 Bull. .
Moy 9, 111 I,
1rt Doed Booll No. 1 17. P...
10, DMcl ,._,... Mllp
Coumy, Ohio. .
The . . . . . . .IbM treot
hll ..... I.....S tile PoiCII
No. 14·00311.000 by tile
Molga C011nty T - - ·1
Qfllile lllld:
..
.
oouthton(10lfleloltotNo.
408 In Pomeroy Anno••·
)ion. .. rociqrded in lhe
Recorclet'o Office ol Moigi
County, Ohio, In Vol. 2,
Record of Plotl of Mligo
County, Ohio, at lllge 18
thenol, ~ penMofI theCVHiago
of Pomeroy, 0111 ounty, ·
Ohio. except therefrom thl
. South 8S IHl ol utd· Lot
408 doiiCribtcl 11 followo,
to-wll: Boglnrtl!fll 11 -the
South Woat corner of Lot
400 of •td onnlxalion,
· running thence nortllerly
along tho woatllno of .Loto
400 end 403, 1 dlotlinae of
811 IHI; thence In owltferly
direction on o lloo perollel
with the Nonh lin• ol uld
Lot 409 to the Eaot llrte of
Supr. Run 811'1111; thence in
a oouthtllttrly direction
tor••
49 Fort. . .
173 . ....on
'
c- No. 9D-DLT·02
P~bllc Notice
75 lo.ts & Motors for.S-'•
76 Auto Pllru a Ace•
7? -- Auto Repaif
·
78 clmping EQulpmllnt
79 Campen • Motor t-to~•
63 Antique• · ,
. ~lie Notice
TRINITY CHOIR PERFORMS - The Trinity
Cburcb Choir performed a. special arraugement
~r 'hi''Tb.lshls ~~ Counla
· irdy" faAt the ~ixtbFann~al
•• . on s ow, 8earl n o mencan, ashton
7J ~-·· 4W0'•
n
MotO.~Ych•
64 " MIIC. Merch•dise ;
66 Buitding I!Jppli•
BULLI!;TiN' BOARD DEADUNE
, 4:30 P.l\f. DAY BEFORE·
PUBLICATION
POMEROY, OHIO
,.
Nf:W YORK (UPI)- Turn- that" with a response.
a neptive review of Kelley's unau·
. bout is fair play. Now there will
Kell~y canceled a ~tional tour lhorizcd 1981 biography of Eliza·
·a book about Nancy Reagan's and two intet:views to publicize her beth TaylOI', as sayina he received
ographer, Kitty Kelley, by an book in·what ~imon & Schuster a Guc~i box con!aining "a bag of
fulhOr who calls her a "bimbo."
called "a Change of publkity sttat- fish heads and a postcaril of Eliza. • The book, " Poison Pen, the egy." She will, however, do sever- . beth Taylor giving me lhe fingl}f. :'
Kitty Kelley Story," by ve~teran altelevision interviews in New
ist and celebrity biographer · Yort this week that will be IIIllS·
·"The card was signed: From the
e Carpozi Jr., will be pub- milled by.sareDirc to 30 cities.
by Barricade Boots in July.
"This is a publishing decision friend!! of KitfY Kefley," Yardley
·
zi is a wrirer for the super- · made because of the enormous suc- '!Vas quoled. ·
·
~ .
pltet t,abloid Star.
·
cess of the b®k." Meyer ~id. ·
Time; ~: reponed that when
: The •Publicati~ dste was origi- ·''We've garnered men p"blicity in writer Gerri Hershey was resean:hially··IICKI fall but 1t was pusbcd up one weelt iD what would normally fng a story on Kelley, she was
~~~~~ to the storm of publicity sur~ tate weeks to geL"
... .,_ .. .... - denied interviews but received
unsolicited .letters extolling Kel'foundi,~g Kcllcy's. p~rient best ·. Reagan's former press secretary
ley's
vinues and offering "flatterer, N~cy Reaglll,'; The f!nau- said sbe felt Kelley canceled her
ing
tidbits"
about her childhood
nzed 810graphy, published tour because sbe was afraid of fac·
and
professional
life. •'
.
Monday.
·
ing backlash from interviewers and
A
CIA
forensic
·expert
conclud·
I The boc_>k . sold more than the ~lie, who resent her portrayal
10<!:0!'0 COP!CS ~ 1ts fJtSt w~.
of Reagan as a cruelly inanipula- ed that lhree of lhe letters were
: I m ~1vmg It to KeUey Jpsl as live and unprincipled woman who typed on lhe same machine Kelley
ihe 8liVC 11 to Mrs. Reapn, Car· wore lhe pants in the White House . used for her business mail, Time
S!lid.
i Said in a relevision interview for ci&ht years.
urday. "She lost,every Job she
Meanwhile, Time magazine, in
-;had ~ause shes treaCherous. 1 an i_ssne to be rcleasell.Monday,
Kelley is best known for her
earned an ~c~ that ~~ K;el· unauthorized biograoby of Frank
, .sa temble ~n.
r.c. I wanted !O u~lll the book ley as a vlndicuve egOISt, echomg Sinatra, "His Way/' wbich sold
\lliUy K~U~y: B~mlx? but the pub- her own depiction of lhe former more than 3 million copies..Sinatni
~sher d1dn t ~bmk.Jt was .a good . fuaqady. ·
sued, claiming Kelley misrepreilles. But
.. ~IS a b1m~.• Read my .
Tune quoled Washington .P.ost sentcd herself to sources, but the
~- It w1U all be there.
..
crilic Jilnathan Yardley, who·wrore suit was dropped
: Lyle Swan, head of Bamcade
·
'ooks, said the book will have a
!fiVer just lite the Nancy Reagan
.
ljook, which,pictured the former
lady in a red Adolfo knit dress.
~ll~J also will be pictured in an
~~ from her own large coUecPublic Notice
. of the desi
'ssuits.
NOTICE OF SALE
By pnlted Press lntemalional
· bid we have her looting .very
TEACHING POET: Soviet
B vtrt of 1 Orcle of
im Jib Nancy,'' said Stuart, who
POISON NEEDLE: Don't get poet Yevgeny Y~vtusbeako has • ..: . tOO::~ o:t ol 'tho
U•luld Kelley •s sel}lfilfonal · the wrong impression if you see added another.talent to his long list Common PiMI Cour1 ol
Melgo Coun.Y, Ohio, in the
k about another first 'lady, Bret Michaels, .the lead 11nger of of accomplishments. The Soviet caM
of City Loan Flnlftalal
11ddc 0111" before the.controvcr- the heavy-metal aroup Polsoa, Union's best known poet, who was 8ervtc11. Inc .• Plolntifl,
. _ til .•
Tllo rneo-.,.e
•f W,rapber deserted her for injecting himself with a syringe. expelled from achool at l6, is holp- 18
Olfulldonto.
upon
1 Judg·
imon SChuster, publisher of Michaels, 28, is a diabetic and lng teach a COWie in Soviel poecry
t1tere1n ruticlered, btl·
p,ives himself ii!Jections of insulin. and lecturlna on tbe Soviet Union lng C.N No. 81·CV·10 1rt
'N~ ·~"
Stuart sa d he learned wh'lie. · . Misunderslandinp happen all the at the Univcnlty of Pennsylvania llld Coltn, 1 wll ofiW for
he told People magazine, through May. Yevtushenko 11so Ia llle, •tthefnontdooroflhe
~=~of
on tile Calpoti boot that a lime,"
HouN In Pomeroy,
lj
I_NIOPio f<eUey claims to "People think I'm sbootins up, I known as a acriotwriter and film Court
Metgo County. Oblo, on the
vc lillomeWed for her boot on was once in a Poi11and, Mafne, JIIMN'«, wldl bli ...talla'1 P-· 14tli dey ol Mey, 1111. et
aa have said tlley were· n.ot hotel and the maid came to clean al" 1Wrin1 Va![le- Redaran 10:00 o"aloall A.M. lho
up the room and lbe uw a syringe IIChedu1ed ., be lllowllll cvne. In fallowing llllldo, tonornenu
ttrYie~ by ber or by her two
peroonol property, to·
in the trash butot and called the May. Penn'• Illllltuto of Contem- Md
~~~m~
wit:
".'J'IIey 1r0 willing to give us pollee bee••• she thought I was a porary Art allo Ia oxhibltin& a
PARCEL NO._1:
Junkie and she was going to Jet ICriel 111 more dian 50 oolor ~
Bllulte in lhe Villlge of
--~~~~ onlhiJ." Stlllllllid.
SltBon
and
Sc.hust6r AIDS liecauee she IOUChed the bas• of people and places ill his Siberian PoniMOf, C•nty of Mtlgo
ends- of Ohio:
ket. 'I had 10 go 10 tile po1ioe sratlon birihpface.
.
~ VlcUlril Meyar said
hlllll Lot No. 49 "llhould
and
prove
that
I
wasn'L''
shi , · ~wouldn'l wutco dignify
.be Lot, No: 4091" ond tho
m
tOt Reru
47 Wtnled lo Rent
48 · Equipm... tor .Aanl
171 "'· PI-t
418 Leon
576 ' Apfll• GIOVI
THIScl"xl"
-- , . BULLETIN SOARD
; SPACE AVAILABLE 1
- AT '5.00 PER DAY' :... ..
Springs, is quitting the restaurant
business, selling an Italian eatery
that served to inspire his entry into
local politics four years ago.
"A restaurant is.a full-time job,
and so is politicking," the former
entertainer said. "I originally came
to Palm Springs to semi-.retire alld
I'm busier now than 'rve ever been
in my life, including the time of
·'Sonny 8nd Cher."'
The mustacbioed Bono has been
the owner of Bono's Restaurant
since 1985 and mayor since 1988.
It was a flap over the size of the ·
restaurant sigri and zonin~ codes
.that prompted the regtstered
Republican, who had received his
ex•wife's endorsement, to run for
mayor.
Bono's, a complex that includes
an 11-coun tennis club, became the
.source of a political controversy
when lt was chosen as the site of
this year's Virginia Slims tennis ·
tournament. The propeny is being
bought by the owners of a hotel .
next door, the Palm Springs Radisson Resort and Conference Center.
Eserow is el(pected to close in
about two weeks. Bono declined to
disolose the sale price, but said lbe
5 112-acre complex has . been
appraised at more than $3 fTiillion.
Residents of this deselrt resort,
localed 125 miles southeast of Los
Angeles, said that speculation is
rife about the mayor's reason for
sellirjg the restaurant
. "I think it's twofold,'' Marilyn
Baker, who ran Bono's camp~gn.
told the Los Angeles Times Sunday. "Wilh two, children in lhe
household. he doesri't feel his .wife
e
e
APirtmlftt
45 -. Furni1h" Rooms
. 46 Spice tor Ren t.
15 Jchoolt a Instruct""'
16 R.tio, TV a Cl Rep•ur
17 Mitc:lllln.ou I
1~ · Wlf'iteci'To Do
.
71 - Autos for 5.11~ .
72 Trudll lor S.le '
43 -Farml t01 Aent .
11 ·· Hefo W.nted
n · SiiUiitton w....
tl lnswance ~
14 ~ Busin•• Trllinl(tl
Ar.. Code 304
TrJnspurldliU11
1112 · Mobile Hom• tor Retu
. 44 ~
a
H-.
GrAin
S•ltcf • F.., ..,.,.,
Hou•• for lllent
UPHOUTIIY
~ SoMy Bono, the mayo( of Palm
...
a·s ~
i
992-2259
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI)
:g.et tt betwee.n the eyes
e•
7 Y•d&llelrleidin.-en~
, I Pulllie Sll,e. A~~etio"
.
~~~~Co .• WV
16 7 Coetv!ll•
THE·HOOPSTERS - The Hoopsters, a group
or Southern Junior Higll b'astetball players, per·
formed a rniJtine to "Sweet Georgia Brown" as a
part or tbe entertainmen. t at. tbe sixtb annual
fashion show or the Pomer(!y Merchants Associ'
ation beld Friday evening at Pomeror Elemen-
61 - F•m EquepmUfll
12 WMtt-d to luv
6~ Liveslodl
:;.
21J.•. S.•ll
'
'
.....
& ' lloH¥ Ads
.• · \.ott 1nd;Jounct
f•xdraitJff'.~ ...
, ue o.tt;,otio
'
L
'lrOke
.
-
li II' vI' I'll'
;, f r v : 1 1:
a fter pUbltCMion 10 mR11 correcbun .
Ill MUft\0111111
..
.•.
[ II
. .b e e
~
'4
'7 pnin1 '-'• tyfHi ona, used
·
. ,
' Sent in ttl " i'PI '"ponaibht tor enors ilflttr ritsl dlf . (Check '
for ~t~ron lil'st dw ad runs 1n PIIHt'l - Call befon2 :00 p .n't .
t·
'
2 ......,..,
3 Annouc11n.,11 ·
s
L
•
, cw•orn.....
.30
.42 .
.10
. .06/doyl·
I
ATLANTA (UPI) - The cut off,"the glutamate becomes Conn., described the action of
merican Chemical Society had a ·toxic to brain cells, he said.
·
venom compounds f'roln a common
jt.Ood word Monday for garden
Glutamate antagonists, chcmi- spider, Agelenopsis aperta, and
•vaiiety .spiders -. lh~ir venom has cals that .block the toxic effects, said they offer a new chemical
;been foulld to have potential medi- have been found in Spider venom · model fill' lhe design of potent glu·
ical be11efits.
· .
and have been syntbcstzed.lactson · tam ate antagonists.
Venom from poisonous spiders slid his eXperiments wilh sucli toi-.
In another research paper, Dr.
such as the black Widow, haS n ins in animal models indicate they Dennis Darnall, pufessor of cbemfor years, researchers.said. are effective in preventing lhe biain istry at New Mexico Stare Univcr·
, studied
But only recently has venom from tissue: daniage that follows a cutoff sity, 4s Cruces, described how a
or!lim!ry spidm encountered in the . of blood supply Or oxygen.
. new patenled product called Algal;rden or basenient been shown to . 'I'hcy also appear to be effective SORB, can clean ions of heavy
!possess possible benefits for treat- anli-convulsants and therefOre of metals such as mercury or uranium
:mg human illness.
· potential usc in treating eptleptlc from wastewater. AlgaSORB is '
. I Two scientists at the society's · · seizures, he said.
,
made of algae and. other nonliving
120 1st' Bllnual meeting gave details
"Results to date SU~Jest that . lll'ganiSms and has a high affinity to
fo r their worlc; on spider venom this class of compounds JS fn:e of adsorb heavy metal ions, sccording
-compounds which they said show lhe side effecrs that have pmoe~~ted · to Dainall. ,
' · ··
·.
,promille·as treatments for some the-clinil:alusc of other glutamare
. The produCt, Darnall ssid, "pro!lleurological disorders.
antagonists,'' Jackson said.
. ' vides an improved way to clean
Dr.' Hunrer Jackson of Salt Lake ..
''We arc hopeful, therefore, that heavy metal ions from groundwa;
J..:it)'~U~ s~icl'b~ain damag~ from spiders may prove our unlikely ters, tily-w!lste efijucnts, >and ;
often iS caused by•action of be'nefai:tors 'in treating or prevent-· industriill.wastewarer such liS those
a substance known as fiu.lamate ing some of the most serious and from nuclear reactors, on a comICh normally facilitates'Derve intractable of neurological disor- · mt~tCial basis With higher capacity
'smission in lhe brain. However, ders."
. and effici.enc:y."
en the blOQd supply or.oxygen is
Dr. Jeffrey lves of Groton,
•
o...,
1 It W!Jfdl
•
.20 ·
Rile
15
R .... •• tor con•cu•M runs.... o.._ UPdl¥1 wliM l!lech•t-'
,.,.. •edt d .. ~ ..,.... . .. .
I .&Q dilcount tor 1dl Plid 1n advance
Giveawey and found Mil ~nd•15wor~swiHbeo
.
I
!Spider venom.touted as
!po·ssible stroke ·treatment
Day•
run 3 d.V1 at no ch•ge.
,. .
.·
'Priq,; ot ad tOr an ctpttall•ttwS •• doubl~.t P"<* of ad con
·tppeai-
t
Of
· • The Area'$ -Number 1 Marketplace
RATES
TO PlACE AN ,AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
. ClOSED SUiiDAf.
PGUCIES .
'
"'' Ads _out~u Mt!llgs, Gallia
pN.
.
.
'
741-USI
131 """ Mldllllpart.
..
·
14111.
\
\
I
•
�•.,
•
Page
B The Dally Sentinel
Ohio
LAFF-A-DAY
Monday, Aprll15, 1911
15, 1991
112
oo.t-. w-.ilt 11<1. vin.
Television
Viewing
1J1Jr 11161:1'' 7 ~D .
T'~ lo. MllJZD- ~
. ton, 011 · . . . _ lnquld•
Ofllr: C.l •s.TIW2Itl,
.....
111~'-W~
IDTa FOR IAU In CioN......
SOK!
=:-Ike: ~~~~ :~.
M
MON.. APRIL 15 •
2722.
·~ ~
rh !' •'
Rentals
3 Announcements
41 Hot1111 lor Rent
Aroo SlngiH Ouollly
Poopto
For
llanlfloonl
Rllltlonahlpe.
Conlldontbil.
·~o: HNII-rch, P.O. loll
1043, Gllllpollo, 011 ....,,
ONawa
(J) ChMee In
Giveaway ·
4
2 blbyduclle,3044711,'1341.
=~m·'
"For what you accomplished
today, Meyerhqff, it"s a shame
YOU got OUt Of bed,"
•
~~:=~~·
a IIJ..
. :a
11
Help Wanted
21
_, Fornalo. To Gaocf Hoftwl .JOIS IN ALASKA-Hlrl[ll. Entry
114-446-11175
.·
nd
lllc
,_.. a
'
. t - co
l.ovoL HOG + woaldy. Cinol"""
t"'• C o - 011 F....._ Coli.
_,
>
..._.
• · 1·201-.,._'1'000 axt.111713.
JO...
----.
7111!518
KUWAIT
f37,IGO •
'
QI,OOO friY· All afdlla. ConPuOIIIoo: t WHb old. 114-251- olruotlon, Road Aobuffcllng,
1013.
-
: 1111011 Bt'Md; Rol•
..
~=::. ~tL
Ill. 1117W3.
aflar
twillor/Lob Aetrtav.. C.H
l";::.,:
5p.rn.l14-211~~US- .JOBS. -~1
Srnel Bed, DNuer, • FHther - -·
vUIIDI 1• - .
Tlck IIott-a. 114-37WI41.
~..=~i:!1 C11 .-
Lost&Found
.6
Muon
Couo)ly 1 . - _...
bar ma~1 • ullrw comme~o
FOUND whfla cot wllfl bfuo IIUnlta wit~ alotllty,
,_,..
to !101 6-10 11. 'Point P I m~Ar' hod 2 kilt...., -
tarvo whH•
Srn~~C~Wan dot. g-, or
hoar .._ ... birfrlnt caM 304LOST ......, ....a
811-3:112.
!loll'-. 200
1111n
Business
·--·
FRENCH
WAITRESSES
ARE 50
!Ill GilT FOR ROOT SEER ?
E)(CITASLE ..
--lal, -mal- . . . .,.
, .
7:00
-1-..
0
LOc.l v.nclng Rout• lor ule,
chooo. llual 0111 quiAJr. 1 14441111:
·
Pr!>m- ile!ltaf bo•kwoa for
ule. tt4-1112
. ..1ooz.
~ -
8
7:06 (])
l l c l i _ ..... - · King
H8ppJ Deya ·
7:30~• Tile MoN You Know
-.. 42
a• EnterU~.,_
Tonlgllt Stereo.
w
ThNe lllloo
Mobile Homei
.......,
CAL.tfO~NIA
f'~0/)1../(:.f
s.rvlc8s
0 IJSIA Warlcl Jat Ski Tour
From Huntington, W. Va. (T)
18 CroutiN
.
7:36 (I) MaJor .....,. .....
1:00
ill Prelh Prince of
llal AJr Vlv volunteers to . ·
teacll a black history clus ••1·
Bei·Air ACademy. (RI Stereo.
aJe
=:·=run~
r<
........... tclzta41 ••• 1:00
Rcoi Estate
31 Homnlor Sale .
I
Pll.,lloadr.., 1.
1.., 1!otooo1t ;, Rtla- Jle.
~·
No ...... Colt
.
. ·-
r
~ MaJor .....,. .....
i
112, In Gal
u
MacGyver Ia 18ken
hOate~
a lanetlc. (R) Stereo. 1;1
III Tile A ttuo-a
~terao.l;l
=·
llW-,.11171.
!VWI!ng
.....
. ill
The town gats
togtllhet'
to·
tutor the.lootball team In
·. algebra. (Rl_Stereo. !;I
ID' e MOVIE: In Ukl Flynn
(2:00)
p.m. Saturdoy.,
Public Sale .
&Auction
8'
(J). Mac0Y'*
(I)
:lbr ........::- ganga, aero •
ALL Yrrrd 11a1H lluol !Ia Pllld In
· DIADLINE: 2;00 p.rn.
tht ctar bolora tt. ad lo to run.
S.mda, odHion - 2:00 p.m.
Frkfay. _ , odMion • 2:00
'
(J) • M8mll'a FarnlCy
!Ill Wlreal al F-1;1
(J]l. M•A•a•H
0 Jaopardyl 1;1
fr~ntc f frl'\i~'; - ~
11+441't430
fOr Rent
Yard Sale
Nlaltt ~ 1;1
(J)
.On .....
w-
OWLA~F_..
lltllrl Tour
From NIIIIU, Tile Bahamal
ID Pnl
(T) .
IBI'rtmiNII'WII
0 laauty and the llealll;l
53
e
1:30 ~
0 lloaoorn Bloolaom
· • createa an Imaginary mother
llhl can·tslk to. Clll s-.
MCJ)IIIIe llupe.l1t - J i l l
w.c .._
~-'cc,;::'
W.nl to buy olancfl"ll. 11-.
Tim ....... f14-113-7NO.
......
W.ntod to bur, Standing_11-.
lob Wlfllarno .a lone ~14ota-
""'· to
54 Mlacella~ua .
Merchandise
Junk ... With
or
wt.rnolon
-oL 114-3'114131. I -
W.ntod
buy:
21.000 m
12
snuatlon .
14
Q,IOO. -
1171
Btbyolttlng In "'" home and
yOUr--··24.
P3 care col Point PIMUntllagloMain Sl, P - Pllaaint,
tn251110.
'
tm
1344.
earn.., --. · - - 76 Auto Parts&
.__
. -r . . . . __
1171 Ul Co...,., Ull, ......
..,_..,,_
._., ... rebula motor,
MW
,.,......1'
.... I1711.
· - •IIY
oar,
....
Apartmtnt,
14107'0,
-
F......... . E~.
=
·
Loolt'C
·''
·, '
1f11Pinto-,:U ... - .
~.~u.tfiOI
,,
''
. _ T - - Utrad 'I -•''
~~ ··~·-~ !!f
'!
· Clmpers&
"
MotorHomaa
.·--paid . . . . . . . .
- _,,II 11
~ 45
0
~ ... IJ'WI IC
=·..,.m; =~~
ill.....
lno-
.........
h l l l l - loaa ·lo tho ...
llloa Paula.. Dey ear. Coot•.
..... •ttoe•••h. PNJII,., ..,
. . .............. -.a.-10.
...... ...., lalloa(." Dup lne
w 2 an.. t1t 4tl mt.
<l
............................
P.O. loll 141M.
==~---10:
CIOrW lli'J, WV .. . . 180
.
IIN'IlO_.IOUR
...... .
.,
' .
\ '' '· '
"
~
~
WN11 llillll. I Wullld
· ... ~o~~.a- "-"'!to
1:::.=
,....
..........
__o_
....
.
Will-. ........" ......
•
-- .. ··. . . 1 .......
llNIII.
I'
look lor romance and you·II find it. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveals which signs ire romantically perloci tor you. Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
BERNICE
TAURUS (Aprii:IO-Ma, 201 Freedom to
BEDE OSOL function independently might be so Important to you today that It may cauoo
you to behave In a manner that will
·,
alienate people with whom you'll be
Involved.
GE..NI (MorJ 21-June 201 Today's annoyances may not be entirely of your
• own making. You could . be squ-ad
into situations. handled poorly by Individuals who are ready to blame yoli for
the. loul-ups.
,
CANCER (June 21-.luly 221 As 'a tactician, you J11ightleave a lotto be desired
tOday. Instead of managing othtlralklllAprll11,1..1
luHy, you may do things In a way that
Much time and eHort is likely lo be makes you stand out as the lone
sPent In the year ahead on endeavors dluenter.
that could add to your reaoui'Cel and LEO (.luiJ 23-AIII. 221 Strive to keep
pouautons. There's a potalbHity you balance tOday bel- 1011-MrVIng and
may buy something expansive that sharing. It's as lmportent to Nllafy
those with whom you 're UIOCI•tad ult
yol!'va long da81rad.
Mils ,.....,.. 21·Aprll1tl The temp- 1o to gratify your own ambltlona.
tation to cwerexlllnd yourMif llnanGially VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) Be prepared
ahould be ~ now. Buy only tor lha unexpected today; you might
what you can .rtord, or better yet, fora- learn that 111088 you thought were symgo llhopping ~a bH. Know where to pathetic to your c•uH may, In ac:tuaUty,
.
~\
H
.
I
"Doing this eround tu time aiwllyl
seems a llltle ·reoundant."
I
............. .........
..... ........ , ....ltlr.. ........ I "- 1!MP, tw illltr,
~
.llftll .....lllll ~
1
"
.
be fined up with your opposition,
LBRA (Sapl. 23-0cl. 231 If y6u're condueling commercial ac)ivlfles In an un-.
comfortable etornent today. be on
guard at all IImas. Have agreements put
In writing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 221 What you
consider a priority may nOt be of equal
significance to your mate today. In or.
der to avoid a serious mlsuncterstand·
ing. c:oneuft your partner belore making
any decillons.
·
IAQITTAIIIUI (No¥. 23-Dec. 21) A
nagging reeponslblflty that you've been
continually Ignoring might require Immediate attention loclay. Get It resolved
once and for all.
CAPIIICOIIH (Dec. 22-Jan. 1tl You're
rather ooleettve when It comet to people with whom you auoclate; for thfl
raason, your tolerance may be •-ustod early on u a result of Cleallng With a
testy lncllvldu81.
AOUAIIIUI (.1111. :IHell. 1t) Under
moat conditionS. you have a subatantlal
amount of . -. But, your tenacity
may not be up to par today, and you
may bUCkle under In the -'Y rounda,
PISCII (Fall. 18 "t ah tD) If might lie
- 1 0 avoid an extremely dornl.-tng
UIOCiate. Thla Individual may be huntIng lor a conlrontatlon today.
s~.
I
I
1· I
-~~1;1
. e 8palll TOIIIgltl
11:1111l.ct-Q
)
11:00(J)il:lnlo .........
~-~t{i;;·· WMh
•
•102
+K5t
+K763
• Q87 3
+AS
SOU Til
+AQ
.AKQJ97
"
HZ
+IOU .
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
Pass
Pass
North
East
I NT
Pau
Pus
••
Pau
'
All pus
<Jpening lead: 2 '
...
letter
47Buckats
ACROSS
1 Com-
48WIIer..
mand·
manti
ooV:t/'
1 Trena-
verb
8 Salvers
11 Ancient
•
grna
2Gerden
Greek
colony
12 Capital
"·
tool
3 Blldlblrd . Ynterdrv'a AnsWir
4 Singer,
-,
onlhl
Gordon
18
Mechanl·
· fly111a
Songka
S Nevada
cal sound 35 Prolubar ·
13 HorM
reiOit
11 FUJY
ance
laugh?
8 Savings 20 Miseries 38 largegt
14"Mary
and loans 21 Stage
continent
Tyler
7 Ch11r ·
llumlnator 37 City
Moore
word .. 24 Jai vehicle
Show"
I Shol11y
25 Shredded 40 Toothspin-off
1 •star
' 28 River
pasta lype
15 SouthWars"
hazard
42 Whh
western
teacher
28 · - Story•
malden
Indian
(Segal
nama
17 Slle of 12 10 "The king
r
and
setting
18 Oppoahe
of neg.
deduction
Across,
fDI short
18Tax
43 Greek
book)
31 Chem.
suHix
34 Pesky
vowel
44 "Cheers·
bartender
.-
" '
.
:
.
..
...."
'
...
p
•
22 Equal
sh•e
' 23 Ermines
•
27Nome
•
hom•
211WI11man
30 Flxsholl
hJ--t--t--;-
quote
31 Custom
41 Choreog-
..
•
rapher
Det.lila
45 Tonic
· water,e.g.
....' .
,,
L-,_........_....__
48 Greek
4115
DAILY CRYI'J'OQU0n5 -1m's how ID work It
•
AXYDLBAAXR
~
lsLONGFELLOW
On~
letter standa for another. In this sample Ais used
for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sln1le lellers,
aposuophfl, the lenath 111d formation of the words are
all hints. l!ach day the code letters are different.
4-IS
"'
'
...
. CRYPTOQUOTES
BURN
BURN
Z
Z
,,
MWGXN,
ZM
HJXG;
AGWN,
ZM
I J M N;
BURN
1I:GI(I) . . . . . . Q
8 ZII
TG
11:10\l:'"'·
..
•••
11:10cll• D.._ 111M YM1
- SY.
(I) 110¥111 . . . . . . .
EAST
+JI096
.654
WESr
+K 873
· by THOMAS JOSEPH
TCN
I ilS Mil . . . . . . 1;1
+AJI06
+QJ9t
CROSSWORD
01111
1. . . . . ~
•ss
Caeur
ae .......,. ...... cas
r=. .
•·li-lt ·
NORTH
+su
e.g.
I]) lien UnriiFDOIIr
<D~Joumal
CW..!1:001
I
38 Stall of • ·
and Mrl. King
ilitiM Ll. a
I
How could West know the cor~t ··
play? Well, if South b~d the diamond ·; :
queen, surely he would have played on. • '
that suit, not on clubs. The spade play '
could wait.
· · ·'
Flnillly: the declaren who drew
trumps atid led a diamond were auccessful unless West was alert. He
should play second band hiah, insertIng Ute diamond king. This leaves declare,r with no riposte.
MOSBtiOR ·
.,._..HaH
11:30 (J) e ill Tonlgllt . , _
·
..
The defenden can sometimes defeat a contract by sitting back and
raking in their tricks. It's much like
being a crotipier at the roulette table.
But more often they must play carefully to win Ute battle.
,
Today's hand is taken from a pairs
event. Some Souths opened four hearts
in the third seat. This ~uaded most
Wests to lead a spade, letting the contract make.
Some Souths raised North's one-notrump response to three no-trump,
tltinkina lbat nine tricks mipt be the
limit. This time IIIey were unlucky.
East had an automatic spade lead; the
flne!le lost and the ~act died.
Most Soutbs, thougti, opted to play
in their long suit. This auction usually
swayed West into leading a cautious,
heart. Ail the declarers drew trumps,
but then th~ path.! diverged. Some led
a club toward the dummy. West,
knowing South wouldn't play like this
with ace doubleton in clubs, ducked
and allowed partner to Win wi"' the
ace. Back came the spade jack, coveretl by the queen and king. This was
the critical moment. U West returned
a spade, declarer wu Hfe. He would
win with Ute ace and lead a second
club, establishing a discard for his diamond loser. But if West switched to a
diamond, the coptract was defeated.
35 Vampire,
0 ....... VIce
Gil On ....
1D ....... TCIIIiglrt
1811aneJIIIe
.8... ---
I
By PltUIIp ANt:r
home
33 Prickly
dfugl. (1:00) .
0 Amerlctt'a CUp 'til
Settlna Sail for San Diego
18 CNit ._..... Nawa
.
-- r
32 Sca~ett's
u~
(J]l •
•n:uwa·
........
Hoat Tom Selfac:k eugga111
ways to keep children from
aeoNawa
(!) ll&aawlk:li
e~ a......,~
....
1111. OVer ... 1""-
Juat
~.:::,In
,....,_or •n ...~~=
.
UH••I SEEN
SNUFFY SETTIN'
WITH YOU IN
CHURCH SUNDAY
a .. ,.. Port-lla~l,_don1
turallioo~noaln
Nd. laiMY w11 bli
FINE AS
FROG HAIR,
. PARSON
Rooms
· lluc-
and
- - -,..-----_./
Furnished
will
dell
.•.
Texas (T)
•. ~
18 ...,.,. King Uval
0 llaautr and the 111111;1
t:30111l
Dulgrlno Wo111n
Charlene enroll• In ooflaat.
and Anthony 11 madl a fuN
partner. (R) Stereo. !;I
10:00(1) ....
<D III MDJIN/'four MrthiC
JoumeJ With lam KMn
Humans make of tllllr
Nvaa through lrlandllhlp, faith
end family. (1 :00) 1;1
Gl.
Nat1hlm lxpoa'"
Ed UIU the help of I WIN
Indian aplrtt 10 find his
11!1ranta. stereo. a
0 700 Club Wlih Pat
Rat! I taon
10:20 (I) MOYIE! Tile Tin ltar
(2:001
10:30. Cloolt •nd ChaM
11:00~· (I) Ill (J). ill
lor · Ofllcull~nl loan
-·
NOT UNLE65 THEY'RE
CIQ\Z.Y Aeair DU6'1'5.t..LL6. )
33 Fannator Sale
oait 304471-1111.
'.
ae
HOW ARE
YOU TODAY,
LOWEEZY?
Pumloltad
.......
1 rnlta
_,_
_holM,
k'Afl-.
12
:mz.- h - · Ohio.
Now
ow-··
""' 8aach
Yfllllrllall From Austin,
BARNEY
Flnanolol IMIHI.C~ wfth oftlcl
In Point P-.nt hlllmrnodlatt
oltiatrlintnoll -
....
a•
ti•.
=~.:::==-~
.-uoo
_....
,
a • Mur!lhr .,_
Notortoua Jerry Gold Joins
1111 F.'i'.l. team to provide a
bal""':i~ Stereo. 1;1
.._r
- 1 Cluaran-
bo
,._,.lifo
for tonclllifl end
to.\
.........
ectl¥hM:,
II., lftl ,.. INIIne.
maintaining_ a .....,Y loan
reepon.
DO YOU SELl E::VO: JHAT ENIL
5PIRIT6ca.JL.D ee HIDINe'
UNDeR YOUR ~E.D~
111
Your
LMclord
Oaa~t~~wel
- ._
froa Ibulr
pickup,
·ooiiOafo.
304-773Pay-••
Than - · to
Nzt.
441-71117.
.
'
EARN
PER WEEK
READING BOOKS lit HOME.
CALL H11-47:1-- EXT. 011.
o"""""
~terao.a
~~~~~~A~ND~ WIN~~-O~immmrmm'll'---------::-"'111111TT11mm
llppl!oatlorw for
1111
On DII..IY
llaoon Apa-I!L E.... HawUnlodtod
I
Prlca
·
·
Stop
In For . . loloctlarr. Kloa Ing Dtlp., air - . ; laiHI'*y
304·r ,..3021, EOE.
Stereo. 1:;!
III ....... cit the Warld
-··
iftO
:..._==-:..,t:....
,_,..,._.VI_
..-a·
001
1171 210 car, t200. 304171-7111
,.,. Otda CUtlaM For-· 114-
... · - ~
wll Nil for . .,400. Ullllllol Paid. Sli'aN Ioiii. '101
o.doonct,3C144711-1711.
. F-h Avo, GoltlpoNa. , , . _
70 ....... - · Qu ~~J :lflr, 4411 Ollar 7.......
lklod Condition. ........
=-;1:-anci=-:J~bod~
tzz,OOO. -
AIC Monday Nlglll 110¥11
''"'
Acceuorles
79
~~MOVIE: 'ThiiiOya'
''
- 141171-Ill No4 lull- lor ChlldNii, Pll1,
~
CoiiTOODAIIdlloon
CA..I1t1110111 '~
~~ •ftwi:OO p,rn,
Boat pflol 4 to I dop por WMk,
12
... rtaya, Dttirw - · _ .
lion, HOopflaiiUHon and pllld
holldayo. Apply to P.O. 8o1
7154J.....c-la-. wv 21313,
Ell. tt3.
~o.ptlt l'lnditr, 11&0,
1171 Cha'J Cia- Coprloa, PS,
PI, 81r, liNd -'< oar. Phono
304.an.814. t'IIIO.
t:li
=pal"r:'..!'Z':"M4
11f.1711.
8fll~oy
Etay Worltf E1oat- . Payl At-lifo
Prodllela • homo. Coli
for lnl.......lon. f104..141.8Q03
1::'
IIDocl AIDM' NIC MOndar
NIOfll at ... Mo¥tel (2:00)
. . . v.Haul 11ft. • Trlllor, 2
llolora, lla!ta\rr. Hurn-
A Daol? c-tdor. ..._
..... . - -~-...,.,.....eon
~~- Homo.
In 111-.ort.
'"""
, _ Apart~
c.e--.mt
1011.
!~1 zoo
eoo..ologlal
. . . . . ilnll HlrMIIjan klttena.
114 •• :11144 aft• 7 p.m•
io..
.....
1:00 aJe GJ MOYIE: '8118
'•·
gniOIOI'L:
Trllning
•.. VIol-
lead to marriage. (RI Stereo.
Wll-111-b ..•
1171 c...... Vol auto, pa. pb;
olr, Ill,._ lf4.113.:11l'J.
AVON • AI ar-, Coli Marilyn
AVON I All Arua I'
Spoara, 30W711-1421.
2111-.
Bualnns
12ltD lchultl. o.d Concttlon, Fum-
Major
-ar
Aoc'aach.
eo•· ~
IMo
""""' ..
lflok
' ·- ·
:Jro
WANTED: Piaoa to live In town.
Ntad .... laundry ....
CluarontMd-...,
· " .........
14441te•
AIIO q!Mlll)l for NO-dopollt
idata1121•
Did A blind
lor Hotowaclluk may
11 Autos tor Sale ,
DDborrnan
-hoa ..,...,
nd
I .
windoW alr -~~~-. - . . . . , . . . • IIJIIPI-.
dN-, rnloc. · - - Sf
· - · portobfo
$2,100 CREDIT CARD!
AIIIWII"•Ifl llarwlco for otMoa
lnduatry. -v ..t bl In I'll ••·
change, ~ tlll;hoM .,an'*• EOE. lend retUN 10 8o1
!!at-
....... for tfcllntt .71.Collltrf-141013hlt•4:00,
l'lah Tank, :M13 ,..._,Ava.
271 II"- oil tailfl, ""'!n!n"r
11na"'T.:~ial ao.:..,~
Wfnled
Help Wanted
Woa•w3-l.
~:-....:t..1__!*"fl
file--·
AC 1110. DTtoo 104475-lm
ln.
h . ._.. Ora;: .,... C.hry Perliiln,
1271, ltaUy 22
41tP
...cttolw;
.._ltd
_
..
...... only Sl-.,..,
Employment Serv1ccs
VISMIC An!~ CMh o d • -· 18CJ0.271.2000 Elll. 02524.
$310/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE OADEAIII PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
t.-zss.ozu EXTENSION P2732A
I
and
:;10::;'.'::c..=fl..
::,.::,.n::-::ta:::blo:-:-=
•. =,~,..::: Dog and Col
otcf, t:IDO.IIrrn. 3044711--· .,.......... In .
-.~na, · 12 ,.. . _ . .,....
'(arnahl
11
W.C
E '"'
I
BRIDGE
. BManevlne
1out11 OiUIDotta, Rt. t ' Adllna
Prohirrod. Ae.....,.oa. Oopoan
UMHIIY MAIL
llequiM
Up to 11,000 Pool! llthofootlon E•..........
r-C:C:.:C'iles an
ID lpart1C1nter
;;:,_::-;R;;:M::.:-=:.,:-;1 a:::lo::-:-;-=-::,.,.:::-,
...,. alllll to town. 1'14-441-.111 Ill 22111.
..._ lor ron1 In Point
PI
nt, J • d - axo ~
dot\ 1M 1tl ........
·
addend
SCIAM.I.m ANSWIIS
~ - •z
Beware- Yield - Price- Genlua -YAWNERS •
Ovarheard In ' lobby of thaatflr: • That movie prove<!
my theory that one yawn soon makes two or mora
YAWN~~S. "
,...,.. ---~-----,
unusual clrMm.l;l
- . - ,. ..
tu,l'lld,
•
~
(J) • lneiCie Edition 1;1
0
Allcloro Avwogo In-
I
······- - - -·'-···
iii~Aft*l;l
ntaHollon. l'llona: 114- 1 l1lf 44Weol:
I
lll+fm.
l.lrge IAoal VlrMI.. Routo For ar, 2 bofl!o, Col, tarae lol, In
llale. llepaat luolnna llaoon ChiaNN. Pliono: _.,.1117,
plait
we wanttc~
I' rr1·rrl'l'l
. , UNSCRAMBLE fOR
... NSWER
·(jj I DtMnl of Jeannie
(I)
I able to
AL T Y ME
... PRIN1 NUMBERED
V LETTERS IN SQUARES
GJ Wheal o f , _
<D III MeollaiiJLelnt .
Proteulonat
a VIcinity
\IJ e
wa~treaa
11-.J.i.-.t..
I I _,.__
I ..I_.._.........
I' •JOU dtwtlep
~=, _~:~ch~~~:
.... No. 3 below.
OUpCIDM
1:36 (]) Ancty Orftfttll
4711-'Mt.
Altlulr'a Chain Lfnll Fenco. ;:---:---':"~=-==7
Corn-~ In- 1 . both, oarpll:!i
d ~•F
•~t ...,~ ....,....,
... _ _..,_
uat,_, porilh, ........ 1181'kinG. hiM for
'--lonL
7
all. Andy Olllllfll
=.\J::a:... r:
awn 11-. ".........,., c.11 :~i=:l...
Gallipolis
=r='..E
l:30fill.!t
(I) (J)
AIC llewll;l
<D Wid Amerlctt Stereo. 1;1
III3-2-1 Contact 1;1
ill 1121• CIS Newel;!
·~ 1812.
. and.l
when the
.....~~::;:::
· :::::::;..•:.,· deMit • No thank you; my
rfriend
~ are
1:06 (J) . ..,.,., Hlllillllil
j _ . , bou1111n1,...,; car1111,
Point
Pfoulnt,
1110. -_,.h p111o
dtpaolt,
814-
1';.
. s
OOurHouee
, .............. 141172, .........
7
II I I
1o;l were
My
BI LL E
17-T-"T-"-r--rr-1~
=~oday
:r 1
II
MUDHI
•
~
: 1..-. ,.r:l'~I'"r--11
0 8choladc llportl
3 or 4 bl*oCIIID hiHM, Paint
OpportunHy
.s1, P- •22 Mo...., 10 Loan
·-•
Pf-nt,WVIIIJIII.
llolloblo Party To llow, 3 A1:n
Lot, Every 2 Fumllh
MARCIE, DO YOU REALLY
Tl-liNK YOU S~OULD LET THI
D06 COME OVER EVER'!'
e
=•= "---------.,---------"'1
""'"·
oflorlp.rn. r
C4uch, Fait Condldon. •~
W44, •ftor 5p.m. .
German ~. Bilek
I
1;1 •
aa=;l;l ·
olt.r
·
=·
a....
(!)3-2-1 Contact 1;1
· ·1nmothy .._.. ..,.. . - . . , .
of IIIIo ind wll no 1ongtr bo
rotponalblo IIIJ' lhonmy-,
.
I
1:00~· (I) (J) • •
Household
Goods
51
•
. ;: 11 •. r: 1\ 1)<111 Til
f.1etCtlandiSe
Announct? rner1!s
-
The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~
I
Ohio
~T 'N' CARLYLE~ by Lury Wrtpt
' ,·
z
QZXG
GNUGI
HROG
RBRD
EJYGOGY .
WGYFD
RXSYCM
Ytaienliy's Crypt,uote: VERACITY IS A
PLANT OF PARADISE ND ITS SEEDS HAVE
NEVER FLOURISHED BEYOND THE WAI.LS. GEORGI! ELIOT
'
.
'
. ••.
.' .'
'
'
'
.
�•
•
Page-10-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
r---Local briefs----.
Hearing scheduled
The Public Uti)ities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) will hold; a
hearing on Wednesday, April 24, at 10 am., atlbe Meigs Coun!y
Multipwpose SeniQr Cilizens Cen~e;r, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
concerning extended· area telephone service between lhe Shade and
Pomeroy excl)anges GTE North lncorponued. The hearing is open
10 ~public.
Telephone book changes
Residents·in the Pomeroy-MiddleP."!' area should report chan$es
· for the 1991 telephone book by April26, Gary Bates, local semce
manager for GTE Telephone ~ons said today.
· Customen wanting to change, correct tr add listings should caB
lhe company's service cenu:r, GaleS said.
A customer planning to move or stan new service before June 28
also s~ld call by the deadline to be listed .in the new book, he
said.
GTE's director delc!line applies to customers in Pomeroy, Middleport, Letart Falls, Portland, Racine, and Rutland. New books are
scheduled for delivery in late June.
· ,
The toll-free number of GTE's service center is listed on page 2
of the current directory, Bales said.
·
I'
,I
Shoemaker...
continued from page 1
Monday; April 15., 1991
,.
Flood watch remains in southern Ohio ·
By United I'm& International
ties and lhe mid 70s over soulhern
Damp weather will continue sections of Ohio.
across lhe Buckeye State Monday
On the weather map, a low presand rainfall amounts should aver- sure system was over northern Indiage ft!OWld one-quar~e;r of an inch, ana with a warm front north across
but lhe National Weather Service lower Michigan and a cold front
said min may be heavy a1 time in south 10 Louisiana.
lhunde111tonns.
.
The low will continue to move ·
People in soulhem Ohio where a north to the northern Great Lakes
flood wa!Ch is in effect should con- Monday evening as the cold front
tinue 10 monitor rivers and streams sweeps east across Ohio.
and be prepared 10 move to higher By Tuesday an .~· of !ligh pres- .
ground if flooding begins or a sure· over the Plains States will
warning is issued.
move to lhe lower Ohio Valley.
The rain will end from west 10
It was cloudy across Ohio Sllneast across lhe swe as a cold front <18y night with showers. and thunpushes across Ohio. High tempera- derstorms mainly across the south. lures will mnge from 65 10 75.
em and western counties. TemperaSkies will clear Monduy night·as tures were in lhe lower 60s across
a high pr~ssure brings drier and southern Ohio and in the lower 50s
cooler air to Ohio. Overnight lows across the northern portions of the
will be in lhe lower to mid 40s.
stale.
The dry weather will continue
Rainfall was generaUy less lhan
into Tuesday liS lhe high pressure one-quarter of an inch across Ohio
· moves 10 the lower Ohio Valley. in the last 24 hours. Ashland in
Tuesday will be mostly sunny · Ashland Count; reported the
across the entire state with highs in largest amoWll o eighl)'-six hun_ the mid 60s over the norlhem coun- dreds of an inch.
'
NATIONAl WE~THE~ FORECAST FAOIIIAM
~16-IHO TAM ~11-11
'
Pick 3i055
Pick 4: 2293
Cards : K-H, 3-C
.
A-D; K·S
Page3
WEATHER MAP- A cold frOnt wUI move over the Atlantic
from the east coast but will stUI produce rain showers In the North·
east and s~theastern states. A low pressure system will move Into
the central Rockies producing snow in the hi1her elevatioas. Tile .
Plains and Midwest wiU be,mostly sunny and mild.
··
------Weather-----
.best interests of lite senior citizens considered but she said A£11, even
receiving services to have those ·wilh legislative cohsideradons, will
Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio '
services discontinued, that now give no guarantee of keeping the
Wednesday
lbrough Friday
Variable cloudiness tonight, low
with some additional assistance mine open.
Fair
Wednesday,
lows in the .
in the middle 40s. West winds 5 to
. being provided through Options for
She encour11ged residents to
40s.
Highs
in
the
middle
60s to
two brothers, Carl Nottingham, 15 mph. The chance of rain is 20
Helen Frazier
Elders they can stay in !heir own write to AEP noting that the decimiddle
70s.
A
chance
of
showers
Chester; and Jack Nottingham, percent.
homes; wilhout it, they may have to sion as to fuel switching or scrubij:unlington, W.Va.
Sunny Tuesday with the high 70 and thunderstorms Thursday and
go into nursing homes, a more bers will affect everyone, and that
Helen Augusta Frazier, 84, of
Friday, lows in the lower 40s to
Services will be held Tuesduy at to75.
expensive care alternative.
Cheshire, died early Sunduy, April 2 p.m. at lhe Heck FWleral Home
the decision will be made by the
lower 50s. Highs in the middle 60s
Rep. Abel said that she and Sen. management of AEP. She said that . 14, 1991, at Veterans Memorial in Milton, W.Va. with Rev. Clark
10 middle 70s.
Long
are
commiUed
10
doing
wha1Hospital
.
.
while
1,258
actual
jobs
are
threat, .
Baker officiating. Burial wilr be in
She was born in Kyger on June the Forest Memorial Park near Milever as necessary to preserve the ened, six other jobs are dependent
jobs at the Meigs Mane and still on each one of lhe mining jobs. 20, 1906, the daughter of lhe late ton, W.Va. Friends may call a1 the
comply wilh lhe Federal Clean Air "That's economic disaster," she Darius and Nancy (Phelps) Rupe. funeral home on Monduy from 6-9 ·
Act
She was 8 homemaker and attended p.m.
concluded.
Meigs Coun!y Sheriff )ames M. dents' teachers by May 6, 1991
·
'
She said that contacts have · . Su!) Maison, party chairman, the Kyger Baptist Church and the
Soulsby has announced the rules before 11 a.m.
Prizes
will
be
furnished
by
local
been made with Ainerican Electtic emceed lhe dinner meeting, and Silver Run Baptist Church.' ·
which will govern his department's
Charles Mathews
She is survived by her son,
bu~nesses.
· Power and the management piano music was presented by
"Law Enforcement Poster Conencouraged 10 install scrubbers so Charles Scott She introduced sev- William Frazier and a daughter,
Charles Myles Mathews, 68, of test".
lhat the high-sulfur coal from lhe eral guests including Sheriff James Patricia Frazier, both of Cheshire; Cross St, Racine, died unexpectedAll Meigs County children in
Meigs Mine can continue to be Soulsby, and party chairmen from
two sisters, Gamet Rife, Coalton, ly Saturduy, April 13, 1991, a1 his the 4th, 5th and 6th grades may
used. Some legislation is also being Atliens and Monroe Counties.
and Gaye Sowards, Gallipolis; and residence.
·
enter the contest, and all entries
several nieces and nephews.
Born on March 26, 1923 at ! must be made solely ·by lhe child.
Besides her parents, she was ' Alvon, w. va. , he was lhe son of 1
They should be dmwn free hand
preceded in death by her husband, h 1 Ch 1 F
M th
William in 1982, five brothers and I e ate ares arrest a ews (no stencils) and lhe student may
Meigs County Emergency Med- Warren D. McLain, who waS taken
five sisters.
and Mary V. McElheney Mathews. use cmyons, markers and colored
ical Services answered 19 calls for to O'Bieness. At 8:52 a.m., SyraServices will be Tuesday at 2 He was a painter, a veteran of ' pencils. The theme for the poster
assistance over the weelcend.
cuse squad went to to Pomeroy
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home with Wa.ld War II, U. S. Navy, and a should be written on lhe pOster, and
AI 9:15 a.m., Syracuse squad Nursing and Rehab Center for ElizRev. Ed Boyer officiating. Burial member of the Veterans of Foreign the child's name and school should
went to Welchtown Hill for Her- abeth McLintoch, who was talcen to
wiU he in Gmvel Hill Cemetery.
. wa::~ ~:=by lhree dough- be placed on the back of the poster.
' man· Redman , who was taken to Veterans. AI 11:21 a.m., Rutland
The three themes ate "Don '1
Friends
may
call
at
lhe
funeral
ters, Mrs. Daniel (Pam) Riffle ,
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 9:54 squad went to State Route 160 and
Talk
to Stran,ers" (4th Grade),
home
from
3
p.m.
to
5
p.m.
and
1
Racine,
Mrs.
Randy
(Gena)
Lilly,
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mul- took Ellis Ward to Veterans. At
"Just
'No " (5th Grade) and
berry for Helen Millet, and trans· 11 :46 a.m., Rutland squad to
P·'hW~ wiU be Richard Dilf, Ironto", and Crystal Simpson, "CrimeSayPrevention"
(6th Gmde).
!
Syracuse; a son and duughter-inported her to Veterans Memorial Happy Hollow Road. Brenda Faulk
be
no
larger
than
Posters
should
Keith
Youns.
Leonard
Weiman,
law,
Charlie
Jr.
and
Rita
Mathews,
Hospital. At 10:10 a.m., Racine vias transported to Pleasant VaUev.
Sh_ennan Weunan, Steve Ltttle and · Racine, lO grandchil~n. and one regular posterboard.
squad was sent to COWlty Road 28 A1 12 18
p
d
There will be a fii'St, secQJid and
for Thomas McKay Ill, and trans:
p.m., omeroy squa
Mike Lattle.
great-grandchildre", and a special
lhird place prize for each grade. All
- ported him to Holzer Medical Cen- · went to Pomeroy Nursing and
friend, An HiU, Racine.
William Hughes
~b Center for Tracy Simpkins,
students
participating will receive
Funeral services will be held a1
u:r. At 8:49p.m., Middleport squad wbo was taken to Veterans. At 1:18
ribbons and all fii'St place posters
W'lli Ri hard "Bill" H
11 am. Thursduy atlhe Letaq Falls will be placed in various businesses
was sent to Village Manor in Mid- p;m., Racil)e squad was sent to .
'
am
c
u
.
es,
Cemetery
Cliapel. The Rev. Steve
dleport for Donald VanCooney.-He County Road 35 for Rebecca
·
71, Chest.er, form~rly of M~ ton, Deaver will officiate and burial for display.
was taken to Veterans. At9:13 Lawrence. Ai 2:41 p.m., Racine
There
will
also
be
a
lsi,
2nd and
W.Va.,
d!ed
Satur~ay,
A~nl
13,
will
be
in
lhe
Letart
Falls
Cemep.m., Rutland squad went 10 Meigs ·
1991 at the Pomeroy Nursmg and ·,. ray. Friends may call at the Ewing 3rd place prize overall. Those three
Mine 2 for Milton Baker, Sr., and squad weilt to Shrinets Park for
RehabilitaliOI! Center. ,
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 p.m. winning ·posters will be placed In •
transported him to O'Bieness Eric Shultz. At 2:50p.m., Rudund
squad went to Kingsbury Road for
Born March 25, 1920 in Cabel Wednesday. Military. rites will be the sheriff's booth at the Meigs
Memorial Hospital. At 9:21 p.m., Walter Mullins, who was dead on
County, W.Va., .he was a son of lhe conducted at graveside by the County Fair this August. All
Pomeroy squad was sent to East
late Maggie Hughes. He was a VFW
posters must he turned in to lhe stuMain. Myron Bailey was .taken rn arrival. At 2:55 p.m., Middleport
farmer
and
a
member
of
lhe
United
·
r
squad
went
.
1
0
Middleport
Sundry
Veterans. At 9:45 p.m., Middleport Store for William Van Meter, who
Pentecostal Church in Middleport,
r-----------------~:7"'"---------'---------:-:squad went to Locust Street for was taken to Veterans ~ At 3:36
Mr. Hughes is survived by folD'
Richard Ward, who was taken to ·
sisters, Mrs. Fmnltie King, Milton,
Veterans. .
·
'
p.m., Pomeroy sq11ad went to
W.Va; Helen Wrlghtsel, HWltingKingsbury Road and took Helen
· On ·SWlduYat 4:15 am., R utland. Mull' to V
A 4 19
ton, W.Va.; Annie Pritt, Cleveland;
unit was sent to Meigs Mine 2 for
IDS
eterans. t : p.m.,
and
Mary Ruth Moore, Columbus;
Rudund squad went to Laurel Cliff
and transported Sharon Smith to
Veterans. At 7:53 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Page Street for Claro
Baker, who went to Veterans.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dinner dance to be held
Plans
have been finalized for a
r~port
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSdinner and dance at the Fenney
Gallipolis Stockyards C!!.
Robert Sheley, Middleport; Flossie
Benneu Post of the American
· April 6, 1991
Allensworth, Middl~port; Agnes
Legion sponsored by the Middle.
Brown, Middleport; Sherw.ood Medium Frame, Steers:
pan Arts Council on SWlduy.
250-300 lbs., 96.00-125.00;
Merideth, Racine; Earl Reed,
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
300-500 lbs., 92.50-112.00;
Pomeroy; Greg Williams, Middle-·
with dance to follow . The cost is
500-700 lbs., 75.00-93.00;
porL
$28 per couple and tickets may be
700-Up
65.00-76.00.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESpurchased at Mick's Barber Shop
Medium Frame, Hellen:
None.
in Pomeor_y, King's ServiceStar
250-300 lbs., 81.50-100.00;
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS and Dairy Queen in Middleport, or
' 300-500 lbs., 79.00-93.50;
Max Folmer, Long Bouom: Tracy
by mail to Mary Wise, 522 South
500-700 ')r.·· 75.00-87 .50;
Simpkins, Pomeroy; WiUiam VanThird Ave. in Middleport,
700' Up 60.00-74.00.
sickle, Pomeroy; Elizabeth McinButcher
cowS:
tosh, Pomeroy; Cleo Baker, MidPor!land PfO to meet
.
Utilities, 51.00-58.00.
The
Portland
PfO
will
hold
a
Canner/Cutters, 43.00-53.00.
Y DISCHARGES
Light weight low grade cows, special meeting April 23 at 7 p.m.
William Van Meter.
at the grade school.
.
43 .00-Down.
Heiferettes, Up 10 68.50.
Hospitllized
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
Marcella
Custer, 313'1·Fairwond
300-800 lbs. 67.00-90.50.
Am ElePower ......................29 7/8
Avenue,
MinersviUe,
is a patient at
Butcher Bull:
·
Ashland Oil ... :.................... 32 5/8
Doctor's
Hospital
West
in ColumUtilities, 61.50-70.00.
AT&T ...................................35 5/8
bus.
Cards
may
be
sent'
to her at
Canner/Cutter, 51.00-58.00.
Bob Evans ............................ 18 5/8
DociOr's Hospital, Room No. 208,
Veal Calves:
··
Charming Shop ..................... 15 7/8
Columbus.
Choice/prime, 95.00-107.00.
CIIY Holding .. :...... :..................... l7
Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Federal Mogul ......................16 5/8
Democrats to meet
Sprinaer
Cows:
Goodyear T&R ........................... 23
The
Meigs
County Democratic
t
''
775.00 & down.
Key Centurion ...................... 12 1(1
Executive
Committee
will
meet
Cow/Calf Com.:
Lands' End ................................. 23
Thursday at 7 p.m. in lhe Carpen900.00-down.
i
Limited Inc...........................29 3/8 ·
ter's Hall. Public is invited.
Baby
Calves:
Multimedia 1nc.....................78 114
175.00 & down.
Rax RestaUmnl ......................... .?/8
Dot Alomeet
Butcher Sows:
Robbins&Myers .........................27
The Chester Council No. 323
4()0-600 lbs.• 43.50-47.00.
Shoney's Inc ......................... I 7 1/4
Daughters
of America will meet at
TopHop: ·.
Star Bank ..............................22 1/4
the
Chester
Fire House Tuesduy at
220-250 lbs., 48.00-49.00.
Assure the quality of your heat pump
Wendy lnt'l. ........................ 10 1(1
·
8
p.m
,
due
to damaged roof at
Butcher
Boars:
Worthington Ind. .. ................24,1(1
•
installation by using a cenitied Comfun
··
lodge hall.
39.00-41.50.
,
Assured
Comtpn Assured dealers ";'
·
have the experience, expertise, 8lld technical .
.
how to properly install your heat pump. ~know because they
proved it to us. They faced the demanding Refrigeration Service
Engineers Society (R.S. E.S.) certification exam that the Society
administered. Only dealers with R.S.E.S.-cenified installers can
display our Comfort Assured emblem.
'
~·re proud of the experience, technical e~tpertise, and
professionalism Of these dealers. Call Ohio 1\lwet, and we'll
introduce you to the.C.o mfurt Assured dealer lleSrest you.
Poster contest rules announced .
Meigs squad answers 19 calls
.
Vol. 41, No. 251
IIospital news
Livestock
'
~DA
By BRIAN J. REED
ject at Beech Grove Cemetery
Sentinel News StafT
. which has been in the planning
· PomerQy Village Council dis- stages for several months. Pro. cussed this summer's road projects posed costs on all of lhe projects
and lbe upgrading of the village are being withheld by the council
sewer plant during Monduy night's pel'ding submission of bids.
regular session.
In addition, Anderson updated
Council made plans to pave council on progress on a new
seven village 'sireets: Chester Street sewage treatment system for the
. near Route 33, which is currently village. According to Anderson,
panially brick and partially black- funding for the $1.2 million project
· top ; Spring Valley Lane from is now in place and bids will be
: Spring Avenue to lhe Ohio Power advertised as soon .as design and
office behind the stadium; Liberty engineering work is completed.
·Lane, Vale Street, Wehe Termce,
Anderson projected the dute for
· Union Ttrrace and a portion of bids to be awarded and lhe dute for
:Prospect Hill.
.
construCtion commencement to be
Village Administrator John August1, wilh construction expect. , Anderson discussed a paving pro- ed to end by December, 1992.
Extensive discussion was held
on lhe village's new zoning ordinance, which council recently
voted to approve. The Ohio
Revised Code requires the council
to appoint a zoning officer and two
olher boards, a three-member Zoning Planning Commission and a
five-member Board of Zoning·
Appeals,
.
'rhe zoning officer, according to
Legal Advisor Patrick O'Brien, is
responsible for nOtifying officials
of zoning ordinance violations and
overseeing removal of structures in
violation. Council ap(!Ointed
Anderson to fill the posation of
zoning officer last night, and Council President Larry Wehrung stated ·
By United Press Iaternatlonal
Marvin Warner's lawyers have
filed a 'Rrit of habeas corpus in federal Cot!n in an a!templ to keep the
fanner Cincinnati rmancier out of
prislln. .
Riffe blasts Gov. Voinovich
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ~
Ohio House Speaker Vernal Riffe
Jr., D- Wheelersburg,, says Gov.
George. Voinovich, a Republican,
should stick to running the executive bmnch of govemm~nt.
>
Cemetery fees now payable
The annual fee for care of graves at Beech Grove Cemetery is ·
now payable.
·
The charge is $5 a grave and checks are to be made out to the
Beech ·Grove Cemetery Trustees and mailed to Pomeroy Village
Hall, c/o Pat Thoma, Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Name.seminar speaker
Dr. James E. Althop, Ph.D. will he the speaker at the Thursday
session of the Alzheimer's Disease and Rela!ed Disorders Support
Group meeting to be held at 1:15 at ~e SeniorCitizensCe!'ter. .
Dr. Althof is a psychologast, and as the owner and chmcal darec10! of Althof and Associates, providing outpatient psychotherapy as
weU as consulting to business and industry. He will spealdng on the
topic "Learning to Aecept Things We Cannot Change and Why We
Deny Unpleasant Things in Our ~ives."
,
..
As explained by Sharon Wnght, pro~ram director, When we
deal with a chronic illness such as Alzheuper's disease or a related
disorder, changes in our life style become daily. We must teaa;n to
accept our limitations and learn to deal walh th~ reahty of our snualion. Denying you have a problem and not copmg only compounds
lhe problems( .
.
.
Registration wall began at 1:15 w1th Dr. Althof to speak_at 1:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served a~ 2:30p.m. and the sessaon w1ll
resume at 2:45 for another hour of dascuss1on.
'I
j
t
.
Patrol charges Pomeroy man
man was c_har.ged and _cited in a one:truclt. crash
A Pomeroy
e R 18
1
Monduy at 7:25 p.m. in Scapto TIJW!'shap on · · . 'on~ mt e east
of lhe jWlclion of S.R. 143, according to the Gallia-Metgs Post of
theStateHighwayPauol.
·
Timothy M. Herdman, 29, of 3703~ Kingsbury l_td., was c~ged
'th DWI, ca'ted for driving on an expired regastrauon and domg so
Wl
.
wi~':~~ce::· heading west when he w~l off the _right side of
lhe road and Man embankJ!Ient. Aceordm~ to the mvesugau!"g
r's repon, Herdman claimed that an unulentafied van ran ham
troope
off the road.
I
I
Riffe, in a news release Monday, criticized Voinovich for
threatening to close as many as 79
state liquor stores unless his bill is
passed to turn all the liquor stores
over to private business.
----Local briefs-~--.
~
,
Director/Development Director Elizabeth
Schaad, and Oblo Power Area Manager Ernie
Sisson. "Tbe check," Sisson said Monday, "is.
another step in Ohio Power's commitment .
toward the communit:y and the people that we
serve." All together, Ohio Power has made a
three-year commitment of $2,000.
CHAMBER RECEIVES CHECK- The
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce received
a $SOO check from Ohio Power Monday anernoon liS part or the utility company's three-year
commitment to the chamber director's office.
Pictured left to rigbl are Chamber board member Tom Reed; Chamber E.xecutive
.:
~~~=~·~::!:;
COIItinued on page 10
.,
____.
L------~----------:-;.;..
.
l
that he would recommend a list of
nominees for the olher .two.boards
at council's next meeting.
The Zoning Planning Commission will .be responsible for amendments and changes in the zoning
law, as well as reviewing new construction and structural changes.
The third board, the Board of
Zoning Appeals, will review the
decisions of the zoning officer,
hear appeals and issue any variances to the ordinance.
Meigs County Parle District
Director Mary Powell spoke to .
council last night about 8 proposal
10 construct a ball field on the for.
mer Sugar Run School piope.ty.
According to Powell, she has
been in contact with Mike Young "
and Roger Abbott, who are active
in the village's "pee-wee" and Lit·tie League baseball progmms, and
bolh indicated lhat their programs
were experiencing difficulty in
scheduling game and pr_actice time
at the field at Meigs High School.
Powell requested that council
provide funds for equipment for the
field, such as backstops and· bases
from a fund established within the
district for recreational facilities.
Council asked that Powell check ·
into lhe possibility of Meigs High
School vocational (lrograms providing welding servtces and asked .
that she check jnto the price of lhe
proj~t before they discussed the
funding.
Powell also spoke briefly about
a downtown revitalization program
through the Ohio Department of
Development. The prQgram provides matching funds for improv~
parlcing, streetscaping, and building
improvement~.
,
In other action, council: .
.
-Discussed the possibility of
conlnlCting with a trash service for
a spring clean up within the village;
-Discussed the possible installa'
·tion of cable service on Pleasant
Ridge;
·
-Discussed the need 'for the village to cut weeds on its proper!y oil
West Main Street.
Attending, in addition to Ande~
son 11nd Wehrung were: Council.
members Bruce Reed, Bryan
Shan!C, Betty Baronick, Thomas
Werry, and Bill Young; Cler~
Brenda Morris and Mayor Richara
Seyler.
·
Warner's lawyers_try again to
keep their client out ofjail
Stocks
d~er.
•
Pomeroy Council to pave 7 village streets
.
Announcements
••
1 Section 10 Poge<~ Z5 cenll.
A Muldmedlo Inc. Newap~~per
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, Aprll16, 1991
·eopyrtghlod 111111
fc
'
· Low tonight in upper 40s.
Wednesday, sunny.
•
---Area deaths---
I
Ohio Lottery
Hussein cops
95th Boston
Marathon
Riffe
also
condemned
Voinovich ' s threat to veto campaign finance reform legislation
unless it contains restrictions on
labor union conttibutions.
"The Ohio Constitution provides for a separation of powers in
this state," said Riffe. "! have
•lways welcomed input from the
governor's office on any and all
legislation. However, threats are
not lhe way to advance an agenda.
"I sincerely hope that in the
. future , the governor will run the
executive branch and leave the le$islative branch to legislatolll," saad
Riffe.
Curt Steiner, a spokesman for
the governor, said Riffe's comments were based on a "mischaracterization" of a recent report
quoting a memo from John Hall,
director of the Department of
Liquor Control, on the closing of
liquor stores.
.
Steiner said lhe deparnnent has
aulhority under state law to close
.unprofitable liquor stores in areas
or low demand.
The ~!ilion was filed Monduy
in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati
just hours after the U.S. Supreme
Court denied W~~n~er's appeal of
his 19117 ~onvictjon pn .ae.cllriliCs
fraud lriii'Odier-chatiies Stemming
from the 198S collapse of his
Home State Savings Bank.
The habeas corpus petition
seeks to rescind Warner's 3 1/2
year prison sentence on grounds his
conslitudonal rights were violated
repeatedly duriog his four-month
trial in Cincinnati. The pelition also
asks all state proceedings be
d~layed until this latest appenl is
decided.
Warner, lhe fanner owner of the
now-defunct Home State Savings,
was convicted on six counts of
unauthorized acts in conoection
with wire transfers , and three
counts of securities violations.
lri addition to the prison term,
he was ordered to pay $12.2 million in restitution and $250,000 in
court costs to lhe state. The $12.2
. million figure was reduced from
$22 million by the Ohio Supreme
Court and is stilf subject to discussion in lower court.
The decision by the U.S .
Supreme Court not to hear· this case
also means David Schiebel, former-president of Wamer' s Home
State, will face six months in
prison and five months probation
for his conviction on lhree counts
of securities violations.
Home State collapsed in 1985 ·
after losing $144 million in investments in ESM Government Securities Inc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
when that f11111 went bankrupt. The
demise of Home State triggered a
run on 69 olher state-chlrtered, privately insUred Ohio thrifts.
This run prompted fonner Gov.
Richard Celeste to close lhe S&Ls,
Some were sold or consolidated ·
and many reopened within three
monlhs. The state put $129 million
into the reopening of thrifts and
recovered $134 million through lhe .
courts.
Warner's and Schiebel's convictions came two yeats after the collapse, but his conviction was overturned in 1989 by lhe Hamilton
County Appeals Court. Warner's
auomeys appealed his conviction
on grounds he received an unfair
trial.
They argued he had no knowledge he was not llljthorized to !Rake
the g~tion&ble m~MY tr8}1sfera . .
Tiley also said ffiat one or the
juron "hated" Warner and another
had a relative with money in the
state S&Ls when the collapse
occurred. The attorneys also said
that instructions given to the jur
were changed at the last minute.
Special State Prosecute
Lawrence Kane argued that th
convictions were overturned o
technical, procedural issues and n.o .
the merits of the ~ilt or innocence
of Warncr or SchaebCI.
It has taken almost six years and ,
just over $6 million in legal fees
joe the ' ~ to fullx. pro!lll4;Ute ,Ibis .,
case. Former Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze was in ch~ge
of invcstipting and prosecuting the
case and brought iri Kane to handle
lhe raslr:.
BEATS LAST MINUTE RUSH ·- Midnight Monday was the
filing deadline rorl990 income taxes. Meias County residents :
rushed to heat the clock in order to avoid penalties. According to
Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Reuter, his orrace received a full box or
IRS-bound mail Monday, including the returns or Jim Schael!el,
above. ··
·
James A. Diehl, Jr., 70, retired educator, ~ies
Retired Meigs High School
He was a vetemn of the U. S. Yeager Diehl, two daughters and
Principal James Andrew Diehl, Jr.. Army, World War II, having served sons-in-law, Charlene and Ron
70, of 510 Mulberry Heij!hts, from 1942 to 1945.
Pomeroy, died Monduy, Aprdl5,
·Mr. Diehl was active in many
1991, at the Holzer Medicai'Cenu:r, church, community and civic
Gallipolis.
affairs. He was a member or lhe
Mr. Diehl retired. in 1982 as Sacred Heart Catholic Chureh, a
principal of Meigs High School, a past president of the Middleportposition he had held since t~e Pomeroy Rotary Club, •d chairMeigs Local School District con- man of the Meigs County Chilsolidation in 1968. From 1954 until dren's Trust Fund. He KrVed on
then he was principal of Pomeroy th'e Meigs County Council of
High School. Prior to that, 1945 to Aging Advisory Board, was on the
1954 • Mr · D'te hi taug hI and Board o f D'~rectors o f the Me1gs
'
coached foolball and basketball at Bmnth, American Heart AJiociaWahama High School.
tion, and a member of Drew WebHe graduated from Wahama sterPost39, American Leaion.
High School in 1938, received his
Born on Au~. 15. 19211' at Hllrlbachelor'.s degree from Marshall ford, W. Va., he was lhe 1011 of lhe
Universi!y in 1942 and his master's
late James A. ~hi. Sr., IUid Lena
· de~ in ,administration from Ohio Gibbs Diehl.
.
. .
JAMES A. DIEHL
Umversaty'm 1!154.
· He is survived by hil w1fe, Ida
~
.
/
-
Rutherford of Brighton, Ind ., and
Jo Ellen and 1ohn Yeary of South
Charleston, W, Va; two grandchildren, Jim Rutherford and Philip
Yeary; two step-granddaughters,
Machelle Tribble and Tracey
Rutherford; and 8 brother and sis- •
ter·in-law, Earl Edward IIIII Juanita
Diehl, South Charleston, W.Va.
A Mass of ChriJtian Burial wiU
be celebrated at lhe Sacred Heart
Catholic: Chun:h at noon Thursday
with lhe Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz and
lbe Rev. Fr. Anthony Giannamore
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery.
' Friends may call at lhe funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p.m. A vigil service will be
held at 8:45 p.m. ln lieu of flowers
donations may be mlde to
American Heart Association.
-
tile
v
'
�
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04. April
Text
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
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April 15, 1991
frazier
hughes
mathews
rupe