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IW18-1~The Daily
.
Monday. April2, 198Q
Sentinel
Ohiu Lottery
UNLV .rips
-Duke for
NCAA title ·
90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE
IF:;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~==:::::.: '"""!l- ~- 1 REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING
ooOR'WITH THE
ATRIUM OOPRI
.ROLLED.ROOFING
.arlen ·Brown ·Willie $
.1Q99
•Bilek oG11111 & White
.
ia~' awhole
~alhe
beatJty of uy home.
c-tn today -let
uo help you choote
the idea that'a rlahl
foryourho~.
6'0 X 6'8•
INCLUDES SCREEN
Atll HARDWARE
BVYNDW-
-
,
~82+~~J-~-~-~-~~~~~~L . . . ;_$9 .99
ROOF COATING.........s GAL ••~:..
S9 .99
1r
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WITH 4112 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG
.
26''x8' ...................~ ...............................~ ........ •5.11
26''x1 o··...................................................-..... '6.39
26''x12' .............................;............ ~........... •·7 .67
26''x1·4' ........:................................. ~ ........_.... sa.90
'
. $11 •35'
26 X 16'.· '!·····.················~········~·················
0
11
Ia. II Roofing Felt ·
.bl ....:~nr:::=:,.
8 II
,,
WORK PRODUCT&
LIIDICIPE
ftMBIRI
lACI
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UIIII'LII
DD BARIS
8' X8'............................S450
8' x1o·. . . . . . . . . :. . .ssso
11111 11011
j
WRJf.l
omr
BARB
•aa•ROLL
~-
Universal Rundle 7ulllats 8' xI' lecllons
'
JlOU.
1 PIECE..............WHJTE ............s189.95
2 PIECE..............WHITE... ......)259.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND- s
49.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND s
2 TRAYS..........................-' ............. 56.95
Shadow Box
Panea
AIDERSII .WINDOWS
,.abla..~!-~~~..:848
Tough, lig.,_ght aa· panels (38' c:o.or)n - r 1o lnotal. Wide
aida laps add exira olnlngth, keep out lhe aleman Ia. All erduoiva
leakpmof cltaln chonnel ·~· onug, 't0181111et1ight anum drr.
'
draft hw inleriort.
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38" x-8 .......•.••.••..'12
38" X 10:.............'15
38" X 12.....;........'18
38"x 14..............'21
3&" X 16••••••••••••••*"
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38" x 18•.....·.........*27 .
38" X 20•..•.•••••.•. ~*30
3S"x22..............'33
38"·x 24 ..............*36
PRISIDRITRIIfiDLDMBIR
----------~~j-111 I IY~t 2 PC.
Price Includes
Screens
PROPIII ftiRCB Krr
,,.
Includes 14.1 oz.
disposable p10pana
luel cylinder. (761Bi ·
Ao
P'••tured
In:
ID
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·--;~
~-~
·24 carbide Teeth
·Cuts Smoother and
Faster than Ordinary
Carbide
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Clean air bill,
fund-raisers top
Busft's agenda
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Commission · ordered~
to transfer
$26 million iri ·'s tudent 'loan"·reserves
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Week-of-the-Child is
being observed locally
Four area
students are
mistrial narrowly averted
•
211 C.nto
trator John Anderson Is cur· mtnder to residents that the
By NANCY YOACHAM
village wlll participate In Clean
rently preparing a list of needed
Sentinel News Staff
Up Rural Ohio Week, a program
Pomeroy Village Council has street signs.
being sponsored by the Meigs
Council approved a second
decided that guard rallls particuCounty
Litter Control Program
llirly needed along a section of reading of a proposed ordinance
lhe
week
of April 23-28. On
East Main St . from H & R Block to give village · employees a 25
'tuesday
of
thai . week, April 24,
cent per htiur pay raise.
to J & R Sports Shop.
county
litter
program employees
It was reported that the vll·
During Monday night 's regular
be
ln
·Pomeroy
to assist. In
will
meettng, council approved a Jage's share of fines and fees
clean-up
activitieS.
Pomeroy
motlon·to Install guard rail along collected d!lring March amounts .
wUl
'provi,
q
e
the
truck
for
hauling
this section, pending the appro- IO $3,529.
and
the
county
program
will
pay
A bl·monthly report of pollee
val ofthevlllagefbiancecommlt·
landfill
fees
for
the
one
day
.
tee: Although a local company department activities Indicates a
Meigs
County
Lifter
Conlrol
will
total of $1,428 collected from
has given council an Installation
be doing the same thing ln other
vlllage parking meters during
· price, lt will be up to the finance
vlllages
of the county on the other
the two-month period.
•
committee to decide If the village
days
during
clean up week.
Finally, council Issued a recan afford the expense and If so,
work out a payment plan with the
company.
In regard to a proposed Pomeroy zoning ordinance, Councilmali Larry Wehrung reported an
cost estimates for the
engineer's
preseated
Hart
with
her
plaque.
Also'
presented
HART RECEIVES CHAMBER AWARD prepar.
a
tion
of 10 village maps.
plaques'
of
appreciation
Satlll'day
evening
were
Melp County Chamber of Commerce Secretary
Council however, Including Wehbuslnesaman Len~;JY Eliason, for his work last
Sherrt Hart was surprised at Saturday night's
.
rung,
felt the propose~ cost of
_
year
In
both
tl!_e
former
Middleport
and
Pomeroy
annual 'chamber-sponsored dinner-dance to re·
$800,
which
Includes purchase ot
Chambers
of
Commerce,
.
and
to
Rlepenhoff
celve.a plaque In appreciation of her dedication to
a
speci<il
computer program
Dlslrlbulinl!,
Jackson,
.
for
their
commitment
to
her-job and the or1anlzatlon. "Sherrl has always
which
the
engineering firm
Meigs
County.
'
·
·
gone above and beyond the call of duty," stated
CINCINNATI (UPl) - WlniJ:
president" planned to plug the
would
need
for
the projecl , ls
Pomeroy Chamber President Bruce Reed, who
lng
up
a
two-day,
four·state
trip,
legislation
his administration
more than the vlllage · wl~ hes to
helped
to
shape
by planting a lree
President
Bush
focused
on
clean
·
spend at this time.
air legislation and fund-raising
at a ceremony ln tndlanapoUs.
Council approved an expendiAlso on the president's agenda
efforts to bolster the Republican
ture of $289 for '\'eat her stripping
was an Indianapolis fund-raiser
Party now preparln~ for.national
for ·garage doors at the village
for Sen. D~;~n Coats, R-In~., where ·
·
and local elections.
garage. Council •at an earlier
party officials hoped to raise
With the Senate scheduled to
meet111g approved an. expen!)l·
'
"·
....
$400,000, and a fund-raiser In
vote on the massive clean air bill
ture for the · projec~ and re:
Tuesday night, the self·
Detroit lor the Mlclilgan GOP, an
CiNCINNA'J'I ' (UPI ) - A fed- whether to appeal to the Supreme
funds under any reasonable queslfd price 'estimates. BankS
proclaimed
''environmental
·
Continued on page 10
er"al appeals-court ruled Monday
Court. ;rwenty-two state commisdefinition of that term," Judge Construction•. Pomeroy, submit the Ohio Student Loan Commls· sions liave gone to court ·1n an
Nathaniel Jones said · In the ted the $289 esumate.
slon must transfer $26 million ln
A resident of upper Pomeroy
attempt .to halt the transfers.
court 's ruling. "Itis the admlnisstudent loan reserves to the
toward
Ml!iersvllle has reTwo years ago , the commistraior of the funds which flow In
.
.
federal government.
sion refused an order from
quested,
through <':ounellman
and out of Ohio as part of" the .
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Secretary of Education Lauro
federal Guaranteed Student Blll Young, that street signs for
Appeals overruled a lower court
Cavazos. to turn over what he
East Main Sl. be Installed ln that
Loan Prograni.
decision thai said the transfer det.e rfnined to be excess re·
section of the village. Mayor
The appeals court said Cava·
demanded by the Department of serves. Cavazos withheld relm·
Seyler
Indicated !his would not be
zos's order to turn over excess
some good old-fashioned " fun
The Week of the Young Child,
Education was unconstitutional.
bursement of $26 million In fees
a
problem
since Vlllag€Admlnlsreserves wouldn't dalnage the
April 2-8, ls a nationai celebra- things" are also being held.
James Biddle, executive dlrec.
to get the money the state
state fund economically.
Locawly, a Make It-Take It
. 'tion he)d eacli year to focus
tor of the commission, said ·commission refused to release.
The Deparlment of Education
Fair
wlll be held Saturday, from
attentlon on the needs of young
''The OSLC does not own the subsidizes a fund thecommls~lon
agency officials are considering
10:30
a.m. to 12: 30 p ~m., at St.
children
and
.
their
families
'
uses to guarantee ldw,lnteres.t
through public lnformatlonactlv· Peter's EpisCopal Church, 541
education loans.
Second Ave., Galllpolls. Chlldre.11
lttes. According to the National
Po~dexter
The federal government pays
Association for the Education of or all ages who at lend the falrwlll
administrative
fees
and
relmbu
~
meet
ventriloquist, play wllh.
Young Children (NAEYC J, "a
WAsHINGTON (UPI) - i\ mistrial was narrowly averted
sements
fOr
loan
defaults.
The
clowns,
and of course, make
commltnient to Improving oppor·
Tuesday In the lran·Conlra trial of John Poindexter after two
'
stu·
commission
buys
defaulted
Four· area students will be
tunltleS available to this nation's · some crafts to take home. The
members of the Jury were contacted by the press.
dent loans and recovers payment
young children will be made only Make lt-Take It Fair ls sponrecognized al their respective
· The judge presiding over the case ordered the jury
for them. It keeps 30 percent and 1 school awards programs for · lf citizens are challenged to sored by thedaycarecentersand
sequestered and said angrUy that the attempts to contact·
gives
the rest to the federal• academic excellence In the areas
preschoolS of Gallipolis, Middlebecome Involved."
jurors, who began deliberating Monday, might be considered an
agency.
The funct has b'een
of malhemallcs, science a,nd
NAEYC, In conjunction "1th port, Pomeroy and Cheshire.
obstruction of justice.
,
Independent of the state since
Specifically for Meigs County
computer science in conjunction
local affiliate groups, such as the
"l'lllhlnk about that," Greene said. "This almost created a
1967.:
with the
Tandy Technology
Southern Ohio Association for the preschoolers, the Gingerbread
mistrial."
- The commission has consl- Scholars Program.
House Preschool In Mlddle,POrt
Education of Young Children,
AI a hasllly called hearing, Greeae announced that two jurors
derecrnrt nlng its operation Into a
wlll be hosting a clown show 011
The
students
represent
the
top
sponsors
the
Week
ox
the
Young
had been contacted Monday lll&ht by two women ldenllfyln1
private business, citing the lriss
Tuesday (today), with children
two percent of each particlpallng cnud.
themselves as reporters. Questioned In court; both jurors said
of the surplus It needs to buy
from the Carleton School Prehigh school's senior class for
they huq up their telephcmes and did not di&CII88 the cue.
ThroughOut the counlry during school, Head Start and Tiny Tech
defaulled loans and the' loss of
overall
academic
excellence
Greene said, "I have decided .I will sequester lhe jury. I have
Investment earnings. As a prl·
based on their work ln grades 9 this special week, children, their as guests. ·
tried to avoid that. rm very sorry to have to do this, !lot the
parents, and early childhood
vate business, the federal goThroughout the week In the
,.
.
through 11. .
Irresponsible behavior of the press leaves me no choice."
educators,
are condl!ctlng actlvl·
. vernment could not seize com·
l\11d41eport·Pomeroy
area, resiReceiving
the
recognition
in
Gree11e said, "I certainly don't want to liave a mlstrlat"
mission reserves.
this area were Shawn '1:.. Bush . ties to enhance public awareneSs · dents Should also be on the alert
and Greta L. Riffle, Eastern of the needs, rights and abilities . for examples of preschool art
work to be exhibited at dlffer.ent
Local .High School, and Emily of preschoolers.
Along with the aerious emphaplaces throughoul the 1two
Bumgardner and Lana Arthur,
sis of the·week-long celebration, c~§lnltles.
Con tlnued on page 10
~-~--"-~
By United Press International
Luckily, the ground has 40s, 10 to 15 degrees below
The clock may have taken a
warmed consld'erably over the normal for this time of year.
jump forward a few nights ago,
last few weeks and little It any of
The situation will Improve
but the weather took a giant ·s tep
the snow should accumulate. slightly Tuesday night and Wed·
backward TUesday morning,
What may ' have been a 1· or nesday: with the precipitation
with snow -falling across much of
2-lnch snowfall in the east during ending from west to east.
Ohio.
After lows of around 30 Tuesthe winter moq,ths was expected
Temperatures at mid-morntng
to only produce a · dusting on
day night, highs Wednesday will
were generally ·near freezh\g,
grassy surfaces Tuesday. '
reach . the mld-40s to mld·50s
and the National Weather Ser·
. TIJe weather was expecte~ to under partly cloudy skies. But . · .
vice said the unseasonably cold
the rain Is to return ·Thursday
change little during the daylight
weather will continue through at
hours, with high temperatures
anq Friday, before skies finally
least the end of the week. .
reaching onlY the upper 30s to low . clear Saturday. Highs will be In
the low 40s to low 50s Thursday
and only In the 40s Friday and
Saturday . Lows will be ln the 30s
Thursday and Friday and only In
• the upper 20s Saturday.
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SPIDCI LUMBER
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1TRAY_ .......- ...............................
36" SHOWER...........................~19.99
32" SHOWER ..............-199.99
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•COPPIIlWOcm
.3" x 5"-x 8' HIGH QUALITY
1 Section, 10
._AMu-•
Councn·· says guard
rail needed on section
of·East Main Street
· SQ.
•OUUIII WBU&
. . . . . ...
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1990
iddleport, Ohio, Tuu(jay.
20 Year Warranty
· 67
.
12
26
: " X ' ...............:....:..................... $7.
24' ROOF 7101111
· ·vol.40. No.229
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0 G 81 8
26''x8' .....
$5.11 .
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I~==;=~·;
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;·~C.~~·-~~UN~~
§~~-~O~WJ;N=====~26'' 10' .......... ............ .'........... •6.39
X
each
$49·95sa.
IIIIILII
ULIIIIIED
·
COIRDUIED
.~
Waatara Pre-Cut
CIIOOie From Charcoal Blend,
illata Blend, Wtather8d Wood
Blind, 811111 Sienna Blend
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1990
0
ANDIAVB
•30 YEAR WARRANTY
Low tonl1hl near 30. 8ullll)'
. We~ay. rup near 11.
Page 3
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$2495
.SOLI) IIIASIIIORTICE
ty.tem of Idea• for
.
Pick-4
6661
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ALUMINUM FIBERGLASS
•• • 5•
ROOF COATING ....~.~..
·AU. WOOD
-ENEIIOY EFfiCIENT
.JIEADY·TQ.INITAU.
.t.OCK INCI.UilED '
The Atrium Door
'
Daily Number
192
0
recogn~
a
Weather takes giant· step backward
--Local news briefs ____,
Meigs
jobless rate .at 9.4 percent
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Meigs County's unemployment rate for the - month of
February stood at 9.4 percent, according ·to a report from the Ohio B11reau of Employment Service~~ Issued today.
The labor iori:e stood at 7,800 with 7,100 being employed. The
rate of unemployment was down one full percentage point over
the January figure and well below the February 1989 figure
which as 10.0. '
"DELIVERY AVAILABLE".
NOT RESPONIIILI I'OR TYPOQRAPtiCAL
·Subsidy funds distributed
The total amount of basic and transportation allowances
coming to Meigs County through the State School Foundation
Subsidy Plan was $788,720.96, according to a report (rom State
·Continued on page 10
\
Sunshine developln& from the ,
west across the alate Wednesday, and the moderating temper·
atures, may push averaee soli
temperatures above the 50·
degree mark. ):.l)lhter winds ·will
contribute to better conditions
for exposed llvtlitock and the dry
air will be· favorable for the
aeration of erato blna or houaJng
areas where moisture has
accumulated.
.
· The showers Thursday and
Friday will k~ soU moiSture
adequate for aood d~loprnen1
of grasses and winter wheat. ·
0
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,
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~~~~~~..,..
~
...,...
.... frleDda~.,
tip •
pnclamadoa deelarlal April 1-8 • die Week of
tile Yo_, Qltll. A mabt , niOiv• ol &be
pnelamNIH Ill to .._
&Ill& ,.... c111J4rea,
,.,.........oi.Gelal or--* tta&-. wW"acb
tllelr lal ~atlal." WWI tile .....,... are,J tor, ..
IIIGIIIY....... c dt .l nu,el
8HM funltaDI, lllll••p..t. u11
,..._
ud NJcid WilMa. •f die C.IJMII lcltnl
PreRIIool, s:rn-. Tlllr Teeb, Ml~•,,..., IIIMI
llelp CoutUJ Belli BUrt .... pnvllle pn~ellool
e4uca&loa pfOII'AIU for artaJollllpten.
0
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~ Daily Santina-Paga 3
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
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·Commetitacy
. Page 2~The Dlily Seutintl
· Pomllov Mldcl1part Ohio
, Tueectey, Apr13, 1990
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'Red ·o ctober' based on real ·incident _.
T·he Daily_ Sentinel
•.,
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Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
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~lb r"T'"L-.1._-.-, r-T"&~~c::loo=o
ts:mj9
DEVOTED TO THE INTERMTS OF THE MEIGS-l!IASON AREA
~v
.
ROBERT L. WINGE~
hbllsher
,
.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
PI\T WRrlEHEAD
A88ls&anl Publisher/Controller
..
A MEMBER of 'I'he United Press InternatloJIIII, lilland Dally Press
Association and tile American. Newspaper Publisbers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be 1..$ than300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed withname, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published, Letters should be In good taste, addressing lss!_les, not personali-
ties.
· II
•
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By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WAsHINGTON- Could It be t)Jat the Democrats are hoping that
Doug Wilder will do to Jesse Jackson what Jimmy Carter did to
George Wallace?
·
Recall that In the earlY 1970s the feisty governor of Alabama was
driving the'Democrat!c establishment crazy by entering presidential
primaries far from his native South and either winning or drawing
enough votes to back his claim that the party's candidates had lost
touch with ordinary people.
Wallace's critics .s;.ld he was getting votes by pandering to
prejudice and tear and that no polltlcaJ party was going to enjoy more
than passing success that way.
·
But they were clearlY rattled by Wallace's successes In places like
Maryland and Michigan, and whenformerGeorglaGov. Carter came
along In 1976 to challenge Wallace, the Democrats were pleased.
The party elders were downright delighted to have Carter whip
Wallace In Florida, although few of. them realized how much
momentum hls ear!y vlctprles would give the Georgian.
Before they or such better known candidates as Sens. Henry
Jackson of Washington or Birch Bayh of Indiana or Sargent Shriver
· knew what was. happening, Carter had pulled Into first place In the
crowded race for the Democratic nomination and not onlY won It, but
captured the presidency as well.
.
.· . .
No one expects Wilder, who made history lastfall as tlie first black
to be elected gover~r of any state when he won the job In Virginia, to
m11ke a serious bid for the Democratic presidential nomination hi
·1992.
..
But after· his election victory and a remarkably successful
legislative session In which Wilder showed hilpSelf to be as fiscally
cautious as an)l white gol'"rnor the state has had In recent times,
some people are talking aoout Wilder as a possible Yice presidential
candidate.
A Iot of water has to now ·under a number of bridges before serious
consideration wi!I be given to a Democratic vice presidential
candidate. But the very fact that Wilder Is being mentioned tor the
post so early In the 1988-1992 cycle probably has more to do with
Jackson's percelvl!d capacity to make problems· for the party than
Wllder!s potential for broadening Its base.
~, Some politicians believe that Jackson got a lot closer to a place on
'-the national ticket In 1988 than In 1984, and If he succeeded In 1992, his
·.color, his llberallsm, his style or ali of the above would not only
guarantee defeat but also drag down many other Democratic
candidates at every level.
· But most of them wi!I not' say publicly that Jackson Is politic;al
poison for fear of being accused of racism. They see a way of avoiding
that by opposing Jackson on the basis of governmental experience
and oHering Wilder as a proven legislator, administrator and
j10 il tic!liD.
·
'
'• It Is true that Wilder has appeared to a!Iy himself w!PJ the so-calleilo'
centrist or moderate wing of the Democratic Party. But it remain~ to
l)e seen whether the first elected black governor will let himself be ·
)!sed against the first black with a plausible chance tow in a place on a
foajor party presidential tlcl!et.
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Letters to the editor
Responds to recent council story
(
·'
HaRD LiNe
. This letter Is In regard to the
article on the front page of
Tuesday's, March 20, 1990 Dally
Sentinel, entitled "Pomeroy to
tJpdate Wastewater Plant; Coun·
~II Names Architect."
· Mayor Seyler stated that he
{elt that the last thing that we
9eeded was an update on .a
~~ewage treatment plant that was
not polluting. I beg to d!Her With
Mayor Seyler and the proof Is
available for anyone and eve- .
ryone to see. Just take a stroll to
the corner of Main and Spring St.
and look at ihe raw sewage
~nn!ng .directly Into the river.
Then check at the corner of Main
and Butternut, or check the
human waste that has been' •
aeriated and dumped Into Nay·
lor's Run an\1 backs up In front of
iny boat dock everyday. Ills very ·
sickening.
·
. In my . opinion nothing Is
needed more than a proper
sewage system for Pomeroy. I
am talking about a treatment
plant the does not dump Into the
river and' sewage lines from
every property to the treatment
• plant. Perhaps this will take time
since Pomeroy residents cannot
afford to do ltailatonce, bgtlsay
take the $1.2 million and put It to
good use as a start toward a
proper sewage system In the
future. Everyone 'In Pomeroy
·
·
knows that many people pays for
sewage every month and that
their sewage dumps directly Into
the river. They are paying for
nothing.
' In the same article council
discussed lnstilllng guardrail
along East Main Street on the
river. Don't you think Council
should contact the owners of the
private properly on the river
before they slart putting up
guardrail?
I sometimes wonder what kind
of leadership we have, and Ithlnk
more residents . should get In·
volved and make their opinions
known to Council, · but I guess
most people are lll!e I have been
In the past, just complain to
friends and neighbors about-the
decisions that city hall makes
and · then have to live . our
everyday life with those
decisions. .
,
I say wake up Pomeroy restdentsand~akeapart!nyourclty
government. You have a right to
make your voice heard, and I'm
not just talking abou ~oting, I'm
talking about dectstolls that are
made from week to week by
council that affects all of our
lives.
Sincerely,
, Dottle Turner
153 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
· ·
Expresses appreciation ·
Dear Editor:
· On behalf ot the soph,pmore
class and tbe academic boosters
ot Eastern High School, I want to
express our appreciation for the
, support ot the parentl and
lrtends who donated to our
charity auction last Sunday,
'
March 25, 1990.
Also, to Mr. I.O. McCoy tor
dOJ18tlng Ills time to do the
auction. ,
Thank You.
Sincerely,
Charles J. Moore
Principal
•
Jack Anderson & Dale .Van Atta
3 of the CIA's " National Inteiilgence Da!Iy" newsletter on Feb.
3. :I'he newsletter Is probably thf
most!nterestlng,leutclrculated .
publlcatlonlnthecountry,upda\·
lng an upper ec)!eion of U.s.
oHtcals on the Intelligence news .
of the day.
The NID reported that un!dentitled m\ltlneers had comman· .
deered the "Storozbevoy," -a
modern guided missile des·
troyer, whil_e It was still In the
Soviet Baltic port of 'Riga . .The ·
mutineers tried to san the ship to
Sweden, 250 mlies away.
U.S. inteli!gence sources
iearnedaboutlt later because, as
the NID story relates, "recent
visitors (translation, 1 spies) to
Riga report that a mutiny took
place on a Soviet wadhip In the
Baltic Jut Novemb@r. •,• ·
Once the spies con~ the
date, the CIA trac~e(f back
· through Its .1Dtercepted Soviet
mUitary communications and
the story was flesbed out:
"Intercepted i:ommuqlcations
show unusual Soviet activity In
the Baltic on Nov. 9, probably In
reaction to the mutiny," the NID
reported. "sOviet bombers, using live weapons, .carried out
strikes on or near .the destroyer,
forCing lt to halt some 1;!!0 mUes
southeast of Stockholm.
~------------~------~~--<--------~
Doug Wilder ~
Jimmy Carter
.I .
'·
to the United States with his
WASHINGTON - A daring
~ash for Sweden by a mutinous
state · of·the·art nuclear
Soviet destroyer captain In 1975 • submarine.
was ' the germ of an Idea that
The Cold War techno-thriller
became "The Hunt for Red
seems almost obsolete In the age
October."
of glasnost. Ironically. because
Best-selling author Tom
the fictional story Is now so
Clancy told us recently that his
popUlar, the Soviets have begun
book, now a popular movie_, was
to admit a few details of the real
based loosely on the.incident. He
story. ·
knew a fraction of the story and
The Central Intelligence Agen·
let hts·tmag!nation run wild. We
cy' s most sensitive files· on the
have seen the secret Intelligence
true . story are still classified •
reports on th!! real Incident.
above "Top Secret."
1
Clancy's Imagination. gave. the
AithoUgl) the · attempted mut·
. U.S. tnteli!gence community . lny occurred on the morning of
more credit for being on top ofthe
Nov. 9, 1975, It was not until Feb.
fictional mutiny than they de3, 1976 that the CIA knew enough
serve In real life.
about It to tell then-Pres!.,ent
Ciancy:s story Is of a Soviet
Gerald Ford.
submarine captain who defects
The news went to Ford on page ,
SoFT -LiNe.
Clancy told us that a reporter
tor the Soviet government news·
paper Izvestia called from Mos,
cow recently to tell him that thl
government · was aknowledginl
that a mutiny similar to theRe~
October story "really did takt
place.!'
'
;
.weekly Statehouse
For too long, township govern:
ments In Ohio have held a second
class status compared with cities
and counties.
That, however, may soon
change 1111 legislation, House Bill
294, .granting townships limited
self-governing powers Is nearing
final approval by the General
Assembly.
The bill, approved by the
Senate this week, would give
township residents more tlex!bll·.
tty In how they are governed and
reduce the need for the General
Assembly to deal with the dozens
of bllls that Involve township
government.
As I reported to you In a weekly
report last November, the bill
would allow a board of township
trustees, by a majority vote, to
!
Any tQWDshlp seeking even /
minor changes must have th\.
state law changed.
.
The legislation, however, stU
would set~ reasonable limit'
on townships tliai..,opt for ho~
rule. Townships still would
prohibited from passing taxe
~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~: :~i
JackSon'S tersec_Verse. getS WOrse Ben Wflttenbe•
In the 1984 presidential campaign, the Rev. Jesse Jackson
began his lifetime running-forpresident career ·with terse
verse. Remember: "From the
guttermost to the· uppermost,"
"From the outhouse to the White
House," and "The text out of
context is pretext, ... and, later.
Jtbe Immortal "Super Tuesday Is
superficial."
Jackson's recent address to the
Democratic LeaCJershlp Council
In New Orleans shows signs of
reversion, Inversion, but not
conversion. It was rhyme urne
again, right there up In the title of
his speech: "Deilghted to be
United.'' Jackson m~sed one
more rhyme, but It was Inherent
·In his remarks: "re-Ignited.''
Jackson says. that the Democratic moderates should be con·
gratuiated. Why? Because, he
says, the moderates have finally
understood ihat Jackson was
right all along. Sweet. It Is the
political equivalent -of amorous
action from an anaconda, which
hugs so bard it hurts. Lett
unchallenged, It Is high caliber
Republican ammtinlt!on.
.
. In New Orleans, Jackson said
that he was for big defense cuts
all along, and now even moderates are tor cutl. See?
No. There Is a difference, and
It's not on!y tllat today moderate
Democrats are for moderate
defense cuts, and Jackson Is for
huge ones . ..
For, unlike moderate Democrata, Jackson was for massive
(25 percent) defense cuta when
the SOVIe\, military budget was
.. climbing, when the Sovi'e!S were
In Afghanistan, when the Soviets
owned the turf •nd corr<lded the
soul ot Eastern Europe, when the
Soviets were building more mls·
sUes, when the Soviets · were
financing arms and advisers to ·
communists In Central America,
wllen, unlike today, it · was'
Reagan, not Gorbachev, who
said the Soviet Union was an evil
I
empire.
While Jackson was In Navana
toasting communists - "Long
live Fidel Castro! Long live Che
Guevera! Long live Patrice
Lumumba!" he said- mod,erate
Democrats were saying there
was a real threat from the Soviet
Union and we ought to . stay
militarily strong. Neither red nor
· dead, said rhyming moderates.
But Jackson Is no Castro convert·
lble; he still pubi!cly applauds
his salute to ;Fidel In HavanJI.
Jesse Is also messy with the
facts about who Is tor what kind
of affirmative action. He
'preaches the.rulnous doctrine of
racial "set-a-sides," which In·
deed belongs In quota_marks. But
the Dl:.C's slatement of (lrlncl·
pies Issued In New Orleans goes
precisely the other way: "We
believe the promise of America Is
equal opportunity, not equal
outcomes.
The DLC statement also says:.
"We believe ·the 'government
· should respect Individual !Jberty
and stay out of our private lives
and personal decisions." Certainly -and unexpectlonal. But
Jackson, surely looking ahead to
the Ca1!1ornla primary, said he
.was very pleased because the
context ot,.the text reve#)ed that
the DLC, Just like Jackson, was
going out ot Its way to endorse
gay rlihts. Or, as a Jaclison-style .
rhyming, headline· might put l.t:
"Dems say Ires gay.'' But the
new chairman of the DLC, Gov.
Bill Clinton, said, "We never
even discussed that.''
Jesse Jackson has played a big
role In transforming the Image ot
Uberallam lnto·a ~ar-out polltlcar
movement, out of touch with the
view.s and values of most Amerl·
cans. That lpreadlng perception
about one pari of the Democrlltic
Party, hu hurt the whole party.
Now Jackson wanu to make the
cue that the whole party agrees
with his hyper-liberal views, and
By FRED LIEF
ship final and left no doubt as to
UPI Assistant Sports Editor
the premier team· in college
DENVER (UPI) -Turn on the
basketbalL
· "They' wmild have killed anybneon: Splash their name across
marquees along the strip. Hold
ody· tonight,··· Duke coach Mike
the action In the casinos.
Krzyzewskl said.
Nevada-Las Vegas .ts college
The · Rebels shredded Duke
during an 18-0 run In the second
basketball's NCAA champion.
And no one - not UCLA, not
half, silencing any prospects
Kentucky, not Indiana - ever · Duke had for at last )lllnnlng an
NCAA title.
gave such a blinding performance as these Rebels did
Such was the one-sldednes's Qf
Monday night In be!tlqg Duke
the contest that by the last few
103-73 In · the. most lopsided
minutes, the players on the
championship final since the
UNLV bench donned If-shirts· In
tournament began In 1939.
tribute to their coach.
"It's one of those games you
"Shark Takes a Bite," the shirt
dream about, •• UNL V coach
read on · the front . •'T.hey Just
Jerry >rarkanlan sa,ld. ' 'I'm as
Couldn't Run wltl! the Rebels,"
proud as I can be."
read the back of the shirt.
With Anderson Hunt, named
Ali too true.
the Final Four's outstanding
"We think we are a great
· player, ·scoring 29 points and · team," UNLV guard Greg AnUNL V applying a crackling · · thony said. ''But to say that we
defense, the Rebels hit college
are the best we just .can't say.
basketball's jackpot In !,heir first
Take Into consideration that they
appearance In a chalrlptonsh!p. weren't on the top of their game.
game.
•
We are the beSt team bec~~se we
·1ri a 'commanding show of
are the natlonal.champs.
strength, dlsc!pilne and sparkle,
Before this bombardment, the
biggest margin of victory In a
the Rebels set a record for most
points scored In the champion·
cbampionshlpgamecameln1968
The prosecutor said Sa blilj
Isolated the otflcersanddecelved
the crew Into following orders fol
a short dash to Sweden. Sa bl!n
was sentenced to death by tlrin~ •
squad. The Soviet officials ·dlq
not say whether the death sent}
ence was carried out.
·
·
buldl!ng codes. Townships alsj
wouldnlt have any authority t
pass laws regulating · huntln~
trapping, flsh!Jig and the use o ·
1
possession ot firearms.
If you have any question
concern this, or any other legis I~
tlon please do not hesitate to cal
me at (614) 466-8156 or write
Senator Jan Michael Long, Stat~
house, Columbus, Ohio 43215. '
·' that he Is now the new crats can publicly endorse hi(
mainstream.
views, which Is what Jackso1
Most elected Democrats at the say~ Is now going on - ani
DLC meeting publicly laughed It
accept the political consequen.
off as preposterous. It's not.
ces one more time. Or Demo
Jesse Jackson Is not preposter· crats, chaiienged now by Jack·
ous. He Is now the principal voice son's embrace, can pllbilcly sa~
of the American Left. . He dethey do not 'a ccept his views -:
serves to be taken seriously. That and reap the benefits.
.
means choosing up sides, pubAs a rhymster might put It:"
licly and substantively, within · Agree' and pay a tee, ll!sagree
the Democratic Party. Demoand be set free.
· .i
)
~
Berry's World ·
I
. DENVER (UPI) - NevadaLas Vegas was In another zone
Monday night.
It showed on the scoreboard,
where . the 'Rebels. demoliShed
Duke 103· 73 to win the national
championship, setting records
for points, margin of victory and
most thorough whipping.
The rout. started on the court In
an unexpected way - a zone
defense.
The Rebels have a long and
deserved reputation for their
.
.
NCAA Tournament Records
By United Press International
DENVER (UPI) - NCAA
tournament records set Monday
night In the '1990 championship
game between Nevada·Las Vegas and Duke:
.
·Championship Game
. Records
Daily Sentiuer
.
·. (lJ8P81411M)
. A'Divtsloa of Multimedia. Inc.
Member: United Press lnternattonal,
Inland Dally Preas Asscclatlon and the
Ohio Newspaifir. Aoaocjaflon. Natlo1181
Advertising
resentatlve, Branham
NeW spaper · Sa es, 733 Third. Avenue.
New York. New York 10017.
.~
POlt-lDEXTERE.D
POS'IMASTE~;
Send ad.t.ss
c~ges
to The D8tty SentinEl • . m Court Sf.,
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·
THEM.·
'
· SV.CBIPTJON Ro\TES
'
excellent man-to-man defense,
and Coach Jerry Tarkantan
usually Isn't happy when he goes
away from It. .
··
· But Tarkanlan, concerned with
fouls and looking for a way to
neutralize Duke's Inside duo of
Christian Laettner and · Alaa
Abdeinaby, went to the zone
unusually early MondaY. night.
Surprise, surprise.
Duke played as If the Blue
Devils had never seen such a
thing. And, considering how
NCAA basketball factS and fJgUres
Published every afternooo, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St .. Pomeroy: Olllo,. by the Ollto Valley Publtshlnll Com-y/ Mutttmedla, Inc.,
' Pomeroy, Ohio 45789, Ph. 992·2156. Second class poetaa:e paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
YES?
- Largest margin of victory:
30 points by UNLV. Previous
r--..fALLS MASTEICRAn TilES
record 23 set by UCLA against
North Caroilna In 1968.
~- Most steals, 16 by t,JNLV.
Previous. record 13 by Duke
against i.outsviile In 1986.
~ Most assists, 24 by UNLV.
Previous ' record 20 by Houston
against Georgetown In 1984. and
' Indiana against Syracuse ln 1987..
Final Four ·Recorclll
- Most thre"'polniers In Final
Four games, 18 ' by UNLV.
Previous record, 14 by.Oklahoma
In 1988.
.
- Best three-point shooting
percentage, .621 (18·of·29) by
UNi.. v. Previous rec<ird .600 by
Indiana In 1987.
- Most assists, 44 by UNLV.
Previous record 42 by Loulsviile ·
In 1986 and Michigan In 1989.
·
Tournament Record
- Most points 'scored In· a
tournament, 571 by UNLV. Previous record 552 by Oklahoma In
1986.
lfAI7miCIIAFr
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L-------------~---------~-·
NCAA
All-Tournament Team
1>ENVER (UPll - The 1990
NCAA ali-tournament team as
selected by media members and
toUFnament officials at the Final
Four
.
•
x-Ande~I!On Hunt, soiJhomore,
guard, Nevada-Las Vegas.
Stacey · Augmon, junior, for·
ward, Nevada-Las Vegas.
Larry Johnson, junior, for·
ward, Nevada-Las Vrgas.
Phil Henderson, senior, guard,
Duke.
Dennis Scott, junior, forward,
Georgia Tech.
.
x-named tournament outstand,
lng player.
f
If~
Radial TINs for.Every Motoring Need
BJ Corrtor or Molca' Boote
81NGLEOOPY
•
PBICE
_Dally ................... ... .... .. ....... 25 Cents
... ... .
DENVER (UP!) - Anderson
verted three straight steals by
Hunt, mired In a shoot!ng.slump
Stacey · Augmon In to baskets at ·
muc-h of the NCAA Tournament,
the other end. When Hunt
says he's played better than his
swished hls second 3·pointel' of
championship game perfor- the spurt to give the Rebels a ·
75-47 lead with 13: 14 to play.
· when UCLA beat North Carolina
sure, the Rebels, threw In a blt of mance Monday night. ,
His coach was quick to dis·
Duke was fln!she<j.
78-55.
,
zone.
"Anderson played just about
· 'Th.ls also marked the first time
UNLV. whlch played. In two · agree with that assessment.
Hunt scored a team-high 29
the best bailgame )Je could play,
the winning team reached 100 • previous Final Fours without
points. And history caught up to advancing to the. championship points and w,as !he offenslv~
on the defensive end and on the
offensive end, " said ·teammate
Duke on that count. In 1964, game, finished at 35-5 and gave catalyst In Nevada-Las Vegas
· UCLA scored 98 points In beating the se!lson a sense of symmetry, astonishing 103-73 victory over
Larry Johnson.
Hunt also harassed Duke's
Duke, a record for points by a . having been voted No. l In Duke In the NCAA championship
game: ijunt. who scored 20 points
freshman_ point guard Bobby
winning team that stood U!ltli t!lls · preseason.
.
night.
Duke, 29·9, was led by Phil In the si!m!flnals against Arkan· ' Hurley to the point of frustration
most of the night. Hurley missed
'·' Their haifcoilrt.defense Is the, Henderson with 21 points, while sas, was named the outstanding
all three of hiS field goal at tempts
best tn the country," Krzyzews!d Christian L·a ettner added 15 and player of the tournament.
But the 6-(oot-1 sophomore
and committed five turnovers.
said. "It dictated the whole Alaa Abdeinaby 14. The Blue
"I was really concentrating on ·
basketball game. We could not Devlls ~ere betrayed by the guard said he wouldn't rankJlte
performance as hts· personal
Bobby Hurley ' and not really'
overcome their defense."
three-point sho~. making 1 of 11.
concentrating on my offense,"
Hunt, whose three-point shoot·
' 'There was never any bal· b es.t
"No, butthls was one of them ,"
Hunt said. ' 'Fortunately I hlt the
tng carried the Rebels In the_ ance," Henderson said. "They
semifinals against Georgia Tech, played great and dominated the · said Hunt, who was Immediately . · open shots."
interrupted by hls coach, Jerry
"Anderson ·guards the ball
was 12of16'fromthefioorand-4of game."
.
· awfuiiy well," Tarkanlan said.
7 from tl!ree-po!nt range.
Duke did !1'10re than most Tarkantan.
"This was the best big game
"Weworkedon ·Andersonailday
Ali-America Larry Johnson
expected thls year, bul this game
(Sunday) to stay In front of
delivered 22 points and 11 remade .for another case 'of Final he's ever played," TarkanJan
Hurley, so he couldn't lob pass to
· bounds. Anthony had 13 points. Four futility for the Blue Devils. said.
(Alaa) Abdelnaby .
Hunt made 12 of 16 shots from
They have now played In the
and Stacey Augmon 12 and the
Hunt said he would give the
Rebels shot 61 percent from the
Final Four three straight years · the field, and was particularly
most outstanding player award
· floor.
and In four of the last five. And devas.tating on the Rebels'
to his mother In Detroit, who has
The game was billed as a
every time they have come up fastbreak.
received all of his other basket·
man-t~rman 'showdown between
empty.
"The credit fails to our defense
L..
ball
hardwa,..,.
.
Uhes was the third straight .
two of the country's best defen0 ur
Huht.
that,"·
said
"It
really
hasn't sunk in yet,". ·
for
slve teams. But this was no . game In which Duke faced a
made our offense, and
he said. ·
k!IIer defensive team. First Con· defense
showdown. This was ·Strictly a
we got a few fast-break buckets." .
massacre. Aitd, for good meanectlcut, then Arkansas. The
Hunt, · whose back·tO·back 3·
·
strain appeared all too clear.
pointers against Arkansas bro)!e
Nothing was more telling .than the Razorbacks' backs on Satur·
the 18·0 bUrst that began with day, made 4 of his 7 long-range
Duke trailing 57-47 and 16 }-2 attempts · In the championship
minutes to go. Then Hunt went to
·game.
Vegas played It, that was pre· . work, scoring 12 polnt.s In the run.
"It was a big game. and I knew
On consecutive plays he teamed · I had to make my open shots, "
clseiy the case.
·
·
··'We could. not overcome their with Augmon for Iayups off the said Hunt, who had been cr!tlcdefense," said Duke Coach Mike break. His three-pointer put
lzetl> for his outside shootlng
UNLV up 75-47 with 13:171eft .
Krzyzewsk!. ''I think what they
much of the season.
There was no stopping the
do so weil, whether It's man or
He came Into the Final Four
zone, ·is they are so wide. They Rebels then. If this were black· ·making just 42 percent of hiS field
jack, the house would have
cover the width of t.h e court and
goals · and 33 percent of · hls
kindly asked the cu~tomer to ·3-polnters. Hunt punctuated ·hls
don't let you <)o anything.
leave.
MVP performance with 12 points
"After you have any 18.0 run
In UNLV's 18.0 second-half run
"And tonight, they were ?O you have to feel you are in
that blew the game open.
·
fresh, ·so excited, so focused. control," Anthony said. "It was a
· He started the spurt "with' a
.They were unbeatable. They ·pretty good feeling to look up and
, 12-foot jumper, and then con·
would have k!lied anybody see that lead."
tonight."
.
it would not he long before I
~~~~~~~~~=:~:-:=~====::--,•
The Rebels can their zone 1he
Rebel
players
were
wrestling
In
"amoeba. "'So named for the way jubilation at mid-court. As for
'
It sUpposedly spreads. But ~rom Tarkanlan, he simply I,)Ut on his
Duke's view, the amoeba was 'sports jacket and cracked a
more like an octopus.
smile.
Zone defense $tarts UNLV:rout
.·.
COMPUTER!
.I
..
'~:he
ABOUT THOSE
EMBARRASSING
FlLES lN THE
Hunt is tourney MVP .
Rebels :fip Blue Devils fOr .NCAA tide
r~port _ _s_en._la_,_n_M~_Lo--;,
adopt ' a resolution letting the townships. ~erliaps oniy'20 or 30
voters decide whether their town- . of the state's most populous
ship should have a home rule townships would want to take on
form of government.
the .new respons!bli!tles assoTownships that opted for home . ciated with a home rule form of
rule would be required to estabgovernment. For those town·
lish pollee and tire departments,
ships, however, that are growing
and contract for regular safety and whose residents desire. more
services with a neighbOring city,
effective government at the local
township or county sheriff. Town- level, home rule Is an exciting
sblps also would be required to option. Currently, about 30 to 40
hlr,e a township Iaw director . .
percent' of Ohio's people I!ve In
The law director would serve the state's 1,31~ townships. They
as a legal adviSor to the township qeslre the option to exercise
trustees, the township adm!nls·
more control over the future at
trator and all other township the Iocall!!vel without having to
officers. Any of these people turn to Columbus for help every
could require written opinions or time some minor change In local
Instructions from the law dlrec·
law Is required.
·
tor In matters connected with
Currently, township trustees
their ottlclal duties.
only have. those powers that are
Home rule wouldn't be for ali .expressly granted by state law.
champlo118hlp trophry after defeating Duke,, 103-73·, In the
champlo118hlp game at Denver Monday night. (UPI)
NATIONAL CHAMPIONS - UNLV' Coach Jerry Tarkanlan,
center, ancl his players accept the 1990 NCAA b1111kethall
·on Feb. Z1 of this year, thl .
military prosecutor's office 1\
Moscow confirmed the attemPj ·
.ted mutiny on the Storilzhevoy·
but gave few detailS btber thar,
the name of the chief mutineer;
He wu Capt. Valery Sabiln, tht
ship's deputy commandini
officer.
I
a. ..
FIGHTS FOR LOOSE BALL - Duke;s PhD Henderson ($)
.outllgbls UNLV's Larry Johnaoa (4) and Davl~ Butler (R) fora
loose ball during their · NCAA Champlonlhlp game Moatlay.
Henderson led the losers with 21 points. (UPI)
'
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�..
Pege-4-The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday. Aprl 3, 1990
Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio
Baseball owners, ·union set,
·Openiilg Day roster at 27
~~~~ J
..
,,.
.. SIGNS BASEBALL CARDS- Cleveland Indian
(22) Cudy Maldouado, (outfielder), sip bue-
ball cards for the Tucson fans before tile start of
Monday's game.
Scoreboard__...
.
Results
EXIIIIIt'ION STANDINGS
Amerkl•LeiiM
Te.,..
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W L Pd.
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4
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Cll•l.t&e ....: Slped pard Mlcla.el
WIUtams lOr remalllkr et aeUoa.
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apllt1. w1• rMetwr CIIU't'IICt We lither•
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aad ce,_,..,Mk
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i!•r.rtJ_.. .btho.;y Parker -•r-ln&
back PMI1el&
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Los Mltle.va. New l'o ... ( AL),U Fort
LlullleniM, Fla.,l:l5p,m.
.
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Pldllllel..la .............. .......... l
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........... .........., .... ............ 1
s .a1
· Fla., t:tl p.m.
Pli.. del ..... VI. Torollf;o, at 0uM.IIo
P1a., 1:11 p.m. ..
aad..at WI. Hou.loa. a&llltlllm.mte,
t:..~~:~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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BIW. P~11011.
ll'ta. , t :H p.m.
New ~·rta INL) w. MoMrell, at Weal
Pllm ..lie.. Pia., I :IS p.m.
MlillnCI&IvLanto .. aaWIWrRawa,
Fla., 1:11 p.m.
'
. . . . . lltJ n . DdNit, at Lakelud,
Jl1a., t:JI p.m.
.t.tlula va. Bal&lmtre. at Mt1111l. I:S$
.p.m.
Clnelud n . Seattle, at Terape, .Vi&.,
>:Hp.m.
Mllwullee n. O&ldaad, at P~~·
l:llp.m .
·
SM Frucltco va. <JIIcap (NL) , at
M._, Aria., S:H p.m.
Clerl .... ll, . . . s
U.rellll. . . . . . ,
.. a.- Cll:rf. ao•oa~
......
Oewa..MI.B•Fruelltot
Clllcap (NL) I, Mllwau"-ee . t, 11
Seattle I, Oaklud t
B• Die• I. Cal .. nlal
SM Dlep VIL Cillllfaral~ at P aim
· Sprl•p, CaiU., 4: 15p.m.
MllwaU.efln SeaUie, at Temp!, Arb.,
1:11 p.m.
N-'110N.4.L BASKE,I'BALL ASIIOC
MGIIdQ' Ganft .
,.__ 8, Qltap(.4.L) I
......,. I. New Yerl CAL) I
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.... ., S~terteTIU•diO•
., u.... rn. ......-.-.. -.~
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adlmON: - O,U.•• plklltn C•rt
Bellll- Ulll
S.D. ldelller I~&&•
. . ~ -'IIIJmlllll Dwrell Miller ... .I.!H
at., ... _..__.
Mca.lll!l ... e•~wa.r .. a.._&.
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1:1..........
Clllk... (AI.) ~ Mild wah·ere ••
,.,.._. ,. .. Du .. fer die , • ..,.. ol
th'l•lllllm llle ............ releue.
• Odl:ap (NL) - SeM .......... Garf
No pma ~ehedlled
'
Tw!edq Galnl!ll
Clevelu•u New York,, 7: • p.m.
• • • • at Pt!Uadel ..la. 1:st p.m.
Goi*a&tate al Orkado, 1: • p.m.
IIM&oa aa Det roll 8: Jl p.m.
. . . . . M Chk:q:o 8: Sl p.m .
Ml.-eso&a at s .. AlltOIIio, K: U p.m.
Cb•IOite .a Ulall, 1:• p.m.
Bal... at P.ltof'alli, II: 3tp.m.
LA . Clippers II S~enmtat., 11: 18
p.m .
.
Portlaad al Suttle, 11: H p.m.
NUL Pl-.vofiA
• lieN ctf Se\len
Dhill. . Semlft ... a
Campbell Cct.-8re~e
Norrll Dl\'lslen
v .... lolewaefllleAmerk•Aeeocl•
till (A.U) ........._.Ala An• ...
ca&cW 81c:lWI..._ to 01.-..... ol&lle
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walvell,ekller
hll&ular; llnle.--.leml.unlf!II:ID
... 'hM IICIOrM& ftrll b-mu ltH
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Dllrtll - Seal ,lk ..en S.t Alllftd
. . ....,. N•Rl•lleelcllerPIIIICiark
1o Telea tf tilt l.aer..aa.• Leape
(AAA): .eat ,.._. Da"e Ric~ lo
....... o.&. tl die
Leape
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£•••
...... CM)'-Itele.edpkiM!rTerl')
t..•ll a.t ~•her Ell He.-..; l~?ded
pllcller lerrr Dt•Oie.. Gal• DriJWH lor
pic.._. 01"1"1 E~f!I'WD• ud ....,..d
.........__'""•·.................
~,...
'I'll: Mempllls ol die S.IAern
....ue -
.
.
.
Placd llilelller P•l
au.....vL Clllcqo
AprU t' - Mlaaese.. at <lllcaao. R: SS
p.m.
April I - Mlaaettola at Clllcaao, 8: 35
p.m.
.
April I - CUc:ap at Mhuae~ota. lUll
p.m.
TOroato n. St. Loule
Aplll .. - Tortllloalk. Lollil, 1: IS p.m .
April I- Terolllloa&SI. 1.o•.1: 15p.m.
Aplllll!.... Sl. Lo.&l Tot'OIIlo, 1: SSp.m.
&nylle Dhbloa
Loll M . . M ,,., c.Jpry
AprU -1 - Lo1 Aa•laaj Calpry, !I: Sll
p.m.
~
. _April I - Lo1 An •Ia .U Cal pry,ll: 35
p.m.
AprU tl- CaiiM"Y etLow AAp!l.-, 10:315
p.m .
• Wlnnlpea n . Edmenton
"PI11 -1- WlnlllpeJ&( Edmonto., 9: ~
p.m .
April 6 - Wlnnlperat. Eclmon&o., 1:81
p.m.
•
,
AprilS - Edmoalonat Wlnnlper, 8: 01
p:m .
Walt~~~
New Ytrll (ALl -w.tve•)tlle~terf'nt
hlwr .......... 0...• 0..-.:la;
........Iter ......... ,.~ .., ••
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0,._4 utelter &.,
stettllleat. .......... Gtr..... PeM,
"<inltWI ...... II ... ..._,o•.rlaNtr
.a... LM......... pie.... Mf .. Pfftl
... on... • • t• t.•w•l! ., 1111o
Amerte• AIIIOIIIIHIA.U).
Teue - 'IN•ell Jle._ Drew Ball let'
Mellll'l!!lf llrl.,..llrrh8,a.MIIl; e&.-d
•cllklller AIHb Allu... •• llll..,.le.,.. ""
'contrat.t; •at ,ek:IMr • • • -'rlelbel"''fl•
Oklllloma CIIJ all tile Amtrka .4.•eocl• ,
Uon(AAA).
'
.•
.
C.llflf'
.
Ml.-nl - Named Leo~ HamUion
mm'l b... db Ill COBCh.
• !lynu.- ue - FoGtball qllll'lfl'back BUI
ScUrr teft lie lum.
·
COnleruce
Pal riel Dlvi»lun
lllan*r · ·~ . \T Ran~rs
Apllj ll- NY hlanderut NV IIMitrA.
'J:IIp.m.
· .
Aprt11-'NY llilanden·aa NY Ran~ra.
K:31 p.m.
.
Aprtlll- NYRuprsaiNYis-..dera.
1",:Dp.m. ·
.
n. Nt• .I err)'
' Aprt) I - W..WII!Ilon at New Jener,
l:ts p.m.
•
AprU ,7- Wublftllonat New Jei'JI!)",
'l:ts p.m.
"Prtl t - New ler~ry at W_.lnpo..,
l:JI p.m.
1 -'d..,. Dlil'llliltn
ftai1ford vs. Bos\On
.-\prU S- .udold .U Bellon, '7 : 35p.m.
Ap111l- •anrolldaiBo•&on. '7 : 05p.m,
-'Prill-..,._" Harllonl, 7: 35p.m.
Mollllrul \'1. .... .,..
·
·
April 5- ~lllltftalat BuU.to, 1: S5
w••..••
p.m.
.
April t-Molllft<al atllaft ..o, 1: 35p.m.
.-I'll t-a.llaloa&Melllreal,l: •p.m.
Parker; will run for Rio
•
· Ryan Parker, oneofthe top two
distance runners to be produced
by Wheelersburg High School,
will a:ttend the University of Rio
Grande in the fall and will run
cross country and track,
Bob Willey, who coaches both
Funning teams at Rio Grande,
. said Parker has been a ' 'strong
runner"· for the Pirates during
his high school career.
· ·
"We're very excited to have
him with us, " W!lley said.
Parker feels he will be put to
the test under Willey's
stewardship.
"At Rio c';rande, I'll have to
·work to be anything," he said.
The son of Ri!ndall and Billie .
Parker of Wheelersburg, Parker
will be at tending Rio Grande on
an athletic and Army ROTC
. scholarship, W!Uey said. He
intends to major In business
management and brings a 3.7
grade point average with him to
the southeastern Ohio campus.
He Is looking at a possible career
Ill Army aviation.
At Wheelersburg, Parkefls the
only four-time Southern Ohio
Conference champion in cross
country. He is also the Southeast
District champion in the sport,
' along with placing third In the
regional competition and being
named to the first team, All·
State. He Is the winner of the
most Individual championships
in the school's cross country
history.
In track, Parker Is a three-time
SOC champion in the 3200 meter
run and has heen the SOC
champion in the mile twice. A
regional qualifier for the past
three years in the 1600 and 320().
· he Is•the school record holder in
the 3200 meter relay and has
recorded 25 individual wins in the
1600 and 3200 events in ~ track
invitationals of13 or more teams
entering his senior·campaign.
Hlsotherhlghschoolactivities
Include one year in basketball,
the Spanish Club and partlcipation In the junior and senior class
plays.
-Funderburke
leaves school
second time
By JIM SLATER
UPI Sports WrHer
Former Indiana University
basketball player Lawrence Funderburke Is missing from -his
second college In four months,
continuing a pattern of skipping
classes and unexplained dlsappe_arances for the Columbus,
· Ohio, native.
·
· "I'm pretty fed up with him,",
Jack Pack,' coach at St. Cath.a·
rine College in Springfield, Ky.,
said Monday. Funderburke ·
turned up at St. Catharine after
leaving ·the Hoosiers last
December.
·An Indianapolis television report Friday· said Funderburke
had re-enrolled at Indiana and
was hQping to return to coa~h
Bob Knight's team after a
meeting between Knight •. Funderburke and the player's
mother. ·
"To my knowledge, anything ·
that has been reported Is totally
. untrue," said Kit Kllngelhoffer,
Indiana's sports Information
director.
The Indiana Dally Student '
repqrted the sc hoot registrar's
office had received all summer
registrations; and .Funderburke
was not among the students
enrolled.
The same day the television
report aired, Funderburke dlsap·
peared from St . .Catharine, al·
, though Pack said Funderburke's
persdn!!l Items remain In his
campus residence.
By Uatted Pr- IDternatl.onal
ije also has a sore shoulder and
Major leag~~e owners and the . Brewer officials said the P,Pssibil·
players uniOn ~pded their wran· tty o( performing arthroscopic
gllng over the size of the Opening surgery on his right shoulder
Day rosters Monday, agreeing to would be discussed.
use TT players through April 30.
Elsewhere, Cincinnati edged
The two sides had reached an Boston 7-6 and 6-5 in split-sguad
Initial . agreement on the 27- decisions, Los Angeles nipped
player lbnlt when the lockout Atlanta 2·1, Detroit trounced
ended March 19. However, last Minnesota 10-2, Toronto defeated
week negotiations between the St. Louis 7-6 and Philadelphia
· two sides liroke down on how the beat Pittsburgh 1HI. .
service would be counted for the
' 6-6
extra players carried for the first
Reds 7-5, Red Sox
three weeks 'of"the season,
At Winter Haven, Fla., Keith
"Considering the time In- Lockhart stroked a t..To-out RBI
volved to get the·players ready,
single In the ninth Inning Man·
this Is a _good Idea, especially
day, lifting the Cincinnati Reds to
from the pitching standpoint,"
a 7·6 victory over the Boston Red
·said Dodger coach Bill.Russell. . Sox· in a split-squad exhibition
"We now have the opportunity to
game.
keep from taking a toll on our
Mike Roesler picked up the win
pitching staff and to give some for .Clncinnati, which collected 13
players a chance to play in the
hits. Boston reliever Jeff Rear·
. big leag~~es."
don gave·up three ~Ingles in the
· The owners and players were
ninth.
.
_. worried aboutlnjurles that might
, The Red Sox had l2 hits, three
result due to the shOrtened sprln!l by Phil Plantler and two each by
tra,lning.
·
·
.Angel Go~alez and Danny Heep.
'This is the best way to do It,"
The Reds took a 2-0 lead In the
said Dodger Infielder . Mickey second' Inning against Boston
Hatcher. "We were looking at a , star.ter · Wes Gardner, who
situation where the risk of Injury
worked four Innings .
would be very serious. This takes
Plantterdrove in the first Red
a lot of the pressure off. Vfe can Sox run with a two-out single In
save a lot of wear and tear on the the second, and a home run by
· pitching staff."
Gonzalez tied the game 2-2 in the ·
In other news, Paul Molitor,
bottom of the third.
the Milwaukee Brewers' leadoff
Cincinnati regained a 3·2 edge
hitter )Vbo signed a _$3 million In ·the fourth but three walks and
contract·durlng the winter; was
singles by Gonzalez and Plan tier
placed on the 15-day elsa bled list put Boston ahead 4-3.
with a brQken thumb. Molitor, 3~,
A solo hoine run by Reds third
can not rfijoln the chjb .until April baseman Luis Quinones tied the
17 but probably, will miss more score in the fifth. Cincinnati took
tlme, the team said.
a 5-4 lead when Lockhart doubled
~
.
100 meter In 10.81 and "the 200
'meter in 21.75, TilT\ Murphy
finished flrst.ln the hjgh jump at 6
feet, 6 Inches ·and "the .4-by-400
relay team won with a time of
3:21.8.
.
Other Individual finishes saw
James Peck sixth In the steeple·
chase, 10: 03.4; Mark Cline, second in the 1500 meter, 3: lj8.6;
Mike Hlll, fifth in the pole vault,
12 feet; Tr.a vis Rambo. fifth in
the discus, 138 feet, 3 inches;
Altman -leaves Marshall t~
accept Kansas. State postl .
"We're having a press confer·
morn·
ing at 9: 30 to announce our ne'l'
coach but we haven't confirmed
or relea~d any namE1." said
Kenny Mossman, Kansas State
sports information director.
•'There hasn't been,any formal
announcement. that he's going to
be the next coach,". Mossman
said of AI tman, who for three
years was an assistant coach at
Kansas State under Kruger.
Altmsn left in April 1989 for
Marshall.
Marshall has been .put on
NCAA probation 'tor twli years,
beginning with the 1990,91 season
for violations under a previous
coach. The violations involved
Improperly giving cash and
jewelry to players, as well as
tllegal housing and loans. Ali 10
infractions, which occurred before Altman was named coach,
were reported to th.e NCAA by
Marshall.
enc.~ tomorrow. rTuesday)
·
. PlUS TAX & DEPOSIJ
THIS W.EEK O~LY
HAWK'S
76
fLAilS, OliO
1UPfiiS
..·..-:.',.
.
....
•
<
· . Rutland Garden Club
conducts meeting
Ann Elizabeth Turner was the.
. hostess and Binda Diehl ,was
co-hostess for the recent meet•'·
ing of the Rutland Garden Club.
Mrs. Turner had devotions
with a poem, "The Time to be
Happy is Now !"' Roll call was
answered with ''My First Spring
Bloom. "
An invitation was read to a
dll)ner {or .voll\llteers that go to ·
the development center for ther· ·
apy programs:
.
,.,
Max imum depos-it S99,999.99. Substantial penaJty for early Jiithdrawal.
'nterest p~id to Printipal and CO(Jlpounded w~kly. Rates c-ffecrin ~rch 9, 1990,
alJ d subject to ch angt_~ ithout notice. YJc-ld assumes th ar uated rate- .remains
.
constant for a full ye-ar with no w ithdrawals of imc-rest or principal.
THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPA.r{Y
The Bank That ·Makes Thinga Happen.
GaiUpolla
The second annual varietY
show of the Chester Elementary
Student Advisory Council will be
held on AprU 20, 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Chester- school.
Residents are Invited to participate wltli comedy routines,
singing, dancing. or p~ying
JllUslcal Instru11)ents. No competition Is involvecj in the variety
'S how, since It Is an open stage for
an evening of fun 11nd community
involvement. All proceeds will be
used to benefit the students at
Chester Elementary.
..
.
, Call or visit you nearest
Central Trust office for details today. ,
Middleport
Variety siJow slated
out searc bing, and taking time
out to decide what to toss and
what notto toss. After all, whatlf
I should throw out some of my
good stuff and"noteven realize It?
Let me make one thing perfectly clear. I do admire the few
people I know who advise me that
~
they 've filed their return and
r~?volution,
. .
already have their $630 refund, in
you'd· even be
their little hot hands. Thill's
willing to start
amazing, Grace.
It?
But · me :.... r find the whole
. . It happens every spring - the
birds begin to sing -:- .and the income ·tax experience stagger·
Nothing 'has changed
Income ~x deadline smacks yo_u lng.
In the face. The singing birds we towards slmpllcatlon that I can
like, butit's the tax deadline that see. I mean y,ou still have to
sets me Into endless motion of complete ~hedule C, but before
trying . to locate all of those that you have to complete Schebusiness papers which I handled dule D and put that Information
so carelessly during all of last on Form 444 before you can get
year. Somehow I always plan to back to Schedule C. And that's
put"them Ina slngu)~rlocationso only scratching the ~surface.
Now I hope doling your final
·I can put my hands right on them
when the time eomes . Oh well, pinning down period you won't
you know· about ihe best laid have to contact a government
agency . If you do , I hope you
. plans of mice and men.
So -It's through desk drawers, have better luck than I did. The
cubby holes, behind furniture, lady at my agency told me I
under the rug and a scramble didn't understand what she was
through a flllng cabinet. : Yes, I saying. And not to be outdone, I
even have a filing cabinet. It's advised her that it seemed t'o be a
lull of good stuff that I never look two way ·street. I could have
at - except between Aprl11 a11d added that communications are
, Aprl115. The big problem Is that really my bag and If I weren't
it has four· drawers - why do I understanding her, then who is?
feel I'd be better oft it there were We ended on a flat note of
dropping the whole question and ·
just one?
It was mY vague' understand- letting the chips fall where they
ing that flUng the income tax may. Why ,do I feel )hem hitting
return was going to becom~ a · me already?
I want to wish you the best of
Now
much simpler matter.
luck in getting It altogether In the
· where did I get that Idea?
next couple of weeks. If you have
Mayb~ If .an Individual works
any
problems that are out of the
one job and receives one pay·
routine
in filing your return, I
check and the employer. takes out
you too are going to be
suspect
the correct amount of Income
feeling
the need to join the
tax, it's a piece of cake.
revolutionor starlit . After aJI,
However, for those of us who
ihey
dolt'
in
London.
Why then oh
dabble into this It's a different
why.
can't
we?
.ball game. ' So the chore of
A part of the bottom line that I
locating the necessary papers
becomes a major emotional come up with, ;mnually, Is the
upheaval: Allclr~umstances con- opinion that Uncle Sam has a
sidered, I feel that I should J;le knack for squelching any ainbi·
very rich -surely there ought to tlous attitudes that we might
have. Perhaps, he wants all of us
big rewards for dabblers.
However, rich I" ain't ....:. I ·ain't to be solely dependent on .him.
even well to do. In fact, you 'd However, won't that make It a bit
have to siretch a point to say that ' difficult when he has none of us to
I'm even doing weli. I've always pay the frejght? I basically don't
heard that the rich have what object to paying taxes, but I do
they call loopho)fs Jn the t!lx object to the monumental gostructure, so they're okay. ·. We vernmental waste: Wouldn't It
, unrlch ones seem to be the ones be nice lor our officials to spend
our tax money as frugally as they
with the problems.
I don't know about you, but . expend their own resources?
, Let me put my feelings this
getting ready to file the Income
tax return .Js about "the most way as I go through the fact·
traumatic experience In my life assembling stage:
I rage and I cringe,
.that I can count on annually. It's
And I !eel like going on a binge;
during this particular tlm'e that I
I rant and I curse,
get thislnsatlable urge to get rid
;Cause Uncle Sam Is in my
of a few hundred meaningless
purse;
.
pieces of paper and catalogs However, I know lcannot stall~
and this comes about because
Or Uncle might decide to take
after hours of searching, I come
It all.
to the reallza"tion that I can't find
. ..Do Keep Smlllng .
the necessaries because of all of
· the unnecessarles. I get strung
The 7-Day-Premium CD
is another example of our
Commitment To Customers.
448:0902
· Tuesd~. April 3, 1990
·Page 6
I
By BOB HOEFLICH
Does anyone out there share
- . this big,feeling of re~olution that
strikes between
Aprll1 and Apgll
15 """' the feeling
that you not only
want to join the
the flexibility and liquidity of a CD
.Which is automatically renewa:ble.and redeemable
at .e ach 7 day_anniversary
992-8881
Da~ly S.e ntinel
The taxman.cometh
Murphy , 'third In the 1io meter
high hurdles, 15.08;. Aaron Grlf·
fin, fifth In the 400 meter, 51.03; .:
Cline, third In the 800 meter,
1:56. 7; Blaise Reader, seventh In
the high jump, 6 feet, 2 inches; ·
and VIc Austin, eighth In the high
jump, 6 feet.
;
In addition, Murphy was third
In the 400 meter IH, 55.85;
Rambo, flft~ in the shot, 45 feet,
11 inches; and Bob Fritz, sixth In
the 5000 meter, 15:43.9. The
Redmen placed fourth in the
4-by-100 relay, 43.5.
In preliminary events; Murphy
was first in the 110 meter high
hurdles at 15.32, and Norris
placed first in the 100 meter
preliminary at 10.9.7. Brii!D Bailey was eighth in the 100 meter
preliminary at 13".6.
For the women, Renee Peck
was first in the 3000 meter at
10: 18.7 and placed second in the.
1500 . meter at 4:47.1. Sherry
Cooke was third in the triple
jump at 32 feet, 5¥. inches,
Bonnje Evans was fourth In the · ·
5000 meter at 18: 16.1 and Leslie ·
Lauvray finished eighth in the
200 meter at 27.98.
Lauvray also finished second
In the 100 meter preliminary at
13.93.
.
Sf!hools competi)lg against Rio
Grande included Otterbein,
Baldwln~Wallace, · Ohio North·
ern, Mount Union, Musklngum,
Heidelberg, Denison, Kenyon,
Ohio Wesleyan, Wittenberg, Ash·
land, Cedarville and Wllminl!'ton.
The teams will be Idle until
April14, when J:!:l~Grande bosts
the Mld -Ohlo'Y Conference
Championships.
$10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
·The
Beat o/the Bend
.I:'.QIOV
Di.'
;EPlER
. 1/16 OZ. 1011LIS
.
and Ron "Oester . singled off
Boston's Tom Bolton.
· A leadoff double ·by rookte
Mickey Plna, a walk, and.baCk·
to-back singles by Planti~r and
Randy Kutcher p)lt the Red Sox
ahead '-5.
Consecutive hits by""the Reds '
Jeff Reed, Jeff Richardson and
Leo Garcia tted the game at 6-61n
the eighth.
At Plant City, Fla., Eric Davis
went.J for3, lncludl)lga three-run
homer, and Cincinnati pounded
out 15 hits .in the other split-squad
game. Boston received two homers from rookie Tim Naehrlng.
Dodgen 2, Braves 1 .
At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Dave Hansen's double-play
grounder in the eighth Inning
scored Lenny Harris. from second base and lifted the Dodgers.
Ernie Whitt hit a solo. home run
for the Braves, who stranded
eight runners.
Tigers 10, Twins 2
At Orlando, -Fla., Jim Lindeman bad two triples and a single
and two RBI for Detroit. .
Blue Jays 7, Cardinals 6
At St. Petersburg, Fla., Kelly
Gruber singled borne the tiebreaking run and Fred McGriff
lifted a sacrifice fly to cap a
tWO· run seventh inning for Toronto. Pedro GuerrerQ had three
hils and thre
. Louis.
PhlU
11, Pllr&ra-11L
At Ciea
ter, Fla., .Darren
Daulton, Ricky Jordan and Dave
Hollins each homered to lead the
Pl)iladelphla. The Phillles had 16
hits while the Pirates added up
.
.13.
.
In what Coach Bob Wllley
called a "good weekend," the
· University of Rio Grande men's
track team placed second in the
Otterbein Track and Field In vita·
tionsl Saturday at Westerville.
The women's team ' netted
seventh · Jllace In the · second
outing for both teams this season.
The men scored 98~ points and
the women had 38.
The Redmen took first place In :
four events: Eric Norris won the
-
!By The Bend
.
_ , . -•'.?..·•
- :-:·:..: ·--· ·~ ..;. .
Rio Grande men's track team nets
second .place, ~omen 7th at meet
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Dana -Altman new "home"
Monday night, leaving behind his '
job as ,fiead basketball coach at
"He left Friday and no one has . Marshall University to accept a
siinllar one at Kansas State .
seen him since," Pack said.
' For the 32-year-old Altman, It .
"He's missed this ,whole day of
means
returning to his alma
classes . It has been a habit of his
mater
where
he served three
for the past three Mondays. I've
seasons
under
the
man he repla·,
heard the sanhe rumors but I
ces
Lon
Kruger;..:
can't verify them one way or
Marshall University sports of·
another. I don't know anything
fiCials
had dlsavawed any knowI·
either. If he has (gone bacl~ to
edge
of
Altman's departure until
.Indiana), he's completely pulled
·
late
In
the afternoon. By then,
the wool .over our eyes. He hasn't
rumors
were thick, and Altman,
said anything to anybody about It
his office, found a
upon
leaving
here. Not a word.
knot
of
reporters
milling outside.
· .','My question is, how is he
It
was
then
Altman
confirmed
going to transfer there when he's
his
decision
'to
accept
the
post at
not even going to classes here ..
Kansas
State,
saying
be
was ·
How can be be eligible?''
"excited"
about
the
change
.
Regarding Funderburke's abAltman said he looks lorward
sences, Pack ·said, ''That has
.
.
to
coaching In the Big Eight,
kind of been a pat tern too !n the
leading
"a t;>lgger school In a
past month. It's something we
bigger
conferenc_
e."
don't allow here."
Under
Altman,
the Thundering
Funderburke _!lisappeared
Hen!
struggled
to
a 15-13 recoi'JI
from Indiana on Dec. 14 after
and second-place finish · In 1the
Knight dismissed him early from
Southern Conference.
a practice. ·Funderburke went to
There was no Indication just
the Madisonville, Ky., home of
When
MarShall would begin look·
Eddie Ford, the father of MIS· .
lng
for
. ~ a ' succ~ssor. Sport,s
sour! lresbman Travis Ford, a •
friend of Funderburke. Eddie , Information director G11ry,
Rltcher said he had hail no ·
Ford said Monday Funderburke
dialogue with athletic ''direCtor
had not returned.
Lee Moon on the matter . .
"He's not here," he said. "Who
' Brian Fish, a graduate assl,stknows what's going on? I would
ant under Altman, said the news
just rather not be Involved in lt."
was broken to the coaching staff
Funderburke played six games
Monday morning.
. •
for Indiana before leaving. After
"I feel happy for him," Fish
his departure, be made overtures
said.
to Missouri and 1;\:entucky ~fore
"When It's an said and done,
going to St. Catharine. Indiana
you've got to take care of your
· would not release Funderburke
family and that:s wl)at ' h~'s
from his letter of Intent, meaning
doing. I kMw he's. hlirt ~bout
FunderbUrke would have only
leaving
Marshall so soon."
'
one
year·
of
NC::AA
eligibility
.
remaining If he went somewhere
. Altman planned to appear at
other than Ind a. ·
Tuesday news conference· In
Funderburke a eraged 28 Manhattan, kan:, 'for the official
points and 14'reboun as a junior announcement that Kruger Is
at Columbus Wehrle, eading the going to Mlaml University and
school to a state title.'
Altman Is succeedlng'him. ,
S129 ... ,.·
... ...
'
.
Member FDIC ;
1-~
show was to be a fall show rather
than spring.
For the program, Margaret
Weber had an article "\)n "Old
Remedies with Herbs." Herbs
for medicinal use should not be
used without proper kni:lwledge.
A convenient place to discover
medicinal value of herbs Is on the
kitchen shelf.' The common,
ordinary cuiinary spices and
herbs so often added to foods for
flavor have considerable medici·
nal use. Most herbal spices are
carmenatives which prevent gas
and stimulates and aids digestion. Anise Is used for a , deep
harsh cough. ·
A letter was reatl from Jan
Harmon;· president ·of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs,
aimounclng the regional m~tlng
· at Hocking Y.aUey Motel on AprU
:28. The county regional meeting
Janet ·Bolln made three arran·
wtll be' April 23 at the Meigs gernents using the Eiister ma€ounty Extension Office.
donna. Mrs. Bolin noted that the
.;Stella Atltlns ~eporte\1 on the baby Is no't io be used with the
(lip to the Gallipoll& Develop·
Easter madonna. The first arranrrient Center with Neva Nichol· gement ·was a sea fan from ttw
son, Pearl Canaday, Dorothy ocean for the back ground and
Woodard, Pauline Atkins, Ann protea .and .greenery In a rna·
Elizabeth Turiier, Binda Diehl, donna container with a small
Bernice Nelson, and Marcia candle behind it.
Denison attending.
.Margaret Belle Weber ansecond arrangement was
nounced that she had planted onThe
a
clear
glass plate on a ra~k
~ultls In planters at the memorial
for the background. She placed It
park on Depot Street In Rutland. in a shiny white base and a
'A trip was planned to Bolin's madonna was ·placed in front ot
peenhouse on Friday at 2 p·:m.
the plate. "For the flowers, she
The name of Kathy Dalton was
'Used crabapple branches and
presented.by Paut.ine Atkins for
daffodils and a little greenery .
membership In the club. .
·. l •
Neva Nicholson, Kathy Dalton,
The third- ari:angeinl!nt · feaStella AtkinB, ,Eva Robson, and
· Marcia Deilliloo fllrntahed flow· tur.e d a fan tall willow, · yellow
ers for the churches and shut Ins. 'tlp,ped arbra~vltae, yellow
Neva Nlc!lolson had the arrange- tipped juniper and American
ment . for the month, "Early holly. She u.ea daffodlla In the
Spring Blooms" featuring daf- arrangement b!lt stated It could
fodils and grape hyacinths.
be u.ea Wttbout flowers.
· ,
A correction was made In the
The April meeting will be held
minutes as the combined flower at the home of Bernice Nelaon.
OU• classes
.for
•
swmuntng set
residents of the center. Back, Beulah Wright and .
Grace Welch, volunteers with the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program of the Meigs County Senior
Citizens.
HERE COMFS PETER COTONTAIL Reslden&a of Overbrook Center were busy
Monday making Easter baskets to send to the
children's . home In Gallipolis. Pictured, left to
rl11ht, fr<!nt, Anna Cornell and l"anoy HeJtl,
Meigs
Co~nty
ReJoicing Life
The fourth six-weeks honor roll
of the Rejoicing Life Christian
School as been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be listed on
the honor roll were the following
students:
Kindergarten: Heather Baxter, Allison Story, Ehran Wilson.
First Grade: Chasidk ,Biggs,
Erin Harris, Rose · Schrock,
Debby Searls.
Second Grade: Tawny Jones,
Joseph McCall.
.
Third Grade: ~ache! Forbes,
Jacque Hall, Stephanie Jones,
Gabe Oldaker, Rachel Pangia .
Fourth .Grade: Tara pavls,
Aaron Pangio, Steven Rice.
Sixth Grade: Shawn Rice.
Seventh Grade: Emily Asbeck,
Jessica Cochran, Mandy Jones,
Jason Pangia•. Kristen Torres.
Jerrod Van Inwagen. .
South~rn ·
Elementary students whO
made the honor roll for the fourth
six-weeks grading period have
been annnounced. The students
made a grade ofB or abgve in all
their subjects. Included\ on the
list were the following students
from their respective schools :
The Ohio Communtverslly Is
offering swimming for teens and
adults and Tae-Kwon-Do for
children with classes to begin on
Saturday.
.
Greg Oberlin, the Ohio Unillersity assistant swim coach, will be
the InStructor for the six "session
course to be held on Saturdays at
, a.m. at the Aquatic Center. The
Tae-Kwon-Do for Youth, ages 8 to
15, will also begin Saturday and
will be taught by Dan and Felicia
Cain. Tae-Kwon-Do Is a method
of physical training emphasizing
the use of both hands and fee.t
while promoting self-discipline.
For more Information or to
register for either of the classes,
residents may contact the Office .
· of Continuing Education, Mem·
oriai Auditorium at 593·1770 or
1 800 336 5699
100
- ·-free_.- ·- -- . - · - -
honor rolls announced - -
Stacey Ervin, Kim lhle, Stacy
Lyons, Amber Maynard, Kyle
Norris, Chris Randolph, Tara
Rose, Dena Sayre, Bobbie Scar·
berry, Jared Smith, Brandon
Wolfe, Lena Yoacham, Jamie
Baker.
Third Grade: Steven Boso,
Jenny Catteton, Joshua Ervin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,
· Josle J~rreli, K11ra King, J~sse
Little, · Jessica · Smith, , Jessica
Theiss, 'Josh Whitley, Tommy
Smith.
Fourth Grade: · Amber Bird,
Matt Dill, Tyson Evans, Ryan
Grace, Matt Hill, Nicole Hill,
John Matson, Alicia Mulford,
Matt Riffle, Nikki Robinson,
Jessica Roush, Danny Sayre,
Derek Smith, Amanda Theiss.
· Jason Writesel.
Fifth Grade: Amy Northup,
Bobbie Wrltesel.
Sixth Grade: ·John Card, B.J.
Ervin, Paul Ihle, Craig Ktilght,
Janna Manuel, Chanda Mulford,
Nick Smith.
SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY
' First Grade: Cara Ash, Sarah
Ball, Jason Cundiff, Jeremy
Fisher, BethHjll, Cha~Hubbard,
Nikki Lonca, ~taaey Mills, Jen·
nlfer Sayre, Teddy Slater, Erin
Struble, Ma:tthew Warner.
RACINE ELEMENTARY
'Second Grade: Adam Cum··
First Grade: Michael Ball, ings, Joshua Davis, Sara File,
Brady BowlinJ!, Clay Enslen, · Domiie Proffitt, Ashley Rupe, •
Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans,
Jon Smith, Autumn Thomas.. .
Courtney Hill, Jeremy Hill,
Third Grade: Bridget Cross,
Shauna Manuel, Erin Roach, \\shU Davis, Tara Knighting,
Joey Sands, D.J. Smith, Jamie Kimberly Sayre.
Stemple.
·Fourth Grade: Cynthia Cald·
Second Grade: James Boso, well, Evan Struble.
Sarah Braper, Willie Coijlns,
Fifth Grade: Brian Allen,
Chrlli Ball, Jessica Counts, Jason
Lawrence, Amber Thomas.
·sixth Grade: · Robby Crow,
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Law·
renee, Jay McKelvey, Samml
Sisson, Rayan Young. ·
PORTlAND ELEMENTARY
First Grade: Nick Bolin, Justin
Burris, Brandi Cpdner, Janice '
Richard.
Second Grade: Erin Bolin,
Becky Oavls, Anita Holter,
Peggy. Lawrence, Joey McKln·
ney, Joshua Pullins.
Third Grade: Teresa Bush,
Jason Roush, Matthew Wilson,
Blllie Jo Sellers.
Fourth Grade: Lisa McGhee,
Ashley McKinney, Jay me Miiler.
Fifth Grade: Hillery Harris,
·Greg McKinney, Amy Rizer,
Joshua Roush.
Sixth Grade: C.J. Harris,
Jamie Rizer, Denise Roush,
Gabe Smith.
D.H. Terry Malone.
HARRISONVILLE
ELEMENTARY
.
First Grade: Adam BuiJington .
Joshua Clark, Christopher Dod·
son. Michael Lambert, Jonathan
Maue, Tenaya Spencer, DustY
Smyers, Patricia Walker
Second Grade: Raina Bennett,
Denise Cotterill, Amanda
Hamon, Crystal King, Tonia
Mllard, Jason Mtller, Krlsty Six,
Kyle Smiddle, James Stanley,
Harmony Thobaben. Adam
Walker, Gillian Wilt, Stacy Gil·
more, Tiffany Richmond.
Third Grade: Erin Dillon,
Jason Preast,' Shannan Sievers,
Charity Whitcraft.
Fourth Grade: Michelle Bis·
seiJ, Scott Dodson, Robin Donohue, Rusty Haning, George
Miller, Melissa Reeves, Jessica
Wheeler.
Fifth Grade: Laura Arlx, Jo.
sliua Howard, Cheryl Jewell,
Timmy Stearns, Brian Young.
Sixth Grade: Amber Bennett,
Bethany Cohee, Gary Stan ley,
Tabitha Swearingen, Dennis
Workman, Donald Yos~· '· :,
THE FOLLOWING AD
WAS UNINTENTIONALLY
LEFT OUT OF TODA Y'S
FASHION TAD.
WE ARE SORRY -FOR ANY
INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
HAVE CAUSED.
'
SAMANTH MAYNARD
.Maynard named
to USAA
Sa!llantha Ann Maynard has
been named a United States
National Award winner In bust·
ness education.
She attends Wahama High
School and was nominated for
this national award by Homer
Preece, a buslnf!IS education
teacher.
Her biography will appear in
the Onited States Achievement
Academy Official · Year book
which 18 published nationally.
Mils Maynard Is the daughter
of James and PatJ'Icla Maynard, '
Muon, W.Va. Grandparents are
Roberts Swisher and the late
Jesse · Maynard, New Haven,
W.Va.; and Dennie and Dorothy
Staats, Ocoee, Fla.
LETART li'Al.I".S
'First Grade: Jim .Alley, Kat!
Cummins, Holly Hannan, Garret
Kiser, Jessica Nance, Fallon
Roush, Matthew· Shain, ·Kayla
Stover.
Second Grade;' Jessica Alley.
Brawn Herman, Autumn Hill.
Third Grade: Daniel Hannan,
Jane Hill, Mike Johnson, Mike
Manley,~ Carrie Stobart.
' Fourth Grade: Dean Hill, ulie
HunrieJJ, Jennifer Roush, Hillary
Turley, Ranetta Wheeler.
Fifth Grade: Eva Crabtree,
Jeremy Lyons, Adam Roush,
Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre,
Vanessa Shuler.
Sixth Grade: , Jason Barnett,
Jason Shuler;
SPRI'I SEASONI
FOI USTD
LJie1, ,..
I ,...,.,
.,......... ly.......
Cil•••m•
·v•• ,........
..
hit .....
Pictured on the easel that Clarice is showing are
I4K gold items, custom designer!__ and hand crafted ·
by Terry Farrar. Terry has been em,pfoyed.at K&~
Jewelers since August 1989. Expenenced m repa~r ·
work, (especially 14K gold riecle cha~nJ andbrac/ets ),
ring sizing and miscellaneous repam. If you would
like a n~gg.et or a specia/y designed piece of jewelry,
we will be glad to give you an estimate.
30 YEARS SERVICE
.
· ALSCh J.i!"'llte line of.
Pllllll, . . . . .
fo.... l•nglngiiDikeh.
.................,_ .
Fl'lflt 111111 Fllw.... Tne~, ·
~-·
HUIU~'S
GIDIIIOISI
~-0
. Hl·s776
211 EAST MAIN
,,
POMIIOY
.,
�.,
Tuesday, April3, 1990
Pomtroy-Mictcleport. Ohio
Page-6_:The Daily Sentinel
Community calendar _
_Sorority chapter meeting held recently
Officers were elected at the .
recent meeting of the XI Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the home of A.R.
Knight tn Pomer0y .
Elected . were l<ay A~kins , .
president; Shelta Harris , vice
·president; Barbara Welsh, recording .secretary; Niese! Gerard; corrj:!sponding secretary;
Charlotte Hanning, treasurer;
and Sandy Iannarellt, city council representative.
It was noted that the Ohto Eta
Phi Chapter Is hosting Founder's
Day at the DoWn Under In
Gallipolis on April 26 with social
hour at 6:30p.m . and dinner at 7 .
p.m. Reservations are ·to be
.I
made by Aprill5.
Charlotte ttanning s tated that
there would be a,_games party on
Thursd ~;Y at the old American
Legion hall in Middleport at 7
. ..
~ -m .
Pat Arnold .reported that a
small quantity of fOQd was on
hand and that it .would. be
distributed to a needy person.
Sheila Harris received a thank
you card from Betty Hoffman of
Carleton School, expressing appreciation for the assistance that
was recently given t hrough the
sale of Watkins produCts. ·
·
A $100 danatlon will be given to
Susan Wolfe from Eastern High
School who is a good will
.
embassador from Ohio touring
'ftlESDAY
Europe for three weeks . It was
·MIDDLEPORT- The Middlenoted that three concerts will be port Lodge F and AM will meet"
given and the proceeds will go to Tuesday, 7 p.m . lnspectloo will
cancer research.
·
be Friday at 6: 3Q p.m. with a
Kay Logan siated that Mauri· dinner. There will be work ID the
sha ~elson is eligible for the fellowcratt degree. Practice for
Order of the Rose this year.
lodge offiCers will be Sunday at 2
The cultural program was p.m.
presented by Kay Logan and
Ruth Riffle on 1840 trivia of
MIDDLEPORT -The MiddleAmerican government, elec- port Arts Council wtll meet.
tions, spciai issues, .civil rights, Tuesday at 7 .p.m. at its new
and business and Industry, not· location, North Second beside
lng Important facts concerning· Johnson's Variety.
these Issues. ·
Hostesses tor the evening were
POMEROY - The · Ladles
Paula ~Haynes and Johnanna Auxiliary Fraternal Ord~r · of
Shuler.
Eagles will meet Tuesday at 8
p.m. Members are. to bring a
covered dish for the potluck.
·
Honor rolls_____________
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs .
Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.
Bob Everly, Michigan, sand
artists. Will be at the Calvary
TUPPERS PLAIN& -The
Pilgrim Chapel on WedJtesday at
·
Meigs
County t;leef ~attfe Assocl7:30 p.m. The church Is located
at!Wl
Is
sponsoring a beef meet·
on ROute 143. Rev. Victor Roush ·
tng
on
ThursdaY
at 6: 3Q p .m. at.
inVItes the public,
the Hanley Rice Farm on township road ~13, Rice Run. Road.
. · THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
POMEROY, -The XI Gamma
:r~wnshlp trustees will meet
Epsilon
ChapUl,r. Beta Sigma Phi
Thursday at 7 p .m . at the
Sorority
will "have Its tea on
township building. The public is
Thursday
at the home of Jenny
Invited to attend.
Smith. Members are to meet at
the. upper Pomeroy parking lot.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Bring
all eornpleted nec~JAces .
Township Trustees will meet in
relllllar session on Thursday at
POMEROY -The ·Meigs
6: 30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire . County. Public ·Employee RetiStatiOn: The meeting Is Qj;lened to
rees, Inc. will -meet at th¢ Meigs
County Senior Citlze.n Building at
the public.
1 p.m. · Thursday. Ail retired
LONG BOTTOM -The Mt.
government persons are ·lnylled
O!tye Community Church in
to attend . A district officerwlll be
l,ong Bottom will have fevlval 11ttending.
Thursday through Saturday with
servites nightly at 7 p .m . Pastor
. ANTIQUITY .:.There willlle a
Lawrence Bush tnvi.tes the
three night . revival Thursday
publiC.
through Saturday at the Spiritual
Faith Church In Antiquity at 7
MfuDLEPORT -There will
p.m. nightly. Rev. K. ' Stewart
be a resident and family council
Invites the public. '
meeting o.n Thursday at 1: 30 p.m .
REEDSVILLE' -T.he Olive
.a t Overbrook Ce~ter , .
Township Trustees wtll meet In
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
the Reedsville Firehouse on
Group of A.A. and AlAnon will
Thursday at 7: 30 P·r:"·
·
STIVERSVILLE - Ther~ wtll
MIDDLEPORT ELEMEN· Haggy , R.esa Harris , Mandl · Rttterbeck, Kendra Cleland.
be
two night revival on Tuesday
Harris , Susan Houchins, Burt • Second Grade: Orion Barrett,
TARY
and
Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m.
Scott Colwell, Stephanie Kopec,
First Grade: Heather Boyles, Kennedy, Missy Leach, Shawn
Larry
Nix, Ashville, N.C. will be
Brandy Laudermllt, Erik MetheMarjorie Bratton, Jason Chaney, Lipscomb, Jamey qttle, Amy
the
speaker.
Gary Holter, pastor,
ney , . Laura Payne, . Jeremiah
Tara Fitchpatrick, Abby Harris, Might, Mary Morton, Jeanette
invttes
the
public.
Smiih, Jeremy Smith.
Derek Johnson, Carrie Lightfoot, McDonald, Chris Neece. Missy
Third Grade: Bridget
Amanda · Neece, Chris Parker, Nelson, Jenny Peyton, Shane
wEDNESDAY
Vaughan, Jessica Priddy, Lori
Lee Reynolds, Brandl Smith, Phillips, Katllie Rush, Aaron
POMEROY
-The . Trinity
Kinnison, Andrea Dunfee, Mi·
• Kathy Taylor, Cassie Vaughn, · Sheets, Krts.ttn Siawter, Joseph
Oturch
of
Pomeroy
will have a
chelle Grant, Jonathan
j3ritnt Bevan Jessic.a Cundiff, Smith, Kristin Stanley, Jenn(fer
soup
by
the
quart
sale on
Dellevalle,
Sabra Davidson, .Michael Haw- Taylor, Amy Wagner, Stephanie
Wednesday.
·Orders
can be
Fourth Grade; Leigh• Ann Can• klnS, Jeremy Jones, Leah Mor- Walker, Any Warth, Jeni Werry,
placed
by
calUng
992-3777,
992·
terbury, Christaf Fitzwater,
• · row, Matthew Netgler, Yhaun Teresa .Wines, Dare! Wolfe,
3222,
or
992-5480.1\"may
be
picked
Matt Metheney, Amanda
• Roush, Brooke Smith, Ian Story, Brenda Wright .
up between the hours of 4-6 p.m.
Twelfth Grade: Nancy Baker,
Napper, Larry Ogdin, Rebecca
; Rachel Taylor, Amber Vining.
Russell, Michelle Smith.
.'
Second Grade: Seth Baker, Tracl sartels, . John Barton,
Fifth Grade: Adam Barrett,
Bethany Boyles, J.P. Boling, Steven Bass, Melanie Beegle,
PubliC Notice
PubliC .Notice
JeJllly Ervin, Carrie Harmon,
Public~
Public Nollce
Charla Burge, Missy Cremeans, John Betztng, Tricta Burke,
·• Micheiie Cundiff, Brant Dixon, Heidi Caruthers, Barbara Cole- . Timothy Lewis, Andy Myers, Jo
OIIDINANCI! NO. 588
240 luppllea
of councll to make the ••· an offldevli of forfeiture H
Sandy.
ANNUAL
Matorl* ........ t7,101.11 -dltu-; provldod thet no you do· not ,.._the •-•
Mindy Hailey, Chris Imboden, · man, Derek Cremeans, Walter
APPIIOI'IIIATION
Tot81 81Net Conatruc·
_....,., ohelt be drawn or of record within 30 dlyo of
Sixth Grade: Jake Gannaway,
Scott Johnson, Jennifer Nease, Crooks, Lisa Darst, Angela Do.
ORDINANCE
.
tlon
and
11-natuction
...
d for lllarloo or-o• ••· recllipt of thia notice 011
Angle Hale, Michael Jarvis,
Zach Meadows, Nicholas. Mi' nohue, Kelly DQugias, Lisa Gray,
An
ORDINANCE
to
make
·
HJtl!w~
.....
7,101.
51
OIPt
to IHI!'IOIIIImployed by lilY oullloquant publication
Ryan Crisp, Gary Canterbury,
chael, Davy Reynolds, Chuckle Lara Hall, Kelly Hamilton, Ryan
IIPproprlatlonl for Currom T- Prllf'Mn IV-Trillo.,111orlty of ...,d In accor- tlloroof in 1 now-r of
Expen- 111d 0t1oar Expen- ponation .. ... t134,471.83 ance with taw or ordl· gonorot circulation in .Moltilt
Shamblin, Brandy Stevens, Re- Harper, Patti Hetzer, Leea Johli·
RVTLAND ELEMENTARY
- - of the Wlllge of Po- PR.OOIIAM II - PUBLIC
n1nce. Provided further- County.
nee Stewart, John Ambrose, son, Cecil JOhnston, Kristin
Nomeo C!f ..__., VIcki
moroy,
State
of
Ohio.
dUring
HEALTH
8EIIVICE8
the
oppropr'-ll!>no for conFirst Grade: Dave Bing, Der·
Steve Chapell, Melanie Blevins, King, Amy Mann, Kim Masters,
Leo Bloki ond Micheel J. ·
the
flecol
.,_.
tndlrig
Do·
83-2·A
Cometory
ttngoncloo
con
only
be ••·
rick Bolin, Zach11ry Bolin, Noah
Max Bratton, Stacey Brewer, Rebecca Napper, Shannon Newlliko
...,....,.31, 1810. ,
2118el~rlta/
p•dodut>~>n•p-loltwoChasteen, Skip Dodson, Justin
Nome of..__, Talon 011
Ashley Burton, Janie Compton, some, Latisha Price, James
lloctlon 1. BE IT liE·
W~~g ............. tl,liOO.OO
thirdo votoo of Council for "
Gliinore, Alison Hays, Billy
SOLVED by the Counalt of 112 Emptllomo of npenH oonltllut- Field l•olgnoe of lloyol PeKathy Diles, Celena Dtllard, Reynolds, Terra Schoonover,
tho VIIIIIIO of Pom•or
llenellta ........... 1.000.00 lng •1111101 obllptl!>n aglinn trol•m Prqpenloo, Inc.)
Kennedy, Bethany McMIIUn,
Joshua Jones, Seth Rawson, Darlene See, Michael Seyler,
Deacrlption of lend: Com•
of
Ohio,
that,
to
pro:
240
lupplla 1nd
· tho vtllltl•· and for purpoPaul Michael, Tiffany Priddy,
Francesca Roush, Tommy Dee Shane, Cheryl Stevens, Navtdo for the au.-t ••·
M-o .......... g,IOO.OO otherthlnthoHoovarodby mencing It the ooutll_.
Nancy Rife, Elizabeth Smtih,
Roush, Joshua Sorden, Brandy talie Tromm, Jon VanMeter,
.,..,_ other •pend· T- " ' - II - Publlo
other opodfic op-ia· cornor of the o o - t
quarter of Sootion 3; thence
Mike Walls, Melissa Wells, HoMatthew Stewart, Susan Tobin, - tu• of tho uld VII- of Hulth
tiono h - modo.
Tobin, Ashlee Vaughan.
,_oy during tho f11ao1
lorvlceo ....... UO,OOO.OO
SECTION 12. Thlo -olu- South 88 dogr- Eut 69
Third Grade: Donny Carna - mer Welsh, Thomas Werry, . Zachary Wtuiams, Nancy Wingo.
-ng ~ 31, 114-3-A 11-oltion Progqm tioil ohell teko oHocf ot tho rode olong ooction line;
Second Grade: Jake Birch·
ham, Virginia Howerton, Sarah Sandy Whaley, Anne WUUams,
1110,
tho.................. 240 luppllea ..d
- · - · period allowed by thonce North 40. dogrfield , Levi Burns, Heather Fer·
Larkins, Joshua Price, William Tara Wolfe.
E•t 1 eo rodo 12 Hnkl to
ondthoy_......,oot•ldo
Mourlolo ......... ,3. 1114.00 low.
cjuortor ooction fino; thonce
· reil, Tiffany Halfhtll, JO,'Ih Htil,
lnd-latod•fatlowo. Tot81
Poo.ed: Fob. 19,1990
Scanlon, Mellsha Swisher, Sa~a
SALISBURY ELEMENTARY
North 86 dogr- WMt 56
vii:
a..i8uN Tlmo
Au.ot: Br1nda L. Morrlo.
Amy Hysell, Mandy · Mtiier;
Wiiliarrts, Philip Burch, Austin.
rodo to cente1 of Motion;
lloctlon 2: That thlro be
Acttvltteo ..........3, 154.00 Clark of Council
First grade: AprU BlankenShawn Workman.
Carr, Jessica Johnson, T.J . King,
1111proprletod from tho OJ:· 18·7-A Fodorol Rovenue
• Larry Wohrung. thence ·South -40 dogrship, Sarah Clifford, Daniel CusThird ·G rade: ·Jamie Barrett,
Joshua Lynch, Patrick M!lrtin,
N
EIIAL
FUND!
.
·
Sh-g
ProgqmPrMidol1t
of Council Wat 110 rodo, 12 llnkl to
ter, Amy Frecker, Sandi Gilkey,
place of beginning. conteln•
PROGRAM 1 Pormlaotvo TuCERTIFICATE
Kristin Brown, Robert Diddle,
Josiah Rawson, Rusty stewart.
Abby Hubbard, Grace Kitchen • . Ben Fowler, Amanda Hays,
SECURITY Of PERSONS 240 luppllea 1nd
$oCtion 1705.39, II.C.- lng 55 acra · end 26 rode.
Fourth Grade: Rachel Ashley,
AND PIIOPEII'I'Y
Matorl* ........ t9,980.80 "No lpproprlotion m-ure . morebrl•e. 1
Carson !)11dkttf, Billy souls by, ·Justin Jeffers, Matthew Justice,
Carrie Hartson, Jenny Hayman,
:rho ·gr~ntora In thlo d · .Pollee Low E......_,ont- Tot81 Podorel Rev·
ohlll become olfoctlvo untR
Heather
Whaley.
.Tanya Mliier, Alyson Patterson.• -:no U - 1
Sheila Neace, Tory Swartz, ·J en- ·
•u•
8hartng
....
9.880.80
tho-.ntyaudltorlll•wlth
••o
co"""' to theuld Garth
Second Grade: Jamie Boyd,
10.000.00 If·1-A ltato Ol'lllt Fund
tho ll!lpropr'-tlng outhorlty .. D. leal lprevlouo owner) •
Clark VanMatre, Stacy Wtlliam·
.nlfer Vining, Matt Wiiiialns,
BeverlyhBurdette, Kim Conde,
212 (mployoe
Main l!ti'Mt law•..a contflcate thlt the tot81 right-of-way tlwough the
son, Jason Young. ·
: Melissa Coppick; Ginger Darst,
Marjorie Haiar, Tiffany Harder;
lendto
.........
35.000.00
240
lupplla
111d
epproprlatlona
from NCh oouthuot corner of their
Fourth Grade: Carly ChasJames Hudson, Coiiin Roush ,
240 luPP.IIM Md
MI!Mrllla ........... 11101.00 fund. lllkon tOgether with Ill lind to the public rood by the
Morgan Mathews, Joey Patterteen, Em Uy Fowler, Bglanna
Nancy Whaley, Jeremy Michael,
..............30,000.00 ~=tala Orent
l"otlhlr out.,.,dlng oppropri- . - - t ond bOlt rooite.
son, Kim Peavley, Anna Story,.
Tho lOUth hill of the
Gilmore, Nathan Halfhill, Jill
T- Pollco Low En·
otiono, do not u c - ouch
_:;_
Wendy Sizemore.
Ryan Ronqulllo.
21 1
1
obov.-d•crlbed rool •teto
t
o
oftlcili.otlmotoorom•dod
.
Lemley,
Danielle
Peckham,
Ta·
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY
11711.000.00.............. ..... ..
ll.ooo.oo official ..."""" Wh111 tho is to contain 27% ocroo, 13
Third Grade: Lacy Banks,
bttha Powell, Lisa Snodgrass,
Fifih Grade: Stephanie Sterods.
2
Jeremiah Bentley, Tricia Davis, . Melissa Titus, .A.J. Vaughan,
A~-~g"
..,t;'i.,':'~
pt..,. · "a!:::~.~-~~-2.
::-::~;..~:
Aloo the foUowlng de·
~wart, Libby .King, Aima Fink,
Becky Johnson, Tamra O'Dell,
Melts sa Wilitams, ' Sandra
240 lupplloa .,d
T- ltalo
tho county •udltor ohlll glvo ocrlbod root ooteto altUitld
,••KrJstina Grate, Darrick St. Clair.
Daniel McDonald, Crystal
Mltorlllo ......... 2.500.00
Gnlnt ............... 3,711.0? ouch · -'lflceto forthwltll In lloctlon 3. ' lcipio TownYoung.
·:. ". Sixth Grade: Jtll Burch, Mike
l)alser, Bobbie Stewart, -Ryan
T - Program tv- .
U-3-A Other lpedll •
ujoon .......,lng from the liP· lhtp, Mllp County, Ohio.
Fifth
Grade:
·
Chad
Bartrum,
' ' Frackowiak, Alison Gerlach,
Community l!nvironR - Fundo-Firopropr'-tlng authority 1 aortl- Bounded and daocrlbed u
Rar11sburg, Maitnda Clark, Can- Cas,ey Booth, Elizabeth Ellis,
m..............
12,1100.00
211
.......
/
.
llod
copy of the opproprla· followo: commencing ot .the
- April Hailey, Mark Mills, Nicky
dace Goff, Edson Hart, J.T.
oouthuot corner of tho farm
PROGRAM V.:... BABIC
W.• ...:........ t3,000.00 tion m-uro.. :"
Michelle Mllier, Beverly Ste·
Mills, Tonya Phalin, Paul PulHumphreys, Carrie Lambert, wart, Jamie Wllitamson.
owned by Joooph !JIIkoy on
UTILITY
SERVICES
240
tupplloe
Md
The
Stale
of
Ohio,
Moip
..lins, ChriS Chaprilan, Dodger . Amanda Ralph , Jennifer
tho llno of David Cucklor;
M-'oto ........ 11,417.21 Coupty, oa
A1·1·A Eloctrlc UtlltySixth Grade: PhyllJs Clark,
Vaughan . .
240 luppllta 1nd
,
280 ~ .......... 80,000.00
I, lrondli L. Morrie, Clork thonce - • about 17 rodo
Ramey.
John Cleland, Jeremy Coleman,
DH: Michelle Casto, Scott
Mlllflllo ........ t3, 100.00 Tot.t Other- ·
of the Vllltl• of Pomeroy, In and I foot to • hickory - ;
Fourth Grade: 1'!{ick Barr, BUll Lori Russell, Ctndt Stewart,
I. Autherson,
A1·1·B 0.. UtlltyFlre ................ l8,417.21 uld County, and In who• thence In • northeHteriy dl·
Shawn Leach, Carrie
Bentley, VIncent Broderick, Ja- Roxanne ,Williams.
240 lupplloo Md
PROGRAM I- UTILITY
cultody the Fll•. Jour,.ll. roction I bout 31 rodo to 1
· Counts, Crystal Conkey.
son Frecker, · Myca Haynes,
Mllllrlalo ........ •1 .800.00 1J!;.II-IuA Utllty
and 11-rdo oro roqulnid by 110M In the rood 20 feet
LD:
Ryan
Kelley.
LD:. Cindi Call, Joey Roberts .
2..... ppllea lnd
Totll .........., vthe &..wa or till &toto of North of tho line running
Heidi Legar, Michael Leifheit,
a.1c
Utllty
Motorlllo
......
e41.
188.49
Ohio to be kept, do horlby North ond South Shera PatlePson, Melissa
..._._
4 800 00 T- Pr.,..m 1.
-'lty tlllt the forogolng
Iandi of Jooioph Gilkey and
MEIGS
JR.
HIGH
·
'I •
Ramsburg.
David Cucklor; thence E01t
Seventh Grade: Sarah Ander-~-iiAM·~.i~~ iiitiiiet:il:,:s ::.::•..A::r:~"co~":i 20
feet to uld north end
Ftflh Grade: Chris Roush, Tim
son, Joey Barrett, Sonja Bate·
GENERAL
C·2·H BuRling .
from the orlglnol Ordln.,ce lOUth Uno; thence Iouth
Peavley.
O:RNMENT
~und ............... ,8,724.SI nowonlllowlthuldVIII~go,
olong llld Nne about 25 rodo
man , Vanessa Compston, Keith
Sixth Grade: Nikki Bentley,
A, •7 •A Olit or or Admin·
T- Dabt
the! the foregoing Ordl· . to the pleco of beginning.
Darst, Tara Erwin, Benny EwAutumn Conde, Dorothy Lelf,
tot Ntloltvo ~- llervlol ............ l.724.55 n1nce boo liMn compared containing OM lnd on.-half
Ing, David Fetty, , Kelley ' heit, Mindy Palterson, Tracy
21 1 .,_1
ENTERPRISE FUNDIby rno with ihe uld original
II~) •cr• more or lao.
Grueser, Jered Hili, Heldt HutWltl•- ........... 31.~.00
WATER
and thlt till ume to 1 true
Atoo tho following rut ft.
Shaffer.
21 2 Employ"
E1 ·I·A Ofllco
and correct copy -eof.
toto olt..ted In Scipio Town. :fman, Kimberly Janey, Annie
hnollto ......... 11.000.00 211 ·a.t~rloo/
Wlt-arnyllgneture.thla . ohip, Mligo County, Ohio:
· King, Chuck Legar, Todd Mitch, ·
SALEM CENTER
220 Trlilel TranO: '
85,000.00 1lth doy of February, 1990.
Comllllilcing at the north·
Shllo Moore, Reggie Pra It,
ortatlon,........... 2,421.13 212 (mployM ,
lrondo L. Monla, 101t corner of the ooutheHt
First Grade: Brian Tarleton,
Sherr! Ramsburg, Clndt Rollsh,
len.ctta ......... 11,000.00
Cieri< of the Vlil1110 quarter of lloctlon 3; lhonce
240 Supptlal 1nd
~ge. lhlt II. 1t'1 SERIES
Jessica Marcum, Dustin ErieMltorlllo ........32,000.00 240 Componuof Pomeroy Nonh81d..-W•t110 ·
- Adam Sheets, Brian Smith, Lisa
wine, Brian Searles, Arnper
ONE. 1 broed~.
Toto! M~or and Adminlon ................... 7,000.00
Melgo County, Ohio rods ·otong quarter uctlon
Tatterson, Jasop Taylor, Crystal
Roush, Jason Tackett, Brad
campethivtly-pricecl plln
loMtlvo
2110 Clpltol
141 3. t tc
·Uno; thence South 4 dogrVaughan, MeliSsa Wilfong, To0111- ..........77,021.13 . Out,_
20 000 00 1- - - - - - - - - - - for retllil .....
80 rodo and I Unkl to
A1-7-I ......latlvo Aotlv1u -!,..... :...... "'
. ,.
Public Nollce
. nya Wiii. Tyler Wolfe.
cornor of Lot No. 3; lhonco
chwchl-.
end
ltloo ICaunolll
12~ppllea 111d
Eighth Grade: Heather Burch,
South 88 dogr- Eut 110
drug ltOfel, Clll Ul for •
rods to ooctlon line: thonco
21 1 lilerloo/
Mll~rllla ........IO,OOO.OO
NOTICE OF'AUCTION
Lorri Bumem, Joey Casto, Matt
propo11l Iend quotation.
:i~-•3.100. 00 ~1un!......•nd
Notlolio'*"'alvonth8t North 4 dogr- E11t 80
Clark, Ryan Conde, Tom CremeMr. and Mrs. John Morris,
rods end 8 lnkl io pt..,.; of
.....
thebolrdofoducltlonofthe
ilas. Danteilc Crow, Tony Davis,
.................... 1,000.00
--~1R 000 00 U..&- 0 ••~ lchool D'-"-'- !beginning. contalnlnu IS
·Clark Air Force Base, PhiiipT- ~tv·
~~~~~~';,'.::"" ' D,
•
......... ........
. . .......
Arnie Elliott, Tracy· Fife, Mindy
pjnes, are announcing the birth of
a·
8 100 00
Moklo CDUnty, Ohio, wll of. •cr•. 21 roda more or .....
And alllilo rood for the ua
·
......
....
•
·
280
Debt
for
tor
lifo
at
public
ouction
· F'lndlay, Jeremy Grtinm, Me ron
a daughter, Michele Susan·Sabia,
A1·7·D
Clerk/Treauror
•--~111101
·au· at MeiOO High lchool, Po- of tho llld land owned by
211
8111rloo/
M-...,.....a.......
,..
•
·
Grueser, Dawn Hockman
on Sunday at the Clark Air Fogce
David J, Cuckl• through
mor~ Ohio, co-cing
w.............a•10,000.00 2110 Capitol
~ Heather Hudson, Rachel Hysell~ Base Hospital.
- 7 . p .M.. on Aprtt 12• the llld land owned by John
2121!mr'--"
••
' Melissa Jeffers, Brad Knotts,
-.· ...,.._ on•
Oudoy ..............5,000.00 1190, the tot-Ing ... J. Cuckl•.
The ' lnfan t weighed seven
ma ......................8110.00 T- E-prloo
ierlbod pti!'IOIIII property:
Rotor.,_ : Volume 144,
214 EAST MAIN
Andrea McDonald, Jason Miller,
pounds and 11 ounces.
240.....,...
ond
Fundi
......
..
tal7,501.ai
•-~
,;_
of
fiMta
101; Votuina t 44,
Kenny Napper, Joy O'Brien,
POMEROY .
M-o .......... 1,000.00
PROGRAM Y_...., .,..,1
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
.484: Volume 137,
'Ronda Raymond,Anne Riffle,
TO!el Cllril/
IAIIC UTILITY
'f!r!ro Gla-re
and Mrs. Carl Morris, Rutland.
' P8liO 341: Volume 120,
992-8687
T....- ... ,. 11 1,810.00
ti!IIVICES
Th- 131 Eleouic llon.Denise Shenefield, Mike Sloan,
384; and Volume 1 18,
Grandmother 1s Mrs. Mtidred
421, DaM llecordo of
_Jay Smith, Jack Stanley, Matt
A~n':'dolild .
='===~-h . P8liO
Morris, Dexter.
Melgo
County, Ohio. LAST
··Stewart, Erin Warner, Marlo
280:C...Itll
240 Supplee .,d
In the form of Cllh. or I - · · DEED REFERENCE: Vol·
Maternal grandparents are
: White, Jason Wttherall.
........... 1.000.00
-~- .. ·•4 az• 11 tlllodorCIIhllr'ach,ICkpoy· · umo 231, Dr. and Mrs. Leo Sabia, Angeles
187, Deed
T
• ..,..
ciOC;,'M;i""'
· D.
. . . . . to tho board of .......
,._,. of Molgo County,
2
·
.
City.,
Philippines.
'
..........1.000.00
Outlft....
3 000 00 . tion of the Mollil LoCII
Numblr of.aa•: oppro•l·
MEIGS HIGH
A
llilerdo and
EZ'W U.iit'iin'd' '
'
School Dlotrlct.whlch lo ,._
metely
84.2.
'
Ninth Grade: Debbie Alkter ,
...
lulllngoqulred etthotlmoofthe pub·
Dlllllof ,_., JIIIUiry 10,
Wendy Clark, Keiiy Doidge,
2
-/
280 Delli
li: ouctlon from the hlghoot 1183.
St e phan le Dolby, Heather
Volumo "!'d Pill• oli-o:
T~-,:i:dl·~;j:'~.ooo.oo_ E::A,.;;;;;;.:.ty3z.ooo.oo bl':m111on __,......,.. Volume
72.- Pill• 748 1nd
Franckowiak, Allison Gannacomn~~oo~ona .... a.ooo.oo Motor,
ouetiDft 111o- be _
_. · 7110, Mllgo County, Ohio,
way, Tracey Gr ueser. Randall
A1·7·0 County Auditor' I
~~ .
-·
et the office of the--=·
Clu• of forfeiture:
·'
Jonnston, . Lori Kelly, Kevin
1 ~.t-urer'o II
....
23,014.17 ~lgh
........
~ . 81 , ~- -non·PI\'mlrlt of dllav
Lambert, Robert Lucifer. Courtrentot ·
.
A...,.. .... ;........,.1 .~uu T - Progrem V
..
Ohio 11'~
· 1-7-lt Other ...... z.ooo.oo 1oo1c UtiOiv
.
_ ......- .
:
b.
non-production
of
ga
ney Midkiff, J effery Noli, Lorena .
·
!~~ogo:m VII- .
llervloao ....... 152.719.81 21881
Tho board raorvoo the · or oH alnce 1.1185
•Oiler. Tammy Queen, Steve
_,_,.. Go .,..._
TRUIT AND AGENCY
1 c. lltplrelion of term 11
Swatzei, Rusty Triplett, Katrina
. .......... '121,471.13
FUNDS
right tortloct onyord bldo, year)
'
GRAND TOTAL GENERAL PROGRAM t - SECURITY
.
Jane Fry, T,..u,. ' Any ..-lono ~~~~~rdlng
Turner, Michael Vance, Thomas
FUND APPROI'III·
OF PEIIIONS
Mligo -t..ooet School Dlltrlot tlllo notice Ohould be dl·
Wilson, Micheiie Young. ·
ATtON ... .....103,171.13
AND PROPERTY
131 20, 27; 141 3, 10 4tc
reeled to Tom H. N!llll, At·
Tenth Grade: Barbara And• I'IIOGIIAM Yt - ·
Dloobllltr
tomoy at llw, 410 City Park
erson, Trlcia Baer, Ffank Blake,
TIIANIPOIITATION
FundPublic NOtice
,._,., Cotullllluo. Ohio
Misty Butcher, Heather Daven432151114)224-1331.
11·11-Aiti'Mtc:-lon
~:~~~~~
• 11 11aa-anm.1111111on·~
1.00 · NOTICI! OF INTENT TO
port, Tara Gerlach, Angle Vlaki•Loelliko, '
1
21 1 811
DI!CLAIII OIL AND OAi
Mlchaot 0. lliko
Goody, John Harrison , Penny
~ .......... t71,000.00
LEAIE FORFEITED
141 3. 1tc
··
Klein, Darin Logan, Tammy
212 fmptoyoe
To: Talon 01 Fllld
.....,.., .. ..." ezo.ooo.oo
lformlrlr o11
Mtller, Joseph McElroy, Loretta
240 Suppllea Md
·
7511....,.11ood .
Reitmire, Melissa Ro11lns, ConMlllr.........21,Ht.32 ·
Mldcloburg Hllighto,
nie Sauters, Kyle Sinclair, David
11·1·C"-~1o , · A!od the Vlt~ge Cllrk II
·
Oh. 44130 ·
Swanson, Michael 'J:honias,
an-....... llemovll....., .............. to drew
......... _ , . thot, polrBobby Vance Christina Weaver,
240 lutllllloo •d
w•iilo•m••iitntltaont.. VIIItleiT,._ IU!IItt to Ohio R........ Coda
M - • ...... .,0,000.00
.._
""-8IGIIon 11101·132. the u• .
· Robby Wyatt.
1 1111
"
Tfllr
c
-"'"
..
,
'
-'"""IIIY
illiil!ti•IICI
herllrw dlclan
Eleventh Grade : · Scott
1
·
tton,
111-DIInd
flo.
th"
the
~~~~Brinker, Teresa Deem, Raena
Fund ... ., 11,1111.12 will 1 , Mill Wllllllln t.Ma to be loihllllid for tho
Eblin, Amber Eblin, Angle ElltI ·I·II_H.......,and thorafor,llflllfO:rod 11y the n•ane below llalad. It 11
'111\jh DIIRIIIII 1'1111111bDenl Dr oftloll'- authoriud the inlalltkht of tho under< ,.
ott, Robert Fields, David Frym- ·
· -c.....lon ..... .•
,.__.to fie for - . 1 with
yer, Juanita Gree.n, Kevin
"-nilllllllllonti:ii'eloo County Rocontor
'
.
"'-Ill-
w..:........,
w,. . . . . . . . 111.01
..':.::: .
j
.
A.,.._.._.___
Morris birth
.,..menu
2
:!!;!_llrlltlry
otu.-.. .......
I
· r.:•
"'*
.,:::J:
=.:u====
,...,..Did
:r.=w..:..=:;;=
..
.
I
l
Pomeroy- Middleport;
Tuesday. April 3, 1990
\
(
•
HOME
• T.he Area~s. _, Number 1 Mark~tplace
15
15
1
3
6
15
15
10
.
Aat• ere
.,.,.~, 1 .!0 d!scount for ads pel d in 1dva nce.
•fr.ee _ads - Giveaway an~ Found ads under 15 wo rds will be
run 3 d_,sat. no ch•ge.
•Price oi ad for all c.,rtal Ienart is double price of ad cos\.
•7 point line type only used.
·
d~.·
!Check
ior errors f tru d., ad rUI'IIJ in papert . Call before 2 :00p.m
Happy Ads
Yard Sales
.
cept - cl•sified d ispl.y, Busin•s Card and legal nOtices)
w•tt also appear In the Pt . Ple••nt ~egister ani:lthe Gell i"polis Da~ly !ribune. reaching over 18,000 homes.
COPV DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
·TUESDAY P.APER •
WEDNESO:AV PAPER
· THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPEFI
SUNDAY PAPE~
.
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
..,... 1 1 :00 A.M, SATURDAY
· ~ 2 :00PM . MONDAY
' - 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
- ' 2 '00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 ,00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY
Classified paf{es corer the
follou;inf{ telephone exchanges ...
Game County
Arei"Code 61'
Meigs Coun1y
Aru Code 614
Mason Co . WV
Area Code 304
446-Gall ipolis
367 - Cn•tlire
992 - Middt.,on
675 - Pt . Pl easant
Pomllfoy
985 - Chester
388 - Vin- on
24.5 - FHo Grinde 843- Portland
256-Gu.,.n Dist .. 247-Letan Fells
6 ·43- Arabia Olu
949 - Rac:ina
379 - Wilnut '
742 - Rutlend .
667 - Coolville
,
458-leon
576 - Apple G·ro\'e
773 - Mason
·
937- Butfat
·
Cet Resulft fast
~IIC
Notice
SHERIFf'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIOS COUNTY
THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY OF
SOOTHEAITEIIN
OHIO. N.A.
vs
FREDERICK W.,KLEIN.
AKA
FRED w, KLEI~. ET AL.
·cASE NO. B!I·CL 227
In pur1uence to an Order
of Sale directed to me in the
; ab!>ve ontitlod oc:1ion, I will
• olflr for ule ot public auc. tion. at the front door of the
Real Estate
31 - Homes for Sale
32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33 - F~rms tor Sale
34- BusinMs Buildings
35 - Lots & Acruge ·
"3 6 - Rul Estate Wanted
42 43 44 46 46 -
Mobile Homes for-Renl
Farms for Rent
Apartment for Rent
Furnished Roomt
Space to r Rent
47- wented to Rent
48 - EQuipment for ~ent
49 - For
L•••
Public Notice
modo to "tho
MlMI'f_. plot thereof on ,.
cord in tho office ofthe Moigo
County lleoordor..
Roforonce Deed: Volume
240, pogoo 81&.
Molgo
County llocordo.
· ThiC property is located at
4158. Fourth Avenue, Mid·
dloport, Ohio .
Property
apPr8ioed at
129,000.00 and cannot be
oold for teoo than two-thlrda
of the opproloed veluo. ·
Aloo tile following de·
forks of the road; thence S .
here~>¥
ICribed real •tate altuata in
1
ANIIQUES a HOUSEHOLD: 4 stock oak bookcase, 10 pc.
Rattan 11-An~ suite. coffee table and end tobles. salVIng
table, 2 MOhogony bookcwes, mahogany dllsk.very
unusual 3 pc. Bamboo and Birds eye rT)Ople bedroom
suite. bed. cl'easer. washstand. 4 pc. becl'oom suite,
small drop kiof table. 9 pc. Woterfotl dining rOIJm suite,
36' gas rqnge. Phllco refrigerator. Whl~poot chest freezer.
leaded toble and matching lomp. corner shelf. 3 tte'
table. old cupboard, loll of !rivets bamboo. etogei
bomboo.-mlnloture table. William Rogers SilVer ptote teo
set. l~s vose. Oriental type pot. Green Deptealon bells
ond etc .. Betry=tCarnival. McCoy pottery, olllompa.
oil lamps, Iorge Avon collecfion,
collecfion mint
collection of plot , boltte collectiOn. gloss eggs.
on n911J. Aunt Jemima coo~le jar. guided frame minor.
baskets, oak condelllcks. montle clock. carved wood
bear. brau horses, atone jail. no01 tamp, coil iron ladles.
Iron pot. crockS. loti of fiN.' Old pictures. lronwore: coat
lroh door.llops. 2 glroffel. rabbit and gooae. cart ~on
spittoon. electric coffee grlndel. roiUng pin~ cl'elling
screer~. ctgarelte box, Coleman tontern. bond tew, one
Shop Smith· dD!Jsit ol. ftoor rT)odel Craltlmon._Pouter.lots
of toots, plus much more still In attic . Loll of glassware stll
In boxes.
'
;._oi..._...,A--...U
....
......
.....
.......... _ .............."I .....
.... .
I . . .IMIII[rl ..
-...,.._. ..
.WIIf ........ - - - - ._.,
IIIOnr Tlll8 ....................
................
'
· ' AUCnON CONDUCTED BY
RICK PEARSON
, AUCTION CO.
LU~CH
M.\ION, WV
773-5785
. Oo-Adl1'\lnlltratoll:
Mary Godlley and Wanda McKinney
TERMS: Cllh arChtck wlllt LD.
ta Rllpnllll Far Acddlltll ar U.'ol Pnipetty
lJcnld' Banded Ill Ohio. Kanlucky,.., Watt Vllginia ~
,_ ......,.,..,_,,._._.A.,...
Z-1-'90-1
83- E.IIc&Yatlng
84 - Eieetri eel &
01.0.
CONNIE'S
OHIO liVER
HEllS and
EVERLASTINGS
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER
USDIIOWIIS
IIIW Y&IDIIAII & ICMO
PIODIIC1S
Saniu c.tar.
llyan Parts 111111 S..orloo.l
••••· lldon, Cllaln
HOURS: ·
Thurs. lhru Sun.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
WHOLESALE-RETAIL
Sowt, Wlllhetan.
HOURS: M·F 9-7
Sat. 9-5; Ctolod Sun.
247-4035 -
lou in old Soctloo 18. Being
tho 11m a p;.miol!l known aa '
tho Adonljlh Sm~h Farm
and the aame u conveyed
"by George Titus. Sheriff of
Molgo County to Wolter E.
by deed doted November 4, 1884, ond ••.
corded In Volume 84. pogo
563. Record of Dooda of
Melgo County, Ohio; EX·
CEPTINO from the obove
llv•ll
described property a trian·
gular strip of 7 ICffJI, out of
tho S.E. Cornertobouoedao
an outlet to the 80 acre farm
adjoining whicb is owned by
John W. ·Corman; and EX·
CEPTINO AND RESERVING oR coat, oil and ga
underlying the 11me with
the right to mine and operate
for the ume.
Also the following rul es·
tete situeted in the Town-
MOBILE
HOME PARI
~eff'ig4Wation
ning containing one acre, re·
Mrving from this grant one
large ch81tnut tree and one
·cherry t~. Being known a1
tho Peoch Fork· School lot
and baing the uma pr•
mloeo convoyed by Fenny
Smith to Boord of Education
by deed dated November
30, 1989. recorded in Volume 102, pogo 248 of oaid
Meigs County Deed liecord•.
•Mobile Home
- ·Parts
•Mobllo Home
R•n•l•
•Lot Rant"l•
Public Notice
'Deed Records.
• 992·7479
Tho praporty in Parcell & II
lit. 33 Narth of
is locotod on Peachfork Road
'(County. Ra.. 191 approxlma·
Pomaroy, Ohio
toly y, to 7/ 10 mil• from l~:::::::::::l:
· i:i:Z·~·a:B-:11:•~
.Route 33 on thelllit hand oido II
of Parcels
tile road.I & II appraio$d
. at
S27,600.00 and· cannot bo
sold for ia.. then two-thirdi
of tho opprais_. value. Tho·
property located in the vii·
togo of Middleport, will bo
,. _
7• 2 3011
oold ooporotoly from proparty on Slllobury Twp. Tho
•Tire Sales
property In Solisbury Twp.
•Front End
will be sold as a unit.
TERMS OF SALE: The
Alignment
successful
puochooor, ••
•Oil· Change & Lube
aoon as his bid iJ accepted
B
8 raka Work
~ha. ll bo required to dopook
an the day ofulo. iri c11h or
MAIN ST., IU1LlND
by certified chock, poyoblo
1·15·'90-fln
Ia iho Sheriff of Meigs
·county; Ohio, 10% of the
949-2969
90 DAY WABAIITY
JIASHERI-$100 up
ORYER5-$&9 up
REFRIGERATOII5-SIOO up
RANGES-GIIs-Eitc.-$125 up
FREIZER5-SIZ5 up
IICIO OVEII$-$79 up
lEN'S li'PUlNCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 or 915-35111
Acrost ,,.. P.ot Office
I'OIIIIOY, 01110
10/30/'19 tfn
Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, , _ , , ow.
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR
.Alto Tr••••t11lo•
~992-5682
,.,.. 992·7121
"25-tfn
.amount of such accepted
J&L
the purchase price shall· ~e
INSULAtiON
bid. but In no event tess than
St.OOO.OO. The balance of
duo ond.poyableto tho Shor·
., ••., Speelll o.
iff .of Meigs County. Ohio.
within thirty 130) days from
the date of confirmation of
VINYL SIDING
VINYL IIEPI.lCEIMNT
10lo. Tho puochaor oholl bo
required to pay lntoroot an
the unpaid bolonce ot tho
rate of 10% per annum from
WINDOWS
the date of sale to the date of
paymen1 · of balance unless
said balance sha'l be paid in
INSIDE SALE ·
White Houeo Behind
Foodland in Pomaroy
TUES.·WED.-THURS.
Clean Ciotheo and
Misc.
18) dayo from tho data
sale.
Jamn M. Sou toby
Sheriff of Melgo Caunl\1
Dougtaa M. Cowin
Attorney for Plaintiff
2
ClA5Siflf05
In
SUN'S UP TANNING
Now Lilll8 ld., •utlcmd, Ohio
1 Session ...........-········-···-···-··· S3.50
6 Sessions •••••••••••- ....................... s12.00
12 Sessi0111...............~ ••••••••~ ......... S20.00
1S StlsiOIII••,•••-·••••.. •••..•••••••..•••• 12 5.00
FIRST VISIT FUE - POSSIIlYMORE
LOTIONS-.. STICKERS
Call SUI• Coleman, 742·t778
·
.
3-U-110-t mo.
.
I and J CONSTRUCTION
Gal IAIUY
•NEW HOMES •~lDI'NG
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
..•GENERAl CONTRACTING
A Great Camlli.tion"Quality Clllll l~asanabla Prices''
WE GO THE EXTIA MILE.....
- '
POMEROY
Memory
Of Our Father,
For All
GEORGE
COOPER
Who passed
' away 11 years
Your Needs
2
In Memory
_...,__ _ _..;....:..,._.;.....
ago today,
April 3.
IN M,l:MOIIY OF.
. JENIIIIFER DAWN
Sadly miuad by
Georga S. Christine
conveyed to Hence Jones
' In
Memory
IN MEMORIAM
In Loving Memory Of
Hulband & Dad
DARRELL L. DUGAN
Who pa11ed lw6y
one yoer 110
AprH 3, 1989
•Fountain Bird
ENtERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
·
Send-Stone-Dirt
(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland.
·
7-lt:'lf.tfn
SHO~T
RACINE
FIRE DEn.
GUN
Iathan
llulhllila
EYUY,
SAT. NIGHT ·
6:30 .... .
Foctory chalro
12 Gat~~~ ShetiJrttt Drily
Stricktly EnforCIII
10-•ttn
"At 11..~ Prlcas"
PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949•2160;
Day ar Night .
NO SUND. YCAUS
a.tt. • Ptut
De•. Frog~, Ane• and
Othw Y•d Ornemenu
.
From Uo & Savel
MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR.
HUCI'S CAR WASH
ALL lUllS
Iring It In Or We
Pick Up.
51 OlfJ 21111 St. INIIIparfl
Far lppt. Call
992-6717
992-6244 Garaaa
"-or
lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
1-tll-'110-f mo .
992-5335 or 915-3S.l
AllllOUilCCIIIl'ill '>
,.,_ .... , ... Offlco
2171.
,....,
HUMPHREY'S
CUMAn
CONTROL
Heat!.., C.......
lefripratioll
Service
CALL
N~WLAND
CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES & GARAGES
•c.mw Bird a.tM
992-2772
Commarcial
twllnolongorlll._.......
::..-:..-=-:..~-=
21,t110. 1!d .........
-11m..,-
4
Glveeway
pr01. I
-~~~
~
SII7.
h•tltf•tYaltylu ltr
. . . I....... 011.
"'IITI ANO SERVICE
For Moit 2 - 4-cyclo
••. . : c f o r
Hornellte, WI rdlltW,
·.
,
..-r. ,..., ploto-
up.l1.-.... ..
.
.....
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION
BISSELL.
SIDING
._.. CO.
...
.
. - . - - .... Call
l t 4 - - or II 110
Hoo1h .,_, -.,..,..
JUIIIt--•.- ·
- ............ 114-:141ICIM.
Ill .......... .....
-11W-Oilwooft
t .lpnl.
.... - -.. ..
.... :n..,_,.....,...__ ... _r
"Fr• EltlmltN"
PH. 949-2801
...
.
NO SUNDAY
.
.,
lo8t • FOund
anti .... . , . .. .....
homo H 1101 - · Doiwln.
114-tii411Z.
LOIT pool 1111111 ~ · lilturdly nlglll, AlWARD,
=..= -· .....
v.w.
PAnS&
Val'
LOIT:-iiL12..._o_
on l'rMl IW.L- VInton
.-.-.
.
_
.. .._,..
=
---
SERVICE
NEW. USED.
PARTS
For Rabbit,
·J etta, Golf,
Beetle end Bu..
5
=r;.·--··~
IAII: . . . _
llt!ltllotoaol
Inti
-........llllumlo
.......
.__,.OII,or
~
IAII:Iolllllt- ...., .....
_ a - .. -
''"-- lt.--1
......
or
t1.,
YlrdSitlo
I. L IOUOI
TIUCitNO
GalllpOIII
&VIolnlty
a.na, 0110
oQRAYEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
• Tooumolh, Brlggo • 8tNtton.
•ANv:JHINQ
PH. 99i-392J
915-4422
1,-21-'n.
t ..- , . .
...._ t14-4olii- -
-- --.-
·"'-<~to
7
DAVE'S
we
word• cannot tell
Hor bright, happy face
. that we loved 10
well.
God took her home; it
wao Hil will,
But in our hearto she is
with Ul atUi.
nme may heat, but It
never can mend,
For' our h • - will be
broken untH the end.
And of the load you
helped ua carry,
Alway• 'patient. ti'UII
and kind;
But 1111erytlting lhlll
be, for God'• wHI
mult be dona.
V't'lllt • beautiful memory aha taft behind.
Died, AprM 3, 1888.
Love, Mom, Haith.-,
IS NOW OPIN
FOI BUSINESS.
IN STOCK: OComlllt -V•io'•Cior
•Citll....,
Ft.iror
lir~-
Ralidanti81•
DOZER
SITEWORII • .ROADS'
CLEARING
BISSELL
BUILDERS
SYIACIISI, 0111
IAMYo Pine Slialll
FREE ESTIMATES
SMALL ENGINE
• HPAII
0
JO'S GIFT SlOP
l-5-'9o-1 mo.
In Loving
nme real 8state .
and Ethel · Jones, Melgo
County Deed Recorda.
Porcli 2:
· Tho following real ostote .
litulted In the County of
Mel go, Townohlp of IIIIo·
bury and &tote of Ohio, and
bounded and doocrlbed 11
foHowo: the following roll
ootete oltuate In the North·
weol Ono Ouorter of Section
No. 18, SaHobury Townohlp,
Mill go
County. · Ohio.
bounded and deocrlbed oa
foltowo: Beginning ot the
Narthwlllt corner of 1 27
17/100 acralrect recorded
In O..d look · 173, . pogo
1Ill, on the Weot I no of loctlon No. 18; thonco , Eoot
1405 • - to the - • • of
the rood; thenco North 27
<lag. 110'· Woat 2011 f llo'l9 tile·contor of t~rood;
thence North 18 1110: 40'
_ , 411 foot along tho contor of the rood; thenco north
31 d11g. 30' Woot' 180 • llong t h e - of the rood;
thenDI North
74 dog.
40' W.ot 373 f.ot olong
lha c - of the rood;
thence North 83 dog. 30'
Woot, 700 feet llong the
Cilntlr of tho rood; thenoo
Iouth 80 dog. 18' Woat. 80
loot llong the ce- of tho
rood to tho WHt llno of Bei:·
tion No. 111; - - IoUth
1170 feM lllong the Woet
linl of loction N"o. 18totho
of
oo-n-
SCRAP, BATTER lEI.
ETC.
992-6810
RUTUND
SALES.and
SERVICE .
131 20. 27: 141 a. 10. 11,
24 8tc
WE BUY ALL
STARTERS.
USED l"1LIINI
85 - Generel Heul1ng
ing 132.17 1Cr81, more. or
p.m. 7 Deye
a.rro.-11
D.Yo. Cloaocl Iunday
lllo.no.-1 p.m. I Doyo, Clo.ed lun.·Mon.
TODAY, MAR . 1.3. 1990
#1
Bile por lb.:
ct ..n Dry
C1111, 31SC per lb.
RIDGE
OPEN:
APRIL 1 THIIU JULY 1
86 - Mobile Home Replif
87 - Upholltetv
place of beginning, contain-
• I .R. 143
• S.ll. 143
Sldonl!qulpmlnt
.
81 --Home Impr ovement s
82 - Plumbing & HeMing
38~ dog. E., 8 chains 81
links; thenco-S. 42V> dog. E.
3 chaine 50 links; thonco S.
3'A dog. W., 7 chains 88
links; thence S. 3'A dog. W.,
~0 chaine 42 linkl: thence
N. 86'!. deg. w.. 34 chain 0
31 Iinke: thence N. 3'A dog.
E.. 41 chalno 741inko to the
Being the
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
I-I l-Ife
Ser v ;ces
thence N. 89V, dog. E.. 13
ro~o; thonce S. 4 H> deg. E.,
13 rodo lo the road; thence
along tho roOd S. 69'!. dog.
W., 13 roda; thonco N. 67
dog. S rode 10 Iinke: thence
N. 22V> deg. W. 7 rods 17
Iinke to tile piece of begin·
Located at 1405 Kq_nawha Street,
~oint Pleasant Watch For Signs
The Estate of the Late Ella Gaskins Will Be SOld
PAT HILL FORD
St. lt. 338, S Mlat
Ohio
Smith' I N.W. corner and in
the .center of the road;
Fdllqllahuday
Apri887-1Daaa
SER~ICE
Wt can r~r and rt·
alt't 'radiators and
heater carts. Wa can
alto oc:id boil and rod
out rildiaton: We also
repair Gas Ta..s.
949-21;68
73 - Vans & 4 WO 's
reuid, end, In uid Section
UCtiON
·. EVENINGS
FREE EStiMATES
74 - Motorcvcles
76 - Boau & Motors tor Sale
76 - Auto Perts & Aoceuor iee
77-- Auto Repair
78 - Cemp jng Equ ipment
7 ~- Campeu & Motor Homes
18, ToVI(n 2, Ronge13 of the
Ohio Compony Purchase.
Beginning S. 25 dog. E.. 10
rodo 20 tinkt from Fanny_
& Auction
Patnting · ·
71 -'- Aulos ior Sale
72 - Trucks fo r Sale
lhlp, County end Steto afo-
Public Sale
Gutter Cleaning
62 .:..... Winted to Buv ··.
63- Uyeslock · ·
64 - Hey & Grain
66 - Seed & Fert il il er
41 - Houses tOr Rent
the County of Mlligo In the
Stote of Ohio. and Townohip
Counhou•
in Pomet"oy, · of Slllobury. and bounded
. Ohio:: rn- the above- named and doocribod •• follows:
county, on Tundoy. Moy 1, Parcel 1:
1190 ot 10:00 a.m.. tho foh
Beginning
. South 20
lowing described real estate, cholna 66 links from lhe N.
situated in the County of · W. corner lwhenco a black
Meigs, and tho State of oak t 2'' bearo N. 83 dog. E..
• Ohio. to wit:
8 links) of Section 18, Town
Situated In tho Vlllogo of 2, R... go 13 of the Ohio .
Middleport,
County of Company Purchue; thence
Meigo and Stete of Ohio:
N. 88'!. dog. E., 20 cholno
Being Cols Nos. t 29 ond 88112 linkl to the center of
t30 In Polmor'o Addition to the old road from which •
Sheffield, now incorparoted Sycamore t 2" boars N. 21
into and o Pill ofthe Vlloge of deg. 10' E., 34 tlnkl and to·
Middleport. Meigo County, cun 6" boars s. 40 dog. 35' ,
Ohio. For e more definite d• 241inko; thence S. 31 'h dog.
• ocriptlon of uid toto. refer. E.• 6 chains 8~ links to the
B
...
Public -Notice
an ce io
Gutters
61 - ·Far'm Equ ipment
21 - Busln•• Opportunity
22 - Money to Loen
23 - Prof•aional Servtcu
992-2269
Downspouts
TransDorlalion
882-New 'Haven
"896-L.etarl r
·
•
..
1 1- Hetc Wented
1 2- Situation Wanted
1 3 - lnsurance
14 - BUsin•s Tram ing
1 6 - Schools & Instruction
1 6 - Radio. TV & CB Rep)lir
1 7 - Misc:ellaneous
"\.
18 - Wanted To Do
209 South 4th St•
NEW- REPAIR
Farm Supplies
& Ltvesluck
Servtr.es
BILL SLACK..
ROOFING
53- An1iQue$
64 - Mis e. Merchandise
55 - Building Supplies
56 - Peu lot Sale
57 - Musicellnstruments
58 - Fr.,.. lu & V eg~ebl•
5'9- For Sale or Trade
Employment
•A clanffilld advertisement placed In The Daily Sentinel I ll~ ·
992-6173
ilowcii'd L. Wrltesel
Ei 1 - Household Oood 11
52- Sport ing Goods
SIIYI YOI'"'
• w• ·-.
"FIREWOOD
"LOW INCOIIE MDIII"
...
3·21·'80-tfn
Merchanrttse
Cerd of Thanks
ln Me"'ory
Annoucem"eniS
Giveawav
Heppy Ad t
lost lnd FOund
7- Vard Sale (paid in advance )
8 - Publ ic Sale & Aucr ion
9 - Wantld to 8u~
TII·COUITY IECYCUNG
*LIGHT HAULING
Midiltpart, Oh.
' $1 .30/ day
run s. broken ul) di/V I w ill b e" charg~
123456-
d• after publtclltfon to m-.e correction.
•Ads thl't mUst be Plid in a~ce are
Card of Th.nks
In Memoriam
.20
.30
.42
.eo
.05/ doy
fnr far.tl
Plld.
•sentiriel it not ruponsible for error latter fir1t
15
Monthly
. outside Meigs, G81, ia or M~son count i• ff1 us1 be pre·
$4.00 .
$6.00
$9 .00
$13 .00
'
.
Services
"SHRUB -8..-TREE
TRIM anll RE·
MOVAL ·.
Reference~
Over 1 5 Word1
'Ra1e
Words
Days
I A.M. until NOON SATURD-AY
.
Goad lloteo
. T.L.C.
27 Yro. .Exp.
RATES"'
7
The Daily
IMM loartl for
Senler Citlz- aad
tlarldlca..... ·
•
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDA Y)hru FRIDAY 8 A.M. ·t o 5 ·P.M.
Ohio.
Busine
Cl.a ssified
w..............
orr-..
•
.
AT ALL
-FUINACE
· FUBACE
fiiiUCI
PAIITI AND IERVICE
ALLMAKII
OAI OR .LICTRIC
1111'S UPUAIICI
SIDICI
992-5315 w tiS-1561
.,..
117 L
'
Olllca
_
11\a . .... T>
I
a ....
--.......
_ , ..... I
_
N.llt..
...................
............
, . • Wfllll IW •
letCIIIo
. . . . . . 111.141•
....
Y•d Ill• Aior1 4. I .• lth. 21>1
�····--·-r -··· ·.• '
o ...... o- - t
LAFF-A-DAY
Yard Sali
7
44
Apartment
Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLEe lty Llrry WriPt
Household
Goods
for Rent
74
. The Daily Sentinel-Pegs 9
Television
Viewing
pt. Pleulnt
& VIcinity · .
•
'=~~, . sec~~~ -~£~s·
ClAY I. POIWt
··0 four
Reorrango loitora of tho
ocramblocl wordo b.
I~ ~
8
TUES., APRIL 3
.low
1:00 (J) HMdcallle And
McCormiekQ
·= •.._.
• (J) • • • (I) Ill
(I) NUT_,
(I) Voyege Of The Mimi The
crew conducts a whale ,
census. (R) Q
i:"'~~!lout Q
IIJ World T*y •
Middleport •
. & VICinity • ·
2 ....., """ ..... llondoY ond
Tt 1 nd 'API. N. Home
lor, 11 .
. _ ot olollllll!l ond
wa•iluL
Tom · 1hll8e
111'11 - . 2
rnl... . Pill
- " " " ' Hlglllo- on left.
w..
-L
.
. . . . ="=='
(I) llody Elaclrlc
r
.
·
121 Top Card Contnt.nta
combine entertalrvnent triVIa
willl the luck of the draw.
131 Hlngln'ln
1:35 ()) Andy Qrlfftlh
7:00 (J) Scarecrow • Mra. King
00 flll600& I'VE OOT.'
•
(J) PM Magazine
.
(ll 8porleCentar
'
ill 8 (I) Current Allalr
(I)
MocNeH Lehrer
.
·rn
tl7*PB,
Dodao
D."1r,
l - ,., '"·
1'8,
~
1 tift, crl!loo.
-ton. ,'
_T::..:.flf flf.AUAN
. \JI&>Eo ..
r
TAtf$.f.
.,- .. .... out,
.1 ;3110. !04'171-
ond out, ...
.... l'Wit..
-·
.......
110M.-~
_.. _.
11
-
HllpWinted
........ Clll
AI/Oili.U-1-..,
...... ~1421.
Bualriea ··
53
47 Wanted to Rent
33 ' Fenns fCir Sale.
INOTICII
,=. . --,.,.. . . Titthall: fOU do
...... .... wllh pHpll you knOw,
riCA.,..,.
.. liolloOI, aood wH,
,,.
...
fUmlohod
_ , to lnt~ 2 llory houM nMC1e
~poln, t 3 IIIlO CIMII, 1 milo ofl
Rd, gooc1 . - , .....
-~ulck
.....
NOT to •ncJ money I -
~.--the ollodnl·
- o n d - . ...ollox
·
lor- - · P21, "'' Paint
lloalolor,
3110 lloln II., Pl. Pl., WY 3110.
...__...,_~u-.
-·
-,ooo.oo.
-
1-•
·
35 Lots & Acreage
- - ·--ion
Lalo ond .., . . . ovoiiOblo tor
Real Esl<riP
::-.::= .:::=
31 Hoinea tor Sale
..
:l::i.
Roybum Aaod. AIWII wotor,
povec~ 101<1, Nooonoble nolrlc>
. _ 31J4.171.1388 •. No olntJo.
wklo trolloro ploooo.
49
For Lease
)ii'Li~ri;i;;;;;;d~;
fOR LEASE: 1Wo S1cancf.ffoor
""'"'*hod _..,, opt. IIOVI
lnd:='rolilgototor.
•nd
uo
114.,.*""'-;',~
q
No polo.'
.......eM ,...
111• por monlh, -or
prooi~S
8:Jr
et~24:,
lt4 4412325.
,
Fcir IMM: t24t llo. tobocoo
DOUndago. Ull por tb. atrt-JS&.
ten.
'
LOYoly
Unlumlohod
lorgo
- - . . _ 3br opt. In dufil...
2.1 mllol, AI. 2,
• • •,1 1 -- . _
lot 1
--Ylndolo,
olnl- 114 •
,_
b olx14
l l Lalo/oorlhlololle · -..,own,
Ool·
Hlcllory
Cliopol
Rd., wotor llpollo,
Rongo,
Rolrlgorolor,
llot't-1tltiL Wp.IIL
on, ......., d
lllod, panh.
ovalloble, lt4~4 or t27.,_, UIHhtoo nal tnctudod,
LICIHIID
QCCUMnOIIAI.
2 oiiiiM·~ Krgor m4.
no 01!110. cllpoolt • rllonnoeo .
liiEJIAIIIIT
Dlolllol. COlli otr, oololo
Nlq il. 114 441 4421,
l'ull ., port 111M; ~ ao, IIIII, 121,100 lt-toGI'II. Two lrllllr loll "" rolll bolilnd
Krgor Crook llgli School. Coil Tallo- ~L ~ 2131 pclo•
0~~- to . . . In. • bod
.....
•. • • 1M •:: nail
•
on d ,_, Hohaw 114-347- ollir 1 p.m.
- - t 3 1 1 - • - .as
por pound. lt4JIIII41.
: : : . : Yoorr ....
_., Mil ..,.,. P
AIMJ tnllltr haallup. Pt1aed to
Rentals
::;o.~~
ooll. It 4-74M3~~ -lngo.
=-=
=
=
........
Heidi
_._
~ ,......,.
n 11 .,., ...., ·~ 001nmllaktn,
- 1 0 P.O.Io•tll. - ·
otj411t4.
Loall
""':.::!!
IARN - Y
-inl lloclbl
=-rr,)
~'iii'~::.~;
-
=•a.
=~
=.. iiiik":'=
1111 .nytlml I~
tarlp.m. '
tolofng
~Ff' -
-In P - .
2124.
II
11,._
I " bldr.n.. -
Soulh Fourth. llklcll1part (nllr
Mole. Jr. Hlghl. •st,OOO. 114- 41 Housea tor Rent
112:'r.la
~::.:;:=.:-:::===-:- 2 or 3lilclrooon " " ' - lor s br1 ~ bath, 1111 modwor home ln ~- 114-112-1723.
on ... t IIIII h i i i J , - · or 3 bod,_, ~~MiY
wllh ollod ond omoll oobln. 114- 2rwdlcorated.
Nice; on UnoOin
:117.Qiol2oftorlp.m.
lt..-flrloe ledua1d to little .......
=ahto.· ......_.
Ia-....
114 IU "U, 11 _
.
., 11-, I llllh, .,.,.. ...,. ond olr,
M
~ pdoild. at..-
ond
Zl7t.
. . . ou-.--......- .11 ··-
toJo!ng opplloot- II Br S • f qocw1a, lui
DolfWiitoe Pliza. P0nwoy I Gil-- IIIIIIMnl, ~ - ·
11po11o. Coli- NC, ,.
. , 2100
"""'
~·~ Wi¥*41 ~lodw.Cotlal•4p.nl•an~
,;~.;.::)
114-4e-m1.
Part.Cinle
help
•nted:
_,....1111 ....
o..,_,
-• woll-"1':d"""·
~~~-r
to bol Clot 30
o1o Oollpoh Dollv Tltbone, • •
Tlllrd Avonuo, Clollipolle, OH
___,
.
.
=7:0 at-·
Musical
fiT
lnstn.ments
"TUnnng"
PIANO CAll!
r- ....,_ -lnr
:lf"l:::l"~oro~~~"'; ~~·P:..,~):,=:
Wlllaei,. tot Ill 2321,
IIH - . 114 •41 4tt~,.!llth
lloclb; " ' • 1111, •.
304-&2H8M.
54 Mlicellaneoua
Merchandise
tl hp laloho T-or1 _'!1ulro
--rloo, ond I t .... BTU
Amono Air oond. lt......W!tl.
tl7t Yalk..,.gon, ~ oondhlon, out~to
111~
Floh - · 5
.-roo.
t/2 outboord ...
remot• control motor,
alne.
Rummlnablrd
Doollt
tift. MOG. I14-<14t.()a1t
Fl.-.
.
t•7 ltD Chovy INOk 414. 1114
NIRin lllrco •nl Cll..,..r. 1114
-'
5I
FruitS & ·
Vegetablea
~~~~~~~-::~
Jock'o Pnid-· liiiJII!IJ Opon .... lpr!ng, Rl. oo Horio
eam1,,,, iiM of
Pro t • l·
wv,
rarrn
Suppl~<•;,
& liVt".(n,·k
··---·-or·
~~~~~ tl 112 ft 120 lip. , . .
T Fonf. 30WIZ-3373.
171-1111.
Pelnt PIIIIIIIC,
no
· MI~aad. _,., unit
hM I bllf'OOIIW, futl • PI -.nt,
.,....., llvlr!l ....., • both.
Lou.-y t ochup tn • 1 1111~,
:"!.::....,
........~~
u"'
1111
17H441.
'
·
..:.·:
...,_for
rent In Syru••· 814112·'78111oftor I p.m.
-
tor ront1 Mtramllll,
Ohio.
2
nomo.CoH
Dopoolt
ond rot.ronco o mull.
lt4-
""*"""'
112-3175.
.,
Nice 3br, houw, .nice Ytlrd, c:Hy
cllotrlcl, 220 Porch St.
Konougo. It 4-44tlo7~73.
51
Household
Goods
;Bos1?
i •On vacation.
Who'•
Tony
'
~~ -
.
.
, . . Ford - · 4 ""· 1111..
...... oondlllon, ....
••1..-4111.
tll7 ComaN I ........ AIC, till
................... - -~_{1,000.
~..-7111-
11-olnod.
Nova A ••aminatlon
of China's advances In
technological growth. Q
o11w.
speed a dro~ing · Infant to
the hospital. Q
.,.=-·
~";·
ilii JlrlmeNIWI
•••
a church '"'"' ...-
a
M'
tll7 llond!l ~J 4 .,......,
11,000. :J0W11.11av.
Plymouth Vorogor L£.
"
"
'
· P
- crulel. 1fr,
~lwiMI,
tltt,
iunllm • - • · Jlxoollont oondMion. $1,111. Col IIH42-2711
or 114-74Nt14.
'
-na.
t •• .. 11,000 .,~~oe,
""'-~
M,lUIIII.
34.
For loto: tiiO TOValo .Cottco,
•t,400.11t :ill! 1121ollorlp.m.
Fcir 1111: t311 Toyeoo Supra,
.. ;:r -.....
~=KingUval
0 ludwal. . PNHRtl:
TUHday Night Flghll
121 Nalhvllla Now Country
mualc's hOtteat stars are
· · 1 0Ch8wyo.
0.- ·
Corwa-.
Surpluo.
-or
or -
as •
mott-•
aa.
Flod llorb 304-77M111
lllko ..,._ li)WI2oll711.
73 vana & 4 WD'a
117& 4 -
dllvo Chovy
-.IOW7J.II12.
t . . Ford 210- _
....
"
" ' -.
. ...
.,h dUIJ
.........
...
_
_
Dati ,.... Cocl p ,.......
Full ..... - · lui ....
lupply,
., • -441 ~
_ . . , lorr
· - · ....tlllr aonot, liurgolor ..... roohlg, olnll, - ·
114-4tl TIIJ
I:OOp.m.
bitw••
1:00-
or
,
0
BARNEY
.OEveningNawl
IJINIWS
, 10:30 (ll To a. Announced
roN-watch
til "" "'!!! Vlalon Of Jamea
Hubball Q
.liD Beliny Hll 8hOw
121 Crocilc • Chi..
·10:34 ()) MOYIE: Hoallge l'llght
HE'S GONE OVER
TO SEE PRISSY SUE'S
BflAND•NIW
IUI'Itl,
mltll · Clblnete,
lioOdboordo 130 ond up to sea.
I'UI'I'IIS If
•t
aame u Cleh with
orodh. 3 mi. out IUIIVII
Rd. Qpon I A.M. lo a P.M. lion,
thl1l sat. Colll14..41-4322.
(2:10)
' in~"=1>Q.
11 00
-,Ohio l:,~:'ond A-uo)
0-_,
liiYI o ohlutliuro lieond
.
quo11 ln'!unnc4 c -of.. .In·
I- olioultl oon·
1M1 Dr. R. Cliorloo Holllcloy II
lt4-70.S11S orllolotl2o2153.
Wonlod: Dump truck drtvor lm1
_.lng1 muat ,.y.
_ ........ 11-!.. lta.
____ ...,...
..... ,
In.-....
:'II Put! - ·
b-......, ' - Iaiii
wllh
1111Miftln.
-jii'ot - -
"""""'
ti
IIIIIdlo!IOii lliiMftlery. Pttowl to
ooU II ua.-. CoM .lt.._
tlllll oftor a p.m.
atate your zodiac lllgn.
BERNICE
:R::-on=-a::p~,o~~;:,;uniiJ:;:,...,---.,..,.-,.....
foolu-,
Sbr,
-c, 'IN Holpllol,
11)4.117J.
....., n
Yolloy
-IOIIAA
. 12
Sltudon
BEDEOSOL
-..tlng o
~""'
-"'"" ....... bod•-··
:.::._too. -.
Two or tine Mc11oom. Nlw
root, M'WfW H ~uarated. llrw
-.......
111711
UnoGin
· .
TAURUS (April ..._, 20) AHhough
you and your mate may hiYia common
objlctlvetoeloy,a~couldarlllover
ICOfUIIO (Oct. 14 Nor. Zl)
quettiOnl your IIIIU1y • an
but today you might Ml golll
the way each wanta to execute hla/her
· ld-. II neither will compromlle, trou-
CANCIR (MIII1. . 11) Do not ••· .
PIC!
otharw to protect your 1-..u today In your lfiWICilll or ~ delllnge. You muet look out lor your1111 orr
......_ ~ .elM you may end up wllllilll th111 what'
In ..,_ to •uo...l yeur nbltloul objeo- rou had wiMin you atartecl
II... In
IIIMd you may have to ...o (....,
...a tong 11 you
April.,.._
Apartment
the,..,
torRent
1 bedroom •
In Mldllap art.
-- ·1-
l
UJiololro
- oncl
_ kilo.. - ,..
q.., Wrltlr
~-. 1141121117 •
114-
1br, ovwtnla ~ 6 • · 1
CoUll ....... ldtillieri - - •
utllfiM. ....... • , ....pluo
,..
•frlaorol•.
114 411 lOA.
np ,_,
:!:t..,
one
ob-·
\
·
tMn H IL
.,.
•t.,.
bolll '
t.,.,..
.,-:"= :r=c.
m:'o':,to:
-•,...llllofloGn•wnii!O:r:·
e=o~- D SlpL at In ordor tc
~you
Alfal,hltyour·
8111c1 for~ AI- you might not ba 81111 to 1111
Jen.r-on•
e
t1l
'
.......
1 IIPOtte T
·
(2;o'O)""'
-(PO)
• (I)
eo Pat ._......,.
0 . . lhet ....
12:00(J) _ . _ One 0n ....__
•
·• •
Nlf.lll= Q
Ill lllb. - • Tonight
. . . . 11jM . _
0 Afllr Holn
·
II)
0
:e:::5a:
en..
91ereo
yow ~
• Nalhttla
eouinry
negoiiiiiOI)I todlry, .,_lilly II rou .
rnulle'l hoiiHI start.,. ·
..... to dtll with a tough "OOOkll" wllo
fMiurld M.
11M ~11611•111 you ..n.
,
12:10•111
cour1g111111
•'= a:.
AGIMMii c-. • rw. 11) You n r · · DMitt ~ ..... Nllhf Willi
I you originally lllvl- notllklil' to 1111111 goocl dl Dllio.11 whln If
~~~al~eo~Mta~n~ta~.. ,~~
. . _ , wll gNatly I Ilion,
IIIOUICIIJO rather -u.ty' you n jWI£1 id today, 10 Dl, lit 1
Ml I I.
today. I .... lit Olhera cut Into on yow ' anronl put you In & poeltiall ..... you I
tit I you n aot, you...,. .... to kill your..._ . 1111 you muat come up wlllllll I!MI• I
IMice tome cllangel dlclat.l by tho . IIICk IO 1..
to==
"How do I get out of here Wlihout being
sprayed with a sample of perfume?"
..
Stopped Lovin' Her Today.
131
Q
11:30e(J) 8 T : t Bilow
e ~ ......._
lecllve l'llgMdlng rour aoclal actlvttill
today. Don'tJet friei)CII get you lnvoi'Md
In IOI!IIIhlng you not only don't
doing, bUt you feel II too expenlive
well.
'
.
.
. jlctlvelfor yourlllfthaiiN ICIUIIIy un:
.....llllr 21.,.. II) UIUIIIy you . attalnlllle. Be practical lind rnllttlc,.
ora a rather OMy ptQDn with ~ to ' aardlng your tiiQita.
:
get IIOnfl, but today you might have e · tAGITTAIIIUI (Niow. 21 Dec 21) Sti'M
chip on ~ lhouldar and read more to ba plllloaoplltoll regarding toclaY'*
Into what people aay than they Intend -'1inltucl of IIIM:&::::"'IIMOUI
and coma outiWinglng.
of mollhllll. A ~
wlllllllko .
44
j '
LIIIIA (~~ttL 23-0ct. 21) Try to be 18:
b1e COUld reault.
Holghlo.l14tll2 1111.
Wanted
course.
tro·Graph predk:tlona lor ·the year
ahead by maHing $1.25 to Allro-Graph,
clo 11111 .-.paper, P.O. Box 91428,
Ctevallnd, OH 44101-3428. 8111ure to
blll..,llmiiJ - · -llvlna
room, cl'*'tl ""!!",-rio hoil
R.ll. -.wurglolln~
-ldl-,2-• Off~h...
..
.
..........
rwl. _...._ Ia ..-.tllln
lal. Tlllo ........... Conlooii.JiOMOII' 111,100. lt4-
1101 -
OMIMIJIIM
0 Miami VIol
121 LIYI!III Legend Gaorge
Jones pelorma many of hi I
Claselc hila Including HI
~ ........
llldcl=,
'T>ID
Who
ei!D A..-o 1t11
:,',:,'::. lal. Cllr 8ohoo!lo,
~lconto In
on o dotiJ
-
for
Publlc VT Oelandera?
For Solo by 0...: Pwlotlitout
llubdhtoloii, .... t 112 lillho,
......, - · - -
•=a,._.
FPays
(I)
_ _ , - . ,
0o111 II«
OH A-lOll 11111.~m.
114112
Tla llolgo ~School Dlolrlol
lo ~ q..allod oppllclnll
to " - " on IIH ol-to
e (I) Coach Hayden
and Kelly have a dispute
over the conca.J'f of
Aolory or oolite toot -ng. •'
--lo-plolod-=z: >'
Pump lnd oorvloo,
•:
•uo.z.
Ia
RoHrtaon
•1%1 8 Mldnlahl Collar
Jack and hla father team up
to clear Jack's younger
brother's fllll'l18. 1;1
• • • (I) llllrtj-llllng
Mich... gota hll
lc>ng-awalted raise bUt can't
tell ElliOt. Q
•liD Now ·Twilight Zone
pO, Good ooiOcllon ol becl100111
10 d•p
9:30 D
oommftment. Q
10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pat
. 1 - Guido (tl - - Roofing 1ncl Siding. Q o Ext. ..10111.
oncl Arldhlona. F,.. ootlrnoloo.
S315to $115. Tobloo HO •nd up •
lo lt21. Hldoo bodo t3IO to
1118. Rocltnoro S221 to 1375.
Lompo 1211 to I12S. D t . StOI ond up to"'$4... Wood
tobiO ...e c..lro 1218 to $'111.
Dooko •toll up to 13711. HutMOO • up, bonk oornptoll
wllh IIIOIIMM 1218 ond up to
PIS. """' bodo ano - boo oprlngo lull
m, firm .... oriel .... Olio •275 • up, King 1380. 4
d,._ cheol $11. Quri Coblnolo
I, I,. I~ JIUI1. llbV
1411, Bod 1roQuoon liM
A. Icing fromo
featured live.
HOW DO 'fOt.J KNOW
HOW I WAe SPEW.. INEt IT~
CIOYEIINIIEHT SEIZED YolilciM
'
MOYIE: Continental
' Beautiful (2:30)
~· :1:rJe.=
=;:-...,.
:;
y
fUJI=flllld
..;.,8onwllllllll [
••
=-
.•
Ill)ID C:0, '
fP..r' Llllr Alllllfllllll
Cillo IIIII•
:::,~-.~~-r.· ·; . ,.::~i:!'~~o~n
..
.. .
'
EAST
WEST
+to 4 2
+AQJ97 .
9A54
+
•...
9132
IA876
+KIS
SOUTH
.KQJ876
tQt0953
+76
Vulnerat;le: Both
Dealer: South
West Nortll
I+
Paa
All pass
l!ul
!NT
An!~
CROSSWORD
".
•...
by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Nigerian
\
1 Gossip
s Up till now
10 Dinah ·
of song
11 Spanish
city
.
I 2 All-lime ·
home-run
leader
13 Prln<;lple
4 Highslrung
5 Aushdie's
"The Verses"
8 Beyond
7 Ha<f a
sawbuck
8 Beverage
Yeaterdey's Answer
9 Hairdo
14 Author
gadget
22 Chinese 38 Troll
Levin
10 Capuchin
port
37 Different
15 Preeminent
monkey
23 French
38 "17 Acute
18 Newsman
port ·
Geordie"
25 Take on
(1956 film)
18 Meager
Koppel
. mir:nber
17 'Superman"
cargo
39 Soak
211nstance
18 Evanesce 27 Emphatic
lhrough
24 Widen ·
19 To be (Fr.) 30 Poor
40 Palm leaf
28 Set righl
20 Become
Clare, e.g . 41 Backtalk
· 28 Framelachrymose 34 Tantalize 43 Minced
21 Solicitude 35 Subsist
oath
work
29 Despicable
31 Abslruse
320rb
33 Attractive
35 Ancestry
36 Stitch ·
·as Just
great!
42 Deft
. 44 Martini
~ngredlent hr-t-+-f.-4-
7
.'
'·
'
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45 Horse ·· c
or cornrnon l~l-.l48Was
astonished
47 Advanlage
'
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DOWN
'
' '
1 Burn
21sraell
dance
:OAILY CRYPTOQUOI 1!3- Here's how to work ll·
'A XYDLBAAXR
.
laLONGfELLOW
413
One letter standa for another: In this sample A is used
for Uae three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lelllth end fonnaUon of the w!JI'dti are all
hints. Each day Uae code letters •re.different.
·
CRYnOQUOTE .
4-3
GDMZM
VB
EXJ.B M G
BJPMGDVHU
GDOG
ORJKG
PONMB
'
'
0
BNMXMGJH ZMBGXMBB.- BJKZEM
.
'::::S:Wr12:41())110¥11: Alluncllr
;1 vau:, . .
on main a burr UIICIIr yciUr llddll.
-'
tKJ4
+AU2
li'II!IIP
Olvtcle (POl (2:00)
1:05 ()) MOVIE: The llacl And The
1:30. Ill 8 (I) The WondW
Y•ra Kevin runs the
spotlight lor !hi SChool play,
starring Winnie. (RJ r;l
. 121 On Bilge
,
'
9:00 D a e (I) A-nna The
whole ctan gaihera at
Roseinne's to eat and
com~lalnNl::l r;l ·
t1l (!) F
lne Phllly
Lutaayl publicly
acknowledQed that he has
AIDS. (1 :30i D ,
1118 8 0 ,MOYIE: 'Laker
Qlrll' CBS Tuetday Movtle
.,
Leller players would complain of make his
Down one in three bearls was not··
bad luclt here, but Alan Sontac, wb01e
result. East-West can make ..
standards of play are the hlgbest,
trickl playing In apadets. .
charged binueU with incorre<!t play.
0 Murder, 8lle Wrote
Home
'
diamond ruff. Dec'larer could tlltn :
f::!~~~b.~a~s~. trouble overcoming bad .ond
proceed to fotce out the
ace
contract.
..
.liD MOVIE: Somewlltre In
Trine (PG) (2:00)
a:oo ....
t..
•
Ill 8111 Raacue: 111 Police
114-311-: ...,
nl
Servtces
.
(I) (!)
iJ:
'
'
wi!ICfow.
Opening lead: t 2
West led bis singleton diamond.
East won the ace and returned tbe sir, .__,__ _ _ _ _ _ _.....,_...J
his lowest diamond. West ruffed and
pla,yecl queen of cluba. Declarer won Alter winning the ace of clubs, ~lar- •
ace and..played the heart 10. West er sbould play the king olspadell lrom :
·took the ace and played a club to dummy. throwing away Ills other clUb.
East's king, and ilne more diamond The defenders' communication WGII1d ,
wis ruffed for down one in three then be cu~ - East could not get tile :
hearts. So .ll!uch for Imagination, lead one more lime to.Jive West a it;C.
The
rellects on his leallngs for •
Angela. (R) Q
, 114- ;
ato,aoo 11nn.. aa- lnqutrteo
only. tt..-27 ollor lp.m.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
$oloo ond choh• prlcocl from
as
nogallolilo,
NJr
'
(J) 8 Matlock A Brttlsh
(I)
.
. ..
·''
•to
would pass originally and then come
In With a jwnp to ,three hearts.
But Alan Sontag, who Is right up there ·
.with the m011t Imaginative and talented players in the game,. knew that it
would take very little In partner's .,
band to make a game. Sure enough,
tbe J·J of diamonds, the club ace and
the heart 10 would normally cover ,
enough loaers that 10 trickl might well
be made In hearls. But there was a lit-.
tie· trouble on the way to the pay •
ambassador reluses to hide
behind diplomatic Immunity .
==-'7:"'::-::--::-:---,,.,.
ltlglollor
Fcir .lllloll,
, - ar, tIIDrlna
Yolo
11am0 t.V. 11uo1
lor"112 liolho,
to 2 _, ....._ AIC, pool, 42 Mobile Homes
"'" """' P.O.
,.....
· nr rl oe. t ..... c1r
for Rent
raP_,
lo1tre; OGhaall, 114 4tl OtoU.
4111t'
7
(2':00)
e
-~~
.trucll.
a. Announc:ecl
7:35 ()) Sanford And SOn
1:00 (J) MOVIE: One On one (PO)
!NOll ......... \'
12,000.11_7...11.
tiill Pollmtno _
5
I"
t2
Perhaps it seems s!range that South · Q J 10 4
:ar:A·'~rdyl Q
0 croufire ·
131 Night <;O..rt
· · - .,....,
All ,....lllotrlo,
'eunroof,
~OIIIIenl
oondltlon,
deck. 171
-
...._
1124 E. Moln. 11-. -roy.
Houro: II.T.W. tO:OO o.m. to I:DO
P·".'·• Sunclor 1:oo ro 1:00 p.m.
5t4olltil-2521.
Top Colli pold. Old tumftlft
-ol,
cuboorclo,
qulno,
......... 30M71440!.
Merchandise
ar,'!nohon2-- ......
llglll lime . . lloro I II, with ,
_ will CIA.
Boll
1 Cit
~~if!1
arillldoaa to run bor, 114411o
tn JUl. 11t -
' 1.1 Codllla ~ Do¥illo,
Bur or loll. AlvoriM Antlquoo,
OHIO YALLIY PUILIIHINQ CO.
lnd
COooh-
1 li I' I' I' I
~~~~~MBLE FORI .I I I I I I' I lJ
By Jam" JacGby
Dill E"*llllnment Tonlgllt
t,..a...-.- ________.,.
......
..,.,
loJ411-1111
O""!'llifll.
·
-clayo,
-· U715.
Opportunity
lllllrtiVn
1110
-
Row Vlclao
e (I) Mama's Family
r.
1112 Ford LTD, t1300. lt4-44&o Camper, 11ft., aoocl. aondttlon, ' ~ :
~~~toed NHOnabl., ell anytlnw, ~ ~
IU1 .
' tt4-441 1342.
• '
'~!
1- -.s, lutomatlc,
Uk8
,_
olldo«i
1or
~l!
fully - - . Wlh ounrool •
Frnanctdl
21
t171 lllor Croft - · 12 ft,
Mlf Mntainocf, hllf OWn Ina, •,
~~· - 2 - olor l:tRI : ·
llollllu ' 2 -
t•t AIIC Eapo, 4 lfllve
ltlllon _ . . N, PI, til
Wheel. AC, eunrool, ...,..
Good oondl. . . ., • 311 1101
Employment Serv tces
'
1171 . . . Chi, ~ aontalned, !'
.... top llr cond, . ...... In ,'
(ll To
LJfT/H! IT~ THI THEME ,S"ONta
t17a 21ft. Haltclor llom- ·l!lh :
trovol lrlllor wllh owning '
oncl lilloli .. ExCIICoN lt,....:W211oftor lp.01.
,,
........
by fi lling in the miuing words
you develop fro.m steP No. 3 ~low,
Post-mortem
flash
7:05 ()) . l a " 7:30 • (J) Fllllllly Fh.CI
773-IIDI.
_
Complete the chuckle quoled ,
' ~
'131 AbbOtt • Coatallo
11ft. wtld•m•• e~~rwper, AC, ,
lilllilub, S8,!100 linn. II..... ·
t:IH.
11M .s-o .t4 ft. campor . 1
toollor1 ~ cOilfolnod,IUO. 3IMo
tm c.ctloo Coupoclovlllo. Four
,... Clwvy
8
.
. NORTH
+KB653
I L,H,;ourt r;l
~ Mullc
~--.or-oflar, ·
.
•
7
ltJ Miami VIce
30W'II.f4tl. .
·
1m l'onl LTD, aood oond, 1'8,
otr · AlllFII
·tiNI
••1300.
114 Ul radio,
3114. - ·
,II I'
NoWIHOur ·
,~a Wheel 01
campers&
MotorHomea
new tlrM 1nd ,... lnrwnHMion.
ltW17...tl.
•
.~
SCIAM.I.m ANSWIItS
'1 - t.
St1cOnd- Realm- Dally- Radial -ACADEMIA
I saw a cliie play on words on the bumper sticker of a
professors car. It read:·. ShoW me a life long student and
t'll show you a reaiA9.APr:=!v!IA"nutl"
i
a
1·
•
2
.II]) Th!M'I Company
.
•
e'm~:RrUMB~ED I' 1 I'
Ill 80C88New11Q
1111$ MY ALO~
T
' ... ·I I
,...
Dill 8(1)AIICNewaQ
.l:aue
'
_V_Y_E_I · youFirstblastconductor:
"Why dO
the hQrn at th!lt
I......J.L.-..1.-..1.
I' 1 I'--.1. ':' crossing?
Hhasn1 been usl)d
In years." Second conductor:
1
. ..
/Ji lpottaLooll
'
•
r_;;_;__....,,_.....:.., "Well, you never know when
--rU:...N:;...:s9..;A.:...;T,..:1~-l~ someone might be -········.".
8:05 (5) S.¥elly Hl..,_.l
8:30. (J) 8 NBC Nightly He~
Polka,_, ""'
'
'
,..~-R-E
ltJ He·Man
131 Charte1 In Charve
...... • , tiO Colo · - · dlopolt. -
.••
.'
fatm lour llmplo wordo.
II..YCRUKONI
I I I' I _
I' IGAMIE
I
I I' I
EVENING
Pomeroy,
~~
....••••
\
The
. KHNHJFH
Y.-...,•• CatJI•••olet NEVER KEEP UP WITH
..
THE JONESES. DRAG THEM DOWN TO VOUB
LEVEL -QUENTIN CRISP
-
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" I 810 by Klnq F - Syndlclle, Inc.
.•. ·~·-·-----------------------·-
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Page-1 0-'R18 DailY Sentinel
Ponwoy-Midcleport. Ohio
.'
Ohio Lottery.
r--Local news briefs...-...;. Clean air...
Continued from 'page 1
Conlin ued from page 1
Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
·
. ·
·.
Totlil to the Eastern Local School District was$152,612.59 with
$5,488 going for school employees retirement, $17,~ to St;lte
teachers retirement, and a net payment to ihe district of
$130,044.59.
'
In the M~lgs Local School District, tile total was $433,400.24
with $14,il87. going to school employees retirement, $53,687 to
· the state teachers retirement, bringing the new payment to the
·
·
district of $364,826.24
The Southern Local School District ' received ·a total of
· $156,018.04 with $7,114 going to the school employees retirement,
and $23,628 to the stlite teachers retirement making a total of
$125,276.04 coming Into the district after the deductions. ·
The direct allotment to the county board was $46,690.09.
EMS makes five runs _Monday
F ive callS were answered Monday by units of the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services.
·
At 9: 04 a.m. , Syracuse went to Trouble Creek Road for Mary
.
Kerns to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Raclfie at 11:07 a.m .. was called to Broadway St. to treat Bob
Campbell. .
·
Tuppers ·Plains at 1:20 p.m. transported DOra Pierce from
Mount Olive Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 4:41p.m., ·
Dale Baker from Route 7 to St. JOS!!Ph's Hospital; and at 11:46
p.m., Frank Day !t om Success Road to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
·
Censli.S Bureau will be testing ·
Residents of Meigs County will have the opportunity to be
tested for Census,jobs at a session to be held at the public library
In Pomeroy. .
The 30 tr~inute test will be administered at 9:30a.m. and 1:30
p.m . this Friday, according to Information pl'ovlded by the U. S.
Ce nsus Bureau. A.rea residents Interested In Census positions of
enumerator or crew leader may register at the nearest Ohio Job
Services office prior to Friday, or else register Friday morning
at the testing site.
'
For fUrther Information concerning Census applications and
testing, contact Cheryl Cox, U.S. Census Bureau District Office
..Recruiting Operation Supervisor, · 18(MI Masslevllle Road
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601, or call (614) 663-4733.
'
Census testing will be given in·Gallla County on Monday at 10
a.m. and 1 p.m. at the Ohio Job Services offlce~ . Melgs CountY'
residents may also test In Gallla County, a spokesman for Ohio
Job Services reported.
'
'
· Daily Number
118
Pick-4
event officials said was expecled
to raiSe $1 milllpn.
Bush Is often-accompanied on
such political events by Republican National Committee Chair-.
man Lee Atwater, w)lo masterminded the 1998 presidential
campaign victory.
But Atwater entered a New
York hospital Monday to receive
radiation for .a non-malignant
brain tumor and Bush sent a
get -well message to his "close
~
friend."
''During thlsdltflcult time ...
our hearts go out to him and that
wonderful family of his, I know I
speak for au when I just say we
wish him our very, very best,"
Bush told a Cincinnati fundraiser for Ohio Republican gubernatorial nominee George
Volnovlch.
Bush ·b egan his whirlwind trip
on Monday In Atlantli, where he
addressed the National Association of Broadcasters.
He then attended the Volnovlch
event In Ohio. .
.
Citing recent polls showing the
Republican Party the "majority
party for Ohioans under the age
of 25," .Bush spggested It may be
on the threshhoid of resurrection
In Ohio, which In recent years has
been dominated by Democrat.
Weather ·
Soutb Cen.tral Ohio
Decreasing cloudiness Tuesday night, with a low near 30.
Mostly sunny Wednesday, with
highs near ~.
Extended Forecast
Thu~ay through Saturday
A chance of rain Thursday and
Friday, with fair weather Saturday . Highs will range from the
low 40s to low 50s Thursday. and
In the 40s Friday and Sa~ljl'day.
Overnight lows will be In the 30s
Thursday and Friday mornings
and In the upper 20s early
Saturday.
9419
It's A.
Whole New
Ball
Game
. .. .,n·.,
OHIO!-
·
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'
I •
.
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Page3
'
BUSH VISITS OliiO -At a luad ralalog dinner
In Cindanatl, President Buah hold.l up the sip
which Is the sloghn for the Ohio gubernatorial
.
'
Ucense issused
'
.
race. On the right Is Congree1111an Mllie DeWIDe,
the Lt. Governor candidate. Ticket• to the packed
fund raising event coal SIOOO each. (UPI)
Lexington, Mass. ''The message
It's still giving Is the prospect of
sluggish growth."
The.downturn followed revised
Increases of 0.2 percent In
January . and 0.4 percent In
December, but .was anticipated
after an earlier report showed a
decline In February building
permits In the wake of January's
warm spell.
The Index suggests " the economy Is still struggling," said
Robert Dederick, chief economiSt for · Northern Trust In
Chicago. "It's still an economy
.that has not broken out of Its
slowdown.' •
Ball co-chairmen named
'
•
a1
· said.
The Index Itself finished at the
144 )eve! iri February, after
hitting 145.5 In January.
"The Indicators do point to a
continued slowdown, ~: Dederick
·
said.
On the downside were building .
permits, vendor performance,
which tracks delivery of products, stock · prices, contracts
ahd orders for plant and equipment.
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Emphasis of the demonstra- '£ldercare Options demonstra.Senllnel News Sta.f l .
tlon project will be 01) providing . lion projects to show that with
A total of $133,027.62 In Elderassistance to Incapacitated se- assistance many senior citizens
care Options monies will be
nlor citizens which will make It can Indeed stay In their own
coming Into Meigs County over
possible for them to remain In homes and that keeping them
th~ next year for programstheir .own homes. This could there costs i!!SS than the expense
geared to help disabled senior , Include '· homemaker services, of going Into a nursing home.
citizens with a full range of; · personal andn'iedlcalcare assistEldercare Options was funded
ln-homepersonalcareandhealth
ance,, home delivered meals, by the Ohio ,Legislature In the
" services.
·
mental health services, tra11spor- amountof$2.5mi1Uondeslgnated
That was the announcement of
tatlon and day care, although at . ior two demonilttatiO'II projects,
Cindy Farson, director of the . this time not all services are yet one In rural area and the other In
Area Agency on Aging, Marietta Jn place, Farson said.
an urban area.
office, when she swkerecently to
The contention Is that most
The rural project was awarded
members of the Adv,l sory Board
senior citizens prefer to stay In to the Area Agency 011 Aging of
their own homes as long as their which Meigs County Is one of
of the Meigs County Councll on
Aging.
health permits and they ar~ able eight counties.
She also announced that the.' tomanageahouseholdwlthsome .
In talking about the program, .
program Is expected to be In
asslstan·ce.
Farson explained that It Is aimed
It Is the State's purpose In the at the low Income person but that
.operation by May 1.
___
0
s
--Area deaths-Jacob Marshal Klein, one and
one-half months old, died Sunday
at the home of his parents,
Timothy Todd and Lisa Jane
Whittington Klein, formerly of
Pomeroy bu I now of Newport
News, Va. The infant's death was
unexpected.1n addition to parents, survivors include a sister, Usa Marie,
and two brothers, Timothy Todd
Jr. and Travis Lee Klein, all at
home;
grandparents, Frances Whittington, Middleport, LesUe and
Yvonne Whi!Ungton, Middleport,
•
r'·
St~ks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
B'ryce and M&!'k Smith
of Blunt, Ellis & Loewl
'
Am Electric Power .......... .. .30% ·To end marri.
AT&T .... ..... .... .. .... ......... ...... 41 Y,
Ashland Oil ........ ,...... .... ..... 36%
In the Meigs ·county Co11rt of
Bob Evans .... ...................... 12~
Common Pleas, Wanda Lae
Charming Shoppes ...... .. ....... 91,1 , Riffle, Racine, Is seeking a
City Holding Co . .. .. ........ .... .13~
divorce from . Robert Wllllam
Federal Mogul. .... : .......... .... ... 18 Riffle, Racine; and Ronald L.
Goodyear T&R .............. .....36% Donaldson, Long Bottom, Is •
Heck 's .. ........ ..... ..... .. ...... ,,,, , 2%
seeking a divorce from Susan D.
Key Centurion .... ... ....... ...... 14~
Donaldson. Long Bottom.
Lands ' End ......... .. .. ...... ...... 19~
Barbara Ann Stone, Pomeroy,
Limited Inc . ............. ......... .. 41~
and Ricky Noel Stone, Pomeroy
Multimedia Inc .............. :.... 78',2
have !Ued for a dissolution.
Rax Restaurants .................. 2')f,
Robbins & Myers ...... ..... .. ... 15~
Shoney's
Inc . ............. ....... .. 121L
PRICES SO LOW, IT'S A
•
Cl
Star Bank ............... ...... .. ...... .l9
Wendy's Int 'i, ...................... 4~
Billboard Top 20 AIIMM on .
Worthington Ind ............ .... .. 21'h
c•E...
Salt EYERYDA\'.
'
H~pital
news
Veteraa• Memorial
Monday admissions - Carl
Dorst, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Pansy
Mae Jones, Gall Miller, Peggy
;Lewis .
Cauttt•-·················-··· S7. 99
CD .................................. Sl 3.99
.................
CIIMBIAL IECOiDS
DOWIIIOWN GAWPOUS
OPEN 'TIL S EVERY NIOHT
CLOSED SUNDAY ·
' 446-3302
I
•Kennebec&
•Katadhlil
•Silver Queen Com
•Golden Queen Com
•Top Crop
•Seneca Cblef
•Sug~ Sup Peas •Eariy Sua..ow
ADd Much Morel
Judgment sought
In the Mwigs County Court of
Common Pleas, Associates FInancial Service of America Inc.,
Parkersburg, W.Va. Is seeking
$3,309.13 and a mortgage deed
foreclosure against Gerald Liee
Young, Winifred Lynn Young, of
Shade, eta!.
SEED POTATOES- 4 Varieties
•Half Rmmers
•Blue l,ake
Beautiful Blooming PANSIES
lD over 30 Vibrant Colors!
*
*
Reds Yellows Whites
Bi-Col9rs *Blues
Blotched or Clear Faces
*
•Red Pontiac
•Irish Cobbler ·
·W hite • Yellow • Red ·.
ONION SETS
"Buy Just The QuantUy You Want"
PLANTS ·
•BroccoU
•Brussel Sprouts
•Cauliflower •Head Lettuce
'
•Cabbage Plants (4 Varieties) - ,
.
Pack of 8 ............ ~ ..........•!.50
Flat of 48.~ ........... ~·.................. .'....•.1·0 .00
Preplanted
Poreh, Basket .............*6;98
, r
.
.
· Plant ¥bur Pansies Now For A Beaut!fi.d
~
Flower Garden ... They Love Cool Weather/
located 1/4
of Pornerov-Muon
Bridge
• JUST ARRIVED • ONION PLANTS •
Sweet Vld•lla Oalon Plants............~l 111 auNca
White 1: YeUow Sweet Spanish
0DJOD Plallta.•.... ~ ............................... 89~ ,BUJifCR
Wblte, Yellow, Red Sweet Bermuda
ODIO~ Plallti·.................·....................SQ+ BUNCH
75 PI.AJill'S PER BUNCH)
.
SUPER PRODUCE BUYS
'21'
~3 lbl. tor •1 oo
Idaho Baking Potatoes..-..........to 111. blg...........-
Bananas................................................~.........
'7 ..........
•.
'2-
bill ilL.
And .
Alulap•••••
Bob's b8ll a wide seleetlon of landscaplaf supo
pUuiDcludha' muloU,, nuaeu, reel JaqiOCk,
wblte ma.rble cblpa. peat m0111. pott'nt soU.
MINI, and much mon• •
Witch Far The Onnd Opening Of OW
To 8ettlr Slrve OUr Polnl "'-nt And
Inc. N-opaper
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) ordere<j by the federal govern- ' ces. Until 1~87. support was
The Ohio General ASsembly,, ment to take effect by Aprll1.
decided on a case-by-Case basis.
moving toward a spring recess,
Simllar action was taken, 90-3,
Ohio stood to lose about $50
Tuesday sent to Gov. Richard on the Senate changes to the
million In federal funds In the
township home rule bill. One of
Celeste b!Us , establishing new
absence of the legislation.
child support guidelines for split those changes, supported by gun
The b!ll requires that a child be
families, and authorizing town- clubs and sportsmen's groups,
provided with health Insurance If
ships to govern theinselves. ·
was to prohibit townships from
there Is any way for either parent
The General Assembly also regulating firearms.
to obtain coverage.
sent to the November statewide
The child support. guidelines, . It also requires reconsidera. ballot a pair of consdtutlonal similar to those Imposed by the
tion of child support awards If
amendments. One authorizes the Ohio Supreme Court In late 1987,
there Is a willful violation of
state and local gover.nments to require a court to take Into
visitation orders, thus nullifying
borrow money for housing pro- consideration the Income of each
what non-cust~la! parents feel
jects done by private companies.
parent when determining how
Is an unfair disadvantage In the
The other &xtend.l the real estate much child support should be , law.
.
·
tax reductl!)n for low -Income forthcoming.
The · guidelines· must be rehomeowners . to s,urvlvlng
Each parent must bear a share \ viewed at least every four years
spouses over 60.
In proportion to his or her
under the supervision of judges,
The House concurred 84·10 In • Income. The bill also gives . domestic relations attorneys,
Senate amendments to the child · judges fiexlb!llty In determining .. and representlitlves of child
welfare.
...
support gu!deli11es, which were ·support In u':'lque clrcums tan-
ELDEBCARE omONS, JtEADY TO GO CindY FarHII, director ef the Area Agency on
Apq, 1\Jarletta, center, outlined plus for the
Eldercare Options demoDBtratlon program at a
meeting of the' Melp County Council on Aging
Advisory Board. ,A t~ .of $13S,m.az hu been
; deaiKD&ted for serVIces for disabled senior
.
lila& at home
quality care
,a enlon Is !eM
expe118lve than nura1D1.home c..-e. Pictured with
Far11011 Ia · Florence Rlcbard.l, Advisory Board
pret~ldent, left, aDd Elellll.or Thomu, director !If
the Meigs Senior Cltlze118 Center. .
.
'
.
Kyger Creek,. Gavin included in
. list
,
Senate approves clean air bill·
While praising the bill, ~J; · provisions would devastate his
WASHINGTON (UPI)- After
home-state coal industry.
13 years of legislative paralysis, c hell also told reporters he wodll
"Clean air need not be bought
the Senate adopted a landmark · seek. to toughen the bill Iii
with reduced economic growth,
clean air bill to slice acid rain negotiations with the House'.
job losses and human suffering, ''
emissions In half, cut cancer- That could provoke a showdown
he said.
· "
·
causing Industrial pollution and later this year with President
dissipate smog choking ' 101 Bush, who has threatened to veto
cities.
·
any bill that costs Industry too
Senators approved t~e btU much.
Senate clean air ntll (la(l
89-11 Tuesday night and sent It to
Senate Republican leader RoWASHINGTON iUPII - Here Is lfie
89-11 vote by which the Senate adopted the
the House, ending more than two bert Dole of Kansas said the
clean air legislation:
months of floor debate and "landmark" bill would probi!,\Jly
For- (88)
.back-room negotiations with the rank as the Senate's most lml'brDemocrats for {50} : Adams, Wash .;
Baucus, Moat.; Bentsen, Texas: Bldert.
Bush administration on a biparti- tant accomplishment In 1990. "I
Del.: Bingaman, N.M.: Boren, Okla.:
don't think anything else we will
san compromise. .
Bradley, N.J .: Breaux, La.;_Bryan, Nev.:
The Senate vote was the first do this year will surpass this . Bumpers. Ark.; Burdlcl<. N.D.: Conrad,
N.D.; Cranston, C.IU.; Dioschle, S.b.;
major step by Congress since legislation," he said.
DeConcln~ Ariz.; Dodd, Conn.; ,Exon,
White ·ijouse spokesman Mar1977 to strengthen the Clean Afr
Neb. ; Font, Ky.; Fowler, Oa.; Core,
Act, an effort that repeatedly lin• Fl~ater, returning from a
Tenn.; Graham, Fla.; Harldn, Iowa;
stalled on Capitol Hillin the 1980s two-.aay ' domestic trip with the · HeDin, Ala.: Hollings, S.C.; Inwye,
Hawai~ Johnston, La.; Kennedy, Mass.;
dl!e to strong opposition from the president; said after the vote,
Kerrey, Neb.; Kerr)' , Mus.; Kohl, Wis .:
"We're pleased, W:e'll work for. Lautenberg, N.J.: Leahy, Vt.: Levin,
Reagan administration.
Mich.: Llebemian. Conn.: Matsunaga,
·Senate Democratic leader passage In the House."
Hawaii; Metoenbaum, Ohio: Mikulski,
Senate sponsors estimated
George Mitchell of Maine said
Md. ; Mitchell, Maine; Moynihan, N.Y.;
the failure to act had allowed air stricter emission !!mil!; on cars,
Nunn·, Ga.; Pell, R.I .; Pryor, Ark.; Reid,
Nev,; Riegle, Mich.; Robb, Va.: Sanlonl,
pollution to worsen subsiantially factories and coal-burning power
N.C. ; Sarbanes, Md.; Sas!lfr, Tenn .;
plants
wlll
cost
the
economy
$21
over the past decade.
Shelby, Ala.; and Wirth, Colo. ·
"We've had 13 years of state· · billion a year, on top of$32 billion
Republicans for (39): Armstrmg,Colo. ;
Bond, Mo.: Boschwltt, Minn.; · Bums.
ments, and the air In some places now spent by Industry on poUuMont.: Cbalee, R.I.; Coats, lad.; Cochran,
has gotten dirty," he said. ''Now , lion control. Industry groups said
Mlso.: Cohen. Maine: D 'Amato. N.Y.: .
we need a law to make the air · the bill actually will cost $46
Danforth, Mo.: Dole, Kan.: Domenlcl
N.M.; Dunmbera:er, MJnn.; Gorton,
cleaner everywhere. This bill mllllon more.
Wash.; Gramm, Texu; Gra11ley, Iowa;
Some Senate opponents said
will do that. It dramatically
Hatch, Utah: Hatfield, Ore.'; Heinz, Pa. :
expands and . strengthens the the bill would take a dramatic
Humphrey, N.\1 .: Jellonla, Vt.; Kuoeclean air law and does It In the economic toll. Sen. Robert Byrd, · baum, Kan.; .)tas1en, Wit; Lott, MiJs.;
Lugar, Ind.; 'Mack, Fla.; McCain, Artz .;
most cost-efficient manner D'W.Va., said he could not
McConnell, Ky.; Murkow&kl, Alaska;
support It because Its acid rain
possible."
Pacllwood, Ore.: Pres~er. S.D.; Rolfi,
Del.: Rudman. N.H.; ·SimpiKII, Wyo.:
RelaiiOulllt
CU111.......
,__..LOcal news ·briefs,...._...,
Fir~
destroys home
An early morning fire claimed the home of a Pomeroy family .
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reported his department
was called to the Dark Hollow residence at 5: 14 this morning.
The home, a tralle~ and house combination, was nearly gone
when firemen arrived.
. ·
Living In the hdfne were Christie VIncent, her two children,
and a friend. The four escaped the home unlnJ\Ired but no
belongings could be saved. Owner of.the home was Steve Eblin.
Chester Flte Department assisted at the scene along with
Pomeroy EMS.
·
.· Sunday brunchplanned
-
Area residents might consider eating Palm Sunday brunch at
Carleton Scboolln Syracuse. The Meigllnduatrles community·
Employment Program, In conjunction witb MacDonald&
. Restaurant, Is sponsoring a ~ncb thii 'Sunday trom,l2: 30 to 3
Condnued on page 5
---,.--·
.._
'
.
'
Officers for the"llewly-formed
Meigs County Law Enforcel!lent
Exploreru Post 230 were swornIn rece.ntly by Meigs Common
'P leas Judge Robert Buck, Probate and Juvenile Division. The
officers w!U serve a 1990·91 term.
Elected to offices were Greg
· Weddle, president; J'. J. Chad·
well, administrative vicepresident; Michelle Friend, program vlce :... presldeni;
Stephanie Walker, secretary;
. Bethany Bass, treasurer; Scott
Brinker, Meigs High member·
ship chairman; · and Carlton
Drummer, Southern High membership chairman. Drummer
and Weddie were also named to
represent the Post on the Junior
Fair Board. to assist In activity
planning for the Meigs County
Fair.
The Meigs CQunty Explorers
Post Is sponsored by the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department.
Young Meigs County men and
women, ages 14 to 20, who are
Interested In law enforcement
and related community services,
are eligible to join the Post.
Afternoon meetings are nor,
mally held the first Sunday of
evwry month · at the Meigs'
County Courthouse.
An ·upcoming fund raiser for
the Pos.t will be a car wash this
saturday •. from 10: 30 a.m. to 4
·p.m., at Chancey's Food Mart In
Syracuse.
And Post members plan to .
attend the April18 session of the
Ohio Supreme Court to be held In
Gallipolis.
.
Arthur K. Yeater, 47, ol Partland, Is In custody at the Meigs
County Jail following a Tuesday
evening Incident at Portland
Involving a shotgun. Yeater,
accordlng to a report from Meigs
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Is
charged with domestic violence
to . a household member, felonlous assault for firing a shotgun
three tim!!!! at the household
member, grand theft of a porta- ,
ble television and ladles leather
jacket, and vandalism for damage.to the trailer.
Deputies were enroute to the
scene when Jlei'ghbqJls of Connie
Caplinger Kotlfled the sheriffs ·
deparlment that an Individual
was firing a shotgun at her
(Caplinger) .
When Deputies Scott Trussell
and John Spires 'rrlved at the
trailer, Yeater ran Into the
·bedroom wheFe~was taken Into
custody:
)
Alral•ot- (II)
Democrats against 15): Byrd, W.Va.;
Dlxm, Dl.; Glenn, Oblo; Rockele!ler,
W.Va.; Slmoo, Ill.
.
Republicans against {6): Garn, Utah;
Helm' N.C .: McCiu'f., Idaho: Nield ...
Okla.: Symms. Idaho; Wallop, Wyo.
Abient and not voUnr -None.
Kyca-. Gavla InCluded
In ICid rain CUt I
WASKINGTON !UP! I - Here Ia a
state-by-state lilt ol the107 coaHJumlng
p-r plants, primarOy In lbe Midwest
aDd South, that would be required to
reduce acl4 rain emlutm• under tJtecl•n
olr biD approved Tuesday by lbe s....u.:
'
.
Olllo
AobtaiJUia.
AVIII Lake.
.'
cantlnot.
eo-"'•·
--ter.
Eu!lllle.
O...I.II.O.oriB.
lbaeCNoiL
Miiiml Fort.
R.E. lkll'!ler.
W.H. Sommlt.
. ' w.c' Btdt}onl.
NBW OJI'PIC.. -
Ntwb ...... llelp
ColiiiiJ .,..... P-*tltwiDbe llliwte•llutq
._.. bJ lillie tftluwe, I tor, P.l. Chllnll,
' · ""'h lratlve Ytee •••Ill ~a~: Mlellelle Frletld,
-F.+ - vice prllllltM; Car._ DnuluMr,
.
...
The Post Is open to new
members and anyone Interested ·
In jolriing or wanting to know
more about Explorers should
contact one 'bf the above officers.
Portland man··held
ln custody. by sheriff
'
, Specter. Pa.: Stevens, Aluka: Thunn<lld.
S.C.; Warner, va.: and ,WIIsm, Calli.
MuJIIbpm Rlwr.
'NIIa. •
Pltwoy.
'
.Meigs Explorers elect··office;rs ·
.
How ·they voted
.Area'• Beat Selection ~f
BULK GARDEN SE~D including •••
Mu~inuldie
General Assembly ·approves
guidelines for child support
_ __
Fund raiser slated Saturday
and Lawrence and Patricia
Klyln, Minersville; great grandparent$, Georgia Fraley, Cheshire, and Harold and Etta Wlll
Pomeroy; and several aunts:
uncles, and cousins.
The Infant was precedi!d In
death by great grandparents,
Randolph Fraley, and Virgie and
Henry Klein.
Services will be announced by
Rawlings-Coats-Fisher Funeral
Home, Middleport.
·
A
services will be available on a
S}lerry Might, R. N. has been telephone wlll .conduct an Intersliding fee scale. She said. that
hired as the case manager tor view with the caller, and In some
probably those with household Meigs Col!nty and will have ·her c;ases actuallydetermlneeliglbll·
Income of unde~ $600 a month will office at the Senior Citizens ity,.as well as give Information on
receive aU servllces free, but Center.
·
client costs, and Initiate Intervensaid that.the Ohio Department on . •
Services
tion procedures as required.
· Aging )las not yet worked out the
Information will be a big part
The Area Agency will be using
technicalities of the sliding fee
of the new Eldercare Options
an ·soo number which will be
scale.
program, according to the Area district-wide so that all residents
To date contracts for services Agency director.
of the eight county area will have
have been"awarded to the Meigs
She said that the greatest
equal access to Information and
County Council on Aging .for amol!llt of help to senior citizens
the same lnformatiqn: will be
homemaker and meal services will be the Information given
available to all people, Farson
and to Veterans Memorial Hospi- over the toll free line. Those · explained.
·
tal for medical and personal care calling In, whether 'It be the
As · for the actual assistlince
services, ·Farson announced. She elder§ themsefves or a relative or
programs there are three levels,
s~ld that the .-mental health,
friend, will be connected with
the director said .
transportation, and day care someone who Is totlilly Informed
-"Basic assiStance" Is a short
service . conir!jcts have· not yet about.Eldercare Options.
term low cost service package.
' been awarded.
· ,.
The person answering the
Continued oh page 5
Ju~ent awarded
· Four...
Jacob Klein
2 Sectlono. 16 I'IOM · 25 Cenu
Pome~oy· Middieporf; Ohio, Wednesday, Apri14. ~.990~
Eldercare program to be in operation May 1
A judgment has been award~ · \
· In the Meigs County Court of'
Common Pleas In favor of Carol
A total of seven of the 11
Prosecuting Attorney Steve Story, AssiStant Prosecutor
A. Smith Lucas and James E .
Indicators that track the pulse of
Linda Warner, and Betty Fultz. Middleport, have been named
Lucas against Thomas E. Allen
the American economy dropped
and Juanita Lee Allen. ·
co-chairmen for the Meigs County Ball for State Senate
In February, while three edged :'
campaign committee.
The court has ordered that tlie'
up
and a single category ~
continued from page 1
In making the announcement, Claire M. Ball, Jr., (R-At hens)
Aliens pay $3,049 for estimated
average workweek - remained • repair costs, $387.12 fog back.
stated that through their leadership he is drawing strong
'unchanged,
. the government
Republican support from the county. "Steve, Betty .and Linda
rent, $1,000 for converted per:,
Advisory Council. .
Wahama High School. ,
have earned great respect In Meigs County, " said Bail, "and I ,
sonal
property, $41 for trailer
The outstanding mathematics,
More than one-third, a total of
Dissolutions granted
value their leadership enormously and am honored to have
taxes, $34 .for real estate taxes,.
. 8,059, of all the secondary schools sCience or computer science
them as:a part of tl)e Ball team,!' ,
,
$81.73 for past due water bills,.
in the United States participated student andor teacher at each
Dissolutions liave been
, John E. Stinson, co.chalrman of the eight-county· senate
In this major educational initia- participating high school were
granted In the Meigs County · and $529.20 .for past due sewer
bills.
•
campaign committee., said that the overwhelming support for
tive, which Is funded by Tandy recognized. From these nomiCourt · of Common Pleas to
the campaign among Republicans throughout Southern Ohio Is /
It has also been ordered that
Corporation and administered by nees. semi-finalists and finalists
Tammy A. Hoffman and Charles
becauie "Ball is the only Republican candidate with the right/ · Texas ChriStian University.
the land · contract between the
were selected. Teacher finalists
E. Hoffman; and Rbonda Sue
combination of political s,trength and experience to win in
two parties be cancelled.
"We are extremely pleased received checks for $2,500 each · Collins and Michael Le~oll!ns.
November."
'
with the overwhelming response and student finaliSts received
Stinson .of the Ohio · University College of Bu~lness
Meigs . announ~ments
In this Initial year. We believe cash scholarships for $1,000 each
Adminstration and Sharon Cline, Plckaway Countv Gferk of
that this Is the largest single to be used at a college or
Courts, are co-chairmen of the eight county senate:campalgn
be taught by Marilyn Meier on
Middleport Arts Council · .
awards program to honor both university of choice.
for Ball. Ceil Geltz, Wellston City Treasurer, Is serving as
Aprll 19 at the same location and
"The Tandy Technology SchoA bean bag bunny class will be
students and teachers," said
treasurer and Maurice Smith, president of .BancOhlo In
the fee Is $18. Deadline reglstralr
taught by Susan Baker In conlars · program exemplifies the
John V. Roach, c halrman .of the
Chillicothe is finance chalrm!!n.
junction with the Middleport Arts • tion Is April 12. Residents rriay
·board and chief executive officer growing spirit of cooperation
register by calling Marllyn·
between business and education,
Council on Thursday ath7 p.m. at
'. of Tandy Corporation.
,
Meier, in the evenings, at 99213l North Second Ave. next to
The program Is a national one and the initiatives of business to
5983.
.
open to students and teachers In become involved In and to help .• Johnson's Variety hj Middleport.
More Information on classes
resolve issues .of national con·
Fee for the class Is $20 and more
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will stage another fund raiser
accredited high school throughoffered
by the arts council may
Information
may
be
obtained
by
Saturday at Eastern High School with proceeds to go toward
cern,"
Roach
added.
A
total
of
out America. The finalists were
be obtained by calling Shirley
paying for the 1990-~1 sports and extra-curricular activities of
calling ~usari Bak"T ~~ 992-7733.
selected by·a panel of educ.llJ.ors $350,000 In cash stipends and
Quickel at 992-7756.
,
. A sweatshirt painting class will
·
I'
.
the school.
and approved by a Narn>nal scholarships have been awarded.
The spring arts and craft fair will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the high schOol with tables being av liable for craftspersons .
who wJsh to display . The tables are for ntfor$10eacliandmay
be reserved with Pam Hager, at 667 6269 ·or Lila Van Meter,
985 -3951.
.
At the fait the Boosters will be· ling homemade Easter
candy and bas~els.
'
A marriage license has been
Issued In the Meigs County
Probate Court to William. Edward Leonard, 21, Letart, W.Va.
and Donna Marie Long, 20,
Letart, W.Va.
'
e
."
VoL40, No.230
Copyrighted t 890
.Leading index indicator-S decline
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Index of leading economic Indicators dropped 1 percent In Febru- .
ary, due to a plunge In the
number of b!.!ildlng permits, the
Commerce Departme'nt said
Tuesday.
·
"This Index has been bouncing
up and down for over a year now
.,jind not going much of anywhere," said economist .Cynthia
Lattli of DRIMcGraw HJll tn
•
•'
j,;.:
.
Low tonight In mid . ..
Chance of rain te percell&.
Partly cloudy Tburactay. Blib
near liO. Chaace of rain te
;\
'
Cap Unger was , not physically
Injured. · ·
'
Yeater Is In jail pending a
hearing In Meigs County Court.
Robert (Pee Wee)Jllffle, Racine, Is In custody at the Meigs
County Jail following an Incident
In Racine Monday night.
. According to the sheriff's report, Racine Marshal David
Huddleston observed Rlffie drlv·
lng recklessly In the business
district of the village. Riffle was
driving In reverse. Huddleston
attempted to stop Riffle, but
Riffle fled out Yellowbush RoadY ·
to. Apple Grove-Dorcas Road.
Meanwhile, Deputy Harry Lyons.,
was responding and attempted to
block the road, bill Rltne ran off
the road and around the cruiser ·
heading toward Racine with both ·
cruisers In pursuit. Just past the
Sun Fun Pennzoll Station, Hud· ·
dles'ton maneuvered the village
Continued on page 5
·
�
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04. April
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April 3, 1990
klein