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Sentinel

OhiO

Moose attacks officer··
du:ring egg hunt · ··

-

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•

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Dance. legeiJd Martha Graham. dead i
.

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1991 Fashion
Musical
Review '

;

NEW YORK (UPI) - Martha ston who was one of her major supAfter her .father died, Graham · changed their minds about GraJuu1t
Graham, who many choreographers porters.
relilmed to dance school and in II and the dan~e. hi retrospect, lher,
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!) - Police Officer Fred Jones is recu·
say made the single-greatest contri·
Fellow choreographers honored short time became a teaeher. ·
said, Graham wideried the scope(».: ..
perating from what mi~t be called the attack of the giant Easter
bqtion to the world of dance in this Graham by designiilg roles solely
Her ability and agility gave her modern dance.
• -&lt;
Moose.
.
. century, 'has 'died at her Manhattan for her because they felt she h!ld license to·practice dancmg almost
· Leonide Massine ud L~:
"I feel whopped," he said Mooday .from his Hum ana FJospital bed.
home. She was 96. •
the technique and individuali'ty fanalieally. "Practice is the means Stokowsky chose Gl)lham to danco'
But the moose lost the battle, shot by Jones at point-blank range
Graham, who was released from. needed to perfect the parts.
·
of inviting the ~~on desired, '' the female lead in the New York~
with his service automatic some 250 yards from where children flailed
the hospital. less thlllf~wo weeks
At the end of last year, Graham she once said. 'You have to have ·a premiere of Igor St'ravinsty's "Th6·
about io deep snow hunlio~ for Easter eggs. . ·
.
ago, died Monday in her Upper traveled throughout the Fit East on craft.' It's your language and you Rite of Spring•: _in 1930. It wa!li
What began as. the IJ'IIditional Easter egg hunt in Russian Jack Park
East Side home, just' a block away a 55-day tour with the company, must masterJt"
then that she established the NeW:'
in the middle of the city tw'tled into a poli,ce hunt.for children mi8sing
froln the Martha Graham Center of which was fqcing its latest of many · Graham made her professional York Dance Repertory Theater, ~
in the deep snow and ended with the moose attacking.one of the
Conteritpo!ary Dance, said Russ financial crises.
~ York debut in 1920, but two all-woman. troupe.
.
. "'
policeman se8rchiog for the little egg hunters.
·
.
Alley, a company spokesman.
· "We were on a tour throughout years later, she beeame jaded and
l'he fust male dancers to entet!
~ annual hiDlt oo a sunny Sunday in the park where 1,500 chit·
Her career. as a dance ionovaror Asia io Japan, Korea and Taiwan . felt ''this was a life leading her company in the late ·193Ps we~ .
dren searched for 15,000 colored eggs llecame a tougher than usual
and teacher pnned more than ·11 and we aame back-at Christmas nowhere."
Erick Hawkins and Merce Cun •
game of hide-and-seek when some children got mired in waist-deep
years and her conltibutions to. the time and she went iniO the 'hospital • S.he took advanl&amp;ge of a teach· ningham, both of whom !Vent on t.0:: ·
snow and a half doiA:n others couldn't be found at all- triggeriog a
c!ance world inspired anists, com· thereafter,". he said.
.
ing offer and became a dance . found their own modern dance;,·
call for police help. .
·
·.
posers and fashioo designers. She
She was in th.e hospital with instructor at the Eas1min School of companies. Gmham was married t&lt;h
Jones=one of the responding officers. He entered the far eild of
was still active in her last year bronchitis for 10 weeks. Friends the Theater in Rochester, N.Y. Hawkins briefly and they remained:t
the park;
'te where the Easrcr egg hunt began, intendiog 10 interdespite crippling arthritis.
said she was preoccupied with .While at Eastman, ~ began friends even after their divorce. •f
cept any · dren who strayed too far.
The cause of her death was list" what would happen to her company · experiments with group dancing.
Among Gmham 's many admit.,.,
But as Jones worked his way through deep snow, he said, "I heard
ed as cardiopulmonary arrest due to and sch~l if she ~o longer ~as
In 1926, Graham returne4 to ers.was actress Katharine cornen,-;
something behind me. I turned around and he was right behiod me.''
congestive heart failure, Alley said. able to ·gJve them acbve leadership. !jew York and gave her first dance who starred in the Broadway P"?""
. "He" was a 1,6(JO.pound bull moose with an impressive mck .that
Alley said he had received a call
Before leaving for Asia, she recieal, which was described later duction of "Romeo and Juhet' ,
stretched at least three feet from one !llltlet to the other.
from Graham's longtime comran· oversaw the Oct 2 opening of the as a "historic evening that ulti· with choreography furnished by~
"He hit' me with his rack," Jones said. "I was 'stuck knee-deep in
ion and the general director o the dance group's New York season, mately was to ciJallge the course of Graham. In 1944, when her dance~
the snow and I couldn't run sol just rolled across the top of the snow
dance group; Ronald Protas.
and premiered ''Maple Leaf Rag.''
modem dance.''
..
school ·encountered rmancial pro~" ·
to get away."
. .
'. .
·
"He said that she was vety
"And she took her bows every
. She soon ~arne a contrOvef~!ial terns, Cornell raised $25,000 to.,
Jones said he looked for brush or some cover to get behind but
comfortable and she went peaceful· Qigl)t," Alley said
f1gu~, shocking the..theater·gom.g . keep the sc.hool from folding.
,
could haidly move through the deep snow. The moose, too, had trOuble · ly," Alley said.
Born in .Pi!t$burgh on May II, ~ubhc w1th a techmque that ull· . . Among the student$ trained iri.:
getting through the snow, but Jones noted, "His legs were a litUe
Classes at th-e Graham school . 1894. Graham showed an interest lized unonhodox bodymovell1Cnts. the school were Bette Davis ··•
longer."
· . ·
·
continued despite the news of her in the theater at the age of 4. Six
One of her innovations that Joanne woodward Arin Jackson·: !
Down on the ground, deep pain in his shoulder, back and chest,
death, "because that's the way she years later, after she .had moved to _ invited criticism. w~ ller abandon- Richard Boone, · Gregocy Peck;:
with the moose moving io from five feet. away for what Jones figured
would have wanted it,'' Alley ~d; Santa Barbara, Calif., her father ment.of roe ~cmg m favor of foot Kirk DOuglas, Lome Green, Rip;:
was the kill - and another moose approachiog from behind - Jones
Although the famed dance D\BS· took her to see a dance recital.
flexmg, which her detraciOrs·satd Torn and Eli Wallach. A young •
said, "I had enough time to get on the (portable) radio 8ljd say, 'I' ve
ter concentrated her efforts on
"He took me and I had my fust was ugly. ·
woman who joined the Graham ' .
just been charged."'
·
modern dance, she was credited corsage of violets," she recalled. . "It.wa~.not l!gly. to ~ugly," Dancers as a professional-laterA
. "I didn't even finish," Jones said. "He lowered his 'head - that's a
with inspiring an· array of artists, . " And that day sealed my fate."
sh~ satd. The flexmg d1d S?Jne· became the nation ~s first lady, ,
prelude to a charge - and I fU'ed one warning shot. He didn't even
including composer Aaron Cop- . Graham enrolled in a dance lhmg el~ for me that the pomt.ed Betty Ford. President Gerald Foret:
flinch."
.
land, sculptor lsamu· Noguchi and · · school, but her father opposed her foot didn I have - a contact w1th presented Graham with the Med~
Then. as the moose charged, Jones flfCd nine rounds at point-blank
poets, painters, actors and fashion ambition .to become a professional ' the earth.''
of Freedom, the United States'"
range from his 9mm semi-automatic, wondering whethe{_ his police
\lesigners, especially the late Hal· dancer and she respected his wish· · Many years passed before critics highest peacetime award.
·:,:
. '
service weapon could topple the huge animal. .
, es by returning to high school.
. . ·~
.,
"He went down," Jones said. '.'But he started to get back up. "I
aimed another round right behind his ear. It took· two to put him
·~
down.~·
.
·
,
~
The moose was so close that Jones saijl, "I wouldn't be surprised
•
he had some powder bunis on him."
'
,
In all, Jones fued 12 rounds and said he was just getting ready to
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. five-day mission, the first of six Apt to carry out a six-hour space- unclassified military mission until •
load another IS-round magazine when the moose dropped in his tracks
(UPI) - ·Engineers Tuesday started p1anned for 1991 and the rust since walk on lhe fourth day of the flight ·around April 25 and making ;
in the snow.
the shuttle Atlantis's countdown to a mission by the shutlle Columbia to test space station construction Atlantis No. I on the launch sched- ;
"I didn't think I was going to win this one." Jones said, noting that
blastoff Friday on a flight featuring in December.
techniques. The excursion into ule.
has had some close encounters with armed criminals and mad moqse in
the first post-Challenger spacewalk
The primary goal of Atlantis's Atlantis's payload bay will be
Similar cracks later were found :
his 17 years oo the police force, but !lever anything like this.
and the launch of a.new astronomy flight is the deployment Sunday of NASA's fJrst sioce the 1986 Chal· in the hinge assemblies of Atlantis, ;
.
Urban moose calls - reporting .moose in neighborhoods, school . satellite.
the $617 million Gamma Ray Ienger disaster. Columbia and the new shuttle.'
yards, Parts and city streets - are nothing new for Anchorage police.
Atlantis's engine compartment Observatory, a massive 35,000·
If all goes well, Nagel and. Endeavour, but in Allantis's case &gt;
And, Jones said, "They more afraid of us than we are ofthem."
· · was sealed for flight Monday and pound astronomy satellite sensitive Cameron ·will guide Atlantis 10 a lhe defects were deenied too small ;
engineers closed the ship's 60-foot to extremely high-energr radiation landing the morning of April 10 at to pose any safety threat to the-.
But not .the big Easter egg moose.
cargo bay doors overnight before generated by the most v1olent stars Edwards Air Force Base in·Califor- shuttle odtS ~w.
." My head came up to the top of his shoulder,' • Jones said, noting
:
that the worst part of the ordeal was feeling so helpless in the deep
starting the shuttle's intricate ·!IDd galaxies io the universe.
. nia.
.
. .
Discovery's hinges were- ;
snow, bein~ unable to get away from the beast ' ·
·
countdown at S:~O a.m. EST Tues·
With the more famous Hubl&gt;le
The National Aeronautics and replaced by those aboard the shut· '
day.
. .
SpacO' Telescope already in orbit Space Administration originally lie Columbia, whicli were repaired :
"What if this had been a ldd?" Jones said.
NASA spokesman Bruce Buck- studying the universe io visible and - hoped to ldck off 1991 by launch· and beefed-up to preclude any .r,
Jones, 38, suffered a bruised back, puUed muscles, a wrenched
shoulder and possibly a bruised heart, but doctors were hopiog that his
ingham said the countdown stiuted ultravioler light, the gamma ·ray ing the shuule Discovery .March 9 chance of a failure io orbit.
'•
heart pain would tum out 10 he excess adrenalin. He was due to be
on time and that work was proceed· satellite' is the second in a series' of on an'unclassified, eight-day "Star
The work was completll!l ahead ;
released from the hospital Monday but ordered to SillY home and rest
ing ~moothly toward blastoff.
four "great observatories" Wars" research mission.
of schedule and Discovery was •
for a week.
.
_
Allanlis's five-member crew-. desiguet!IO map the heavens across
But lhe flight was delayed after hauled back out 10 pad 39A before :
'•'I'm just glad to be able to talk to you," he said, stiU io his hospital
commander Steven Nagel, co-pilot the electromagnetic spectrum.
engineers discovered cracks in the dawn Monday. NASA officials say :
Future spacecraft in the series hinge assemblies of critical fuel the shuttle and its seven-man crew ·•
bed.
Kenneth Cameron, Jerry Ross, Jay
The moose ·meat was donated to charity and Anchorage police were
Apt and Linda Godwin - was wilt study infrared emissions and line doors in the belly of the orbiter should be ready for takeoff around .::
scheduled to fly to the Kennedy X- rays from deep spaQe tar&amp;c;ts, that IIIU8t close properly in orbit to April ~5 :
toyin' with the notioo of mounting the impressive moose rack on
Jones patrol .car or at least in the patrol room at Anchorage police
Spa~e Center later in the day fpr
giving astronomers a more com- allow a safe-re-entry.
•·
final preparations.
plete view of the FOShu!l than ever
headquarters. Jones also had "velvet" lium lhe antlers on
uniform
NASA managers ultimately
IIOUSI OVIRFLOWINC7
If .all goes well, Atlantis will before.
as further evidence of the encounter.
·
ordered eqgineers to haul DiscovCl£AN liP W1TJ1
The second major objec;tive of ery off pad-39A and back to its
As for the missing kids, they. all turned uP,. though a fejf'sulfferc:d blast off on the 39th shutlle lllission
at 9: 18 a.m. Friday to. kick off a Atlantis's mission is.for Ross and hangar for repairs, delaying the
ClASSRUDS .f \ '
some

Pick 3: 744'
Pick 4: 1755
Cards: 7·H, 7-C
J·D; K·S

Insert

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

By BRIAN J, REED
· Sentinel News Staff

Athens, supervised by Athens'
County Public. Defender Mike
W~stfall.

After being in place for a litlle
The regional PO's office, esl!lbover a year, the Meigs County Pub· lished in January, provides indigent
lie Defender's office has begun to criminal defense in seven counties.
. save county taxpayers a consider· Instead of contracting directly with
able sum of money.
Knight, as th~y did during the fust
Pomeroy Attorney Charles year, the Me1gs County Cornrnis·
. Knight was appointed to the posi· sio~ers are now involved in a con· tion in January of 1990 and his · traci with the Ohio Public Defend·
office is 110w a !'art of a regiqnal er's. office, which in turns pays
public defender s office based in Knight's salary.
·

· Each of the seven counties,
ihvolved in the regional public
defender's office now has a public
defender on staff, and the larger
counties, namely Ross and Wash·
ington Counties, have more than.
one.
In addition, Knight's office now
haS more ready access 10 au~liary
staff ·members . .Investigators,
expen wimesses and other public
defenders are now available 10 the
·Meigs County PD's office. aild to

il1at depiu bmlDL"

• The Marth 3 beating was capiured on videotape and has since
llecome a symbol o~ police ~i­
ty - especially agamst mmonbes.
King is black pel "'e officers are
white. .
The beating also bas led to a
steady streani of public: condemna·
lion of Police Chief Daryl Gates,
)'iho is being presswed by commu- .
nity members and pub~ offic1als,
ipcludin&amp; Bradley, to reSign;
.,
While denying tbll the commll·
sion will focus on Gates, Bradley
has chlrJed the JB!Cl with review· '
ing the ~ rOle of.~ office of
police chief IIlii eQJIIlJIIIII JXOIIOI·
als for revising the City Cbarter
· concemin&amp; the appointmaJt,. dilcl·
plining and removal of the chief,

'

,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio House is scheduled
Thursday to consider legislation
limiting campaign expendit!JfC\S by
.candidates for slatewide office ·and
the General Assembly.
_
The House Ethics and Standards
Committee on Tuesday .voted out
by a 5L3 margin the legislation that
would limit spending by each can•
didate in &amp; gubernatorial mce to $1
· million in a primary and $3 million
in the general elecuon.
Candidates for other statewide
offices would be limited to .
$500,000 in a primary and $1.2
million in a general election.
Candidates · for the Ohio

-' ty.&lt;;.,MICJi1HII!!UHJP..Dmll&amp;
Chamber of Commen:e wUI•.~~~~;~
be
its
,aJ1nUaJ Jbemb.ersbjp drive during the
Of
April: Accordlllll to Executive· Director Elizabeth Schaad, the chamber has set a goal or 150
)lctive paid m,embers. The chamber currently
has 105·members. 1,0 'letters or invitati!)n to join t
the chamber have been mailed out, along with a
new recruitment brochure. Pictured are the
chamber's mem!lfrship coml!iitte~ and several
or the chamber's new members ror 1991. Left to

rlelll••Dicll G ui -·~ Vlt, 11ot1t mem.
bersblp committee melllliers; Brenda Venoy,
representlnll Twin City Machine and Welding;
Jimmy Caio or Cain's Upholstery; Bob GUmore,
Middleport Trophies and·Tees; Dale Taylor,
Tearord Realty; Chari~ Masb, C.R. Mash Con·
structlon; apd TJ)dd King, membership commit·
tee member. The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is offering rour Cincinnati Reds tickets to the chamber member recruiting the most
new members. •

.

duced in January with no spending
limits and •specific limits on contributions 10 candidateS for stateiwde
office and the Legislature.
They explained the public still
will believe large donations can
influence officials.
Vukovich accused top Republicans of trying deliberately to sabotage campaign finance reform by
failing to take pan in negotiations
in the last two months.
"We held this up waiting for .a
Republican proposal," said
Vukovich. "Where is it? It's easy
to object to something but it's a lot
harder to come UP, with a comprehensive p.r.oposal. ' ·
:
-.

VQii)O:Vi~h

h9pes t~ hold utility
rates .down and keep mining jobs
.
'

.

.

about the backgro11nd of Rep. "WI]at was lackihg was another
· COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Michael
Fox, R-Hamilton, before form that had not been submitted
Gov. George Volnovich says he
nominating
him as direciOr of the and quite frankly, I thought had
' hopes to keep utility rates down
Ohio
Department
of l;luman Ser- been submitted."
while preserving the jobs of Ohio
vices.
·
Fox withdrew his nomination
coal miners whose livelihood has
Voinovich
said
when
Fox
was after a series of articles in The
been threatened by federal pollunominated March 7 that it was his (Cleveland) Plain Dealer said Fox
tion slandards.
Voiriovich, at a brown bag lun- most thoroughly investigated cabi· passed bad checks at the state b)la·
cheon in his cabinet roomfuesday, net appointment , because he sury and was investigated for a
1
possible connection with. ·!he
said he has been meeung w1th thought it was.
Scott M. Dillon, 27, Pomeroy, make the enforcement of such ordi·
"At the time I said that ... we national treasurer of the .Hells'
major utilities, the Ohio Manufac·
.was rust to me a petition for a seat nances a prim!I£)' goal on council's
turcrs Association and coal compa- thought we had done a very thor- Angels motorcycle gang.
on Pomeroy Village Council. A agenda for future improvements, if
said.
Fox was never charged.
ny owners and miners to develop ough check," Voinov-ich
,,
., '---· -···
five-year resident of Pomeroy, Oil- he is elected.
an Ohio response to federal clean
. Ion hopes to win a council seat in
This is the first time Dillon has
air standards.
·
the May 7. election. He filed his run for public office and he realizes
Ohio's coal is hi~h in sulfur
.
petition Feb. 19 'with the Meigs his goals may no~ easily
content and some utihties feel it is
County Board of Elections.
achieved . He ,underst ds that
cheaper to buy low-sulfur coal
In explainin$ his reasons for improvements cannot e made
from out·of-state sources rather
seeking a counc1l position, Dillon .overnight but is willing 10 do all ~e
• than to install expensive anti-poilu.
says he is proud of his communi,ty can for the advancement of
tion equipment
and sees "a lot of potential" ·for Pomeroy. "This is .our community
ST. PAUL, Minn. • Locked out November.
Voinovich said he wants assur·
Pomeroy. One of Dillon's main and all residents of this village
members
of the United Steelwork·
The company contends the .
ances from federal regulators that if
concerns is the appearance of tlie must wolk together," he says. ·
ers
~nion
passed
out
lea{lets
on
the;
employees
went on strike, but slate
· '"Ohio utilities comply with the stan·
village. He believes ordinances
streets
of
St.
Paul
on
Tuesday,
urg· Another hope for Dillon is for
employment
security officials have
dards in.l995, "10 years from now
exist which require property own·- Council 10 work closely with the
ing
a
boycott
of
products
made
at
a
ruled
the
dispute
a lockout.
.
·
the EPA is not going to come qlong
ers 10 maintain their slructures and Pomeroy Merchants Association. "I
Jackson
County,
WYa
..
aluminum
.
More
t.han
40
Ravenswood
and say, 'now we w~nt you to do
grounds within · the village. "The thin~ Council needs to be con·
plant
. workers plan to stay in St. Paul
something else.'"
problem-is," says Dillon, "these cerned and involved with the MerRavenswood Aluminum Corp. through Friday, where they Will
On another .!tatter, Voinovich
ordinances have -never been consis- chants' projects and offerassis·
says he wishes he had known more workers were invited ·10 .Minnesota pass out handbills urging contently enforced." He intends to 1311ce and support whenever possito participate in a rally at the state sumers not to purchase products
Capitol in-suppon of slate and fed- produced at Ravenswood, officials .
eral legislation birring the hiring of said. ·
SCO'IT DILLON
· pe1111anent replacement workers in
Particui~Jf targets in St. Paul are
labor
disputes.
soft·
drink manufacturers 7-Up, RC
1
ble," says Dtllon. .
Larry Wehrung has filed his
The union said.onc of the issues . Cola and Diet Rite Cola, and
Dillon was an active panicipant petition as an independent candi- in the Ravenswood dispute is .the
. The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the·
in
last
year's sesquicentennial cele- date for Pomeroy mayor. Tuesday hiring of replacement workers to American National Can in St. Paul,
reported thefts of a boat and a mo10r from another boat
bration in Pomeroy and is currently afternoon that pc.:tion wd validat-· supplant the more than I,700 steel· which uses Ravenswood aluminum
David Reed of ReedsviUe notifited the department that he had a
vice-president or the Meigs·County ed by the Meigs County Board of workers who were locked ouf of to make cans for Stroh's beer and
four-horsepo~r inotor stolen from his boat at Forked Run State
Old Milwaukee beer. ·
Unit of the American Cancer Soc1· !"lections.
Park near R sville.
•
·
their
jobs
by
the
·company
last
ety. He is a member of the St Paul
J:lis name will appear on the bal·
William · · nes of Balcer Road in Pomeroy reported \&gt;D Satur·
1 1
Lutheran Church and serves on the lot m the November Geneml Elec·
·
day thflt his fishing boat was stolen from his property.
church council.
Both incjdents are under investigation.
lion
as
an
independent
against
the
..
A 1986 graduate of Ohio Uni-· winner in the race between Bruce
versity in business econOil)ics, Dil·'
Reed inand
J;lottiePrimary.
Turner, Republi·
.
Ion is currenlly the accountant for cans,
the-May
· •
1 u
Bapk
One,
Athens,
N.A.
He
·
has
Investigation into the breaking and entering at a gamge 'in PonWc;hrung had filed as a Demobeen employed there for five years. crat candidate for the May primary,
land has ended with an arrest.
By United Press International
- Gorman-Rupp Co., a MansDillon is married to the former but his petition was disqualified by ,
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bill
field maker of pumps and pumP.ing
The
April
issue
of
CFO
magaJulie-Elberfeld. They reSide at 12 the Board of Elections on the basis
Combs of Brook Park, l!lhO owns propeny at Poriland, reported
:
zine gives the Premier Industrial equipment;
l,incoln Tertace.
Sunday that his gamge had been entered and approximately 60 twoof insufficient valid signatures..
- · Greif Bros.. Corp ., a
Corp. of Cleveland a top rating and
• by-fours were stOlen.
lists nine Ohio companies among Delaware firm making paperboard
Soulsby reports that Mike· Henry of Portland was arrested and
the I 00 most financially sound containers and ·boxes;
charged with breakin¥ and enteriog on the case . Henry gave state·
- Liqui-Bo11 Corp., a plastic
businesses in the United States.
ments to officers admitting the en tty and theft of the lumber.
CFO, a trade publication for products flrnl from Wo[!~ting10n;
Henry appeared before Meigs County Court Judge Patrick 'J:l.
- Medex Inc., a HiUiard maker
chieffinancial officers, reviewed
O'Brien and ~as released on bond pendmg further proceedmgs m,
of
surgical and medical instrumore than 6,000 companies and
. .
court.
·
ments;
mted them from zero for the wealt·
'
. ATHENS, Ohio (OPI) ~ R.ep· an effective lobbying 'group for est 10 99 for the strongest.
·
.- Rubbermaid Inc., lhe plastic
rese·ntatives of five southeastern . coal interesU on the federal level. . · Sel~ted for perfect 99 ratings hoine product company from
·
Ohio counties have begun mapping
· To comply with new federal were Premier, an eleCtronics dis· Wooster;
Cb8tges are pending against ~our juveniles for a rash of mailbox
strategy to encourage Amencan clean .tlir standards, AEP must · tributor, and four other companieS
- J .M. Smucker Co:, the· jam
damaging that occurred on Leading Creek, Noble Summ1t and Flat·
Electric Power to install costly decide whether to build scrubbers - the WD-40 Co., a lubricants maker from Orrville.
woods Roads.
_
The factors considered were
scrubbers at its Gavin plant in Gal- at its Gavin plant to reduce sulfur maker from San Dieso; the John H.
. According to the Meigs County Sherifrs Department, the damlia County.
dim&lt;ide emissions or switch to low- Harland Co., a {lrinter in Allanta; cash flow, cash flow to total tangiage was done on Mon~y using a baseball bat ·
·
Officials from Athens, Gallia
sulfur western coal.
lhe American LISt Corp,. a direct ble assets, pretax opera:st income
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton coun:
The company now uses hi~h · mailer from Great Neck, N.Y.,; and to total tangible assets,
flow 10
ties met Tuesday to discuss their sulfur coal produced in Me1gs lhe A. T. Cross Co., a Rhode Island total liabilities, net workinll capital
pen prOducer.
·
plan of action, said Jack Fowler, County.
to total tanaible usets, and total
Meigs COunty Common Pleas CoUrt Judge Fred W. Crow III has
If
AEP
decideS
to
switch
to
lowOther
Ohio
companies
listed
Executive
vice
president
or
the
debt
10 toeal tan~ble assets.
.
filed a corrected court entry in the case or Douglas Harris, whose
·. ·
Gallia County .Community sulfur coal, it would close its affili· among the top 100 were:
Officials d1d not release the
Conlnued 011 paRe 6 ·
Improvement Corp. ·
- Bob Evans Farins Jnc., the nllJllcs or the low·ranking compa.
a!ed mines, which e!llploy 1,258
'
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.
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people
in
Meigs
County.
-Columbus
restaurant company;
He
said
members
hope
to
form
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R avenswood wor· k ers
•
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Supreme Court would be limited to
$225,000 and $750,000, State Sen- '
ate $200,000 and $500,000, and
Ohio House $50,000 and $200,000.
The committee vote came afler
majority Democrats push~
through 21 amendments of their
own and shot dowlillll but a hand·
. ful o~he 28 Republican amend·
ment offered in a session that
lasted ore than three hours.
"This is not a final definitive
position on campaign fi~ance
reform, " said Rep. Joseph
Vukovich, D·Youngstown, committee chairman. "It's a fJ£St step."
_ Republicans said they would
have preferred the bill a ~ intro·

Dillon first to file for Pomeroy Village post

Choose From Brands Like
Marathon, ·E:p:on, and Texaco Havoline ~otor Oil at City Ice· &amp; Fuel ·

Our Warehouse Located.
On Rt. 62 North
.Near Point :Pleasant

ihe other public defenders in the · tracted with Knight in January, hall) lind the courity's sha~e of
region. The two staff attorneys in 1990 for those services, the con- overhead· expenses for the reg1onal
the Athens regional office are also tract was si~ned in the limount of office.
available to the office in case of $30,000. Tins "year, the savings are · ,.. Knight, however; receives no
conflicts. .
anticipated to be even more dra- allowance for overhead. He must
Savings. for Meigs County under matic; The contract between the pay office rent, slaff salaries, sup·
the new public defender system Meigs County Commissioners and pl,jt:s .and equipment from his pub·
have been significant. In 1989, the re~ional public defender this lie defender salary ..Knight main'
which was the last year that the year wlll cOst the county $23,000. . lams a pnvate pracuce m addiUon
county paid individual attorneys for
That figure, according to to acting as .the county's public
assigned counsel fees, the co·unty Knight, covers both half of the con- defender, staling that he spends an
paid out nearly $47,000 for those tract price (the Ohio Public estimated half of his work time on
services, When the county con- · Defender's Office pays the other indigent ccriminal defendants.

·House to consider campaign
spending limitation bill

Save Money During Our Spring Oil Specials!
.

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Wednesday, Apr113,1991

Public defender Saves .Meigs taxpayers mohey

Department
official to head probe

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Val. 41, No. 242·

Copyrighted ,.,

R:r...filtLJrtl!

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Low tonight in mid-405.
Thursday, hi~h in mid-60s.
Chance or ram SO percent.

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LOS ANGELES (UPI) - For·
mer Deputy Secretary of ·state
Warren Christopher has been
appointed to head a high-level citi·
zens' panel charged by Mayor Tom
Bradley to investigate the Police
Department and the Jssue of police
brutality.
.
• Formed in the wake Of the ·
videotaped Rodney King beating,
tJie commission ostensibly will be
independent from City Hall.
r"esponsible for raising its own
financing-from the private sector,
. but will be able to utilize the
mayor's subpoena power 10 inter· ·
view pocential witnesses:
"The time has come for a rea9Jned, objective, thorouah and con·
. • Sll'UCtive examination ol the struc·
ture and lhe operation of the Police
Department," Bradley said Monday in announcing the commis·
sion 's membership.
In addition, the seven-member
panel will be advised by recenlly
retired Assistant Police Chief Jesse ,
Brewer, noted criminologist James·-··
Q. Wilson anti former New York
· Police Commissioner Patrick Mur·
phy as it probes deparunent operations and devises possible reforms.
Patterned afrcr the Knapp Com. mission, which 20 years ago
probed corruption io the New York
Police Deparurient, the Christopher
Commission has been asked to sub·
mit an initial report within 60 io 90
~
days.
. .
..
-·"There has been a cnslS of con·
fideace in the Los Al1geles Police
t)eparlment in tile past few weeks
arisin&amp; out of ttie Rodner, King
beatin,, " Bradley said. ; I think
there 1S a need for us to restore
public confidence in the LAPD and
restore the prestige and morale of
• the men and women who malte up

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Countdown begins ·r or shuttle .Atlantis

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Ohio Lottery

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•GREASES
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TEXACO iiAVOLINE
.20W50...99¢ QUART......$}}88 lZ. PACK CASE

counties unite to save jobs

of M.eigs 9ounty miners

Charges pending (!.gainst juveniles

Corrected court entry filed

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Page-2-The Dally S.ntlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday,
Apr113, 1991 .
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PLANT ,CiTY, Fla. (UPI) -. .he would not reveal any names. . Ellis Burks had two hits and droVe
Phillips said tlte only way to
in two runs Tuesday night to lift head off a lo;kilut is for the owners
. the Boston.RC!I Sox to ·a S-3 cxhi- , to soften their han!·line stance on
bition victory over the Cincinnati salaries, pension benefits and post·
Reds.
·
season compensation. He said the
Wade Boggs and Tony Pena two sides are "very, very fat
each added two hits for the Bo5ox. apan. ' ' ~
·
MarlaDo Duncan went 2-Cor·S with
Philli~ said a major stumbling
an RBI and Hcrril Winning~am block is the owners' refusal to con.
· sider sharing their revenues with
went2-for-2 for the Reds.
Tom Bolto~ piclted _up _th.e win ' the umpires, despite Javis!ri!lg pia~- ·
for Boston, gomg five lllllmgs. _He ers wi[h multiqlillion-dpllat con·
allowed one run .on two htts, tracts.
· .
walked one batter and .struck out
The last union contraCt expired
four. Cincinnati starter Jack Arm· at the end 6f last year. Negotiatin}
strong suffered the loss.
sessio1111 are scheduled for WednesReds shortstop Barry Larkin ·
·
'injured
his.he
back
in the
fqurth
inning when
slipped
leaving.
ihe
b'a tter's box after hitting a
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Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

W ASHINQTON • The appear- United States, Saudi Arabia and
ance
of the Israel Philharmonic · Israel • not to mention Great.
DE VOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF· THE MEIGS.;MAsON AREA .
O!CheStra ·in Washington had once . Britain, whoSe Royal Ballet was
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seemed.to government and priva~ also playing the Kennedy Cenle{.
the Gulf war.
The lack of a l)ig renorist attaek
t:!i!m~ ~.._-r', I"'T"E5!=1"""
securitY experts the ideal opportu• ~&gt; But it is a sign of how thoroughOtliers see the silence as an indi- by pro-Iraqi forces since the war .
'q:Jv _
.
.
nity for pro-Iraqi terrorists. But ly defeated Iraq is that none of the cator or Saddatil's passion for sur' began should not•• how.ever, put
Saddam Hussein and bis terrorist countries involved felt that a satu- viva!. They believe that "violence · Americans at ease. Saddam threatR OBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE JIOEFLICR
paras\tes IJ1USI have been busy else- ration of securiiy was necessary (or against the Israel Philharmonic in · . ened to strike out at Americans, ·
General Manager
.Publisher
where in midc ~arch when the the concert.
·
Washington would have been lhe .and while_he boasts a great deal, he·
orchestra
played
at
the
Kennedy
·
There
"'ere
no
metal
detectors,
.
last
sJraw for the Israelis, who does not bluff. He has lhe terrorist
'·
· PAT WHITEHEAD
·Center.
··
· .
pnly a cursory ·search of handbags, endured· the Scud attackS on their network to do it, and he 111ill have
Assistant Publlsher/ Conlroller
' It. is enc!)uraging that -5addatn one uniformed ·offi&amp;r and a long country without slriking back.
. the will to do it too if Iraq emerges
. would pass up such an occasion. plainclothers officer scanning the
If Saddlun does inflict his terrOr' from the cease-fire settlement total-·
. A MEMBER or."llhe.United Press International . Inland Dally P;ess .
· Israel's rop backers in Washington audience from near the stage. Since ists on the Western world once he ly humiliated. He is simply otherA ssoc latlo~and the Amer ican Newspaper P ublishers Assoclalton,
.. ·always supjJort tbe orchestra when the Gulf war, plainclothes men has time 10 worry about something wise preoccupied right now . . ·
it is in town, ,espccially this year have been discreetly scattered besides domestic problems. he will
WHO'S ON FIRST'! • At the
. LETTERS OFOPINiON are w~lcome. They should be less tltari 300
1
' commemorating ·the 40th anniveraround
the
center
for
all
events.
·
be
sure
to
pick'
his
targets
carefully
political
level·, all Ji;aqi opposition ·
· words long. All letters ar e s ubject to editing' and must be signed with
sary
.
of
the
group's
tirst
U.S.
There
were
no
threats,
federal
law
so
the
8CIS
are
heinous
enough
to
groups
haye
joined {orces to oust ·
·
,
name. address and lelephone number. No unsigned letlers will be pub'_- .
:
appearance.
To
malce
the
·perfor;
enfon:ement
sources
told
our
assocallsil
outrage,
but
not
so
outra·
Saddatil
Hussein
from power, but
llstied. Lett ers should. be in good taste, addressing issues. notpersonaJI-·
mance
e~en
more
inviting,
it
feaciate
Les
Whitten,
and
no
beefed.
geous
ihat
they
bring
retaliation.
·at
the
subterranean
level, the pic· t!es·
.. lured Israel's latest violin prodigy, ' up security for the Israeli perform- For example, Saddam would ,prob- tur.e iS more murky. The fiercest
;.
·
, . . . ably not use his terrorists to pi~ oo fighting has come from the Kurds,
Maxim Vengerov, a new immi ; ers.
. ~~from the Soviet Union; al~g
Some secu(ity experts have any nation that uses terrorism as a · who are in a constant state of rebel;
wuh Isaac Stern, whose name IS attributed the low level of world tool also, such as
If he were . lion in northern Iraq. The Shiires .
synonymous with political and . rerrorism to lhe suddenness of the stupid enough to strike at Syria, the · are carrying on the baitle in the
musicll;l support 6f Israel
. ' ' coalition victory and the early world would witness two or the south and drawing suppou from an
. Bes1des, the Kennedy c;enter ~s destruction of Iraqi intelligence most venomous international ter- alliance of small ISlamic p~lies
kiny-comer from tbe Saudi Arablll' . communications. For instance, rorist-backers in combat through . based in Iran. Unconfltllled intelli."
Embassy. _Thus a ~sly bloodbath there was only one threat against their trainees and hirelings.
gence reports claim that Iran has
- was poss1ble agamst all three of the Kennedy Center, and that was · As one old securitY hand called ·. sl\pped 50,000 Iraqi Shiites, once .•.
. By STEVE GERSTEL
Saddam's :~great Satans'~ . - the telephoneS in .on the second day .of it, "Tarantulas in a bottle." ·
. deported to Iran, back across the ·
WASHINGTON (l;JPI) --'- The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, some·
1
,
border 10 fight against Saddam. He ·
what like the Baltic Slates, ~ found out that self-determinaliori can be
r-----.:._,..-....,r---~7
)lad
report~dly deported 200,000 ·
elusive aspiration. ·. ·
· .
· ·· . .
·
No, No, We. FiGtti'
~ Sliiites 10 reduce die influence '
To ·hang on to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, the Soviet Union
·
· ·
":ll.:i.:.
of
the sect in southern Iraq. Syria
tanks and troops. To prevent P.uerto Rico from choosing its future,
·
.ft3f(eD
~~S$iON,
t¥tr
,
lilso:
hosts several anti-Saddam
Congress refuses to grant the island a binding plebiscite.
·
·
t4aKeD
~eceSSiON!
groups
and Saudi Arabia has
Late last month, on a 10-10 tie vote, the Senate Energy Committee
as~mbled about 30 formc:r Iraqi
killed a bill that thllt wonld have allowed Puerto Rico. to hold a referen'leaders. All of tbem have lheir condum on whether it wanted continued commonwealth status, statehood or
'
tacts inside Iraq, and. they now
independence. ·
claim
to bo united in their o~si- .
The vote of the committee probably ended any hope of passage. this
lion
to
Saddam and their desue for ·
year..The leaders of tlje three mov~ments '!a,noLwant a referendum next .
demOCI"llcy.
If Saddrun were elimiYear to muddle the 1992 gubematonal elecndn: ·
.
· · .·
nated,
it
remains
to be seen
• What the inhabitants of the island commonwealth ·want is a plebiscite
whether their united front would"'
with an understanding that Congress would abide by the results. ·
crumble
in violent squabbling to··
- ; It seems fairly clear th~t Congress does not object to com!Donwealth
see
who
would
fill the vacuum. ..
status, a sort of paternalistic chattelism, or independence, a vision shared
MINI-EDITORIAL:
Health and '
more jn the abstract.ihan in reality.
·
·
. •
Human
Services.
Secretary'
Louis ,
. What "appears is that Congress fears the islanders will vote for s.tatemade
an
Sullivan
·recently
hood and that Congress. would have ld honor that vote. ·
·
announcement
that
was
no
oomb.
: Ye~ every president since Harry Turman after World War II.:.... when
shell
that
!he
best
way
to
help
"at
•
colonialism went out of fashion - has promised .Puerto Ricans this·
risk" ~hildren in America is to.
choice.
·
.
. ·
· ·
strengthen their families.•
That includes George Bush who ma&lt;;le the pledge_irt his 1989 State of
'
Humankind has known tllat for
the Unic;m addtess in which the president said his prefercn~e was statethousands of years. The bigger
Hood.
·
·
·
question
is how does a government .
: Puerto Rico. part ofthc spoils from the. Spanish-American War, · ·
intervene
"in the life of achild withremalned a colony. till 1952 when it became a C!Jmmonwealih --, not on
out replacing ti!c _falnil¥? For that.. ,
an interim basis but permanently.
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the Bush. admm•stratton has no '
. : Times, however, have changed in Puerto Rico aild S\lltehood and indemagic answer. In fact, many weU- ··
pendence have become alternatives, especially statehood.
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intentioned
fedenil welfare policies .
Membe~s of the energy committee gave varied reasons for voting
,... haye mea ~ffr-ct ~f,_ w,~njn$ ,fllllli- ·.•
against the bill - a different culture, another language, great and costly
- '
hes an discouragmg mamage.
.
poverty, the prospect of a Quebec-type ~esion movement sometime in
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the futQTC.
.
·, ·
. A boiling l)lad Sen. Patrick Moynihan~ D-N.Y.; an Irishman with a
,.
large Puerto. Rican constituency, complained thai at the commitree meet"
ing one senator a(tet another expressed doulit that Puerto Rico belonged
in the Union.
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But, Moynihan said, "they sure as hell belong in the gulf, the Per8ian
Gulf' just as tlley did in Viemam and Korea. They are American· citizens
KINGMAN, Ariz. : Although ov~. prospects for recovery ;,ith- . Many states already have !ldopt- .
who could not vote for the president who waged the war nor the members . Arizona ·enjoyed a boom matehed out drastic action, nolably increases ed austerity budgets that call for .
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of Congress who authorized iL
by few, other states during the in existing taxes or imposition of furloughs or layoffs of public
Throughout the ·country, stare
Moynihan said it was clear ihat many committee members were guilty, · 1980s, its econorny now has turned new levies, have become blealcer employees, hiring or travel freezes, .
executives
a:re calling for new or
of what he called ' ' navitism. the close associate of racism. denying ~lf- sour • and nowliere is that reversal with CI!Ch passing week and monih. spending cuts or deferrals and other
additional levies on alcoholic bevd~tenninatio on lhe·basis of "their color and their language."
·
At. the end of last year, the economy measures ..
more apparent th\ID in th_e budget or
erages,
moror fuels, tobacco prodNational
Association
of
State
Bud·
Closing
hospitals
for
retarded
• "At this time, in our nation, in this age, you could want to weep,"
ihe slate government
.
ucts, soft drinks, tires, food, cloth·
Moynihan said. .
.
. In a development matched virtu- get OffiCerS and the National Gov- children and·similatly drastic mea- ing,
over - the-counter~rugs and ,
ernor's
Association
conducted
a
sures
have
been
proposed
in
some
.
Some days later, Moynihan son of apologized, saying he meant no ally everywhere in the nation, the
vari.
o
us
other products, 'as well as
offense and that' 'navitism" is -often unconscious.
··
recession that began last summer C!}untrywide survey that found 28 states. In others, spendirt~ is bc;ing .
some
seivices.
·,;
· "When I hear people talking about welfare.benefits and porverty, I get and has no.t yet abated led to a states were projecting an aggregate slashed Q1i schQdls, libranes, parks,
·
Just
as
the
federal
gpvernment
nervous," Moynihan said; "That may be hypersensitivity on my part. "
severe contraction in consumer of just under $10 billion in budget police, h~th care, high'r"ay mainhas shifted to the states~spon- ·
But his anger at the. failure of Congress to enact legislation allowing spending. That, in turn, diminished deficits in 1991.
1
• tenance and countless other tuncsibility
for funding many programs,
Puerto Ricans to choose their destiny remains unabated.
·
In late January, only one month lions. ..
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tax revenues available 10 the slate
the
states
have sought to transfer
"For the first time we will have specifically failed to keep our ·government
later, a similar survey conducted by
Here in Arizona, some desperate
financial
obligations
ro· lfie cities, , ·
p iomi ~,'' Moynihan said, "In the past,. we have not gotten aroUnd to it;
' At the same time, state agencies state officials in New York identi- state official~ initially considered
with
distressingly
predictable &gt;l
now we will have said no to free choice." ·
·
· and departments came under fled 40 states that were estimating major reductions in the funding of
results.
·
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increased pressure to provide collective budget deficits of $33 · public education from kinderglllten
·
The
U.S.
Conferenc~
of
MiyOJS
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through high school, then
expanded' social services, ranging .billion in )992.
recently
reported
that
of
50
city
,
Describing most state budgets as embraced a more measured
from unempl_oyment compensation
"ca:ught
i~ the Viselike grip of · 8P.Jli"08Ch: When. the state Legisla- . governments it surveyed on fiscal ;
10
welfare
assiStance,
to
ihe
newly
By Uni,ed Press International ,
jobless ancl- others adversely affect- shrinking revenues and increasing tQTC met in a .special session early measures they were required to ini- .
demands for more spending," NGA this year, it imposed reductions of tia~ during the 1980s, 36 had .
ed by the recession.
.
: Today is Wednesday, April3, the 93rdday Qf 1991 with 27210 follow.
That combination of'circum- notes that ihc federal government .at least 3 percent in -th~ budgets of increased tax11s, 34 had reduced ,.;
1be moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter~
stances produced a projected bud- has sh1fted 10 the stateS the respon- almosi all state departments and theil" work force and 24 hild cut ser-. ,
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
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vices. .
.get shortfall during the current fis- sibility to finance educational, agfiJicies.
The evening starS are,Mercury lind Jupiter.
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The
federal
tax
burden
may
Elsewl)ere,'however, public offi.
Those born on this date are under lhe sign of Aries. They include histo- cal year of more than $95 million, . medical, environmenJill, corrccl\ona1
and
othcr
.programs
of
unprececials
are turitin~ to the ultim.ate have become somel!Vhat more toleran
intolerable
situation
because
rian and sroiy writer Washington Irving in 1783; comedian George Jesse!
remedy, new or mcreased income, able, but state and local governArizona's constitution requires ihat dented scope.
and publisher Henry Luce; both in 1898; actress Doris Day and a~tor Mar·
"In 1980, Medicaid spending payroll, sales or excise taxes. The ments increasingly are paying for '
· Ion Brando, both in 1924 (age 67); astronaut Virgil ~·Gus" Grissom In aU annuals budgets be balanced.
· . Oozens of other slates, includ- . accounted for 9 percent of a (typi- governors or Connecticut 'and·Ten· programs that earlier were funded J
1926; anthropologist Jane Goodall in 1934 (age 57); actress Marsha
cal) state's budget," says NGSA.' nessee have proposed enactment of from W!15hington, and !hey -all get
Mason and entertainer Wayne Newton, both in 1942 (age 4.9); and actor- ing the. vast majority situated east "In
1990, it accounted for nearly 14 income taxes, never before thcit money from the same taxpayof the Mississippi RIVer, face, simi1
comedian Eddie Murphy in 1961 (~ge 30). ·
ers.
imposed in th!lSe states.
!~ fiscal crises this year. More- . percent of all state spending." ··

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Re·ds drop. ~-3 exhibition tilt ·
to Boston; Armstrong loser_

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· Are terrorists .waiting in the ·wings?

The .Daily .Sentinel ·
111 Court Stred
Pomeroy, O.ltlo .

· The Dally Sentinel-Page~

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Self-determination can
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State budgets sufferfrom ~ecession

RobertWalters ..

Today _in·history
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Berry's World

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Wh~

can .lead the Demo.crf:ttS i~f _1992? · .

' If anyone malces a movie about about Bush's ratings. Think 87~32.
Jhe Democratic Party, I've got a The first number represents the
title: "Dances With Crabs."
percentage of Americans who
I would not be suggesting that approved of Hatry Truman ill July
the Democrats are dyspeptic politi- 1947; the second was his rati.ng a
cians, that would be an infringe- year later. Heck, think 48 percent.
mel\t on Alan Simpson's copyright. That's where Bush himself was
'J would he referring instead to lhe floundering last fall.
current breed's basic nature, the
Second, you should mount a
way therscurry sideways, and their counterattack to rhe outrageous
habit o molting every couple of char$es 6f disloyalty being leveled
years l,nto soft, squishy things.
by r1ght-wing troglodytes. You
flere it is, less than a year before could respeind in the mild manner
·the Iowa c;aucuses, and the fwtpig ·. suggested by columnist Michael..
. farm has yet to be visited. Eleven Kinsley: "We were concerned
m·onlhs before the New Hampshire above all not to sacrifice the lives
primaties, and the first stemwinder to American's fighting men and
has yet to.be delivered i)ll the banks women. We are delighted to have
of the Merrimack. .
been proved wrong."
.
The Democrats seem to ha:ve
Or you could opt·for The Cur- '
three basic pr.ob~_q.s: I. They are mudgeon's choice: A yigorous
spooic:ed by Geo• I;lush's popu- campaign pointing out that the
larity, 2. they d~'t know how to . primitives who are fl!akl_ng the
respond to Republican charges that charges, Rep. Newt Gmgnch , R-.,
they are appeasment-before-coUII· Ga., and Sen .. Phil Gramm, R- ·
. try liberals and'3. they c:an't make Tew, .are craven chicken hawks
up their minds what they stand for. who chqsc college over Vietnam
, As a columnist, I natu,rally have and their own Republican vice
· advice on how ihey could address · preaidenl asked his well-connected
all these concerns. .
'
· mommr and daddy to get him in
First, you should quit worrying .the Nlllional Ouanl 5o he wOilldn't

d.

Joseph Spear

be drafted. ·
. .
, Third, you should once -agai11
.'
champion the people you used to· Bentsen ofTexas and Sam Nunn ·or
r.epresent: Mainstream Americans Georgia would make.serious candi·
who pay the taxes, obey the laws · dates, as would New York Goverand provide the bodies when the nor Mario Cuomo.
,
poliocianl want to go to war, This
In my "Credible" category
•s nnt to say you should abandon would be Senators George Mitchell
the picked-upon, poor and power-. of Maine, Bill Bradley of New Jer- :
less . But the special interests .. sey, Charles Ro6b or Virginia and :
should climb ,aboard the Governor Bill Clinton of Arkansas. ; ;
Democrats' ship, nnt vice versa. If My "Maybes" would include Sena· · .
.they canno, bring ihemselves to·do tors Bob Kerrey of .Nebraska and l
th!s, there's a ihird-party boat.being Jay Rock~feller of West Virginia, ·
readied by Molly Yard at the former ~nator Paul Tsong~s of
National Organjzation for Women. · Massachuseus and Governor Dou· '
· And don't forget the fairness glas Wilder of Virginia;
·
~
.issue. It's a fact that the GOP repReally Dark Horses: Sen. David :·,
resents.the 1110IICYed and you reprc- Boren of Oklahoma, Rep. Steven :.
sent ihe unmoneycid. You shouldn't Solarz of New York. The God For·
bash the rich, you sllouldn'l favor · bids: Maryland Govemor,~~.William i .
them eiiher. Stu.ff ihe capital gains . Donald Schaefer, Boston universi·
~ breat down ~ge's RU!let. .. .
ty president Jol:m Silber, George ·
· So why should It be? Which of McGovern and Jesse Jackson. .
the .crustaceans crawling around in
One final bit of advice: Whoevthe Democratic basket could wage er claws to lhe top should adopt a · :
a plausible campaign? Richard theme IIOilg, IIOIIICthinJ!: that can be !
Gep~dt, clearly. The Missouri hulllJ1led while IICwrymg. Say "Me i
congressrn110 talks tough is on ihe and Bobby McGee." Hmmmm !
right si!le of IllOS( issues. Senators freedom's just another word fo~
Albert Gore of Tennessee, Lloyd nothing left to lose hmmmrnrn.

,/ · ..

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Wectnesday, April ;;,..,

•'

l,

•
'

.

i

,I

•

.,..L' ----'"'-.-· -._;._.

.L.:

day and Thursday.
" There' s certainly e nough
lime," Phillips said.
' · . ,
. . In ~hibioon games Tuesday: ··' ·
At West Palm Beach. FI.a.. Bob
Melvin belled a .thrile-run horne run
as part of of a. five,run seventh
inning that paced the Baltimore
1-0rioles to a 10-5 triumph over the
Atlanta Braves..Deion Sanders hit a
two-run homer for Atlantil and.Olis
·Ni xon, acquired 'from Montreal
Monday, ·went 3 'for 4 with two .
srolen bases and scored IWice in his ·
Braves debut.
At Kissimmee, Fla., Mike MerContinued on page 4 .

··onee·rs su··rv···ve-1·5-·h··t·
Rio attack. for two wins.

p·

~~e~ichael

Lawhon of -the
Reds medical staff examined
· · Larkin and diagnosed it as a lower
baGk sprain. He said it would be
treated medication and rest, and reevaluated Wednesday.

-

· Marietta Colleg·e snapped a Rio Grande's scoring altack, .wllich .
four-game ·wioning strealc for the . saw Rio' Grande ahead of the Pio- .
University of Rio Grande baseball - neers at the end of five inni.ngs. But
.
. SCORES - PittSburgh's J~y Bell (left)
Bradeatilo, Fla. Bell bad two hits, scored
.team Tuesday in· a doubleheader at Marietta, advancing on a three fo,r
ru1111 and drove ln a run to help I.e ad the Pirates '
scoots around Detroit catcher ·Andy Allanson In
Marietta.
·
'
five performance by Frank Antill,
to .5-2 victory. (UPI)
.
. the third inning of Tuesday's exhibition game at
Another
season
and
another
The
Pio11eers,
who
improv
to
·
edged Rio Grande with a 16-hit fin.'
lockout looms for basehllll: Ah, it 15-3, coasred to a 370 win in
· ish d took advantage of some of '
mus1 be spring,
.
open,er but had to survive a 15-hii
e Redmen's five errors to post ihe
. Union ·umpires claimed Tuesday attack by the Redmen in the second win.
·
that major league owners planned gametoedgeRioGrande16-12.
· Andy Bulach (sophomore,
to lock them OU\ Qf bal!patks i.f
Hamilton) was on the pitcher's
ther_e is no contrac,t seulement by
The Redmen were credited with mound for.Rio Grande, while Mike
ihe stan of the SeasOn Monday. ··
eight hits ·and Marietta batted in Sherman was his counterpart for
.
'
· "The league has a clear intent to five in the fwt game. Shawn Han- the ~ionecrs. The hosts ·commit~d
WILLOW WoOD • The East·
A J&amp;Son Hager double and two . Durst fanned Renfroe to end the loc)c: out on opening day," Richie .ing (junior; Logan) was three for two errors ..
C!R Eagles started their 1991 baSe· pissed balls gave EHS an early 1-0 ·game with 111e tying runs pn hase to . Phillips, general counsel for the three and. James Lewis. (junior,
Now 11-~. Rio Grande opens· a
bill! campaign on a high note Mon- lead in the second, but_an Eric "'all win the gaine, 5-3, .
· . ·. Major League Umpires Associa- · Cincinnati) connected three times · home series this weekend against
day with a 5-3 SV AC vicll)ry over -. solo homer tied the seore ihe same : .Eastern hitters were Finlaw {IB- · lion; said at a news conference il! ·on four at-bats, but the Redmen Cedarville on Saturday, which will ·
defending league champion inning at 1-1.
.
3B) and Hager ( 1B-2B) with two his Philadelphia office.
bl
·
dd
. B.•sseUa.double and Kay1or a
·Phillips said umpires did not to
were
una eMarietta
to ¥810 any
groun ue IJ!l the Mid-Ohio Conference openSymmes Valley.
, EHS went up 3-J in the third h1ts,
a strong
defense.
er for the Redmen, and Central
Eastern is !lOW I -0 and SV 0.1.
when Marie, MWphy walked, Randy single.
·
receive· their monthly paychecks
Marietta was led hy Ti.m State on Sunday . Both are l p.m.
Eastern's winningest pitCher last Kaylor had a bunt sacrifice and an
Wall homered and Criswell, Mondny, prompting the union to McConnell, who was two lfor three doubleheaders. Marieua hosts Heiseason, junior righthander Jeff ensuing throwing error that.scored Edwatds, and Gater singled for SV. flle an unfair labor practices law- with a home run. Doug Cook was delberg Saturday in its Ohio l\lhletDurst hurled a complete game tri; a run; followed by Til!l Bissell's
Eastern will play at home suit with .tbe National Labor Rela- the winning pitcher and Brad Roser ic Conference opener.
umph, compiling 13 strikeouts and double.
·
tonight in an important SVAC con- · lions BOatd. He said the league .has (freshman, Delaware) had the loss
~nly tw~ walks. · This eff~rt was
Singles by Matt Finlaw and test.
. also falled to issue union umpires for Rio Grande. Neither ream com1mpress1ve .under any cucum- Hager followed by RBI groundouts
. Easter~~ Coach Dennis Eichinger opening day assignments, but that mitted any errors.
stanc~s , 'but. ~as _esee~i~lly out- . by Aaron Wilson and Marlli Mur~ praised Durst's fine effon and his
some 200 replacement umps have
Gary Harrison (senior, Gallipo:
standmg cons1dermg hmlled out· · phy gav.e EHS two more. That 'club's ability to come through in . been issued uniforms and game lis) v•as three for five and Darrell
·
assignments for the regular season. ·
door practices.
. :came afrer Durst struck out the side the clutch.
LINESCORE
·
" Every indication is that the · ~areum (senior, Hamilton) went
Andy Less (five ·innings of the previous inning. .
'Eastern o 1 2:2 0 00-S 6 4
scabs will work if there is .not an two for two ih the nightcap to lead
work) and Eric Wall had an equally ·· Symmes Valley added on in the
SymmeS
Valley
0
I
0
1
0
0
1-3
agreement by then," Phillips ~d.
impressive combO in posti~tg 14 fourth and one in the seventh as
5
4
·
Union umpires .will continue to.
strikeouts
and jus( two walks. ·. ·
.. ,
·GOO.D USED
work ihrotigh spring training, and if
We p,uaranlee your sati s·
faction . And our exprri ~
a lockout occurs, they will picket
WASHERS, DRYERS,
ence iri prep.uin g cOmplete
stadiums· across the country,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
Phillips said. He said several major
and acc urZt to tal&lt;. returns wi II ·
GAS
'&amp;
EUC.
RANGES
league
players
have
"expressed
a
·
give you peace of mi nd .
By BOB KEIM
Lansford, signed Monday as a Plan contract holdout in his rookie year
·
desire
to
honor
picket
lines,"
but
UPI S&amp;nrts Writer
B free agent, did not pass his physi- and caught just six passes for 70 '
...._.
ttaR BLOCit
BER~A. hio (UPl) - New cal and was waived. Lansford had a · yards.
coach Bill Belichii:k calls ·it an calf injury last season, but did .not
Then he suffered a stress fracAm erica l• Tax Team - Put &amp;UI to
experimeTit. ·
·. ·
,·
miss any games, and he said earlier ture in his left leg last year and
loor'-: for you!
Lawyer Tillman might like to Tuesday he was healthy and in the spent the season on injured resef'le.
HOURS:
Mon.
thru Fri. 9 am-8 pm
~27 3rd Av1., GaHipolit
Sot.
9
am-5 pm
call it something else,
hest shape he's,l?eert in for'"seven.
"rye just got ~o get out there
nine~
PH. 446.1699·
·· .
POMEROY
·8.18 E. MAIN ST .
and work extra hard," Tillrnan
'"flflmah, tvho'·has "sjlent ·mo.re years.
H011$11A.M,..6P.M.
992-8174
time out of uniform than playing in . Till01an had plenty of time to said. "You're going •to•beve ups
Non-league Trimble rolled over
his two seasons with the Cleveland study as he said the situation upset and downs. I hope I'm done with
the
Southern TornadOes 12-6 TuesBrowns, 'got a surprise Monday him so much that he· could not the downs. All I want to do is get
day
at Racine in area high School
. l)ight when he came 10 the team's sleep Monday nighL
into the game. I want to play this
baseball
action. ·
·
training headquarters at BaldwinThere was speculation when year. I don't even want to talk
Kounch
plcked
up
t·he win for
Wallace College. ',
TiUman was drafted in the second about the injury. I just hope it's .
Trimble
with
three
strlkeouts
and
·The 6-foot-5, 230-pound Till- round of tbe 1989 draft that he healed."
two
walks,
despite
giving
up
12
man was drafted as a wide receiver · would eventually replace NewBelichick tried to downplay the Southern hits. ·
·
out of Auburn, played there in his sonie, who also was a wide TCCjliv- · move. . ·
.
Trimble is now 3-1 on the year,
first two seasons, and thought he er in college. Given his size and
"We're planning on looking !II
already
having a great stan, while
would be p)aying there again in \,Newsome's age, the move seemed Lawyer at .several different posiSHS
drops
to 1-1, 1-0 in the
1991..
.
'
c!lnevitable, but the Browns main- · · tions," Belichick said. "He's got a
.
·
.
That w;IS before assistant coach tained Ti'llman was going to Slay at lot of skill and versatility. (But)' S.VAC.
Dill
pitched
well;
but
Jeremy
Ernie Adams ham!ed him a tight receiYer.l
We're not locked into these posi- suffered the loss a1 the hands of 7
end playbook, Suddenly Tillman
''I knew it was eventually going lions at this point.··
errors. He fanned foui and
was a light end and a leading can- to come, hut I didn' t know it was
TiUman said he was frustrated ·SHS
walked 6.
.
.
1981 PLYMOUTH HORIZON 4 DOOR
didate 'to replace the retired Oz:tie . going to come' so \lllfly," 'fiUman and.discOuraged by the move.
Coach Mick Winebrenners sald
Newsome.
. said. "I've just $01 to get oui there
"It's weird," he Said, "because
Automatic, AM,FM. Good tires: Good
th~t one thing summed up the game
. ·"I didn't say anything," a sub- and prove to myself that I'm the ·it's differenL I'm in the room with
transportation.
dued Tillman said Tuesday after same strong player I was when I (the receiver$) and there's a lot of · for Soulhern; '1'oo many errors"! :
For
South~rn
Andy
Baer·
dougoing through his fwt practice as a · came out of college."
· talking 10 each other. I go into the
iight end I!S the Browns opened
The Browns, who seftt a No. I (light end meeting) room now and bled and tripled, Keiih Jones singled, Jamie Anderson tripled and
their three-day minicamp. "J just piclt 10 Green Bily to draft Tillman, it's quiet
singled,
Scott Lis!~ had a double
took the book home and studied also would like Tillman 10 prove he
''It's difficult to go from standand
two
singles,
Kyle Wickline had
iL"
wd the same player· he was when ing straight up to a three-point
two
doubles,
and
Jeremy Dill a sinThree players missed the first he came out of colleg~. Tillman stance. It seems easy, but it's really
gle.
day of mmicamp. Michael Dean missed all of training camp in a not.
Trimble was led by Guffey and
Perry and Eric Metcalf do not have
992-2174
Bore with a triple and single,
Pomeroy, Ohio_
500 Ea1t
Shamhart a single and double ,
~~P~'~ornn~~~Y:f..:"~ntir~~~; .
Arnold,
Kennel,
and
Richards
each
are signed, and Frank Minnifield · '
·
·
·
.·
had a prior commitment and is
WILLOW WOOD-Despite talc- ter! We just need to build more singles.
Southern
goes
to
North
Gallia
expected to practice Wednesday.
ing a 1:0 lead, Eastern dropped a 6-· confidence as a team. We travel to
In other news, the Browns 3 decision to Symmes Valley in Belpre tonight and play home IQnight for an SVAC contest
· LINESCORE:
announced_tliat placekicker Mike area bigh school softball action ate Thursday with Wahama."
·
Trimble 2 3 i I . I I 3: 12
Symmes Valley. . - '
LINESCORE:
Eastern is 0-l and SV is 2-1.
Eastern I 0 0 I 0 I 0-3 2 7 10 2
Symmes 2 0 0 I 2 I x-6 4
. SouthernO I 4 0 0 0 1-6 12
. The Daily Sentinel . ·Eastern's game with Belpre was
7
· postponed yesterday because of a 2
•
(VSP81fl-. .)
·.
. league make-up by Belpre.
" Dlvltlon ol Mallhne.lla, lac.
Dana Blankenship was the winning· pircher with 7 strikeouts, ten
Publl!lbed every afternoon, Monday
.
.
through Friday, •111 Court St.. Powlllks,
and only two hits given up.
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley PobEdna Hensley suffered the loss
llahlng Company/ Mulllmedla, Inc.•.
with nine KO's, two walks, and
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769, Ph. 992·21~ ~
.
.
I
,
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
four hitS allowed. ·
Ohio.
.
.
Eastern had 7 errors and four
. .r1uv'u"'ll yuu ii11u yuuo llttlljiiUUI~ Wtlll , trt~naty, ,sarety­
Membf,r:· United Press ·tnternattonal:
stolen bases, while SV had three
Inland DaUy Presa AsaoctaUon and the
errors and four steals.
.
.conscious propane service is a Ferrellgas CQmmitment.
Oblo Newapaper Alloclatton. National ·
Trina Schneider led SV with a
Advei-U1lng Repre.enrattve, Bnnham,
AT THE
For 50 years, we've handled the everyday and em~rgency
Newspaper Sales, 133 Third Avenue,
triple and single, while Leah Mays
needs
of families like yours. ·
New York. New York 10017.
imd Jen Owens each singled.
.
Mary Jo Reed and Carrie Mor· -·
Ferrellgas .. . the fOlks to rely .on whether it's the
POSTMASTER: ·S.nd address chanl"'
to The O..Uy Sentlael, l1l Court St .,
rissey each s\ngled for Eastern. . .
coldest
day of the year, weekends, evenings, even
Pomeroy. Ohio met.
Coach Pam Doulhitt comment.·(fOrmerly Jaymar GOlf Club)
holidays.
•·
·.
.
. •
ed, "Being our rust game I felt ihat
8UIIS(JBII"'10N R"T1121
I~ cam.- or Mol.- ...le
we had a lot of nervous girls for
One Week ......... :.......... .... .. .... ..... ll.60
Cali about our speclai Customer PrOgrams;
RT 7
some reason. We bad more girls
One Month ......... .. .... .. .. :. ~ .... ,.. ~o .. l6.95
One Year , ................................ 183.20
strilting out than I felt we sho\(ld
• ·24 Hour Emergency Service .
,
· . SINGLE COPY '
have. Our errors in the field (7)
• Level Payment Plan • Ferrellgas Installation Review
PRTCE
lcllled us..
'
Dally ~. , .. ....... :.. .... .. ... ...... ..... 25 Cento
Symmes Valley took advantage
.Subl&lt;rlberonot d..trll!rtopaytbeearof
those crron, and scored Off of
rler may remit In advuce cUred to
•.
. five 6f diem. 1 doft't want to lake
992-5097
The Dally Senlillel on a 3, 6 or 12 - t b
AND
bOll. Crotllr will be rlveot carrl.-..dt
,,:any.dting
away
from
·sv
because
weelt.
'
_
POMEIOY,
they played 1 JD011 defenSive game,
No t~bl&lt;rlpitons by mao permllted i.
· howovor, tbey abo had two games
ar.as where h~ c&amp;rrlfl' ,18'\'lce II
undct their belt and were more .
avao~ .
.
reloalled."
· "We've bad to move our infield
;~.;,.-:j.
.~·-~~":,
·
.
around
a lot with Tabby Phillipa
'
13 Weeki .....................,............ W.If
26 WeelcJ ............... .. ._ ... : .......... NS.H
out (out with an auto accident
!2W..U .... ......... .... , ........... , ..,a"N
Injury) ud the Jirls are atill con· .
OollldeM. . ()ou!J
fUsed aa to thclt roles at cenain
13
.........~
_. .PAl
26
l*killlll, We're going to do bet-

a

Eagles open league.play with
5-3 triumph -over S.V nine·

Bro-wns. move Tillman to tight end ·

'

Trimble downs
SHS
12-6

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

$895

· SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC•

•in

Eastern girls lose.6-3 battle

OPEN HOUSESUNDAY, APRIL 7, 1991

.For Dependable Horne .
Heating, Water Heating and
Other Propane
Services... ··
.

cal Ferrellgas

1:00 ·PM 'Til ??

MEIGS· GOLF COURSE
Off ST.'
·IN POMEROY

.

....,.•.•
,.......
,.

'

•

.•

'

•

.FREE GOLF

SNACK
·Enterta·inment

.

I.

o•o

-·t
I

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f\.

3,1991

Ohio

As.alesuit of his

-min~te

vvednesday,Ap~l3,1991

her1ncs,

••
•

Several Meigs Countians will be
partlcipatina in the horse division
of the Dogwood Festival Grand
Parade to be held at Piketon on
Sunday, Apri128, at 2:30p.m.
. Judging of the horse, pony ad
mule division will be at the Pike
County Fairgrounds at 1 p.m. with
the grand parade to follow at 2;30 ·
p.m.
.
· Trophies will be awarded for the
unit which traveled the longest cJis.
tance, the best horse hook-up, the
best mule learn hook-up, the ·best
pony hook-up, the oldest rider, the

By U~lted Presslnternallonal ·
Johnson dicn-blocked a shot by son- high 16 rebounds for the HorMa81c. Johnson prov~ Tues~y Sean Elliott and after San Anwnio nets.
'
that he snll has a few tneks up his climbed within three with 40 secBucks 141, 76ers 104
I''
sleeve.
·
onds to go on a free throw by
At Philadelphia, Fred Roberts
. The Lakervcte~an an~ three- Robinson, Johnson converted four scored a career·high 32 points to
. . ..
nme MVP scored e~ght pomts and free lhr9ws in the final seconds.
lead I)Je Bucks past the 76ers, who
blocked ll s~ot over the final 90
The Lakers made 36 of 38 Cree, were mi&lt;ssing forward Charles
. sec.onds I~ hft Los Angeles to a th!ow tries. .
Barkley. ·Barkley injured his left
1~2-115 v1cto~ over the San An to•'lt was like a fight and no o~e kriee Sunday and wUl be sidelined
•
n1o Spurs. ·
· wanted to be knocked out," sa1d for at least the next two weeks,
· Joh~on finished the nigh\ with Laker Byron Scptt, who finished Philadelphia is 2-7 this season
30 pomts, 12 rebounds and 10 with 19 points. "But we were able when Barkley does not play.
assists tQ post hi513th triple doUble to win the decision."
)·
.Trail Blazers 1o4, TbDberwolves
of the season.
·
.
In other games Bostonlstompcd
93
' 'Magic ;~as tough as. hell down New Jersey 94· 77, Washington
At Minneapolis, Jerome Kersey
' the stretc~, S!lll ~toruo forward defeated Cleveland 101-82, Denoit scored 25 points and Portland talSean Elliot swd. W~at can y~u halted Charlotte 83-78, Milwaukee lied its seventh straight victory. It
say abour um? That s why he s outscored Philadelphia 121-104, . was the second win for Portland .
won so many MVPs."
Ponland nixed Minnesota 104·93, over Minnesota in the last four
. pe Lakers sn~p~ San Anto- Chicago stopped Orlando 106-102, days. The Blazers finished· 4"0
ruo s five-game wu~:m~ .streak and Dallas bumped Denver "\ 33-126, against the Wolves and improved
10-game .home wmnmg s~reak. Phoenix beat Utah 131-117, and their record against the four newes1
Spurs center Dav1d Robmson Sacramento upended Miami 96-90. expansion teams to a league-best
proved his own-+1VP potential
Celtics94 Nels 77
· 27-1 .
with 36 points and a career-high 22
At East Rutherford, NJ., Reggie
· Bulls 106, Mqlc: 1()2
re~unds_. . · .
.
· . . .. · Lewis scored 22 points and Brian.
At Chicago, Michael Jordan, the
, Dav1d R~bm~?n 1s _amazmg,
Shaw added 17 w lift Boston. The NBA player of the month for
Jo~ns.~n sa1d. He IS so cal· Celtics were helped by a poor March, began April with the same
qmck.
.
shooting performance by the Nets, flourish, scoring a season-high 44
But the only numbers RobmS&lt;?n who hit only 28 of 87 from 'the points to lead the Bulls. The win
appcl!"ed concerned about fellm field for .32.~ percent. New Jersey reduced Chicago's ma~ic number
the.~m-~oss column..
suffered its lowest scoring output . to clinch the Central Division title
Losmg at home 1s tough, really on the season
to two
tough,". Robinson said. "I felt
Bullets io1, Cavaliers 82 . ·
Ma~ericks 133, Nugets 126 .
good tomght and put up some good
At Landover,"Md., Ledell EackAt. Dallas, Derek Harper ~nd
numbers, but none ~~ that really les scored 21 points and the Bullets Rolando .Blackman combined for
matters when we lo~. .
.
held the Cavaliers without a .field 10 points in the fmal three minutes
The Spurs . ma!n!a!n a .shm goaj for the fm.t 7:48 of the fourth . to fight off a Michael Adam~-led
advantage over d!Vl~lon r.~val.s quarter to grab the victory. ·The· rally and bring the Dallas MaverHouston and Uta.h, wh1ch boih s1t Cavaliers overcame a 15·point icks ihe win. Adams scored 37
one game back 1n. the thr~e~~ay deficit in the third ctuaner only to points and· became the NBA's all·
~ce toward the, M1dwest D•_viSion hit. the drought that sen I them to time three~poini leader, hitting four
I
title. P_ortland s 104-93 v1ctory therr seventh straight detear on the w run his career total w 626.
.over Minnesota _keeps the Lakcrs 2 road and their third in a row overSuns 131, Jazz 117
1/2 games back~ ~e West.
all.
At Phoenix, Kevin Johnson
BIRD PASSES • Boston forward Larry Bird
Coleman (right) and over tbe bead or teammate
passes tbe ball past tbe outstretcbe~ bands of
The Sp!ifS ralhed from a sevenPistons 83, Hornets 78
scored 37 points and Clishcd out 20
Brian Shaw in the first quarter of Tuesday
pomt defiCit ear~y m the fourth _, AI Charlotte, N.C., Joe Dumars assists lo lead the Suns. Xa.vier
New Jersey's Sam 'Bowie (left) and Derrick
night's NBA game in East Rutherford, N.J.,
QJ!arter. and took a 114-113 lead scored 24 points to help the Pistons McDaniel added 28 points and 12
which the Celtics won 94-77. (UPI) .
with 1.35 r~mat.mng on a free to their fourth straight triumph. rebounds for the Suns, while Jeff
throw by Davtd Wmgate.
.
Dumars also connected on all five Hornacek had 18.points and Dan
Johnson . then made a runmng of his free throws, increasing ·hls Majerle 17. John Stockton scored
hook shot m the lane to put the · strin!! to 59 straig~t overall. Mark 28 points and handed out 10 assists
Lakers 1 ~ front fo! good and at:ter a Agurrre fimshed w1th 23 points and to lead Utah. Karl Malone finished
Sllurs m•ss h~ hila layup With a Mike Gminski finished with a sea- with 25 points and eight rebounds.
CHICAGO (UPI) - The last ing, but that is for sale, too.
SIJ'eet
and
Shields
Avenue
is
des.
·
Kings 96; Heat 90
person to take a swing at old
"We' ve had a few offers (for tined f9r a parking lot, There's not mmuteremammg,
Comiskey Park will be the crew · the scoreboard) but I can't talk much senti!DCnt for parking lots.
At Sacramento, Calif., Travis
behind the wrecking ball on about price or anything.-" said
Mays
scored 25 points and hit four
"I ha~e a nostalgic feeling like .
Wednesday when demolition Terry Savarise, vice president in most people,' ' said Tim Romani,
free throws down the stretch to lead
begins in·earnest at baseball's old- charge of stadium operations. •'The deputy director of the Illinois
the Kin&amp;.s. Antoine Carr added 19
est ballpark.
people who made th.e offers want to Sports Facilities Authority. "But
points and three blocked shots for
Once ·known as the "Baseball keep it pretty quiet.
this
is
overshadowed
by
my
excite·
Sacramento,
which won for only
Palace of the World,' ~ home to the
"It's a nice thought, though,'' ment over entering the new stadiBy DAVID ENSCOE
time
yesterclar
after
six
months
of
the
second
time
in nine games.
Chicago White Sox since the frrst Savarise .said. "Maybe the old urn. Th~ new·stadium is just a fabunegotiations.'
PHILADELPHIA
(UP!)
Sherman
D.ou~las
led the Heat,
game was played there July 1, scoreboard will survive at some lous facility."
Major lejigue baseball owners plan
Phillips said a major stumbling who lost thell' e1ghth straight on the
1910, the brick stadium soon will other ballpark, or at least a part of
Ironically, just three hours after
to lock union umpires out of the block is·the owners' refusal' to con- ro~d, with 22 points and seven
iL.,.
be a parking loL
the wrecking ball is scheduled to ballparks if there is no contract set- sider sharing their astronomical BSSISts.
"When the fans come out for
Not much of the old Comiskey strike the ~utheast corner of old tlement by the swt of the regular · revenues with the umpires, despite
ihe home opener April 18 (at the . will remain once Kolko 's workers Comiskey, where the right field season on April 8; the lawyer for lavishing players with multi-milnew Comiskey Park), they'll still are through.
lion dollar contracts.
'
stands meet the first base side, a the umpire's unioli_said Tuesday.
hardly notjce a thing - maybe an
"Figure a wrecking ball swing- ·media tour of the new ballpark will , ''The league has a clear intent to ·
"The umpires have ~ightened ·
· opening on:the east ~nd where right ing almost' constanUy for all tho~ be held across 35th Street
·
lock out on opening day," said expectations,:· he said. "They
field used to be,". sa1d Larry Kolko months (until October)," Kolko
The White Sox's first gimie at Richie PhiUips, general counsel for . want a fair and equitable distribuof Speedway Wrecking Co. "But said. "She's a strong old l!all- the new park is Aprill8 against the
the Major League Umpires Associ- tion of revenues. But the owners
we hope to -have it pretty much · park,"
·
Detroit Tigers. ·
.
ation at a press conference in his . want to deliver a message to the
done by October when the Sox start
The site of the old park at 35th
Philadelphia office.
umpires. They are sar,ing 'we have
playing in the World Series across
Phill1ps said umpires did not to draw the line 'here·. "
the street."
;l ContinuecUrom page 3
The last union contract expired
receive their monthly paychecks
'
.
., Speedway's crews have been
Monday, prompting the union to at the end of last year. Phillips said.
·dismantling .the ballpark's interior gan went six innings and·combined Tartabull drove in three runs and
file an unfair labor practices law- Negotiating sessions were schedsince March I. The seats are gone with three Los Angeles relievers to S(orm Davis pitched seven scoresuit with the National Labor Rela· uled for Wednesday afternoon and
and for sale at $250 apiece, with lead the "Dodgers to a 2.0 victory less innings to guide the Kansas
lions Board.·He said the league has Thursday.
the money to benefit the White Sox over the Houston Astros. The City Royals to a 9-0 rout of_t~e_ .also failed to issue union umpires
"There's cenainly enough time
Charities . The infield dirt was Dodgers scored their runs on a·• New York Mets. Kevin Seltzer . opening day assignments, but that (to rea~h a settlement)," he said.
moved to the new stadium, while bases-loaded walk and a throwing . drove in a pair of runs for Kansas
some· 200 replacement umps have
the gtass was replanled at a city error by third baseman Ken City.
·
.
been issoed uniforms and game,
park.
Caminiti.
At Fort Myers, Fla., Chili Davis
assignments for the regular season.
. The old sco~eboard is still stan!!·
At Haines City, 'Fla., Danny belted a twc.-run home run .to guide
"Every indication is that the
the Minnesota Twins to a 6·3 victoscabs will work if there is not an Soccer
ry over the St. Louis Cardinals . ..._ agreement by then," Phillips said.
Diego Maradona flew home' Iii'
· Kevin Tapani allowed three runs in
Union lllllpires will continue to his native Argentina, arriving on
six innif\gS and Dan Gladden had
work through spring training, and if · the same day the Italian Leau~:~e
two hits and two RBI for the ' a lockout occurs, they will picket suspended the soccer great foe failTwins.
stadiums across the country, ing his March 17 drug test. Players
W~oesday Games
EXIDBITION STANDINGS
At Bradenton, Fla., Jay Bell col- Phillips said. He said several major in previous cases in Italy have been
Ne w York (NL) YL Loa Af1&amp;ela:,
lly Unlltd Preulnterr~alion.l
VcroBeach,f1a.,l 2:35 p.m.
lected two hits, drove in a run and league players have "expressed a disciplined ~ith suspensions of six
Pittlburgh v1. Bonon, Winaer Haven,
American League
MASON, WV.
scored three times to pace the Pitts·
desire to honor picket lines," but · monthS' to two years.
Fll., t :Ol p.m.
·
W L
PeL

.

~.

...

...
..

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Horse show invitation
issued to ·Meigs riders·

Johnson leads L.A. L·akers
to 122-115 victory orer Spurs

,' '··

•

Terre·Wood to perform
in "Ten . Little Indians" ··.

Cumberland College Sludent
best original horse and rider from
Frontier Days, the best horse and Terre wood, the daughter of
best dressed horse and rider, the Robert and Catl)ie Wood of Long
Best English walking horse, the· · Bottom, participated in Cumber·
best quarter horse, ana lhe best land College's spnn1 production,
over-all unit
·
·
"Te.n .L ittle Ind1ans by Agatha
.
Further information may be Chrisne.
Wood portrayed the character of
obtained by contact Dale McNelly, ·
Mrs. Rogers for the production
PiketOn, phone 289-4489. .

you want it ...
you·ve got it ...

N

which opened Feb. 28 and contin·
ued to March 9. Daniel K. Naz· worth, assistant professor of speecl!
and drama at Cumberland College,
was the director and~·
"Ten Little.Indians" IS a classic
"Whodunit" that involves ten pco·
pie from all walks of life who have
been inviied to an island by an
unknown host who never arr1ves.
As the ten wait foe the host, there is
a death followed by another death
and only the dead are abOve suspi·
·
ClOD.

Carmel notes

Harrisonville notes

Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Gainer,
their daughter, Marty, her daughter,
and Jana Gainer, all from He'bron,
visited Eunie Brinker on Easter •
Sunday.
MrJ. Marilyn Yound, Sid11ey,
visited her mother, Mrs. Mary
ROush on Friday.
There w«e 72 present for Siln·
day school on Easter Sunday.
Becky Bentz and children spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Groeser at Logan.

Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bi$hOp
recently spent a. week in Florida
visiting rel8tivcs and friends. They
also spent a few days in Tennessee
and went to the Grand Ole Opry.
Harold Ball and Mary
Woodgard, Columbus, vis\led
Frances Yoang recently. .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.visited
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson and ·
Ra~
Alkire in Columbus recently .
. and Mrs. Doug Bishop were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Kinney, Columbus.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gi,bson and
Although the Stars and Stripes orig- sons, Columbus, were weekend
ina ted in 1777, it was not until 146 · guests of Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
· years later that there was a serious
attempt to establish a uniform code of
The maximum speed of • reindeer
etiquelte for the U.S. flag. . ·
Is approslmately 32 mpb.

COPYRIGHT 1981 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY; MARCH 31 , .THROUGH
SATURDAY, APRILS, 1981,1N ..,..• .,....,.. ,
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITI~S . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVE~TISlD
POl.teJ... Each of these Klvertised ·it8m1 t. reQuired robe readily avarlabHt tor
, .. . •n. e~c~ Kroger St~re, . except 11 apec ific~lty noted tn this ad. If we do wri oui of an ·
a~rt•l8d item. we Will offer you your choiCe of a comparable item, when aveillble
. ~eftecting the same.aavinp• ~r .• r~incheck which willantitkt yOu to pure haM the adv$rtiud
~~em at the advenlsed prtee Within 30 days. Onlv one vendor coupon will be ·accepted pe
·~em purchaaecl.
·
.
·

m-.

'·

.

•

Golden-Rip·e
Dole
Bananas

-

Comiskey Park to~ torn down

-lbs.

Impasse between owners, umps
may spell Opening Day lockout

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"
CHILLED

..

~.--~ ·-u.s :~

WE HAVE

· Sports briefs

.

I!
I

"

.I .

'

Sports scoreboard

BosU'Il

Minnelou

9
9

.679
.M7

.. IS lO
.... 13 10
.1 ••••• 14 ll

.643
'.565
.S60

..... .19
...11

·

New Yodl:
Ckvc!ond
S..ulc
KarUuChy
C.lifomia

·.. 13 II , .5-12
..... 12 12 " .!00

Olk llnd
Milw1ukee

....13
....:12
..... .! t
.... 10
.. 10

14
14
t5
15
II
......&amp; 17

Toronto
J)ouog

........&amp; 19

Baltimore

Oticaao

Tu u

.411
.462
.423

.&lt;00

.3S7
.320
.296

National Le~~~:ue
H~1.an
.... 14 I .636
SL Louil
..... IS 9 .62l
I'll"""""

....13 10

San Die&amp;o

•. .13 10

. 56 ~

.........
New Yorl&lt;

.14 11
...... 13 J1.
.. 14 13

.S60

ChiCIJO
Monb'Cf,l '

.....14 )4
... .12; 14

Sm.Fn:n ~

.... Jl . IS
LooAnF1" . .. 12 17

Cincinnati

.S6!

.542
.! 19
.~ '

.462

,423

.414 '

Philldelpi\U
.... &amp; 16 .333
Spllt... quad aamN count In Jtlftdlnp.
Tit~, "P" a•m• aad pmu a..liut

n•·m•Jor ,............ ao q_,._
Tuesday

RHUlt.s .

Babimore 10, Atlelta 5
Lc» Anaela: 2, HouilOI'I 0 •
Km1u Gty 9;New Yod&lt; (NL) 0
~ 6, SL 1Auil3
MonttctlS, New Yodl (AL) 0

Pltultura" 5,.o.uo;, 2

CbioqO VJ.) 3, T..., 2
8•101'1 S,CinclnMii!

. ~;,6, T-ool

IO,a...ioM7
Mllw.-7. Son FnnciJco 6
s-Jeii,Oticoi"(NL)S
Cllilomii!O, SID .Die&amp;&lt;&gt; 4

burgh
Piratct
to a Andy
5·2 victory
over
the
Detroit
Tigers.
VanSlyke
also had two hits and drove in a run
for Pittsburgh. Alan Trammell
delivered a two-run single for t)le
Tigers in the fifth.
. ·: .
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., And[es
Galarraga smashed a two-run
~olller'as part of a 15-hit attack that
led the Montreal Expos to an 8·0
victory over the New ):'ork Yankees. Five Expo pitchers cQmbined
on the shutoul
At Chandler, Ariz., Gary
Sheffield went 3 foe 3 with an RBI
to help the Milwaukee Brewers to a
7-6 victory over the San Francisco
Giants. C:andy Maldonado had two
hits and two RBI for the Brewers.

Chicago (AL) vs. Tormto, Dunedin,

Aa., J :35 p.m.
.
Milwaukee VI. San Francilco, Scent·
· dale, Ariz., 2:35 f..m.
.
Sctltle VI. C evcland, Tucaan, Ariz.,
J :OS p. m.
.
Chicaao ·(NL) vs. Oakland, Phocni:c,
3:0S p.m.
. San Oie-o VI. Calitoftu., Palm
Spnnaa. Calif., 4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati " ' · Odroit, Wdand, Fla.,
7:3S p.m. ·
Hous\on ""' Kanau City, Baieball
City, Fl1 .• 1:3!!i p.m.
811\im.Ote VI. McwttiC.I.l, Wut Pain,
Beach, At., 7:3.5 p m..

Thursday Games

TolOfllo vs.. Kans.u City~ Daseblll

City, ·f la., I :~ p_..m.
Tu• vs. Minn..:&amp;\a, Fort Mycn,
fll .. I :0! p.m.
•
Houlton vs. Cincinnal.i, Plant City,
fll., I :0! p.m.
· Ne:w York (N_L) va. Monlrell, Wc:~t
Palm Beach,.Fia.; 1:OS p.m.
,
Detroit VI. Philacklphia, Cle~~rwaw,
Bas ton

VI.

he Phillips
would notsaid
reveal
names.
theany
only
way to
head off a lockout is for the owners
to soften their hard-line stance on
salaries, pension benefits and post
season compensation. He said the
two sides arc currently "very, very ·
far apart"
Phillips said the union is willing .
to compromise, and has already
given ground on issues the owners
have addressed, such as salaries.
But he said the ownets have
refused to even talk about other
issues.
''They have thus far. failed to .
address compensation for postsea~
son play," he said. "And they
addressed pensions for the first .

OR

Ice Cream
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$

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For

For

·whole

Sirloin Tips

88

•

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FREE

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RED TAG
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FOR MDI, WOMEN &amp; CHILDREN

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Appl. Pie

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Piuabuflh •.Bradenton,

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Cleveland vs. Milwaukee, O.andler,
Ariz., 3:05 p.m. ·
Seoul• " · Chicoao (NL), W.O..
Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
'
a.himon vs. Now YOlk (AL), Fort
IAudadolo, Flo., 7:3!1 pm.
Chlaao (AL) w. 1!- Lottll, St .,._
tollblq, Fio., 7:35p.m.
·
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Sports briefs

Olymplcl
·
An"Oiympic panel in New York
released the results of a report
· detailing the links between food
and athletic performance. The
study, conducted in Switzerland
under the auspices of the IOC,
stressed the imporiiiiCO of a wellbalanced diet. Tbe report was
unUsual not because or ill findings,
but because a consensus was ' •
reached in a field where ditr~nces
typically abound,

"

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DOWNING
. CHuS
MUWN MUSSEl ·

WILL CLOSE AT 2:00 P.M. SATURDAY,
APRil 6, DUE TO PEATH IN FAMILY
OPEN 9 A.M. MONDAY MORNING

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New York (AL) vs. Atlanu, Wen

Aa.• J&gt;O!!i p.m.

•POLES
•LINE
•TACKLE
. BOXES
•FISHING
ACCESSORIES

PICKENS .

Palm Be..ch, Aa., I :O!i p.m.
•
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Minnclota vs. Tcus, PM CharlQUC,
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84-oz.

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T1Je Dally Sentinel

•

.

_ _ _ Local briefs.~. ·----.
. Contiaued from page 1
request for shock parole was denied by Judge Crow llll-*.
In the corrected entty, the pi~ of Jason Riggs - ~- contest".
·
·
-- . Bo~ Harris and Rigs lite serving sentences illqlcllld ill c 1{~-:
bon with th.~ June 2 death of Canal Winchester
who was lcilled when he was struck by a vehicle drive. b)' Rial
Harris was a passenger in the vehicle. After the
WllJ•f'
body was _thrown over a bank in rural Meigs County -s ""'""""""'
the followmg day.
·-;--·-"T.

P'omcroy Mlddlepon, Ohio

_......,.,_,,cal&amp; Weather
I t

VVedneaday,Ap~l3,1991

____,;,· Meigs announcements---•

.,

eeDinl

Trlllleelto meet
' s.dl
Ohio
ter will have a smorgasbOrd diMcr
Mostly eloady Wednesday
The Sutton 'Township Trustees on Sunday from noon to 2 p.m.
llialll, widl a low between 45 and requests that all old flowers be Cost is $5 and chiklren 11ndl:r 12 is
Oll'CI rain 20 percent removed from cemeteries in Sutton $2.50. Public is invited.
11114
0.0.. 1aac1 ~ v..... cia fr Th~y. with Township before·mowing begins .
.
LoUridge voup to meet
c:::~
lrllipOrted her 10 . a rtpl)ll of Jhowen Wnd thunder- on AprillO.
The
Loaridge Community Cen~
V.UC,. HospiUII. At 9:56 ltonlll, IH 1liahl iii the mid 60s.
Reviva
l
ter will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. ·
•·•·· Pomeroy squad went to Chanc:.oflllln li 50·pt~te~~L
Public
is invited. Center located on
·
The
f~~dom
Gospel
Mislion
School for Margaret
Ollleexlladld lorea~t
Ch~~~th w11l have revival April9-13
I. ~
De wa 1ranspotted
, . . , . . a p Sunday
Athens County Road 53 south, five
I t " - Ira lal Hospital.
A or a II( lhowers and lhun- at 7 p.m. nightly with Rev. Junior miles west of Coolville.
~
'
p
ay 14uad went to Lon1 derscermt Fri*y and Sat. u!~ay, Conger from Sandyville, W.Va.
· SinginB will be the Gabriel Quait,et,
Hollew load at 12:4'6 p.m. for · widl fair wrk on Sunday.
Ed Adem of CarDCnter re~ to the Meigs Cou8ly acrur1
Coll'ee house scheduled
Travelin On Quartet, Mary bailey
,I.Hiettl
lolllrts.
lt.obens
was
wiD
be
in
lhe
6011
Friday
and
SaturDepanment on Tuesday that sometmJe between II Lm lind 3 p.m.
An evening of wom~n's enter- .
•'l!tii&amp;IIOC llllllipGillOd. At3:31 day," and in the 70s Sunday. Family, United Gospelenes and tainment, sharing and refreshment ""\_ __
that day, someone entered a house that he owns ~ Mt UniOII
.....
~ I ~ . .wt WORtiO Stile · ~~~~_!.ill be in the.40s Singing Messenger. Pastor R.G.
Church. Enl!Y was made by breaking a second floor wiadow. Tile
be held Aprill2 from 7:30·11
'
Willford Sr. invites the public. ,
. _ 7 llr Sillily Mipt. She W11 ._.....,
.-matter rem111ns under mvesllgation.
·
·
,.
p.m. at United Campus Ministry,
ilbll ..
Aot 4:31 ~:!d ~o,.,.~ction
.
18 North College St., Athens. A .
·, Women A6ve lo meet . . · donation
lrlee ......... 10 Bulum
"'
ol $3 is requested.
. The Women Alive group will
for Jt,ili Maylt, wllo was transport·
The name of tile son who surThe
coffee
liouse will feature
The Open House at Meigs County Golf Course will be lidci: oo.
.. • Y ,
At 4:37 p.m., Mid· ·viva VirJie ltee Burford, 79,. of meet Monday at 1 p.m. at the local musicians Becky Lane and ·
Sunday, April 7, not Saturday as was reponed on T·-- ill n.·
dleiiMt' . . -..n-at went to ·ltulllnd · u James E. Majors, not Kr.fer Cfi:C.k Club House. There Laurie Griffith. Edid! Melina from
Dwly Stn/IMI.
·
_,
. . . . 7 Mil ll4 for an auio Ma1as. a walllaled in the obitu- wil be a devotional speaker and El Salvador and Lucia Deasis from
Free J.Oif wiU be available, and free refreshment~ lllld e ., , 1
fla. N ...WCII WIJ owned byr ary iD 1111 U.Uy Sentinel Tuesday, · Becky Pasquale will demonstrate Brazil will be reading poetty.
ment wdl be offered to those visiting. The public is ia.u!.. 10
G-.tilatD N. 1&amp;.57(t.JII,, Mid- His ..._Ia unknown according sweatshirt making. Refreshments
Also on the .program will be
attend.
will be served.
South Sec- ••ily •embers.
paintings and hand painied prints
a.
Maallilpaugh. He
by Deva Travis. Free child care
Bloodmobile
- · $PtC 1111111\1 I WS
,
The American · Red Cross will be provided.
0111
Wdauday
At
1:17
a.m.,
,
u
oN
of
marriage
have
~ Gallia-Meigs _Community Action Agency will IIOw ill a.
Po*"*J'..... weM to Pomeroy be raated in ~eigs County .Bloodmobile will be in Pomeroy on
clothmg day for ~w-mcome person on April 5 from 9 ..... ., 110111,
Dinner 10 bC held
·
MIJII!!!ia . . It' 'ililltion Center
PICII Court to ~~ E. Aprill7 at the multi-~ build· ·
!Jie. Agency .cloll)mg bank is located in the o(d school &amp;oa. IMIIIAn
evening
dinner will be held
for TIICil Sillptills, who was
,Sr. llid 'Mary K. Michael; ing from 1-5:30 p.m. ThC Middle- at the senior citizens
mg m Cheshire.
· . .
., · .
center in
·~ • 'Vtltr 1
.
·
·
·to )erry Eugene Fields, Jr; and port Child Conservation L~gue Pom,eroy im April II from
5-6:30
,.
T1n11 Mlri1 Fields; and 10 Lovell will be in charge of the canteen.
p.m.
Cost
of
the
dinner
is
$3
lind
A group is needed to serve the ·
,,';;
.,
Leroy Hlto aftcl Artie W. Hite.
men11
includes
oven
baked
chicken,
canteen at the Dec. 18 Bloodmo. '.
bile. To volunteer contact the mashed potatoes and gravy, green
beans, cole slaw, biscuit and beverBloodmobile at992-7569.
grandchildren, BAd six 11ep ..... Bennie ' s.eV- ~· Burial
CL"VELAND (UPI)
T
James Eiselstein
age. Pie willlllso be available at 75
grandchildren
.
.
wiD be ill ...... Sui~n~t
metcry,
,.
uesF
1
·
'II
~
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day's winning Ohio Lottery nomceniS per piece. Following dinner,
. Group to meet
James H. Eiselstein, 80, of 6453 Th unera SCTVICCI WI be •eld l'oiM PlcuanL •
.
bers:
'
The Pomeroy Group of AA and music will be provided by Junior
Osborne St,, Pomeroy, died unexursday at 1 p.ll. illtlll' I I "
1~ ~~ ddl evening, 6 · Plck-3
·
AIAnon will meet Th11rsday at 7 and Rita White, AI Wim!on and
pecJcdly Monday, April!, 1991, at ~~~~': FWn~ 11-.1.
. QJ I IAill ::a~.;:..at .L~=Ig Funcrnl
744.
,
Ray Wenl The public is invited 10
hisresidence.
• · · ••· • - •
•one hour • Ticket sales: $1,3]4,549.50. p.m. at the Sacred H~ Catholic attend.
..
Church.
Born on March 6, 1911 at 1M
. nillt~er wMilarloffici&amp;met
·,._ a.ial ~~ ; prior • ~~ice.
Payoff: $3g2,228.50.
•
· Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
n
'-4'-lery. ' _ ,
·
'·
Pick-4 .
DelbertEiselstein·andi.auraMoore wiiLbe no visitatioll.la llalill(
17SS;
Smorgasborddinner
He
was
an
""""''ion's
flow~,
fri~ds
~
COIIIri'-1eC1
•
$255
658'50
·
Th
· 'ty CenEiselstein.
supervi$dr with the Pep$fc0ia Co. favonte charity.
·
All
~ ......................29 112
,._.,. .......:
• . .
e L. ottn'dge C. ommum
poor to his retirement ,
• •
'
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~ ..,.~....................... 3Q
A World War II veteran of the ' Wilham Proftitt
v
IIi. .T..__....................... .34 314
.
1
9
3
U. S. Army, Mr. Eiselstein was a
. .
·. ' ~ol:=-hop
14 1~
memberofiheArnericanLegion.
Wilham Ray ProCilu. 14, el , ·
Six were fined and six others control of a motor vehicle while
He is survived by two daugh- Mason died l'iaday *Rifll, CitY 111
a......-.........~.. ,,.,57
.... l4 forfeited bonds in the coun of Mid- under the influence of alcohol or
ters, Sharon Allen, Huron, and Apnl 2. 1991, at ·Holar Medical. IWcniMollll.-................ .1 18 dleportMayorFn:dHyffmanTues- drugs, and $60, failure to control
Center.
··
O 1
'l'.la
dly nU.ht
her ve h'IC Ie; Mar k Ha1ey, Wcod-...,
I and a
ltc
..._ ..........., ........233.5/8
...
Kathleen Adams. Sand...
318
step-daughter, Patricia G~llager
Born Sept. 16, ' 1906. in PlliM
Y~
I
Fined were Joseph D. Jacks, siOCk,SliO,opcn .containcr;'Robcn
Frazier, Pickaway; one .son, James ~~?~t, he was a IIIIi of dlo ' ,':~.~~ ~~ Pomeroy, $2S and costs, open con- CoueriU, II, Moglll!ore, $50, ttavel-'
H. Eiselstein II, Sandusky; and one
1g ton Howanl wd Laola L.1ey fl' •
tainer; ChristoPt« S. Gilkey, Mid- ing the wrong way on a one-way
1
1
stepson, T. Patriek Gallager, San- (Lalhey) Proffitt, k. •
.
?2 5/8 dleport, $25 fiiCI costs, consuming street; Johnnie Ratliff, Middlepon,
dusky; 10 gnmdchildrcn, and .seven
He was ~-llldlllll ~two
!It · rt.--................ ?/8 alcohol urider a1e 2.1; Robert M. $460, physical control of a motor
great-grandchildren.
· brolhers, Leighlclt H. Pmlllu, Jr. ~ tl ,ltM,_..__ , .........26 1/4 Haley, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, vehicle while under the influence
Besides his parents, he was pre- and Emory A.~ wd.a ~; ~JaC............................... I7 failure IO'control; Dwight S. Haley, of alcohol or drugs, and $210 on
ceded in death by a brother Cecil
Clara E. Proffitt.
.
. . "" ._·'"'"'"""'""""""'""""22 Jr., Middleporl; fined $10 and · driving under suspension; Belinda
Funeral services will 'be heid
Married in 1936 10 the Wl'IIIU '. •••
· 'L "'"':"'"," """"" IM18 costs, squeahna tires, and $10 and R. Roush, De:iliir, $460 on physical
24 518 .costs, expired operator's license; control of motor vehicle while
Friday at II a.m. at the Ewing Evelyn R. F~. lie ' ~ 1 , W&gt;w"
·· Funeral Home. Burial will be in mcmbe~ of !lie Mlec. Umtcd ·
&amp;arry W. Chapman, Rutland, $10 under the influence of alcohol or
Beech Grove Cemetery where mili- Mclhodist Churdt•. wllcn lie ICrved D
and costs. ruanin&amp; a n:d light; Paul drugs; and Darrell Michael.
tary rites will be ·conducted. as teacher and chairmw of tile oifi.
· ·
H. Ken~, Bidwell, $25 and costs, Pomeroy, SUO on petty thefL
Friends may call at the funeral C18l board. He a IP' t: ol · ·VelA
M•wW lletpltal
consumiAIIIcohol under age 21,
home from·S to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Pomt Pleasant Hillt ldlool, ·
TUUDAY ADMISSIONS • $25 and COsts, open container, and
Muhammad Ali was knOwn as Cas.
·
y&lt;orked atthc.Mnlla'l.fvufaclur.' PWq Anlold. Pomeroy.
$25 and costs, disorderly manner.
sius Clay wben he stopped Soany LisIda C
mg Co. unti11t cloeed ia 1910,Iilld
1'URSDA Y DISCHAAGES •
Foifeitin&amp; bonds were Sherrie A ton in IIIe seventh 1'0U1Id Fell. Z5, lHt,
•
te
later worked f~ lllelr' a Catl IYI Jcl &amp;1111, I iNIIcy Smith.
Walker, Rutland, $460, physical to win the world heavyweight boiing

re:a::V.:....Wit.
aceidat,

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DOUBLE Manufacturer's

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Illegal entry reported

· .' The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

COUPON
S~~~G§
sto,.•
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will oq~BL~~:.,y:~~!~".~/slze
ol up to 50" lor Til•

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~~ Coupotll 01 50' Or !All, Nol To ~~::~...lf.loluo Oi Tlle ll!tt11.
•otter Umitld.To Manul-gtu~oM 01 Other Aetallttl and No~To ,'i.!nucal Item• And Coupon•
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couponl. F,.. Cou~~o.:-hrclloMd. Addlllonol Coupono
Umll One Co.J8IIIOIIm-•~od o\1 Foco Velue.
o..r so• Will ' _....
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Item•
prohlbll&lt;d by law) .
~exeludlna

a.· "*-·;..............

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11..

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Idaho Baking

5

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COUr DeWS

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Package

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sMnH-NELsoN MQToRs, 11c. ·

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•

Planning A Class Family l•i.l•ll,
Wedding, Anniversary, But l••'t
lave Time for the las111t
Call SONYA'S COUNTRY IITCia
Aild Let Us Take It Off Yeur " ds.
We'll Take Ca;e of Eveitthlna - Fl •• ;
tilt Decorating to tht ca........
ASIA""- DCWSIYIIIGNIS TOM . . . .
. . . . . . ' IMOUIT lOOM OVIILO_,.
•AIIMI.D., .
. .
.Call Us Today

2 5 YEARS IN BUSINESS
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Blades and
Trimmer

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Stock Up Now

t414.95

l....
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FREE

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Line

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Freezer-Queen Family .- l.....
28 oz.

artter now

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.

.,

.

.

One thing you can count on from
year to year is wHds. Thanks to
their enginHring, the 111me can be
said for Stihl weed trimmers.

StihJ.tri11m1r

naivt.., to
· ~15.00 in
. FilE
Acc...rits.

.....

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· Your Choice of Varieties

I

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·' ·JI&amp;

15.5 oz. Can ,,..... pr&lt;Jhlblod by Jaw)

•

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. . · . · Pn
••IZ~s
·· AND GREAT DEALS .ON STIHLS ~

•&amp;lllliNV.,_y

Limit I Can, Pleue Wlh Any
Other Purc:h.IR (..cludJnc

.

·..,

., ,.~

~ '.REFRESHMENTS

REGISTER TO WIN
A WJ'REE BRAND"
COLLECTOR'S
KNIFE w/CASE

1983 CHEVIOLET MALIBU t 11.:·
V·l Er,gilie, Tilt, Cruin, Air.
AM·FM-Stereo. .
.,

lb.

.

.

.,.· · COME J.OIN US. AS WE CELEIRA
TE
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roun
69(:Man~~~~;~uce
u.c

•••

APRIL 3RD. THRU 6TH
1966-1991

. •. t

. -"

OPEN
HOUSE.

,,

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r-

.

• 1

' •"

~C~-71,-Ru~~ retired
~~~~~~~~~~~·-••••••••••••~-~~-~·~m~~;~~~~---~~---;;;;:::;::
in 1983. Prollllt wu 1 fbr;
mer mayor and couaciliiiCIIIber for
the Town of Muon.
·
: Surviving are.hilwill. ~a.;·
Proffitt; a son 11IJCI
p ••·
James R. and Carol L. Pnifiu,
Mason; dllughter wd Dl·il-law.
Sara K. and Dr. Rollat E. Mclride
Michigan City, Ind., a
Nancy L. Proffill, It - . . : ave
grandchildren l1ld IW! areat·
grJndchildrcn.
..
The funeral wil • Thunday
April4, I p.m. 11 t1ie) I&amp;DD ullitllli
Mc~1odisl Church will! the lev. .

•
~

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P.llld. ..................
. ·
0Spita1neWS

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500 Iaiit ..... '

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-wak .._................

nJ-2174

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oddlllonal

Lottery numbers

c

CLEAN AND PRICED AT

'

Umll I Gallon,
Pleue Per F•mlty
with •to

~·

' '·

Stocks·

Automatic,

I

.

---~ -Area deaths · ..

·died April I, 1991, in the Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant,
•W. Va. followina an extended illness.
· She was a former operator of
White's Service Station at Dawes,
W.Va. a member of the Church of
Jesus Christ ·at Rutland and the
Harrisonville Senior Citizens.
Mrs. Wbite -is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Elmer (Juanita)
Bowles, Pomeroy; a son Carl Kirk,
Topeka, Ill.; one sister Orpha
Rouse, Rutland; five grandchildren,
four. step-grandchildren, nine great-

l

~..

Camations To
First 20
Customers
Daily

....••
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..
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.

lOW. STICI SliM. 11·110 PIISSURE WASHII $49995
•

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Wednesday, April 3, 199l .

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.

ANDERSON'S

-· The Daily .Sentinel

·By The ·Bend

''

•

Birthdays celebrated at Legion

•

'

The American Legion Hall in calces. ice cream. chips and dip,
Middleport was the scene of a mints, vegela!)le slicks, soft ilrinks
binhclay pany recently.
and·coffee were served.
Among those being honored
Enjoying the evenin~ were
were AI Windon. Tessie' 'Evans, Carol and Melvin Cross. Pauline
,\ngia Walker, Bill Ward, Junior McLean, Nancy and Lawrence .
White and Bob Walkins.
. Blosser, Iva M. Stewan, Mary SigThe hall was deCQrated with red, man, Jim Chirk, Kas Bissell, Thelwhite and blue and green crepe ma White, Chick Oiler, Doug Cirpaper, balloons and "happy birth- cle, Amy and Leroy B~. Olga ·
day" streamers.
Yonker, Henry Hensley, Peggy and ·
A variety of music, including Harold Clark, Manley Christy,
gospel, blue grass. country and Malinda Christy, Louise IWI, Gene
western and old time standards was and Angia Walker, Jolmie and Kim
presented lhrwghoul the evening. · Evans. Jim, Donna and Jeremy
"Happy Birthday" was sung 10 · Evans. Harold and Blondena Rainthose celebrating a birthday in er, Wilbur and Connie Donohew,
March and refreshments of a large Dennis and Cindy Spires, Venus
inscribed cake and four smaller and Mark Ward, Etta Richardson,

WE'RE CELEBRATING WITH LO.W SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT
THE STORE.
IT All STARTS .THURSDAY,
APRIL
4TH!! ·
.
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QUALITY .BERKLINE WALLAWAY
· RECLINERS, ROCK-0-LOUNGERS
AND RECLINERS: DURABLE FABRICS.

Sl9900

RECLINER SALE

J

Ande11on ',. ___,- ;:

t

I

.T.URF

J1

*Extr.a Heavy Grade
•12 ·Ft. Width
*Green, lrown, Gray
•100% 'Olefin Pile
•3tl Montli No-Fad•
Wprranty • 1
*Reg;' S9.00 sq. yd.

SELECTION IS
GREAT!

SERT A PREMIER
COMFORT
'

SERTA ULTRA
SUPREME ·
PIMow Too • o..,

OulftM Top• """ 5UHOft
1 y,_ WMre"tY'

1 D YNr W1rfemy

•
•

~

FUll

S88 S108
lA. PC.

U.. K.

JUST ARRI~ED

SALE

SALE!
flulltlftg

TWIN ..... ,......~P.I&lt;sto
FUlL ...........!U.(, $ 1 54

a

QUEEN SIT.......

..$3 54

SERtA ·;

PERFECT
SLEEPER·
·.
eou,.

.,.,. ._,.;.

•H~mptoft

•1 I V... W.teftty

FULl SR

QUEEN SET

SUMMER·'FURNITURE.
Reg.· s·131 Lo-back Spr.ing Base Chair .:.·.sale S'i9·
Reg. ;~ 15 3 ~i-back Spring Base Chair •••• Sqle se·9 ·
Reg. S289 :Spring Base Lounget·.......... Selle SJ'79
Reg. S312 2-Seat Glider ••• ~ ••••· ~ ....... ~ •••.• Sa.le· SJ89 .

$

$369 $479,

LLOYD/FLANDERS
'

&lt;

.MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE

. WATE·RBED BLAST OFF

LAYAWAY AND SAVE!

•

•

Softsiders ...

•

CYLINDER TUBE BED
• Near Waveless Motion

~f'o.­
.
~~
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SALE PRICED
'

$3990°
· ·GUN
CABINETS
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Reg.' S219
6 Gun ·Cabinet..•. Sale s216 ·
Reg. 5329
.6 Gun Cabinet .••• Soli ·S246 .
Reg. SS59
.
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1-Gun Cabinet .... Sale 5419
Reg. S499
12-Gun Cabinet .. Sale S37 4

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Joey Sands, Terry Smith, Steven Smith, April
Travis and Jamie Stemple. The theme of the
week was "The Rodeo, Rounding Up a Good
Book." . . .

RIGHT TO READ WEEK OBSERVED •
Joyce Ritchie, Right to Read Week coordinator
at Racine Elementary spoke to students on the
importance of reading. Pictured with tier are

Kathy Haley hosted the reeent
meeting of the Evangeline Missionary Group of the Pomeroy Church
or Christ. She opened the meeting
with prayer and programs for the
year were distribuied,
.
RespOnse 10 roll call was ·given
wilh an answer pertaining to Easter
and Eileen Bowers. had the devotions with the following participal·
. . ipg in reading: ..The Triumphant
Entry" by Sherrie Migfit; "The Last
: Supper" by Seuy S~ncer; "The
Garden" by Charldine Alkire; ':The
Way of the Cross" by Pauline
Kennedy; ''The Crucifixion" by Pat
Thoma; "The Angel of the Lord"
by Elaine Kelly and Eil~n Bowers
read "The Resurrection" ending
' with prayer by Janet Venoy. Mrs.
Bowers also read "Nature's Resurrection."
·
Officers and committee reports
were given and it was noted that
the Mother-Daughter banquet o,yill

FUll OR QUEEN

..

\

A potluck dinner was held start at 8 p.m.
.
recently by members or the Chester
Everelt Grant won the Easter
Council No. 323 Daughters of basket.
America.
~
Bulah Maxey won the cake
JoAnn Baum conducted the walk.
meeting which opened with
Birthdays celebrated in January.
pledges the Christian and American February and March were Mary Jo ·
flags, the singing of the "Star Span- Barringer, Pauline Ridenour, Opal
gl~ Banner," roll call, "Tbe Lord's
Hollon, Marcia Keller, JoAnn
· Player," and scripture reading from .. Baum. Harlin Ballard artd Sadie
Psalms.
.
. Trussell.
It was reponed lhal Mary liolter .
Attending were Bonnie Landers,
is home from the hospital and that Goldie Frederick, Pauline RideFaye Kirkhan is not well.
nour, Belly Roush, Thelma White,. ,
Deaths noted were Buel Ride- Ada Bissell, Sandy White, Jean
nour, Lora Damewood's sister-in- Fredrick, Doris Grueser, Mary Jo
law, and Ada Morris' sister.
Barringer, Katheryn Baum, Eliza· '
Doris Koenig and Opal beth Hayes, Alta B~llard, Erma
Eichinger each have new grand· Cleland, Opal Hollon, Charlotte
daughterS,
Grant. Margaret Amberger, Brenda .
TIFFANY N. ARIX .
: Erma Cleland ~rted on a rally Cunningham, MJ¥cla Keller, Doris
at Cincinnati,
Koenig. Helen Wolf, Mae McPeek,
Goldie Frederick thanked those Sadie Trussell, Ethel Orr, Dorothy '
wllo sent cart~$ and visited during · Ritchie, Bulah Maxey, Everett
Tiffany Nicol£ Arix celebrated
· her iUness.
,
Grant, Esther Smith, Jo Ann· Baum,
her
fi~st birthday recently at the
Beginning in April meeting will Lora Damewood and Virginia Lee.
home of her parents, David and
·Candy Arix. .
•·
S·he receive'd many gifts and
cake was served 1,9the guests.
··
Allending were maternal grandparents, Junior and Pauy Gillispie,
Pam Grimm and Stacey Gillispie.

'

Evangeline Missionary group meets

• Ughtweight ·
• Zipper Tops

"SALE"

Bill Ward, Edie and Larry Hub·
bard. Carl Hubbard, Rose and Red
Carr; Larry and Nonna· Chapman;
Jim Carnahan. Margaret Tuttle,
Bob Spencer, Shirley Spears,
Michelle Young, Tre.vor Petrel. • .
Ray Van Meter. Chris Van Meter,
Deann Van Meter, Everly Van
Meter, Cora and Sam Michael,
Alben Schultz, St~phanie, pavid
Dailey, Margie Brown, AI Windon,
Raybon Wallace. Jean Somerville.
Earl Rovinson, Ray Wallace, Josh
and Stephanie Black, Connie Jol·
ley, Sally Shipkosky, Joe Clark,
Kent D. Jolley, Dwayne Jolley, ·
Freda Ferguson. Janine Pevel, Bob
Watkins, Junior and Rita While,
Bob Snyder, Toni Andrew, Dusty
Andrew. Chris Tripleii,.Adam Han·
·ing, .Tessie Evans, MarY Rose, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Fairchild and Don
and Rose Madden:

Arix birthday

PORCH ·&amp; PATIO

SER.TA

TWIN

with him are Kacy Ervin, Sbauna Manuel,
Courtney Hill, Joey Sands, Jeremy Hill, Tommy
Roberts, Josbua Bake~: and David Dowler.

. RQDEO ROUND-UP • Joe Evans spoke to ·
students at Racine Elementary for Right to Read
Wetk recently. Tbe theme ortbe week was "fhe
··· Rodeo, R!!iiDding Up a Good Book." Pictured

.. Beauty••• Comfort••• and Durability.
Casual Outdoor Furniture .at its Finest

AS LOW AS ·

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D of A mef:ting held

. p

BERKLINE

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Page-:-9

ANNIVERSARY

"

VVednesda~April3,199~

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SECONI).
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-THANI&lt;s·FOR YOUR _.PATRONASEI

'

be ~eld May 9 with the theme ,
. being "Patience." A salad buffet
will be served.
· Cards were sent 10 Jestie Molden, Eva Dessauer, Gertrude
Andrews, Charles· Kennedy and
Paul Brickles.
Janel Venoy had the mission

RRliTNIIO'J;'

study re'ading ·a letter from George
and Debbie Pickens who ate in
Kenya. ·
Prayer for the refreshments was
given_by'Pat Thoma and the hostess served those named and Debbie
Alkire, Linda Laudermilt and Jill
Roessler.
•

Fo·rest Ru·n UMW meets·
·

·

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STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Erika Meadows receives 1 certlft·
cate from Bob Ashley tor being selected Student of tbe Week In
health at Meigs Junior High.

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"We Are All Theologians" was Good Shepherd," "Jesus as He
the tille of the program presemed .Kneels in Gethsemane," "Crucifil(·
by Eveyln Hollon at the recent ion," "Jesus Stamjirig Before a
meeting of the Forest Run United Door with Shining Lantern," "ResMethodist Women with Carolyn urrection," and ''The Ascension of
Salser as hostess.
·
. Christ."
Faye Wiggins had a special
. Mrs. Hollon stated that theology
starts with a persons life' and is reading "Legend of lh~ Robin" and
· faith in action. Kathleen Scou read "Consolation." She also read
a meditation of hearing each other "What Shamrock Leaves Mean.~
into speech based on Luke 23 and
Refreshments were served.
24.
Edith Sisson presided 81 l,he
·meeting and Erma Roush gave .( V
_
_
devotions from Luke. The "Lord's ,
Officers were installed at the
Prayer" was given by all. Officers
reeenl
meeting ·or Ohio TOPS Club
reports were given and 36 sick and ·
No. S70,
.·
·
shut-in calls were reported.
Installed were Peggy Vining.
. STUilENT OF THE WEEK • Adam Cross was selected as stu· ·
. It was noted that spring retreat
dent or the week at Melp Junior High S~hool ror work hi math . .
· will be at.Camp Asbury on Friday . leader; Cindy Faulk, co-leader;
Virginia Dean, ueasurer: Wanda . He is pictured with Mrs. Stephanie Ash.
and Saturday. ·
_ /
.
A program was ·also .presented Faulk. secretary; and Trina Faulk, ·
recorder.
Installing
dfficer
v-weight
about ·stained glass windows
depicting eve'ltS from the life of was Lennie Bell- Aleshire.•
Nellie Grover was the best loser
Christ. Scripture was £C!Id by Mary
and
Wanda Faulk the runner-up.
Nease before each wmdol!" was
The
fruit basket was won by Ola
described. Each person was sup·
St
.
.
Clair
and the surprise gift was •
posed to imagine being there. Win·
~
won
by
Trina
Faulk.
dows described were "Mary.
Joseph and baby Jesus in the S.ta·
Greenland, New Guinea ·and Borble," '"The boy Jesus in the Tem- neo &amp;C'!!'Ibe three largest islands in the
p~," "Baptism or Jesus," "I Am the world.

Sauters birthday
• Britnee D. Sauters. daughter of
Charles Mark and Dianna Sauters,
Pomeroy, recently celebrated hei '
second birthday at her home.
.Attending were her parents, her
brother, Kelsey Mark; great grand~other, Manda Eastman; Theresa
and Tracy Shaffer and Joy Sauters
all of Pomeroy.
·
'
Britnee later visitecl her grandparents m West Virginia and cele.
bra1ed there also. Attending were
he[ grandparents, Delbert and
Loretha Vandevander, Whitmer;
Alford and Delores Bradford
Buckhannon: J Wle, Jackie and Ali:
·
,son Vandevander, Volga.
Also sending greetings were her
grandparents. Leroy and Joyce
~auters~ Pomeroy, who were v1sit·
mg fwmly m Texas.

T/)PS meets -

STOlE HOUtS
Monday 9:30·1:00

Special of the

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00

..

'REVIVAL .

'

ROBIN GILLISPIE

. Gillispie recognized
Robin Gillispie haS been recog·
nized for academic achievemem as
a United States National Honor
' . Roll Award winner.
. She attends Southern Junior
High School and is the daugh,.e-.of
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Willford.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jim
King and Mr. and Mrs. Dons
Arnold, Long.BottoiJI.

SAUTERS

'

'

.

Bradbury Church. of Christ
Fri., April 5-AI Hartson, Speaker
Sat., April 6-Dtnk Stump! Sp~ker
. Sun., April 7-Don SHweri, Sr., Speaker

eek!

B.B.Q.
S1.49
WitH FliES ................ S2 .:1 9

'

ADOLPH~S

DAIRY VALLEY

file;, ..,,., l!•n• •1•1•'" .

"At '1111 1111111 .t

PO.IOY, OliO

PH. H2·1S56

7:00 P.M. Each Evening
.

Public Is .Invited

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'1

·'

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�•

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17th-Annhtersa.ry S-le ·.
! .•.

STORE HOURS

·

8 AM-10 PM

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A .

·298 SECOND ST. .
· POM(80Y, OH. . .

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. SIGN UP .
AND WIN ·
FREE . ·.
GROCERIES.
One Lucky
Person Will
Win Free
Groceries

• ·Appreelate Our Custo•ers

Monday tlku Sunaay

April 3, 1991

WedneSday, Aprtl3, 1991

'

Ohio

..

PRICES EFFEqiVE MAR~ . 31 JHRU APR. 6, T99 t .· · · ·

· WE WILL BE OPEN EASTER SUNDAY .

1-LB. BOLOGNA
REGULAR or THICK
SLICED

· Each Day!

----

2 OZ.- CHIPPED
MEATS
.
'

c .

CORNED BEEF
BEEF . . HAM
TURKEY
'
CHICKEN ·

ONLY$159
.

.

·, . 8 OZ. PKG. . . ·
JIFFY CORN.
MUFFIN MIX

'

PICKLE LOAF · OLIVE LOAF
OLD FASHIONED LOAF ·
. COnO SALAMI
· HAM &amp; CHEESE .
. HONEY LOAF PEPPER. LOAF
CHOPPED HAM

8.5 OZ. BOXES

$ ·1 29
..

YOUR
CHOICE . .

.

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MIKE-SELLS · ·
POTATO
CHIPS

120Z.

·

S1 .390. .

2/Sl

·GROUND
CHUCK ··

I

' .· .10 LB. PKG •

. $,1 590

REGUlAR or BEEF
.

10 LB. PKG. BULK SliCED

' ..$'139oz.
LITE LINKS

BACON

'$1390 :

12

TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS
10 LB. PKG.

$59{) .

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BU.
l
TERBALL
.
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_
,
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TURKEY ·BACO·N
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YOUR CHOICE

· . SIZZLEAN

lUNCH
MEATS
.
.
.

10 LBl PKG. ·

.

&lt;&gt;

•

•

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BUTTERBALL
BunERBALL sucE-N-SERVE
TURKEY SAUSAGE TURKEY BREAST ·

$199

$319 LB. ' .
,,

$199 LB.
.

3 oz.
'
PEPPERO-NI

ASSORTED

PORK CHOPS
10. LB. PKG.

•

~1790 .

$119

'

~ORK

STEAK

10 LB. PK(j.

89( .

SJ390

ROY·AL CROWN

COLA
PRODUCTS

$259

•

2 LITER BOnLE

. .

.POUND .BOX_ • ·.. ~

'_

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· Lite
KEMPS .
.
.·
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Ice. c·re.a. ·m ........

99(
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5 QT. PAIL

~...

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BANQUET

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$2 49-

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.... CWr At Nw••• S.,. Valli
........ 11 tlwo April '· 1991
Ulllt 1 ,.,. Cust••• ·

-

20 LB. BAG

1-LB. BEEF·or .
. CHEESE FRANKS ·
,

. $209

·

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.

LB.
.

.$1290

,

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SWIFT 3-LB. CAN ·HAM

.

10 LB. PKG.

,.

· .LONGHORN

'COLBY. CHEESE
10 LB. PKG.

'

KRAFT

••.••

CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE

·,~~ll

.99( .

a...l Cllity·At ,_ ••, s.tr Volu
a...l .... II
April io, I"I
tinlt I Ptr C.t• u

*•

... ....
•
•

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•• 9 LIVES CAT FOOD .·

MIRACLE WHIP
3.2 oz.
69
JAR

$. •1

.....·.

o.H Gilly A:

Ptw.rs 5uftr Villo
Gold ... 31 .... April ~. 1991
liMit I."' C.IOIIIW

......

' ~A~~·

sf$1

.· FLAVORITE.
FRENCH FRIES
2LB. BAG ·

,s..er

a...l Ollly At Pow•••
Volu
Goetl ... 31 thru ......... 1991
limit ·S Ptr (1111-

.

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.

·$.1 69 .

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. 2-LB. TURKEY ROAST
· WHITE . DARK .·

MIXED

'

AMERICAN
CHEESE
10 LB. PICG.

Sl69~

..

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I

.. '1-LB. PKG.
'

,.
I

'

SWIFT
BACON .
.

'

$169'9

-

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CRISCO SHORTENING'
.~: $'199

$149

."

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HOPPED H.

TU.RKEY FR·ANKS ·

136 OZ. BOX

'

'

$)89 .··

10 L8JKG.

$)190

.UTTERBALL BUN SIZE

REGULAR or IUN SIZE

'

•

LB. ~

ALL MEAT FRANKS .

DOG FOOD .·

.

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1-LB. ·

PURINA
· .
FIELDMASTER

Spread •..•3.~...~~••

Zesta .Crackers ••••• 89
.
DETERGEN.T . . . ..
. $
9
8
6
T1de ·········~············ . . .
.

·

$1 ..99 ..

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,GAL

BLUE BONNET

-

1-LB• .SMORGAS PAC

Head 'L'ett:uce •••••••• S9·(
FLAVORITE
· . . ·. . . $
·' 2°'/t0 .M1.lk
·
...
149
.
••••••••••••••
. ---~---

CHICKEN
. BREASTS

_._.,....... r;

...... .

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·.Page-12-The

Sentinel
Public NotiCe

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I~

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Public Notice

MEIGS COUNTY
GENERAL HEAlTH
DISTRICT CAB H

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TO PlAtE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S I'.M.

8 A.M. until .NOON. SATURDAY

.

.: ·-2....;.._1n~Mamo--'ry'-· __
s __H_app;..:..:.y_A_d_s_ _

Deoombor 31 , 188Q
Totol Depooit
Boloncoo ...... . 82,7311.00
Totol Outotanding lolenoto
ondC-oooof
12/ 31 / 80 ....... 4.178.00
Totoloflol- ·
12/ 31110 ........ 77.~9 . 00
SUMMAIIY OF RECEIPTS
EXPENDITUIIEI ond
BALANCES
For Fl101l Yeor -Ending
12/ 30/80
1&gt;1STIIICT BOARD
OF HEALTHBal. 1/1 / 80 ...... 13.184.00
Rocolpto .......... 280,2911.00 .
Totol ....... ... :.... 273,411.00
Expencllturoo ... 243,287.00
B111ncea

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•

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•
•
In Memory Of
DARRELL L.
DUGAN
Who Left U 1 April

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.The old nian
;is FoJ1y!
· Lova.

. 3. 1989.
Although it'a bHn 2
yeera,
lt'i gone by too faat,
But our love for you
will alwll'f laat.
You're nlll with ua
•each end every dey
Beceuae no one cen
take your love .ewey.
· Sadly mi. .ed end
'
loved,
Wite, Children end
Motl!er·in·law.

•

·

Boord
Dev•·
DIHbiiHiea will
-led bide for thl
following vehicle:
ONE 114 pooaenger buo
with wh11laMir lift. For
complete opeclflcltlono ond
bid lnforlftl1lcin contect:
Dovld L"'*o
Tronoportnlon Dlroctor
P. 0. loa 307
SyroouM. Ohio 41778
(8141992·8881
. Initial ·Inquiry muot bl
prior to of- of buol·
nooo on Aprl 28,1881.
Bldo will bl OPened on
April 21. 1891 ot2:00 p,m.
at thl ·Melgo County Boord
of MII/DD officn.
Moigo County Board of
Montal lleterdltlon/ Devol·
opmentef
diHbllltleo ••·
lorYH the right to o-pt or
reject ..., or Ill bldo.
14) 3, 10, 17, 24. 4tc

m-

and being ·rnore fully de·
ICI'Iblld oefallowo:
Comm.ncing •' en Jron
pin In t h l l n t - . of the
tXIIting IOutherly right , of
way lint of. State llouto No.
124 ondthe-otlnoofOno
Hundrod Acre Lot No. 293;
thlnoe.aouth 2 dogron 41'
17" wilt Ilona thlweotl)no
of oold Ono ilundrod Acre
Lot No. 293 end thloalotlng
-.tlllilno of Walnut StrMII
totol dlotonce of 112.00
fMt ; thence ...Uth 87 dogreoo 18' 33" oaot o total
dlotonco of 31.00 - ;
"thenC.
northla-otdly
oontlnulng along Hid lint
.,d with the ore of o curve to
the loft hiving 1 rodlul of
732.78 felt o dlotonco
1111.88 to en Iron pin.
the point of beginning af
the troct herein doaor ...d:
thence aouth 3 dogroeo 311'
84" .... 111.88 felt;
thence north 81 ,..._ 00'
27" ult 27.21 felt to on
Iron pin, polling on Iron pin
II 1.29felt;-aouth4
clearoeo 10' 40" eeot
to tho edge of
20'1.80 the Ohio !llvor, poulng en
Iron pin ot 1117.73 feet;
thence along the •'- north
711 dogroeo 44' · 29" lilt
77.22 felt; thence leaving
the rlver'o lldgo north 2
dogr- 41' .27" llit
3211.84 felt to en Iron pin,
peooing •Iron pin ot 47.18
' - : thence eouth BO
dogr- .10' 33" .....
141.80 feet to tho point of
beginning end contolnlng

Classifieds

992-2156

12/31110 ..... 30. 182.00
TRAILER PARKI
AND CAMPGROUNDSBot 1/ 1/ 80 ........ 2.808.00
Rooolpto ,'.......... ...... 801 .00
Totti ....... ............3.207.00
ExpendHuroo .......... 121.00 .
B•lenc•
.
Public Notice
12/ 31 / 90 ...... .3.082.00
FOOD SERVICENOTICE OF SALE
Bal. 1i 1/ 80 ..... .. .8,B81!i.OO
By vlrtuo . of on Order of
llocolpto ... ..... ......8.152.00
Totol ..... ,: ........ .. 18,037.00 Solo l-ed out of the Com·
Eapendhureo ... .... 1;313.00 mon Pleoo Court of Mllgo
County, Ohio, In tho coae of
Bela~•••
12/31190 .. ... 10,724.00 The Home Nlllfonol Bonk,
STATE FUNDS. Plaintiff, ogelnot William J .'
'811.. 1/ 1/ 90 ...... 38,810.00 Hollay, It ol., Dlflndenta,
Reoalpta ... ....... 284.417.00 upon 1 judg-nt thoroln
Totol .. .. .. , .. ...... 304.227.00 rondored, bllng Cooe No.
Exptndhureo ... 212,028.00 80-CV- 274 In ookl Coun, I
will offar 'tor Hlo, ot tho
Belenoe1
12/ 31/80 ..... 42.199.00 mint door of the Court o,., 1Tnecrea.
Thelbove deocrlptlon pr•
TOTALSHouH In Po-roy. Melao
Bol. 1/1 /90 ...... 88.448.00 County, Ohio, on the 131h pared by Evono. Meohwon.
Receipts .. ........ 404,900.00 doy of Mey, 1991 , It 11 :00 Hambleton • Tilton. Inc.
l'otolo .. ........... 493,349.00 o'Clock A.M. tho following lol Groaoov K. Wright, R•·
Expendlturoo ... 427,884.00 Janda, tenement• end pereo- glnorod Surv8yor #85311 .
Subjoot to oil legal high·
nol proporty, to·wlt: ·
Bolonoeo of oil Totalo
Slluotlld In 9eotlon 31. weya. IIMmentl of record
12/31/90 .. ,:.... 81,481.00
Jon D. Jacobo. R.S .. Rongo 12, Sutton Town· a'n d rigtlta of way of recorda.
El(CEPTING therefrom
.
Admlnlotrotor ohlp, VIJI8go of Syroouoe.
lnd other
Melgo County General MoigoCoiJnty, State of Ohio the toll, oil,
Hulth Dlotrlct and bllng 1 part of One mlntrelo ond righto horllo·
Hundred Aero Lot No. 283 fore rooetved by C. H. Wl.l·
f41l. he
llomo, Truoteo, In deod recorded In Vol. . 157. Pegit
220, DMd Recordo, Miolgo
County, Ohio.
Further the grentoro, their
heirs end eulgna; hereby
grant to the grantee, her
h8irs end 111ign,, en Hie~

0

~!'v~:r-:.':' ~
. o::'~
faurteon · In wld1h. -en

felt on oi- oide ofthlfol.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE

4:

· so. ~N.i~~i~~~oRE
1,.-JJIIII!I...";!!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~-1

~=!';'!.~~ II

CANDLEUGHT SERVICE

At

thllnte-n
of theexlet·
lng
oau-ly right
of wey
lin• of &amp;toto Route Number
124tndtheWeotlneofaeld
One Hundred Aero Lot Num·
boo 213. point 1110 be·
lng the grontoro' nor1hweot
property cor-; thenoa
South 2 dog,.... 41 ' 27"
Welt along tho grantor's

,.rr.:·~~··~:~ AnnexSTORM,

n•

(IR()()IAM

PM

0ti1o Associalton of Public
S
I
choo
ployees, Meigs
Loca I ## 17, do hereby

.·

Pledge our Supp,ort to
the united Mme Workers
f
M ·
0 the. etgs Mines and .
the RAC employ
d
ees an
United Steel Workers of

..

Em

Lot

the ulatlnu centerline of
walnut str~~t. 17 8.00 .foet
to the rill
~Inning

r.:lnt
~ ~~.. ~ ':7

dogreoo 1B' 33" Eaot tiona
the centerline of thl O.hlo
Rlvor ROII!JIIIY end
Compony'o right of way.
311.00felttoopolnt;thanee
northe•-•clv contlnullla
along Hid line ond with the .
ore of I curvoto thlleft htV•
Ina • redluo of 711.78 feet •
dlotonco of 14B.II8 tNt to •
point, tho long chord of aeld
ore
blorlng North Bl
degnMO 41' 11" Eaot.
148.30 felt to told point:
thence North 80 dogr49' II" Etll continuing
olongoold line 141.12 .f eet
to o point In the grontoro'
eoot. proparty Une Md thero
to termlnoto and contolnlng
o.108 ......
Further EXCEPTING on
the eouth oide of the above
deoorlblld fond on eoMment
11 herotoforo given to Glenn
Cundiff, Ji. ond Coral Cundiff, their helro and oHigno,
for 1110 ond woter linn end
thl right to ontor ond molnt·

p"-

Stemple.

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THE FIRST AND THIRD.
FRIDAYS OFTHE MONTH
. APR. 5 &amp; APR. 19
--:--Musical

Local School District has been
Third grade • J.B . Boso, Kyle
announced for the fourth six-week ' Norris, Brandon Wolfe, all A •s;
grading period.
·
Jamie Baker, Stacey Ervin, Kim
SOUTHERN JUNIOR IDGH . Ihle, Amber Maynard, Chris Ran·
Seventh grade • Paul Ihle, dolph, Tara Rose, Dena Sayre,
MIDDLEPORT · Inspection
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Bobbie Scarberry, Derek Warden
Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and
Lawrence and Rayan Young, all and Lena Yoacham.
.
AM, Friday. 6 :30 p.m., potluck
•'
WEDNESDAY , .
A's;
Amanda
Mills,
Jason
Barnett,
Fourth
grade
•
Josie
Jarrell,
dinner, meeting at 7:30p.m.
John Card, Robby Crow, CJ. Har· Kara King, Jesse Lillie and Jessica
POMEROY • Rev
I at the
ris, Craig Knight, Jay McKelvey, Theiss, aU A's; Sreven Boso, Don·
Calvary Pilgrim Cll· e! . in
SATURDAY
Jason
Shuler, Sammi Sisson and · nie Carnahan, 'Jenny Carleton, Josh
: " Pomeroy will be held throu
n·
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
: day 111 7:30 p.m . nightly with Rev. a fish fry at the Middleport Fire · Nick Smith.
·
Ervin, Suz11nne Evans, Troy
. : Kenneth Hooper 115 evangelisL The House on Saturday beginning at 11
Eighth grade • Brian Anderson. Hoback, Jody Hupp, Jessica SmitJi,
• church is located one half mile off a.m.
Grant Circle, Mason Fisber, Matt Tommy Smith.
: Roule 7 on Route 143. Rev. ViclOr
Morrow, Kendra Norris, all A's;
Fifth grade- Stephanie Stemple
• Roush inviles the public.
SALEM CE~
· R • Star Willy Childress, Randy Bing, and R.yan Grace.
I
'
Sixth grade • Bobby Writesell,
I
Grange and Star J ·or Grange will · Andrea Moore, David Pickens,
' ; RACINE - Southern Local meet Saturday . 8 p.m • .at the
Tracy Pickett, Jim Randolph,
all A's; Angie Carleton, Tonia
: :oAPSE 453 will hold a special grange hall nca Salem Center. · C~Jurtney Roush. Amy Weaver,
NIIZ!II'Cwycz, Amy Northup, Jennie
: meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ' Harrisonville Grange will visit.
Ryan Williams.
.
Scarberry , Jesse Maynard lind
Southern High School cafeteria. Potluck tefreshmeniS. AU memben
Melissa Smith.
SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY
Members are urged to attend ..
urged to atrend.
First grade • Malt Ash, Nathan
PORTLAND ELEMENTARY
Martin,
Cody Wallace, all A's;
..
THURSDAY
CHESTER • The Chester Fire
First grade • Amanda HuddleB(ice Hill, Stacey Mills, Aaron
LONG BOTTOM • Revival bcparunent will have a fish fry on
ston, Travanna Moore, all , A ' s;
Ohlinger, Chris Rupe, Mary
through Sunday it Mount Olive
Saturday from 4-7 p.m.
Tanya Baker, Anthony Barber,
Schultz and Jamie Smilh.
·
• Community Chureh in Long Bof·
Chris Burris, Tyler Johnson, Rus·
Second grade' " Cara Ash, Josh
: tom at 7 p.m: ':Bch .nig~t. Speaker
MIDDLEPORT ; "Horse with
sell Krider and Amy Wilson.
: will be Evangchst BtU Vtllars.
flying Tail" will be presented 111 Larsen, all A's; Sarah Ball, Jeremy
Second grade · Brandi COdner,
. ,
Fisher, Ryan Hill and Erin Struble.
the Meigs County Public Library
all A's; Nick Bolin.
RlJILAND · Rutland Township on Saturday a~2 p.m. and on Mon· · Third grade • Joshua Ji)avis,
Third grade • Joey McKir111ey,
Autwnn Thomas, Steve Tackett, all
• TrusteeS meet in regwar session on day at 7 p .m . at the Middleport
all
A'S; Erin Bolin, Amber Carpen·
A's;· Allam Cumings, Ponnie Prof.
• ·T hursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut·
Branch.
•
ter.
Rebekah Collins, Rebecca
fitt, Jon Smith.
; land Fire Station.
'Davis, Anita Holler, Amanda Lang,
Fourth grade - Bridget Cross,
RACINE • The Southern High
Peggy Lawrence and Joshua
Ashli Davis, Tara Knighting· and
POMEROY • PERI meeting at .School Class of 1966 will hold an
Pullins.
Kim Sayre.
.
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen- brganizational meeting for iiS 251h
Fourth grade • Jason Roush, all
Fifth grade • Cynthia Caldwell,
ter 8't 1 p.m. on Thursday. All class reunion on Saturday at 6 p.m.
A's; Pauy Lawrence and Billie Jo
•memben are urged 10 auend.
at the high school. All local school Evan Struble, aU A's; Valerie Cun·
Sellers.
diff, Jennifer Friend, Shaun Harris
class mcmbcn are urged to auenil.
Sixth grade • Greg McKinney.
and Billy Young .
: ·; .; MIDDLEPORT • Evangeline
all A's; Zach Couch, Josh Roush,
Sixth grade • Brian Allen, Jason
11172 OES MiddlepQrt will meet
RUTLAND • Baseball 'teague
Amy Rizer.
Lawrence,
all A's; Kevin Fields,
Thursday for their regular meeting. will have a signup Salurday froll) 9
L.D. - Sara Ervin.
Hillery Harris, Travis Lisle and
. Officelll are to wear sll'cet dresses.
a.m to 1 p.m. at the civic eeRier.
D.H. • Lora Ward and Darlena
Amber Thomas.
Flowers.
POINT PLEASANT, W .VA. :
RACINE ELEMENTARY
, : The La Leche League Of .Point
LETART ELEMENTARY
First grad~ • Tyler Liltle, Rachel
' Pleasant will meet on Thursday at 7
First
grade • Janet Craig, Lori
Marshall, Jill MaiSon, Jason Miller,
..p . m. at the Presbyterian Church lit
Sayre,
Crystal
South and Ian Wise,
Ida Murphy and Kathryn John· Macy Rees. Matt Thompson, all
8th and Main Streel. The discus'
Second
grade
- Kati Cummins
· sion will include· a discussion on son were Sunday dinner guests of A's; Joe Adkins, Sheri Cummins;
and Holly Hannan.
Mr. and Mrs . Jeff Bole, Horner .Amber Duffr., Matthew Johnson, .
: nutrition. For funher information,
Third grade· Jessie!! Alley,
Joey Manue, Billie J. McNeely,
; call (304) 675·5142 or (304) 675· . Hill.
"
.
Alex
Chaffee, Erawn Herman,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Russell, Tiffany Williams.
: 4439.
Aulul!ln
Hill, R·yan Hill, Misty
Second grade - Joshua Baker,
Harrisonville, were Sunday vfsiton
Sellers, Mandy Spaun. ,
.
RACINE • The Racine Ameri·
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell and Clay Enslen, Macyn Ervin,
Fourth
grade
•
Lee
Qreene,
· . · Jonathan Evans. Courtney Hill,
can Legion Post 602 will' meet family. ·
Daniel Hannan, •Jane Hill, Mike
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ~efresh·
Kevin Knapp, Michelle, Amy Shauna Manuel, all A's; 'Michael
JQhnson.
Jennifer Morris, Joshua
men IS will follow lhe meetmg,
and Ashley, Michelle and Charles Ball, Jen;my Hill, Tony Hupp. Erin . Whitley and Rebeccah. Wolf~. ·
'
l(napp and Jan Knapp were Satur- Roach, Joey · sands and Jamie
· Fifth grade : !'-mber Atkins,
•
FRIDAY I
day visitors of Charley and Naomi
CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs . Smith. Eugene Haning was also a
• Community 'Action Agency will visitor.
hold free clothing day on Friday at
Mr. an!! Mrs. Doyle Knapp were
• the .o ld high school building in Saturday e vening visitors of Mr.
! Cheshii'c from 9 a .m. to noon.
and Mrs. Kevin Knapp.
Christine Bailey was a Tuesday
roPPERS PLAINS • There wUI evening visitor ef Mr. and Mrs.
•
: be a ro1111d and square dance on Robert Bailey.
ALL JR. and MISSES .
1 WAll LADIES •.
: • Friday at the VFW Building in
AND.
; Tuppers Plains from 8.· 11:30 a.m.
CASUAL
featilrinJ Jtocty Mountain Blue·
grass. J1m Carnahan will be the
SPRING~~.' I Y f,iN; M~
· • caller. Public invited.
446 4j24

Wolf Pen

.

LADIES' SALE

THURSDAY, FRIDA.Y&amp; SATURDAY ONLY

i

..

BLOUSES . OFF

• 11 Salisbur)' emenwy. Enlenain:
: ment, Bob and Kendra Ward
· : Bence. Speaker, Gene Esbenshade.

MI. OIK, SUNSET aut, IH
ANI IIO(IY IIIIUNUIII

JEANS

. 20'/o
OFF

DIESS PANTS

20°/o ·OFF

~'

·
P050Y · Meigs County
: Grange J1111 uct. Friday, 7:1$ P·!'l·

•
:
:
•
:

20°/o

US'r WEEK FOR ·
·1 TAILE OF
WINTER SWEATIRS LAD)ES SHORTS

5()P/o

OFF .2 5°/o OFF

BRADBURY ·• Revival S(lVices
at B~ Church or Christ Fri·
day
Sunday at 7 p.m. Publie invi
Special IJM"'ken niglll·
ly . AI Hanons. Friday; Derek.

'.
•

.

REEDSVIbLE • Tile Olive

pm 'til

?.

Come Jo1n The
Coinradery At...

OSCAR'S
OF COURSE! '

59 Court St.

Gallipolis

290 SIC- AVI. .

•DDUPOIT OH •.
I

. ORDINANCE NO. 113
Fixing ond regulotlng the
price thlt may bl chorgod by
Ohio Powor Compony far
oioctrlolty to thl Vlllogo of
~omeroy, Ohio.
.
IE IT OIIOAINED IV THE
COUNCIL OF Th5 VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, OHIO:
For ond In Clllnoldorotion of
the mutuel coven1nt1 ·end
ogroemento herllnoftor con·
tolnlld, the partleo hereto
.g,.. with ..ch other 11
folio-:
1 . The Compony ogreoo to
lurnloh ond thl Cuotomor
ogreeo to occept ond poy far
otreet lighting Mrvice, dur·
Ina the torm of thlo
ment, conolotlng 61 the
nitmber. lire •nd type of
lompo 11 Noted on Atteoh·
-nt A. Incorporated by
refereno. •• H fully rewritten
heroin.
2 . The Cuetomor ogrMo to

.11-·

Jerem~

In accordlnce wkh rites

!~:~~~~~sli.~mJ::r,/~hoa:~~:
Sixth grade •

Lyons,

Dean Hill, Jennifer Roush, Hillary Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre and,·
Ranetta Wheeler
Vanessa Shuler.
~~~~~~~~·~._...,,_..,_ _ _ _IIJIII_ _ _ _. .

LET OUR FAMILY .

opeolfled In Tariff S.l. In
offect 11 the time the eddl·
.
tlonollempo tro oddod.
The portleo ,._nlzo thet
I period of tlmt wHI nooe ..
. oerlty elopM blforo oil the
now lompo con be obtolned
ond lnotolled. The Compony
will lnotoll tho eddltlonol
Iampo 11 repldly •• labor
oondltlono ond motorlol do·
liv-o ·will ,.rmH.
'
•
4. All metorlel fumlohed
• by the c()mp•v shill r•meln

YOUR FAMILY.

HOL~ER CLINIC
FAMILY PRACnCE
992-2118

446-5137

the property of tbl Company
ond moy bl rBJI'CIVId ot the
twminetion df.""'VVII egr•~
ment If the Company 10
doolreo. ·
1. Thloegreoment oholl bl
end romeln In full force ond
efflot for on 1nn1a1 term of
one ye~r from end efter the
1ot day of Juno, 19B9. ond
, thereafter In , IUOC8111Ve
• t - of on•·VMr eobll, untN
•' either party ehellglvo ot looot
' 80 doyo' notice in VI!'Hing to
. 1ht other. of Ito Intention to
dlocontlnuo thl oen.lct et
the end of ony torm.
8. H the Cuotomer oholl
dofoult In the poymont of
ony blllo eo herolnblforo
, ,provided, the Company moy
. · ot Ito option. otter hovlng
• given 10 dlya written not tee

: · of ito Intention to do eo.
· dfacontlnua the urvk:e he ~
• . ·rein contrected for end con~
; · tlnut to withhold the oupply
• of electric energy for otrett
• lighting. until ouch limo 11
•. the Cult:omer hel meda
: payment for oil blllo in which
•, it it j~ 1rr..r1.. ln'y •IUCh
:. IUIJIIIenolon of oorvice by tho
•· Compeny ehlll not torml·
;, &gt;~ n1t1 thil egreemant unle11
t Company 10 electl.
·
7 . T.h e Cuuomer ••
• · further conlideration for the
• · promi,.l and ..,..menta
: · mode by the Com pony he·
• rein Ml lorth horoby granto
to the oald Compony the
prlvlloge of thl u• of the

&gt;
~jl ./

V'L ~

1987 FOlD ESCORT

•

8

SALE .PIICED

llliln

Notice

CASH BASIS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINI'NCIAL
REPORT
.
For Tho Flocol Ytor End'ed
Dooembor 31, 1990
POMEROV CITY
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
· Govemmentol Fund
Typoo
·
REVENUE IIECEIPTS: '
Local Toxeo .....381 ,412.9B
lntorgovommental
Rtvonuo ....... 188,072.18
Chlrgoafar
SorvicM ......... 41.803. 74
Flneo. Llcen11o,
• · Pormita ....... 40,827.84
Mloollloneouo .... 83.437. 73
TOTI\l
RECEIPTS .... 877,854.1S7
EXPENDiTURE
DISIUIISEMENTS:
Cunent:
Security of Poroon •
.
Property ....... 327,823.71
Lllount Tfme
•
.
Actlvltloo .......... 1,210.BO
ComiJUnlty Environmeilt ................ 1.032.0,0
loolc Utllty
· Servicu ......... 36.27B,27
Tranoportetlon ... 78,028.32
G-.1 Govern· rnent.. .. ..... ... 138,B88. 12
Copltll0irtloy ... 40.810.10
DebtSorvlce .. ... 48,113.43
TOTAL DISBUIISE·
MENTS .... .'.... 118.883.1&amp;
Totei Ropt 1·oVer/und., Dfob. . ....... 10,891.12
OTHER FINANCING
SDURCES/(USES)
Trenoforo-ln ........ .... 31 .111
Tronoforo
-Out .........f140,031.111
Total Other Fin. Sou~o
(U-) ...... ....... 140.031.11
PROPIItETARY FUNDS
OPER "TING REVENUE
RECEiPTS:
:
1

Chergn

tor

S lc11
3•19•1 28
TOT-:::.
.... ... v ' v •
RECE 1PTS 381 985 28
'
·
OPERATING· ....
EXPENSES:
DISBURSEMENTS:
c
urrent: .
Security of Peraon
•Pioporty ........ l7,122.19 ,
Contractuel

.

49
.S Sorvicu ........... 3,B 81·
uMpplleo ond 132 • 00 117
otorlolo
...... 18.v
~- ~-1
0 Ia
1131•7•
....
p.w
ut
Y
...
•
v
-•
S
1o
78
314· 49
D
t
orv
•
.....
'
·
TOTAL DISBURSE·
ENT
30 1 278 49
S ......
..
•
·
M llopto
Total
ovor/undor
Dl1b
84 88178
.... ,............. '
·
NON-OPERATING REVEN·
Es EXPE NSES)

¥,.~; 1-

:

I
1 71 a aa
n .......... , .... , .... • v .v'l
Tr-lori:'·
·
(1 71 • 841
0
ut ................ • v.
TOTAL OTHEII FIN. S.OUII 1 7111 •4
CES/1.UIE. Bl
NON EXPENDABLE .v
TRUST FUNDI
OPERATING REVEN'\JES:
EC EIPTS :
R
·
~Ia
38 18
Mlao~
neouo.... ....... ·
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .. , .. ........... 38. 19
0

~~~:~::s

992-2174

PubliC Notice

. PubliC Notice

FINANCIAL STA'I'EMENT
I ~I«Y thlo report to bl
oorroot end truo to the lien
of my knowlodgo.
Brendol. Monlo, 3/ 28 / 91
Clerlc-Truo.
320 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 411719
' 1114·192· 2143
141 3 , ltc

SECOND TIIACT:"The tOI· Floyd Norrloond PeoriNorrlo
lowlng .rMj -teoltuoted In by died dot!!dllepttmblo 7,
the .County of Mtlge, ln the 1848. ond •-rded Sep·
8tote of Ohio. ond In the ttmber 23, 1149. In Doed
Townohlp ol Lotdt, • - 182, ot Poge 272 of
bounded end doiCI'Ibed oo thl Mllgo County Deed
faliowo: Belna In 100 Aero 11-o. ond being mort
Lot No . 280, lltort Town- portlt!ulorly dooorlbtd • folahlp, Meigs County, Ohio. - • : lllglnnlng Itt point In
boginnlng In the of the - · of the Pienta and
the creek, Woet 1830 foot EMt latart lloed. Bold point
.Public Notice
from the NorthoootOt!rnerof bllng 23 f e l t - of tho
uld 100 Aero Lot No. 280; woot oide of bridge, lrontlng
LEGAL NOTICE
. thence Welt 1800 ' - t o FloydNorrlund~Norrlo
Notice lo given thet Barbero the center of Eoot Utart rool Mtoto; thence North
Gruooer, Mildro~ Shumwoy. Rood: thlnco South 8 dog. 1000 t.t too w1t10o oo11ond numerouo other sub· OO'Won 1171 footo1 0 nguld thlnoe eoot 220 to 1
aoribero of tho Shode Ex- Eoot Letart Rood to tho point In thl cent• of creelt.
change of GTE North lneor· South line of oeld 100 .Aero Hid creok bllng Welt boun·
porottd hive filed o petition · lot 280; thence Eoot 1430 doov of G. Chorleo Footor;
with . Jho · Public Utilttiao . feot. to the oont• of uld - o e.olong m(!ldla ofllrllk
Cornmlulon of.Ohio -king creok; thenoo along tho with m..,dorlngofln I oouth·
the lnotltutlon of. two-wey, moondorlngo of uld. creok · orly dlrtctlon to 1 point In
nonoptlonol, llot, roto ox- North 112 dog. 00.' Eoot contar of rved, eold point
tended trtooorvlco bllween 183.8 feet; thonoe l)lorth 82 bllng G. Cherleo Fo-o
tho Bhodo Eachenge ol GTE dog. 00' Eoot 78.2 feot; oouthwoet - -: thenco
North lncorporlled ondthe thence North ·14 deg; 00' weotolongcontorofroedto
Pomeroy Excho~go of GTE Eoot 1 38.8 feet; thenco thl place of beginning.
North Incorporated. The North 23 dog. 30' Eoot 100
Further uoeptlng from
CommiHion hlo aohodulod feet; thence North 111 dog. the. obovl dolcrlbed rool
thlo molter. Cue No. 90- 45' w- 178.8 feot; thence otate- follwolng :
Shuate In Letart Town·
1781-TP·PEX, for public North 33 dog. 00' Woot 80
heorlng oOO:OO e.m., Wed· foot to tl\t pUOI ot tMJgln· ohlp, Melgo County, Stoto of
neldoy, April 24. 1891. at nlng. contolnlng twonty·ont Ohio end being In 100 Aero
the Melgo County MuHipur· and olx·tentho (2J.IIl ocroo. loll 211 Md 280. Town 1
poll Senior Cltlron Cantor, moro or looo, but aubject to
North, Rona• 1 1 Wen of the ·
Ohio Cornpony'o Puii'Chooe
Mulblrov Heights, Pomeroy, olllegel hlghwoyo.
Ohio, 46719: Any Inter· · THIIID TRACT: The fol· and being .r;aorlbed I I
eoted pa!ton
obtoln lowing reoloototooHueted !" followo:
further lnfarmotlon rogerd· the County of Molga, In t~o
lllalnnlngot t point on the
lng thlo motttl by dlr!ICtlng Stele of Ohio, ond In the South. lint of 100 Aero Lot
en lnquiov to the Public Townohlp of Letart. 280 o.nd Weot 3100 felt
Utllltleo Commiooion of bounaed ond doaorlbed •• · from thl loutholin oornor
Ohio, 180 Eaat Brood follows: Being In 100 Aero 'of llld 100 AOI'I Lot 280.
' street, Columbuo, Ohio Lot No. 259: lltort Town· uld point oleo being on tho
43288·0673.
ohlp, Melgo County, Ohio. . Ellt llno of Jim lutoher'o
(3120. 27; (413. 3tc
Boginnlng In the center of 38·. 7 ocro ,..,.., 11 do•
the creek. Woot 21111 felt orlblld In Moigo County
PubliC Notice
from the Northoaot corner of Deed R-rdo; Volume 284.
ooid 100 Acre lot No. 218; Pog_~ 809; thenoo. North
thence Wtot 1430 foet to 31Bj.41 foot olong Jim
NOTICE OF SALE
tho Wen olde of Eoot Lotan Butcher'otold Eootllnetoen
By virtue 9f an Order of ' Road; thence South 8 dog. lronrodpooolngofencepoot
Sole luuld · out of the · OO ' , Weot 285 ltlt to tho ot·.IIQfllt;thenoeSouth17
Common Pleoo ·court of center .o f uld 100 Aero lot dog. 34' 01" Welt 5411.&amp;8
Melgo Cilunty" Ohio, in the · No . 269;. thonco .Een 1241 fen tori.I onoflroT n roohd 1n thed
c••• of The Home National feet 1long the center line of f;:~nte n1
own 1P 11 Ol! .
Bank, Plaintiff, egeinot Clar- oold 100 Aero Lot No. 288; !,~ IHIII lloadl • J!I•Bolna •
once E. Hill. tt ol., Defend- thence . North 38 dog. ·1 0' ....co. poet ot 3 2 v . 3 felt
onto. upon 1 judgment i~e - Eut 1 BO feet to 'the cantor ond
out of 100 Acre
rein rondered .. blingCCoot or uid crMk; thence North lotLot !o o n~n to 1~~!.,Aertd
2 v 8 11 - 7 .49 - .. on
No. 91-CV-07 in oeid ourt, 40 deg. 00' Eoot 197 fell
I will offer for ••••• ot the along tho Olllloter fof Ill~ e•2•1olnlg .!!'. folro,n..~d•••.t
front door of tho Court oroek to the p co o begin· v • I -··
·-• ;
• h 18
HouM in Pomoroy, Meigo ning, contolnin a eight ond t ho.'!ooEeotNort
· deg
- . 17'
1v 11 ·0 2
0 10 ng
County, Ohio, on the 30th o""'tonth (8. I 1 ocrao. moro 14
"-of AprH. 1891, at 10:00 or looo but oubjtct to oil thl -.tlrllno of told Town·
;.';lock A.M. the following legal ~woyo. Excoptlng ohlp road 88 tD on hon rod
linda, tenlrMnte and per· and reurvinlt to· former It the Southwelt cornet" of
aonol property, to·w":
grantors, Charley loggeoo Wh~Mor'o Parcel • doo·
FIRST TRACT: Tho fol· end Oot Boggooo, their helro Crlblld In Mel go County
lowing reol totott oltuote in and aoalgno, on equal, undl· Deed Reoordo; Volume 271.
th t County of Mol go, ·s tate v1'dod one·•·if
P-•
·~ port or ohoro
·w 871, Hid Iron
lin rod oloo
of Ohio end in the Townohip of ell the coal, oil end goo, bllng on the Eoot e of Jim
of Lotert: Being in 100 Acre end other mlnoralo In or Butcher's oald 39.7 ocroo;
Lot No. 281. letart Town- under the promlaeo heroby thitnceNorth140- 'totht
ohlp, Molgo County, Ohio, conveyed, .wnh the right to point of beginnln8i, paoolng
· old
o' nlronroda·t~o
•··tfa
beglnnllig in the center of enter on 1
premlu1,
~ ·
·- . r
tho creok, Weot 1930 feet proopect. exploro ond drill rlleronoe, oontolnlng 0.48
from the southeeot corner for. and mint, txCIIJvota ond ocroln 100 AOt'ILotNo. 280
of oald 100 Acre lot No. remove .t he lllime wflh oil ond 0.47 ocro In 100 Aero
281; thence alo•g the meohlnory, opp 11oncu. fl x· Lot 2118 fo r 1 t oteI ·of 0 .8 8
·• croek
meondorlngo of Hid
tureo and thlngo niCIIHOV 111r1, more or 1eu. ••copt1ng
North 33 dog. 00' Weot 60 or conven""t
1111--'
~.. therefar. ond
.,... r~hto of w-.
·•
feet; thonco North 30 dog. the right to uM oo much of
DEE 0 EFERENCE: Vo·
oo· w tot 220 felt; thenoo the IUrfooo 11 'moy •luma 288. Po~o 911. Molgo
North85dog.OO'W•ot82.3 neoooooov lor the purpoHo County Deed -•do.
..
t •'of •- 111
ofor...,·d . Exo-11- on· d ro·
The obove dllcrlblld rlol
0 I•~ center
t~
d
·~ ...
1 u-lfl·" 1 h
100 Aero Lot No. 281; oervlng unto Froelond E. eotlto • ....., n t t
thenoo Weot 1340 feet to Norrlo ond Erline Norrlo, tho rooordo of the Molgo County
the contor of Etot Letart following .... eotote; Being Audl,t or by PIIJ'CII NoL :
R
In the County of M~ 08·00281. 01·00280, and
oed; -oe South 8 dog.
0028 1
00' Woot 28,1 - olono tlio Stole of Ohio, tho Town lp 08 ·
·
of Letart, and boin,r,rto of
Sold rool eotote wao ID·
-.tor of Hid rood to tho 100 A
l
N
.
~
II
, 88 7 3 4 OO
South 11- of Hid 100 Acre
cro Oil o. 1, 280 · pro 1. ,
· ·
Lot No:281: thence Eoot imd 2118. The Hme being
Ter,.. of Sola: Ceoh. ·
1800 felt to the pi- of parto of Trooto No. 1, 2. and
Freol eotate ,.nnot be oold
blglnnlng, containing til) 3 of tha oomo rMI eotete u
lor leu then twg,thlrdo of
f101ooroo. more or leoo. but that oonv-ed from H. N. thlepprolood volue.
oubjeottoollloftolhighwovo. Wolfe ond·• Ruth WoHe to
• Jomoo M· louloby•
"
Shorlff of Melgo County
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ill .2 0, 27; 141 3. 3tc
Real Estate General

..

· Real Eatate General ·

POMEROY,

OHIO

01 TOU. FlEE

BISSEU. &amp; IIIII .
CONSIRUCnON

•Gaf'CIIII
•Co•plete

·-.wc.,...,.
..

"~

..

Oily.cir Night ·. .

'.

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Monday-Friday, 11 am-3 pm .

IIEW LISTING - RACINE - . Moderahon is fhe keynote!
Here's a medjum sized plqt, average size rooms, and best of
all- adown to earth price. Wu real stealforsomesensible
1amily! ASKING $19,500.00. MAKE AN OFFER. . .

••
••
'

Auction Conducted By

RICK PEARSON
.
.
.... AUCTiON CO.
?73·5785

T. Ul'l'IIIRE

Caolt ora.olldt LD.
lloiRtt(ltl!llllfJior'nld *ot:LeMoiP: It"'
'
U11111d ln:lllott:lo:lln Dfllo, ICI:iluclly, oM Wtot Vlrilnlo ..

NEW LISTING- RUTLAND- 119.89• acres of farm land.
Approx. lOO acres limber for the modern day hunter! Has an
oldel·home on property also. ASKING $36,000.00.
LiST WITH US FOU 3 GOOD REASONS
.,.
We think our sense of values- our list of pod pros,tcta
- and our tireless efforts - will mate you &amp;lid you

called usl

1
HENRY E. CLELAND .. .......... .. ....... 882·1111
JEAN TRUSSELL .... ... ...... ........ ..... 1148·2110
J.0 HILL. ... ........ .......... ............ .... ,. 8111·4411
OI'FICE ....... .. ...... .. ..... ..... .. ...... ... .. . I82·22118

EMILEE MEIINAR .
Owner &amp; pperatar

614-992-00jCU

•Remodeling 1nd
Home Repalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONS:OUCnON
992·6648 or
698-6864 ..

4-11·16-tln

1Z· S\ ·IO· IIfn

ol MINIII'H
UPHOLSTERY

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAIR

21 J. ... Sacllld
llldilteparf ·

AUIIAD5
1r1,. It In Or We

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapea
36 \' eoro Experience

KEN'S APfliANCE
$EIVICE .

We Soy Whot We Do.
We Do

Howard

992-5335 or
915-3561

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
. Window•
•Roofing ·
•lnoutatlon

· JAMES KEESEE .
992-2712 or·
742-2251

Acnu p,.. l'flt OHice
117 1. hc.IIIJI St.
POMIIOY, 01110

L Wrltasal

•

539 Bryan Place :
Middleport, Ohio ·. .
11-14- n

316/90/lln

IOOFING
,,

NEW- REPAIR
Gutten
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FOiEVEI IIONIE
PROM TANNING

FREE ESTIMATES

ht 50 High School

SPECIAL

10 SESSIONS- $10

3-4·11-1 ~•. pd:

949-2126
For Appt.

Call

TRI·COUNn
RECYCLING
PEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A M 'TIL 7 P M
If lou
· 'uon
1
· ·
up' your
· •• L .....
yar an w...e........ wt
bufton Wttkt...o
••
,...
o·

I-COUNTY
RECYCLING

·
Locatod Off tlto lrpoll On
Tho Cam• of
· 11. 7 &amp; II. 14'
•
Pom•oy, Ohio
P111lng ~uh ·fur olumlnum,
ooppor, ilrloo. •lnlu otool,
mogn•lum. ro-•• otort·
.,., .., . _ , ond oil non·
,._. " ' -1 ·
WI FDI I'IIICIS
614·992·5114

FDIEVEI IIONIE
IAIIIAIUD., UCINI
3-4·'91;1 mo.

111111101 • DTIIIOI
FREE EBTIMATES
painting.
let f!ll do it for

yo11.

· VERY REASONAILE
HAVE REFERENCES

1614) 915-4110

3·8· '91· 1 mo . pd.

THE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
oBLOWN IN
INSULATION

· . COUNTRY ClUB ·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

GOLF LESSONS ... liD ao.
. 6 for 155
NEW GIIPS .............. 14

. . ·-hilt.

"frH Eati~tea"
PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949· 2160

NO SUIIOAY CAUS

AM·7 Pll-7
.z. Dnt
,.,,~ oWnk
.

($
. ..
..·····

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Take the pain out of

Students ·

949~2168

.•,

J&amp;L

Pkk lip.

614-992-2311

3-lt·lln

E,ectrlCII end Plumbing
Concrete wort
Avoting
lnttrkH' • Eaterfor

Pointing
IFFIEE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pllltllfly, Ohio ·

'

S1le ·
lroken Ch.. Rtpairtd
TIOPIIES. • PlAQUES

IADGES
JQHfl RAFORD ·
s-tC... lri.Outw

4/J/1 110.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD .
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD nES
1-12·10-tfn

11-1 4-'9.0 tin

. l

USID APPUANOS .

IIIDDLEPOAT - Purl StrHt- Anice 2 story home with 3
bedrooms. 1\l baths, vinyl siding.- new windows, full basement House is on a GOOD Street
•
$39,900
' IIIDDLEPORT - Beech Street- A I \l slory frame home
w:th 2 bedrooms. Newly remodeled. Comes wilh new washer,
dryer, range, and re1ri~crlor. Also, a ·9 piece livinf room
suite, 3 beds, and 2 nighf stands.
JUST' 9,500
RUTLAND - Beech Grove Rd.- Approx. 2 acres and ecute
I \l story home with 3 bedrooms. deck. gartlen area, part ba·
semen!, and a d:ning ropm. Owner wanls an offer.

$26,000

RUTLAND - Stile Rt. 124 - Building .lot Big 2 acre lot
that is level and has a lol of frontage . Public water and elec·
tric available.
JUST '7,000

NEW LISTING- NEll LOCK GROVE·- N:cely remodeled I \l
story home on approximately a IOO'x200 lot. Equipped
k~chen , de&lt;:king .and 3 bedrooms are just a few greet lea·
lures! ASKING $29,900.00.:
.

.
~-=-~~-"-"----.~-;---'.....,...

PIL 949-2101
or IH. 949·2160

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ' .
D():Q:IE S. TURNER, BROKER

.

acre lot
for your children
can be yours for

'

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

·~ ..,._,
CIUte.fifW .........

Homestyle Lunch Special•

IUILT ·.

"At Reasonable Pricot"

985-4473
667-6179

HOME 992-6692

..,.''

MASI1tRICARD • AMitRICAN ll:XPRES8ACCEP11ID

CUSTOM

Step &amp;
.._Fr• EttiiiiCitH

RUTLAND - Smith •un Rd. - Beautiful start, approl. 3
acres of vacant 11round wilh a dug well, barn, stock tank, and
is fenced.
$13,500

ran.:

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•••• H•-

OFFICE 992·2886

MATURE PAINTS A MASTERPIECE RIGHT OUTSIDE YOUR
WINDOW? An enchanting view ol stately frees and rolling
h:lls that make you look forward eagerly to gel b&lt;Jck home.
Make your fam ily lhe envy of their !rien.ds in thisscenically
situated hOme. Other features include 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen !with anice large deck) as soon as you walk oul your
frenchdoors, family room, 2 car garage and on and on. Hold
on the owner just called and REDUCED the pnte AGAIN!
NOW you can have lhis beauty for ONLY $69,900!00. CALL
NOW. T~IS WON'T lAST LONG!!

Complete Grooming
For All lrllils

Pomeroy, .

-

)

l

992-7013
or 992-5553

- Room Addition a

.

WNCH
MASON, WV
AD~TOR: JOHN

•Cerpet
Dry
Tlma
•High Gloao on Tile
F.f oor Flnlah
. MilE lEWIS, owat. I, lutland, OH.

- Gutter wofil

MASON FAMILY
.
RESTAURANT

,.

Work

•Frea

CARPENTII SERVICE

Mae Reltmlre will be Hid.

VI~ •

"'

I.

Public 581&amp;

GROOM
ROOM

•Rt~eonable 'Rateo

YOUNG'S

The estate of the late

Monday· Brown 1111'11 and Cornbnad
Tuesday· Choice of Any Style Hamburger with Soup a·Fries
·Wedn11day • Balled ~ Mulled Potatoes, Gretn Beans
Thuriday • Spaghetti Dinner with Salad and Garlic Brlld
Friday· Turkey Club wfth Soup a Friis .·

CAIPn CIIA.IS

ollll n&amp;i fLOOI CAH

992·2259

In New Haven, WV.

RI'. 33
MASON, WV
' NEXT
TO FAST 4 u .AND MASON MOTEL
It

WHAUY'S
AutO PARTS

r.•olna

Bolonco .. .. ....212,170.12
lnveot-nto ...... 33,800.00
Total Treoouov
Bolonco ........ 289.803.18
Outotondlng .... (22,141 .401
TOTI'll
BALANCE .... 248,781.78
SUMMARY OF
INOEBTEDNESS
OUTSTANDING 1/1 / 80G.O. Iondo .. ... 819.000.00
Retlrlld ......... .. ... 87.000.00
OUTSTANDING 12/31 / 80
G.O. Bondo .. ... 812,000.00
THIS IS AN .UNAUDITESI

SATURDAY,
APRIL 6, 1991
10:00'A.M. · ~~~~~
Located at 214 3r4 and Lewta Street

.....,.,,ow.

Business ·Services

"'"Y

der Dlob
...................
Total
rcpu
ov•l un - 38.19
lrMIUry

PubliC Notice

3

. . . . .. -o-li==~~~J~j======:::===l 1-;=::;;:=:;===J.:=======::,
•

$29 50·

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 East

Public

&amp;Auction

Auto .• air, power steering. power brakes.
AM-FM-Stereo, . r~r defogger.

II carr, Out Orders Anll•ble (304) 773-53~1 II

: stump, Saturday; llld Don Scevm
1 Sr., Sunday.

'

By

In The Bar Dining Room

...

D•ss

6:30

PubliC. Notice

opeolfled during tho term of
thio ogr-nt ond to poy
therefor It thl opplicoble
rotn currently In offlot or
·•nv aubtequent revlalon
thereto oo opeolfled In Torlff
S, L. which hll · bltn IP·
prqved by the Public UtMhlea
Commlalon of Ohio.
3. Upon receipt of · 1
wrlttan notice from 1 duly
outhorlred repr-ntotlvt of
the Cueto,_, the Compony
ogreoo to lnotoll eddltlonel
lompa. Such Iampo oholl be
• provided by thl Company
ond pold forbytheCuoto,_

· "The R1tz"
From

.

accept the aervlce herein

Entei1atnment

The -1· eotote above de·
oorlblld lo oubjoct to oil
loooeo. u-nto ond rlghto
of woy of record.
DEED REFERENCE: Vo·
luma 310. Poge1143. Meigo
(Continued on Page 13)

Town5hip Trustees will meei Fri·
day at 6:30 p.m. at the . Recilsville
Fire House.
·

.
.·
.
.

'America.

aln 11m1.

. ·

•

,

M • c
h
}}
d
etgs ounty onor ro s announce .
The honor roll for the Southern

·

We, the Members of The

:::
11':::-'o':·J~..!::
Aero
Nu- 293 and

Fill THE

Middleport American

OhiO

~.

fContln!tlld from Pogo 12i
ltroeto. olleyo ond publiC
County Daed R-..!o.
placoo of told CulltCimor tor
The IM¥8 dooorlblld rool the purpo• of Placing Ito
ntate lo ldontlfled In tho ,.. polea ond equlp-nt · for
cordi of the Melao County oortylng out thloegra-.
Audit&amp;. by Peroel No. 20.
B. Tho Cuotomor • - •
00241.
lhet during tho INo of thlo
Slid roll eotote woo op- og,..mont it will provide In
prtlled It 123,000.00.
it1 ennull budget• end elll~
Termo of lele: Cuh.
mMea 1nd levy of ....,
Reol ootata connot bloold ouftlclent fundo to pay tho
lor leeo then two·thlrdo •of · Company any emounu due
·. the -oiled velue.
it.
Jomeo M. Bouloby, 1411. 3, I . 3tc
Sheriff of M•g•
County, Ohio
(4) 3 , 10, 17, 3to .
Pub. lie Notice

~~----. . .--------~·...........

= o ftoland
... _
, II
ond..:r.::
frOm
1
";~'r,¥l'a the~.:Riv·

ClAUiflfO ADC

Community calendar

Public Notice

:::m.::.·r.::c.'"..=: BULLETIN B04RD.

a••

Sentinel

:J. 1991

PUbliC Notice .

Public Notice

'.

RECONCILIATIO~

..ead
the
·«::18881fteds!

1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohl.o

POMEROY - Ch:ldren will love il - Because-there's a bed·
room lor all:n this 4 bedroom home, also has a big nice pool
lor children lo swim. Huge rooms. full basemen!. rock flower
garden, and a view of the river, and a fireplace.

$46,000

CHESTER - Bounl Subdivision- Elegance &amp;LuxuryNice big shade trees with acolonial style home Slitting on 21'.
acres. Fancy chandeflers,.2 flrepl~ees. 4 bedrooms, formal
dining room, big foyer, 2 car garaae. basement, swimmina
pool and much, much more. Call for more details.

tODAYWAIUtm
WASIIEIS-S I 00 ., ·
DIYIS-$6t "'
.
IIJMD~TOIS-S 100 .,

DOTlll S. . . - , laOIIII

HOUIEI•LOTS•FARRI!I
.COMMIIICIAL
'IV, Need Uotlnp!
11·1'111-llo

HAPPY HOLlOW IIOAD- Alittle over l&amp;.mes w~h 1 newer
2 siCily home. Hupi:Yinl room, 4 bedrooms upsllnrs, end '
27x36 111lnill*l on tile inside room. His 1 cute little cov·
•eel picnic shelter, end 2 storege building
S2UOO

IIEIIIIA JEFFERS ............................................. !]!!·~~
OAILIIIE STEWART ......................................... !
SHERYL WALTERS

.,

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE .
"2-5335 or ti5·J5•1
&amp;cr.. p,_ hot Offlct
' POIIIOY, OliO

~~~~•u
MOilLE HOME FURNACES- HEAT P.UMPS
All FURNACE PARTS .

BEllm'S MOBILI HOME'
IIUTitiG &amp; COOLING .
h

11111 011 Wfllll k1111l K aH lt. 1~1

KELUR'S CUSTOM lENDING
.

W.t Hew Cho•a•• Our l&amp;Gtlan Ta
11h Milts E•t an Rt. 241 thrMgh
Chest~r,

Oh.

SPECIALIZING IN....
•Custom Bant Exheuat Systems
•Cpmpleta IJne of Exllllllt luppiiM

..........

•Hench ancJIIIIUII Monroe lhotllla

z

Come • • 118 U. l'ar A.._'

ellla

PL 614·ti5·H4t IIIWJ . . . .
471.. St. lt. .2a

llflllltlttt~~.

011. 45741

1111/11/L M.

•

·--· _____ ,_ . ~'
•

n1mts- Sns

11&lt;10 DVDIS-Srt .,

Now /1

LOIIG 80TTOII- Fantastic Rlvtr YIIW- This one story, 3
bedroom home is almost in I he middle of two bends of the
beaulnul Ohio R1ver. Has new carpefinglhrlll!ahout.lmmed·
iite possess:on and comes with all furniture.
lUST SEE $21.000
DARWIN- FARM - 166acresoflanh~hanofder211Cify
home. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms. 2 barns, and frH ps to
heal your home. Approx .•2Q acres lillable. ·
Sl5,000

IANGD- 0.-lllc.-$ US .,

Soc-

lOS II.
Slrllf
IIIDOLIPOif; 01110 45'7..
Offlct 614,"1·11..
IIOMI 61 4-tft.J691

..•

�.

'

Ohio
3 Annourtc'ement• .
"-GPPI
l"or-~
Write:

~

_._

• •

1991
KIT 'N' CAJU.'YLE~ t.y l.lrry Wr!PI

.......nt

Wednudll

72 Trucka for Slle

~

·::..~•

HMrt-.

R..a41o NhtPII·

LAFF·A·DAY
.......... ···- ·· •-.-.... .... .......

.,....~

....,..

1117
n HI,!,.;.
114'IIRID4L

86RNLOSER

-.......-

REDUCE: lklm all Ill while rou

.•
•
One F-110 - ...p '
tool """ bod; One 1171
Ford 1001- Von; One 1m
OIIC Vondln Von One -

- . I lpOeil ;;;;4.,;,_~VI,
...........-iiWallll
-

OPAL--

.......
T1k1
Fruth.Pharmacy.

REDUCE: 1oum all Ill -,...
. ....... tllla OPAL A - II
Fruth.Orug.

faod Qtolol- TnMik Wllh I ,
U'baom.-: •~·-

aAY L

0

8:00 C2le lll &lt;ll •

II

~~a.-a-Q

(!) ~IIUibciw Q
DON'T LOOK, MANAGER.BUT
1
WE ~E TRVIN6 TI-lE OL'
·.
. •'J.IIDDEN &amp;ALL II PLAV...

18llt ':'fmou1h Sllllllto, 311 ..,.
gino, JC!_U'It-2315.
· .

4110.

r.-12

I!:F~~-

'

8:01 (I)

Bsvortr ...,,...

&lt;Il Abllolt trnc1 C n Ia

i•

movies?"

I 1 I· I' I
6
•

•• I

1 now know that holi(!ay
shopping makes it harder than
ever to laugh at your own •••••••

"

O Complete
the ch~ckle quoted
1
by filling In the missing words

•'

, •

. .'

.,.. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
~ IN THESE SQUARES

1D UpCiole
8:35 (I) Andy Griffith
7:00 ()) e ILL iiJ WIIHI of

i ~~ic!~~!~ER LETTERs TO I

I I I· I I I I

,,

. &lt;Ill Drum of JHMie

·- ..,tOft I I &amp;I
.......~

Z3

SCIAMUJS AJiiSWII$ (
" :~
Fusion· Prank- Craze- Entomb- FROM the BACK
• W"'at a monstrous thing a three way mirror is." sig~li&lt;l
the woman. "It allows me ·to see how !look FROM the
BACK!"'{ '

~ [Ill:::~ Q
~;'::;l~Ourl Q
.
Aftalr Q

~~
BMoneyMne

~--

8&amp;c8rectOW

•• 17111

;:;:n Elk·· '· ....

and M,., King

7:05(1) " - " 1111'•
7:30())\i IIJ~IQ
&lt;Il
c:-IQ

·----nt
(!)). ,.
.......

1MI Kowollll 110-LTD.- iihlft ; •
drtve, aw:oeun .cond, :J04.882· ~

1111 Clwvlill II PI"- Clllll'
Pet. for Sa..
·
~ 1111111 Chivy 414 C IDCI:•.
lnd ~ !ShoP-Pet ~- Chlvllll ·~.laO
•!no._All . , _ Allllyilo.
'L old ..,.. lolly. · ... Fwd Diller. Julio
onor I pm.
.
WIIIII.COIIII-4CICIZI1.
11117 Fori1 LTO cune good
I old !'1!11- whh r.:._100. ~- 1flor l:iil
........, • Roilll- Btacll
IAII Co o lrocl
Wor- 1111 Chi-, 2 new llroe
I - , . To GO ns. 114- illllocy, -.e'IWllz """' ·
MW114.
Pll.

2!11.

PHILLIP

---~-

.,ooo:

==

'g::;.......:.....

- .-

- · ~.

MC Regiltlllnllluro
: : . ,• alii.
ohMka,iil-1
.-or.

j:{'a::tt. n~,:

Dbclt Witch IIIVIol,

-

...

WllorllnH,ptutnlclng,

olcl 11mco, corporilor

comodlllna. ,_ lill-,

PI'P'

blood linN. ISO

,

111-3447, 8t. Ana, WV..

la

:';'::1.·
-

trootor

tlrCPII.

Cia yf ,_,.. •

.

...

TFJtllw•=•,

II.""...-:-.......,..,_ .,_
- .-..lbL-.1&amp;'t ....... ..
WV.Ior-...... - ....

Pocn-:z:.::r:;:

-~-• ....._
Chwlilca

·- .

aurt I

_., ••tn

I clrtlng

...... -

:,4- ....
•

•• -

,_ a-..
Y., IIH:

-. ..............,,•••m.

Coli- ...... - -

"'"' ..... Aprllllllru .. ..........
Hllven,WY. lnd ... - · -

,., ... , _ .tMtao 110.00 •

.__~,

Pomeroy,
Mldd•n
&amp; Vlelnlty
·4 Flliifl¥ Clorott lcclo, April ...

_,..J
__
_
......
I lth f:OO

L11L

-=

le I P·"'· -

.

Apcll 4th lnd ....
n1.1111n•-P
.,.

ConDit

• Cllrogl 1111: """' 4th lnd ....
- 141 'llullonny •.
Hutlaon
IrolnIllor1M,
-

........
Hugo

uum.

LIWn t-r - roiolol14
... - PM
"""' II
..
point

-

,... ..... 111,., ..... _
, rolrl:C:'*
-......
.... .... .-.

......
... tici.*' ... ""

Y•n

No Y1rd To lit Or
lmll Relleblll ~d ' ,

:IlL

WlintCIWIIWno, -~~~~­
171-1881 ofler 5:00 PM or -

Pofclt Iiiii: Apc11 1 tum ftrw1

P I - 1-. for 1111- . .
-.e7MCM~aler 5:00.

poll WIIPO, I -

~ IIIIo to do lloloplnty, 111
~ ltoiM all 3 ilhlftl
II

Rafli•an
••••4 .

a I 1nd

I_··

.........,

Duwu•own O.llfpoMe ANI. .....

_lnl,--=---

whh

OM, 81.110: 1011n11- 4 1 - ,._, ...-.;.~ 1..-boy

""':

8upor.C whh Plow a CUIIIv1tor,

81,210. 114-2864122.

- I N Faod troctar,11 II t1,100. IIM-IJI.

olohct· DMnc
·Hoe,
88,CIIO
or boll410olfor.
111-1411144.
O.vlcl lrown whh a.--,.,

Foril
Coin$1!011
-.
- · 1880;
l'ictt·
up t-.
- 2dliDCI,
-~ ... Com ......... 1 ......, 110 tiDOd .....

runlehld

.........

. . 1111

h

lor2ort

iiil

•llcer.

----.OIO·t-304....-.

'''lruatratlona t.IUH a lludent
to go on a murderous

;11;-:·liO=-;~~oo=•~-;;c:.t,.-;;-1'"'••""•--=s-=:oo-=-,

'

rempage. Stereo. Q
&lt;Il MOVII:.......&amp;on Ouelt
(1 :00)

-•·

you

c.n :

--~--------------------··
75 Bolts&amp; Motors

GAt..L

IIl Cll. nte W-* YN,.

TtiAT

Kevin trnc1 Wayne dlttagree
about whO should get their
sister's room. Stereo. D
(IJ Ill LMntl Agelnat tfte
-Odd• Gambling or rock
climbing are considered
perwonal rtaka, 1M
earthquakll and plane
craahae are celled accidents.

$f~VICE?I

••

for Sate
. 11 11. 1111 a.,n....

Caorlee, It
ltp,U.O.IIorlne'-Outboonl 1
11-. 1111 1-r. Wilk Thru ,

Wlntllh
_ llld,

llorrlna.

·

Ccwor '•

Con-11111 Top. PriCe 81,200. ;

,00~~~10~

. - - . 1114tl'i'CNtll
'
1110 14 I. long T""Y lu1 Boot, ;
10 hp IIIIIIIUIY lroly '
IIIOIOr fll.ft2·2H2.
~
•••
••·1
-· oroft bocci, 14 H. whh ,•
- · 7.1 HP lwnrudo ncotor,
-duly t,rollor. All Uu new, •,

Traape Armed Forces

Benda, Color Guards, Drill
Teams, Bugle Corpa and
Choral Groups From Hanger
3 at Andrews Air Force BaM
· (2:00) Stereo. Q
··
Oe JlrlleiJDft 1111',
il) Murder, lite W"* D

-.b.. , . ~ lllandw 180, A·1

-on-·
__
,
-r
-r

p.81.,

1UI

-.1,1~ 140 lip, 18ft wolk ,

• Calab••• Oft taa• 'X
.,. Host L.orllnne Crook

lhru · · -IU·-IIIIi
,..-,
ln
d pull2 ;

•~.

rtLA'Siddla,
o.b., I·
op 01rrlor, , ..., ~~&amp;.
locllcl, 11r, 1111111num
. ..- . ....'. .,1,800.
•
Corvatt.

r.- ·-· euto, locl!~&lt;r

1112 N - 11310. outo,

........................lr ...........1111-lp.lll.
.. - . . . . IIWII--.
.., ........ .. ..... 14", goucl
....,
.
Mid ..... .._, 1110. l'liNI lllniclor,
- . ...OliO. oom'
~
.. lliloalf, goucl

a..- ...._ 0 ..............
~~~ _.. ~..Wll~·~·~~·~·
::-=~-:-'"'1::~
lilt, I ...... Norlh ol ~pnll In , _
rolld left from lld~lapart Hill

laole

d:a •mantaiiOn, • • ·
p.w., door

•.aet

81 Finn Equipment

•

~· ' - xa. CloH
1-1-4
1,_ 3 lhcu
,.,W.......... IIIMollil.aa1.

IIIIo Poull'o 0., Coro - ·
Sate, 1ttordablf, chl'dnrc. ...,.
• ..... • 5:30 p.m. ~ 1·10.
'"'-· 1ft1&lt; ochocll. Drap.1no
walc:me. 114-446-1224.
Qllllpolil ArlO. s

hln
'

'181
DolIUR 110 SW, R-flOOd,
o
111nc1on1, aa IIPO, t1,ooo. 304-

"-" llrerll
whh ... 11.711; P01111111 H Troctar, 81111;
l,oMor,
IllS II&amp;. ..... ~-~·--· worn ... CO.. r-or ~
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1~ do' or night. -,
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27,0110 ·-

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ALL I GOT
IS FtJUR

. DtJLLfRS II

solve the recent murder ot a
man .already &lt;Mad. Stereo. Q
aiCNNivMna~
1D 700 Clull Willi P.t

Robl'*!ft
10:30 121 CIOOk and CNIII

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114 441 1111.
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iiJ Nawl

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patch up a broken romance? The Astrothose you're 1nvotved with think your ·
bright'Ideas are actually their creations.
, Graph Matchmaker can help you under, . - - - - - - - - slanct. what lo do to make the relationYou shouldn't have any trouble making
ship work. Mall $2 to Malchmakee, clo
allies.
this newspaJ)er, P.O. Bbx 91428 , CleveSCORPIO (Oct 24-Now. 221 Financial
conditions look encouraging for you at ·
land, OH 4C101-3428 . ·
BERNICE
TAURUI (Aprll20-llor 201 Your greatthis time. A sudden windraH might be
' BEDE OSOL
eat benefits today could come rrom a generated
by · an
extrtiCIC'dlnary
joint venture, one where another has 'development.
initialed lite endeavor and found a way
SAGmARtUS (New. 23-Dtc. 211 You
for you to play a supporting role.
have a commanding aura today lhal will
QEMINI (lloy 21-June 20) The key to ·elicit respect witHout on.ctdlng others.
II you request thai something be done a
success today lies in your ability lo advance your own intere&amp;ts, as well as lite certain way, compliance Is likely.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~ 10) Some-1
interests ol people with whom you are
directly Involved. Parfiy is the magic thing that ,ou've been trying to lie down
ingrect.i""l.
lOOks like It Will be flnaliZid to your Sill·
CANCER (June 21-Julr 221 Try not 10 lsfactlon with relative • - loeley. Timlimit your career objectives today, be· lng makes all the dlftorence.
·
cause, even H yoU fall short, you can still
AQUARIUS (Jen. ...... 1t) Your
April 4, 1"1
make substantial strides.
worcltl carry considerable wor11t today.
LEO (JW, 23-Aug. 221 YOU[ natural
and mailers that· you diiCUII wllh
There could be a &lt;Mrlnlte mari\11 In lite ability IO organize Is your greai11SIB111181
lrlends wHI nol be redy forgol!en .
year ahead for specl~l knowled!lh or ex· today. You'll handle something relativeFortunately. ,ou'll have a knaclc for ..Y· ·
pertlso you've acquired through expetl• . 1y small or quite large with equal
ing the rlghl lhlnga.
.
·ence. Don't sell yoursoll short
II aplomb.
PIICII (Felt. -....ct\20) Occaaloll·
comes 117-whal you have to offer.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) An Important
anx,.n-.n•t hurt to 1001 our own hom.
· ARtEI'(IIrin:h 21·o\prll 10) Wlodom change mighl transpire today. and al- This Is a good diiJ to callto your ou~lyou may acquire today Utrough a ~- though It' could be more subtle than obor's a11111111on the nne jOb you've 1101181 experience could prove to be of 'ri~~·· · ,-1_
1 . may . bring you aubstanllal
doing. In turn, your bolt mey
. Immense votue. After ,.,.•.,. "ltUdled benefits later.
111·ree
It's
worth
addiUonll
and aeolmiilled Ill worth, you'll ftnd a LltiiA (lepl. 23-0cl. 231 You have a · remuneration.
way to u!IO It In your anllra. Tryong lo marvelous racully today f~r lolling . .
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ASTRO-GRAPH

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t2:00llle 11110 ~Night Stlreo.

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and try the diamond finesse. but ii'
lbses and the defenders run the spade
suit for two down.
.•.
Declarer does better to duck th•
first spade and wi~ the second. ~~e~~
cause it puts pressure on West. Bu~ ­
West should know that East has the ,
queen of spades. When making a Stlf· ,.
rounding .play, East guarantees holding a higher.· non·touching honor. ~. :
on the second round of spades, West"
musL unblock his king. Once more
clarer will be forced to take the ·di_a:,
mond finesse for his conLract, and he~ is·
••J.
dOomed to defeaL
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2 Preps
3 Arms store
4 Cuts off
Yesterday's Anewar
5Some
6 Goad ·
erg.
ruler
7Famed
17 Cures
29 Spack's
riveter
20 Camportraye1
8 LIC!(lrleey
paignad
30 Scent
herb
21 Bar bill
31 Of a new
9 Streisand 2.4 Garden
kind
· film
llower
35 Baseball
11 Coast
2S·Attack
team
Guard
27 Rainbow 36 Wing part
vessels
shape
38 Print
15 Cagers'
28 Appointe(!
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11:30 (2)e iiJ Tonight ShOW

1'10111 Nalollll (2:00)

Opening lead: ·

Eaot

' AXYDLBAAXR

e8 lceNCfOW trncl ,.,.,
.
-~

ii)TI1t

West
Nortll
Pass . 2+
Pass 3NT .

DAILY CR\'I'TOQUOlTS- Here's how to work It

Hoat Lortanno Crook
lnterviewl country stars,
including Charley Pride,
(1:00)
~•anew*'~

Stereo.

Vulnerable: East-WesL
Dealer: South

cousin
37Hollywooo krt-~-r-+product
38Wed
secretlY, ·
39 Slgnsol
sorts

~ ......... (2;00)

Co.- E - ENTERPHIBEll,
, . . _ , OH 1-.a3M1!211.
,

A Q9 8

+6 3 2

danca

1D laaablll Tonight
10:41 (J) MOVIE: IItie
Agelntt

llltcllo Tonk Puntolna 810i.011111 '•

-"'""·------·

.

Jake and~
l'etmen Jake and McCabe

till

Ron'o TV tlor'IICCI, -"":.::, :
In Z:.nllh olio - I n a
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82

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Presenters and pertormers
include ""· Klrstl!c Alley, Bea
Arthur, Mel Brooks,
Downtown JuMe Brown, Sid'
caesar, Alck Oees. Matt
Frewer and others. (2:00)
Stereo. D
QJ MOVII!: The Rotwn of the
Mulk....,. (2:00) Q
.·
12111 Annual Emmy
Auuardt for &amp;porta From
New York (Ll
e Larry King .Uvel
tl:30 C2le i1J OHr Jahn Johit
Hlks lielp breaking into a
aperm bank. (PI 21 (R)
·
Stereo. Q
10:00 (2)• I[J Quentum Leap
Sam ieapa into the lila or 1
New ·orleans brothel owner.
Stereo. Q

Home
IAIEIIINT
WATEIIPROOI'INQ

.

0

Serv1ces

flood

•

121 Nalh'llllo Now

Cindltloit. Call 301-41.1118. :

81

ACROSS
'1 Refrain
piece
61mp e ~
10Wadin
bird
11 Hag
12 Hoarse
13Bow
coating
14Some
poems
·1s Bull bull
16 Take lhe
trophy
17 Balling
stat
18 Conger,
e.g.
19 lebanon's
setting
22 Bric!ge
. coup
23 Diner
, oflering·
26 Mak driri'k
29 Palin- '
dromic
nickname
32 RNs'
coWorkers
33 Brunchec'
34like 0.
Henry
tales •
36 Twist's

American ComeQ Awerda

." A NeweR: Nar MUCH ...
N06T HO'Wt:G Ol.N'r
ORAW VE:I2Y WELL." '

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.

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.AKQ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

o NIQM Court Harry

IIl Cll • .., A-'

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CROSSWORD

rubs elbOws with the rich and
famous. Stereo. Q
&lt;Il MOVIE: Pride ill ·

.

••
.

SOU'I'H
+J 6 5.

Yesterday we looked at the basic
surrounding play. A defender holding
K·J·9 of hearts and seeing the-10·8·7 in
the dummy on his right, led the jack.
This collected three tricks when declarer held Q-5-4 and his partner A-63-2. Note that the defender must lead
Lhe jack. not the king or nine, to guar~
antee collecting three tricks. Today's
deal is a variation on this theme.
West leads Lhe nine of clubs, and
East wins with the ace. Seeing no future in that suit, East looks aro)llld for
something betler. Naturally his eyes
~light on spades, a logical choice since
South's two -diamond response to Stay"
man means he holds no more than
three spades.
If not knowledgeable about the surrounding play , East would switch to
the 5even of spades. But t~at gives d~­
clarer a chance. He plays low from
hand and West has to put up the king.
The jack of spades is safe from attack.
and three no-trump will be made. ·
Now look what happens if East
• ·switches to (he 19 of spades.l&gt;eclarer
will probablv win with dummv's ace

,

Maryland (1 :00)

'""*

- T·~4"'::'&amp;:'J..'":"u~
tl
.~1:00 Pll.

+9 874

Cll. DoGgie Hawur,

e:oo C2le

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M.D. Ooogle has trouble
deMverlnQ a premature .baby.

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8:05 til.MOVII: Conan the
· 1J8rbM111t (RI (2:40)

IOO&lt;E flt (Q\lSPIRAc:Y .

Q

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m"-,12:500,8....,.~

Hortdoo ClYte Wocan,
IUI-UoAIIIFIIII-Mita, ..cellent 1M Mila•...

itlJ G£T'11-t fE.WIJ3
SOit\EriMES 1l1A1 \l-IE EIGI{Tit~ .

MotorHomee

11 II. lcolilr, luU, oqulp- .
peel, raof, olr, .IIWrtlng. IM-251·

high

ID Exp •l!fllon larlh

campers&amp;

- ......., !.¥_.., __..., olr,
tiDOd OaniiOn, ....... · - ·

1NI Hortdoo -

lnterv~ country atars,
Including Chertey Pride,
(1:00)

1

24 II Pont- 10 HI'! Evlnrucu ~
IX40 Hot. Tninor,_~cucy 3S ,

•a 6 a
f42
+ .A10 ~

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By Pllllllp Alder

M,atwiH Acad8mlc

ii,OGo":i!::"eou....:IO oer ~ --=-=--:l-Ull::--::-':-:--:--=~ ,

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I I II TREE SERVICE.
Trlmm!ng, Tr11 - 1 1 ,
Fr11 - l l i l l ,

&amp;VIcinity

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1144Q.4212,

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I llcihl- blood 1110."'"~- 1 OUt.
11no,
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, IM-417-$404,

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7:31()) lanfonhnd Son
8:00 C2le I[J Unaatvect

11t 441 B72.

lop.c:.tll-7111.

£!$
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tK43

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3-2·1 Contect Q
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more advanced than theirs, hoW
come we don't have in-night

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"If our technology is so much

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i -T'I.V_E~I.~" r.,.l!i- .1Rir. -~tF

• Wootd Todl'
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1'14AT'5 GREAT .. WlolERE
DID '(OU AIDE IT?

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1
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low to ·rorm lour liiiiPio -do.

I!V!HING

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WED., APRIL 3

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, . Chivy pR II'I kll lena

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1• - ·
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ctor, 1 I!IIL. llltro'ol .U. •
lllnll 11.1100. l'l4oMI-4204, -

lhlnllly-

2 omeA bi1Cl., I J..,, I whho
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sc.--.

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be NI'IIH&amp;I:Ia a"' dlbl1 oeMr

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One letter stands for another. In tills sample A lsu~cd
for the three L's, X for the two O's, ttc. Single letter!,
apostrophes, the length and [ormation of the word! ~·c
all hints. Each day the code letters are different.
4·3
CR\'L'TOQUOTE

DU

DUFU

DV .KW
KG

LGVI'

DVKW
-

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SG

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: HE HIAT IS BUSY IS

TEMPTED BY BUT ONE DEVIL; HE THAT IS IDLE (IS
TEMPTED) BY -A LEGION.- THOMAHUI.I.ER

·E

'
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~16-The

Sentinel

BIG .BEND

.

.

f'i

Your Locally Owned;
1 ~ w.·,.
Low Priced Super:f!~arket 'I C••••lty

.

r

Ohio Lottery

l'fHL playoffs

•

begin; Bruins

Pick3: 494
Pick 4: 6331 ·
Cards : 6-H, 10-C

upset victims

s~n;

Super Lotto
29-36-37-39-41-45
Kicker ·
741304 '

Page4
· we Welcome
Home Our
Nation'8 Son8
&amp; Daughters. ·

•

•

Vol. 41, No. 243 ·

.

Copyrtghr.d 18111 .

.Tu~key Breast

··1 ·9

g· '

lB. .

'

.

Ch~nce or rain 80 percent. Low
tooiRhl in 50s. HiRh Friday in
mid-60s.

•

a1
From Our Deli
SLICED or SHAVED

Q.s

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.

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.

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 4, 1991

.

.

2 Bootlono, 12 Pea-• 25 ceni.
AMultimedia Inc. New~p~per

,

'

SEED
POTATOE·S,
.CABBAGE
PLANTS and
ONION SETS
·AVAILABLE

Man's family files 'suit against Riggs, Ha:rriS
By BRIAN J, REED ' ,
Sentinel News Start · ·
A civil suit has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Jason Riggs, Dougl!lll
HBJris and several others by the
family and estale of Victor Will.
Will, 82, was struck and killed
by a truck driven b'y Jason Riggs in
June, 1990. Harris was a passenger
in the truck. As a resull of the
impact, Wili's !)pdy was thrown
into the back of the pickup ttuck.
His body. w;ts then taken and
thrown over a creek bank near

.

•

Rich Peat
40 LB.
BAG

Chester. The body Willi recovered dollar amount was not requested in
the following day, and both Riggs the suit,' which · was filed on
and Hanis are now· serving prison Wednesday afternoon. ·
·
terms in connection.with the case.
According to the complaint, ·
The plaintiffs in the case - Riggs was "operating a motor vehiWill's daughter, Vicki Nicholson cle.. .in a negligent manner, and
· {who also serves !Ill the executor of negligently "exceeded tl1e speed
Will's estate) and Nola Will, the limit, negligen~y failed to maintain
.victim's widow- are demanding a safe speed for the weather and ·
judgment against six individuals:
lightning conditions then present,
Jason Riggs, his father, Kenneth negligently went left .of cepter, neg. , Eugene Riggs,his brother, Kenny· . ligenUy failed to maintain a proper
· Riggs, Riggs Ustid Cars, Inc., Har- lookout and an assured clear disris, and an unnamed defendant who
tance ahead, operated a motor'vehiallegedly furnished beer to the IS cle while under the influence of
year pld Jason'Riggs. A specific
alcohol, and negligently struck

.

..

{Wil))."

u,nderage and nevertheless fur - WiD's body was disposed of. JasO!I
The suit alleges that the Riggs' nished alcohol to him, the com- · Riggs' brother. Kenny is named as ·
family business, "Riggs Used Cars, plaint goes on to say.
a co-defendant in this portion of the
Inc. and/or Kenneth Eugene Riggs"
As a result of lhe incident, the complaint. The complaint alleges
were the owners of the vehicle
complaint states, the victim· suf- that Kenny Riggs "conspired with
driven by Jasoc Riggs at the time fered "severe bodily. injury and the !lefendants to keep the whereof die incident, and states that the experien.c ed pain and mental abouts of lhe body unknown ...condefendants kne'w or should ha"e anguish" prior, to his death. In addi- tributing lo the abuse·of lhe corpse
known that Jason Riggs was an
tion, "the decedent suffered severe and the emotional distress of the
"incompetent driver" and was neg- emotional djsttess and lerror prior plaintiffs."
ligent in allowing Jason Riggs to to the impact wilh the Pefendant's
"The actions of the Defendants
drive' lhe truck.
vehicle and upon the realization were inlentional, outrageous and so
Harris and "John Doe" (the indi- that he was abomto die."
disregarded the rights of lhe Plainvidual or corporation pr.oviding · . The plaintiffs also allege emo- tiff," the complaint continues, "lhat
Riggs with the beer) "knew or uonal d1stress and mental suffering the imposition of punitive damages
should have known" that Ri·ggs was as a result of the manner in which are warranled against them."
'

'

Commissioners approve_bids
· others will be re~ubmitted and Court Judge one thtee-yeanerm
reapproved on a monlhly basis.
holder. No more than two of lhose
Roberts and County Garage on the board can be elected offi- •
The Meigs County Commission- Superintendent Ted Warner attend- cials.
ers approved several bids for mate- cd the meeting and discussed a
Five members were appointed to
rials .for the Meigs County High- problem of mudslides in the coun" the board in 1982, but Housing and
way Dcpanmcnt when they .met in 1y. According to Warner, mos1 arc U~ban Dcvelop.mcnt (HUD) omreg ular sessi on on Wednesday in locations which make them the cials have indicated to the commisaflemoon.
·
. responsibility of lhc townships. The sioners that those terms were
.
Three bids - one each from commissioners thanked the high - expired.
Dravo, Ri chards and Sons and way department for clean up efforts
In other business, the cornmisQuality Stone - were approved for at the site of a mudslide ncar the sioners: ·
·
aggregate materials. The commis- county courthouse.
• approved payment for a scmisioners approved all of the bids,
Discussion wa~ held on possible nar in Columbus for Joan Tcwksleaving the decision of which to appointments to the Meigs bary ·and Kathy Cummings at the
purchase to Meigs County Engi- Mettopolitan Housing Authority, a Tuberculosis office;
·
necr Phil Roberts.
.board that reviews subsidized hous- ! · • approved paymcm for ttavel
The same approval was granted in~ applications and recommends 1 and expenses for t@ Meigs County
to both bidders on bituminous rental property for subsidized hous- Recorder and ht!t' staff for the
materials. One bid was received on _ mg use.
Sou!beast Ohio District Recorder's
bituiJ\inous products from Ashland
The county commissioners are Meeung m Lancaster;
.
. • approv~ payment for a stausPetroleum and another from responsible for appointing one indiAsphall Mal43als.,llle.:,J. ,: ,. ' """" .•. Yidtllll fot' a'· f()qr ~-.tcnnrAcldi-· . , Uul.tcpOt11Dg_semmar..foF County. ·• ·
· Richards end. Sons and United tionallt,' the' Mayor of the mo~r · Coorv·en~~~loy.ees Lmda Be01z and
Asphalt submilted bids for asphalt populous village m the county (m Pat Wolf; .
·
·
concre1e malerials,: at~d both bids, this case, Middleport), appoints
• approprialed $375 that had
again, were approved by the board.
two members for one-year renns; · been certified by the Budget ComThe bituminous products bids the Probate Court Judge one two- mission for use by the Meigs Counwere accepled for the year, and the year 1erm; an~ tile Common Pleas ty Common Pleas Court.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

,,

NESTLE INST~NT

Hot
Chocolate

BOX ·

·,.~o;.io-:t

.... '

.

IIIJ

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

By Charlene Hoenicb .
Sentinel News Start .
Dedication of the new Fits!
Southern Baptist Church building
located on Pomeroy Pike will be
held at 2:15p.m. Sunday. ·
· The Rev. Lamar O'Bryant, .paslor, invites the public to attend the
dedication ceremony and ~ open
house which will follow.
' Speakers will be Clifford Coleman, director of missions for the
Scioto Valley Association, and Ron
Martin, who heads up the Buckeye
~aptist Buildings which assisted in
framing the new 7,000 square foot
structure which is attached to the
original 3,500 square foot ·church
building constructed in 1982.
The facility will be open for
viewing by visitors during the
af1emoon and refreshments will be
served following the dedication
ceremony. Regular morning ser. v.ices will be held at 9:30, Sunday
school, and 10:45, worship service.
The 'new section includcs.l6xl8
foot classrooms for ages nursery to
to adults, as well as new restrooms,
an office, and'a '\,8x48 foot fellowship hall with a fully equipp.ed
kitchen. All of the classrooms arc
attractixcly dccorat.ed and furnished for the respective age
groups using them , and the entire
church i ~ carpeted. .
.

CAN

- IIII

Limit 2 Wit!) Coupon and Addltioned=•urchase. GolJd th'ru April 6, 1991
-

.

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

9

NESTEA

Tea
·Bags_

100 CT.
BOX

LIBBY'S

Potted
Meat
•

Polite roy Plk.e, will be (ledicaled at 2:15 Pr.m.
Sunday. The publit is invited to attend the ceremonies.

First Sot~thern Baptist Church dedication
ceremonies scheduled 2~·15 p.m. $unday

Armour
Treet 12 oz.
- -

'

. DEDiCATION·· SET SUNDAY ; Th~ First
Southern Baptist Church building, located on
.
_

3 oz.··
CANS

While the church building was
framed by Buckeye Builders, volunteers from the congregation and
others provided most of the labor in
completing the bu1'ld'mg. The con· gregation has a 'building appraised
. than a •••f-m1'U1'on dollars
at more
""' $130,000 plus
which cost abput
hundreds of hours of volunteer
,
·
labor,
accordmg
to the Rev.
•
O'Bryant, pastor •llr th. e past f'rve

y~ss a ~an of the lat;st proj~t, a

. I stri!cture .was
section of the orlgrna
renovated to provide a pastor's
office and conference room : which ,
also serves .as ~ Sunday school .
classroom: '
Besides the regular .Sunday scrvices pf th, e church, a variety of
.
o1hcr programs arc taking place rn
the church fpr both youth and
adults.
' nighl entire
·
On Wednesday
faroilies are offered special programs.
These include Master Life Disci-

a

....

boys first through sixth grades,
Girls in Action, frrst through sixth
grades. and youth groups for both'
junior high and teenagers. ·~ ~
In addition, the church has a
volunteer !Utoring program in
progress for studcius .who are havrng difficulty in some academic ..

~

LUCKY' LEAF ..

•
~

Cherry ·. 21 oz.
Pie Filling cAN

"·•
~

•

•"

I

~

~

~

..
••

•

·oreo
Cookies· 20 oz.
\

.
'

Local briefs.;._
· -...:..,

~

.g

HalUssues reminder on liquor salts
Daylight Savings Timei'etums to Ohio at 2 a.m. on Sunday,
April 7.
.
. ·
1o1m R. Hall, Director of the Ohio Department ~,&gt;f Liquor Control. reminds all liquor permit holders, "When the clock sttlkes 2
a.m .. it will, in fact, be 3 a.m., 30 minu1es past the legal closing time
for all permit holders entitled to be open,
"Therefore, all sales and consumption of_liquor mu~t cease at 2 :
a.m. when clocks should be advanced one hour," HaD added.

Name mystery farm winner ·
Marie Bush of 49740 McKenzje Road, Racine, was named. this
week's wipner of the Sunday-Times. Sentinel's mystery t)lrm contest. · ·
·
Mrs. Bu~h was one of 10 to correctly idciuffy the farm picture
which appeared in the Sunday paper as that of Robert Lee on
Bas han Road. Her name was selected ~y lottery because of the ties.
She wiU receiye a $5 check from The Ohio Valley Publishing c;o..
The contest is;co-sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Wah:r Conservation DislricL
··
·

.,

'&lt;

•

.

• ·.j,

J.

·G soJ"Ine
a
• .es t Uffi bJ e
PfJC
.
By WALTER
,. A'NDREWS

United Press lntetaational
Wholesale
prices
bl d
1U.S.
2 gasoline
t
11
tum
c
near
Y
ceo
s
a
ga
on
w·•
da af
· d
d
. ....ncs yrtedter 1an rn ustry
tra
' led . c
group repo
a ong-awm nse
in· imports,
leading
the drest· of· the
k · d
011"Gasolin'
mar et m ae ownwar
Jed the sprn.
marke1
down," said Tom Bentz, 'dircclor

~~~~~i~RT;;~ri~~b~fs~~~;:~g~ ~c~~~~"~t.~~~gr~n;~yu~n~r~~ ·

'

•

ar~as.

Two ccrtified 'teachers give
two hours each on Wednesday
even1'ngs help1'ng students who
have difficulty in reading and math .
The minister advises thai the
church is !\oping to have the tutor·
ing pronram
" . expanded to include
other subjects.

.
. '

•

.'.

matically and demand is kind. of
tapering off.' '
:
"fhe May-delivery futures conttact fon unleaded gasoline dropped
1.7 5 cents from Tuesday 10 65 .97
cents a gallon 00 the !\lew York
Mercantile Exchange, while the
benchmark West Texas Intcnnediate crude May contract slipped 23
cents on the day to $!9.47 a barrel.
The industry's American
Petroleum Institute reported late
"fuesday that U.S. gasoline imports
·last week surged to a daily ave~e
,0 f 535 000 b 1 f
119 o·
'
arre
s
rom
barrels the previous week ·and
205.000 a year a~o, ·

'Ohio House moves to end

common law.rna·rri•ages

.

.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) The Ohio House of Representatives
passed a bill Wednesday' that will
end the practice of common law
marriages in thesuue.
Rep. Ron MotU, D-Parma, is the
pr1'mary sponsor of the b"1ll and h••
~
been worldng s1'nce 1967 lo get a
bill of this type through the Legislature.
.
·
Mottl sa1'd common law marriagcs need to be eliminated to &lt;rive
.
. sh' .,. d
some cenamty to re1auon rps an
to eliminare instances where fraud
arises in settling estates. He said
people always attempt to get part of
an estate by clal' ming a common
Ia' w arrangement ex1·sts.
He sa'1·d that common law marria~es have been recognized since
be ore Oh 1·0 became a state. In
those days Mottl said
common law
beca
1
marriage,s wprked
use peop e

,

· •.
·
had problems getting to. churches ,
for traditional weddings.
In today' s modern society, he
said; there is ~need for common
law marriages . ause mostpeop1e
can easilr reach ministers~
Mou ·Said . 37 state
ave
already noled th1s and b nned
. C!)m' mon law marriages.
The House also considered and
adopted a bill to provide payments
of up to $500 to public employees
h
Ttary rcse 'sts and had
w o are mi. I .
rvl .
.
lhctr benefits mterrupted by bemg
called to activo-d~ty. The bill was
already approved m th.e Senate and
affects some 1_80 publ.1c employeesf .
who w.ere acttvated m support o
Operauon Dcsen Storm.
In other House action:
. .
-A bill was passed to proh1blt
h
1
anyo!le from recording
tc
ep
one,
·

d
· 1 sec ·1
cbe 1t carh or
socra
1cs r·•--• • un y ·nomh
rs· on c ec ts o '"'"" •Of
· pure ases or paymen ·
.
-A measure was approved 10
overhaul
d
f lhe way
h Oh10 ,handles
.
or ers rom ot er states •Or payment
spousals and child
Thof 0"'
1 support,
.
e
uro
enate
a
so dmetb'll
on
wd d
d
e nes ay an approve a I
designed 10 restrict automated tel~phone
caUs
by
f'
Af made
'
·d telemarketing
·
1
urns. tcr consr enng severa
amendments from the Senate floor
added to the bill it wu unanimous-

,
ly approved. The bill, if adopted in
the House, will set up a toll-free
number
mainianfed
·
I' b~r·the Ohio
Th'
attorney
venera
be · ~11 11 s o ICC. • IS
num r bl
w1 f a ow
' anyone, oor
th ' .a
reasona e ee, .o remove e1r
number
1
kfrom
· the
li list used by lhese ,
tc emar etmg mns.
...

Coal dust samples altered, Post reports&lt; '
. WASHINGTON .(UPI)_ Oper.
,.
ators of nearly half the country's
underground coal mines have been
tampering with dust samples they
send to federal safety inspectors
who determine miners' risk ~f· gett1ng black lung, The Washmg1on
Post reported Thursday.
_
Labor Secretary Lynn Martm
was expected io announce Thursday that the govemm~t will seek
civil penalties agajnst the operators
of more than 800 of the approxi·
mately 2,000 U.S. underaround
coal mines for tampering with. dust
samples.

In the past few months, federal Depar~cnt source t,old the news,
af .
h
t d paper. There are gorng to be some
mme s ety mspectors ave oun
vcr)r big fines.,
·
,
mo~ than S,IXX! incidents of sam- . According to government and
ph~g fra.ud, sa1d the !'~wspapet, industry sources, the newspaper
wh1ch cited u01dent\f1ed Bu.sh said lhe cost of shuuing down 8
admmlstrauon officials m tls min~ and making any necessary
report.
.
repairs to a vemilation syslem far
. In many cases, mme operators outweigh the cost of government
s1mply blew away or vacuumed lines
some of the dust ff!ll" gove!"mentThe Labor Department has the
approved samphng equipment authority 10 order a mine shut until
bef~re the .samples were ~ubmulC(I -~afcty corrections are made, ·but il
for ,r,n~uon, the Po~t smd,
cannot close an 'UIISafe fllCility perIts a test thai directly affects
tl
·
.
lhe lives of the workers," a Labor manen Y·
.
•

Move·.on·toprivatize county,
::0!~~;~~ei~;~~re~· city minim(lm security jails ,
..
re~::;1::;:!u~~1:a;;~~~~~~
.
transit to the United States were

.•'

The trader said the API statistics _
also indicated that daily U.S. gaso•
'··
•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- A offered lesllmony before thC seria!e between the profit motive of a p~­
line demand declined to 7:2 miJlion
barrels from 7.9 miUion in the pre- plan to privatize count_y &amp;J!d. mu.nic- Judiciary CQmmittee and called it vate cont{actor and the governvious week, .
· .
lpal minimum secumy Jails tn a poor~public JIO.llcy fot govcmmeniS .men.t '-s duty to ensure the fatr
Moreover, there is more than · cost-savir\g .move got harsh criti- to get out of the business of ilrl(&amp;i'· adminislrition of justice," he said.
enough crude on world markets, cism Wednesday by a union leader C\lfllting criminals. ·
•
Lauridsen offered eumples of
and Bentz saw WTI eventually_ representing worlccn wllo would be
·Lauridsen said the bill raises states that had tried privatizing
going below $18 a ti'arrel even affected by this proposal.
.several questions, including who jails. He said they heel problc1111
thougp he said it managed 10
D~yid Laundsen, .director of would be legally responsible and
with operaton bringing in priiOIIedl
"creep 1!ack up" at the elid o( legisfation for {)hio Council 8 of liable if 1111 inmaiCi escapes.
.. from odter slates to rail the ~
Wednesday's session after u'ading the American Federation of Stale; · ''This also raises a concern available so they didn't lose
.County and Municipal Employees, about the conflict of interest money.
as low as $19.37 a barrel.

.•

•

·

red'

•

'

---

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