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                  <text>/. • Page 14-TheDallySentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

,. I

17th Anniferctrf Sale

.,

Reds down
Houston for
win number2

HEINER'S OLD FASIIONED

BREAD

e Appraelata Our Caatomare

20 OZ. LdAF

...... .
STORE HOURS ,

· Pick3: 651
Pick 4:0047
· Cards : K-H, 2-C
10-D; 2-S
Super Lotto:
17-43-47-14·13-5
Kicker: 603978

Page3

Monday ., bq, Sunday.
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
• · POME·ROY, OH.

.PRICn EFFECTIVE APR. :7 THRU APR.

13, l

'

',..
r

FRITO~s •

'

·'

~meroy-MJddleport,

~ . Cop)ilglta.d 1111

Ohio, llnnday, Apr1111, 1991

BANQUET
FRIED CHICKfN.

" ·,

28-OZ. BOX
I

GRADE A

I.

I

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... '

·

_

._

(

Whole Chicken ••. :~. 49.
CHIC_KEN

·'

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Leg Quarters ......'!. 49
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
. L•. $ ,
q·
7
BUCKET
.
.
Chuck
Roast
•••••.••
;1 ·
49 USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
52
·
·
Cube Steak ••••••• ~·•.
9
9
'
·
R
ibeye
Steak
.....
o:.
SiJ
LOUIS RICH POUND ROLL
.La. $
l9
:Ground Turkey •••• 1

_

STAR KIST TUNA ·
6112 OZ. CAN
•

2/S.l
· 24 PACK CASE

ROYAL'
.
PRODUCT$ .
12 OZ. CANS

MR. TURKEY

BUN SIZE or REGULAR

.

· .

~

Wieners ••••••••••••L:~ ••
OSCAR MAYER .
.
. $ ~
79
. Bologna ••••••••••.•••~ 1

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'

$499'i

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.

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GOLD MEDAl·

FLOUR .

. KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIP
32 OZ. JAR \

·Bananas •••••••••• !~ .... 39(
FlAVORITE
2°/o Milk ••••••••• ::L... $149
.,

BORDEN'S

·orange Juice .•• :~:~L. $129

''

·
.
.
.
9
9
(
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I.
.Pr•ng es·...............•.
. oz.
$249
Cream
Ice
••••••••••••
STOKELY'S
BANQUET
Tomato·· Juice •••;:::. 59 (· yy· Dinners •••• !~!~:~ ..
KEMPS

.

6-7.5

5 QUART PAIL

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CLOROX BLEACH·

7
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7 "'"' • • 1), 1991

t I Per (UJtom•

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MT. OUVE

CHARMIN

DILL CHIPS

CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE

oz.

JAR

Gold Only

89(
At ,_..,

S... Valu

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GoM AarU 1 ttoru April
1991
Unit 1 ,.,. em·

12 lOLL

PIG.

$249

G6lil eAt ,•••.• Sopor v...
GotNI

·

. 7 thru AprN 13,1991

It I rtf Cult.....

.

DOMINO SUGAR· -

SLa.$169
BAG

Good
Good

Oft=I At7 thru
Powlll's Super Valu
April 13, 1991
it I Ptr Customer

INTERSTATE FROZEN

FRENCH
FRIES

3/Sl
RUMP ROAST

29

LB.

' USDA CHOICE

BEEF ROUND
ROAST

$229

~ Storni

.~ ;. eo~rth~use·· esti,m~~~-~-'-at,:$7,],00::

'

were

briefs-----.

LB.

deputies

see

.
Rutland man held on charge

,,

'

damage to former Meigs

Cable theft probed

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

2'

By MELINDA POWERS '
ing SCS the additional money.
Roxanoe Groff, Athens County
OVP News Staff
•
"I believe th81 we could do the member. "I am opposed to giving
An .emergency extension to revisions internally and ariate these people anymore money."
expand the daily waste intake of · some money ·for a consu tant for
"I think thev have a lot of 281110
the Gallia County landfill for 90 the director 10 work with," said
Continued on paae 12
days stili. has not been granted by a
S18te agency, a G~a County ofli·
cial said Wednesday.
·
Gallia CBunty Solid Waste
Director Doug Briggs told the poli·
. 'cy committee of the Athens..QalliaHocking-Jackson·Meigs· Vinton '
solid waste district 81 their regular
. meeting that his request for· the
extension from the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency has, so
far, been denied. .
"I submitted a letter to lhe·9.hio
EPA on Mareb 28 and have had no
decision back from them." Briggs
said at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. ''They hive told
me, however, that they would
review the request in a better light
if the Gallia County Health Department would draft a 1eaer of support
to be sent with the requesL"
emergenc;r project, and IIJ'Hd to speDd more
LANDMARK DAMAGED • This bulldlug
Briggs told ~ committee that
tbaa $7,000. to repair the damaxe (see related
Ia Qhester, wbieb served as a former Meigs .
he expected to meet \Yith the health
story oalhls page). The buDding, wblcb Is recog-,
Coultty CourtbOUM, nstaiDed seveu11hoUSIDds
department
this week to discuss
Dl2ed as the oldest staDdiDI courtbouse In Oblo,
of dollan In damace ddriag Tuesday aight's
such
a
letter.
DOW serves as a meet1n11 place for the Daupten
windstorm. Tbe Metas County CommiasiODers
In other business, the committee
or the American Revolution.
.
.voted 011 Wednesday to declare the buDdiDg an
agreed to pay SCS Engineers
$15,397 to adl,t Ohio EPA-suggest·
ed revisicns to the district's waste
GETS I'{E IN IIACE • Fermaa Moore, director of .., Melf
mana~ement plan. Although SCS
Unit
ottbe A111erlcau C•cer Society, ROIIDYIIIvecUD Wedrelllay I
· !lad Signed a contract to complete
Cancer
Day ,at Bll Bead FoOdlaDd Ia POmeroy, ulle !Uew a pili In
the plan and add the revisions, the
tbe
fau
or John Mauer, lasurauu 811Dlclll'itb.!Jae PoWJiiDt·
c'ol)lpany stated as early :as Ju_ne
a•lldi-MQJiea·Maaer
luearauee Co.;:•Y· S.yii'IJ ietiYitlel
1990 that lt-:llad•w- ·oMr tts
I
l
,
CODdueted
tllrougllout
lbe day tO
laoney tor tlae.tlllei"Iappwximate $170,000 budgeL
. By BRIAN J. REED
to apwove rmancing through bonds .
Meigs County Engineer Phil
CID
Cancer
Sodety.
Fqodlalld
doaated
nve
perceut ollhe day's
A few members of the commit·
-: . Seatlnel Ne'lfll Stair
.
of the new addition to the, Depart- Roberts reported t,hat Tuesday's
total
sales
to
the
American
Cancer
Society.
. ·
tee were staunchly qpPosed to giv·
•'
'
the Meiss County Commis- me~! of Human Services Buifding storm had left Meiss County's
sion~rs took emergency ~lion on in Middleport. The proposal of rural roads covered with debris,
repam1 of the foriner Meigs County Cential Trust in Middleport was and that county crews spent the
Courthouse in Chester during accepted. Central Trust agreed to · pmter part of Tuesday night clean·
Wednesday's regular meeting. ·
finance the cost of tho project, mg the roads.
I
•
Roberts also discussed a propos·
••
The building, now used as a ex~ to total $1.2 millton, at a
al from the Ohio Department of
. !l!ee~ place for, community orga· rate of5.52 percent.
m~uons such as the Daughters of
Ptl&gt;posed · financing was Transportation to repair a bridge
, the American R~volution, sustained received by the board from two near Carpenter in Columbia Town·
. roof damage during Tuesday other banks, as well. Bank One, ship. The state requires execution.
The Chamber's resolution states
as the lighted candy canes. to
By' JULIE E. DILLON
night's wind BDd rain storm.
Athens, N.A. submitted a proposal of paperwork on the part of the
the failure of American Electric
accent
the
business
district
during
Sentinel
News
Staff
James Kessce, a local contrac· of 5.85 percent on the total amount county and that. paperwork was the
Power (AEP) to install llerubbers at
the holiday season.
tor, was authorize(lro complete the and TbC Farmers Bank and Savings subject of discussicn.
the Gavin Plant in Cheshire would
No
action
was
taken
during
Bill
Sullivan
of
Sullivan
Dis·
No action was taken on the
, roof repair, replace the existing Company of Pomeroy agreed to
result in the loss. of the Southern
Wednesday's
meeting
!Qward
the
plays,
Louisville,
Ky
.•
explained
roof and repair a dama~ed ceiling finance up to $500,000 at a rate of request pending further r:eview of
Ohio Coal Company's operation in
purchase
of
the
banners,
or
any
1
terns
available
from
his
company
': in one of the roonis mside the 7.45 pcrccnL Home National Bank the document by the engmeer and pertaining to the purchase of addir other Chrisunas decorations, due to Meigs County. The resolution goes
: ~ding. Kess~ esilmated that the of Ra~in.e did not respond to the the commissioners.
tional Christmas banners for the lack of attendance by Association on to say that legislation is needed
•projCCt would cost $7,200.
·
commt~toners request for proposContinued on page 12
Pomeroy business district at members. Merchants Association which will not only allow AEP to
.: the commissioners also voted . als.
Wednesday's regular meeting of President Susan Ciarlc set a special recover the costs incurred in
the "P.,neroy Merchants Associa· meeting date of April 24 at noon in_ installing scrubbers but also to
the conference room of Bank One recover costs incurred by Southefll
tion.
at
which time a· decision will be Ohio Coal Company in. providing
The Merchants, along with
coal 10 the Gavin Plant once it is
made
on the purchase.
Bank One, pun:IIased 12 fiV.e-foot
installed. The resolution encour·
In
other
matters,
the
Merchants
Christmas banners last year for
ages
consideration of the human
voted
to
adopt
a
resolution
set
forth
Pomeroy and plalls this year to pureffect
of the closing of the mines as
chase additional banners for Court, by the Meigs County Chamber of
·
Jy BRIAN J. REED
de~elopnient practitioners" for · Kellogg -Foundation of Battle
well
as
the financial consequences
Comme~
regarding
the
potential
Second and Lynn Stteets. In addi·
~en tine! News Staff
Me1gs County.
.,
Creek Mich.
which
would
result.
Entitled "Leaders~ip 2000: ~
The session's three speakers tion to purchasin&amp; some additional effects of the '1990 amendments of
Mrs.
Clark
feported on the
banners.
Merchanu will the Clean Air Act as they relate to
, • Staff from _Ohio State Universi· Search for Excellence m the Public were all·associated with the OCES.
annual
fashio11
show to be held
Prior to· the speakers' presenta~~~IUCh
' ty's Coopemtive Extensicn Service Sector," 'the semiilar was sponsored
tomorrow
(Friday)
at Pomeroy Ele~
·· spoke 81 a WCllnesday seminar for by the Meigs County ~hamber of lion, each of the estimated 40 peomentary.
The
show.
"Heartland of
community leaders at Overbrook CoJ!Imerce, The _Metgs Cou~ty pie in attendance were _asked to
America, 1991 Fashion and Musi·
Center. The seminar is aimed at Offtce of the Oh1o Coopcrattve voice their wishes for Mef$S Coun·
cal
Revue." will begin at 7t30 p.m.
, developing a team of "economic Extension Service and the W.K. ty for the year 2000. Answers that
Those attending the show witt
were given reflected common goals
receive
a coupon package containand a wide variety of issues.
in&amp;
a
minimum
ol' $100 worth ol
Many of the participants were
discount
coupons
from panicipa •
concerned about education, reert·
ing
merchants
in
the
AssoqatiiJII. •
ational and vocational opportuni·
This
year's
show,
which carries
by
tics for the area's youns people,
a
patriotic
theme,
will
take on 0
while some showed an interest in
sltghtly
different
style
as more
development of the county's river·
The Meigs C9unty Sheriff's Depanment is investigating the theft
encertalnmm-t
will
be·
o(fertil
front resogn;es. Others stated that
of 1.000 ~ of three-inch diameter cable from Southern Ohio Coal •
throughout
the
evenin$..
:
the.y would like 10
an increase
· • Company. A.ccordinsto Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
Over
70
models
wtU
lake
to
th~
in both small businesses and larger
. · the cable is valued at $17,000.
\
.'
runway as they present what is
industries in the-county.
A report was n:ceived from Sandra Little of Middleport on Tues·
available
locally 10 garments and
Meigs Count)r Home Economies
day. who told the department that her residenCe luld been entered
accessories
selected from local
Extension Agent Cindy Oliveri, the
- and money had been stolen. Entry was made through the front doQ(. .
stores
or
created
from materials
fir.st speaker for the session,
. The department is also looking Into an incident on Tuesday
available
locally.
•
addressed the group 011 the subject
where a Columbus Southern Power Company transformer in
The
·show
will
open
with
the
of "The Nine F.orces Reshaping
, Pomeroy was shot at least three times,
presentation of the . colors by
America".
Pomeroy
Cub Scout Pack 2497
AccOI'ding to Oliveri,' the world
Sandy
Butcher
of Crossover Band
society in ihe 1990's must deal
will
sing
"Qod
Bless the U.S .A.
.
I
with an entirely new set of issues •
and
the
Trinity
Church
Choir wiU
John David Sj)rins. 19, Rutland, was arrested by the Mei¥s
including the rapid asing of the
~rform
a
beautiful
rendition
of
County Slteriff's Dep~Wnent on Wednesday evening on chalges m
population, the introduction of
Tl)is
Is
My
Country."
featuring
. Franklin County. He has been charged with breaking and entering,
technology into our homes and
Dixie Sayre, under the direction of
theft and failure to appear. Spriggs will a~ in Meigs County
society's new concern for ·public
LoisBurt.
&gt;
Court for a Rule 4 Hearing since he is wanted in a ll!ln-adjoinlng
and environmental bealth and oilier ·
Perfonnina
durinl
the
evcnins·
county. •
social issues. Oliveri's information
will be an ensemble from the
Also arrested on Wednesday evening was 20 year old Johnny
was culled from a study conducted
Shady
River Shufflorl and Ashley
Litlle of Middleport. Litde wu chlltjled with failure to control,
by United Way of America.
Hannahl
will be featured u a part,
improper handling or a loaded fimmlm a motor vehicle and reslstDavid Bootbe, 111 Associate
BANNERS DISCUSSED • BIB Slllllna of Salllv• DllplaJI,
of
the
xroup
when she performs alnglmst.
~
.
Professor at Ohio State University
LouisvUie, Ky., atte•ded Wedaesda:r'• re11ular meetiDI of tbe
solo
routine
to
"Y8llkee boodle." :
The c~ followc4 an incident 011 Wednesday when Little lost
Pomeroy Men:h•ll AIIOCiatlou to aplala hems available from
and Director of the OCES program
Other
performances
will b(
contrOl of his care on TIIUI Road and the v~icle skidded off the
"EXCEL", spoke to the community
bls COlBpiiiY perWDIII to the purcbase or addiUollll Cbrlstmas
made
by
Jean
TruslleU
who
wW do
baanen for the Pomeroy bualne11 dlltrlct. Here, SuDivu dlsDiaya
roadway. ·
.
leaders on some rl the critical f~·
a
special
musical
nwnber,
'and
also
• Little. ·who then ran fiOm the sheriff's cruiser, is now lodged in
tors fm successful development.
one of the nve-loot bullln available from the COIIIPIDY. Tile MerShirley Quickel and 1ulie Buck ot
Boothe's presentation brought ., cballti purcbued U live-loot buaen ft om tile compuy Iut year
the county jail.
.
.The
Dance Company who wiiJ.
out
the
imPOrtance
of
a
communi.
and
plaDJ
are
nDderway
to
pnrcbaddltlollll
ba·uen
for
tile
Collllnud on pagt 11
•
·
Condoued 011 pallf i:!
Continued on pallf 12
1991 bollday - ·
......... ....._'
·- ·-·-·- - · - - -+·-.-..---- ,. . ~ --.-·~-

~-Local

200Z. BAG

$_

landfill .limit request

-.

, Wishes, goals of leaders sought for
;future development of Meigs County

.$169
I.

....

Merchants view Christmas
ban·ne_rs; no action taken

5 LB. BAG

'·

.

·-

WATER or -OIL

1

..

''

$219,

p•per

No response to Gallia

. '.

.·

A Multimedia lno. New

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· 2 s.cUono, 1e P•llft 2s ......

.

:, Vol. 41, No. 241

79(

(

at

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REGULAR S1.39 PKG.

.

Low toalgbt ill mid-JOs,
Friday, dwlce or rain 70 per·
(tDL Pardy doudy.
'.

_,._ _

' 1,'(

�...
'

Co.m mentary
'

The Daily Sentinel

I ,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
~-

~IT't~

rT'--''-.....-1 r"TE!! c::l1o=o

~v
-

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
·
Publlsher ·

CHARLENE HOI!;FLICH
o 'e nerallllanapr '

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aulataat Publloher/ C.,.troller
A MEMBER of The United Piesslnternatlonel, lnland Dally Press
Association and the America n' N!!Wspaper Publisher s Association.

.

.

...
Page 2

LETTERS OF OPINION ar e welcome, They should be less than 300
words long. A)llelters are subJect to ~ling and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Thuract.y; Aprll11, 1111

Don't expect quick econ~mic reb~und
the p~ Gulf War will not net·

bocitsiraps are not .vailable. Feder- already paid for.yeani ago. M~t of

~· and state job programs and the weaponry was developed and
mcre~sed. welfare arc out of the stockpiled during ,the Reagan and
s•on. Peace and prospenty do not quesuon smce the federal govern- Carter years, and the war did not
go hand in hand .. There are too ment has blown the wad on defense last long enough to require a mas. many factors plaguing the economy Spending for more than a decade, sive re_jllenishing of those stock- quite se~ fro~ the war • to . and !IJe state 11!1~ local govemme.Jts piles. The arms m~~ are proud
expect a qwclc fix.
,
. .·
are m no pos1uon to come to ~- that lheit equipment was unbeatFirst, the bad news, then the bad rescue either.
able. But it performed so weD that,
news. Most ecooomists are predictThe Busb administration has for the most pa11; it doesn't need to
ing months of climbing unemploy- generously granted the states more be replaced, remodeled or
ment, flat personal income and autonomy in dealing with the social ~gned.
.
slack industrail production. The problems of their peo~le, except
In addition, anothet shot in lhe
housing industry, which normally tbere has 'been prec1ous little arm that a wer usually gives · mas'l~ads t!Je country out· of .a, re~es- money turne4 over with !bat auton- sive purchases of. food and ot!Jer
s1on, will be of no·help. Expect 11 to omy. In other words, 1t's every . services for troops- ended up bemg
stay in the deep freeze for months. · state for itself.
· a shot in the arm for f~ counTIIanks to the Reagan revoluWars are supposed to be good tries, including Saudi Arabia. Many
lion, the usual quick tixes that can for an economy, but' this war was of the purchases were made abroad
help pull the economy up by its
e~y mean an end to _the

reces-

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•

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By REBECCA KOLBERG.
UPI Science Writer
~~SHINGTON - Children should cut down on fatty foods to lower
therr risk of lleart dtsease when they grow up, but lhere is no need for all
youngsters, to undergo cholesterol tests, the government ~ommended
~onday.
,
In its ftrst recommendations·for children, the National Cholesterol Education Program urged cholesterol testing only for children wid! parents or
grand~nts who suffered heart attacks or orher symptoms of coronary
heart disease before age 55, or.those who have a parent with high cholesterol.
· I
Under the new guidelines, roughly a quarter of Americans between the
ages of 2 and 18 should be screened for cholesterol, said Dr. James Cleeman, COOr:dinator for the government-sponsored cholesterol program. The
cost of a routine test for IOta! cholesterol is about $5to $10.
About 10-percent of al~ cbildren and adolescents woul&lt;llikely prove to
~ave choles!efOII~vels h1gh enough tp require "medical intervention"
like fat-restriCted diets or cholesterol-lowering drugs, Cleeman said.
Cholesterol plays a role in heart disease by accumulating in deposits
that can gradually "harden·· arteries, making it more difficult for blood to
pass through. When blood supply to pan of the bean is cut off, a bean
attack occurs.
,
.
.
.
"The scientific evidence has convinced us that alherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) be~ns in childhood and that this process is related to ·
nutrition practices which affect blood cholesterol levels both in children
and in adults," said Dr. Claude Leofant. director of the National Hean,
Lung, and Blood Instiblte.
.
. Coronary heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United
States, killing about 500,000 people each year.
' 'If we could delay the Onset of heart disease, we could extend the .
. y~ or healthy .life for many Americans," Lenfant said. However, the
experts who cnw up the new recommendations offered no exact estimate
of hoW many lives migtll be saved if all children foUowed·lheir directives.
American children and adolescents tend to have higher cholesterol levels and higher intakes of saturated fatty acids aDd cholesterol than yoUths
in other countries, the panel said.
Children and adolescents with hif/11 .blood chol~terol frequently come
from families with a high incidence at coronary heart disease among adult
members, the panel said. High chole$terol tends to run in families due to
both genetic factors and factors in their environments, it said.
Studies have sha,m children and f.!.olescents with high cholesterol are
more likely to have 6k:\'._ated levels as !adults, the panel said.
In children, a total-cholesterol oount of 200 milligmns or more per
deciliter of blood should be considered high; between 170 milligrams and
199 miUigrams borderline; and 170 ilblligrams,acceptable; the panel said.
The panel recommended that all qbildren over the age of .2 reduce the
amount of cholesterol and saturated flit in their diets.
.
.
The dietary guidelines, identical .to those the government issued for
U.S . ad.ults about two years ago, inclllde:
- Saturated fat, like that found iri butter or fatty meat, should be less
than 10 percent of total calories. Currently, sa~ted fat accounts for
about 14 percent of a typical child's tOtal calories.
·
. - Total fat should avetage no mcire than 30 percent of total calories,
compared with·lhe 3S percent to 36 percent average for today's average .
youngster.
·
- Dietary. cholesterol should be less than 300 milligrams per day.
Although children and adolescents are eating on average less than 300
milligrams of cholesterol per day, the panel cautioned that "many"
youngsters still consume meR than that amount
.
·
.
The panel's recommendalions are not intended for infants from birth to
2 years of age because they require more calories from fat for adequate
nutrition. But 2- llld 3-year-olds should make the transition to the recom·
mended eating )lllterD as they begin to eat with the family.
.
"Eating this way is safe .- it supports normal growth 8nd development," Cleeman said.
Allhougb some doctors have called for widescale cholesterol screening
of children, Dr. Ronald.Lauer of the University of Iowa, whO headed the
panel, said his group concluded lhe risks of so-called univefS&amp;l screening
among people under age 18 outweigh the benefits.
' Noting that "quite a few" children wid! high cholesterol levels wiD
grow into adults with no choleste'rol problems, Leuer said widescale
screening of children without any risk factors for bean disease could lead
to needless anxiety and overuse of cholesterol-lowering drugs.

.,

..

BerrY'S World
.,

·•

,.

TOBACCo
INOUSTRV

NO SUING

.''
•

" ... And what with Mlchsel JICk$011'1 blllkln
dollar contract, I tlfiurs I diMe: ..., more

money/"
,i

\

.. ALMOST! - The Reds' Chris Sabo goes.
airborne to attempt a gl'ab or the .ball hit by
Houstou's Jetr Bapell, but the ball1ot throuah
, Sabo's 110ft 111111 made It IDto left fteld for a sfn.

gle - RapeD's flnl major-leape hit .:... in the.
fourth lnnlag or Wednesday night's National
Leagu~pme in Cilldnnatl, wblcb the Reds won
6·5. (UPI)

i

The ''pragmatic" president, who
seems more concerned with world
· stability than self-determination,.
has returned to direct our foreign
policy. Having incited the people
of Iraq to rebellion, lhe Ttananmen
Bush now watches, grave but
immobile, as .they perish at the
hands of Saddilm Hussein's
remainilig troops, ·
.
You remember tlie TiananJDen
Bush. He's the feUow who couldn't
rouse himself to support the Chinese students demonstrating for
democracy in Beijing's Tiananmen
Square in the spring of 1989. Let
historian Steven Mosher pick up
the action: "For two and a haff
weeks after the demonstrations
begaO on April 18, President Bush
duclced questions from the press on
the events in China. When Bush
finally allowed himself a put&gt;lic
comment on May 5, he may have
made matters· worse by implying
that the heroic young student
activists were merely unreasonable

malcontents.
.
On the night of June 4, Chinese
troops thundered into the square,
slaughtering and wounding thousaads. Yet e~ then, renwtably,
the presidenllllfuiiiCIIO lllte sides..
Secretary of State J.,..es Baker
merely deplored the outbreak of
violence (iinplying equal respansi·
bility on the pan of the victims and
the pemmenl) and called on the
)lllltles to settle their dlft'erenccs.
Now fast-forwaniiO the present'
and Usten to a sicteDing echo as
White House spokesman Roman
Popadiuk discounted the Kurdish '
rebels' ~qllelt for assistance in
. battling Saddam's stormtroopers:
"The issue of inlenlal unrest in Iraq
·is an issue that bas to be settled
between the 11.ovemment and the
people of lrlq.
.
But if internal unrest is not out_sider's business, why did Busb
bother to call for the overtlww of
Saddam? Or is revolt acceptable
only 81 die hands of an Iraqi gmeral who preserves the central gov,

ernment's unquestioned authority?
Even if that's the case, couldn't we
at least kept Saddam 's helicopters
on the ground to limit the bfoodbath?'
.
It's squalid, if you as1c me: The
United S'tates fi!Jhts for a Kuwaiti
emir and a Saudi king, then boosts
an Iraqi military coup while dis·
daining ~ular rebelliQn. But I
suppose it s not surprising. Bush
seems temperamental· repeUed by
popular movements wherever they
surface- unlike Ronald Ragan, an
·instinctive ins;:&amp;ent. Hence this
y with virtually
president's em
ailyone who holds power - especially if be's someone Bush personally knows - · from a decrepit
hood like Deng Xiaoping to a
major-league embezzler like' the
late Ferdinand Marcos (remember
Bush's extravagant 108St to Man:os
a few yean~ before his downfall?).
Saddam's mortal sin, in lh&lt;: president's eyes, was not so·· much ~is disreputable past as his decisi-on to
breach the frontiers of another

a

Legislators exploit loopholes_-__Ro_be_rr_wa_rre_rs'
'

'

WASHlNGTON • Based on the
events that preceded a recent junket
to examine the devastation in warravaged Kuwait, here's a fresh
report on the ethical conduct - or
lack thereof - of members of
Congress.
The all-expenses,pail_l, four-day_~
long trip was ~ized and spon- .
sored by Kuwait s embassy here in
Washington. Among those invited
to fly aboard a Kuwait Airline's
Boeing 747 were assoned corporate executives, international business consultants - and a dozen
members of the House.
But congressional ethics guidelines specifically prohibit legislators from accepting anything of
value - including the free tranS·
portation, lodginJ and food offaed
in connection w1th the.,trip - from
lhe goverillllent 0( another Jillion.
The creative lawmakers found a
loophole in the ethics code, howev. er, that would bave allowed them
to ~te in the junket - if they
em
from somewhere Ollllide
this country. To evade their own
regulations, lhey were prepared to
fly first to Montteal, where the
chartered Kuwaiti pllne would pick ·
them up.
The Canadian excursion· was
unnecessaiy, however, bec•111" the
lc-gisJ•IaS too11: lldvantage of another loophole. It allows corporations
to pay the bills of members of
Cc_mp who~ on "fact-finding"
The Fluor Corp., one of the
country's leeding lieavy construciion compaoies, igreed to underwrite the lawmakers' travel. They
all accepted .and expressed no
qualms about the IIIIIIJellleDL
Tbal episode OCCWied 1c:a tlaJ
a month ICier the dilmlyiJII conclusion of the Senate Ediicl Committee's invCIIiplion into the con·
diiCt of five senators who qgresI

.. I

.

sively intervened wjth federal regu- groceries, parking tickets, golf his campaign treasury ever since he i
laton on behalf of Arizona busi- · course fees, health insurance pre- was elected in the late 1970s.
. 11
- He·is a Republican; IIS'1II'C 10of;
nessman Charles H. Keating Jr., miums, utility bills, baby-sitting
after accepting $1.3 milUon from expenses and "pocket money."
the 121awmakers who went on lhe,
None of the contenders was Kuwait junket and all foftt House•
him.
Memben of the committee were elected. but they were following a candidates who converted political
reported to have been reluctaot to tradition established by veteran donations to lheir personal use. But ,
recommend any puniii.,e action members of Congress who long fou~ of the "Keating five" are-1
against their colleagues because have used campaign funds to buy Democrats.
'
Sleaziness among politicians-1
IIIey believed that no improprielies everything from cars for themalways has transcended party lines;,
were committed - a view not shared selves to clothes for their spouses.
· . Indeed, a ~ichigan congress- - and it endures throughout the,,
by most impartial observers.
. AlW 14 months of in~tion man recentlx was revealed to have clamor for integrity.
at an estimated cost of $2 million, paid himselfilimast $225,000 from
' •1
the ethics panel concluded that four
of the five accused lawllllken violated no rules Or laws and therefm
;,"
ought to receive only written
rebukes • a slap-on-the-wrist penalBy United Press lntern~tional ·
ty. A somewhat more severe pun.,
.
.
ishiJient, a reprimand by the full
Today
is
Thursday,
Aprilll
,
lhe
101stday
of
1991
with
264
~fol·,,
Senate, was recommended for the
low,
,.
/
fifth legi.slator. ..
The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
;;
But tbe committee purposely
The
morning
stan
are
Venus,
Mars
and
Sarum.
_,
·
limited iU orobe to a narrow review
The
evening
stan
are
Mercury
and
Jupiter.
;
of wbether any laws or rules were
broken. It carefully avoided any
~ born_oo lhis date are under ~ sign of Aries. They include :.
Amencan statesman and orator Edward Evereu in 1794; Supreme ,,
broa:r c:ll8l1liMtion of the morally
Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes in 1862; statesman Dean Ache- •.
questionable relationships betwee_n
members of Congress and theu
son_. secretary of ~~~ under President Truman, in 1893: fashion
des•gner Oleg Cass~110 1913 (age 78); Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen.:··
benefactors.
Robert F. Kennedy,m 1928 (age 63); and actor Joel Grey ia 1932 (age ;:
Meanwhile, Common Cause
reports that other members of
59).
....•
11
Congre1111 have emlnced a scheme
On this dale in history:
:
:.c
to evade all federal restrictials and
In 1947,1!1Ckie Robinson became lhe fust black in ~jor Ieaaue :
reponed requirements while collecting money from corporations, · baseball, playmg for the Brooklyn Dodgers against the New York Yan- Z
tees in an exhibition game.
·
~
trade assoriations llld others.
In 1951_. President Truman 1111ieved Gen. Douglas MacArthur of his ·;~
. Those politicians are relying
command m Korea.
·
.,
upon ''back JIOCk"'t" Ulicll action
In 1968, President Johnson ordeied 24,SOO miliwy tCservisls called =!
committee~ that ~ to bave no
up, half of them for duty in Vielnam.
.,.
interest in federal elections and
In 1970, the Apollo-13 spacecraft was launched from Cape
therefore a not governed by fedCanaveral, Fla., oo the third U.S. moon-landing miSsion. The attempt ' :~
eral law. Instead. ibe PACa are diswas aborted when an oxygen tank exploded, but lhe astronains safely ).,
aui!ed If state-level operations.
reblrRed to earth.
l"
Finally, four candidates for
In 1987, South Africs, exrending a nine-month-old state· of enier- ;~
HOUJC aeau (two in lncllana and
gency, baned all
:i
two in North Carolina) in last
. proteSts on behalf of political detainees.
.
autumn's elections are 111vealed to
A th:1htfor
_ the day: President Johnson once said, "A president's ::t;
have Used campaign contributions
hardest
is·not to do wbat is right but to know what is right" · '
•'1
.Cor auto and mortgage payiiJe_n_tsl

Today

in historY

~

HENDERSON TAGGED OUT - Minneso·
ta's Chuck Knoblauch (11) runs down Oak·
land's Rickey Henderson and puts the tag oo
'
.

him for the out in the fourth inning of Wednesday night's American Leape game in Oakland,
Calif., which the Twins won 4·1. (UPI)
•

.MSU player ll"aigned on drug charges _
&gt;

.

" G~AJ:ID RAPIDS, _~c~. (UPI)

- Mich1gan Sta~ Uruyers•ty basketball playc:c Parish Hie~ and
another man are charged With conspiring to seD an undercover agent
about 2.2 pounds of coc
. aine for
000
$28, . ·
. . . .
~lanan, 21 , a _cnmmal JUSbCe
IDII,JOr from Detrmt, and Maunce
Pmnter, 22, a non-_student from
Southfteld, w~ arrwgned Tuesday
by U. S. ~1strate Hugh Br~nneman _Jr., who ordered_them_Jwled
pending a Thui'sday bad heanng.
The 1":'0 were arrested on the
East Lansmg campus Monday after
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent ' Even~tt Gay
negotiated ill an off-campus
Wendy's restaurant to buy the
drugs, Gay said in an affidavit.
Police estimated the street value
of tbe drugs at $100,QOO to $200,
000.
No drugs or weapons were
found on Hickman or Pointer,
according to State Police Lt.
Charles McCord o( the Metro Narcotics Sq!IBd. But Gay said a third
SUsp!tl, who was not named iii the
rr~. "fled on foot into a dormi-

tory" with the cocaine.
If convicted, Hickman and
Pointer face a maximum of to 40
yean~ in prison.
Hickman, a 6-foot-7 forward,
· ·
tant
b
r th
was an •mpor
mem er 0
e
Spartan team that tied for lhird in
the Big Ten Conference and won
,one game before beipg eliminated
in the NCAA tournament's West
Regional last month. He averaged
6.0 points and 3.7 rebounds in 30
games this season.
MSU basketball coach Jud
. Healhcote said he. would withhold

s

Spor"ts brl·e"s
I:
Boxing
Actor Miekey Rourke's .scheduled debut in May as a professional
boxer is not the certainty that he
seems to think it is, Florida Athletic Commission executive director
Don Hazleion said. Rourke, 34, had
announced his plan to debut as a
professional boxer on a May 23
card at the War Memorial Audilllri, urn in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. To
make the super· middleweight (168
,pounds) fight, he would haV'e to
apply for a waiver.

•••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••• •

SPRING VALl FY CINEMA
446

451~

'

,,
I

comment "because of a lack of
information ." John E. Denbow,
MSU' s assistant vice president,
said there is no indication that the
university is the subject of the DBA
probe
Offi.•c•"als also said the Hiclcman
case is apparently unrelated to the
cocaine-related arrest Sunday of
MSU football player Carlos 1\.farino,' a senior also majoring in criminaljustice.
Marino, of Detroit, is charged
with possession of 3.S ounces of
crack cocaine with intent to distribute the drugs . He is free on

bond.

$3 . 00
.
13.00
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT\IRCAY &amp; SUNDAY
BAAGAIN NIGKT TliESiiAY

LAST CA~YT.:.===:::=====!
KEYtN COSTliER In "IWICES WITH IIOI.YES"
IL._ _ _ _,;,;;:.;.:;.;..;
7:30 RATED (PG -13) ,,;.

------.....J

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Spdrts Writer
It shows you where a little intelligence wiD get yoQ.
·
Scott Sanderson;·the recipient of
post-game praise Wectnesday from
opposing hitters for his strategic
aJi'P.roach to pitching, held Detroit
h1tless for eight complete innings
en route to a 4-0 shutout of the
Tigers.
"He pitched a very intelligent
game," Tigers outfielder Lloyd
· Moseby said after Sanderson and
Greg. Cadaret combined on a onehitter. "He used a lot of llrains. He
pitched outside to the left-banders
and iiiSide to the right-banders and
said, 'Go ahead, pound it into that
wind.'''
Sanderson, a right-hander making his ftrst appearance with the
Yankees after arriving from the
Oakland Athletics in an off-season
deal, had his no-hit bid dashed in
. the ninlh when Tony Phillips lined
his first pitch for a wind-blown
double off the glove of.right f~elder
Jesse Barfield.
·
Sanderson said he thought
PhiUips' high fl)' ball was going to
sail into the right field seats.
"As soon liS they hit the ball I
thought it was a home run," said
the 34-year-old pitcher who deponed in favor of Caderet after surrendering the hit. •'In fact, a couple
balls they hit I thought would be
home runs.''

The game sWied in 42-degree
temperatures that felt even colder
because of a $tiff wind blowing to
right. The wind held up balls hit by
Detroit's Cecil Fielder and Moseby, and blew an upper deck ~ot by
Mickey Tettleton a few feet foul.
"I don't want to take ' anything
away from (Sanderson), but you
can't 111ally judge a pitcher's performance in weather like th1s, "
said Detroit manager Sparky
Anderson.
,
"I was loolcing fcir six or seven
innings out of (Sanderson)," said
New York manager Stump Merrill,
"but I kept him in because 9f lhe
no-hitter.'
Sanderson said he threw more
fast balls than usual because of the
cold weather.

VCR-TV
Repoir Center

"It was .a tough day to play pitched' lhe ninth for his first save.
baseball," said Sanderson, who is ROOkie starter Jose Mesa. 0-1 1 took
playing for his fouth major-leagu~ the loss.
club. "1 don't think I threw a
Continued on page 4
breaking ball until the fifth innint&gt;Ji
I just tried to let them hit .the
and hoped somebody would catch
The D~ily Sentinel
it" . '
New York's first two runs off
(UIP&amp;UMtl)
Detroit starier Walt Terrell, 0-1,
A lllvllloo or Mllltlmtdta, be.
were unearned. The Yankees added
Publlshed every afternoon, Mon&lt;11y
two more runs off reliever John
thr ough Friday, 111 Court St., 1'&lt;1meroy, Ohio, by tho Ohio Valley PubCerulli in the ninth.
llahlne
CompuyiMulttmedta. Inc.,
The Yankees purchased SanderPomeroy, Ohio 15719, Pb. 992•n\ll. Seson from lhe Oakland Athletics lin
con4 cl&amp;!IB postqe paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
DeC. 31. 1990. He posted a 17-11
record with Oakland last .season.
Merilber: United Press Internaunnal,
Inland Daily Press AIIOCiatiOn and the
including a 3-0 mule with a 1.04
Oblo Newspaper Alaoctatloa. National
earned-run-average against Detroit.
Advertlalni' R~retentatlve, Branha m
Els-e where in the American
NNrJIUIPf'l" Sates. 733 TJdrd Avenue,
League, ToroniO lOPPed Boston 5- New York, New Yorit 10017.
3, Chicago blanked' ~allimore 2.0,
POSTMASTER: sOnd addr"' ch&amp;nliOI
Kansas City cUpped Clev!lland I.(),
to The Dolly Sontlllol. 111 Court St.,
PoiROI'oy, Ohio e781.
Milwaukee shut out Texas 6-0,
Minnesota dropped Oakland 4-1
SVUCBIPTION RATa
IJ Can:t•
Roote
and California sank Seattle 5-3.
One Week .................. ..... ,...........h .fO
Blue Jays 5, Red Sox 3
Oae Month ................... .. ...... ......kill
One Year ................................. . uo
At Toronto, Pat Tabler coUected
BINGLE COPY
his fltSt hit as !I Blue Jay by slugPRICE
ging a three-r!(n homer with one
Dlllly .. ...... ..................... " " ' 25 Ceittt
out in the bottom of the eighth
Sublcrlben riot detlrbl• to pay the car·
inning, lifting Toronto. Rookie
rter may -remit In advance dJreet to
Mike Timlin, 1-0, earned the win in
The Dally se.ttnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
baiLs. Cl'edlt will be 81ven carrier eadl
relief and Tom Henke pitched a
week.
.
scoreless ninth for his second save.
No t ubocrlptlono by mall permitted In
Jeff Gray, 0-1 , suffered' tl1e loss for
areas where horne carrier l f!I"VIce 11
Boston.
avaJJable.
White Sox 2, Orioles 0
Mall"S....rlp&amp; .... ·
At Baltimore, Gi'eg Hibbard
"IMidollolp Coolllly
· allowed three hits over eight
13 Weeko ............................ .... .. t,ll .IIC
26 w..u .................................. $0.16
innings an4 Scott Fletcher deliv·
52 Weeko ............. ........ .. .... .... .. . IIIC.76
ered a two-run double in the sixth
Oolllllo Mo&amp;p CeulliJ
·
to lead Chicago. Hibbard, 1-0, . 13 weou ..................................m .ICI
26 Weeko ..... ................... .... ,..... $15:!10
struck out four and walked four in
52 Weeks ............................ .. .... $81J.ICI
eight innings. Bobby Thigpen

or-·

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•

1

.

IQ Oil Can Boyd. .
Doclpn 6, Bnves 4
At Atlanll, Tun Belcher pitched
seven strong innings and Darryl
StriWberry drove ill twO nms in his •
Los Angeles debut. Belcher
allowed four bits in ·seven -llld one·
third innings to earn the victory. He
struck out ftve and did not walk a
batter before John Candelaria fmisbed fot lhe save. John Smoltz suffered the loss.
··
.· Reds fi, Astros 5
At Cincinnati, Chris Sabo belted
a two-run homer in the seventh
inning and Todd Benzinger drove
in' four runs to rally the Reds, Ted
Power, 1-.0, who relieved starter
Jose Rijo in the seventh, pitched
one inning for the win , Randy
Myers struck out three over the
ftnal two innings for his .lir.it save.
Darryl Kile dropped his fltSt start
for the loss.
PbUiies 8, Mets 7 (10 inn.)
At New York, Lenny Dylcstra ·
scored. on a fielder's cho•cc_ground.
out by John Kruk in the lOth inning
to lift Philadelphia. Roger McDowell, 1.0. pitched one and one-third
innings of hitless relief. Jeff Innis
took the loss.
Padres 4, Giants 3
. At San Diego, Fred. McGriff and
Jerald Clark each hit two•run
homers in th.e San Diego vic lOry.
Kevin Mitchell was ejected in the
fourth inning for charging the·
mound after he was hit in lhe foot
by winning pitcher Bruce Hurst.
Crail! Lefferts earned the save with
one mning of relief. Bud Black was ·
the loser in his first National'
League start

New ·York blanks Detroit 4-0

.•

member of the world's club of
· rulers.
.
.
This sympathy for the )lowen
that be also explains the aclminis~
tration's immoderate tilt towarc:l
~ikhail Gorbacbev, despite the
fact that the Soviet ruler now trashes internal reform. Boris Yeltsin,
meanwhile, urges a popularly·
elected ptesil!e'nt' (~liic~·· m~r­
. bachev) opposes), Jl!lVate ownership of land and quick transition to
a rnm:lret economy. So how has the
Bush administration -treated
Yeltsin? It has all bl,tt snubbed bim.
Consider what the State Department' s ~garet Tutwiler had to
say about the Kremlin's refusal to
issue a permit for pro-Yeltsin
forces 10 demonstrate in Red
Square: "It's no different than our
own country. If a country wants to
have a demonstration here in ·
Washington, D.C .• they have to
apply for a permit"
·
Spoken like a true disciple qf
lhe Tiananmen Bush - for whom
the only good revolt is the one
that's just been crushed.
'

,
the stan Of the niilth innin . Smith
gave up two hits to the !'frst two
batters he faced, then struck out
Bernard Gilkey and in~ Pedro
Guertcro to ground into a double
plar,to preserve the shutout.
'I didn't want to swt ·out fust
and third, nobody out, fust time in
a CUbs uniform but it worked out."
said Smith, one of three free ag~ts
signed this winter by Ch~o. The
right-hander picked up h1s first
Chicago save and 200th of his
career.
. .
Jose DeLeon, 0-1, who led the
National League with 19 losses in
1990, took the loss. serving up
seven hits in five innings.
The Cubs took a J.() lead in the
third. 1erome Walton beat out an
infield single tmd reached lhird one
out later oo Marie Grace's single.
Walton then scored on George
Bell's sacrifiCe fly to center.
Shawon Dunston doubled over
. center fielder ~ilt Thompson to
open the Cubs fourth and scored on
Scott's rust major league hit, a sin·
gle to left, for the 2.() fead.
Elsewhere in the National
·League, Pittsburgh topped Montteal 6-3, Cincinnati outscored Hous· ton 6-5, Los Ange•es beat Atlanta
6-4, Philadelphia defeated New
Yorlc 8-7 and San Diego handled
San Francisco·'!l-3.
Plrate116, Expos 3
At Pittsburgh, Bob~y Bonilla .
went 3-for-4 with two RBI and
Zane Smith combined with Sian
Belinda on a seven•hitter to lead
the Pirates. Smith helped his own
cause with a double, a run scored
and an RBI forccout The loss went

Though Sanderson's no-hit bid fell short,

Bush lets Iraq foil rebels _______. :. .:.:Vin. :. :. .:ce;,; .,;.:,nt_.; .;Ca; ;.,l;,}ll.:. n~

mtSSIOIIS.

~
C 1W1.,.NU. ~. f/A

and paid for by tile allies. ·
:
The end of the war broug~t
instant n~lief from high oil prices,
but that may be short lived. Sauili
Ambia has a huge war debt to pay '
the United States and will start
pushing oil prices carc:fully Blld
slowly higher. It will take years
before Kuwait is once again a reliable oil producer.
;
The one bright spot is that a
quick and spirited war will inspire
consumers to come out of t6eir
bunkers and start spending money
again. The bad news i~. if they
don't have the money to spend,
there will be many purchases on
plastic. Factories won't mind the •
buying spree, but .consumers can't
afford 10 increaSe the level of lheir
debt. If the consumen are smart
enough to keep their credit cards in
their wallela, then economists wiD
continue io blame them for the
receSSiOn ~~~~se. Of the precipitoUS drop in spending. Never mind
that there are good reasons for
putting away the wallet
' . ·
Consumer confidence is the tail
lhvaa d!e cqmri¥; dog.,&amp;:011.
.thoUgil tliit confidence, admiDistra•
tion economists believe, will
rebound in the wake of the success,
• ful war, the ~-driven booni
of the 1980&amp; IS not lilr.ely to repeat
itself in the morning-after days of
the 1990s. One-of the main reasoQS
is the huge buildup of pubUc and
private debt in the 1980s. That wiD
constrain spend:ng for years to
come. Americans have been
spooked not only by their personal
debts, but ~ the excessive govern•
merit p u g of the Reagan yean~ .
While recovery may be around
the c0ti1Cr, it wiD be weak and ane,
mic compared to the recovery ~
began in 1983.

'

nie Timlanmen Bush is back.

United Press lnternalional
· Gary Scou cracked the ball and
so weD in spring training, his fust
hit in
rnijor leagues was no big
deal.
·Scott, who split last season
between Class A Winston-Salem
and Double A Charlotte, batted
.366 this spring and smaclced his
fitst major league RBI single
Wednesday to spark the Chicago
Cubs to 1 '2.() victory over the St.
Louis Cardinals.
Based on his spring petformance in the Cactus League,
Scott's first liit was more of an
expectatiOn than aeelelntion.
"The guys were razzing me this
morning, saying that when you get
your fltSt hit, You get the ball and
I'm saying 'yeah, really?" ' Scott
said. "When I got a hit, they threw
the ball into tlie dugout. I think it's
still in there.
''They did give me a ball and it
said fust major league hit - ' m-e~-o-r 1-i-g-u-e 4-11 ·91' so it was a
JOke. They dated it all wrong and
messed it up.''
The rookie Scou hasn't messed
up in the infield. fiandling third
base duties, he was dazzUng defensively on two double pl,ays. ··.
''I thought I. was comfortable
yesterday but in compariso11 to
today, I was deflllitely much more
relaxed," Scott said. "Yesterday I
had more butterflies but I tbillk
everybody has butterflies on Opening Day."
Greg Maddux, 1.0, allowed five
hits over eight innings, before
being relieved by Dave Smilh at

me·

1ack A-,ulerson
and Dale VanAtta

Panel says kids should
also cut back on fats
;

Scott's RBI single h;elps Cubs
to 2-0 win over Cards; Reds win

The Dally_Sentln81

Pomeroy Middleport, OhiO

wASHING'tON - The end to

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Ohio

.

.,

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~~~~·..:.....;_~~!!!~!!!!:.:__:_...:.,....~--~The~~~~::!.. ~: ·

..

~

rNormari.,- Ballesteros ·eye Masters title
.

.

.

'

By DAVID MOFFIT 'j
ing money winner 011 ~U.S. Tour "Before, I did!t'l want to play golf · straight Masters crown - and
.
UPJ Sports Writer
last year with nearly $1.2 milli011 • . and it sbowed. Now I'"' ready to some of the other top European
'
It
,
AUGUSTA, Ga. -It's wider· "In recent weeks, I didn't want to step J.-J.
'-"' m.
·
golfers, is limited in his play in Ibis standable when former Masters play golf- and it showed. I felt
NOI'IUI, wbo lost in a playoff • . country because of an unwiUini·
stars like Arnold Palmer and Gary like I had been bum~ out for quite the '87 Masten and missed by a ness to commit to a PGA Tour "'in· ., '
P)ayer no ·Jonger are considered awhile."
siitglc lbot of being in 1D01ber in imum (12)number of appearancea. /0£
serious contenc;ters fQf lhe chan!pi·
But Ballesteros and Norman
1989, says be crCJteS unneeded
But that doesn ~ l mean Balles- : ::.
onship. .
.
i
both ~sl$1 they've come to Augus- pessure 011 bimJclf: "My expecta- · r.eros bas slowed down very niucb. · ·
. Their time is past.
• · ta as born-again golfers.
·
be llid. "have aiWiys boen .A fat her for the rtrst time last · ·. ,
. tions,"
hl""- · " - ......... ""-y .........,;,be." .·
''I hav~ a good feeling about ·
· Whill is llardet io 1!1\dentaDd is ·
- u•• ..,_ u"' ..........
August, he still plays in at least 2S · ' ··· why recent solfmg greats SJeve ..this week," Ballesaeros Slys. "It's
BallellaQI, winner of~ than. toumam~ts a year. .·
·. ··• •
, Ballesteros and Greg ~orman IBisb ~n quite a Ions lillie since I've . 60 toumliDeilts oveneiS- includ"I've had the SIIJIIe schedule for ,. •'
are not expected to be among the been feeling .this way, btit I really ing three Biililh Opens, appa(ed the pasno years," Ballesteros ' •. '
leaders in this week's Maslm. '
feel good. My game .is sharp .and I in only eisbt U.S. events last year said. "It means traveiing all over ·"·!·:
"Maybe I don't view wi;J.ing feel very confident....· ·,
· · . and in two prior to the ~ Ibis the wald and with all ol the com· · ':·
.
the Masters as urgently as ~-did . 'Norman sings much the same year.
.
·· .
milmeQIS I have elsewhere,"! lim· • '
. before I won it twice (1~80 , tune .."! feel al!)t more relaxed
He. like Nick Faldo of England · ply can'tlie myself down 10 as · ··
,198.3)," .says_Ballesteros, ~just· . · after .taldng a week off," he said. -, who is goinl! Bflrl a record third. many U.S. tournaments as die POA : .
turned (Tuesday) 34-year,old
would lib." ~
.
·
· SjJallianL who plays inftequentl_y in
~· European
And, as Ballesteros noted, die . ::,:
. the States these days. "But I !still
.
.
'J
.
golfers aren't as dep!n, , •. , .~.
come here to win, not io finisb ;~­
. ,
dent on· die U.S; Tour as IIIey 1111111 . •
ond;diird,flfthorwhatever." I' ·
AUGUSTA, ,Ga. (UPI) -lack disappointed. I wouldn't have Slid to be baCk in die days when the (a. ·: ·' "
Since his lir$1 victory in 1980, Nicklaus still plays to win.
·
that-the last couple of years."
. oign purses were minuscule in : '.:
Ball~ has been one of the big
"I ean't approach any touma- · Nicklaus won. his sixth Masm comparison.
~~
1
· attractions at A!l«usta ....... .as much ment any oilier way," the 5I·year· champi_onihip • two moi'e than sec- · In his nloSt lucrative yell: 011 die
for~ flamboyant style of play and
old, six-time Masters winner said . ond· best Arnold Palmer • five · U.S. Tour,l987, Ballesteros earned "' '·
movie-idol dark look as for his on die eve of liis 33rd appearance years aso at age 46. He has not $305,00!! in Ibis country. ~ nex1
scoring. But although he has been in the fJISt of the year's four map .• won on the regul8f PGA Tour year, while held to $16S,OOO m the .·,
'fifth or beuer seven limes in the golf championships.
· ··
since, but be has won three .Senior · United States by his limited appearJl&amp;'l 11 year8, it's been .eight years
" Being setoncl a worse is nota events since joining thaa Tour last anees, the long-hitting Spaniar!l ,
since he last won.
· ·
l&lt;loal," lie said "I always feel ihere year.
·
Clltlle.d more than $800,000 over- . ~
"Others may find that ac~pi· ts only one winner. The rest,
"The -courses and die competi- seas.
able, I don't,'' Ballesteros said. "I whether there are 87 others like we lion may not be as tou&amp;h, but win·
· Ballesceros says it doesn'l both- ,, ., .
come to Augusta to win, not to rm- have here or ISO others as we have ning any tournament helps r,~ur er him that ~le are writing him , .'
ish among the runners-up.l"m a . in some events, are all losers." ·
confidence," Nicklaus said. ' I've off rell8tding his chances f!lr win- ·
'Jitde tirell'of seeiQg that happen the
Nicklaus, fresh off Sunday's liee!l playing
docent this
diis Met's Mastm. .
, '
FIRST ~STERS APPEARANCE - Roc:co Mediate, making . last few years."
. .·
come-from-behind win in the spring and
_. I'm I
g. forward, to
. 'I doll'l care
_ \¥hill peq&gt;le wrjte .- _,,
·his-first appearance at the Masters, unbags his extra-long putter •
Nonnan, 36, never has won the Senior Tradition, hesitated w)len · this week." .
about me," be said. "If it's SOOd, .. ,.
he gets ready to putt the On!ll b.ole ot a playo" for the par-3 ch_ampi• · Masters, although he was fifth oi asked if he really felt he Could win , Nicklaus was tied with eventual
If it's bad, I don't reslly read •. ••
~DSblp.Wedn~y. Mediate took par on the bole to win thecbampl- · better copsist~ntly fro111 1986.·89
this week.
winner NickFaldo U:~tbe fu~l . it anyway."
·
'," .
oDSblp. Masten play wiD
ioday. (UPJ) .
. .·
· .
. . before failing to mat~ die cut last
"I honeslly feel I can,' ~ he holeofdle.fmalrounclmlasq~ears
And,~ as for his own feeling ,_,. ,.
year.
.,
,
replied. "I feel I have a SO-SO Masters,.but wound up sbooling a . aboul thts week's chances Ballei- . .. ..
. . "I seem to have lost some o~:::l chance and I wi)l not be surprised 74 and finishing sixth.
·
t~ros said, "I have a feellns my ·•.
'.
desire of late," said Norman. · • if I do ·win. If I don 'I win, I'U be
biDe must come very soon." ·
• •
.,

.

Nic. Ida. us stillpla"S. to win

i4 rebouo.ds per game and plans to
visit Ohio State by die end of April,
said Yates ooach Walter Johnson.
Williams, who averaged l;l 'points
.and 6..5 rebounds per game, also
plans to visit Columbus ~is month..

•

6 PC. ·GUN .CABINET
·.· PINE

..

.

•

· ~evin _Appier
.· combined pn
Kansas

11:33 a.m. - Tom Watson and
Ronan Rafferty.
·
';; (limesED'I).a-denotesamateur:
11:41 a.m.- Mark O'Meara
:;
8:45 a.m. -Lanny Wadkins and Donnie Hammond.
.
·-:,~Jodie Mudd.
.
...
II :49 a.m . ...:. Ben Crenshaw
8:53 ,a.m.•·'- Tom Sieckmann and Mark McNulty. ·
, ·. '· ·•
- and Loren Roberts.
· '..
11:57 a.m~ - Seve Ballesteros
9:01 -il:m. ,- John Inman and .· and Marit.Calcavecchia. .
.
12:05 p.m. ...:. Mike Donald lll!d
· ·~ Ftankie Minoza.
9:09 a.m. ·- Billy Casper and Billy Mayfair.
,
12:13 _P.m.-. Ray Floyd and
. bougFord.
. . 9:17 a.m. -. Scoll Hoch and · Steve Elkington. ·
•· 'Ken Green.,
12:21 p.m. - Larry Nelson and
,.,,., 9·25 am - Sandy Lyle and Rocco Mediate.
•:·r~ Schu~ · · '
.
12:29 p.m. - Curtis Strange
,;,;~ 9:33 a.m. -· Jim Gallagher and and Steve Jones .
' Jim Benepe.
. ·
. 12:~7 p:m; - Wayne G~y and
'; 9:41 a.m. - Tommy Aaron and Bill Bntton.
.
Qay Brewer.
·
.' 12:45 p.m. -Fuzzy Zoeller and
''' 9:49a.m. -Bernhard Langer:· Jan Woosnam,
. . .
.
and Oil Morgan.
r
·
12:53 p.m.- Larry Mize and a9i57 a.m. - Charles Coody and Rolf Muntz.
. · .
-. Manny Ze~.
·
t;Ol p.m. -Jack Ntcklaus and
' 10:05 a.m. - Lee trevino and a-MichaelS ..Combs.
. ·
.
· J:09 P-~· - Jumbo Ozaki and,
, -Tim,Simpson.
10:13· a.m. ·- Gary Pbiyer and Wayne LeVI.
. . . ·· . ,
· ·Jeff Sluman.
1:17 p.m. - Davtd Frost and
_10:21 a.m. -Tom Kite and Mar~25Brooks. N' k Faldo and
Brian Tenn~son.
.. _ ·
.1. . p.m. tc
a, 10:29 a.m; - . Paul Azinger and Phil Mickelson.
. .
··John Huston.
·
. .1:33 p.m. -Scott Stmpson an(!
·;· "''10:37 a.m. - Craig Stadler and Nolan Henke.
.
. ..
Nick Price'
1-:41 p.m. -. Tommy -NakaJuna o... ~~- 10:45 a.m. - Andrew Magee and Corey PaYin.
.
"and Billy Ray Brow_n. .
I :49 p.m. - Davts Lov,e and
'. '. 10:53 a·. m.- John cook and Stev~Pate.
.
Ian Baker, Finch.
.
1:·57 J?.m. - Hale Irwm and
· 11:01 a.m.-GregNonnanand' Jose-MariaOlazabal;
.
Fred Couples.
·.
2:05 p.m. -GeOrge Atche~· and
11:09 a.m. - Bob Tway anll . Don Pooley.
'Peter 1acobsen.
2:13 p.m. - Mark McCumber
· ti;17 a.m.- Arnold· Palmer. and~obenGamez..
.
and a-James Stuan.
2.21 p.m. - Chtp Beck, Moms
11:25 a.m:--. Joey Sindelar and Hatalslcy,and 1ay Don Blake.
Kenny Knox.

Fruit . - """'rlill Tr••;

....... -.'
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FRIDAY 8 A.M. Til 8 P.M.
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0 LOOO
0 1.000
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Folag1 ....... lasbts, · ·
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~
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�Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

Thurad!y, Aprll11, 1991

.China

announc·es b-id
Com'!lun~st Party prf!perty, power
=-~~·=--..::.for 2000 OlyMpics · .

Minsk strikers want to end
MOSCOW (UPI) - Sttike
leaders in Minsk vowed to spreid a
work stoppage through ithe
Byelorussia and demanded an ~
to Communist Party control of Stale
positionS in the republic, the SoViet
media said Thursday.
i.
In an ominous development,
!nlerior Ministry trQops "~
m lbe sueets adjacent to (Mins!t:s)
central square where thousands of
sfrikin$ WOikers had gathered .tter
D)arch~ng defia"tly from factory
gates m the second day of !the
strike," the official" news ageilcy

tass reported.

•

: ·"The Minsk strike commiUec
I)Dnounced an intention to be4!in
~arations for a republic-wide
jlohtical strike," Tass said. r'It
~ an ~ ~ the Byeloius~ people to umte m the drive for
a better life·."
·
Alexander Muthin, leader of the
Minslc strike committee, told Soviet
television Wednesday ilight that the
labor protest would spread across
the western. predominllljdY Slavic
·republic.
.
"We conttol the situation in 98
percent of Minsk enterprises,"
Muthin said. "We have a suite
committee that was elected by the
w~rkers. ~n two \o three days we
will organiZe a strike committee for
all of Byelorussia."

By The Bend
•.

The activists called for a republic-wide ge11eral strike to be$in
. BBIJIIIlG (UPI) ~ em- ctfi- staged wltbout disruption, lllhlera, ]KIIIDd - exp.tliSMg "support and
.April 20, the Russian Infonnat1011 'Gorbacbev than their Ooudlla bis
Agency said.
..
pwpoaed IIIOrliiOrium- on all politi- cials Th~y lawlched Beijing'a ~iall and ~~ from ~- ~y" Ill die Chione&gt; Olympic
cal strikes and demonstrations formal bid to host the -2000 lieipldJII countnes voiced a wide Conimillce.
- -·
The strikers, who we~e demandGorbachev is also·the bead
· ·• ~~~ and brusbed off coocem array of complaints over inade·
The officials also dismissed
ing hi&amp;Jier pay and the resignalioo
era! secretary, of the Com:!u~~~ '~ m1g_ht be der.ailed ~y human qUite _fac~tiea, poor food, sloi!PY concerns that Beijing would~ .
or the !Cpllblic's president and pre- . Party,
.
.
nghts ISiues, 88)'1111ll0lilicl woold orgamzauon and often draconian hard· pressed to finlncc a mukibil- ,,
mier, suddenly broadened their
.
The
tens
of
thOusands
of
work
not in~uence the fnternational security IIIC&amp;1UMS.
.
· lion-dollar Olympics, hintilig ~
demands to include an end to Comeis
had
originaiJ.
walked
A
-j
OlympiC
.Committee.
.
The
Games
also
did
ncit
inclUde
broadly that wealihy H011g Kong, ,
munist Party domination of all siate
4
to
demand
hJwagea
~
The
bid
~as
8IIIIOUIICed
by
.Chi·
V.:estem
.'?Our~
that
~
main·
T.
aiwan ·and overseas Chi~ese , ·
bullies in the republic and to
persate
for
an
average
perccbt
nese
OIYD!JllC
Comml~
P!esideot
we
~
agamst
China
for
its
wou!d
be called on to contrtbute ,\
natiQnalize party property, Tass
60
mcreases
in
die
price
of
consumer
He
Zbe~li8ns
and
BeiJIDI
Mayor
use
of
military
force
to
cNJh
the
,heavily._
..
said: .
goods
The
renewed
die.
Chen
X1~ns.
who
also
lOOk
the
~
pr&lt;Hiomoaacy
protea11
in
Funding
was
a
problem
fur
the
The new demands amounted to
action
·w~a
with
die
u
work
opportunity
to
defend
8tr011Jiy
the
1989.
Those
nations
continue
to
Asian
Gamea.
Although
officials
lbe first all-out labor 8S88ult on the
strike in Minsk. Y
general guvmunent's violent crackdiJwn in · attack Beijing's dismal human
denied it, .there were widespread •
Communist Party. which. despite
.
.
credible JeportS that Beijins resi- ,
Strike· organizers said the June 1989 on pro-democracy righ1Sreconl
losing its guaranteed polilica1leadByelor·ussian goverament had ~pnsntors·
.
&lt;lien, ~ key figure m the c:n"· deniS wae fon:ed., don* money .
ershlp role in March 1990 has conV.:e have officially ~t up a . down, cued the International and llbor and mate mmlaiDry pur- •
tinued to bold the major economic refused to begin talks with them
In oth~ labor problems . , t commiltee. to l!lan our b!d• and Olympic Committee charter and chases of BOYenunellt·boads to offand bureaucratic jobs throughout
ISO,OOO CQai miners at one:ro~ w~en the _ume 11 IJi!P.fop~te we ~.lid the .10c:s site selection set ~ coet.
the country, in effect the levers of
power and wealth.
of tl\e country's 6.00 mines will submit II! official ~licatlon . . should n«,,lle influenced by polit. ~e ~ill~~ ~Uite fulld·
·
remained
on
strike
in
the
sixth
_
to.
the
~ternaiion;al
OI)'IIIJI1c
~ical
factors.
.
.
.
1ng,
sa!d BeiJing V1ce Mayor
The other two new demands
were equal opportunities for all week of. their labor protest to !Dittee, Chen said at a news briefHe. aliso an ~~- ~ pres~dent, Zhang BaifB:
.
.
.
.
.
as~ the parnc1pauon of roc
The. ofticials said they wae for·
·political fortes to use republican demand pay bites. The most radi- mg.
Chen .Sild China would subnut President Juan Antonio Samaranch· mulatmg a bid strategy but .
. television and radio, holding a cal miners in lbe Kuzbass of
em
Siberia
and
the
Ubaine's
i!S
bid by the ADril 1992 deadline · and other Olympics
at last
appeared to have no concept of
round table meeting of political
bass
coal
fiCld
continued
to
call
f~
and
conceded
olf'ICials
had
"a
lot
year's
Asian
Gamea
meant
China
why Beijing should be chosen
parties, the formation of an interim
~f work to~·: before the decision ~!l~e lbel989 stigma.
above other pole!ltial sites. Bedin
coalition government to promote Gorbachev's resignation."
In an ominous devel
t for IS~ m 1~3.
. The tntemauonai community
and Athens are believed to be ·
national confidence and the reaigcomChmese officials ~ve ~pt an !8 full_y aware of die social stability
among the other possible connalion of the leadership of CO!llmu- . ·Gorbachev some of the
e~ on lbe 2000 OlymJI!CS II1I!Ce die m China," he said.
tenders.
..
nist-dominated Byelorussian trade mittees in the coahegions sent
unions.
resentatives to Minsk to join
~id-19~ ~ hsve ta1im the pubHe claimed S81l!81l111Cb sentbim
.. CO.C Pr~si~ent He cite~ the
Slronl! aspnnons of the Chinese .
The strikers' singling out and labor protests in Byelorussia Qc postUre thell" hand was stlalgtb- a telesrant on June 7, 1989- three
end to Communsit Party power and repcllts Said.
. · ' ened by Beijing's hosting of the days after the crackdown and the ~e" and the fact that China is ·
1990 Asian Games in September.
day Chineae trooPs fired on a for'the world's most popuiOWI counBut while the Games were eign diplomats' ~idence com- try. ..
·

c!:.

.'!'0

'f:::

officu

:0

':fe

.

· Commllrtlty Caltrtdar Items
apJifiJT two diJys before art tvtrtt
arul tlte day of tltat """· l~ms
m111t 1H i'ectlnrl well bt adrartct
to assllrt Pllbllcation In the ealertdar. · '
·
·
'

. THURSDAY
PORTLAND • The Freedom
Gospel Mission Church will have
revival through Saturday at 7 p.m.
nightly with Rev. Junior Conger
from Sandyville, W.Va. Pastor
R.•G. WillfQrd Sr. invites the. pub-:
1IC .

POMEROY - The Preceptor
·Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
· p.in. lit' the · Grace Episcopal
Church. Officers will be elected.
Hostesses 8J"Il Charlotte Elberfeld
and R~rtll 0 'Brien.
SYRACUSE - The April meeting of the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities will be held
Thursday at 7 p·.m. at ·carleto.._
School/Meigs Industries. ·

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SECR....,r"W"''ARY'S .DAY

COTTO NElLE

""1·...

APRIL 24th.
Remember Your
Secretary at ~ruth's
•BALLOONS
•FRAGRANCES
•RUSSELL STOYER
CANDIES
"'·'::..... ·•PRECIOUS MOMENTS

·NAPKINS

'

140 comn

14"x50" WOOD FRAME

DOOR MIRROR

·a9(

-- - ·- - _________,__________ _

@

--.. --

·-···.

MANY OTHEI Gin
IDEAS TO CHOOSE FIOM

oz.

Ladies group meets
· The Tuesday's Ladies Gulf
League will hsve its frrst meeting
and play on Tuesday at 9 a.m. at
the Meigs County Golf Course
(originally Jay. Mar). All lady
1101fers are welcome.

_M ______________________ _

-

O~LY $3 9 5
FROM SAME NEGATIVE 136mm ONLY

I

tl1ru APRIL 14

OPERATION
DESERT

CRUTCH.
RENTA'L
IS FREE

$199 -

STORM

.

.

12

TIJPPERS PI;AINS - The TUP.pers Plains VFW Post 9053 ·will
meet Thursday at 8 p.m. (Note the
time change).
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange. will hold an open
meeting on Thursday: Poduck din·
ner will begin at 7 p.m. with an
auction following the dinner.
Friends and neighbors ~ invited.
CHESTER • The Shade River
Masonic Lodge No. 453, Chester,
will .meet Thursday at 8 p.m. All
master masons are mvited to attend
and refreshments will be served.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will

i

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·wE HAVE OPERATION DESERT

'

STOIA' COLLECTOR CARDS

•
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364 JACKSON Pill '
GAWPOLIS, OH• .45631
(614) 446-6620

786 ·NOITH SECOND ST.
MIDDlEPOIT, OH. 45t60
(614) 992-6491

~

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••

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the First Baptist Cnurch of ·
Pomeroy on Sunday will be Pastor ·
.Eddie Buffington. Services.begin at ,
POMEROY - Guest speaker at 10:30 am. Pul)lie invited.

Come See
Mannington Gold
And See Yourself Jn A

Mannington Gold is arevolutio!WJI.
-.inyllloor !hat breaks !he shine bonier.
Mannington Gokl resists scuiTs, scratches and dents
to keep shining long after other floors have: lost their
luster. And nobody reslsts sutlns better or comes widt
astronger guaranttt !han Mannlngwn Gold'.
·

$25(ffi
·

'
tchen.
Drear11 J&lt;i

· Take a look at Mannington Gold btfort April
30th and you could wi.n S2J,&lt;XX&gt; for your Drtam Kitchrn, '
plus we have sptcial offers on a Belter Holl\eS 6r Gardrns
home decorating video•. Mannington Gold. A
siUnlng example of what afioo&lt; shouk\ be. And
adrcor.uor's dream come tNt.
•§er us lordnalk on lhr Manninglon Gold DKor1uJO
CileW!rfand ~·s "No Quaounf/Uiu:d"

. -.

See These Participating Retailers:

INGELS CARPET·
175 N. 2nd AYE. • MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEROY · - The · Meigs
Genealogical ScX:iety will have a
workshop for beginning genealo-

992-7028

,..•,

'

Women'.s fellowship
has meeting recently
The Meigs County Women's
Fellowihip met recently at ·the
Bradbury Church of Christ with .35
present
·
The minutes of the previous

3 49

REG.
15 :99

3.29

•
BAG
PINE BARK NUGGETS or
MINI NUGGETS

TURF BUILDER"'
PLUS HALTS ·

PINE BARK MULCH

3 cu. ft . Helps retard weeds .

1

3 cu . ft. Gives landscaping a
well -groomed look. Conserves soil
moistur~. adds organic value .

Lawn fertilizer plus weed ,
crabgrass pre"Yentj!r.

PIULOSOPHY OF MANNERS: Mill MuM, lbe syndicated
etiquette columnist. has ~clilely ~the academic worl~ to
coacclltra~e m""' on the
graces. "Ph11olopllers_ are not payma ,
enough attention to mannen," Mias Mannen, a.k.a. Judith Martin,
said Tuesday in addtell to the ~
Depdaent at Jolllll Hop' kina Utlivenity in B1lll!l!tJI'I. Sb4~ Je lile IDVClll modern eli.
....., tbal aile "¥elY mndt Ia need.bf plillc.opbical ciarificaqueae such aa as 1111w 10 dell wllll ttl r"' •~~~,~Woalq machltlea. ID;.000."
1114 people wbo IIIII die television rCIIIOfiC IXIIdlol. s&amp;e ·
!lCffl"' .... Clll be b...W llwqb - - 11w "E•rc;.Ia lllllftlly W111ii l'llift' bec111• It mlllt
· lib Into ICc tU• tbe
of
',pi! effective tiel and 10 on,"
Miss Mannen said, "and 10 the adlptlcill n slow."

:t=~to
•

•

34.99 ~~~~G.

1.79

40 LB. ORGANIC PEAT

·cOMPOSTED MANURE or
POTTING SOIL

BARR BUCKS SETTLEMENT: !lmeeiiM Barr has sealed her ·
multimillion- dollar po_st-divorce disllute with former husband Wlllllm
Pentland, who claimed he~ up hJS career to belp hers. A.statement
said Barr ·and Pendand conSidered the settlenwnt to be a · ·~pnv~;per~
sonal and confidential matter'~ and no derails were announced. "The
settlement was reached Qtrough friendly negotiations and was fair to
both parties," said a s!Btement released by Penlland's lawyer, Mama
Mitchelson. and Barr's attorney, Arlene ColetDIII-Scbwlmmer. Pentland originally had asked for '!alf of the asaets ~~_Barr accumuiat-·
ed during their 15·l: ml~Tl?age, plus $IS million 10 damaB~ I!Dd
another $3 million .
Barr s new husband, Tom AI'IIOid, claimmg
that Arnold's influence led Barr to end ber busineas and pcnonal relationship with Pentland in 1989. Pentland said he sacrificed his own
·career to manage Barr' 1, acted as 1 homemaker for her and helped
develop and wri~e. her c~edy material. including the top-rated
"Roseanne" teleV181011 senes.

Scientilically blended lormula for
more vigorous plant growth. Helps
to loosen harclened soiL •

40 lb. Composted manura for planl
growth. 40 lb. All purpoSe polling soli .

2 GALlON

1

G~LLON·

SPEEDY GREEN
ROTARY SPREADER

5.000 aQ . fl. Use when planting
seed, sod or plugs in a new lawn or
when over-seeding an existing lawn.

Wide swalh for rasl coverage or
large lawns. Sturdy wheels Easy

'2 GALLON ASST.

. 1 GALLON ASST.

EVERGREENS

AZALEAS

AZALEAS

EVERGREENS

lEG. 9.99

lEG. ..4.99

lEG. 7.99

lEG. 3.99

3.50

6.77

2.99

1.·so
'

5 GALLON

.

EVERGREENS

RHODODENDRONS
no.

29.99

bel"'

99
1·9

_ALL TREES

ASSOITED

lEG. 11.99
&amp; 10.99

20°/o·o,,

988

LARGE SELICTION OF
SHADE &amp; FIUft TIHS

ChooH fr0111 Arboryitae, Yews, Juniper•

'·

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA...,;.GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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A Lenten Film presented by
Father Walter Heinz preceded the
recent meeting of the Catholic
Women's Qub of the Sacred Hean
POMEROY - The Grubb FamiChurch.
ly Singm will appear at the Laurel
Ann Layne presided at the meet- · Cliff Free Methodist Church at 7
ing in which Barbara Mullen give
the hospitality repon and Jane BeeJie reported on the ways and means
committee and craft circle. Mrs.
Elsie Sutherland gave the card
cammittee report.
Upcaning.events include a con,
firmation retreat on Sunday from 26 p.m. with confirmation on April
23. A reception will follow honoring Bishop Ottenweller and the
confirma,tion class. First,commu,
nion will be held on Mother's Day
on May 12 and a breakfast will be
served.
· The Women's Club will host a
DeaJtery Workshop on June 22
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
·
Diana Bartels conducted the
program with a presentation of
"The;Lady in Tears." ·
HQstessea for the m~ting were
Marii'yn Poulin, Susie Stewart,
Grace Wise and Teresa CICIIIeans.
. Tbe next meeting will be held
Tuesday with m8811 1¢ 7 p.m.

By WILUAM C. TROTf
United Preu IDternatiGDal

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2501 JACKSON AYENIE
POINT PlEASANT, WY. 25550
(304) 675-2303

·-:-·r:omirioE

People in the news- ·2.29BAo

•'

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.DnAILS AlE AYAILABLE
AT EACH STORE.

oz.

"RlJTI.AND - The Rutland Baseball League will hsve a final sign·
'up Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
sponsor a round and sqlllft dance at the Rutland Civic Center. There
on Friday from 8·11 p.m. Music by will also be a sign up for junior and
the Ha{w Hollow Boys of Athens. senior girls.
The public is invited. Those anendREEDSVILLE • The Eastern
ing bring ~nacks .for the snack ·.
High School Class of 1992 will
table.
present "Skinned Alive" a comedy .
HARRISON'v JLLE - Revival at dinner theatre. Dinner, 6:30-7 p.m.,
the Harrisonville Holiness Chapel consists of barbecued chicken,
will be held.Friday tbrougb.Sunday. potatoes, vegetable, roll, cake ·and
at 7:30p.m. nightly. Rev. Robert drink. Play begins at 8 p.m. The
Wilson will speak. Rev. John dinner costs $8 and tickets for the
play only will be sold at the door
Neville invites the public.
'
for$3 .
RUTLAND - The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR,
BASHAN - The Red Brush
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Church of Christ on Bashan Road
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber in · will"hsve special services on SaturRutland. A program, "The Early day at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 10
History of ZOAR" will be present- a.m; lind 6 p.m. with Denver Hill of
ed .by Mrs, Carl Horky. Hostesses Foster, W.Va. Public is invited..
·
are Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Virgil ·
Atkins, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood, · · TUPPERS PLAINS - The TupMrs. Steven Jenkins, Mrs. RoQert . pers Plains Ladies Auxiliary 9053
Jewell and Mn. Dtlyton Parsons. .
wm have a spagbetti dinner Saturday beginning at 4 p.m. Cost is
REEDSVILLE - Fellowship $3.50 for adults and $1.50 for chiiChurch of the Nazarene in dren under 12.
Reedsville will have 1 gospel sing
LONG BOTTOM - The Mt.
on Friday featuring the Kelly's at 7
Olive
Community Church will
p.m. Rev. John Douglas invites the.
have
a
hymn sing on Saturday at 7
public.
·
p.m. Pastor Lawrence Bush invites·
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will the public.
be a round and square dance Friday
~- coUiuiy music
from 8-11:30 p.JII. at the Tuppers·
Plllins VFW Building featuring night will be held at the Lottridge
Foggy Moun~ Drifters. Ronnie Community Center on Saturday
Wood will be the caller. Public from 6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments will be available. All bands
invited.
welcome. Public invited.
.SATURDAY
SUNDAY
POMEROY • A bake sale will
POMEROY
- A 12-step AA
be belli Silfia·dliy' begimiingllr 9:30"
meeting
will
be
held Sunday at 7
a.m. at Big Wheel by the United
p.m.
at
the
JTPA
office in
Methodist Women of the Rock
Pomeroy.
·
S!?fings United MC~llodist Church. ·

gists on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
M~gs County Museum.

Money raised

11114 FOR

APRIL 8

p.m. on Saturday.

meeting
read by
Charldinc
Alkire andwere
devotions
were
by Ann f~pr:ev=en~ts~s:oril~er~os~io n.~::.§i
Lambert and patriotic songs were · .
sung.
·
Lynn Runyan closed the program with a solo, "God Bless
·America."
.Refreshments were served. .
· The kindergarten class at MidThe next meeting will be held at
dlepon Elementary recendy participated in a "Bunny Hop" to raise ihe Dexter Church of Christ on
money for Leukemia. Those chil- AJI!il 25. Stir-fry cooking will be
dren obtaining $ponsors raised a ~strated by Kathryn Johnson.
The public is invited.
totsl of $490.28 for the project

I PHOTO SPECIAL

"ENLARGEMENT SPECIAL

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE ··
LOTION

celebrating its first birthday Sunday
during its regularly scheduled ser·
vices and special singing will. be
featured at both services throughout lbeday.
Cake and refreshments will be
served to everyone attending, ·
. Hillside Baptist Church was
~lished Nov. 11,1989 and preVIOusly met at. the home its pastor,
James Acree.
·
· .·
Tbe public is invited to attend
this celebration.

0

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churchs first
birthd{iy to be
observed
Hillside Baptist Church wiU be

.IS

4 ROLL PACK

99&lt;

will be _held at the seniQr citizens
center m Pomeroy on Thursday
from 5-6:30 p.m. Cost is $U:J
penon. Menu ·includes oven
chicken, mashed potatoes and
gravy, green beans, cole slaw, biscuit and beverage. Pie is 75 cents a
slice. Entertainment by Junior and
Rita White, AI Windon and Ray
Ward. Public invited.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
REEDS VILLE - Revival Gospel Church in Long Bottom
through Sunday at Eden United · will bold a hymn sing on Friday at
Brethren in Christ Church. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. featuring the group, '"Traveacli evening. Bob Wiseman will elm' On." Pastor .Steve Reed
be the speaker.
invites the public,

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Thursday, Aprll11, 1991

Community .calendar

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Page-7

Catholic women
meet recently ·

0 FRUTH PHARMAC.Y C
0 ~ fJ STORES ~~ C&gt; ~· 6

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POMEROY • An evenins diner

!AT YOUR 3 AREA

T.he Daily Sentinel ~

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Page 8 :rt1e Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

Thu!!d!y, Aprll11, 1191
'lbu!!d!y, April 11 , 1991

Gorbachev proposals coul4 'destabilize' country

Belli says real inventor
of radio starved to death

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Tbc plan Ia cxpecred to be preA senior administnllioa official · Gorbachev's warning against
United States, edgy about growillg sented next week to the Soviet Par- said the United Sta~e~llld ill West the "disintegration" of the Soviet
tensiops in the Soviet Union, liamcnL
European atues lbue "a certain Union came 11 the southern repubwamed that Mikhail Oorbacbev's .
While the adminiatration coolin- anxiety lbout developments in the lie of Georgia declared its indeilen·
continued attempts to silence his ucs to suppon Gorbacbcv, U.S. Soviet Union," but want to deuce from M·oscow, the first
population could destabilize the offiCials are cooccmcd that a mora- "encourage Gorbachcv along the republic outside the Baltics to do
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - The. gmndSon of a Kentucky farmer
wl!o starved to dealh says his ~ather is die real inventor of radio,
cowury and cucerbate a crisis !hat torium on porests "could destabi- path toward both economic and so.
and he has hired lawyer Melvm Belli to sue any book publisbelS who
is creeping toward cJums.
lize the. caul! try," nid State political reform."
·
The Minsk WOlken, wbo initial· give credit to anyone else.
The blunuemadts&lt;issued by the Department spokcsmall Richard
Boucher suggested that Opr- . .Jy..,Jtruck last week, had warned .
Belli scheduled a oews con(erence f~-ihG· P d •·
State Dcpart111ent Wednesday, Boucher. ·
bachev'a econ~ic blueprint they would .~c;at.thcir..threlt-.
estate of Troy Cory, grandson of Nalhan B. Sllibblefield
came hours after thousands of
"ln our view Stability can not be obscured the real mtent of the plan, ened genenJ strike ~bout the
"Melvin Belli will put publishing houses tbrougbout the world on
workers in the Byelorusslan C!fPital restored by suspending legitimate which was to implement lllrict dis- republic Wednesday 1f their
. notice that, if dley do not recognize Srubblefield a_s the sole inventor of
of Minsk went on strike, decying peaceful democratic forms of ciplinc against the rebellious demands for wage increases to
radio,-and recognize the fust real public demonsttalion of radio voice
ihe Soviet president's warning expression," be added. "Such a republics.·and growing unrest compensate for price increases
broadcasts, suit will be brought against them," Cory said in a prepared
against W01k stoppages.
mtntorium is likely only to further around the nation.
were not met.
,
statement.
On Tuesday, Gorbachev ~ke exacerbate the crisis.''
The economic reforms, Boucher
But the strike quickly ~
''A strong box believed to contain financial records, proof of the
in ominous tones o( a "senous . The Soviet crisis was one of said, "have figured in earlier plans, to include grievances &amp;pinst politi·
demonstnitions and the original palellts of the invel)tor, which disapdanger banging over our CQUDtry" several issues expected to ·be . inch!ding Gor6achev's basic guide- cal leaders, as the workers called
peared in 1928 when Stubblefield died in Mwray, Ky,, of starvation, ' that, he said, justified a moratorium addressed Th~l.n
between Presi- lines frotillast October.''
for the resignation of the president
.will be opened for the rust time, .. die statement said.
on strikes and demO!Jstrations "for dent Busl! and! . of _the Euro- . He was referring ~o pr!ce of the republic, ~ikolai Demcntei,;
In a scholarly dissertation circulated by Cory's publicists,' David
the duration of a one-year econdm- pean Commuruty, mcluding EutQ- mcreascs and other belt-bghtening and the prcm•et, Vyacheslav .
Hendrick Miller wrote that Stubblefield first demonstrated his invenic pro~m !hat. would !ICCelemte · pean Council President Jacques economic measures Proposed last Kebicb, the Soviet news •seney
tion in his lab in 1892. Ten years later he demonstrated it to die public
privabzation and impose major Santer.
·
fall.
Tassreported.
in Kentucky in January 1902.
·
budget cuts.
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Stubbleftcld's.public demonstration was two years ahead of Sir
John· A. Fleming's development of the vacuum tube, which !he
Columbia Encyclopedia aedits as "lhe beginning of radio relphony."
, Stubblefield) pubfic test camefivc years before Lee de FO!eSt perfectM&amp;M/Mars, bowing 10 JllllSSIITC . agreeing at all wilh the characteri- commercial with a variety of
Gibson said the girls' school
ed the three-electrode vacuum tube,which earned him credit as "the
from a national coalition of girls' zation made by the coalition, actioos, includilig boycotting Twix coalilion did not hire a public relafalher of radio."
private schools, Wednesday pulled nonelhcless deculed to withdraw candy bars, writing letters to lhe tions agency to mount the ad
The claim to the 1892 laboratory test puts Stubblefreld ahead·of
a television commercial for one of this commercial, effective inuncdi- candy manufacturer a!ld pulling protest but had worked with the
Guglielmo Marconi, who .is often credited m the public mind with the
its Twix cookie barS after the group .ately," Mars said in a statement
·M&amp;MJMars prodiiCts from vending agency previously on other matters.
invention of the radio. Marconi developed the radio ielegraph in 1895
protested the ad portrayed all-girl
The coalition claimed the ad, · machines. About 172,000 girls
Mars.Blso said it was weU aware
and sent the first trans-Atlantic message, the leaer 'S,' in~l9lll. But his
schools in a ~gatlve lighL . . · which showed a girl silting on a attend independent girls' .schools of the value of single-sex educa· invention sent only Morse Code, not voice and. m11sic like StubbleThe commercial for Cookies-n- staircase in a shot through the across the country.
.
tiona! inslitwiOns.
field's radio.
Cream Twix, which showed "good balus~. associ aiM girls' schools 1 Arlene Gibson, head of Kent
••All of the daughters of the
Miller said Stubblefield bad an audience of more than 1000 when
news-bad news" scenarios, implied, with prison.
Place School in Summit, NJ., and Mars family ue graduates of prihe demonstraled his radio in Munay in 1902.
that attending ail all-girls' sc~ool
"O:tlyiously, you and .your coalition president, said she was vatc girl's 'chools, as are the
"Five listening stations were established in various loc:ations
was "bad news."
advcTilSlng agency are uninformed delighted wilh Mars' decision to daughters of a great many of !he
throughout the city, the furthest being six blocks distant from the ttansThe company, a division of about girls' schools and the oppor- drop the commen:ial.
company'i associates/' the compamitting station," Miller wrote. "The transmiaer was located in the
Mars Inc. with headquart~rs i.n tunitie~. they ~~ford . youl!g
. "Yoo don't know what ~le ny said "ln fact,' two of the ¥an.
town square. Two wires were run from the ttansmiaer to the ground.
Ha~kettstown, N.J., :sa•d 11 women, -~ coalib!lD'·s co-chair- will,~· whe~ they'll really lis~ · dilughters attended the school run
An aide stationed at lhe transmitter spoke..in. Uone. oLvoice..such ~
rev1ewed the commerc1al afteJ women SBid m a mailgmm sent to ten, she wd "We're delighted by one of the signatories of the
that ordinarily used in telephoning. As the program progressed, an
recei_v,ing a m~ils,ramfrom the M&amp;M/Marsfuesd&amp;y.
. .
they'~~ve."
Mailgram."
assistant tallced, whispered. whistled,. alld played a harmonica. EveryCO&amp;!Jbon. of G1rls Sch?Ois sug~ars sa1d .t~e cc;&gt;mmerc•al, .. G1bson sa•d she .was sure the
Amon~ the 52. schools joining .
one at the listening posts reportedly beard him with 'remarlalble dis.11estmg
students
·
a
nd
theu
parents
~h1ch
began
alTIDg
recently,
was
good
~wsJbad
_
n
ews"
campaign
the
coalition were: Madeira in,
tinction.'"
boycott f&gt;!ars produc.ts. ,
,
mtendel!
,to
be
II
humOI'OU!
play
on
was,not
mt_endea
to
be
offensive
McLean,
Va., The Brearley School
Stubblefield later nveled to Washington, where he demonstrated
Mars
IS
the
nations
second:
words,_
.
but
has.
turned out to be but sexistJokesaren'tfunny."
in
New
York,
Miss Porter's in
his invention from lhe steamer Bartholdi, stationed off lhe Virginia
largest
candy
producer
after
Herdi!l'arbing
to
~e
people,
and
for
The
candy
maker
said
it
was
Farmin,ton,
Conn.
, Hathaway
· bank of the Potomac River, Miller said. He successfully transmitted
shey
Food
CJ?IP.
·
lhis
we
apoiDgJZC."
·
concerned
because
the
mailnam
Brown
m·
Cleveland,
Westridge ·
, harmonica music to a small boat ancbcnd across the river. ·
.
The
Coalibon
of
Girls'
Bo.W~MB&amp;B
Advertising
of
St.
came
from
a
public
relations
fum,
School-in
Pasadena,
Calif.,
Dana
He was successful in raising $5 million for the Wireless Telephone
mg
~hools
also
JliOtestcd
the
comLows,
the
ad
~ency
!hat
created
addi!~!~lhat
it
was
"llllfortunate
the
Hall
in
Wellesley,
Mass.,
The
Company of America. He hoped to use his system to replace telephone
m~.
.
.
the
commcrc1al,
could
nor
be
coalition
di~
JIC!I
see
fit
to
~tact
H«Jraday
School
in.Dalllsllld
St.
wires, and never envisioned Iioadcasting to more than one listener.
In
·light
of
the
complaint,
the
reached
for
comment
somebody
m
the
company
before
Mary's
Academy
in
Englewood
Stubblefield fell out with his promorers and said he wanted to have
company immediately reviewed
More !han SO elite girls' schools utilizing tbc resources of a public· Colo.
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nothing to do with the company unless it was "opcmted as a fair and
!his
commercial,
and
while
not
across
lhe
country
protested
the
relations
coUIISC!or.''
· legitimate business."
·
"There remains nolhing for me to do but to go home," he lamented, according to Miller.
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Although he fought for ~ won a patent on the wireless telephone
. in 1908, he died in poveny, starving to death in 1928.
JjlRSEY CITY. NJ. (UPI) _;__ A dows closed.
The thick black smoke sPread a8 go outside if they have respiratory
wind-whipped
fiTC
fueled
by
aban''My
God,
!his
sruff
is
pouring
far
as B~yn and Staten Island, . p:oblems. ·
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doned rubbish mgcd out of control into this office," said Sanford
and cast a shadow over parts of
Police officers .witli bullhorns
Wednesday afternoOn, blanke:~ Evans, a spokesmlin for the New
Lower Manhaltan, providing a mid- willned residents and pedestrians
lower Manhanan with thick b
York City Department of Environday spectacle for workers in the ncar the fire to leave the .area,'
smoke and prompting warnings to mental Protection. "There's a ICII'iFinancial District. A Jidio station wamiliJe~f the possible presence ci(
New York City residents to S\IIY ble miasma settling oVer Manhatreported complaints of smpke as far pestic'
and other dangerous sub-·
indoors.
·
i
tan. S~ are circling IDd seem
south as Asbury Park.
·
SIIDCCS in .the air.
:
More than. 120 firefighters bat- to be driven into lower' Manhattan,
Because of the heavy smoke
The Port Audloiity' of New York
tied the blaze, which bad spread to movin&amp; fll{lber and further back.'' . blankcting_lhe mctropc)litan area, and New J-y said the fire jlad 110'
_;. PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Sen.
into the chapel by members of several nearby buildings by late
The blaze began aboull:30 p.m.
!he New York City Fire Depart- effect on its .--..,ions, eilher lithe~·
: John Heinz, killed last week in a atied
military hdnor guanl. Thousands aft
J
c·ty
Fi ,.,...,..,n
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-plane collision, was remembered as of mourners, fniln political digni- , Et':y::f
· l1'e ~·· as a .......,. RelhOP· cw -..:{t · mcnt -reponed receiving "several · Holland Tunnel or~ PATH train..
Turnpike •. fire official• said. t calla" fnxn people in Lower Man- operations.
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:a dear friend and dedicated public wies to the homel-· fiiled past the
...,..,
In New York, raidents in Min- spread q~ckly_ .tllrougb an open
haaan who thOught the fire was in
A spokesiDID for !he New Jer-'
servant at .a funeral attended by
and ;JuesdaY to pay hatlml, Brooklyn and StaleR Uland area, b~mg iin!a, car parts and . New York City.
scy ~Authority, J~ Adu~
Vice President Dan Quayle and casket Monday.
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dozens of fellow lawmakers.
- ~Hts. the,_ ad_m.uauon
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d wcreWIIrllediOstayindoon·andin odlero\-trulbbish•. b firefi h
had t "-The New. York City Health bato, sa1d the .blaze b&amp;l had no
. n . . ··• .,.,_
··-·y c.·ty, emcr"e:r
.. e...
_ .. Cl" t
'" ters,
.. ~ .... Athfton.. eucct
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' The ceremOJiy Wednesclay for ld fethwon
_._... 0fPiUsburlh •mel
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n,...,
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t:1 ~tme.U ··-·""
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on •••
way o~s.
btU
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ISC
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•&lt;iuad
SOilliiiiiUCks
IOc
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been
l!IJU~e4
by
late
.
a
fternoon,
,.
•
ry
waminJ
MJ4eats
of
B.....a.t~,
'•
added,
''Wc·re
Walcbingit!'!•
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•the heir to the H.J: Heinz Co.
:ketchup and pickle empire begun : : ~n:&gt;'m~=: se~:d leave the arC!! or keep tlieii win- . Mooney wd. . .· ·
. Manhattan and Staten lsl~"';.i;t to
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;'by his gmndfather was held in a
-gothic-style chapel 111 the Universi-ty of Pittsburgh campus where the
Republican senator married his
Sen. Timolhy Wirth, D-Colo.,
.
~ wife, Teresa.
recalled Heinz's sblbbom work for
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Bot- from existing bottled .water siana
complete
list of the 400 or so to the bottlers and does ~
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:· His sons gave eloquent tributeS lhe elderly, lhe environment and tled water may contain more pqrendanls.
lhe
GAO
said.
Funbeimore,
bottlers
to
use
cer:tifled
I
·
s
U.S.
water
bottlers,
leaves
01051
of
· or their father.
.
the common man.
tially harmful contaminants lhan
for
such
self-tests.
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investigators
found
the
FDA
lacks
the
monitoring
for
contaminants
up
:. "A flower cannot proclaim itS
"He really believed that he tap water due to lax govemrilent
:beauty until it dies," said Henry could make the world a better regulation, congressional invesiiga:John Heinz 1'{, 24, quoting "a wise place," Wirth said
tors say.
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and dear friend."
He said Heinz approached his
An investigation by the ~rat
About 500 people were invited work with. an endearing innocence . Accounting Office concltlded
•-to !he funeral inside the chapel that and childlike mischievousness. Wednesday !hat the Food and I!lrug
::bears the Heinz family name. "Such a conlrast to the jaded resig- Administration has not taken ilde. Among the dignitaries were nation of our time,'' Wirth Said.
quate steps to .make sure bot
•Qua&gt;:le. Oov. RobeiJ Casey, Senate
The s·ervicc was led by Sen. . water does not pose a health
t.
- Republican Iader Robert Dole of Jobn Danforth, R-Mo., who to consumers.
·Kansas, and dozens o( congress- observed !hat Heinz could have
"The FDA could do more to
men and other senators.
spent his life in lhe comfon and ensure the safety of bottled Wfll.'l,"
, About },000 other mourners and security or his weallh rather than in said John Harman, who diret..ed
· journalists listened outside in a the riskier wa1d of politics.
. the investigation. "It is very dlfft.
blustery wind to a broadcast of lhe
"John did nbt need to be in _pol- cult for them to make assura.,tes
• ceremony over loudspeakers set up itics,'' said Danforth, an ordained that the water is safe.''
· on the lawn between lhe chapel and EJ)iscopalian minister. "He did not
· According to investigators,; the
the towering Calhedral of Learn- need the town meetings and the . FDA's current bouled water stan: ing.
fund- raisers, the days on the road,
'. Andre Thicrstein Heinz, 21, the nif!ts in motels, the trllllped dards are less stringent lhanfthe
public drinking water ~ set
recalled something his falher once hours m little ailplanes. It was his by
the Environmental Protection
_told him.
gift."
Agency.
.
'"Son, you'll fmd !hat people
Philadelphia Archbishop Antho"As
a
result,
bottled
water
...
~ are what really matter... oil, they're
ny Bevilacqua and Pittsburgh Bish- may contain levels of potentially
· fascinating,"' he said. :'This op .Qonald Wuetl each offered
advice my father made sw'c he told prayers at the service, interspersed harmful contaminants that ue not
· me as often as I n~ to hear iL' • with performances by the Pitts- allowed in public drinking water,"
Harman told a House Energy and
· Heinz, 52, died April4 when his burgh Symphony's string quanet.
Commerce
subcommittee.
: small plane collided with a heliAfter the service, dignitaries
The
panel
requested the probe
::copter over a suburban Philadel- lined lhe chapel steps as, to the
after
last
year's
voluntary recall of
; phia schoolyard. He was in the sound of Beelhovcn~s Ode to Joy,
.
benzene~taminaled
Paller min·
..-middle of a home state tour of town the casket was carried ouL Private
eral
water
.
•meetings, editorial boards and pet- entombment was in the family
Since 1973, the FDA has "tem·::sonaJ appearances.
·
mausoleum.
porarily" exem)!led mineral water
.. _ His 'lla~-draped casket was car-

-Contemporary living:

~Swim
'
in pounds
Heipt Weight
without without clothes
shoes ~~~ 35Years
andOver

15'0"
5'1"
5'2"
5'3"
5'4"
5'5"
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.;Hundreds attend·
funeral of John Heinz .·
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!~=~~~~ Bottled w~ter may contain more contaminants :
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)~Supreme Court uphold~ death :~sentence

for convicted murderer
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• COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ....,.

: The dealh sentence of John Spilko,
•convicted in the 1982 slaying of a

· northwestern Ohio postmaster has
• been upheld by die Ohio Supreme
· Cowt

·: Betty Jane Mottinger, post. mistress of the village of Elgin in
~ Van Wert County, disappeared
~ from work the morning of Aug. 9,
- 1982.
• Her canvas wrapped body was
found six weeks luer in a Hsncock
Coullly field Audoitics sad Mottioga had bea1 stabbed more !han
a dozen times. Aboul $700 and
·- some blank money orders were
: taken dming the robbety.

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. Spirko ilisisted he was innocenL
He prohibited his lawyers from
offering mitigating evidence during
the penalty phase of his 1984 lrial
after he was convicted of aggravatedmwder.
. On Wednesday, The hiJdt coun ·
unanimously reJected 60" points
raised by public defenders and
agreed with the Van Wert County
C'ommon Pleas Court that SpirkO
should be executed.
Supreme Coun J11Siicc William
Sweeney, wbo wrote the opinion,
said Spirto told the juiy "that be
deserved to be put to death
nonetheless, since he had done
enough in his lifetime to be execut•

(! .

ed three or four times.''

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SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE*

'91 CROWN VICS
3 TO CHOOSE FROM

Spirko ,was in jail in .Toledo
awaiting lria1 for unrelated charges
of felonious assault wheh be asked
to speak to postal inspectors about
Mottinger's
slaying.
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...

Your Choice

AND

GRAND
MARQUIS
.

SJS ·9 99
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Spirko originally sought his
f!eedom in exchange for informsbon about the crime bui subsequently made incriminating statements, autboriliea said.
During his trial, Andre Ruffm
wh~ bad been Spirko's cellmate,

tea11f1ed that Spirko bragged of .
killing Moainger.

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Mars drops commercia! after girls' sc~ools protest

Jersey fire blankets New York WJth sm.oke ·

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5'8"
5'9"
5'10"
5'11"
6'0"
6'1"
6'2"
6'3"
6'4".
6'5"
6'6"

~-.

97-12R

tOR-138
101-132 111-.143
104-137 115-148
107-141 119-152
111-146 122-157
114-150 126-162
I 18-155 B0-167
121 -160' 134-m
125-164 138-178
129-169 142-183
132-174 . 146-188
136-179 151-194
140-184 155-199
144-189 159-205
148-195 164-210
152-200 168-216
156-205 173-222
160-211 177-228
164-216 . 182-234

.

suit season s~gnals .
By CynthiJt. s. Oliveri
Swim Suit season is just around
the mer! Foc most of us !his also
means a need to take off the
pounds added on during the winter
months!
About 25% of the adult populalion is overweight and there has
~n no decline in this proportion
· for years! Yet 'lhc prevalence of
weight loss dietS frlln! A to z and
the American obsession with
model-like figureS testifies to our
concern with obesitv. A reccnl Diet

and Heallh Knowledge Survey condueled by the U.S .. Department &lt;!f
Agriculture co.nfums !hat Ame!JC!!!'~ value the ll1lJlO!WICC of mamtaiJUIIg a healthy weight
. About nine out of 1M meal planners/preparers_in the ~SDA's sur:
•eY lhought 1t was Important to
maintain a healthy weight and bad
heard of health problems related to
being ove~weig~t. About half of
th~e surveyed think thoy are overweigbL
·.
·
So, what is a heallhy we1ght?

The 1990 revision C?f "Nutri~ion
and Your Health: D1etary Guidelinea for Americans." lust ~leased
by lhe Department o( Agriculture
and t)le DeJIIrllllent of lfealth and
Humlin Services, su$gests assessing your ~eight us•.ng the three
steps described belOw.
.
~ First! check to see. •f ~ol!r
we•ght (WIIhout clo!hes) 1s W11hin
the suggested range_for ~ns of
your age an~ he1ght (w1~hout
.shoes). The higher weights m lhe
18RilCS a;cnerally IIPPIY to men, who

tend to have more bone and muscle· the lower weights more often
apply to women , who ·have less
bone and muscle.
NOTE: The lower w~ights in
the ranges are best for most
wOmen, who have' less muscle and
bone than men.
_
These weight ranges reflect new
research !hat indicates !hat people
can be a little heavier as they grow
older wilhout added risk to their
health.
• Next. cbeclt to see if the loca'
tioq of your body fat is "healthy".
According to the Die~y G?idelines fat in the stomach IS believed
to bC a greater health risk than fat
in the hips and !highs. To check
your shape, stand relaxed and measure around your waist at its smallest point. (Don't pull in , your
tummy.) then, m~ure arounu your

hips where they arc the largest.·
Divide the waist measurement by
the hip measurement to ~ct your
"waist-to-hip rstion.MRatios close.
to or above 1.0 are linked to higher:
risk for certain diseases.
:
.· • Finalll, do you have a medicalproblem or which your doctor:
advises you to gain or lose weight?
If tbe answer is no, your weight is .
• wilhin lhc range of the table, and
your waist-to-hip ratio does not put
you at risk, there appears to be no
health advantage 10 changing your
weiaht
.
•
Only one in ten respondents in a :
JCCCRt survey could correctly iden•,
· tify butter as having the most calories, wilh alcohol ne;Jt. For more
infqrmation to help you maintain a.
. health¥ weigbt, contact Cynthia S. •
Oliven at the Meigs County Exten- ~
sion Office.

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Just for
YOU

l\0

\A0~'1~\..'if
.~~'{\lte~1S

Nintendo gives
coupons to settle .
price-fixing case .
. WAsHINGTON (UPl) - Fed.ei'al and state officials charge.d
Wednesday that Nintendo of~­
jca Inc. fiXed prices on its ~
blJmc video game console and wd
the maker of America's hottestselling toy has ~ to give consumers $25 million in coupons to
settle the charges.
·
· Officials from the Federal Trade
Commission and New York's and
Maryland's' attorneys gene{al
charged some of the nation's
largest retailers also appeared to be
involved in the scheme, which
iffected 9 million con$umers, but
they would not idenlify the companies. They also would not say
whelher Nmtendo's parent company, Nintendo Co. Ltd. of Japan,
was involved.
New York Attorney General
Robert Abrams said he considers
•'this kind of price fixing to be cpillcmic in the country," and he said
Japanese companies are "a signifi- .
CB!It put or it. 'lbe laws in JliPan
ate liOt as IDUjlliS the ·lawt ill New
York."
Abrams said this is the fourth
case in whicll federal and state officials ue obtaining payment from a
Japancso electronics firm for
alleged pri~c-fl!'i~g. Olher .cases
involved Mitsubish1, Panasonic and
Minolta.
The officials charged !hat Nintendo, of Redmond, Wash., forced
retailers to charge a set price of
$99.95 for its consoles, .and
delayed deliveries to retailers wllo
sold !he consoles for less. 1n one
case they said, a retailer was
forced to remark his .consoles
because they were priced 6 cents
llelow lbe set price.
' · The .P.roposed consent agree·
ment wtth Nintendo is intended to
send "a powerful message across
!he country !hat we will_not to!eJ:ate
this permcious pracllce, wh1ch
takes millions of dollars out of the
pockets of consumers," Abmms
said
,;ln this particular case, Nintendo was not satis~ with being the
major supplier and seller of lhe
biggca electronics game for kids in
the country. They wanted to extract
every last ounce of JM:Ofit.'' he sajd
Nintendo offic1als, in a statement, denied any WI'Ongdoing and
said the company settled the case to ,
maintain consumer goodwill.
"We were concerned with bow
Ninrendo game plar,ers might view
these allegations, ' said Howard
Lincoln, the company's senior v~
president. "We opted to get lhts
behind the company immedtately
and in a manner that provides real
value to Nintendo game players."
Under the terms of the settlement with the atUlmCys general of
New York and Maryland and at
lciast 39 other states, Ninrendo is to
give $5 coupons, good toWard lhe
purchase of a Nintendo game, to
the 4.7 million consumers who submilled warranty cards for consoles
bought between Junt 1, 1988, and
Dec. 1, 1990.
The more !han 4 million consumers who did not submit warranty cards can request a coupon by
~ing 1-800-255-3700.
Officials said conswners probably will not receive !heir c6~na
until fall, and the company IS not
rcquir~ to issue more than $25
millioD In coupons.
Abnms and Maryland Aaomey
General J. Joseph Cumn Jr. said
they did not require Nintendo to
give cash refunds beclll*' it would
be difficult for Ninlelldo to issue
millions of checkt, and they
believe moat conaamcrt plan on
buying more video 1ames and
~d inter~ COIIJIO!II.
· . "Nia~tndo Ia payiDJ. a heavy
price,". Abranll lllid. ' They arc
bd'&amp;!riolor the aripnt of beiq a law

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Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

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This Is .JUit A Partial Listfnt Of Saa. ltaru!
'

ASON

URNITURE
(304) n3-5592

2ND STREET

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MASON, WV
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'TliUI!d!r• Aprl11, 1111

Poinetov llldd!epOit. Ohio

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On_e survivor found in _ferry crash
LEGHORN, Italy (UPI} - A
feny Crasbecl into ID IDCboled oil
tanker iD lbe fog-bolllld Medirerranean and burst into flames
• ijO\iiicudy killq Ill bul one otlbC
141 people aboard anJI sending
blazing oil inro tbc sea, officials
said Tbanday.
Scores of bolls llld he~

Thur$day combed the Medater1'1111C811 off Leghorn but found no
trace of the 140 passengers and
crew aboard the 6, 187-ton Moby
prinl:e 14 boln aftu it ram""'AAIbc
Agip Abruzzo and burst into
flames.
· Only the feny's cabin boy survived the 1Q:30 p.m. Wednesday
collision and. only one body bad
been fOUDd. more tbiD a mile from
lbc ferry. There were no casualties
aboerd the llllter.
Rescue officials feared the 74
piUCIIFJS aud 66 crew !liCmbers
from tbc Moby Prilicc paisbed in
the names. the •bin boy was
picked up in the sea by a coast
. gusdl•..d.

"We must lfttl!R ourselves for
lbe worst," a police official said.
''The fact dial aftu Ill tbcsc hours
lbc cabiD boy is the onl survivor is

I nepliWI sign."

•
•;

REMEMBRANCE • Israelis in do-town
;•Jerusalem staDd in llile1lc:e Tbunday Ia mmory
~~r the 6 mDllon Jews who perished Ia tile Holo"taust at the baDCb of the Nazis duria1 World
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BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI} Deposed Prime Minisrer Chalic:hai
Cboonhavu arrived back in Thailand under light militaiy security
Thursday 10 receive a royal decora·
tion.
Chatichai, arriving with his
wife, Boonruen, on a flight from
London, was met by a military
republic •s 600,()()()..strong minority escort at Bangkok's Don Muang
Serbian community, which oppo~ Airpon and whisked away to his
the republic's !!rive for indepen- Banglrok borne in a miliJary motordence, fearing a severing of ties cade without speaking \0 reporters.
. with Serbia.
·
"He said be wanted 10 stay quiArmed· Serbian extremists, etly aad comfortably," said Som·
encouraged by a Serbian govern- sat Chlmduayli:it, a former member
. ment JnOPIIIDda campaign warn- or Parliament from Chatichai' s
ingot persecution by Croatia's· politic:al )Jilt)' who visited the for.
nationalist govarunent, have IJmi. mer leader at his borne.
caded the approao:hcs 10 numerous
The sealrity measures ,also pre·
Sabian-dominalcd aress in Croat-· vented Chatichai from meeting
' The lar
the If .. lared with a group of supporters who
II.
gest,
se -uec
Serbian Autonomous Region of gathered at lbc airport in response
Krajina c:enlercd on !he town or to leaflets passed out this week
Knin, announced April 1 it was calling on people from his north·
acceding 10 Serbia.
eas1ern constiiaency to show their
Troops and tanks of the gralib.Jdc fO lbc ~ priin~ minis·
Yugoslav ariny, its officer corps fer.
dominated by Satlian communists.
Gen. Suchinda Kra_Prayoon,
remain deployed in Croatia's dcpu!Y leader of the miliJary junll
Plitviee Lates National Part more that overthrew the elected
than
a week after clashes between Chatichai government, slid the
Croatian police and Serbian security measare&amp; were meant 10
extremists left two people dead and ensme the safety of the 71-ycar-old
. more than 20 injured.
. politician.
Military officers arrested
Chatic:hai at gunpoint during a

Yugoslav republic presidents
meet in third round of talks.
place in each republic, on ~ging
wide differences over the future
~~ ~~t.~-edmic.
• . fcdaalion
r-JY-

The oommumst-ruled republics
of Montenegro and Serbia share
wilh the Marxist-led army the pi
of J)l'CICtViiJa a socialist fcdenllion.
Croalia, Slovenia, Macedonia and
Bomia-Herccgovina, governed by
non-communist nationalists, want
10 the countty ro be an "alliance"
of independent SIIICS. .
The dispute has endangered fed·
eral efforts 10 implemen
· t w--.
__ ,
style. reforms to rescue the countty
from economic: disaster and has
helppl revive historic ethnic rivalries, particularly between the 4.6
million Roman Catholic Croats and
8.5 million Christian Orthodox
Serbs, the lsrgest of the country's
e~icgrou~.
The latest Wb came amid a virtual insurrection in Croatia by . .•
lantes and mutinous polic:e of3:c

.Pretoria determined -to 'go on with
talks, despite ANC ultimatum
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (UPI) - The government.
in an· apparent attempt to restore
confidence in talks on ending
apartheid after a threat by the
African National Congress 10 slOp
the process, said Thursday it
incends 10 push ahead ·with negotia·
lions.
At the same time, the ANC and
the smaller and militantly antiapartheid Pan Africanist Congress
jointly announced their leaders .

.

bklodlea militlry coup d'eta Feb.
23 and held him Cor two weeks.

minister said he would wash his
hands of politics but that he would
return to Thailand to receive a
royal decaation from King Bhumibol Adulyadej due ro be awarded
Friday.
.
·
Military sources said the coup
leaders were not happy aboui
Chaticbai's return, but felt theycould not forbid him siDCe be was
coming ·back to receive an award
from the much revered monarch.
The royal honor. Cbaticbai is 10
receive, the Ratanaporn Medal
F'u:st Class, is one of lbc country's
highest awards. The honor was
decided before 1bc Feb. 23 coup.
C:batichai and 24 o~ his scni!lf
~ and part)' offic:ials are ~ . .
under mvesbgallon for conupuoi!
by a powerful military-appomted

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w__._...,......,.._._...,.., ,..,

15°/o

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691 WEST llliN

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ESTATE ·
ANTIQUE
JEWELRY AND . SALE
Friday, April 12 &amp;. Sat., April 13

POMEROY, OK.

We have 1nv1ted one of Oh1o's foremost antique dealers into
our store for two days w~h a large selection of Ant1que Je.
welry. Watches, ~oils. Qu11ts, Glassware. Sterling Silver and
Much More. Don I m1ss lh1s chance to purchase a one-of-a-·
. kind keepSake. Th1s is the sale you've been waiting for - 2
Days Only 1n Pomeroy. Ohio.·

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Th insure )llUr home, Cl!r, boat, condo,mobile home,apartnient,or even )llUr
business, gi~ me a call.I h~ a lock on jlllt the right policy. ·

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:NSURANCE
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SEEDPOTA
AedlaSodl,
Katadhlna,
KennebeCI, Ponlllcl,
~Cobbler,

REG. 131.99

FASHION SHOW
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BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
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DRESSES ................... 20°/o OFF
(12 Mos.to Size 14)

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BOYS; DRESSY ......... 20°/o OFF

112 ..._ to Silt 71

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Bilek, White
Bone. Red
Nevy, Taupe
Black Patent.

(Discounts Taken Off Regular Price)
SOUT.IN PHOTO wll be at tht ltort
SAIUIDAJ fro• 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. -'""

L. A. GEAR • CONVERSE • KANGAROOS

ltc.iwt Slpper Bottle, Head Band
or Fanny Pack With L. A. Gear ·
2400 Eallern Avenu•
(Acroll frOm K.-.rl)

1/4 Mile North of
PomeroV l'w.n Bridge

Qal.llt,OH
(814)448-1711

llllaft, W¥
(3114) 77H721

Hours: IIDndiJ htllrday, ...
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lundly,1N

Pink

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Stop In 'fhla Weekend- Buy An
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3 HilL HIIGHYS ~VAIURE
MID, LOW and FUT

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992·5177

220 last . . . • PamaroJ, Ohio

Chapman Shoes
992-3715
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. 992-20~4 .

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Ullt tllrwl ....
And All You OM F.

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992-6754

•

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APRIL 12th-13th

TepCI'ap•IWIIIuNw
SllverCIIMA• ~ CMeli

Sl 0 OFF Redwing Work Shoes

P.....,oy, Oh.

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39080 Hobson Drive
Middleport, Oh.
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FLORSHEIM • HUSH PUPPIES • CHEROKEE

HO,OD FAMILY SHOES

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• APPLE, CHERRY &amp;. CREAM PIES IC~onut, Chocolate, Banana) .
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2'0°/o OFF .All Nursemates
20°/o OFF Men's Dress Shoes

·

MEIGS CARPET AND
·DECORATING CENTER

HOMEMADE PIES ........ 75(. SLICE

.

INOT 25% OFF EVERYTHING)

would meet in Harare, Zimbabwe,
next week 10 explore steps toward
forming a united "patriotic front"
of blacks.
. The PAC opposes tbc ANC's
preliminary talts 'with Pretoria and
welcomed the ANC threat last Friday. since apparently modified, to
break off more than 11 months of
official contact with the govcrn-

Purcha~~.

.

POMEIOY ST.OIJE ·ONLY ·

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FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 7:30P.M. AT
POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

_SATURDAY
&amp;
.
SUNDAY ONLy·
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20°/o OFF ·All Ladies' Shoes

: It also opened higher against the
JI!)Und_ in ~on. Sterling fell 10
$1.7755 from $1.7785 amid speculition that Friday's announcement
of Britain's March Retail Price
lAde~ could be accompanied by a
clit in British interest rates.
. In Zurich, the ·dollar opened at
I ~ 4270 Swiss francs, up from
1,4245 Wednesday.
.
. It was also hi3her in Paris Brus·
sets and Milan: at 5.6850 French
fcpncs l'rom 5.6SSO; 34.65 Belgian
francs from 34.3375; and 1,247.25
llalian lire from 1,247.00.
:Earlier, the doUar closed higher
il( Tokyo_at 136.65 yen, from
135.08 yen Wednesday.
. 'It was down slightly from
Wednesday's late New York rate
ot 137.49 yen as Toli:yo investon
root profits, dealas IBid.
· Efsewhere in Asia, the dollar
closed in Hong Kong at 7. 7930

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2 BIG DAYS TO SAVE!
$hop With Your
Lo·cal
.
.
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P·c,-meroy Merchants.
Pleaser's
DON'T MISS ••••THE
Wee·kend
POMEROY HEARTLAND Of AMERICA
Sale ·
1991 · FASHION MUSICAL
. REVUE

f!ollar opens :high.er

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SHOULD HAVE READ
OFF EVERY DAY
AL...

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-•KIRSCH WINDOW TREATMENTS
. •WALL COVERINGS
•CARPET
•GREY SEAL PAINTS

~------

BLACK HILLS GOLD AD

cess of talks and negotiations,"
said Gerrit Viljoen, minister of
Constitutional Development and
manager or Pretoria's racial
refOIDls.
The ANC, blaming the government for ignoring or fomenting
y!!ars of factional blac:t strife, Friday told President Frederik de
Klett to saclc his Defense and Law
mmL
,
and Order minis!n's and purge the
But "the government bas every security forces by May 9 or the
intention of going on with the pro- . ANC would suspend the Wb.
The ultimatum was a "drastic
and unforeseen event. not expected
or justified by developments,"
Viljoen'-t.(!ld reporters in Cape
Town. .,,_ ~
. LONDON (UPI) - The dellar Hong Kong dollars from 7.7935.
De Klerlc has not directly
• opened higher against the major
In SiniJIPO"C. it closed higher at
'European currencies Thursday in 1.7615 Smgapore dollars from I. addressed the demands but Cabinet
minislers have accused the ANC of
quiet uading ahead of U.S. dala 1555.
ignoring
its own role in the viodl!e later in lbc day.
Gold cl6scd in Hong Kong at
. :.. · Analysts said the. dollar was $361.25 an ounce, down from lence and trying to score political
points.
~ moving ahead partly because the $363.95.
Defense. Minister Magnus
'lilarket bad discounted a cut in U.S.
London gold opened at $361.00
Malan
announced Wednesday lbc
i(lterest r;~tes by the Federal an ounce; down from $363 .50
dismissal
of 28 members of a
Reserve and also from parallel Wednesday, and in Zurich it.feU to
defunct
covert
inilirary and police
siJeculation that the Fed would $360.50 from,$364.00.
squad
assigned
to track anii·
l~ve monetary policy alone.
Silver opened lower in London
apartheid
activists,
but denied it
. Speculation in reccllt days has at $3.95 an ounce from $4.02
was
a
response
to
the
ANC ultimacentered on whether inflation dall Wednesday, and in Zurich it was
tum.
would be good enough 10 allow the unchanged at $4.00.
~ 10 ease monetary policy.
: Two key barometers of U.S.
illllation, the Producer Price lndelt
and the Consumer Price Index,
w,'ere due Thursday and Friday,
NATURALIZER • HUSH PUPPIES • D . MYERS
while relail sales figures were also
dUe Thursday.
.
.
. rhe dollar orened firmly in
Ftantfurt at 1.68 5 Gcnnan nwts
from l. 6785 at Wednesday's
close.
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You'll Find S.uper
· Savings For _
E very
.Member Of The ·Family.

committee.
Somsak: said Olaticbai did not
talk about politics, but the former
prime mimster said he was conccmed about the economy and foreign investment in Thailsnd.
He said Chatichai will leave'
Tuesday for what may be pcrma- ·
nent exile in Switzerland.
Somsalc said Chatic:hai's son
Kraisak:, who was a key adviser 10
his father, bas ta1cen a lecture post
at a university in London.
'
Milirary coup leaders have said .
Chatichai ltas the right 10 travel but
will be provided with security
throughout the five-day visit.
Thailand remains under martial
law and Ill political ~~ by
more than five people are
ibited
·

* CORRECTION tt

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On his release, lbc fll1ller prime

1l1e Dally senunet Paae 11

fptlng/1 Hete And The Time to Bug /1 Now/ $hop
Wilh ·The1e Pome1og A1es
See U1
MeHhsnt1 F1idsg, Apli/12
Fo1 You1 Complete In Noms
aRd $at~J~dag,
Aptl/131
I
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Os~o1stln1 . Nesd1- .
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Ousted Thai prime minister returns

I

. BRDO · KOD KRANJA,
Yugoslavia (UPI) - The feuding
presidents of Yugoslavia's six
republics resumed· talks Thursday
on resolving differences pushing
the COUI\try toward civil war, meeting in the seclusioo of a mountain
retreat of the late communist dicll·
tor Josip Broz Tito.
The lhird round of discussions
began at about 11. a.m. and was to
end about 6 p.m. with a nationally
televise news conference.
: The talks were held in Brdo
Casde in this mountain village, 360
miles norlhwcst of Belgrade in the
western Slovenian Republic. 11111
casde was used as a private resort
by TiiO, lbc World War II gucmua
leader and architect of communist
Yugoslavia whose 1980 death
opened lbc door to a resurgence of
the nationalist passions that he
squelched by' force.
The presidents made virtually
no progress in !he previous meet.
ings, part of a series of talts 10 Lake

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The di;...,. "'fimcd 2.6 miles watclled television, " he aaid.
off lbc nanbw taD Itlly 10W11 of ."Suddenly I beard a loud noiSe.
upm wbeillbc ferry puDCIUICCI Everybody ran but everywhere
the side of the 98,000.:roo Agip . lhere were~ and flamel.
Abruzzo iD dense fog. Tbe tanbl'
''With 8lther two llhipmMes I
WBS Ill anchQr, wailing for daylight broke tbJou11b a door and lllllllllpd
to enter lbe.port.
.
10 get outside, but t11e1e wete lti1l
• Pan of tfle 1allkcr's 82.000 lOllS SIIK81Dd flames We sraYcd there
of crude oil gusbcd iniD lbe sea IDd about 20 minutes but tbed my shipburst into f1smes. app~~~mdy ignit· mates co!!tpoed I lried fivinJ than
cd by sparks from the collision.
mouth-to-mouth respuation but
The f1lmcs guliCd the ferry and lbcy were dead.
dcs1roycd part of lbc tanker.
•'I sbouJcd. but nobody replied.
''It was an apocalyptic scene. I stayed there, hOlding on ro an iron · ., ·
There were names everywhere," . ring, for two hours. Then a police
said llllter c;aptain RenatO Superi· launch arrived They told me to
na afler bringing .his crew of 28 jump iniD the ~ so i jumped and
safdy 10 shore in the ship's launcll. they picked me up " he .aid.
·
~o.me. of the crew suffered. minor
Port officials Uid they planned ·
IDJur•es and sbock' but most 10 tow lbc ferry ro port 10 illspcct
emerged unscathed.
the burnod out hulk. The offiCials
Ser'i$,\O
Albanese, com~t said lbcy were not sure of lbc nomof f!le
.. ~.Authority, told bel{_,!)I ~~..IBid il.wou!! ~
Italian te won, It was a scene up to relatl'lres to identify the
lite D~m;e's 'Inrerno." '
cbarrcd bodies
Aless.•o Bertrand, the 24-y~- : . Hundreds of people crowded
old .cabiD ~y. gave. a dramat•.c into port buifdings awaiting news
account of his escaP!' m the hosp1- of relatives who were aboard •. It
~ ~ ~ was being treated for .was inilially believed there were 67
m~ lftJUfiCS. .
.
trcw ~~later it was learned
We were all 10 the. small that a ship's engineer left lbc feny
saloon where every evemng we before it sailed.

War D. At 10 a.m ., sire•• sounded au over

Janel -king two mia•tes olllleoce aacl •rlnl·
iDg the CODDlrJ to a complete ·staadltUL (UPI
Rellfel')

Thurtday, Aprll11, 1991

POMEROY, OtiO

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POIUIOY'S QUAUTY SIOI SIOII

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�11, 1891

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Meigs board authorizes Supt.
Riebel to. _expand ABE program

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llo•es lleloallar 18 I!Jiel' Westfall
were destnljedla IRVtft rala 111111
wind lltor• oo Tuesday tftllllll. Acc:ordlllt to
.
Westfd, the tnUer Ill the IOifiJOillld bad~

hea
oato tile property for ue 11 a
rt11taL Tile ~r, _.wblle, .was occapled at
the time of the lterm. Tile root oo WestfaU's
b-e, loalted acr011 tile road, was also damaaectbytllnriaci.No~urieswerereparted.

..___...__Local briefs..• _ _ _ Merchants ..•
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•· Collliltudfrom pa,. 1

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Clal!ification
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DWJ charges filed by Pomeroy police atainst D. Michael
Mullen, Pomeroy, followmg an accident on LIJ!COIII Hill Sunday
even~ were red!ICed to driving left of center in the ~;ourt of
Porn · Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night Mullen was fined
$43 lllld costs on the reduced charge.
~.
"
conlioued from paae 1
J:',
The aimmissioners beard a preIn the only other action, comsentati~ from representatives of missioners announced they will
lhe ChilliCothe Telephone COinpa- altclld the semi-annual meeting of
ny, who'_discus~ the install!Uioo . 11M! !luckeyc-Hills ~ Valley
of a ~hone swttchboanll)'llml · RegJOnal Development District at
at the cpurthousc. ·The .tep 1senta- The Spor1SIIIan in Athens on April
lives di!CUsscd the inJta!Jatio!l pro- 30.
CCS$ and estimated COlt at $12,000. .
Present were Commissioners
· The ·commissioners have not Richard Jones, Manning Roush and
recenlly held discussion on lhe pos- David KoblcniZ, Clerk Mary Hobsibility Qf installing such a system. steaer, Roberts and David Spencer
but did a&amp;ree 10 review the lllllieri- of the Meigs County Highway
al.
Deplrunent

Ren,air...

Wishes
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Continued from page 1
c1ance to "vogue.·
.
A special prese!!lal.iOn oo new
ideas for spnng wlll be made by
the Meigs County 4•H Fashion
Board under the direction.of Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs Coonty Extension
Agent Home Economics and 4-H.
---During-die show approximately.
so door prizes will be awarded and
the first prize giveaway will be
held at 7:20p.m., ten !ftinutcs prior
to the start of the show.
Tickets 10 the show. available at
participating stores, will remain on
,sale until Friday but may also be
purchased at lhe door. There are
only 400 tickets available. The
price of lhc tickets, either advance
or at-the-door, is $4 each. AssociatiOiflncmbers selling tickets for tho
fashion show on llriday are to
deliver remaining tickets to Joan
Wolfe at Bank One by 2 p.m. on
Friday.

- - - - - - -,

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'IXT

.nf!ather ~-_____.......,.

South Ceotral Ohio
Increasing cloudiness ThurSday
night, wltb a low between 35 and
40. Chance of rain is 20 pen:cnt
·Mostly 'cloudy Friday, with showers and thunclmtorms likely in the
afternoon, and highs between 60
and 65. Chance "of rain is 70 percent

'

EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. (UPI)- The AUantis
astronallts ·aJided home to a daylate Moja'IC Desert landing Thursday, lea~ a repaired asu-onomy
satellile behind in orbit and closing
out the shuttto program's first
decade with I~ SUC\X!SS.
·Banking sharply over the
Mojave Desert after a steep plunge
tilfough Earth's atmosphere, commander Sleven Nagel and co-pilot
Kenneth Cameron guided Adantis
to a pinpoint touchdown at 6:55
a.m. PDT on dry latebed runway
33 to close out a 92-orbit mission
spanning six days and some 2.4
million miles.
"Wheels stopped, Houston,"
ratlioed Nagel as Atlantis rolled to
a halt in a 12-tnot crosswind. '

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
·MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
PCJUCIES

IRIHS YOU TIE

GREAT American VACATIIN

SUNOAV PAPER

. . ...•
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N. 2nd Awe.•Mitldleport

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992·5627

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lave 30
1

Save•ao

11911 t:ta

139"~
Ill
Low Aa

LowAa.,.,.., - ·

Find -lllllnfo
fllllfl5.840

..

Ptr ..........

AM/FM stereo, tumta- .
ble, rack. 113;12&lt;10

'....
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•

Mont~ly

.

S&amp;.OO

.20
. 30
.42
' .60
.06 / day

1 Card ofTh . . kJ
2 In Memory

Jt··
32
33
31
35
36

3 Annoucemeru'
• Giw1W11-v
5 . tt•PPY Ads
6·
7
8
9

loti and found
Vafd Sllelpaid •n ad\lancel
Public Sale lr A."'chon '
Wanted to B.uy

Hon1ea tor

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C/as.~ifit•t/

flagt•s ml't•r 1/11•

jullowi"K I l'it'flht;lll'
Galha County
Areil Code 61o4

11

Meegs County

Muon Ca . WV

Areil Code 614

Arn Cude 304

992· Mrddlt!J)or1
36; 7 Ch•hll e
·Pomero-;
388 Vinton
985 ~h•te•
2)&amp;5 Rio Grande ' 843 Porll..-.d
256 Guyan Dill. 247 Letai1 falls
643 Arabra Dist. 949 Rac:rne
379 WIIIAYI
1•2 Aull..-.d
.
667 Coo,lvrlle

1•·

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76 Auto Parts• Ac:c-.s.orr•
17 Aula flepaN

.· ~'',.•·'
• •r

78 Camp1ng Equepmttnt,
79 C11nll)efl &amp; Motor Honutl

'

15 Schools &amp; lnstruc:tmn
16 Rad10. TV &amp; CB Aefum
17 Mrscell.,...ous
1~ Wanted To Do

67&amp; Pt . Pht•Mnl
468 leOn
576 Apple Grove
773 Malon
882 . NewJt~en
895 Letaft
937 Buttilllo

.

HelD W•tlld

.,.,, ...

72 Trucks tor Sale
73 V~tns &amp; 4 wo ·,
MolorcycltJS
'75 loatt a Motors tor Sale

w..,ted to Rent
48 Equtpm.,t tor fluftt
49 For le . .
47

51

Hout1holdOOOdl

63

Anliqu"es

- ,...
...,,.

,

81 · Home lmptMment 1

82 Plumbing I H••rnu

&amp;4 Mi1c. Mtrchlf!dil•
56 Building luppli•

83 E ~.,ating

a•

Elec:tric .. I Rebigun11•on
8&amp; · &lt;Min•al Hauhny
86 Mobtle H~e RtrP••

51&amp;

P•t• tor 511 •
57 "1uliclll ln .. rumentt
58 f'utts &amp;. V•glllabl•
59 For Sat• or Tndt

Bu1in•• OPJ!Oftunny
22 Mon&amp;\f to Loin
23 Prol•sional Set"¥icd

·''

.

6Z - Sportiftg Qoodl

21

., ,1

71 · Autos tor S-'•

Farms for Rent ·
APirtmtnt for flunl

45 • Furnial1ed Rooms
46 Space
Rent

12 SihHitiOn Wlftlld
13 lnsur•nce
•• lusin•• Trarnrng

I'XI'ItaiiJ{t'S •.•

4.4 6 Gali1polit

43
44

...

Tron spor ldllon

HouMt tor Rer~t
Mobile Homn for A•1t

42

'

61 - Farm EqU'I)mvnt
.62 Wlf!ltd t.o euv
.63 llvi!SIOck ,
64 Hay &amp; Gra'in
65 s... • Fwrtr4Wer

F•rmt for Sill
BusinMt Buildings
Lots • Acre-e•
Rell htatt Wlnled ·

. 1;4111

EnqJioyment
Serv1ceo

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&amp; l "'!'luck

s...

Mobil• Hom• for SOlie

41

.

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Cut-3P.

,.

Sllm·Dealgn .AMJFM Stereo Cauette

33~- 0ft

3911 :.li

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Great tound you can carry around. Aulo-leval,
bullt·ln rnlkl,lhoukllf llnlp. 114-752

011- - . • . "'·

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•
...........
on-_!l'
-lind,.._
__
llil"no_lillt_

Moft. llwu loL 1:110 A.m. io 1 :00 p.m.
- - . ,. 10:00 a.m. 111 4:110 " · m.
PIIIICIII'TIONI ,
.
I'll, H2-21d '

Clllcll
IWI~ lOUCH·'IONEIPULSE.,....._
....cliiiM:i'.only-~dloll-,.. oon • • -

!'lit ...n::-.:.:,o.............,-.FCCr

-..,.oH.

Corp.~ I

OffJCC ~will begin at 7 p.m.

Ella

Ylll

= ,.'"' ___ _

IICAiw;=~tiCiudllbl

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. ""*-•Aig. TM~

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DeALERS

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Public Notice

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87 Upl'lalstery

PubliC Notice. ·

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
tor tho purchooo of o 1111
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS · modal palco cruiMr with 1
OF TME TEN Mill
VB 3&amp;0 g11 engine. ComLIMITATION
pleto opecl~ ..tlonolor ..td
. Niltlcolohorobyghiontbot
pollco cruloor .. n be ob·

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5~~~~:~~1{~~

THE
·
I
COUNTIY-CLU
'

Sale

GOI.F lfSSONS •. SJO oa.

6 fer SSS

APPUMCO

90 DAr WUUitTY

WASIIIIS-$100 111
DIYIS-Ut .,.
llfiiGIIATOIIS-$100 •

IAHIS---$115 •

Fllllils-SIIS •

·

•aokEN~YIIIS-S
APPSl71tAH•C· E
SERVICE

992-SUS • 915·1561

JOHN TIAPOID

PubliC Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
OF SALE
S....., Tow1llhlp Tru•
- \IOIIo«wlor ooltet Public
AUCIIIon 111 0no 11n ~~mo~y

"' 1M ..... Ollduoetlon,
Of' the louthlm Local
· lchoOI Dlotrlat, lloclne.
Dhlo, ,_... on· thO 11th
' dey ofl'atlniiiY.·1 181. - ·
wtllbuu•.,r••-ot
,fho '""""'
lllld IUbdfv~
'tion at a 1'11111 eleatlon to
... hlllllri iiW I• l~«n Loaal ....... Dltllllol a!MIItt
,COUnty. Oliff. at"" ....lor
p1aoo1 rrr Vlltlntl thonln. on
111e 7111., rrr~1.e11.

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. . . . . . . . of

&amp;-'IIIIMIDio-

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PUBLIC BID
ADVERTISEMENT
.
Sealed bldo will be recolwd by tho VlllltJt of
SyrecuM. Ohio, untH 12
o'clock noon local time on
Thurodoy, May 2. 188t . It
which tlmo they will be
oponod and publicly read.

•

ClA~~IFID ADl ~

fll TH.=-:f~~-'~,.,._,,

'I

-

-Eieotricol orod Plulllll...
-CGII-wortl

-floo.,..

-•-=::_
~·IFIIEE ESTIMATEII

Potatoes •.••• S6S 8

Seed
Cucumbers •••• -4 tor Sl oo

. . ••••••••••••••• sass Flat
Pans1es

WE HAVE YELLOW SEED

INCIEDIILI SWID COIN

MEIGS FARM· MARIO

300 Welt Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

• •
CAIPEN!IY

'GuttJrt

992·5526

Downepoutl

949•2161
4-5-tl·l .._

-·

SPECIAL

•Ou..lty Worll

ht SO High School

e&lt;:tt pllh

•Fret Eltimll..

CONSTI,CnON ·

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Stu.. ntt

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CAIPITCUAIIIIIlUPLOOIICAB
•ANaonabta

"c.rw'm!''

Rat•

667-6179

7·2·2411

GROOM
ROOM

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SPEEDY VAC
Quality

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES I GARAGES

•ss_
ELL

Sweeper
Repair ·
698-6591

"At R11-blt PricH"
Pll. 9"9·2101
or IH. 9•9·2160
•. Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

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

SIDING CO.

11. I, lwil l OIL

J.J4·'fl-tfR

INSULATION

•R=:=t

•VInrl llcllnll

•R='::,
•In
n

"Free Eatlmettt"

...s ...

.... ....9·1101 .
., .... 949·1160

Ill taryan , _

NOs.AYWIS
S·II·Ifl

4-1-'90·1-

992-1172

•.. i

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•

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......... .

Floor Fln'-h

J&amp;L

II' .

742-2251.

...

Mld!IIPDrt. Olllo

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• !

. .. .

CIDAI
CONS'IIUC1ION

FOREVER IRONZE

•VINYL SIDING
.
•ALUMINUM IIDING
.oiLOWNIN
INSULATION

.. ..

NO JOB TOO SIALL
flEE ESTIMATES

THE

t;~===3=··:·':9l:·l:m:o~.

f .,. ~

•RIImoclellng and
· Home Aepelra
. •Roofing
•Skiing
•Painting

.ILIWI$.0.•

oHigh Gloa . on THe

I I,

, _,_,

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915·C473

5-U·'tO If•

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C0111plttt Groeml..
For All lrHCis

•EMiliE MEINAI

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991·6MI or

F11t Ory

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Step I C"t¥111'1

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R L MASH

10 SESSIONS - $10
Call 949·2826
For Appt.
IISHAit ID., UCIB

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•Aepllr Wort&amp;

NEW - IEPAII

......,

PROM TANNING

• ' 1 r, ~..,
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.Owner &amp; Operatw

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614-992·6120
Pon.-oy,

.-

TII·COUm

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IECYCUNG

OPEN 7DAVS
A WEEK
8 A.M. ':TIL 7 P.M.

-

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.........._...

H F" elM!; .. ,_.

AUTO PAnS
Speclalldftt In
Custom , , _ l...,r
NEW • UIED PA"TS
FOR ALL MAKES •
. MOOELS

992·7013
Dr 992-5553

....... arw.

ai'S':~AIICI
IIIVICI.

liu.t.• ........

lii·COUNTY

.,..a.

IECYCIMG

loaoll40ff ...
'llloc-of
If. 7 111. 141

,_.,,..,..

,.,........ h ..........

"I·IIIS er
..••, ••I

llfL ...... a.

USED RAILROAD TIES

PI

O·t2·10-lfn

mo.

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..... ,_,..._.... -.-&amp;--·--.. -·
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BILL SLACK
992-2269

1-100-141-0070
31&amp;1'11/1

a&amp; IIIIa

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

01 TOll FlEE

DAIWII, OHIO

•CIDWA¥1
OVIN-AII ·

SHIUI &amp; TIEE
TIIM and
IEMOV.L

. WHAlEY'S

IY,

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ULUOI,_IS

614·"2·5114

• .. . ' .oj

IELUI'S CUSTOM 11-NG

N•tt ·l•

. 'Yt ... lilt .. lt. 241 .........

I #HAll

. Wa hYB (h IIIII Our ........ ,.

;II Mlillt''"
'UPHOLSTDY

Chest•, Oh.

IIJ. ... Sec111d
........rt

.,. 1&lt;/t.,
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•

SPECIALIZING IN ....

•Custom lent Ellhalllt lyet11111
•Complete 1JM of ExhaUit ~uppllte
•Handle and lnetllll M..- lhoclla
Come ud lee VI,.., A I'Ne IMptiiiiDII
. . . . II d•

Hencl Tufting
Cullom Diipee

.......................
1/llltl/l ..

36 Yooro Expwhnee

.......2·2121
We
Whet We Do •
We Do ...... -~'~-··:-• '

4716t St. lt. 241

. . . . . . oddl·
r

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•Vlnrl lldl111
•R-Itlon

ROOFING·

992·6215
P-Y· •. .'91J lin
11 14

•ssm &amp; IIIII

FOREVE. BRONZE

ODD COLORS - NEW PASTEL COLOIS

Cabbage, Broccoli,
Cauliflower, Strawberry
Plantao.

~~ . ,.

:::.;.;::::
•Land-plnn •'l•aciMtl

V. (. YOUNG IR

Merc~ndlse

' 4 lbs. $119 ·
Bananas........
Head Lettuce •.•••• hd. 39(

Howud L WrfteHI

Gutter Cleenlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•

54 Mlacellaneoua

Kennebec

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCEII
OF THI tiN MILL
•·
LIMITAnON
Notice Ill fllrllwlfwn thot
,I n - - rrfoll..tutlon

.·

-11~·dlilow•
-~~--

Acrea ,,.. ,_. Offlco
I'OMIIOr OliO

Soout C.. ld., Chlldelr 1

z.

· JO.lJNG'$.
CAII'EN11R SERVICE

.

.

J-•La-n,
Clotk·T--er
131 27; 1414, 11, 3to

1..::;;....;;;;..;;~..;;...;-y;-...-;..;._~---':il

lr---~=-----1

NEW GRIPS-............. S4
lrolten (lubt Rtpnirttl
TROPHIES - PlAQUES ·
IADGES

period of tlmo,
The poHo lor Aid Eloctlon
will bo open at 11:30 o'clock
1.m . and Nmein open untH
7:30 o'clock p.m . of uid
'day.
By Order of the Boord of
Electlono, of Meigl Counl'!.
Dhlo.
·
Evolyn Clortc, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyor. Director
Dotod M11ch 21, 1111 ' '
141 11. 11, 21; Ill 4tc

PubliC Notice

t"r,~~ ~ocir.iACUIE

Business. Servi es .

=~.:~~= :=~~:~ !~~::::.

tlonol tax of4.0 llour) mlllo
: NOTICE OF SALE
• On tho 17th day of AprP, to run for three years. at a
1:981. AT 11:00 A.M . . . rote not excHdlng 4.0 mlllo
1971·Noohui Moblll Homo, for each one doller of valua·
tion, which amount• to forty
~lng tlie ~porty ol the liM
Joolt R. ·Miller, of Rutland. ·contllo(t0,40) lor Nch one
Qhlo, wll be oold at tho hundrod dolloro of voluoilon
&lt;:oout Houoo ....,.,. Socond lor throo (3) yooro.
Stnot. PomorQy. Ohio, for . The poh for 11ld Eloctlon
· tflo belt obtainable price. will be open ot 8:30 o'clock
a.m. and ,.main open untH
Oath on delivery ol title.
lnqulrloo ..n be modo ot 7:30 o'clock p.m. of Mid
day.
814-742·21103.
By Order of the Boord of
KaNn Thacltu,
Admlnlotrotor of the Eiectlono, of Molgo County,
Eltlte of Jock R. Miller; Ohio.
Evelyn Clerk, Chairman
docoo-. Molgo County
Probe!• Court · Jane M. Fry myor, Director
Co• No. 28,4&amp;1 . Doted March 21. 19B1
141 11. 18. 2&amp;; l&amp;l 2. 4tc
14110.11. t2. 3tc

......

II"

of voluotlon, which omounu
to 1e0.101 fifty conte lor
oech one hunclrod dolllro of

PubliC Notice

..

.:=:..:=:..=..::..:.:.l--...:.---:--.,.....l.-...:.------1--------"""';::=======t

.. In
of purM~ence
tho Boord of
Of• Reeolution
Edueotlon.

~·

.... . .

PubliC Notice

tolnod from the alerk·t-· ' St., 8yr-ll, OH. 41nl •
ourer or poU.. chief of VII• Mid oubmhlod In a Nlled
logo of Syrocu•.
............ t~lolnly Mldonod
Bldomu~ beedcfNI.... to """"""' Crul... 'lld.
·v iii...- of ~Hull, 'OIIrd
Vllleto of Syrecu .. re-

velu•tion, for 1 continuing

...•

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

..

--.....

F.illll SII IIIJII·!~

Ann uu11cemcnts

Over 15 Words

Aatesaie tor con•c:utNe runs . brokenupdanw1ll becn•ged
tor each d., as seplfate ads.
·

Sold tax being ' on oddl·
tlonol tax· of &amp;.0 lflvo) mill•
tor • co"'lnulng period of

Call 614-992-7Hi4 for Appt.

• • to be held ot Soli•
bu'Y Townllllp lulcll,.,
II..,. Sr. Inti•; on tho 27th
day of prM, 1,111 at 10:00
A.M.
larolrGibbo.·Ciork '
34041 loN Run Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 411781
Ph. 182·7081
14111, 1S. 2&amp;. 3tc

2911 :.J&amp; .

the· Athens C,ounty Extenaion

••

T - iofttii n11182.

Good dental hygiene helpe werd off oelaulua 1nd periodontal
probleme. You'll find everything you n.d it...

....

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•

'

New Iller-optic pooba hu allullt·ln light. 10 • dll;tllot- -the
calaulua he'a -.ping -IV. Jounllll rtf P'veclodontalatv reported
the - · dlvlca. llld to lmjiiOIN .,.....,.... Df bwbiwnt.

· ,...._. ......

~

. "··
......

BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

****

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.•·: ,1

TOPICS

'

·: .'PubliC Notice,

NoMe een be reehaped In 30 mlnutll with a - piOCIIIIure. Phi·
lechlpllle eurgeon worlul through lnalaloM lnllda the noltrlla. ·

•·-

'

'

$9.00
$13.00
" $1 .30/ day

~~::: !;.:.':rrpooe ot

•'
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9911.:1,

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•

,•

****

'The . ., moedna of lbe policy
COIIIIIIlal'e will be beld May J6 •

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"'
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••

.

SHOE PLACE

..... ·ICII!~ ......

6
10

'

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15
15
15
. 16

lion to be held In the Molgo
Lo..l School Dlotrlct of
Melgo County, Ohio, ot tho
rogularplooeaolvotlngfhltl'·
oln. on the 7th dey of Moy.
188i. tho queotton of lovv·
lngotu,inuceuoftiiOtetr
mill Umltotlon.lortho bene·
fit of Molgo Locol School

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and owner financing of up
to 80% of purchase amount may be
possible for qualifying person to
buy very nice large home on J'h
a'cres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths. 2
garages, rented 1 BR apt: Property
includes 4,800 sq. fl. farm bldg,
and mobile home .

. ..
•.

STAT

****

.•

.

niore

voM of thO_.. of ' oold ~----===-.::.::.;~.:::;..:::;=.,.=;..;;:;..;=.,
oubdlvlolon at o Spoclol ...c- ·

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL' OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

•'

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••

you can lliellnl 1411-4032

MlcrocaJHtte

•

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Low Aa Ill,.., llaniho

herita_gt
houst

•

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1481! · 2~

Colllog

•

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Toget!Mrneq halpa. Study It the Un"'-11ty of Nebrallka
found that coup'- who wortcld together to lowar choleaterol
with diet ch1ngea got better ,..ultl thaln tlloae who tried It
Ilona.

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11te helrinas ha~ )'It lO be ......

v.

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lave'111

sggg "":.~.oo

provide the comfort of athle[ics
with Nurse Ma[es' proveR sup- ,
port and d4rability. Discover
me shoes that have champi·
oned professional footwear.

. .... I

Oura.t ·
Hugt15•

2DMBHD ·

'tbu'lllove the fit of Nurse
Mates Athletics because they

~

: BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE ·
:
4: ~0 P.M. DAY BEFORE
•
PUBUCATION

.,r;

In Pari&amp;. docto .. et Salpetrltrl lta.p11tl •• treating aoma
brMat cancer petlenta with checnothtr8py and radiation end no eurgery: Flve-yMr auNivel mala llld to be compere·
bla to. thoM undergoing m111tactomy.
,

..

1
3

Public Notice

.

~~

Goocl'nawa: eardiovucular dia- h1a declined 30 percent in
the U.S. In the l81t 30 yaera. R•Mreh ..-ported In the NEngland Joumel of Medicine creillt,t l~etvlt chen(ll&amp; emong
the population. MoN lmpronmenl Ia tapeotld.
·

'

•
• •

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Ra1a
$4.00

Words
15

Days

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
11 .00 AM SATURDAY
2 .00 PM MONDAY
2.00 PM TUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2.00 P M THURSDAY
2 00 PM. FRIDAY. ,

.:BULLETIN 'BOARD

~

•'•'
•'...

•'

A Fitting
Champion.

PHA

District Dim:tor Lance Wilson
_said that the district may have no
choice but to pay SCS.
"All alonJI. lhcy have provided
documentallon that they were
elCeeding their budget." he said.
After se-.1 mmwes of discussion, the commiliCC voted 17-4 to
accept SCS'a!"""'""' and 10 pay
them lhc w!c!itiooal money.
The committee alao voted unani!Jiousty to enter a mutual aid
.,.-eement with the Roa-HlahlandPickaway-Fayeae Counties wute
district. In the eveat tbat tho
AOHJMV dialrict could 1101
its OWIIWIIIII DNds, the RHPP district qrcoa to ~Jte the exceas
!· waste, die IXlllliiCt saya. .
1
• The commillct voted to hold
I lfo Jarinas ~ day at lhe belinning of tbe pablic ~ I*iod of
die diltrict plan. One IIKII1IiD&amp; llld '
.. e-., ._.., will be held in
adjacent coaaties, according to
commltiOc cllairman Dale Neal.

~-

•

..,. "

Hospital news

an~"

·-~
.. "'#i

.'

Pauline Rumbaugh .

Coatinued rrom Pile 1
come back and ask us for money
that we've already paid them
once," Jon Evans said. "It is asinine
that we even consider paying diem

~..:

TC--..

RATES

··Ads outs.du Me •g•. Galt. a or Masun cuuntu!S mu st be pre
. pa.d
'Rec:tiW'tl S,60 drscounl tor adf pard rn advance.
• free ads
Giveaway and Found ads undet 15words wrll be
nm 3 d.,-s "'no ch•ge:
'Puett ot Jd lor •U c•pitJIIeu~.rs "doubte prrctt o t ad •toll '
'7 poHII Me type unly used .
·
,
'Sentlnet 11 u.o l respotrsrble lot errors ~rtur l~r st llat (Cher.k
' . tor enun lirlt d.,- old runs 111 papl.'f) . Cilll tn.-fore 2 00 p m
dJ¥ aftttr publrcatioll 10 maktt correctKm
•Ads that musl be pa~d m advancu illll
Card of Thanks .
Htrppy Ads ,
' In MemOIIMll
V;ud 5"115

THURSDAY PAPER
tHIUAV PAPER

.\

No~ ..

lOth

·.

l1ililginal weilher at both Edwards Kennedy Space Cent« runway.
do Ill orbit Wednesday other IIIIa
·and at the
Space Centt:r.
The astronauts~ lht OllloY lbe view while login&amp; bOIIul
- -...;u·es pn·mary goal of the 3 th shuttle .. ..:........,,.
............ time" llld WCIIt with an
Wl.th fi·vc-:-Janding-:f .
v.....--~
on botb coasts, flight controllers mission Sunday wbcn they anwcurndio sylleni.
·
waved off the first shot at a · l•oobed the Gamma Ray o.-vaWhen rookie a.stronaut Jan
Kennedy Space Cenler IOUChdown toey satellite after I daring emer- Davis toot over u I(IICecraft combecause offog and possible low I!CDCY spacewalt by Ron and Apt municator in m.ission conttOI, Apt
clouds, preferri~instead 10 wait 10 which Ross sh.ook loose ·a gave her a glimpse of what_to
one 94-minulie
t 10 get a· beuer jammed llldio antenna boom.
Cltpect when she blasts off With
handle on the weadler.
It w~ the first spacewalt by astronaut-husband Mar~ Lee and
As it turned out lhe forecast U.S. astronauts in
than five five crewmatcs on a SC:Ience milwas wrong and conditions ~both years and only, lhc acconde- car- ~in 1992.
,
.
sites were acceptable as 111Jlding . ried out 011 an emerge11cy basis.
'Hello, Jan, you re aomg to
li.nie approached
· ·'1 With the GR,cYSIICUitc safely on Jove ill" Apt 11111ioed. .
Nonethcles~. Atlantis wes. its way. Ross and A!lllhen lll&amp;ed . ''Is it worth the wait7" she
di!ecled to land at Edwards. adding and already-plaancd spacewalk asked.
. .
.
a week 10 its ground ~g and Monclay' to test SJ*C station coo''And more. Jt•s mcred•blc.
many lhousands of dollius
to
the
·
slniCiion
equipmenL
Some
of
views are
.
.,
With
IIDIICCwaib ind
h
1· the
d "J
ou amazin&amp;,''
oulcfn't
flight's price tag, cjespite apparent·
two ,flite Jaun'
a suee. rep 1e · an, Y w
ly perfect Florida weather, beefed ceisfu1 sate ite launch behind believe iL This spacecraft has greal
up brakes an~ an improved • • the shuale fliers IJ:Id ~ to windows.~·

Classifie

MONDAY PAPER
TUE$0AY PAPER
WEDNf.SOAV PAPER

-·--Area
deaths-.

l.

homes in Houston afk-s briefphysical exams and reunions wilh family
members.
.
.
Left behind in orbit was the
$617 million Gamma Ray Observatory, an astrononl)' satellite .
launched from Atlanus's payload
bay on Sunday after a bold emergency space walt repair job by
Ross and Apt. the first spilcewalk
by American astronaufs since 1985.
Officials say lhe giant spacecraft. built to study extremely l)igh~
energy radiation from the most violent sllll'S and galaxies in·the univme, is in good condition and saili~ smoothly through its initial
0 'tal checkout.
'
Atlantis's
re-entty Thursday·was
in doubt until almost the last
minute l)ecause of predicted

.. -·-

.

Ohio exteDded'forecast
Saturday throup MOiiday
A chance of show!'lll and thun·
derstorms Saturday and Sunday,
and a chance of showers on Mon· ·
day. Highs wlllmge from lhc 60s
to lower 70s Satw'day and Sunday,
and from the upper 40s to tbe 50s
on Monday.

COP~ OEAOLII\IE

" I feel that we have the right.
lllliiosphere' IQ,WCIIt .,ward a I1IIF,
intense and .detailed p.;ogtam tlllit
will-guide us toward solutions,~·
Schaad said.

ceded in death by five sisters and
four brolllm.
•
Funeral
services
wlll
be
held at
: Pauline (Pat) Rumbaugh, 73,
1
p.m.
Friday
at
the
Pryor
FunaaJ
died Wednellda)', April10, 1991, at
16' home in Winifrede, W. Va. fOl- Home, East Bank, W. Va. The Rev.
lowing 8n extended illness.
· Dennis OiU lllid lhc Rev. Charles
• Born on April 17, 1917, in Fort Stevens will officiate and burial
wlll be in lhc Kanawha Memorial
o'efiance, 'W. Va.. she was tbe Cemetery
at Glasglo·w, W. Va.
· daught« of tbc late Colonel Jerome
Friends
may
call at the funeral
I alld Maude Frances F'mt CoareU. . home from 710 9 p.m. Thursday.
She is survived by her husband,
Leslie Wamic Rumbaugh, two sons
add daughren-in-law, Kenneth and
K.ly Riunbaugh, Keith and Faye
.Vela'- Memorial HOIJiital
Rumbaugh, another son, James
Wecbm1ay, Aprl110
Rumbaugh, all of Winifrede; a
Admissions: Keuh Musser,
daughter and son-in-law, Donna Middl
. .
and Andrew Ball, Hurricane, W.
Dlac"\:'ges: EHen Wells, Victo~.; a sister, Gwinnie While, Mid- ria Quillen. and Perry Hoffman.
dlepon. Md I sister and brother-inlaw, Joe Leah and James Mullins,
Winifred; two brothen and sistalin.-law, Bill and Chloteal Coureu,
qwapeatre, W. Va., and C. J. and
Della Cottrell, Winifrede, nine
grandchildren, four great-grandchildrea. and a special niece, June
Cox, Winifred, and several other
ni!'CCS and nephews. She_was pre·

''Copr, wheels stopped
Atlantis,' replied astronaut Brian
Duffy 'from mission control in
Houston. "Steve, you and your
crew !)id it all and you made it look
easy.Congratulations on a great
JOb."
.
Touchdown came one day late
because of dangerous Mojave
Desert crosswinds and one day shy
of lhe
anniYCISIIl)' of the shottie Columbia's p~ Aprill2,
1981, bllistoff on the maiden flight
of lhe orld 's fust rcusablc space
1 w
•
P ~ehalting up· one of the most
su. ccessful fli~hts in the 39 miss•ons to da1e, ase.I ·44. Cam eron,
41, Linda Godwin, 38, and spacewalkers Jerry Ross, 43, and Jay
Apt, 41, planned to fly ~k to theu

'A cl01nrtu"l ~ulvttrlisemtJnt pluc t.."lm lht! Oarly Stmt uutl (.:a
Clrl)l · claurtrud drsplav. Busrnou Card ouul h.•H;ti nolices)
Will illsu appear rn the Pt Phmsant Rew s tur 11nd the Goillli
pules Oarly Trrbunc. ruatlung owr.n 18.000 horntts

sion .will be the first step in ,an
ongoing local economic develop-'
mcnt program. ·
"What J plan to do now,"
Schaad said Thursday, "is to anaIrze the information presented in
light of the community's develop· ment concerns. J'hen, 1 plan to
introduce a new pro_pam through
OCES called 'Tate Olargc'."
"Tate Charge", according to
Scbud, is a five-session OCES
program thal will assiJt those interestcd in community development in /
devclopinf. I.ong-rantf: plans tO·
vo~laslao :ghont~ to
~rns

...

The Deily Sentinel Page 13

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio

Shuttle Atlantis glides to smooth tou~bclown

contlaaectrrvmp•1

t)o's abilitY to deal wilh conttOver·
sy. He IISo stated that academics
and educational opportunities are
~ital. '-·
Other ,impMant factors in com!11unity development, according 'to
' Boothe, are an innovative arid
diversified leadership base and a
Willingness 10 invest local and privatc capital wilhin the community.
Speaker Sam Crawford, an
Extension Specialist for tho OCES,
reinfocted much of the information
presented by Boothe, stating that
conu-oversy is actual beneficial for
tile communi!)'. in that it exhibits
concenl witbin the community's
rNidcniJ and leaden.
~ Meiis Coonty Chamber Executjve Director Elizabeth Si:halld
anticipates !hat Wednesday's ses·
..•

l

and il was noted that Auoa Shccls • Rural Schools based It Ohio Uni·
of}'le!ss High School has ·been versity.
The
Cleveland
lawsuit'
was liled
selected from tbe dvoe IICIIIineos to
1cp1 rut Meip CouDty. The other as a i:lass action silit ~ling
nominees wae Jennifer Darlene all 612 Ohio sc:hool d11lriCIS in
Smith, Soulhcm Local, and Aildrea Ohio. The coiltapion of the coaliCleland, EaAem.
tion is that lhc suit does 1101 ICCU·
The oo.d IPIII'OVCd a 1e110lution rately repreSent all the systems
to option out Q( the CicveJand law challenging Ohio's school funding
,
·
· ·
suit on school funding equity. All fonnula.
The action to get exempt from
three Meiss school dislncts have
Iaten similar action, as have olher that class suit is now in the appeal
schools in Southeastern Ohio proeess and expected to be !iCard
which have .joined the Ohio Coali- about Apil 17. If successful then
lion for Equity lll)d Adequacy of the coalition plans to file its own
School Funding, an outgrowth of suit and Meigs wlll become a part
lhe Coalition of Appalachian and of lhat action.

Expansion of the Adult Basic
Education pognun was discussed
at lenpb during tbe Tue8day nigbt
meettng of the Meigs County
Board of Education held in lhe
board room.
John D, Riebel, Sr., superintendent, was authorized 10 enter into a
contract, with the Meiss County
Department of Human Services to
expand the ABE program and to
employ personnel to staff the program.
.
The board also qreed to contract with the Washington County
Board of Education for Early
Childhood supervisory services.
The superintendent reponed on
plans for the annual Me;gs County
Academic Excellence Banquet .
which has been Set for May 9 ai 7
p.m. in the Meigs High School
Cafeteria. ·
·
Cheryl Halley was employed as
a substitute teacher to be used on
an as-needed basis. A repon was
given on the Franklin B, Walters
All-Scholastic Award Nominees

.

..·:. · Th.W'Id8Y, Aprll11; 1991

\

'-1 ....... all. 41FG

#

,. ' .

.: !!·.
•.• u,,. .
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•

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Sentinel

O'hlo

LAFF-A-DAY

"

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-~~~-~

- •: ~.P.O.­
:tOQ, Cldlp =Ia, OH 41ftt.

BORN LOSER

Hollllhold

......

1he Dally Sentinel Page 15

Gooda

Television
Viewing

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IS IS TflE FAMOUS

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hW~IAl .WOULD
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Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
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HOW WILL WE

CAPTURE lliEM~
A QUICK BLOW

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1:30 (]) 8 IIJ Dlrr...nt World An
oratory proteuor allkl her
lluelanta to write their own

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a1112.loulh Point, OhiD. 111 ••

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Clacoell hiarofllyphlea found
In Owl cave. ~ .
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1-IQ0.241 . .0SM.IItre.

ASTRO-GRAPH .

Protaaalonal
. Blrvlcaa

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL ·

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'

.

ahead. Send tor Aries· Aalro-Greph
predictions today by. mailing S t .25 to
Astra-Graph. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
Bo sure lo alate your zodiac llign.
TAURUI (April ....,, llll) In your
bulinetl deallnga today. don't let the
othel' guy IMI he'llhe only oource who
can gratify your raqulremento. Your
plOy COUld gain,... ax1r11 condlideratlon.
Gil. . . (..., 11-.luM llll) One of your
nobler attrlbu181 11 Your loyally to
lrlondo. A pal yoii'A ttand by today wiU not readily forget your true-btua

quallll•.

CANCIR (.Mw 11-.lu!J 21) Yau'A perform bell when under pr8S1Ure today,
10 don't back IWIY from challengeo.
AJH'II 12, 1•1
Yau have good r~ to draw upon,
. and. better yel. you'll enjoy being
Brighter, mort pto-' tlmea lhould vletoriOul.
be ahead tor you In tho upcoming year. ._.0 (olu!J . .Aug. 22) Thel'e may be
lQU'rellllely to develop a more relued -hkog good you'll have to lhare to'!1111tude that w111- you wall. both day, but don't lhlre It wllh llrangalt.
_,morctallr onc1 ""'*"~'·
Chock your old llondbya ttrat to -~~ n
AJIIII ~11·Aprll11) Aattary can • _.,.ng INy wautd appreciate.
acore polnlllor You today, provtded n Ia VIIIGO tau. llll lopl. •1 aon-11
11.-relnd ~~~~'*· Go OUI 01 jout whor-.ltygm~youonlyhlll~~
~way tocomptllnalt u-WIIam you fW
IUPIIOtl COUld do a romarkallle about·
- worllly oiiiJICIIIIICIIIce. Get. Jun!p ,_today. going Ill-Out Johalp you. Ba
on life Dy uncllrltlnCIIng the k•.. 1 Ql -e to lhOw your gtalltude.
wfiloh - gMm1ng you In the YM1 L.u (lept. ~
You'N , _ a

. . . . . . m, no polo, 114-

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to ._lltwn
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614-992-2156
304-67.5-1333
614-·446-2342

......

-~~~
...~~~~
11]1 700 Club Willi PM '

Up 1e II,OOD ,_, lllllfllllon
Clo._.
imJllodlllo lorvlot.

31

a•

. ~::-" .

23

l!jea on ... Ptl&amp;e Stereo.

WUiidarFife
·
111
~ Llndlntl
Maek'a auepenllon hils the
law linn l:ald; Val Ntume
hornti. Storao. Q
~. . . . TNII: Tho Nlllt

Mol-,
I I hod.' moiOIWin_IJ,_

IV~ IACKIC»&gt;, lilt. ~­

-~.
- - - llo&amp;I"IIJ lor
'L
~-·
1M - " llo nrldllll-ot
¥1111111 IIDIIII: ,., - .
...... -Cit.-~!!'- ""'l.'!!- .......IIIIJI IOih IMJOI" II I
WaJll
-·Call 114- t¥.-.-loaono,..ttow
- In
.....
arftl
.........

.lET

1'.

"Ready to celebrate tl\8 arrival of

,. ,. -· '

. . . ; __ ~-· -----~
.

.

•.

••

~---- .2.·-··- -·-···i ··ll...o-~'--....-·· -

.-,._,_...;._.......,_ .. -

10:01 (I] MOYII!: Dallli lcNam
(2:00)
10:30 lJl Weet VIrginia Report

wonderful woy or pulling those whom

• Crootc lnd Clilll

you're Involved wlfh cOmpletely at ease
today . Thole arringements will be imbued with harmony. aa well aa pleasant

11:001J)8 Cll Cll • • 11118
IIJNewl
(J) Nlghl c-t Q

memorial.

. o•.....,..

A third bridge player has received
an honor for services .to the game
from Queen Elizabeth II. In 1988 the
Medal of the Order of AUstralia was
awarded to Tim Seres.
.
He was ' born in Vienna in 1925 to
Hungarian parents. Before World War
II the family headed east. and in 1947
they took a boat to Australia. During
the trip Seres learned· to play bridge.
Less than a year later he won his first
national championship. and for the
last 40 years this quiet Sydneysider
ha$ been lhe undisputed king of bridge
in Australia.
He has all the characteristics of a
great player: imperturbable temperament, ability to concentrate for hours
on end without any loss of form, per- ·
.feet technique. and imagination. To·
day's hand, in which Seres was East,
made him world-famous.
North was cautious in bidding only
two .spades, but South compensated
with his aggressive jump to game.
West led the live of clubs. Seres
paused for a moment. then won the
trick with the ace of clubs and
switched to the king of hearts.
Declarer could have succeeded by
playing off four rounds of diamonds,
discarding his lwo heart losers. but he
thought East had the queen of hearts.

EAST

WEST
+to 53
• Q 10 7 3

+AJ

.K94 '

+J92

t8H 3
+A 8 6 2

.9 75

SOUTH
+KQ86 2
• J85
e A6
+KJ 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
South

Wesr

+
4+

Pass 2
All pass

1

North

East

+

Pass

t+

Opening lead: • 5

So afler winning dummy's ace. of
hearts. South called for a trump. Seres
rose wllh the ace and relurned the
heart nine. West took 1wo winners in ·
the suit and then inflicted the final ignominy: he ledllis last heart, and Seres
ruffed with the spade jack, promotirig
West's 10 for two down .
_
This defense was deemed the best of
1975 by the International Bridge Press
Association.

CROSSWORD.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Tardy

5 False
appear·
"thirty· .
somelhing'
12 Muse ol
astronomy
13 Custom
14 Letter's ·

••'

451ncline

'

DOWN
1 Weather
map

spots
2 Crooked
3 Ford
. classic
4 Lure

5Join
6 Bout

Yasttrday'l Answer

sites
7 Taper
8 Addition·
signer
ally
15 Foolball
&amp;G111me
player or
hair worry
. piece
11 Sparklers 10Corn
helping
18 E)(cuse
22 Discon· 16 Danson
or Knight
carted
19 Lacomo·
24 Letter
live, old
stroke

style

20 Slant
35 Torn
21 Question- 36 Bruins'
able
campus
22 No longer 37 Now's
fizzy
counter·
23 Assistant
part
28 Canadian 38 Superla·
river

r

live

29 Hon1e
confines
30 Bad

ending
39:Haggard
novel

' review

31 Attack

·

40 Great
amotlllt

wife

26

B~,.tmbler

27 Tijuana
ta-la
30 Small
flower
32Comb

parts
· 33 Bat wood
34 Produces
38 Mol)ll·
cello, e.g.
41St. Louis
landmark
42 'Act the
butler
43 Man, for.'
one
441,ease
signer

•

·.
•

••
.,.

.•

DAILY CRYP'i'OQUOliS- Here's how to work It:

•..
e

:r=..,....
r~~onlglil

8·Ia • - lnd Mra. KinD

coutoflle an exception. Lot compauiOn

11:llll~:o~ Tonlghl._

take pleoedeliCe a- practicality.
CAPI?ICOIIN (Dec. 21...1an. 11)
Changeo you wll be lnoti'IIIMfltal In
making today that affect your' lamlly
lhould win the pral- of all concerned.
You'll lie glad you did what you did.
AQUAIII&amp;II (a.. ........ 11)1t's Important to 1at the ono you love know
how you truly t.ll today. Your ..,....
lion at -devotion will llevatelhll
lndlvldull'l J1Pir11a IIIII rrllkl the Clay I .

· CI)PJ

!ltd

(!) .?olin llaLitgMht's 0111

on 0111

l e PGA C11a1P

t:~:••-:\L. a

Tho MuWra

........ ,...,.,.
Hlgl)llglilli

0 lp a IIConllr

.........

.

,..l.!;ac;a:o·
01'111

I

for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apossrophes, the length and formation of the words arc
all hints. l'.ach day the code letters are different.
CRr~oQUOTE

Jsz

NTMXZCJ

Jsz

POAXJK

VQI&gt;CJC

11:11Cil Cltnra 0
,
111410 • ...,,., ...,... -

oil 21) EthOUgh tlllngl may lOOk bleak, you
IIIOUid dO ... tor rounert whon 1111 fl.,
nal rwulls artllllled. Tho MCrlll to IIUCceoala to hang In there.

blONGI'ELI.OW
· One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used

..- 4, 11

.

\

Ql

PDAXJK

Ql

SXC

QAZ

t

411

AXYOLBAAX?l

Hill Stereo. Q

OMIIml VIae
Mlertarn llullo lhop

dlatorted tnlormatlon, Ia about to make
a completO chengoo of hNrl. You two
may become very good lrlondo.
IAGITT AIIIUI (Nov. D-Dec. 21) Under
moat condlllono. It 11 uoually.unwiee to
tetycu heart rule your head. but today

rouolng " - '·

4·U·!d

(ll Nsawatoft

ICOIIPIO (Oot. at-Nov. 21) Someone
who unllirty Juclged you, bued upon

JIIIICal C'*- 10 "

NORTH
+974
.A62
e K Q 10 4
• Q 10 4

' two-time

au.pec~a 1

~ :.-t Ywd!'l """'" Pot
INTELU
-~· -•• · ~--~~~~~~~~~~·
~.,~a~ln!-~s~a
.,.~
'-lotti. . AIIIwe
- .........
1n1-.
Cuot......... Hlrlna.

II III II II

------

25 Dickie's

iiJ leklhlld Jerry

1:30 (J) .•

WIL

Ul

.Q

StareO. Q

to'

.........
... _ .., ...
s

--~
.......
Iff I Ill
Clft ..

.... •....

~"-·--

oo-

ooptlnl , ....... ,. "' ...
......., -

a-

-

ltf:Mta•ll

Rooma '

tne landiOtd. (R)

1:00 (]) 8 11J CliMra CIIK
worries !hat hla motlietllkas
Wooelybllttr than him. (R)

follllcel

....
..... ". --- ...
212.... 1.........-·111mRIDIIOIID • 12 10 le¥11,
biH. 2 ...,., ~.
.... .......... Rt. , 01110.
ta~aooo

3

•

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

anee
11 Kenol

organize• a rent llrlke

F~

PRINT NUMBfRED

lETTfRS

CompleJo the chuckle quoted
by •filling In lha missing word1
dovelop from step No. 3 below.

you

(1

D:t: ,...,

:r.~.s,OJJ:-c
.......... taae

~·=\ .~:'~"'

·

0 • Tlii: l'mpuna Homer
1104!1 Qli • walght-feducllon
Dnlilr&amp;m. Gurit Ringo ll!IIT
!IW.O.Q
W-Q
,_.,DIn llullo llioP

IIIII: r Jlllllod Dorio ......,

llioiJIII .......
""' ....
, .· COJBt:t••w.
.......
iOndll

~

lslhot alter

. Stereo. Q

Conoot. ......

.......,,~

Me

J::

"f,-\Avt!:;
..

sus~·IOoklng di'IYer.

Pill.

In ..... ,.,

'

pulling ovar a

tM•IIII

Employ111Cnl ServJCrs

=;·

&lt;Jl MOVII:
thgera As
the Oamlllsr. ~
Col116J - (2:00)
(J) Cll8 'llllwDpwllog •
M,lletlll Slllar Sllive'a

~ 1:410 to 1:00 p.m.

Clllaftor.,.,.. 114-ltl-

Wont to buy ...,..... • - ·
T1m_(_71111.

+-II

M•

= ....

;
8

'umiiiNd 4 • • ...... 11111111•
StGO
3/n or

114-

7:31(1) Bantanl and Bon
8:00 IJ) 8 11J Colby 8l:ow CiiH
Is recruited to be a
. peacemaker bebue1n two
feuding
Stereo. Q

l
t

~

Hit pr'LI:::i:aiiJIJiiiii..,DII

............ 11100. will ... "'
$7100. 114-11:1.- or 114-112- l'llmllllld

&amp;Auction.

9

._._. . . -.

ClJ IIJ

0: 53 AilllquM
_ ...... - a
~.=.
1.1 .
~ or..._ llr••• ~
~--:r.:"'l1i
oond,,
:~~~~··~·:~·~:-~=~·~.oe;=
~i.'i~i;"i~i;'~ii;i;
11.000
1
- ·. •
11ft
I. lillln -... P..-ow.
1170 lohult 12x11 - l e homo Ono- .._, .....,I

-

li

1

Building
SUppllla

YOLI~ C~PJ
AHP WHEy'~

19

By Pbilllp A!der

7:01(1) Hippy Dap

Pt.P.....nt ·

I

e

I
I I :8
I' r1 I" I' I' I' I" I' I

BRIDGE

Scarecoow ancl Mra. King

p.m. Solunloy.

~j

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Idiocy - Quart - Adage - Harrow - TOWED
Used car salesman to customer, "Not only does ~
have low mllea,pe but most of that was while .it was
being TOWEDI . ·
. ·

ftl~l.=t=Q

&amp;VICinity
·ALL 'food ..... Muot le Polclln

,_J

6

. ....1.-..&amp;.-.L.__.
L_.L.-1..

Amerlol

Gilllpolla

l

· .That's not mucll of a set- ,
!lement your honor.
1 1 1 1
':~·::;-~-~~-~~· Judge.
announced tile attamey to the
r
' After all, my client
l I RHL S
deserves ---··----taal'
5

w•AICNiwiQ

..

IJ

H0 GU C

TOCIIY

1:30(J)• ONICNewiQ
(J) Allllilt lnd CoRIJIO

BEE~"

PI E 12 1

I I Is I'

11]1 Oltr Hauae
' I:OIIJ) ~ IIIR "11

PVT A LITTLE ICE
CREAM IN Ti-115

rt

TONUF

1&amp;1mi:::Q

_...,.,_,

IIR--,10--

.....,.,

,~

~~C.::VQ

~II, NIIIWIIII, . . .

___. ·-"""".

...... ..._....,.....

..... Coollor IPIInlol, 11M u•

6

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

blllk, ftufiY, 1dar b' ,

•

EVENING

' " .:-.... .... 1:00
PM...........
1.

.~

THU., APRIL 11

llooll,lltt•
......
-luii-...Mim, . . _

ol 01010 ............... ...
I IJ

...

...... -In

3 Announcem.,.a

..

XC
GSQ

SNYXMXJK .'

.-LDHQV EMDJBEXA
. YeaMiday'a Cryptoquote: SEARCH OTHERS fOil .
THEIR VIRTUES, THYSElF FOR THY VICES. - UF.N.jAMIN FRANKLIN'

l

�The

Sentinel

Ohio

11 1181

ANDERSON'S·
SECOND
ANNIVERSARY
I

Ohio Lottery

SVAC honors
tts athl~tes at
banquet
•

I

Pick 3:365
Pick 4: 7315
Cards : J.H, 5-C
4-D; 4-S

Page .4 ·

Chance of showers .and
thunderstorms statewide
Sunday and Monday.

.

WE'RE CELEBRATING WITH LOW SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT
' THE STORE.

•

•

a1
Opposition voiced on sch·ool closing
VoL 41, No. 241.
CIIP)rtghled 1881

.

i t~ll:'!l~4 ~~~~~!::';!:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll12, 1991

•

By CHA~LENE HOEFUCH
.
. school in lhe dislrict and lhat it is the feeling of the ~ts lhat it should dent said. H~ · went on to :stare lh~ lhe treasurer reports lhe district n~
Sentiael News Staff
continue to be used. She also said lhat lhe children w11l have 10 be on lhe between $350,000 and $400,000 m reduced spending 10 keep lhe district
A rally in opposition 10 the ptopos41 of lhe Soulhem Local Sc~ool Dis- bu~s longer if Iiley have 10 be ttansported 10 lhe Letart Falls school.
. solvent and that cuts will have 10 be made regardless of how the levy
The Portland school was closed in the late 1960's for ~eml years and goes.
trict's Board of Education 10 close the Portland Elementary School next
year has been set for Friday (today)at 5 p.m. atlhe school.
at that time the SIUdents were taken to Letart Falls. It was reopened, she
Currendy there are 96 children in the Portland sc;hool wilh two grades
Mrs. Charles Lawrence, who along wilh Mrs. Pam Richards, are head· said because of parent dissatisfaction and also damage which was being in each classroom. Of the 96 there are 21 students in the learning disabili.
ing. up .the move.~ the .~losing, said ~ the 'rally is one method do~ 10 the unoccupied structure.
· .
.
ty an~ developmental handicapped classes. According t~ Supt. On!, the .
which the~ IS usma to get everyone 10 realize what IS gomg on."
· In discussing lhe sil.pl!tion of the proposed closmg of lhe Portland plan IS to ttansfer lhe LD and DH classes 10 lhe Racme Elementary
She emp!lllmzed that it is not just the parents of the chit~ attending ·school wilh Supt BoJ&gt; Qrd, he said lhat the school closing is j~ .one of school and the other 75 smdents 10 the 1;-ctart Falls School.
.
scboolthere who are concerned aboutlhe proposed closmg, but olher severallhings being considered by the board 10 b)' 10 keep the district sol·
The Lelarl ralls School, Ord explained, also has two classes m each
com111unity residents as weD.
.
vent.
.
·
room, but by transferring the Portland students lhere. the classes could be
Petitions asking lhat the board keep lhe school. open hav~ been cin:u· ·
He said olher cost-saving actions to be col)Sidered by tJ:le Board at lhe ~paratcd wilh jU;St one grade in.each room. He poin~ out that the tran~lated and Mrs. Lawrence reported lhat over 300 Signatures m support of April 22 meeting are kindergarten every.olher ~Y all day msread o! h_alf· fer .would f!lSull ~~ 26 smdents m l!'e fmt grade, 27 ~n the ~ond grade,
that have already been secured.
· . .
days as a means off cutting down on ~portallon costs, and.the ebmma· 17 m the lhtrd, 17 m the fourth, 25 m lhe flflh and 23 m the s1xth.
,
The PCtitimi will be presented 10 the Board of Education at the regular tioit of one teaching position atlhe high school.
.As for how much money closinj! the Poitland school would save, lhe
April 2~ meeting when some formal action is expected ID be taken 10
Supt Ord indicated lhat .lhe cuts 'will have to be made regardless of superintendent said it had been estunated between $55,000 and $65,000.
close the ~d schOol. Scheduled 10 meet wilh the board are Wilma . whelher or not the levy on lhe May ballot passes. That levy, which is a The teachers at..lhe l'ortland school .would be ttansferred to lhe Letart
Black and, Bill Hannan.
,
~.
.
four mill, three year one, would generale $210,000 a year, the superinten· School according Ill plans of lhe Board, Supt. Ord concluded.
Mts. Lawrence .said lhat the Portland buildin1 is the newest elementacy
.

~LLOyd(~ flanders
All-Weather Wicker

QUAUTY BfRKLINE WALlAWAY
RECUNERS, ROCIC-0-LOUNGERS
AND RECLINERS. DURABLE FABRICS.

Beauty••• Comfort••• and DurabUity
Casual O~tdoor Furniture at its Finest

AS LOW AS

BERKLINE
RECLINER SALE

$19900

'.

Voluntary recycling program
begins for Mason County
.

WALLPAPER
SALE

JUST ARRI~ED .

Hundreds of patterns.
Most are pre-pasted,
washable and .
scrubbable.

su

An•lver11ry Sale-

LLOYD /FLANDERS

ER .FURNITURE

Reg•.S131 Lo-back Spring Base Chair ••••Sale s79
Reg. S153 Hi-back Spring Base .Chair ••••Sale sa9
Reg~ S289 Spting Base Lounger .......... Sale S179
Reg. S312 2~Seat Glider ........'.............. Sale Sl89
.
.
'

''''"'·

Reg. $309
Roll-Top.Secretary Desk .... Sale $2 47
Reg. $389
Roll .. Top Desk ········~···· Sale $3l4
Reg. $469
Roll-Top o·esk •••••••••••• Sale $3 77

WHIRLPOOL AND ROPER

APPLIANCE SALE

SELECTION IS
GREAn

, v.. w.remv

FUll

saa s1o8
IA.IC.

u. " ·

SERTA. ULTRA
SUPREME
D-. Oultlftl

SERTA
PERFECT

Sl 08
FUlL.... - ....11.." $ 1S4

-..:::
,w·m..·.-..-

Pillow Tott •
1D Y•r W.MMy

TWIN .........u.."

!LEEPER

S3S4 S369 S479

QUliN SIT .........

30" Gas or Electric Range ••••5299
Undercounter.
Dishwasher .................. S269
large Capacity
Washer •.••.•••.•..••••~ ...• $339
large Capacity
Electric Dryer ••.•••••• S2'89
Frost-Free
Refrigerator ........... $499·

gaps.

·

Opiions.woulo not qualify for the '
other program."
· The creation of a· block $rant
~m. previously separate line u~ms
m the Department's budget and the
elimination of funding for senior
multi-purpose centers were olher
concerns addressed in Abel's testimony.
·· ·
The creation of the block grant
could shift the burden of allocating'
funds to counties throughout the
state while providing them wilh
less funding, causing a scramble
among local agencifeS for mo11ey
lhat is no1 available, Abel observed.
The elimination of funding
development of lhe seni&lt;l' facilities
would "pull the rug" from under
them and make improvements
impossible, Abel added.
llouse commiuces will continue
10 conduct hearings through April.
·
·
·

Ohio House passes bill addressing
juvenile felony drug offenders·
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UPI) ly by a vole of 94.(), even though sonable comprom1se he can live
The Ohio House of Representatives lhe bill approved bears little resem- wilh.
He said everyone in the House
passed a bill Thw:s«&lt;ay desi~ 10 , blance 10 1ts original fcrm. When it
stem the flow of Illegal drugs iniO was ftrSI introduced the bill calle(l .is concerned about this problem
Ohio by juveniles.
·
for all juvenile felon)' drug traffick- and hopes the Senare takes action
The bill, sponsort.d by Rep.'Ron
.
ing cases 10 auiOIIUUica11y be bcund on the bill.
"We have enou-gb juvenile
Moul, I).Puma, will require juve· over to lhe adult court
nile c:oun judges 10 review the law
Mottl said naturally he would be delinquents in Ohio. We don't need
of lhe state lhe offender lives in a lot happier wilh the original bill, . to import them inlo this state,"
before deciding 10 triiiSfer !be .case · but the pre~nt legislation is a rea· Mottl said.
. .
1
over 10 an adult coW1.
·

Our entire stock of appliencea .
Ia now on Hie. Stop In end
look ua over. You'll like our
quellty, prlcea and friendly
aervice.
·

This bill only addresses ~~ ­
related felony crimes including
drug dealing end possession by
minors. Mottl said that arowing
numberS of juveniles are belna sent
10 Obio &amp;em cidei like Detroit 10
trauport and sell drup. He ,said
tbeiC l'uveniles are beiilg uted by
~/ade~s "t.o do their ~iny
MoaliOld fellow legislators that
· thiJ bill will send a sttmg
to "tboae Detroit drug
ti1Ugs" that there is no longer an
advantage bringing drugs into
Obio.
The measure passed IIII8Jiimous.

;f

.·

I

','Eighty. percent of Sou~~ni
Oh1o ramtlies iake care of agmg
relatives," Abel said. "'ptions does
n.ot ~lace lhat, but helps 10 fill the

Abel noted lhat she had not vis·
ite.d homes where services were
bemg provided under lhe program
zens.
.
· State Rep. Mary Abel (D· and found Options to be a great
Athens) asked a Finance and help for the.elderly and their fami• Appropriations Subcommittee to lies. She listed home delivered
reconsider the elimination of some meals, medical assistance, rempo·
programs when deliberating lhe rary care and health aid as among.
lhe services provided. ·
. .
fl1181 ronn of !be bud&amp;eL
The current budget proposal
Abel said one of dte most devas·
tating cuts will be lhe phasing out eliminates programs like Options
for Elders in favor of expanding the
of tbe Oplions for Elders prosram,
funded by the Ohio Department of PASSPORT pro$!!1ffi. Abel points
out that this wtll not solve the
Aging under. Elden:are. The program providel rural senior citizens dilemma of remaining at home for
.
a means of getting assistance so . many seniors.
''PAS SPORT only serves lhose
that they may continue 10 live in
on Medicaid levels," Abel said.
their 0W11 homes.
· "Many seniors covered under

518.9.00
.

SALE!

TWIN

Calling lhe elderly a "segment
of our population who should not
be ignored," a local lawmaker
urged a House panel on Human
Resources 10 realize the effect of
Gov. Ge&lt;J'ge Voinovich's proposed
budget cuts on Ohio's seniot citi·

S169.00_:--__:~~---...;..--

~nRES

Services or Gdla, Jecboa ud Melp Coalldes
wiD be spoasorllla several p• opams to ldahllabt
Child Abuse l&gt;reVentlon Montll. Plctlired wltb
Mayor Seyler are; 1-r, Glen HW, Phyllis Hoachul
.aDd Monica Dodrill.

Budget cuts to elderly programs
would have devastating effect: Abel ,

SJ29.00
S139.00

SERTA

OuiiW T-. • I'IMI lupp.ort

,ABUSE PREVENTION PROCLAMATION·
Pomeroy Mayor Rlclwd Seyler, seated, lliped a
proda!DII.._ lbiU'Iday afternoon In oblervaliCe
or Child Abuse Prevention Month durln1 the
mnth or ApriL Community Asunlt Prevention

DESK SALE

I

SERTA PREMIER
COMFORT

'

'

LAYAWAY AND SAVE!

White or almond flnlah metal china
cablnetl. utility cebinetl. baae cal:li· .
"eta and wardrobea. Perfect for
extra etorage in kitchen, baeementi
and garages.

A11d111Dn -~~:: ;.

plelila~

I

METAL STORAGE
CABINETS

'

..

... ~ •· .

MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE

C\eao\ol
SfiC\~\.S

Reg ..S) 59.00 ••••• Sale
Reg. S169JOO ••.•. Sale
Reg. S209.00 .••.• Sale
. Reg. 5229.00 ••••• Sale

By MINDY KEARNS
. OVP News Staff ·
. A vol~ntary recycling program
w11l begm m Mason County on
May 4 spearheaded br Paul Wears
of w~t Columbia Wilh assistance
from the Mason' County Solid
Waste Authority.
·
D'te 10 the garbage crisis in
Mason County, wilh the closing of
lhe landfill near West Columbia
. the authority felt an emergency
voluntary pro11ram should be
implemented. Smce v~rs over·
whelmingly supported a recycling
re{erenclum on the ballot in
~me audlori
. 'Ly .IWiiJ com-

I :

wcterlberec:f.·

cling plan pnor 10 August lhat will
make it man&lt;lalory for all residents
10 recycle.
According 10 'Nancy .AndersOn,
secretary of lhe aulhority who is
working closely with w~. if lhe
voluntary program is successful it
just may tum iniO the county co~prchensive program
Wears·will be siationed 81 four
locations, one on .each S81Urday in
May; 10 collect paper products,
plastics (milk jugs and 2-liter soda
bottles) corrugated cardboard
glass, and aluminum.
'
on May 4, Wears will be sta·
lioned in Point Pleasant behind lhe

city building; May 11, 'betwee'! be dumped, it IS lhe hopes of lhose
Fast-4-U and Mason Family involved wilh the voluntarY, recy·
Restaurant in Mal!on; l.:far 1~. in cl!rig program that less garbage
Leon next 10 the c1ty building, and w1ll reach landftlls. ·
May 25 at the Valley Fire Depart·
Anderson said once a mandatory
ment. Hours will be 9 a.m. to 3 recycling program is implemented
p.m.
. . .
.
by the solid waste aulhority~ a fee
Wears sa1d It 1S preferred lhat can be placed on county reSidents.
people sepa~ate lhe1r recyclables If enough people participate in the
~fore b~mgmg ~el!ll? the recy·
v&lt;?luntary program, however. it
cling stauons. but It 1sn t mandato· m1ght become the permanent prory . He also asks that lids be gram and wiD remain free.
removed from glass jars. and news·
The wa~tc_l authority s~c.r~tary
papers .be. bundled. .
.
added that It IS the responSibility of
Asstsung Wears will be hts son everyone, from the manufacturer to
Danny.
·
lhe youngest consumer,IO recycle.
·~Wears said as time goes bY •.. , . Anderson stated if everyon~
m~. ~swill be~en. He stated would participa.te in tile, voluntary' } '
he •r lt)'ing !lJe recyclmg m a~- program, 53 percent of lhe county's
porary .basis, to see if there IS garbage .would be removed from
enough mrerest.IO make lhe. venture our conn ty •s waste stream (or
profitable for h1m. ~re will be. no 7,932 10ns).
.
charge 10 lhe public. when takmg
In 1986, the Unlled States genrecyclables 10 the stations.
erated 160 million wns of garbage,
Accordmg to Anderson 14,967 an increase of 80 percent from
plus tons of ~aste went into the 1980. If lhe U.S . continues at this
local landfill m 1990. The landfill rate, by 2000 it is predicted 193
was recently closed down by the million IOns of refuse will be genDeJW:U~~ent of t;"~atural Resources, eratedperyear.
and stnce lhat ume. local garba~e
Wears has rented a truck to
has been trucked. to the Galha carry lhe recyclable items, and is
County LandfiU. Wllh lhe fear lhat now working on a contractiD swre
that l~dfill w1U. soon become .ru~. lhe irems until lhere are enough 10
or w111 reach tts monthly hm1t take them 10 market
before Ma!lon County garbage can

C.!!.!r!!!...'!~"!.!1.,~!'ll~?.!~!.:?l!1!,~'

who serves as county loan techni·
cian in the Athens Couno/ office of
lhe FIDIIICI'S Home Adminisll'alion,
haS received Ohio's FmHA Technical/Clerical Federal Employee of
the Year Award for Exceptional
Performance.
Mts. Calvert also received a certificate of merit for outstanding
effon in coordination and installation of computer software tluQugb·
out lhc dislric:t which handles eight
county offices.
· The awards were presente4 10
Mrs. Calven at a recent SIBle meet·
ing held in Cincinnati by Ohio's
FmHA State Director, Allen L.
Turnbull . Ohio FmHA employs
nearly 253 employees Slatewtde in
its system of five dislrict end 37
county offices.
Mrs. Calven joined FmHA in·
1974. She lives wilh her family In
Pomeroy. FmHA is the rural credit
service of lbc U. S. Department of
Agricultute and provides financial ·
assistance 'lnd counseling 10 rural
residents and communities. The
agency provides a full range of
farm, housina ancl community
facilities loans.
The Atbens County Office
serves Athens, Mei41 and VIniOn
Counties. Informauon regarding
the agency •s programs can. be
obtained by contacting the ~ounty

RECEIVES AWARD· Pamela J. Calvert of Pomeroy wai· .
selected 11 Ollio Farmers Home AdmlnblratloD tecbalcallclerk:al
federal employee or the year. Here she receives a plaque from
Allen L. Turnbull, stale direc:hlr.
·

Shoemaker keynote speaker for Jefferson-Jackson dinner
Suue Rep. Michael C. Shoemak· coach in Chillicothe aDd Waverly
er (D·Bourneville) will be the in the early 1970's and since tm
keynote · speaker at the Meigs hall been employed'u 1 carpenter
County Democratic Party's Jeffer· . In Columbus Representali~e
son-Jackson Dinner on Sa~y Sboemlker m .evCIII CIOID·
niglu, to be held 11 the Moigs miaees. He is the Vice Chairman of
County SeniorCilizensCenler.
the Education Committee, and
~maker. who wu .elected 10 serves on the Collcpa llld Univer·
the Ohio House ~ 19'!2, 11 a gnctu. sities Sub&lt;:ommiuce, tile Public
ale c:l Clpital Umvenuy in COtum· Utilities Committee the Finance
bus and Xavier Unlvorllity in and AIJili'OIIriati Comnuuee, the
Cincinnati. He was a teacher and Veteriiis Affain Committee and
the Education Finance Comrrlittee.

In addition, Shoemaker serves
on' line select commtaees.
When • home, Shoemlker is an
aetiYe member of the Bainbridge
United Methodill Church, llld is
affiliated wltll the Paint Valley
Alhletic Boosten, the Township
Trustees and Clerlta Auocletion
and the Balnbridae HiiiDrlca1 Soci.

.

Metas County Democratic
Cbainnan Sue Maison llatea that
.she is looking ·~ 10 heulng

,..

•

ety.

Slloemaklir speak on Sllbl'day.
"Representative Shoemaker has
distinguished him~lf in the Gener·
al Assembly wilh his sttaigbt·for·
ward approach to difficult prob·
lems," Maison sai!f. "He is well
resp·ected by Democrats and
Republicans alike for his willing·
ness 10 listen 10 all points of view
and then take definitive stands on
the issues. •
Maison continued, "He is not
only very knowl~geable on the .

... ·-·
...,'~'

~·
.....

. ..•

status of education 1D our slate, but
he is also candid in accepting lhe
responsibilities of being a realleader for Ohio."
.
Tickets for the ham dinner, 10 be
held at lhe ,Meiss County SeniorCitizens Center, are 58 per person
and $25 per family with school age
children. The dinner beains at 6
p.m. and the program begins at 7
p.m. Maison inviles all those inter·
ested 10 anend,
•

••

•

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