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                  <text>Page 1S..:.The ·Dally Sentinel

BIG BEND·········Your Locally Owned
Low-Priced

Reds, sweep
3-game series
-

REGISTER 10

·CERTIFICATE

''

OlliE WIIIIIU PH DAY PEl STOlE

••

Cards : s.H, K·C

. K-D; 11-S
Super Lotto:
6•10-11-13-33-43
Kicker: 089023

Page3

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FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK
NAME _ _ __ .:___ _ _.........;._ _

STRAWBERRIE

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1 .r·-'

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PHONE-----'--'----- --

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FOODLAND ICE CREAM
l!J Gallon Ca'rton

FREE

BUY ONE
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WITH
COUPON

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ASST. COLOR

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FREE

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41NCH
POT

GDOd tlwu 5/11~91 -

WITH
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MR. TURKEY

TURKEY FRANKS
GDOd thru S/11 191 -

WITH
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limit 1 frH Per Family

QUEEN
KIN~ SIZE 12 • 16 OZ.

DINNERS

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crow;

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1

'

: , , By ,JVLIE E. DD.LON
wilhin lbe next week 10 diacua the
•
Sebtlael J"iews Stall' ·
. contest with those interested as
•·
well as lhe requirements '*:e••ry
~ . Activities planned by -the 10 enter.
: Pomeroy Merchants Association ' A formal~ for tile queen
_. for Heritage Wcekelld (June 8 end candidates will be hold flriday
• 9) were dlscussed at the group's evening, June 7, at the Meigs
• regular meeting 011 Wednesday.
County Public Librlry in Pomeroy.
: · A full day of activities has been At this Je0epti011 tile c:ontesl winner
- plaaned by tile Mercbants for Sat· wiD be IIIIIOURCed. The queen will
- urday, June 8, from 9 a.m.IO 5 p.m. reigu o.ver Saturday's festivities.
in Pomeroy. Activities will take · The winDer of tile contest will be
• place on both days, June 8 and 9, at presenled with a prize package
. ,tile Meigs County Museum ori But- from members or the Merchants
lllmut Avenue.
· Associ•inn.
~
~
To kick orr the_ festivities .· SaiUJ'day's Heritage Days activi·
·; planned by lbe Merchants, a Her· ties will begin with a pariiiW at 10
uage Queen ConieS! Is being orga- a.m. Participation in the paiUe is
, nized. The eontest is cipen 10 any open 10 the public and inlorination
junior or senior at Meigs, Eastern, on entering11ay be obtained by
• Southern and Waham1 High calling parade chairman Angie
' Schools. Representatives from the Swift at Pleascr's in Pomeroy,,m .
Pomeroy Merchants Association 20S7. The parade wiD be fol,ll)wed
wiD be tr1Velina10 tile high scllools . with ente!'linment by square
A

WITH
COUPON

Umit 1 frH Per F-lllv

•

an.

ASSORTED

Dei .Monte
Vegetables

12-17

I

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test and cloaiDJ llftiUPL Bank One
· in Pomorpy is coor"inatlng the
Herirap COSIUIIIe Conlle8t with cat·
egorios.aadiie·uiremeats to be
IIII1DOIII:Cd. J
~~ to; this conlell
wiD be beld at 30 PJI.
COIIIJli!IIY B. The 91• Ohio Volunteer llifantry Group. a civU war
reenactment teun, will perform
throughout tile day but will be featured at2:30 p.m. The poup will
set up camp_ on tile lfOIIIIda bellind
the Meip county COunbbuse IIW'
the Masonii:: T~ple. ·
Festivities will coaclude with
entertainment by 1 local bend from
3·S 1'·!11· tin CoUn Slieel wbae all
fesuvlities 'for the day will take
place. All Pomeroy merdllnts are
urged 10 dial Ia IJIPfllP'Iate her·
itage auire for tile "el end.
In addition 10 featured events
Cciallaued 011 pqa 5

PREPARING FOR SHOW • These students
In t~e · Soutberll Hlgb School Choir, under tbe
diredlon nf Mn. Rallerta Mllideas, are prep.-lng for the Kbool's variety show, "Showtlme," to
lie presented to the public oa Saturcbly at 7:30

P•* or Hou#MI.2»-t86

Gunpurchpi'OCWurM

'

Would raqulra handgun
buyers lo preaent
ldentHicatlon to a gun
dealer, who would then
notHy local paltce of the
prospective sale..Hno

oz.

abjlldlon Is ralaeclln

eeven

CANS

the

Typeollllll
cover.d

and
or

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ICE PO
169

Would exen.,c dealell ·
who clon'l have
telip.'MIIII ..,..loe, or

wha oan, run a cheek
becl1118 of a teohnloal
probllm.

See relaled.IIOry oa paae 9

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said.

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Waming issued on junk violation

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Local bri·ef:s ___. ·,.
Accident still under investigation

CO

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won··

by tile end of May, there
be ·
any doubters left," EVIlls said ol
those who are still skeptical the
economy c:an pull oat of tile recession by midyear.
Thouglt .the number of people
filing for unemployment assutance
fell in the laat week of April, it i&amp;
still far above the level of claims
for 1aat year. For tile same week in.
1990, there wae 361,000 new job-:
less claims. the Labor Departinent

lican Bruce J. Reed and Indepen- from tile previous week's mark of a
dent Ellen RoUJht this November half·million, the Labor Departin tile
for Pomeroy Mlyor. . ment's ~showed.
.
A hit-skip accident on Second Ave. In Pomeroy on May 1
Wellru~ Democrat. filed as
Today s good news on jobless ·
remains under investigation, according 10 a report from Pomeroy
an in~ t candidate after his claims follows 1 report from last
Police loday.
. ~.
.
pedtloaa' a a Demoa-alic mayoral week that showed die jobless rate
Police said lllat lla Daniell, Middleport, had palbd hllr car at a
canclfdate were rejected due to falling in ·April for the first
meter on Sec:ond Aw. When she ieiUmod 10 it, llhe fouad that the
insullicient slpalurea. .
improvement In ~a year.
left rear side had been sauck IPPiieftlly by another wllicle. There
· WehrunL:l terVes u preaiLast month, the natioo' 1 unemwu minor damage.
dent of die
HI hla laved on . ployment rate dropped 10 6.6 percouncu em t11e Jllll 10 ~ 11111 u cent. down from lilarch'a rate of
Aillllllltavilla Ilia dlinl c 1 datu- 6.8
L
.
live ltlll. He hla IOIVed with bod!
.Wysra wrote off April's
HiJh ar- .a yn &amp;lied wilh iunk ldld Giber clelrU are in vio- ,
Mayor Richard Seyler llld former unemploymenl JePDr1 u a sllllildIation or a viiJase ordinance, acconlingeo PwMoy Cbief nt Police
~Ciualce Andtewa.
cal quirk, but odlen ldlid It might
. Oetlld RoUJhL
W~ile ia otrice," Webruna mean that the nation'• economy,
The pollCc dlieC today called for reaicleats 10 cuttlleir lJl'llll lild
uid, "I bave worked llltd with miNd in JOCelllon Iince last July,
keep It
llld clean up their )'lids. Ott.wilo, lie said, ordiJIIIICO
other COIIICII - • eo • mcxe wu boaomln&amp; 0111.
, provision~ IOprdinJ ftnOI will flo put iniO etfecL
Caatbnteclaa Pllll 5
· The jobless clPos report can be

nee

Six-month suapenslon;
lou of license, plus a
cMIIIne of up to
$5,000.

PKG.

vllloa ...ows and movies to be praeatecllroal 1
dlrector'l Polnt.of-vlew. Admlsllol to the show ' .
Is Slfor aciulll aid $1 far ltadeall.

extremely volatile l'roin week 10
week, but Evans noted that the
four-week movin~ average of job.
I~ claims - which many anafysts
calculate themselves and.consider a
1m ore reliable barometer - had
, fallen as well.
.. ·
.
For lhe four weeks ending April
27 , the. average weekly jobless
claims filin~as 476,000, Evans
said. down
rhe 511,000 average for the similar four-week period in Mirth.
"If it c:an get down Ul 400.000

==~:m~
thelin~~ ·
fell by 45,000, down 10 455 ,000

L1Wry Welming wiD face Repub-

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We..rung tQ
face Reed,
Rought in ~all

Would not P'""1'1
atatalllwa.

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. LARRY WEHRVNG
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WASHINGTON (AI;') - The
number of Americans filing new
claims for unemfloymcnt benefits
fell drama tical y .at the end of
April, the ~overnment said loday.
"This 1s further evidence that
the labor markeu are improving,"
said Michael K. Evans, who heads
an economic forecasting firm in
Washington.
"It's another Sllllw in the wind
10 SIIJlPOI'I the view that the recession IS over," Evanuaid.
For the week end~ April 27,

goes

•

.m. Appnmmatelj"IO llladeilll·an partidpat·
r.n&amp;ID
the • - wbfcll will feature lpooll of tele-

Jobless claims fall; buoy hopes
that recession is nearing end

FOOfJLAND HAMBURGER and·

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Hobstetter.

diDcers. a .tkrillle Costume Con-

BRADY BILL

i

Hot Dog ·Buns

tile JK!Ssibility of replacing the ~·
sentaupon.
The grant, according Ul Linder,
will be funded by the FAA and
administered by the Ohio ~­
ment of Transponation's DiviSioo
of Aviation. Under lhe tenns of the
contract. the two counties involved
will supply $1 ,500, and the balance
will be funded by state and federal
monies. ·
Meigs County is being asked 10
contribute $750 10 the project. but
the.payment will not be due until
next April.
In addition, the commissioners:
- Approved a road name chan_g_e
in Olive Township. Lydia Road (T313) from Township Road 161 at
lhe Alhens County line will be ie·
named Indian Run Road.
- Held a hearing on. and
approved, the renewal of a brine
permit applicatioo for Jaymar c~
Company.
· •
Auending' were Commissionefs
Jones, Manning K. Roush, and
David Koblentz, and Clerk Mary

·

gun control bill backed by the National Alilt Allocllllon:

oz.

grant, \jlhich will be used 10 study

•

DEL MONTE
32

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Coll'flllllson ol the key proVIsion~ ollhe sa-called Brady BHI and the

Squeeze
·Ketchup

~~-

· ~~ Heritage Weekend (June 8-9).
'"

llltlltl \'\II -., 1'1 t I \I l l t l l ' t l \

FREE

;

'By BRIAN J, REED
The only other bid received on
Sentlael News Starr
the project was from Diamond
The Meigs County Commis- -Engineered Space of Charleston,
sion~s awarded a bid for tempo- ·W.Va. at a cost of $1 ,045 per
rary office space for the Departmonth, also based on a 10-month
ment of Human Services during -lease. ·
their regular meeting Wednesday;
·· The commissioners commended
The space will be used for the Meigs County Emergency Services
modular-type administrative office Direcror Bob Bycr and those crews
space while the $1.2 million addi· ilnd volunteers who helped out dur·
uon 10 the DHS headquarters ln ing this weekend's slide in the Pity
Mi,ddleport is underway.
·Me area of Meigs County (near
· : The ·space, according 10 Depar!- Hobaon), which fon:ed the evacuam!:llt Dim:IOr Michael L. Swisher, lion of 26 ~IC.
· will not be used for service Ul ~
~·we commend Byer for the outgeneral public. The depanment's standing job .that he and his crews
clients will continue 10 be served have done in handlin~ the situa. by the department's Race Street lion," Commissioner RIChard Jones
headqullrders or additional space in said on behalf of the commission·
the Coates Building.
ers yesterday. "This board uid all
The bid of Oelco ·Space of of the citizens of Mei~s County
Columbus was accepted at a base commend them for their efforts
10-month lease rate or $750 per toward the unfonunate situation
., .
month. Other costs associated with· that exists in that C9111munit~ .~
the rental are delivery, $(05; setThe commissioners reviewed a
up, $920; tear-down, $805; return letter from the President of the Galdelivery, $705; and steps, $28 per lia-Meigs Regional Airpon Authorsc:t.
The unit is. expected to be · ity, Howard Linder, slating that the ·
Dave DUet, llelllnd DOell
_ ullil, ierved
master of ·
delivered
10 the site sometime next Oallia-Meigs Regional Airport
ceremoala, wbiJe 'red
O!'PDlzer or the
week.
·
· Authority has received a SS5,SOO
eveat, Is Mltedlt rip&amp;. For tlle'ltOry llld adell:
tloaal phofol, see Pqe 4. . .
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-~::-PomeMy Mercha.nts.~ t~e ·~:

Umit 1 frH Per Family

-----------------------BUY ONE
GET ONE

~

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. GRIMM HONORED - Letart Fallii utlv~
Bert Grimm, seated foreii"IIUiid, was llcmored by
tbe Obla VaHey (baseiNIII) AIIIO'iatloll Wedae.
day Dight at Veteraas Memorlll HIIIJIItal far bls
lifetime acblevemeats Ia tile.pme or baseball,

.'

FISCHERS MEAT

·GERANIUMS

•

1 SectJon, 12

Allulllmedle

. Commiss.ion awards
Geico Sp~ce DHS bid

ELCOUE OHIO ·v~(L~EY ASSOCIATION
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ADDRESS~---------~

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Low tonight near 60•
Party cloudy. Friday, high
in low 80s, partly sunny.

9, 1991

RED RIPE
CALIFORNIA

1

Pick 3:2'19
Pick4: 9325

0&lt;

$33°0 GIFT

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WIN A
. ...,.

·Ohio Lottery

Pira~es ·top

s

�. Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

lhuradey, Mlly 9, 1991

Thursday, May 9, 1991

The mother of all b09Ddoggles,_________c_on_.C_la-.,.-te_nce_M_il_ler
The Slay you are about to read
contains a series of disturbing facts
and figures, many of which are suf.
·ficientiO cause a rapid rise in one's
heart rate. So if you l!fC prone to
·high blood pressure or a squeamish
stomach, I suggest you proceed
"with caution. S~er than fiction
some say - a pubhc fleecing say
·- ·

others. However it is described,
few can explain or justify this
"mother of all boondoggles" that
has been going on for decades on
the agricultural plains of the westem United Ststes. What I'm about
to describe is a classic case of
Uncle Sam's riglit hand not know-

Is Head St.art really
nr;lluz'm Rusher
?
a Success .
rr.,
.

Whenever a liberal politician or
journalist wants to cite some welfare program that has aciUally succeeded, he or she is likely to point
to Head Start.
Liberals are hardly likely to
point with pride io Aid to Families
. With Dependent Children, the well·:meaning program that has inadver:
:tenlly ·all but destroyed the black
·family structure in America. And in
~ity after city around the country,
low-cost government housing pro: jects loom abandoned against the

• :sky.

But Head Start! Now, there's a
:~gram that really works. So don't
.tell us welfare is always a failure,
;Buster.
·
• Well, let's see. Head Start was
launched in 1965, as a part of Lyn·llon Johnson's comprehensive War
:on Poverty. The idea was to pro: vide children aged 3 to 5, from
·iow-income families, with various
6ervice8 (educational, social, mediCal and nutritional) that would spur
their development and, as the pro. gram's name implies, give them a
push when they were put on the·
•~hoollrack around age 6.
: Like all government programs,
\his one started modestly and grew
into a monster. In 1965 its budget
was $96.4 million, with which it
. enrolled an impressive 561,000
· children f~J" the summer only. Dur: ing the 1990 school year the budget
: was $1.386 billion (or about 14
: times as much); there was a .paid
· .staff of 79,549, plus 615,000 vol• : )lnteers; and this whole shamozzle
was managing to provide year: round services to just488,000 chil. !lren - or 73,000 fewer than the
: p.rogram managed to serve in that
·far-off summer of 1965.
:: Nonetheless, Head Start is tout-

I.

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.~Oday in history
:•

By The Associated Preas

·

;! Today is Thursday, May 9, the .
· 129th day of 1991. there are 236
:\Says lefi m tho~·

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I

::: Today's Higlllight in~
·:, Thirty years ago, on May 9,
:J961, in ~ speech to the National ·
:Association of Broadcaster&amp;, Fcder·il Communications Commission
: ~hainnan Newton N. Minow cori:d.emncd television programming as
... uvast wasleland. t'
..
~-·. ., On th'IS llJIIK;:
•
·• In 1502, OUistopher Columbus
Jefl Cadiz, Spain, on bis fourth and
final trip to the New World.
: . In 1754, the first American
llewspaper cartoon was published.
"The piciiUe in Benjamin,Franklin's
Pennsylvania Gazette showed a
!lividcd snake, each part ITheWUit·
mg an America~ colony.
caplion read: "Join or die."
-· In 1913, the 17th amendment to
the Constitution, providing for the
election of senators by popular vote
rithec than selection by state legis14t!Jres, was ratified.
: · In 1926, Americans ltichard
Byrd and Floyd Bennett became
!lie flfSt men 10 make an airplane
flight ovec the North Pole.
·: In 1936, Ilaly annexed Elhiopia
As Benito Mussolini celebrated in

Rome. ·

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in¥ whal his left hand is ,.OOUt; in
llus case the right hand being the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) a11d the left, the U.S.
Department of Interior's, Bun:au of
Reclamation.
For those familiar with the
worlcings of our country's agriculturai policies, the concept of price
supports and set-asides are seen as

ICI
':.r,

farmers~ approximately $1100 mil- · Subsidies Reform Act." This bill, if
lion of wbicb is dcvo!ed to the pro- enacted, will not only put ID end 10
duelion of smp1us c:rop1. On top of the waste of federal dOllars, but it
this;.the USDA sperids hundreds of wiU also serve to ·reduce the JK!?•
millions of dollm each year on duction of many IIIIIICCded agncuJ.
commodity payments 10 farmers turaJ commodibes, the overproduc."
wbd use federally subsidi:red water lion of which not only drives down
from the Bureau of Reclamation to the income of the average farmer,
grow such surplus crops.
but results in putting the fannen of
To address this alarming wilSie the Midwest at a competitive disad-

........,

lloomillg and Foilagt
Hanging laskets, Fruit and
Flowering TrHS, Shrubs,
Azaleas, llhodotlendrons and
lloiiJ TrHS.
SYRACUSE. OHIO

992-6778
Open Daly 9-5; Sun. 1-5

SALE

Rome.

Gift Suggestions
For Mother's Day
BLOUSES
LEVI BENDOVER SLACKS
SWEATERS
DRESSES
HANDBAGS
SCARFS
JACKETS
COATS
SPORTSWEAR

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

Slluabl had a two-nin double IS
Pitubur'h took a 3-1 load in the
fUll apma Norm Clwiton (1·3).
Pittsburab made it S-1 when Bell
had a two-run inside-the,parlt
homer in the second, his sinking
liner eluding a divinJt Paul O'Neill

the double eliminaiion toumamont. over ODC. Should Rio Grande Chris Sample, who got the win.
Walsh (28-1S, 19-7) was to meet win, it will meet Urbana (19-19,
Marcum wiS two for four and
po1ted a two-run homer for the
Mount Vernon Nazarene (29-15, 14-12) at4 p.m. IDday.
17-6) at 1 p.m.
·Walib, coached by T'un MOld, Redmen, while Jason Wri1ht
Rio Grinde COidl Dave Ogles- overcame an early Rio Grande (sophomore, CarroU) shcnd up die
by termed the lou Ill the Cavilias defensive effort to acorc the game's offwe by aoina two for five.
Other acores posted in Wednea"a very disappointing situation," flrlt run in tbe fourth inning, but
day
action at Jlio Grande saw
but held hopC his team, top.mllcd Rio Grande answered with two of
Walsh
·edge Urbana S-3 in the
in 1he district as the postseason its own in the bottom of die inning
began; would aet ,b!JCk !n!o the to iaice the lead. ·The Redmen post- opener. At Ohio University, which
winner's
bracket
w1th a VICtory ed one more run in the fifth to post serves as Field B for the touma- .
.. '
.
aS-1 advan9.
ODCthen
handed
Findlay
a 13-3
loss and
went
up aaainst
The Cavalieri, led by a,four for lnent,
five perfonnance by Scou Turner Mount Vernon. MVNC then handthai raulted in a doublo, throe runs edthePanthcna12-4defeat.
and two RBis, toot off in the sixth
to lead 9-S. The Redmen posted
one more run in the seventh, but lay against Urbana. Down I().() in
the fourth innina, Urbina balded
were not to ICOrC again.
The ·Redmen put up 1 10-hit
attack against Walsh and oommitted throe errors, while DarreU Mar- ptheml, and then slipped ahead on
cum (senior, Hlmilron) had the loss a throe-run homer and an earned
as pitcher, .aending hia season run !0 win 14·13 in the bouom of
.
record, to 7-4. Walsh advanced on the lOth iMing.
Findlay
departed
the
IOUmamCilt
11 hits and held i~f 10 lWD erro~.
Jeff Paul started IS pitcher for the at 17-14 overall and 14-7 in the
Cavalien, but wa• relieved by dislriCL
~

-ana

runs."

Po~h)J 99~-2124
'Riluro:
.
11 am tO Mid. Sun.·Thurs.

LAIGI

PEPPERONI
PIZ Z

$5 99

PIZZAS

A.

2 nEIIS

$9 99

Plclcup
Onl

Y

u......, ...... tR&amp; 0111' ....,. . . . , . . . . . IIG.OO.
............. to
...........
&gt;ln.._..,.
............
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..........
•s· *"· PUIT TIMI
AIIJ
OPPOin'tJNITtll NOWAVAilAIUI

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15

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17310

· Meigs beats Belpre 4-3

LlOYD /FLANDER'S

'·

,

ROWE POTTERY
-

Patriot's Collection
...
'

THE SPIRIT OF. AMERICA IS EXPRESSED IN THESE
TIME-HONORED PATRIOTIC PAnEINS
. '

.....
..........
,

. By DAVE 'IL\IUUS
Buies without further clamqe.
Seodael Corl'l!lpOodeut ·
Phalin and McGrem,:oth
. Kevin Taylor's infield ~!f!e pilched oalltanding bill,
101'
with two outs in the ~enth · 11101 despite belnathe loslnJ pitcher
scored Shawn Hamon from third pvc up duee hits.. walt tine and
· base with the winning run to push strike out 10. Phalm went the fmt
· the Meigs Marauders 10 a 4-3 win six inninas &amp;ivinl up three bits,
: over the visiting Belpre ,Golden ·walldng five 1111 llrillin&amp; oat seven.
. Eagles in a Tri-Valley Conference Taylor and Hamon pitched the sevbaseball PJ1le.
enlh iMina. Taylor gave up one hit
The win gtves the
a and a walk in picking up the win,
• ll-8 record to close out
while Hamon walked the only two
"~'auon and ali.S
·~~~:~
~TVe Bet~t
·1il .
came into ihe game ranked 17th 10

Division m.
..
Losing pitcher Chris McGregor
seemed to be piclcing up steam in
: the seventh inning, as he struCk out
'"the first two batters, but Shawn
Hamon lined a double to the fence
in left-center field. Terry McGuire
• then coaxed a walk, both runners
advanced on a wild pitch. With a 2I count ,Taylor hit a nubber doWJI
. the third base line just beating the
• throw 10 first as Hamon croucd the
· plate with the wiuning run . The
Eagles had tied the pme in the top
, of the inning when Hamon walked
in the tying run, but the sophomore
: made it for the y.'llk In a big way
' with the rally ltlrling double.
The Marauders rook the early 20 lead in the fmt inning with out
the benefit of I base biL McGuft
led off the game with a walk, after
iJe stole IOCOIId Tayl&lt;w reached on a
:fielders choice. After bolh runnen
'advanced on srolen bases, McGuie
scored on a 1aso~t ground
ouL Taylor later
on a wild
piiCh.
· Belpre scored in tho third inning
· :when McOn~gor walked, stole second and scored on 1 double by
Jason Gandee. Meip llllde it a 3-1
.game in the the bottom of the
inning when Wright led off , th~·
-inning with the Marauders first hit
cf the pmc. ~Y ~~bed
·on a fielders cho1ce With Wnght
. Gdvancing to second. Both runners
·.advanced on a wild Jlitcb and
Wright scored on a sacrifice fly off
die bat of Eric Heck.
• Bcipre scored linsle runs in the
sixth and seventh innings to pull
even. Run Jacobs readied first on
a fJelden choice and later scored
on a wild pick-off throw to pull
Belpre to within 3-2. Beblro lied it
in the seventh inninJ. wfdl 'hylar
.pitching in .-lief of Jeremy .....
McGregor led off with a doullle,
with one oat Gandee waibd ~
Shawn 111mo11 t:111111 on eo pilclt ...
the Maitidlll. Hllntllllld .....

findinllhll ............. In
a row forcinJ In McOIIIp wllll the
tYing run. Taylor 1111111 _
_.eo
the mound and ~ die Oolden

plate
a double, and
and Taylor added a single
McGregor and Oandoe led Belpre
with a double each, and Toby
Sharpe added a ainglc.
Meigs will bit the tournament
trail next Tuelday afternoon, the
Manuders will travel 10 Oalllpolis
to play the Blue Devils with the
winner will advancins to district
play.
Score b.J. loobJp
Belpre 001 001 1 - 3-4-2
Meigs 201 000 1-4-3-2
WP -Taylor
LP- McGregor '

The Daily Sentinel
Publlabal ....,. alton-. Mnllday
lbr!OI&amp;fl Frtdoy, Ul C..rt St., Po·
moray. Oblo. by tilt Oblo Valli)' Pulillabllll Co-nylMUhlmollla, Inc.,
Pomtroy. Olllo mil, Pb. lt2·21M. S.
cond ctuo PGI!alt Jlllld ot Po....,.oy,
Olllo.
Membtr: 'lbe AloOCioted l'l'fto, In·
land Dally Pr•a AIIG&lt;Iattcm and tbt

Oldo I'!OWIJIIIEf.o ::.,.oetau.... Nallooal
-~~~~~~
IIM,Iraabam
NIWIJIIIpor
•• 'Ill 'l'ldrd ..._ ...
New Yorlc, Nrw YoriiiOOIT.

,.
··~··

Z·'lll .
nurJMkl
Wl-2220

'
.. rice
.79 sa p ..t~at per plug

"54~
.
....

.....
74:;.
II I I

.99111ePrlee
-.25 ml(t.

A7 71 II 'I ........
1.99 1111 price
1
• .25 mf(t. rebate per P ug

on..

1!~

PCllrJ'Mo\liTii
·IU
-Court
cbaniB
10
Dolly Sentinel.
St .•
Pomoroy. Cillo fSNI.
lllUCIIIP'ftON 8.\TU
.

CIPCIMP

I

(IJIPIUMti)
" Dhllloo.. . . . .... . . ..

. , Corrl4r .. - - -

o.weet...................................suo
llH Montb •.... ..•........•.•....•..... .•••$1.111

O..Yoar ................................. IIUJ

.
SIN=PY
DaUy ................................... 25 C.nu
SUbaerlllln !lOt dMirfiiiiOJIIIY lbtClf•
. . J!U§ nmlt ......... ~..... 10

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, . u.JI)' ......... d,. Ill' IJ ..-

- · Cl'lllll wtU ....._

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pormlt!td II

by IliAD

OPEN
DA:v$ A WEEK~
___SEVEN
... \!: ..................
,...

...&amp;&amp;. .,..... .............,...........,

a.- lriMft- curter _.. ... Ia
avallabl•.

.......... C:O.IIIJ

IJW- ................................•. J21.14

.

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•

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· - ··································"1.11

12 •
11 W- .................................. 12UO
• · - · ·•••••• n••• ••n •••• •••••••••u••MS.IO
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10

.

Hl~

2 MEDIUM

NO DECISION- Delpl~ pllchilll m:deat Nil for sb: buablal.
• Meigs rlpthaoder Jeremy ...._... dJcl110t pkll up tile wiD Ill t1Je
, ~odlra 4-3 victory aver Belp're. l'lla1lll 11ft lip dlree 11111 ad
-, strlldi out seva.

992·5627

WE NOW .

· ~~!~;~~:._:u~a:m::tO~l~a~m~F:rl~.•:;Sa:t~.---~DIET~~Pl~PSI~~

a:=
,....

Mickleport, Ohjo

N. 2nd Ave;

SOLID OAK or ALDER

•

experA to win.';

who lowered his BRA to 2.06.
"The Reds _.. 't lwinlin&amp; the bits
real good right now ...
it helpl
wben your te1111 aets you seven

Cincinnati didn't set seven runs
in the entire ~Cries, losina 3-1, 7-2
four hits in eight innings and bene- and 7-2. They were ouihit 25-13
fited from ttandout defense, some and didn'tloolt like the team that
of it his own. He knocked down defeated PittsburJb in the NL play·
two balls thai his infJClders turned oils last season.
Riaht now, they ~·L They~
into ODII.
hinina
.222 and n next-to-last m
Smith has given up four earned
the
~in
runs scored.
runs in hiJ past four starts and is
"We'r~ j:st not hilling the
10-3 aince Monlnial traded him to
Pittsbur1b last August. He is ball," Pini 1 llid. "It's not that
tbrowinl cjuic:kly - and .thn!winll we'n~ not tryinJ, we're Just not getslrillel-10 keep his defeitJe m the , ~ the job done. ... I JUSI hope he
(0 Neill) iJ right and this is the low
pme. His pat two IWIS have last- point.,.
ed one hour, 4S minutes and two
"We're just out of sync,"
bours, 11 minDtel.
''I was able to set into a groove Glenn Braggs said. "We can ' t
and throw strikes and let my seem 10 ge1111ything going. Maybe
(See NL OD J'a&amp;e 4)
def- help me 0111." said Smith,

:J:k.:: :;mthethe~~ =:

SHOE PLACE.: ..

ASSORTED
FABRICS

S20' 9~0

but we didll't •et a chance 10 11111
ihem. You c:an''t come in hen and knock JDe OUL .,
ICOie the runs in three pmes IDd
Smith allowed two runs and

pla~e ~i~~ C~~r: #~:

fJ1ie

GLIDER
ROCKERS

STARTING AT

and rolling tO the rta6t-fleld wall
"This is the low point of the
1011011 for us," O'Neill said. "The
way thinn are lOin&amp; I'm lucky the
ball didn"i hit me iD the ltelld and

htrita_gt house

TOWNE SQUARE·

I

. and tboy wlluppcd up llli us pretty
&amp;OOd," Reds IDMIII" Lou PCnieiiA
said. "We liD lo come in hen 11111
pt a leid llld ao to our bullpen.

111104

$29900
.....

.

THROUGH SATURDAY

SYLVANIA REMOTE
19" COLOR PORTABLE TV

Hubbard's Greenhouse

.

Thai's not UIIIIIUII, Iince they .
waa 95 pa1e1 a year qo. Willi's
different is .how the Pirates are
, doio&amp; iL Dnbelc iln'tl)itchina weD,
but2ane Smith (4-1} and Vicente
Palaciol (2.0) are. Banda iln't hitliiiJ, but Orlando Merced (.3SO)
and Don SllualU (.343) are.
Pirates manager Jim Leyland
insilied lutiOUOII thst his team
won widl 25 playen, not just with
the Killer B's. Maybe he's now
conVincing people he :wu riahL
.
· "The Pirates have a good club

20°/o OFF FO'R MOM

·CHAIRS

Complete li111 of v..,tablt
and ltdlllillg Plnnts,

, The Walsh Collese baseball,
team exploded for eight runs in the
sixth inning of its District 22 playoff game with the University of Rio
Grande Wcdnesday and continued
on for a 9-6 win !IVIIr the Redmen
at Stanley L. Evans Field.
The Redmen, who went 10 271S IDd 17-6 in the district, were
scheduled to play Ohio Dominican
(36-i8-1, 17:,1!) at 10 a.m. IOday"in

•CONNIE DRESS and SPORT SHOES
•KEDS - Leather and Canvas
•WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES from Auditions
•MATCHING HANDBAG$
•ATHLETIC SHOE$ from Reebok and Nike
•L. A. Gear for .Mom .

SPRING-BASE

NOW OPEN FOR THE
· SPRING SEASON

win."

W~lsh nips Rio Grande ·in district playoff opener

BRUCE J. REED -· ·

~~~

,

are pcakiiiJ - Dearly all of theft
llarl except (IJ" BobbY BonDI• a
havin&amp; down yean - but they'n~
still sitting atop the National
ha~ East with 111 18-ll record.
' It's been a fun year," ibonstop Jay Bellllid after Wcdnuday's 7-2 victory over Cincinnati
completed a three-game' sweep of
the defending World Series champions.
. "We haven't played our best
Wrona, that's a recipe for the ball yet - at least I hope we
best record in baseball.
· · haven't played our best baseball
The Pittsburgh Pirates hardly yet - but we're finding ways to

By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Spara Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Cy
Youna A ward winner Doug
Drabek iJ 1-S. MOSl Valuable Player Barry Bonds is hitting .167.
Andy VanSlyke, the $12 million
outfielder, has a 127 average. Two
of Pittsburall ' s relievers have
camcd run aveiages above 5.00.
.ghTht?at's a formula for .disaster,
ti

USDA's Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). The CCC's tab, of -------TH_A_N_K_Y_O_U----~~:
course, iS the taxps~'s tab; add to
this ,dJe tact thai such ovec produei:'
lion undermines the price the rest
For
Your
Support
In
the
Pome
.roy
Village
•
of America's farmers (those that
I;
opeiate without any inigation iubMayoral
Race
On
Tuesd~,
May
7th.
1'-'
sidies) get for !heir product, and
what you have is a most ine9.uitable
and wasteful set of conditions .
Additionally, one must ast whr we
are providing them subsidized
water when the USDA in turn is
Paid lor by the Ira'" I. Iotti lir Mayor C11111miHot,
I
payin• many of these same farm
John f. Mussor, Troos. Mullltrry Hgts. r-oy, Olt.
'operauons (under the acr~~~~Be set
aside program) not to grow many
of these same products?
. Recendy, the Inspector General
for the Department of Interior
reviewed the federal irrigation,
crop subsidy and set-aside pro- '
grams and concluded that the praclice of providing multiple subsidies
should be minimized and that policy and procedural ,changes to coordinate these programs could yield
estimated annqal savings of $66
million to the govemmenL Personally, I feel the !.G.'s estimate is
exlrelllely conservative given that
the lntenor Deparbnent spends an
estimated $2.2 billion a year to provide cut-rate irrigation' water to

2 5°/o

3

Non-marquee players drive Pirates to 7-2 win over Reds

~~~~~fa~u:~ ~~!\~ ~u~=p~~=o=
s~e:: r: ~~~r~~r:~; ·~r~ta~ ~~ge with their bre~n in th~
pluses have to be purchased by

investment. The first assures him a
minimum price on his produce
while the second helps .guard
against ovec production of a given
commodity while also serving to
rotate croplands and preserve ,the
quality of the farmer's pastures.
Price supports have been around
since the 30's, while water irrigalion subsidies came into being with
the consttuction of the chain of federally sponsored dam projects
along the major rivers in the west
that began at the turn of the centu-

ed as the principal jewel in the diadem of liberal welfarism. And, 10
be fair, it has had some modest successes. Some studies suggest that
academic performance and IQ test
results do improve, for a year or
two, once the disadvantaged children start school. At a minimum,
some poor children do get hot
meals and health care that they ry.
·
Not much attention was given
would probably not have received
in what passes for their homes. these farm irrigation subsidies until
There are individual instances of , rec:erilly when western fanning was
c!lildren who benefitted permanent- transformed from a relatively small
ly from the program. And the prin- privately owneil enterprise to the
ciples of parenlal involvement and huge agri-businesS operation that it
local control, observed in it, are · is today. Further complicating the
wisdom of such water subsidies has
clearly salutary.
·
But anyone who tells you that been the rapid population growth
Head Start has accomplished what of California, the state most directit set out 10 do is kidding you, and ly affected by these programs, a
quite poSsibly himself (or herself). state which produces approximateThe most comprehensive swdy of ly 40" of all the ~ltural prothe program ever undertaken (back duce marketed in thiS country. The
in 1984) found that short-term population of California, which
gains from Head Start fade after a presenlly ~ds at approximately
year or two. To quote Ron Haskins, 27 million, has more than doubled
a developmenlal psy~hologist and in the last 40 years liJid with it the
welfare analyst for the House Ways state's need for conventional water '
and Means Comminee, writing in
the American Psychologist for
KAIMR' SPRING CLEAN DRAPEICY SALE
February 1989, "Results from
Head Start projects are uncertain
for the special education effects,
OFF ALL FABRICS
and there is virtually no evidence
•DiPiiUD, SIIADI
tHJ (p)_ .41-... (/.2 /
(that Head Start reduces) teen pregAND WAll fAIIIO AYARAKI Vo ~ .,..£/d'
nancy, ,crime, welfare, or unem.
30 DAYS ONLY
ploymenL"
ANY IDEA CAN BE JUDE INTO l WINDOW TIEATIINT
No major studies of Hea4 Start
Show Us A Picture, Wt Cali Make It
have been released in the past 16
All Custom Made · ·
years and none are under way,
oSw•11• and Jabots
according to the Heritage Founda•ca~rad~:s
tion (from a recent report by which
•2fJ Dllfer~nt Panerno of Cornl&lt;~o
most of the above information was
•\'nl•nr~s
taken). Pechaps the welfare bun:au•Phtrh PI~•• Oropery
crats don't want to examine too
closely a program whose glossy
repulation might suffer from a really rigorous evaluation.
For the rest of us, the lesson is
simple, and perhaps a litlle painful:
Head Start is no shining exception
10 the rule that government welfare
OF COUISI WI DO CIStOM IPIIOUlBY.
programs are expensive failures.
On the conllll')', it jlroves the rule.
' '1
• •
21! North S.C.,.. ht. ,
NOTE: Leslie Gelb advises me
that he is not (as I had speculated in
992·UII
a previous column) the oo:hestrator
of the charge that Reagan aides
persuaded Iran not 10 release our
bosrages until after the 1980 elections, having stepped down last
Ocrober as editor of The New Yorlc .
Tim1's Op-Ed page on which the
charge appeared. He did, however,
thunderously demand in his own
column a full-scale investigation of
the charge, and hence still qualifJCS
as one of those who, I suggested,
ou,ht to put their money where
their mouths are. President Carter
himself has since become another.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

;; In 1974, the House Judiciary
Committee began its hearings on
'IVhether · to recommend the
impeachment of President Nixon.
: )n 1978, the bullet-riddled body
of former Italian prime minister
Aldo Morp, who had been abducteil by the Red Brigades, was found
ifl 111 automobile in the center of

•

suppllea has likewile sk:yroclcclcd.
At~~ 85" of all o( tho IIYiilable water in.CIIifomia II UJecl by
apiculture, often for surplus and
low value crops, depriving many
water-lllrVed cities in that: sllle of
this__. resoun:e.
Why, I'm oompellcd to ask, Ire
we providing iJrigatioa su"'idies to
wesum flnl operations 10 produce

Pari•

The o.lly Santlnel

'

�. \

May9, 1991
Ohio

1811

---Area deaths--- Weather
Genevieve Hoff

Grimm honored at OVAA banquet·
B7 SCOTI' WOLPE
Sentinel Cw aeapWI•t
"It's the memoriel-'-tbe good
things in life we dlooae 111 .-u.
ber-that count in life. Ben

Grimm is among those memories.
We think of a roc of good times
when we think of Bert and the
OVA."
These words were spoken by

of Harold and Rosalie Van Meter
Roush, who S!IFYivc him and live in
Gene~ieve Hoff, 90, Roure 1', Mason.
Torch, died Wednesday evening
He was a construction laborer
May .s. 1991, at Fairview Manor w,ith the Cost of Wisconsin Com·
~~n.s Home afler an excended pany.
IW"""'
Besides his parents, he is also
She was born in Sandyville ' survived by his wife, Debbie CoJe.
W.Va., a daughter of the late
man Roush; a daughter, Erin; and a
nie and Lucy _Bilmett Owens. She son, Lucas, all of Mason; t1uw siswas a bousewlfe and a member of ters, Mrs. Clarence (Ro$C E.llen)
the Ton:b Baptist Church.
· Lee, of Pomeroy, Mrs. Carl (Vicki)
She is survived by one. niece Jeffers, and Mrs. Butch (Sandra)
Freda Gibbs, Coolville, and one Stewart, all of Mason; a brother,
nephew, Joe Owens, Coolville, as David (Sandra) Roush, Mason; his
well as several other nieces grandmothers, Vannie Roush, New
nephewsandcousins.
· ' Haven, W.Va., and Katie Van
·-,.,Jn addition to her parents she .· Meter of Mason; bls IIIOtba'·in-law
. w8s preceded in death by hQ' bus· and father-in-taw, Marcella and
band, EIIOJI Hoff, in 1969 and five Jack Coleman, Middleport; two'lis·
brothers.
ters-in-law, Mrs. David (lCathy)
Services will be held Saturday Gilmore, Addison, and Mrs. Bret
at 11 a.m. at the White Funeral · (Becky) Ingles, Waterloo, Ohio:
Home in Coolville wilh Rev. Roger several aunts, uncles, nieces
Fairfax officiating. Burial will be in . nephews and cousins.
.
'
the Ton:h Cemetery.
He was pr«eded in death by his
Friends may call atlhe funeral brother, William •Billy" Roush,
home on Friday from 7-9 p.m.
and two grandfathers, Hazen Roush
and Okey Van Meter,·Sr.
Timothy Roush
Services will be Saturday at 1
P·':D· at Fisher. Fun·eral Home in
Middleport wJth Rev. O'Quinn
Timothy Wayne Roush, 30, of KeUy and Rev. Kris Trienlbng offiMason, W.Va., died late WednesBurial will be in Grsharn
day evening, May 8, 1991 at CabeU ciating.
Cemetery in New Haven.
Huntington Hospital as a resuh of
Friends may call at the funeral
injuries received in an accident
home on Friday from 2 p.m. to 4
He was born on March 23, 1961 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
in Mason County, W.Va., lhe son

JIIISier of caemonics Dave Dilea in

honor of Grimm, lbe last surviving
cbaner memller llld manager of lhe
.Ohio Valley Association (OVA)
(See GRIMM OD Pqe ')

Lon:

!

.)... ·
'

GETS PLAQUE - Pomeroy attorney Freel
W. Crow, right, organizer of the event which
honored Bert Grimm, presents Grimm, seated ,

OVA MEIGS COUNTY MEMBERSMelp Couaty 1184 allrae tarnoat In .uenunce
• lo 1101181' Be,r t Grimm. ID tile front row are (L: R) lob Jeeile, Bert Grimm, Speck Boring, Lyle

'•

with a plaque ill commemoration ol his lifelong
contribution to the 1ame or basebaU. At left Is
Grimm's son, former sports writer Bob Grimm.

-

'

'

aaldenon, Roy Hun. . ad CUriel Selrlel. In
the BeeODd row Ire John Riebel, Sr., Henry Clat·
worthy, Bob Grimm, C. Ed Humphrey, Fred
Crow and BID Stewart. In tile tlllrd row are
Ducky Walters and Don CottrUJ.

fll''re trying 100 bard. We'llge&amp; out
ol iL We wero plaYing a ream tbst's
bDt right now.'
· Both teams bad today off,
aJabousb Pitllburgb played an e,xhibllion pme II CWi MA Buffalo. Tile Reds open a weekend series in
Chicago on Friday, while the
Pirltel entertaill Atlants for three
. PE'i'acwhere in the National
I ape, it was Philadelphia S, San
Die., 2; Montreal S, San FI'IIIICisco
4; Allants 17, St. Louis 1; Los
API Ia 3, New York 1; and Hous• 4, Orial10 2.
Pllllies 5, Plldra 2
W1lik ~I Henhiser was lltslt·
. . his~ from injury in lhe
Danny Cox was quietly
reatbinr; a milestone in h11 own
lduibilitstion bailie.
:cox, who milled all of 1989
IIIII pitdlecl in lhe mincn last aeaJCII llllil JOing on lhe diAbled lilt
on June 19, llllciwed five hits and
two runs in six innings Wednesday
niJbt as Philadelphia defeated San
DiegoS-2.
.n was .Colt's rust major league
victory smce July 21, 1988, the
salne year Hershiser won the Cy
Young award. Hershiser pitched
five sllutout innings in a minor
~ game It Bakersfield, Calif.
'The l,ast rime I ~ a win, Reapn was president,' Cox said. "It
bas bCen a while. ll's a gOod feel-

•mors.

Martinez, who had a streak of
three straight complete games
snapped, has allowed one earned
run in. his last 34 innin~s. He beat
lhe Mets for the first ume in four
career decisions.
Braves 17, Cardinals 1
AI Atlanta, lhe Brsves routed St
Louis as Ron Gant snapped out of a
slump with a homer, double~ and
duwRBis.
tom Glavine (4-2) exrended the
Cardinals' longest losing streak of
the season to four gamea while
Atlants won for the fifth time in six
games.
.
Gant, who had not had a hit in
IS at-bats, homered in the first
inning off Ken Hill (2-2), giving
the Brsves a 2-0 lead. In the third,
Gant doubled in another run and
later scored on Sid Bream's
groundout.
Astros 4, Cubs 2
Houston avoided a three-game
sweep at home u rookie Luis Gonzalez drove in three runs with a
double and a rriple against Chica-

backgrvaad.

Meigs girls
top Belpre 8-4

CLOSING STORE · .
ALL .SHOES MUST BE SOLD

Meigs jumped out to a 3-1 lead
and went on to defell Belpre 8-4 In
Division II sec:tional tournament
softball action Tuesday afternoon
atBelpe.
· Tara Gerlacb pldted up lhe win
for the Marauders, as the maioon
and gold boollchhelrleCOid 10 13·
6 beading into the sectlonll fiDaJJ
today against .Vinton County at
. McArthur. Belpre and Meigs met
apia last nigbt in 1 TVC Jlllke.up
game at Meigs H.S., wbicb the
Marauden won. No details were
available oo the pme 11 Jftlllime.
The Marauders won the game '
despile beinJ outhit 10-6. Missy
S.isson and Gmger Fin!lloy hid two
SJDglea each 10 lead the Marluders, .
and Tricia Baer' and Verna,Comp·
ston had a double each for the
Maraudas.
Score by lnnlnp
Meigs 313 000 1-8- 6-2
Belpre 112 000 0 - 4·10-6
WP- Gerlach {WP)
LP- Robinson (LP)

OPEN 10-3 DAILY-CLOSED THURS. &amp; SUN.
ltFANT'S, MLS', WIS', IOYS' I MEN'S

:Wehrung... continued~p~et
,street paving done and ell~innted
}he. use of cinders in the .winter
:wh1ch helped make o~r village a
,rwch cleaner place ~ bve."
I have ,worked w1th the mayor
·and council to try and run our vii· ·~e as econo!Dically as possible,"
~!truDI conbnued.
As far was the one major thing
I feel tbst I have worked very hard
!0 accomplish was the installation

·

LEATHER TENNIS SHOES &amp; JOGGERS
S3
TO S12
'
GIRLS &amp; LADIES
FLATS &amp; DRESS HEELS
•
S6 TO S12
MEN'S LEATHER DRESS SHOES MEN'S HIGH LEATHER JOGGERS
MEN'S LEATHER WORK lOOTS -

'fleritage•••

$1 5
.

,.

$29 &amp; UP ·

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR.

. COUll Sl.

POMaOY; OHIO

.

VCR-TV

Walk-a-thon set

for May 25 ·. ·

NL ~·oames···--~;___----..--~(Continued from Page 3)

GI:Jmm {llll'roilt) an Wlllam Richard Balling·
to•, Mel Clark, Venoa Grlndslead, Howard
Ronsll, F.aer.Grinde'•"' and Luther Tucker In

OVA MASON COUNTY PLAYERS 1\'!ason County always llad a larlt 1apport
group In the OVA and several of Ill •rvfvlaa
players paid trlbnte te Ben Grimm, tile 1o11e u,..
mg cbarter member or the OVA. Pletared wltll

Repoit·'· Center

. There will be a walk·a·thon
spoqsored by Form 03 Weight
Loss Center of Oallipolis tblt wiD
go.
lake place on Saturday, May 18 .11
Pete Harnisch (2-1) gave up lwo 10 a.m.
runs and six hils in seven innings
In lhe event of nln, lhe llllllk-a·
for the victory, but his NL-Ieading thon wiD be re8Cheduled for Sttur·
earned run average WI1Jit up from day, May 2S (same start time).
l.07 10 1.33. Curt Schilling, who
The courae will begin at the
came to the Astros with HarniSch Galli{'Oiis Oty Part and end • lbe
in the Glenn Davis deal, pitched Haskins Memorial Park. There wiD
the last two Innings for his fifth be a picnic following the walk lhlt
save.
is open 10 lhe publlt.
Shawn !ioskie (2-3) w~s the
The proceeds trom the event
.!~· ~~wmg four nms.on Sill hits will go to lhe Guiding Hand School
m SIX mnmgs.
in Clieshire.
·
.
Expc~~~5,, Giants 4 .
Interested individuals
pick
Ivan Calderon s founh hit of lhe - up forms 81 lhe cenlei or
446~e. a solo hornet in the seventh
4664.
·
mning, broke a tie and lifted MOJI. · - - - - - - - - - - !real past slllmping San Francisco.
Calderon's flfth homer of the
Nineteen U.S. ships were either
season came off reliever Francisco sunk or damaced and 2,300 Amerl·
Oliveras (0~1) as the Expos com- cans were killed when Japan attacked
pleted a three-Jarne sweep of the Pearl Harbor, HawaU, at 7:H a.m.,
Giants and fimshed a homestand Dec. 7. 1941. The United States declared ·war on Japan the lollowbJ1
wilh a 6-2 record.
Barry Jones (1-0) pitched the day.
sevenlh inning for the victory. Tim
BuJte .worked two innings of hit·
less relief for his third save. ·
.

:a

Funai
sy,.honic

lTV
Philco .

Emerson
Shin tom
Multi Ttch
.Scott

Sylvania
Magnavox'
GE

RCA

.

•
•'

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
POMEROY, OHIO

992·3524

1li1UCT' THOSE

1DD. DOLLARS

ina:·.,

TO YOll POCKET
WITH A
CI.ASRDAD
• Purchase aSnapper mower i1 May and make no monthly
payments until Novembet
I Pay noff completely in November and accrue no interest
I Ask about our Total Protection Warranty. You provide·
usual maintenance, we cover full repairs free for two
years. No questions asked.

(0-4).

Cox (1-1) walked four and
strUCk out two in six innings before
Jtoaer McDoweU piu:bed three hitlea innings for lhe save.
"I felt like I struggled," Cox
.said. "I didn't have the greatest
locllim in lhe world. I walked four
Ia six innings. That's too many

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

.

'

...
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walb.''
.
Dodll'll. Melli 1
New York ,....... Bud Hln'el-

~

ol Darryl Slrlwba1y )&lt;\lith
I!IICCII'IIicd 1·1 in lhe ofabth, and
S•ael'• two-run single won lhe
for Los Angeles II Shea Sta·

.

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-

..r

...

•

,, &lt;)

" ..
'-"' '

. . l.a illll'l C.l

n•
"I \II

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•••

GRAVELY·TRACTOR SALES AND SERVICE

ChJcke• Barbeque scheduled
Middleport Park 'n' Pun'on Mochlbe Tuppers Plains Volunteer er's Day (Sunday). The Park 'n'
Fire Depanrilent wiD have a chick· . Pull is located 81 General HartinF
en b1rbecue at the firehouse on P1rt in Middleport
Smlday, beginning 11 11 a.m. The ~~roaebbli
cost of $3.73 indlidcs a balf chick·
W.
will be the finlll day
. en ~ n'bs, baked beans, cole slaw, tblt app1
ons wiD be accepted
breid and beverage. Pie and cake for IIJIIIRlOl POII=JICIIOimal II the ·
will be available at a cost of SO Middleport MtDilllal Fool a Qen.
CaJts.
0111 ~
In Middleport.
Mother's Day llpeelal
Applicadoanilay be piclrad up .S
All molhers accompanied by a ~ in II the ~ddlepan Jtecre.
son « daughter will receive three abon Deputment Ill vi1Jip ball.
free'(es of miniature golf at the
' '

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!

"

with other involved individuals.
Forfeiting bonds were Linda
Asbury, Albany. $4 7, speeding;
Edna Householder, Reedsville,
$43, stop sign violation; Latrell
S~hoenleb, Pomrroy, $43, improper backing; Jaunita Thomas, $48,
speeding, snd $63, driving under
suspension, and $375, DUI; Pamela
Hogan, Tul!pers Plains, $63,
-expired regiStration; Duane A.
Johnson, Pomeroy, $SO, no financial responsibility.

.•

Snap crvc~;ws yw no IJlOI1tNy paynB11s for !M) days. Ask your dealer for details.

Ramon Martinez (S-1) gave up
one run and four hits in seven
inalDJs for lhe Dodaas before Jay
llo'ftiJ flllilhed for Iii&amp; tbinl-

CLEVELAND (AP) - Trash . the districts 10 le~ the highest of
haulers who successfully chat· three per-ton fees ·on Interstate
lensed higber fees charged to dump haulers. Intrastate haulers pay
.
out-of-stale garbage in Ohio said lowerfees.
The stare fees have gone into
lhey may seeli a refund.
Allen Moore, president of the hazardous-waste cleanup funds
National Solid Waste Management managed by lhe Ohio EnvironmenAssociation, said Monday his orga· tal Protection Agency. The state
nization would probably asic: a fed· collected about $2 million from
eral court 10 refund fees tbst out-of- int~rstate haulers last year, the
Oh10 EPA reported. The loss of
state haulen have paid in Ohio.
U.S. Disttict Judge George C. that funding could harm ·cleanup
Kicker
Smith in Columbus ruled last week efforts, agency offiCials said.
()..8-9-0-2,3
State lawyers met Monday to
the state law allowing higher
(zero, eight, nine, zero, two, dumping fees 10 be coUected from consid!lt what impac:t the federal
three)
interstsre haulers is unconstitution· court ruling might have on the fees
inttastare haulers must pay.
at.
Moore, a spokesman for the
Pick 3 Numbers
The rulinjl also applied to higher
!raSh-industry
association, said lhe
2-1-9
fees tblt OhiO's 48 solid-waste disruling
meant
that higher fees on
(two, one, nine)
...---utc' ts can coUect
a 1988 law.
interstate
haulers
must end immediThe measure allo'Ned the stste and
ately.
·
Pick 4 Numllers
9-3-2-S
(nine, duw, two, five)

._;:;...
~ .----Announcements-----

.

£...

•:

"'

Lottery numbers

.•

• SeeyourSriapperdealertodayfordetails.

=~:rled to fiPII .Juan Samuel

Court: high out-of-state
trash fees unlawful

Three tined, four forfeit bond
ip Middleport Mayor's Court

Four were fmed and six others
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night:
, Wanda Riffle, Pomeroy, $SO
and costs, failure to appear;
Dwafne Qualls, Pomeroy, public
inroliiC8lion, $113 and COSIS; Craig.
Fugett, Miramora, Fla., $375 and
tOllS, DUI, and SSO and COliS, left
of center, Joey Reitmire, Pomeroy,
SSO and costs, desrruction of propen, with restitution, and an order
fCCj,Uiring that there be no contact

'

Cox was 18-9 for St. Louis in
198S, but his career has been on
bold since March 31, 1989, when
bo hid 1 Ugament lnlnSplant in his
riJIII elbow.
.
RJcty Jonlan pve Cox the vic101)' with • sixth·mnins pane~ s1am
~t Padres starter Andy Benes

of guardrail ·on Main Street After
many years of trying to ·get his
done, part of Main Street is a much
. safer place 10 drive. In lhe future, I
hope, along with council's help, 10
get some additional railing
CLEVELAND .(AP)- Here are
inslalled."
"If elected," Wehrung coolin- ' the selections Wednesday night in
ued, "I will sttive to wort well with the Ohio Lottety:
council and the surrounding vil!ages to make our area a better Super Lotto
6-10-11-13-33-43
place to live."
(six., ten, eleven, thirteen, thirtythree, forty-three) .
Conti!lued from page 1
The jackpot is $16 million.

fined in Pomeroy Court

••

' ··

•'

SJ399S
SAVESSO
HOOVERe
Elite""
800 Upright
Cleaner

oojler

.

Includes attechmentll

--

•Ueh.......ht
• Bruthtil fdo- ciM!nlng
.Top.tiN . ., chllnge Mg

-----Weather-----

. there will be craft booths set up W.Va., an advertising representa~roughout the day, concession live for WSAZ television 3, attend·
~tsnds and activities in the mini ed Wednesday's meeting to discuss
parks, which will include a a proposed "Salute to Meigs Coun'!Turkey Shoot" sponsored by ty's Heritage Days and the 1991
;i&gt;omeroy CU'b Scout Pack 249. Soap Box Derby." Garten
Spaces for crafts people may be explained the five day salule pack·
.reserved for $10 and concession age to the group and the requirestand spaces ma&gt;: be r~ed for ments necessary 10 participate.
$25. ~or more mformauon on
Annie Chapman presented a
re~mg.SI?ICCs, or for any.of ~e project on behalfoflhe Lyons Oub
day s acUYJbes! contact. Julie Dil- m which that aroup and the
;ton at The Dally Sentmel, 992- PomerQy Merchants Association
.} 15AisoS. disc •-A · Wednesda , · wiU develop the median strip on C1rds
• .
us,.., at
y s Main Streea Into an area accented
S (five) of Hearts
~~!!Jig was lhe porchase of J!ddi· with flowers, Jimestpne,, l!ri!lk and ,
K (king) of Clubs
-~ Chrillmas banners 101 ,light- mUlch. "A work session for i6e proK (king) of Diamonds
mg systems by the Merchants je&lt;:t will be announced and all·
8 (eight) of Spades
A~soclation for ~e business dis· .members of lhe association are to
'P'Jct Ten new e1gbt foot ha!'ners participate.
~ve. ~ pure~ al&lt;lJ!S With 17
Brenda Morris, Pomeroy Vii·
ligbtmg sy.stems whJc!l ~ill be used lage Oetk, reql,ICsted that lhe Mer·
to refurb1~h the ~x1stmg candy chants decorate their windows in
~es used m the village. The dDco- keeping with lhe alumni weekend
rsbo~ were p~hased rrom S!Jlli- lheme on May 2S.
Vetmuls Memorial Hospital .
van Displays With proceeds raised
Mary Powell Meigs County
WEDNE.SDA
Y ADMISSIONS
fr?m lhe 1991 F~ion Show and Tourism Director: presented a pro•
Irene
Russell,
Middleport.
wnh a $500 donauon from Bank posal for advertisement in the
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
One. Any business or individual Weekender Edition of the Colum•
James
Will and Donald Covert.
who would like .li:J make a dona_tion bus Dispatch which would promote
tJ:Jward the Chnstmas decorabons Meigs County. The Fomeroy MerHolzer Medical Center
should contact Susan Clarlc, presi- chants Association conrributed $25
Dlsc••rJ•• May 8 - Lelia
dent of the Pomeroy Merchants toward the 10181 $247 for lhe adver·
Adkins, Michelle Cox, Wesley
Association.
tisernent
The next meeting will be held ' . Cox, Elol11e Mills, Christopher
Bill Garten, Parkersburg,
Mohr, Carolyn Powers, William
June 12.
.
Rawlins, Mick Sibley and Darla
.
While.
~·~May 8 '7 Mr. and Mrs.
Irvin Saunders, daughter, Gallipolis. Mi. and Mrs. Randy Searls,
son, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
· Three were fined when they only; speeding•
Jamie Farr, known for his role as
ai)oeared in the court of Middleport
Forfeiting bonds wm Jarnea R cross-dres'sinl Toledo. Ohio. native
~yor F_red· Hoffman Tuesday MiUer, Jr. Cheshire, $460, p11ysqi Corporal Mu Klinger on the TV show
=·white four others forfeited . control of a motor vehlcfe while ·M• A•s•H; was actually born in Tounder the influence of alcohol or' ledo on July 1. 1134.
·Fined were Timothy L. Lyons, drugs; Janice K. Breeding, MiddleNew Haven, W. Va., $425 and port, $460, physital tontrol of a
~ days in jail, physical tonlrOI motor vehicle while under the
Ol a motOr vehicle. while under me
influence of alcohol or drugs, and
iAfluenc:e of alcohol or drugs, and $60 on no operator's licenne; Larry
$100 and costs, driving under sus- · Rider, Middleport, $60, passina In
pllllsion; John F. Aeiker, Pomeroy, n~ passing zone; and Donald R•
$2S and costs, open container, and N1~hots•. Pomeroy, $60 on expired
Cllarles E. F"tnk, Fomeroy, $16 fmc registration.

~our

{; .

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.

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES ··

39 I WEST MAIN STREET

By The Aaol:lated Prea .
Here's lhe lareat Ohio agricul!mal WCIIbcr advisory prepared by
the Natioaal Weather Service's
Midwest Aarieultural Weather Service Center in West Lafayette, Ind.:
Ohio farmers will be getting a
golden opportunity 10 catch up on
fieldwork over the next several •
days. Dry weather with temperaf!QYZI;
ture's in the 80s is fortcast through
............ ~
Sunday. ·
.
Ventilation systems should get
theit fUll lest of the season u Jive·
stock hell stress will return. SaturQCIIOY
day and Sunday should see maxi·
mums into the 80s across the stste
WEATHER MAP • Tbe wea~ Forecast for Friday shows ··
wid! a near 90-depee reading poa·
showers in the Southeast, tllundeultorms, showers and snow In the
sible in the south.
.
Rockies. The remainder of tile country wiD experience fair sides. .
Planting activities should not be
(AP)
hampered by rain, although an isolated thundersiOrnl could occur late
Sunday afternoon. Some light ~­
cipitation is poasible Sunday ru-ht
of showers or thunderstorms tate
and Monday ,while heavier preclpi· South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low Sunday into early Monday north
tation should hold off until possibly
around 60. Friday, partly sunny. and in the south Monday. Very · .
Tuesday.
warm Saturday and Sunday, then a
'lbe1alest six to 10-day forecast Higb in the low S()s,
little cooler on Monday. Highs in
for next Tuesday through Saturday Extended Forecast
calls for above-normal lempera- Saturdly through Monday:
the 80s each day, except 70s to
Mainly
fair
except
for
a
chance
near 80 Monday. Lows :SS-65.
tures across lhe state. Precipitstion .
should be near normal, althougb
northwestern sections may
encounter slightly above-normal
amounts. Such conditions should
be ideal for growth of recently
planted com seedlings.
. I

Hospital news ·.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goltlstar
Samsung
Soundtsign
Ztriith ·

good for
plowing

• 4-MeiiUtOI'Nitlll ~t

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• 31 Pt. cOtd/ qulck,.,._
• DlMI btwh 'e vltlldon

• FurniNrt g1111rd

U4465-9

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. SAVE sao

522995

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~.ro

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11111'111111

• 11111 .......1'1..
1_ _ _ •
•tO-HP'• $WI\MI , _

· · ~foollllaoage

on--

• Po ermatiC• Noule wtll heaciUght
and ~odge~IIIIJ

SEAFOOD NIQHT It Now On FRIDA VI
FRIDAY; MAY 10 - 3 P.M. TO

a P.M.

SEAFOOD SPECIAL
•SHRIMP • OYSTfiS • CRAI lEGS • CAI'FISH • SCAllOPS '
ClAM STRIPS • SlUFFED CIAI • IAIED FISH
AND MANY Ol'llfR ITEMS

All You Can Eat $J99

•••••••

SAJUIDAY, MAY 11 - 3 P.M. 'tO 8 P.M.
MfATIAUS • FliED CIICKfN • IAIED STEll • CHICKEN liVERS
VAllErY OF VEGETAil!S, SOUP, SAlAD AND DESSERT IAR INClUDED

AI You Can Eat $549

•

••••••

SUNDAY, MAY 12 - MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL DINNER BUFFET

HAM ·ROAST IEEF • SCAllOPED POTATOES. YAMS

FRI[~ CHICKEN. and -.aD STEAk • SOUP &amp; SAlAD IAI and

DELICIOUS DUSfiT tAR INQIJO[D

All You Can Eat

$589

Each Mom Sharing The Buffet With Us
Receives A Lovely Polled Plant

MOM'S
SMORGASBORD
ON , .. COIND - AT THI RAFFIC UGHT
RAVENSWOOD, WV.

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three speed

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•~ttvcord NIMie
• !uy-empcy ' "·thru dirt cup
• Edge oleenlng
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$5495

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GWIIR.I,

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"

• Hlng-"P for 110,.11

As you know, Car Buying Is Serious Business. It involves serious money.
Perhaps you've
putting off buying that new car or truck you so
seriously need. Well, now -· Thanks to a serious tiew Pricing Policy at
· Turnpike of Gallipolis ••• You can buy any new Ford car or truck for
549 Over Invoice. This is not a sale ••• Not a special promotion ...
tbis is now the everyday low price ••• Only at Turnpike of GaUipolis:
149 Over Invoice on any new Ford car or truck. Invoices are posted on
'a ll new cars and trucks, so shop Thmpike of Gallipolis when we're
open or closed and check our exclusive low pricing.
Why Pay Mort Somewhere Else? Over Invoice ••. That's The Price Everyday At Thrnpike Of Gallipolis•
It's No Wonder Turnpike Undersells Those Who Won't Be Undersold!
Lft fA COMK I ifiGI IIWIIIII,. TUIIPID
IAU.IPOLIS,

.

•

DIY, IIW MY,

•.

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•-

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__
,
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••• , cllarige, top.fiH bag
• .lrumld edge C'l a: 11ug

•
'·

w.,

INGELS
FUINITUIE &amp; JEWELIY

o•

1 Ill. Stc•d Awe •
.......rt, Ohio
' .
992·2635
..__....._..__
_ _ _ _...J .'.'

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Pea•

'll'IUredl'f, May I, 1~'

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

6 The Dilly Sentinel

Grimm honored...

ranb as a l'eiiQit of his yan in the

_&lt;Conlinued_.
_&amp;om_Paa_e4_&gt;_ _ _ __

Wetbnes1ay evening in lhe exlelld· lhe mail. This miphasiwlhe great
ed care unit of Veterans MelllCrW ·respect Bert got in the baseball
,Hospiral.
·
world..Thank you Bert!"
More than 50 players in the
Speakers at the head table
OVA were joined by friends and included Mel Clark:,Tom Wolfe,
familytohQnorGrimm.
Bud Bickel , Fred Crow .. Dave
The evening began with the Diles, Jim Venari and Vernon
invocation by Tom Wolfe, former Grindslead.
OVA player and now ~dent of
Bud Bickel, former Meigs
die Racine Home Nauonal Bank. County coach and educator and
·Fred W. Crow, one of the event's now manager of the Huntington ·
organizers, then gave opening Cubs, had much to say about his
remarks, before all present ties to Meias Coutny, his duties
embarked upon a fine meal served with the Huntington Cubs lind
by lhe sutff of Veterans Memorial ' praise for lhe OVA and GriJ!tm.
Hospital.
·
"In 1962 as a Fairmont State
l"ollowing the meal, Grimm, araduate I did not know of the
who is a patient in the VMH beautiful Bend IU'CII that I came to
. ·extended care unit, was broupt to know and love. I've always loved
the banquet hall where he was evezybody in this community.
greeted by the OVA continaent
''There are two things hememwith a rendition to "Take Me Out ber weD - if you went to Racine
to the Ball Game."
to play ball and yelled "Wolfe."
"Ben, this is your night. All of about 87 heads popped outlhe winus admire you very much. You dows in Racine. There was BiB
have made all of our lives richer Fooze (Wolfe), Liule Fooze, Wee
and better!" said Diles.
·
Fooze and about I00 others, and
Diles lhen told of one particular lhey all played ball. You were sure
encounter he had with Grimm, torunintoaWolfe.
when be rruinaaed lhe Racine team
''The other thing I remember is
for which Diles pitched.
.
the coach saying, 'Diles pitchin~.
Fred Crow, then presented Wolfe cstching and .. .evezybody m
. Grimm, now 93, With a fine plaaue · lhe outfield running,'" a comment
which was inscribed in part. "The that drew a large chuckle from lhe
Ohio Valley Association honors crowd in relation to Diles' pitching ·
Ben Grimm for outstanding and effons.
. meritorious service in the spon of
Bickel also spoke of the Hunt·
:baseball. The last serviving chaner ington Cubs for which he now is
· member and manager of lhe Ohio generai1118J181er. He told of former
~ Valley Association. Professional major Jcaauers Ray $edecki, Billy
baseball aueer. 1921-1937."
Williams, Richie Zisk, and Billy
The plaque also detailed each Piersol who often helps with the
year of Grtmm's career and the team, either on a reauJar or roving
teams he was associated with at type bssis.
· :that lime.
·
·
Crow stated, "It's worth a lot to
All present introduced them , me to see someone nx;ogni2.ed like
selves and ma~y had a special this todiy. Bert Grimm has been a
moment to share with the group great man in my ~k all these
about Grimm.
years. I'd like to 11y, 'Thanks' to
Fonner Gallipolis "Queen Bee" Bert and thanks to all those who
Foxy Grant stated, "I was awak- made this evening possible.
ened early one m~K~~ing by a knock
''We realize as spin ball players
at the door. When I 111swered the that the physical thinas like arms,
door, thele was Bert with a Racine eyesight, and the legs 10. but the
uniform in his hand. He said, spirit behind the days when you
'Here, (giving Grant the uniform) pia~ stays with you forever. •
you're playina for me for lhe next
The Ohio Valley Association
three years. ••
·
was formed in 1938 and despite a
It was noted by One fOrmer play- brief suspension from 1942 to ·
er that Grimm once pitched to 1945, operated uniil1952.
· bP!!t:bell immortal Babe Ruth. This
Charter members and managers
came wben Grimm was with Dallas who organized the league were
and pitched an exhibition ganie (manuer and team) Bert Grimm·
against the New York Yankees. 'Racine; Harle:y, R.ife-Bradbury;
Grimm "aroovcd one" for the StaDiey-~lltHobe Wil.On and
Babe, and lhe Babe hit a home run. Howard Hardway-Gallipolis:
The Babe said "lbanks kid" to Bert Clarence Fisher-Point Pleasant:
as he rounded third baBe.
Herman Layne and Harry LayneLuther Tucker jokingly stated, Hartford, WV: and Bernard Som"Back in 1948.. .1 thought I knew mervilJe.Ciifton, W.Va.
thins. I knew or only two
Bight other teams were in the
e who knew more than I did. league.
of thole men was Bert Grimm.
In II years, the OVA had 44
Everyone reapec:ted Bert."
players signed by major league
· Former PhiladeiDhia Pllillie Mel scouts to minor league contracts. ·

minon.

Despite a carc:Cr winning record
and 16-game winning SCBSOII, the
Meigs County pitcher never
reached the majors.
He did however, bec:ane known
u a vezy knowledgeable and much
r~spected person in the baseball

An artk:le IJ' elnd in the paper
when Grimm wu 011c:e pitching,
which read as follows: "Bert
Grimm pitched one of those 'way
down Elst' or 'Bast LyoDe' meller·
drm'l'k kinds of bill pmes Tueaday afternoon with I dlrill in Cvtfl'
one of the nine episodes and he

'MIIIit-whicb IIUitea the srory mOle
inlllatini so lelL
"Yea lir, Mr. Orimm of Letart
Falls, which isn't on the IIIIP yet,
bul wblc:h will bo about lhe lime its
111011 famous, flinous - regisrm
a rew more pitcbina ttiumpbs. It
was Grimm's 16th victory or the
aesaon and it was aerved up to lhe
Cdi6calion or Joe (Poncho) Cantil·

lioa, former boa of Minneapoliil
111d now acout ror tho Cubl, IIIII
Bill ROurke, former owner ol ~
Omaha team in the Weatera
Leasue and now scout for th~
Reds."
•
Although somewhat "wordy,~
the story emphasized its point:
Grimm could pitch 111d be ,love!J
lhe game of lles-ball. ',

'll'lurHiy, May 9, 11191

RIVIISIDI
aoLLROP
DISK

Carpenter birth

\

Todd and Jill Walburn Carpenter of Lincolnton, N. C. are
amouncing lhe birth o{ • dauahter.
Olivia Marie;, born on May 3 at
Catawba Birthing Cenler.
The infant weiahed eight
pounds, one ounce and was 21
mcbea long. Mr. and Mrs. Carllen·
ter bave two other daughters, llrit·
tany Jill, age 10, and Valerie Kay,
age2.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mr$.
· Dale E. Walburn, Middlq10n. and
Mr. and fdrs. Ransom Carpenter,
Lincolnton. N. C. Mrs. Mary Wal·
burn. Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
A. 1!;, Carpenter, and Mrs. Ollie
Whitener of Lincolnton, N.C. are
great-grandparents.

. Quake or tremor?

S
89
. 9
. •9

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RECOGNIZED ·Two clepartmeats of VeterMemorial H01pltal were i'eeopized at a tea
beld Tuesday afternoon M I part ot the obser·
Yllnt.e oiNitlonal NIU'Iea Week. Tbe two depart!DHIS were pnsellted f'rlmett certlfleates sllow·
" in&amp;::: they were ac:credlted bJ the Jolllt Com·
11
OD Aceredltlllloa of Healtllca!'e Orpul·
ZlltiODI followlq Jnspectfolll by the COIDmlssiOD
IDI

100 If STOCI ·

Golden State tops L.A. Lakers
125-124 behind unknowns

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· Rlloada Dalley, dlractor ol aiUIID., IUid oa lbe
rlgbtii·J4o1Pital AdmiiDiltrator Scott Lueu.

The Warriors won despite being
outrebounded 49-28, but the
rebounds by Higgins and Blie w~
the mo;;.t
1m rtant ones in the
game.
Althou
pbeU hadn't been
used m during the regular season and in lhe Lakers' f'U'Sl·round
victory over Houston, he played the
entire fourth quarter Wednesday
nipL

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third-seeded Lakers by splitting the
fust two~ aHhe Forum.
·
"We II be back, we'll play,
we've been here so many ·umes.
We know how to play on the
road, "Johnson said after scoring a
playoff career-hish 44 points in

GIFT

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Phillies . .Wandell Mosser spent
time in the majors with the
Philadelphia Athletics and New
YOlt Yankees.
Grimm started his career in
1921 with the Lansing Senators ip
lhe Cenlrsl League, Lansing, Mich.

MOTHER'S
DAY

Save
1100

:.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) MaBie Johnson and Chris Mullin
played lhe llllll'ing roles before an
ianl1kcly ttio decided the outcome
in favor of the underdog Golden
Stale Warriors.
Los Anseles Lakers rookie
. Elden Campbell committed two
devutating fouls in. the final 28
seconds and Rod Higgins and
Mario Blie took advantage of them
as the Warriors rallied ror a 125. 124 victa'y Wednesday nipL
· Now, the second-round series
. mov~ to Oakland for games Friday n1ght and Sunday afternoon.
The WIUTion, seventh-seeded. in
lhe Weslml Confcrenc:e, now have
lhe homecoun adv•tage over lhe

IClub reviews 'Luther Alive' I

Mrs Wendell Hoover reviewed Daniel Thomas gave a brief insight
lhe bOOt "Luther Alive" by Edith of her life. Roll call wu conducted
Siinon at the recent ..UOg of the with the me'!'~ namin~ a .post- :
Middlepon Literary Club held at Lulheran Christian denommallon.
lhe horne of Mrs. Daniel Thoma$.
Refreshments were served by
During her review Mn. Hoover lhe bosr.ess.
stated that Martin Luther, 1483·
1546, turned to religion after a
career as a lawyer. A wonderful
preacher, people came from long
distances to hear him ~ch . He
wu insttumental in getbltg Witten·
burg on the academic map. He
preached against indulgences and
their relation to penitence. This
made him unpopular. His concern
was about peoples'. souls which
inspired him to nail his 95 Thesis
to the North Door of the Cas~le
Church. He was called a heretic
The scale by which eartliquakes and a drunken German. The Cardi·
are measured wu devised by Dr. nal attempted to obtain a recant
'
Charles Richter or the California from Luther but he would not do iL
fii1 -·-=--:::~•:::::""'::::-:;;....;"--'
Inslitute of Technology. Called lhe He did not wish his followers to be L.::~=•-.:...::._..:-=-=
AND
Richter scale, it categoriw earth· called Lutherans. He ssid "Let's
quakes by numbers, from I to 9. just be Christians." He was con. .
STEVEN SEGAL IN
For example, No. 1 signifies an demned to be an outcast and even
earthquake that is felt by .sci~lific his life was in jeopardy, but he COR·
instruments only, No. 5 s1gnifies a linued to write. He married and had
quake that causes walls to crack sixc.hildren.
R
Mrs. George Hacken Jr., presid·
and household objects to fall, and
No. 8 signifies a disasler. No earth· ed at the meetinll in which Mrs.
446-1088
quake has
to measure 9 on the
Richter

',.

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MAY 10 THRU SATURDAY, MAY 18!
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11'11 Dally Sentinel-Page 7 .

Middleport, Ohio

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2

lhe opponunity you gave me. One
day a JDIIjor ~ ICOUl called and
told me Bert Glimm had called and
said that he (the scout) sbould sign
me. The scout lalked to me over the
· phone.butneverevensawmeplay.
In a few days I got the contract in

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-~163-17&amp;

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�--..-·-·- · -~-- ~------Page 8

The Dally SenHnel

Beat of
,t·he B.end· ••

Bob
Hoeflich

-·

Caryl and JOIJeph Coot, bmer·

l

•

ues recently when they observed
their 70th wedding annivenary 11
the Piei'ce Memorial Baplist Home
in Brooklyn, Conn., where they
now make their home.
·
Mr, and Mrs. Code., as many of
rou know. spent mast of their lives
ID Pomeroy but moved to Con.llecticut only about a year ago .to
make their home nearer their
daughter, Dorothy and Edward
Cortoran of South Windsor, Conn.
Several photos of the Cooks
appeared in the Brooklyn Chronicle
along with $eir "story". c.y1 and
Joseph took • train from Pomeroy
to Kentucky 70 years ago to be
married - now just try catching a
train in Pomeroy today. In fact,
you can't even find the railroad
. tracks. The Cooks were honored
with a party on their 70th anniversary and Caryl eommeniCd that the
wedding cake served at the party
was actually their fll'st since they
dl,dn' t have a wedding cake at the
time of their marriage. That's the
way is was for many people at that
point in time.
Interviewed by the· Chronicle
reporter at the party, Mrs. Cook
partly attributed the long marriage
to simple life.
"Don't tty to keep up with the
Joneses", she told the reporter.
Joe is 89 these dars and Cary11is
9;2. Would you beheve that Mrs.
Cook is chairman of the Baptist
Home Council and still sings with
the Retired Senior Volunteer Program in Plainfield, Conn.?

Commuult;r Caleadar Items
appear two dafl before m emit
and tile da;r of tbat event. Items
must be reeelved weD In advance
!~da;;.ure publicltioD Ia the cal•

-_--....J ·

_w_,_..;-;..
____,.,._;;..
==•-•__..,,__.~...,=-w...-..-=--.,--=-~
...,=...w,.=--:-=:.,.~-~-"~•-w

ly of Pomeroy, became real celebri·

Feighan and gun-control forces defeat gun lobby

Community calendar

By

doctors 11 University Hospil&amp;l, the
Channd 6 crew visited Belly a_
t her
borne to tie in her history and expe·

THURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS • Revival at the
rience with heart problems with the
problems President B~Jsh had. I Belle Chapel Church in Gallipolis
don't know how effective the heart · will be held through Sunday at 7
information was lh81 Betty supplied p.m. nightly with 'kalpb Savage,
upon questioning from die crew, Columbus, as evangelist. Public
but she really created a whale of a invited. - · ·
sandwich while Oil camera.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Speaking of heart disease and
Springs
Grange will meet Thursday
heart operations, Carrie Kennedy,
at
8
p.m.
Raciite Grange will visiL
who not too many months ago
underwent by.-pass ·surgery at a AU members are urged to aaend.
Columbus hospital, recently pointPOMEROY • The Preceptor
ed out that a number of Meigs
Countians she knows petsonally Beta Beta Chapler, Beta Sigma Phi
have undergone heart surgeries and Sorority Will meet Thursday 817:30
procedures in Columbus. Carrie p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
thinks it would be a good iden to Church. Officers will be installed.
COfllpile a list of those residents - Hostesses are Shirley Beegle and
not only those who have gone to Jeannie Werry. ·
Columbus but to hospil&amp;ls in other
POMERO.Y - There will be an
cities for the procedures and surgeries. I, too, think it might be inter- organizational meeting to flan for
esting to pin down just how many the 20th class reunion o Meigs
High School (1971) on Thursday at
residents have gone this route.
If you have undergone the baJ. 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Public
loon procedure or open heart Library in Pomeroy. For inform&amp;·
surgery why don't you let me tion contact Bob Werry at 992·
know? Just send me your name, 5396.
the; procedure, the hospital and its
WELLSTON - The Wellston
location and when you underwent
Ohillco
Society will present a base·
the operation or procedure. The
ball
and
sports card show on Thursinformation can be sent to me at
day
at
the
Saint Peter and Paul
109 High SL, Pomeroy, or you can
Parish
Hall
fro
4-9:30 p. m ~ Admis·phone me the info - the problem
sion
is
$1
per
person and $2 per
there; of course, is catching me.
family.
Hourly
door
_prizes will be
Either way, I'll be glad to hear
from you. I have a feeling, this given.
could be quite a list and when it is
ATHENS- Serenity House supwrapped up, I'll pass along the
port group for members of the
entire list to you in this column.
community affected by domestic
With so little going on at the violence will meet Thursday from
.1
polls locally Tuesday, it seems only 5-7 p.m.
natural td ask if that election was
RUTLAND - The Leading
reaily necessary. Do keep smiling.
Creek Watershed Association will
-C
·
meet Thursday at 6 p.m.

ftUDAY
POMEROY • Tbe Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
sporisor I dance on Friday from 8ll p.m. with music by the Happy
Hollow Boys of Athens. Those
auending brin¥ snacks for the
snack table. Public invited.
.
POMEROY - The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
will ineet Friday at1:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Co11nty Public Library.
Edgar Yerian will present a pro- , ''The American Indian, Some
fiis:ory." Hostesses ire Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
Grueser, Jr., Mrs. Evereu Hayes.
Mrs. Pearl Mora and Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds.
·
POMEROY - Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabiliwion Center is sponsoring a flower and plant sale on

Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Public
invited. Proc!leds go to the
Alzheimer'.s Foundation.
POMEROY - In honor of Moth·
er's Day, a mother-daughter tea
will be held at Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center on Friday 113:30 p.m.

LONG BOTI'OM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
· tom will hold special services Friday at 7. p.m. featuring the Dailey
Family and The Messengers. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance Friday·
from 8-11:30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW Building featuring
Foggy Mountain Drifters and Alvin
Chutes on the fuldle. Jim Brown is
the caller. Public invited.

Kendall Church 81378-6406.
ROCK SPRINGS - Buckere
Rodeo at the Rock Springs Faupounds, Sanmlay trom noon to 2
p.m. Admission is $5 for adults and
$3 for students. Children six and
. under admitted ((ee. The. public is
invited.

WASHIN.GTON (AP) - A
heavy advenising blitz by the
Nllional Rifle Allocillion failed to
chan&amp;e any Ohio votes as the
1 sevcn-dly waiting · for biiJd&amp;un pun:hlaes.
hio's deleplioa split 14-7 on
Wednesday as the House iipjlioved
· the biB intended to pve police a
week to determine whether handgun buyers lulve criminal records
or hislorie~ of menw illness.
It's illCialto sell guns to those
• ~le,
backers d. the waiting
penod contended lives can be
saved if criminfb can't get a pn
~ply by lying on permit apphca-

be in concert at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church on Sunday .
81 10:30 a.m.

"i:rio.-ed

lUPPERS PLAINS - The annual chicken anc! spare rib barbecue
will be held 11 the Tuppers Plains
F"lre Station on Sunday belliOning
81 II a.m. Cost is $3.75 and dessert
is .50 cents extra.

MIDDLEPORT • The Mei11s .
County Soap Box Derby Associ&amp;·
lion .will ltold a rummage sale at
General Hl!"tinger Parle: on Saturday from noon to 8 p.m..

ana

uons.

POMEROY - Ameriean Legion
Baseball sign up will be held Satur- ·
day at Meigs High School at 1 p.m.
for ages 1&amp;-19. There isa $10 signup fee and those attending should
bring their ball glove.

111

naker and he is the son of Harley
and Jo Stalnaker of Route 7,
Pomeroy. He is also a graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
His ministry includes television
and radio, concerts at churches,
civic auditoriums, civic functions,
. campgrounds, .mobile home pules,
and prison ministry has .spanned
the United States and extended into
11umerous countries including

Stone is married and has two
children. He and his family make
their home in Port Charloue, Fla.
Other local appearances will be
held May 17 at the Long Bottom
Full Gospel Church 11 7:30p.m.;
May 18 at Royal Oak Resort Club
817:30 p.m.; May 19 atlhe Chester
United Methodist Church at 7:30
p.m.

Tysinger personal
1
.f

Sherry Tysinger, Reedsville,
will be among 134 graduates of
Milligan College during commencement on May 19.
A psychology major, she will
receive the bachelor of science
!Iegree. She is a graduate of Eastern
High School and is the daughter of
Norman McCain, Reedsville, and
the late Lois McCain. After graduation, she plans to teach. She is mar·
ried to David Tysinger and they
reside at Route 8, Johnson City,
Tenn.
Sam Moore, President of
Thomas Nelson Publishers, Int.,
Nashville, Tenn., wiU deliver the
commencement address during the
3 p.m. ceremonies. Dr. Marshall J.
Legge11, President of Milligan COl-

•
1

BURLINGHAM - The Burling-

ham·Modem Woodmen will lulve a

dinner at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on Thursday from
5-6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 per person
with a menu of baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy, corn,
cole slaw, biscuit and beverage. A
variety of pie will be available 81
an extra charge of 75 cents piece.
Following the dinner, fiiUSic will be
played by I unior and Rita White,
AI Windon and Bill Ward. A free
will offering will be taken for the
musicians. Public is invired.

REEDSVILLE- There will be a
men's softball tournament for
Classed D and E at the ball diamond in Reedsville on Saturday
and Sunday. Cost is $65 per team
and lams must provide their owns
softballs. First. second and 'third
place trophies will be given away.
Call Jim Carter'at 378-6325 or

LOTIRIDGE • Countty Music
Night will be held at the LOttridge
COmmunity Center on Saturday
from 6 p.m. to midnight. Refresh·
men15 available.
SUNDAY
CHESHIRE - Calvin Minnis
and Minnis Quartet will perform
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Old Kyger
· Free Will Baptl$1 Church on Sungy
Creek Road in Cheshire.
·

. ''
agam.

·.

,

'

'_

' Ohio Attorney General Lee
Fisher also praised the House vote.
"Without question, violent
crime made possible with f~s
is turning our neighborhoods into .
war zones," Fisher said in a news
release. ''Last year alone, hand·
guns killed nearly I,200 Ohioans,
many of whom might have been
SJ*ed throullh common-sense leg- ·
islalion like iiae B111lly Bill."
.

1 .50 d11count tor ttd( Pl id 1n advuncv.
"F1ee .cis
Giwt~~~t~~ay end Found 1ds undei 1!i'words will bu
nm 3 d.,s •• no ch•ge.
· , .
"Price of 1d for 111 t:IPillll-'lt!fl is doubh! pntl:l' olad cost
"7 point ..ne type only uMd .
•senlil\111 11 n.ot responsiblt tor errors ;,atuu tirsl d., . IChtck
lor ttnon first d~ ad runsm paper) , Call bttore 2 ;00 p n1 .
dl'f •h•• publication to makt1 correction
"Ads that must be IJI!Id tn ldviiOCtl' at•!
Card of Thanll.11
H•ppy Ads
In Mumortlfll
Yar'd Salus ·
.
..
"A tlitUihod advenisvtnunl pl ~ct.'tl m The Oatly Sununvtl•" ·
tt1)1
dasSIIu:td dts plav. Businun Card anlfl"\fill noticn} .
wtll .a lso appe• Ill Ihe
Plual;ant ReQIIhtr tnd thtt GaUt
puhs Dady Tnb.tne. ru;~ch•ng OVtl t 18.000 hon•n

SENIO~S!

· • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
A'lllilli'lll'lll~nts

Rate
Ov" 1li Words
.4.00
.
.20
••. oo
.30
$9-.00
.42
$13.00
.60
t1 .301day
.06/ day

WEONESDAV PAPER
THURSOAY PAPER
tH IUA"f ,PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

· ''

5 Happy Ads
6 Lo,a and Found.
1 Y•d s•elpeiCI in adlllncel
I Public l-'1' &amp; Auction
' Wlftte.l lb Buy

Clm.~ ifwd ,,alw-~ c·m•c•r

tlw

GatU. Coynty
Area Code614

11 · He1DW......

Aru Code 114

Area Codel04

17

Milcell.,..ous

1~

W.ntHToDo

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

. 11 ,00 A .M . SATURDAY
2!00 PM MONOAV
2 :00P .M . TUESDAY·
• 2 :00 P M . WEDNESOAV ,
2 :00PM . THURSDAY
2 00 PM. FRIDAY • ,

21

~usin••

23

to Loan
Prot•sionll Sllf'viC4tl ·

261 G..,.n Oitt

143 Arlbil Oist.

843 Pert'-nd
247 l"an fills
949

Racine
Rull•d
817 Coolville
.14~

379 Walnut

676
4i8
6745
773
. 116
• 937

R. .io, TV • Cl

41

~11on

22 Mon.,

let•rl
Buttlllo

1A Motorcycl •
75 Boats a Motors for S11le
76 Auto,..,,, • Acc•IOf• •
77 Auto Rtpa••
78 Camp1ng Equtpmltf\1
79 C•mpen &amp; Motor Honurs

FOf L•••

Mer clid iHIISI!

S!'rV11:es

51 Hou•hold Goods
62 - lportW.t Goo•
53 AnHques
54 · Mite. M•chandill
55 IU!I.ing Suppll•
&amp;I Pets tor Stle
&amp;7 lllluliullnsttuments
58 Fruits • Veg..abl•
{. 59 Fen Sale or Trade

.

Opp6rlunhv

Sal~

72 Truct&amp;s for Sale~
73 v...... wo ·,

41 · Equipment for A~ml

Pt. PI•MWII
L110n
Apple Gfov•

112 New HIVen

71 .,. Autos tor

tor"'"'

Rt~pjl tr

1&amp;

99'2 MtddlttPO~
Pom•oy
986 Ch•llr

Mobile Homft for R•nt

47 WMtttd to Atl'lt

M1son Co., WV

317 Ch•hire
38.. Vi"ton ,
245 Rio Gflnde

Tr~n spor \ dt ion

Farms
44 ·· Apanm.,t fQr Rent
41 · FMrnishei flloom•
41 Space to1 fl.nt

It I' :l

Metvs County

441 Galle,otts

' liD"'

4)

12: Sit• lion W 1nted
13 tnturMu
14 - lustn•s Tratntng
15 Schools • lnstruehon

:folluwinl{ 11'11'/!hlim• l•xdrnlll{l'-~ .. .

61 -- Farm Equtflmoot
Wanti!d to Buy
63 Livestoclt
64 H•y • Gr1in
16 - Seed • ftr1tliltr
62

,., 'Hou•s tot Rent
42

r•

TUESDAY PAPER

ARnoucemenh

'J

I&gt; liJl!SIIICk

MobU• ttomn tor Sotlt~
33 Firms tor Ill 1
3 l Bulin•• Buildings
35 lots • Atre-ue
36 Rul Etqte WW!~ed
32

4 Givuway

:) '

FM'II Sillljllll!S

Lstale

31 · Homn IOJ S•l•

tn Memory

f III["'IIYII'I'Il\

.

COPV OEAOLINE
MONDAY PAPER

Rr.~l

1 C.d of lh•ks
2
J

, lor etch d., 11 IIPUMe •ds,

p~d .

"Rt~atNit

81 Homeln•pro.,.mtnt li
82 · Plumbtni &amp; He•"'Y
BJ huwating •
84
86
86
87

Electrical • Aetr~Q.W•t•on
GuntMal Haulinv
Mobil e Hvn1 o R•p•i•
Upholstery

STOREWIDE

THRU THE MO
- NTH OF MAY
_ _
.1.

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

_

'htrhant ·hOU$t
Olfe

~

- ..
A(;
_~E
_!"':

SHOE• PL_

N•.Second Awe.

BULLDOZER and

IAC*I:tOI W~l(, .
M()MaStTII.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER •nd SEWER
UNEB ·

Middleport, Oh.

DUMP 11Uas

•

AVAILAIU

992-7451
4-21-11--1 ..... pd.
'

BISSELL
.UILDERS
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
''At 1-nllill Prlcts"

PIL 949-lllh
. , . . .! '949·1160
Day or, Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS .
4-l

'

ROOFING
NEW -IIPAII
Guttel'l
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
P•lnting
FREE ESTIIA.TES

WHAUY'S
. •AU1'0 PAnS

c................,,
NEW • USED PARTS .
FOR ALL MAICES a
MOOIU

991·7013
., 991·5553

'

•Herb 1'llflla • ..._ ..,,

•Ev.rtutlngt
Crtflert. Grow.,... own
4rlld-ltla.
o,..i thun. t11tu lat.
10·S: Sun. 12·11

. _ ........ Office

......

.LINDA'S
PAINTING

It h•• been two loMiy

**********

vun

Whhout you .
We loY• •ncl mill you
10 much.
Your laving memor181
will ..w•ye ,. with

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC
ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN
ADVERnSE.NT IN THIS SPECIAL EDITION

Ul -

Loved end Ml8ud by
Wife. Children.
Grendollll*enMMI

..

~ ~----~---------------.--------~---------- ~

,

Grul·~

f
I

lnttrilr • l1twler

GROOM
ROOM

Take the pain wt of

Complete Gr~lng
· For AU lrlld1

r• ISliMATIS
pelnll...

SIIYICI
991·SIIS er
tiS-1161

lei -

•

EMiliE .IINAI .

It .... J.lll• •

Owner &amp; o..,.t.

ftiY IIASOIIULI

IIAn . .•as

,_.,,

614·992·6120

16W'l tiS-4110

4•23•1 fi!O. pd.

Public~

...,_

M•Y I. 1888

...t.

1171'11/1 .... ....

41121'1111

AUIWIS

o.,... .,.,

TldV_....memorv
Of • loved one gone to

' 992-6434
Afttr 5 p.m~

511. S. I. U8,

.... lt .. OrWe

~-Hf'o
Offlae llole
end 11M MMt• Coun!y
HouM...,. tnMnce.
4 W11dMIWI tu II} ,
TM ~lp•m•n,. o1&gt;(Uaad by MalfiO Counly Jus
die pu.,lc lwo
vtnlle Coull Worlc Pro- lti'Vad
hou11 pflor 10 11M .... time
Ia Ulan.
,tC"'- lawn aunlnt o11het
The right le rtNr.H to,.
equipment wMI be auctioned
ofl"'d toltl N Ia. on lttur- ..... toy •ncl ........
•v.May11.1811et10:00
Cart 11 . "l:l·
Mai(IO Co. , _ . . OUII
o.m. from tht Mole• Coun!y
CourthouM,
Shorlff'o o.,.t.
PonMNOy, Qh. 4171t
•.•• 10. 31c
In Lovinll M•mory Of
ELDON MORRIS
In U11110ry
2

Mo-• «••

STIYI WHITE

. 147-4035

J/1/101111

(Attach your Name, High School, and Parents Name to Photo.)

PLEASE CALL 992-2156.
Ask for Brian or Dave

Call 614-992-1104 for Appt.

·pROFESSIONAL
.SUNROOF
INSUUnON
Contact

N- Open F•r Sprln1l

MICIOWAVI
OVIRIIPAII

Pldi.... .
QI'S APPUANa

PUILIC AUCTION
Lawnlttiy 18 Inch
lAwn
ltl

992·6641.,
691·6164
1 2•,, sfO•Ifa

IIIIIIIVIBAmNGS

POFlROY, . .

7 UHd

CONSTRUCTION

0110 11va ••s

1111'1111 mo.

The pnce has been reduced to
$81 ,900 and owner financrng of up
to 80'11\ of purchase amount may be
possible for quahfyi~g pei$On to
buy very nice large home on 31'1
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages, rented 1 BR apl Property
includes 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home.

PubHc Notice

CIDAI

CONMI'S .

In Loving Mlmory

· Of Wlfa and
MetMr

YunAto.
Loved It MiaMd
By Hlllblnd Peul,
Deughtera Paula

IMfllnoH.
Grtnclallldlen end

flm

xu•,

.....1 _

I
Hind Tufting

Cuatom DIIPII

Public Nata

36Y-olx.......eo

614·991·1111

W~ae•y.

,..

Citewa•nven

ZCIDIGIIItN48070Z1

BETTY J. HAWK
Who Deperted 4

111-........

742-ZIII

TAURUI 4
Do. tled8ft 1PAIPII3UXs
~
.

11• CHIY. CaiMIO Z28,

1G1PPI7PIPN142011
TM Ter- •f 111a .... "'
oath.
·
TM H -' N8Jio;l81 lhnk
, ••• ..- tM rllht to NjiOt
"
' ' Ot oil llldt-_
Tile_
Home
N8111M1e_.
IIM
rllfht to , _ , . ..., of the
- • - - vehlll•• from
11M .... lilt ~limo.
~ 7. I. I. 1 • IJ, 1:1.14,

...

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

CONSTIUCDON

._......

•c-•l•te

Step&amp;c_,.,

,,..9.15·4473
···••et••
667·6179

5-31-'10 ""

SHRUB &amp; TREE
T•M and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIR.EWOOD

IILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAiliOAD nES
1·12·10-ffil

SPEEDY VAC
Quality
SwHpar
Repair

II /lfiiiii,.H
UPIIOLSTDY .

SIPnC TMI IIU-G
POH-A-JO.IINYAl

,.,.
fllllowln"
1117
FOR

'---tlcn
.
__..,.
-1-·1·-...

CAIPENTEI SEIVI(E
-aunwwo•

-c..~NMworil

(FIII!E E8TIMATE8)

V. C. YOUNG IH
992·6215

.

698-6591

W. S.V Whet W. Oo.
We Do W1le1 w. l•v.

10-ltsiiiCI.

4·1-'M-1-

----·

•VINYL IIOINCI
•ALUMINUM 811)1NCI
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

COU1friii CWI

S1l1
GOLF LESSONS- SJ 0 •·
6 ,, •ss
NEW GIIPS-.."--" S4

lrabn(lllisl....,ld

· TIOPHIES - PUMS

IADGIS
JOIIII YUFOID

s-t c.,.

P1L 949·1101
....... 949·1160
NO SUNDAY

-Ill '

." '

1,625 GAl.-S35-f45
lt. 1, •• 71-A

•m••·

01110 45775·9616
614·741-1904

l!tUtllli ·,

SIGNS
by tlclc lttOIII'ltl(

~,U.,r

by

~UALITY
Plllnt Pl...... 615-692!

t

INSULATION
•VInyl Sldins
,
•R•IH-t

Wlndo-

•Room Addl1ioiUI

•ae•

eG..

aR-=~ n
alneu

JIIIIS IDSII
991·177:1.
742-2151

11:18 .,.,.., Plaae

•Kitoh11ne • l•the
•Vinyl lidlns

• R•toration
aRep81rWork
•L8ndeaeplng eQ,.dlng

R. L. MASH

Middleport.

CAIPENTIY

WE DO

ROOFING·

. 992·5526
PO.IOY, OliO

.. JI•1ls f•~

3 Announcement~

fDEEmUTES

,.

•••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••

"Freelltlmatu"

CISTERNS, ETC.

J&amp;L

All CONIIRIONDS • HOT .....S _.
MIACU fOI MOR• &amp; ~ . . . lOllS

...........

POOlS,

.Cilldl•l

lttd/1

IISSEU
-SIDING CO.

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

4-H -tt . 1 mo. pd.

,

III.COUNIY
SArufATIOIII

I'UeLIC NOTICE
M8Y 11,
1111, tt 10:00 A.M. !he
H - N.... nal ltnk wMI of·
fer lor .... 11 Plilflllc Auotlon

IISSILL &amp; IUIII

-·--

YOUNG'S

-Efoolrloll ond PlutftblftgJ

NO JOI TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIIATES

•High Glo11 on Ti..
Floor Flnilh
IIIII LEWIS, Ow•
lt. 1, ...liM. OH.

t11L .......

On Friday, May 17, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with
, photographs of high school seniors
graduating ~his year.
Now through Monday, May 13 Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel To
Be lncl~;~ded In This Special .Edition, at no
charge.

•Painting

nme ·

01 fOil. fBI
1·100-841. .70
OAIWII, (NO

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

't

-ioou•llty Work
•FrwE•dm•tu
aC.raet H.. F..1 Dry

4·5·11·1 110. pd.

PVH Adm, Coni. Room
Call 675-4340 Ext. 232
To Register

AREA HIQH SCHOOl fJRAOOATES
OF 1991

••
an
•Rutonnl• Rat•

949·2161

s.,....l ... ln

BIG KID AND BABIES
PROGRAM
SAT., MAY 11 - 1:00 P.M.

•RemodeNng 1nd
Home Rep1lra
•Roofing ..
•Siding

....niLWrlteMI

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
. PUBLICATION

···-···.-.

Business Services

...

CUStOM llllT

BULLETIN BOARD

parents, this is an opportune time
for a child entering kindergarten to
receive their skin test.
The funds fo~ these clinics are
provided through the tuberculosis
levy and there is no charge for any
of the services.
Further information may be
obtained by contacting the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Office 11 9923722.

20% SAVINGS THRU SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1991

pen to think a sevea-day wliting
period miplave some lives.''
Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio,
~:f: beba1f d. an alternative
bill
by the NRA. That mea·
sure ca1led for a nalional hotline
through which gun dealers could
call and instantly find out whether

•
10
Monthly
R•~ .... for con•altiwerUns. bfoMftupdiWt Wtll bech•gld

"Ads outlidv M1195, G.ll11 or M11on counti• ntl11t bu pre·

POMEROY - Bruce Stone will

Wordo
. 16
16
15
16
16

'3

POLICIES

ATTENTION

Special Gifts For MoJJl, pendants tn diamond earrin!(S. co a family ring with mlorful
!(ems representing family members. or to a
lovely strand of pearls... we have just the
ri!(ht gift for your Mom or Gran~ mom ... Or

recr up and they want the

safe," Wylie said "I hap-

handgun pun:hue.
Boehner complained that
Feighan's bill give~ police lime to
do blckground checb but doesn't
order the cheeti Without comput·
erized recorda requiled under the
"::RA 's plan, any checks will be
tune-aJIIIUDiing, he said.
"It's goinl to lake (police offi·
cem) off the street and put them in
the station house," Boehner said.
"I don't believe that the Brady bill
will work. "
The NRA counterproposal (ailed
011 a 234-193 vote.
· James B111lly was left paralyzed
Wh(!n be was shot hi 1981 by a

RATES
Day•
1

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SlittDlY

Skin testing clinic Monday

for your Wife. After all, Mother's Day is a
time to express your love and appreciation.
Do somethin!( special fur the MOM in your
family this Mother's Day. Come visit us.

Ire

Streell

18

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuplege, will award the degrees. The p~rs Plains VFW Post No. 9053'
commencement exercises wjll be will meet Thut§day at 8 p.m. at the
held 81 Seeger Memorial Chapel on post home.
the Milligan campus.

'

lbey

•

CIGssi

s

FREE ESTIMATES

A skin testing clinic will be conducted in Rutland on Monday by
Joan Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Clinic.
The clinic will be held from
4:30-6:30 p.m. and any individual
who will be assisting with the
alumna or July Ox Roast should be
tested.
For the convenience of working

from biJc:msrihwoU, •
"The people llepl smt and the
peopla of lliil llllion have sent a
clear IIICUip. It to me lhll

a customer could leaally make a

I

who also WOIU)ded President Reapn. Feighan's leP,slllion
became known IS the 'Brady
Bill."
·
The bill is sj)OIISOIIld in the Senate by Howard Metzenbaum, 00hio, wbo's geared up for a flli·
buslcr.
.
. He issued a slalement Wednesday night praising the House vote
as evidence "there is real momen·
tum for effective laws to kMn guns
out of the hands of criminlii.'~"•
"We'll have a tough fight in the
Senate, but we've beaten the NRA
before 'nd we expect to do it
gunmlll

'.

2o

Country Blue
from
8-ll p.m. sponsored by the Senior
Citizens Community Action.

by the consdtuenu who returned
tbe auryer _b11111 be sent OUL
Rep. Cbalmera Wylie, R-Ohio,
said be got the 18111e instructions

. (AP).

dinner Saturday at 7 p.m. A film
will be shawll·on drup and safety
in the home and each. mother will be recognized with a Oower. Children welcome. Public inviiCd.

"\'1

Ohio Rep. Edward Feighan, the
bill's cbief aponsor, QJ.1ocf the vote
a chance "to pn:vent some of the
c.na&amp;e·''
His bill pused on a vote of2391~.
.
Rep. Donald Pease, D-Obio,
called the bill "1 commim sense

HAPPY MAN - James S. Brad;r, tbe former Wwte HoUle
prlllleCI'etarJ WOUIIded In the a •+lltloiJ attalpt oa Pmlllent
ReqaD 10 ;rears aao, &amp;lves tbe vldor;r li&amp;D afler tH so-caUed .
Brady bDI puwd ·il tbe House Wednelda;r .tpt In WublqtoL

·
SA1lJRDAY
- And that was Betty Hoeflich
.Don't Forget
POMEROY - "Big Henry and
Hammer, formerly of Meigs Coun·
ihe Polkadot Kid" and "Cannon
tjr, on Channe16 news, Columbus,
Our
Ball" will be shown at the Meigs
aJ 11 p.m. Monday nighL
County Public Library in Pomeroy
. Upon the recommendation of
on Saturday at 2 p.m. and at the
Graduation
Bruce Stone to peuorm
May 12 . RACINE • The Southern Local p.m.
MiddlepcxtLibraryonMondayat7 .
,
Gift To You
Bruce Stone will perform a· Haiti, The Bahamas, Rome, Italy Band Boosters meet Thursday at ·
gospel concert at the Laurel Cliff and Jerusalem.
7t30 p.m . Anyone interested is
POINT PLEASANT - the Han
Eree Methodist Chuil;h on Sunday
In his contemporary style he ·urged to attend
Brothers will perform at the Old
0~ . OfF.
!1110:30 a.m.
..
· reaches ou~. with sincJ:n: commiU• · .:;!:~"i'i~R
' "i.~."~--·er·e· w.. 1:1 be. a · w
r.~-~~-::~~:;~~~~.u"'
;'e~··~.~~-~·
. - ·· .•·: 0 .... .- .· "·.·
Stone's real name is Bruce Sl&amp;l- ment to hisljluipose.
· ·· • ·
POmc v •.

I

Page 8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l11urad8y, May 9, 1991

Pomeroy.....UiddleP,rt, Ohio

0

:

�-

'

...

LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway

, ............. , .... 814-441-4222

• 441-2111iafter a. ·

•.

·-

35 Lots a. Aci'Nge

Q Wanted to Rent

~.- :: :01_~'.::

Wonllo- llyJ-111, •••

'ThUrSdly,- .. 1111

Thurad

Pomeroy-Middle~rt. nhlo

9,1991

.~B~O~R~N~L~O~SiEiR~~----------------~----------_:~~:!r=~~~~~----1r~~;;~;;~=;~·~n.~D~a~lly~~~nt~ln~e~I~P~~~._~1~1

Television
Viewing

btltiMIII holM, ..... ....

:J04.f15. ::~ hoWl - .... ind
' .JOWlt.IO:IO • m0no .... · IMIIIdlntl toeo, noor

Wllor ovlllollle.
2?22. . .

-

,_,, lor your .......... I7H10I.

•

r.tc rclld nd '•, e

·For .... ,.._ bo'* PIOflrllf In
llooon.IOI-17Hiet.

•

5I

HOUHhold
Gooda

Rentals
41 Houa•tor Rent

THU, MAY 9
EVENING

'::~~:~' S~~~lA-~~tfs•
::::
Uli..t.,. CLAY II. POlLAN _;...__ _ __
0 four
Roorronge lottoi1 ol lho
xro,.blad wordo boo

•

low to form four

I [ I I II 1
SAVIT I
I I I' I I
.· 1 ·Is' 1 1 I,
I
!
~

L-..1,...-J..--1.--l........J

1:05 (J) levelty 11111111111
1:30 Clle o NIIC ,... Q
(I) Mlbitt end C01111o
A8C ,... Q

LOOKING
AT IT...

I

!i! &amp;•
C!i~2·1=8
a o•cssNeWaQ

··

WIIHI of FGrlune
11) I Draui Dl leannle

U!.=='·
Q
1.11J!..£..AnatrQ

IIIISCI- ancl Mra. King
7:05 (J) Heppr 0.,.
7:30 (II • . 0
Q
f)) MIJar I lllut ~. . . .

-

~~A?1!'Hor1untQ
. . . . liar
LPeT 110w11ng

a

J.

AENT20WN
.
11t 441 . .
Ioili and Chllr, ...It por Moll.
I Peloe W:ad.G1, I'M.Ot ,_,

Eom M-$10 hour with Avon. Ho
to neca-ry. Call

Kay '*"2·7110.

Frtdly. ._ro, "'".!Jj homo Flaota Hair Solonlo Inc. lmmldloto Oponlno r F'ua or
IIIUih·
ol Eunb
II 2110 ""'
llo-.
"""'·
Rt. 7 Part•Tlmo Styllrt. HourlY WPtuo llony lonoiHa. lt4.hlo. Mar 10, 11. 8::10 to 1182.
1:00. ......, Vlllogl II. Third
111'001. lnfllntll to lduho ond GET PAID ..; 'COiilp111ng llolllno
Uala. $500,.., t,OOO. Cioll 1·900'
"""" Olhor .......
230-3131 (10.111/mln) or Write:
tierogo ...., 11a1. Mor 111h4 w. PAISE • 33A tit South Un2 112 lilllol CKII of ICMil, St." Rt. cotnway, North Auror0, IL 10M2.
511.
lmmldllle O.,.nlnoe Avlllobla
-lng · Sole: 10' John Boll, For Ful~Tlma lftil Part·Timo
color, t.v., clolhlo, nlc..,..o, LPN'1. Cornllllhlva Wogoo, Dll....,., 2110 wUMomo Hollow (oH ......,lol
Willi
ExPOrlonce,
1211), Wid ollot.
·
Flnlbta khldullng AnUabla.
ConiHI Tho Dl_.or o1 Nu,.
1~, PI-rill eo,. Cantor, 170
P I - - Drtvo, OIIHIIOIIo, Ohio
45831 114-441-7112. Equal Oppcortunlty Emplopr.
Y... lolo. Mer ,_,o-n. Knlclc
Knlclcl, -hlo. ote. Felrvlow Ucenood PI'IIC!Icol or Raalo1 - Nuroo To Take eo.. ollll
, ........ Rd.
lion In Hie Homo, 3 to 5 doytl, 1
...... ohlft. PINIInt Sur•

Go-

•.

l

J
)

l

y
- Fund ""....' Vlolory - . bohlrld

U_t o

BIUI
F-ein 110111, lloy 10, 11. 11-4.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity 'l
3401 .Fr•nklln Aw 1 10:00 till
4:00, llay 13. lnfllnt, toddlrr,

-Don
na........ tM-:15&amp;-1113 -

lOr.

Hood hllp taldng cora otaldorly

pooplo. IM-1112-31511.

-

Tnldng Ajljlllcatlano ot

Domlno'l Pilla, QalllpoiiJ.

8laJ homo and -ke $IOOiwlt.
glrt'o ctoehoo, ...., lumftura.
400
componlol
nood
- · C o l i for·~~
• Yard S.lo, lily I to 11, 4 F_a~l
NDDrdlcf m1 I Jege.
3t

' 01111

AKZ •

ftrn'

ICI'OM from

4130,111.~

WANTED:
Two
pii'Wimo
5 FamilY Yord Silo, Moy 1.1,10.
1:00 1111 3:00. Aoln •or llllna. pool!- avollabla ot a comComer Fht ond A*mt, ..._,, ~':..::=".:
WY.
1n 1111w11. Houn: ttl .._,
1:»-tOp.m, __ : 3:.,:30p.m.,
Corn.....tty Yard Solo~ Frt; lo.m....,JII, OR 10:30o.m.·
12. lwnHuro.
- ......... .._ hdon •
Rt.".
~ ..... Frldar ..., 10, 114
milo out Sond Hit Ad. ...,_
from Nu,.lng Homo. 1:00 1111
thru

4:00.

--.wv.

l:top.m. (rotatoa~ lot; lo.m.·
lp.m. OR 1-11p.111. (rotatool.

SUn; (21 22-llr: IIJII .~.ro. OR
tO::IOa.m...::IOp.m.
(rolat•l,
Bot: ll.m.~.m. OR 1·~11:;,';·
(rolotlo),otoH
Sun:mooting;
ll01H: or r
10(aoldJ
11

~uloa.

olhoiWiaa

H~h

Hot 11hold Solo Frl 10 and Sat oohool dagroo; valid drlvor •
tt. t:ON:OO. ii7 Fifth 81, Rio33, Ilea- ond good driving
rwoonl, good cornmunlcatloii

-nlatlon
tklllo,
21111 111. v...-, YHu,. a Frl, and
punctull, and 1hle to work u
t:OO All till ? . AnllquoiUmhuro, port
ol a loom raqulrld; II·
lett mile.
porio,_ worttlno wllh , . _
Yard Bale, Frld8y 111v 10, 1:00 with montol rotanlatlon and
•~•lapmental
dJubllm.
till ?, - - Ill ........... ....,.,...., Sollry: 14:1M1r, to
11rao,
.
,
....
...;
llart. Sind rooumo to Cecilia
l&gt;lcyolll, .....

lake~.:4~ ... 104, Joclloon
Yonl - · ThurWay and Friday, OH
Dloclllno lor ,P:
I lu-1 Addn.
r.lcallano: 11111111. Equal Oppor.
unity [mploJW.

Pomeroy,

Mlddlepon
&amp; Vlclnhy

12

.

Shuauon
Wanted

T-hor wll oaro lor -•r ehlld
3 loml~:~ III0/1t 1112 mil• In my homo ..,.;-...._

T,. 0w1 -~~.. 3rd
on rlghiiAII-,,
~ ...., Moy 10-n, Iorge
boby bod, lnd tabloo,
room dlvkNir, qUMn tlu IIIII·
II'OOI, 11 -dn' - · Ooorgo
-e'a 01 nl:l3
1aJi111 hlo: 11ay 111 1 , _
., · 2·
- - on
• N
IIJOIII
Run
Rd.
Juotlco
IIIUih

~~-

II

ld -

momlta. eo11 et~.
.14
Business ·

Training

Rotraln
-lllouthlootorn
1 - - ~. I!""" Valoy
Ploa. Coli Todoi.J.114-441 Gl'lll
llloglll..--121111.

18

Wanted t Do
0

Aontal buoln11a lor
..... -1112·1002.
Prom Clown

Api, 2201 olollit180n Avo, 2 bod-child, no pota,
ldlollon
~. 1
:IOoU7UII7.

I..QjiN8

GauraniMd. Immediate s.rvtce.
1~241 1110 t14.H fM.

"=L
:;kO.::i
tla.M por Moll.

I

-:'!..-

~~.~:z=Doll.:l:"

-y

Coitogo .......... IUmlollltl, AIC, &amp;p.m.

OIIJIIIL 110011

A-

=.

- . lOIII

"'t:':.J

,

Roome lor'""' - - o r month

=:r:~::.~· ~~~ Hoell:

.......... _

...h_ng.

11-.•-·

~.~·~

,_ ....,1....

..... .IG.-r.
. .larvloo-!hoi.

~~~~ ~11fnr!

Ill good 1 - ·

ovor

Space for Rent
•PPIIInoao..!!r..!.,unclorplnnlnti 46
seooo, aw..nz-M"'

~aiaaniiik&lt;'iR~op;;,l;~t~lllt~FFiiioot;;;;wood;;;;;t
all deluxe fMiu,.., u low M
:1100 down, Coli lanlt Ropo
•Aoont ol 114481-21111.

-

iFor
or hall
ront -141170lalmobllo
&lt;
homooolo
wllh
_,
llaPIIoon,
.
»HH2·2141 aft• 1:00

. 114--7.

You 421 171L

8UJIPir.

.,... . __h,..._
he. lol. booth lelllbla
W.lftor8 ............ Rt. ...
Pla•w.,wv.~

Cllomolon
114-2fi.1GD.

IJIIrr """' 110.

-..: iioom I

Boord In

o.i.

.
I:D!i (J) MOYlE: TIM lllacltboard
.Jungle (2:00)
1:30(11. 0 Dl"-11 World
Whitley plotiiO make
Dweyne jealoua~ dating
Ron. (R) Steroo.
lllle ...,..
tng ....
IP8r1llillil II overcrowded,
Marlene ancl Darlene move
Clul Stereo. D

1114 t•·OOI.hOOO.

__,_.,._

THEY HADAS!GNL.IP
Home

1171 Otdo an-,, ..... liM,
-good, 1480. ~la-1171.

THAT eAIDTHEY RAN
OUT OF FOOD.

..

:

1111 MOVIE: FI'Oiiller Pony

l!xpNII (1 :00)
10:00(11• 0 L.A. Law An
· obeeulvt woman Ia accused
of murdering her married

=::. . =-=.~
-PI podge lllroda. Auto, PI,

lOver. Stereo. Q

f..:\P•InieUme Uve
(!) IJnciW Fr..
.
TNII: The Nell ·

·

=.,ltltr

eCNN"r...~ ......

BARNEY
I BOUGHT MY
MAr.! SNUFFY A
BRAND-NEW PAIR
OF WDRIC

YOU'LL NIIIIR GIT THAT
LAZY t:USI IN A PAIR OF

•

.JeT

ONewa

~==Q

llll• AIHniO HIM Stereo. Q

,.
1·

IIJ Mr.t Ylce Sweo.
.On.._
a lelllillt Tonight

'

112

ASTRO-G.RAPH

......
1_I

•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Cfllll111. 1141

82

Plymblngl

...-rng

......,.

35 Lola I Acreage

=.=:.····

••

=:-"'

.........

v..- ........'1111- ond

twa hn I I 11M llloh'*d ....

7DoAk

1lOI . . . . .

--·=·

At 111111111
......

the year ahead . Send lor Taurus' Astro·
Graph predictions toda~ by mailing.
$1 .25 plus a long, sell·addresaed.
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
this ~ewepaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleland . OH 44101·3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac algn.
GEMMI (...J 21..,_ 20) In most circumstances, you shOuld be rather lucky
today. provided y&lt;w're dMIIng with In·
tangibles. 11 you switch your ellans
elsewhere, such conditions may not
hOld up.
CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) You may
start out focusing on a rather conserva-

110.00..,...0111ona.........

•

....... low- ....... ovllloblo
hll llilldvllloft. 2,I
~IT-='llood,
"" ""''"" IUILDINO, In " I 1

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

..1. ___

~·-

•

;181

1

Uu d 1
·
8JJI I ~ . . . . . I

l!aplandOreal A Personal

VIew (0:30)
(!) Wt11 Vllglnll Rlf)Dit
• Croalt IIIII ChiN
11:00 (J). Ill (J). Ill tD.

AeuatiOn
rill 1hM. . . .
I . . . - - - I n otook, RON
EVANI, JACKION, OH. t -·
IIJ.1121.

RabMtlon

10:05 (J) MOVIE: Claaa ol 1114 (AI
(!)

I

Mat.,._

1111 700 Club WHh Pat

(2:00)
10:30 (j) Newa

IHDISII

:a=:-~·.._..

..

A HIDEY PLACE
FI!R MY BUTTER
AN' I!GG MONEY

WORIC SHOEIII

1-. ..... lor ..

"'_

~ Laat KIN (R) (2!00)
• LlnJ lOng Uvef

ttiOO. .,.,. 114'1NAtt.r I::IOPII, 0111 ~

':-

· .Q MOVIE: ,._, Night Ill:
• P' I 'rile Now
G Top Rank lo1ln(l

Int-.

=~

1-4-AII-.y
dnan:led. 16r Mldhla::J

2 loCo

r eueee eoME f'60PLS.

ARE: ..Jt..liS't J!5C:QN I I !O&lt;Y.

1171 Cllrrlfor Con1obo :110
.......... - . ..... point, giMI

=-

or 1 drlvt-by

lhooti!!O. ~,Q
llll • ........, Hila; 10210
The Walllt lomlly conllidera
~to Mlnneaolll. Stereo.

WINTHROP

..... - - ' 1100111,. . •

Wolll t o - 1owno• ..,._
1120.
_....., ..

•••ewe.

target~

i
• S'·'i'

_~

tloo!
...,..,.._,11/J.-

1111-1711. • "

houM • mine. Hlwe

~

llrMoin-.=,rrt~.~

=-ond=-~
. . . . ....

..... -·-·
....,.. __

aKaren••
Knota Laadlng
and Yal llaoDrne

;

24 II, Flaotwood ~-;
:101-458-1170.
_, .. _ ..

Make,.....--· No
1 IIDDIIIIL-=
~: quoiN
lho phone you
laJI4 Yoddlor Coro, 114-MHm.

Painting,
- COli
......
"""' hoUIIng,
. pliaiO
104-J75.7!110
IIIJIIillo.
TliiMira I '-toe, _,,.,_

i

=:...~~~·

........... _Fonto
12-IICI' hiD Joc1cot 110.00. While

c:-t-1-.a-.

mull -

In 1931 reinalna unaolved lor
60 yem. g
(!) MrltlrVt Sklonle and
Lomax confront lhtl
enlglrietlc Kartn Mulw. Q

.

1171 PalaRtlno ~P. ltOM~

'ltll Chow ~ 4

a..

(R) Stereo. Q

(!) MriWiYI A brutal murder

:-.~..:::-·.:..~

........ lhllw'a - ,........
0... W. £Ill s;a, . I 1 lliwt. . .
Gltlilo
Ollli . . II. ~ullle. OH 1M 1111 ION.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

.

1:00 Clle o CMera An
ln-dlplli look at lhtl Pilat
tight HIIOIIIII preaented.
1m Tort • a., llet, . . _ ru.,
-.--.-polto

Exciting developments wnere your ca·
r - is concerned could be In lho offing
in the year ahead. There IS an excellent
chance you'll llnally be able to luHIU a
!;!tCret ambition.
TAURUS (April 20-May !b) A pleasant
Sljrprise regarding a matter you have
perceived negatively may be In store 101
you today. Ones you- things u they
actually ere, your doubts will be eroded .
Get a jump on IHe by understanding the
lnll~ which 'are ~overnlng you In
I

tive objective today. However. there· a a
chance something ~gar and more en·
terprlslng ..,.Y loom on the horizon
which cauees you to alter your goal.
LIO (JuiJ :13-Aug. 22) Your formula lor
oucceu 1oday caNs lor equal parts ol
Imagination and elbow graaM. One.
you cOIICelve your plan ol action, let
your mulcles do the
YIIIGO (Aug. :13-lepl. 221 An lnv1111111 -eel lrom your grip might be
altered 11 thlo time, •llllllnll you to
onc:a ll(llln auume tho rllns of control.
Tills you'll be more elfecllve.
LIBRA (s.pt. :a-o.t. D) ear- benelila arolllttily today, th-• to the help of
peCitll&amp; !or whom · you pravloualy have
gone to bat. The blggeet punc:ll wiK
como lrom an Individual who ia moll In··
debtee! to you.

••t.

QIMei1t,..,.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) The more .
1111 Vldtolyncraay: The Nell
determined. dedicated and consilient
you are today. the luckier you'll be. This
is one ol thOM dlys when Lady Luck Is
rnualcilnl for l)llrenll are
delighted to help a doer.
·
pro~led. Including Carnie and
SAGITTARIUS(-. :13-Dec. 211 Do a
WeniJy WilSon, Chyme
little PR In order to create goodwill with
PhiHipa and Malhew and
thoM with whom you have pending
Gunnar
Ntlaon. (1 :DO)
commwclalarrangementa. This InvestSteroo.
,_, will •
dividendo.
CAIIIIICOIIN IDee· 22-.lan. 11) Condl·
11:30 Clle o Tonight lhow
Steroo.
lions are a trilla hard tp read today, yet
II may appear that you are luckier -lor
(J) Ellehled
(!) John Mcl..aughlfn'a One
another than you are lor yoursell. But.
In the llnal analysis, the opposite coUld
on
be true.
wr,:u:.'lteroo. Q
AQUARIUI (Jan. fiO.Feb. 11) Although
'Ply 11r Might' CIS
you won't be able to accomplish it
~.Me Nll!il Stereo.
a)one, there are strong probablittlea to·
• Amlllaan ..... lltop
day !hat you'll .-.e a eparse opponunllpallaCaMir
ty lind turn II Into S011181hlng quite
lpatlaTonlght
grind .
·
I'IICI!S IFeb. IID-Mirch 201 As or to- . 11:81!1) a-tiQ
day, 11ar1 lOOking 101 an outlet where
you c.n Mil your werea: Something you
conllder an avoeetlon that Olhera feel
hDa comrnorclill potential could be a
IIJTIII
winner.
•
Now
AIIIU (Marah 21·Aprll 111 You could
be a rational rllli&lt;-tllter today: There Ia a
IJI (2:00)
poulbNHy you may do rather Willi In an
12:05 !ll MOVll!: lllid IIOMid
endeavor lha1 hu pronounced ele,_la ol chance. You'll know the ule

' =:::n.!a~!~

an.·

.l e

a

l

1*l§:.~s:.eo.

·-·
.

·==-~

.

~~Q

11:10. Up Clole

EAST

WEST

Rebidding a five-card suit is not
nonnally recommended, but West's
solid spades certainly looked like a
six-carder.
Partner's nine of spades is surely
the starl of an echo with a doubleton.
If so, you can cash three spade tricks
and have the ace of hearts in the back·
ground. But where is the fifth trick'
It is unlikely partner has a club han·
or. Your only real hope for success is
that singleton diamond. At trick two,
switch to the nine of diamonds.
Declarer wins in hand with the
queen and leads a low heart. Rush in
with lhe ace, cash the ace of spades
and then lead lhe two (or jack) of
spades. Partner should see what is
needed. He will ruff the trick (assuming be started with two trumps) and
return a diamond, allowing you to ruff
and defeat the contract.

+94

+A K Q J2
"A 9 8

"3 2
tJ108 75
+J 7 43

t9

.Q 10 9 6

SOUTH
• 876
"Jl07 65
tQ 6
+A K2

,.

.-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Soutb

Pass

2"

West

Nortb

2+

3 ..

21

Opening lead:

East

Pass
All pass

+K

If you have four hea rts, you kno'!
partner has only one trump. He won't
have an entry to give you a diamond
r11ff . In this case, your best chance is
to tea4, four rounds of spades. With
luck, partner will have the seven or 10;
of hearts. If South discards from the
dummy, East will ruff with that crlti·
cal trump, etfecting an uppercut. Yop
will come to two heart tricks ..

CROSSWORD

!It Aineilcln'Mutlc 8lloP

-=
==..-.
.
- - ...... ond

·

(1 :00)

Homo Claooratlng ()pin
I Sot llay 10-11, 10AII-.

Buildings
OFI'ICE IMCE FOR·I.EAII on
2nd Auo., OottiiiOflo.
to

takas on odd jobs 10 raise
money to buy a rare comic
bOOk. Stereo. Q
IIJ Munier, SIMi Wrote

F~

:z,
_...........

tD. Top 'Cape A

gunman obeeased with a
woman living In hie building
II caP!!Ired. Slereo. D

1111 MOYlE: My Pal Trtggor

'Umhld

lltl.• .......
- l o I laundrY
114-441-311i. ...........
Pomll...
'.

llll

a _

lllle TIM Slmptona~rt

'ALLEY OOP

OUIII.II400. 114 Ill till.

lf1 Wanted to Rent

Cl 1ttl kif H(A , \ftC.

1141

are convinced a sulckle was
reallY murder. (R) Stereo. Q
(!) On lhtl Waterweya

lt8ge

1 0 -.

'

$ ·9

+ B5

Io~tead?

~.~:. ~~Jteve

C!l TIM Mind

,.,...,..ves

.,

7:31 (I) Ianford and Son
1:00 Clle 0 Coeb)' Bilow An
expecllnllalhtlr uses
coaching tedtnlques 10 help
hll wife. (RISler~

Sierao.Q
.On
BP••wNen

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

='::..

3 boll- 12111 1.,. s~~u~tz

Bualness

·=·.

IIJ.l'IOI.

LJ$f.

::r.:

--ton-·.
-·

(oholca of OOicH11 Coli 't-800llpollo. 7lfi.I045 lor dotalla.
fuml-.
twnl....

Wllnl to but ....-na tliltber,
'11111 ....... ,_,.,..,,

:IOM'IWI21, .... 7p.m.

-ric, 2 BR, like lhroughout. f!ISO. 114-44t-017!1. ,_.trallrr - · Allhook-upo.
c.u 2:00 •p.M., :104·77311M 1 1 - 14110 •• 110c 11881, llaoon WY.
Dlooount Lu111ry ~ Flo to
....._, h . Por Coujllo. •
and dryrr, rortlally rur:
~~-. :104o41la-1177.
.,.,~..... ....... We

=·a=~::..::.:.'!.!:
taro and alapo. ttUflOO

Ate! :M-tO.

a-1 - - - . .,.,.......

Iori....:
="'
•liar--.

onrb cugfll OfUIIn, florida to

Klrttwoool

Rna DMbly. II lit llotor1

'
A TIMP/..E,

C;':.t't'ta"l1

w- -

ttll4

$li

-cl'!':' -

-r

Moon ......... homo

~

r lall,
11-. Can ..

I$

fO~ C.OMMI~t:IAL.

- · .:104o41lao-

~ ft. Pvc

Building

..., 1111,

SPECIAL flletory to you. 1"'
or • - bodroom 14X'IO

--··lila
·eDar..-.
Con Conlor.
.... .,

- .......... -.411

toi&gt;Y

P-.

sar.

12&gt;~:~.':""· Prlca rlducld.
_:104;;;--8-;;;:i::::-·~-==---,---,

...... -

noigltborhood 00

u-··= -.-.--

tl72 -

..- .

Rocl- 1111 por Moll......,.., .... 112.20 por

wfth 4 Clloft, 17M Jill'-. 4

-n

muotool -

IIIIa

'
. . , _ Clfrl, 11 112 • :
2:10 .. ,.., fllll-11111 monr

....... ilaotijj,:, 14.44 ... _...

,ELIE~E THE t/IJMA"'
Af'IP APPA~fNTl..Y
NINE WAJ'N'T :ZON,_l&gt;

for Sale

. SWAIN
Suppllla
~ _ , . , WY 1·!1Q4: AUCTION I FIJIINmiRE. 11:1
23 Professional
Olivo II., Galllpallo. - I Ulld
~ lila.
fum~ure~ ........ w..,. · 1 :::~1..!""··
Se!VIces
F...,lolild 4 . R - I Bath. Work
-o.l-11.
ltr1,
·
OH
Call 114Cloln.
No
Po4J,
RtlotliiCI
I
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Page4

•

.

. VoL 42, No. 5

.

...._per

2 Secttona, 18 Paae• 25 ceniAI •

Copyrlghled1H1

A Multimedia Inc,

County's top
students are
recognized

SOUTHERN ACADEMIC AWARD WINNERS- ReceMn1
• awards for IIC8demlc excellence in the Southern Load Scbool District at Thursday's Academic Ellcelleace Buquet beld at Meigs
• HJab Sebool were, 1-r, front, Harmony Jane Hill, Vanessa Shuler,

Patty Lawrence, Gre11 McKinney, Ji!Sie LltUe, Jesse Maynard,
Asbll Davis and Jason Lawreace. Bact, Mason Flsber, Matt Morrow, Todd Grace, Julie HOI, Jarrod Circle, Cheryl Pape ud Jen.nifer Smith.

'To Help Celebrate
Our 3rd .Annual

· Open Bouse,
Bob's Is Featuring
All Flowering

10" HangtngB•.ets

-.

Re&amp;uJar*11.98
Now
roa_

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*POmNGSOILS*
'1'o Give Yow FloMir aid A

Chit FocMidltlon,
Fuly 9IDcUd Wlh '".

Bob'•,

•POTTING SOIL
•MULCH
•NUGGETS
.coMPOS I ED MANURE
•PEAT MOSS
•MARBLE CHIPS
•RED 'LAY~ ROCK
•PEAT HUMUS
•AND MORE

Including: ·
•"Bob'• llarket Specialty"
New Gablea JIPI'ld Impatleat

•FuCbl••
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MAY llTB
"

REFRESHMENTS
WILL BE
SERVED ,

AND mE
BOB'S MARKET .
CLOWN
WILL BE GIVNG
BALLOONS
AND MOREl

EASTERN ACADEMIC AWARD WINNERS- Awards for
aeademk exceUenee were presented to these students In the East·
ern Load School D..rlct during the annual Academic Excellence
Banquet beld Tbursclay evening at Meigs Higb School. Pictured, I·

are

r,
front, Aaron WUI, Meredith Crow, StepbiDle Eva111, David
Baker, Jesslc:a Brannon ud DUly Franc($. Bact, Jamie Ord, Jessl·
ca Radford, Jeremy Buckley, Nicole Kuawalsky, Andrea Cleland
.and Lelp Ann Redovlu.
.

· A nnual disaster drill scheduled May .14

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Llslanthus
Kalanchoes
•Geranh1ms
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Hybrid _Impatiens

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'

ondary supervisor; Debra Buck,
school psychologist; Robert Hudak,
school psychologist; Kitty Hazier,
talented and gifted (TAG) coordinator; Sandra Chadwell, speech
therapist; Susie Heines, speech
therapist; Michele Pratt, speech
therapist; Sheila Hashman, early
childhood teacher: Perianne Holmberg, SBH teacher, Shirley Willis,
SBH aide: Patty Cook, MH teacher; Faith Varney, MH aide; Otis
Knopp, attendance officer; Linda
Haley. secretary; and Nancy Camahan , secre~ .
.
Guest speaker for the evening
was Dick Smith, Eastern Local
SuperintendenL Smith thanked and
congmtulated the students for their
hard work and complimented their
parents for the support and guidance in their childrens' lives. Smith.
told the students that they have the
capability inside of them to do
great things and that the sky is the
limit in setting and obtaining their
desired goals. Smith closed with
reading a poem that describes the
relationship that should exist
between parents, their children as
students, and teachers.
eontinued on page 12

Committee urges

$22.00

•Chenl11e

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Fifty-nine of Meigs County's
highest ranking siUdents ·were honored Thursday evening at the seventh ann~ A~ademic Eltcellence
Banquet held at Meigs High
School.
Following a welcome by
William Buckley, secondmy supervisor for Meigs County Schools,
and invocation by Oris Smith, a
member of the Meigs County
Board of Education, a calered dinner was served to approximately
300 people.
Special guests introduced
included Meigs County Board of
Education members, Harold Roush,
presiden~ Bill Quickel, vice president; Robert Burdette, Harold
Lohse and Oris Smith; John D.
Riebel Sr., Superintendent of
Meigs County Schools: Dick
Smith, Eastern Local Superintendent; Jim Carpenter, Meigs Local
Superintendent; and Bobby Ord,
Southern Local Superintendent.
Office staff employed with the
"Meigs County School System are
Carol Brewer, work-study coordinator; John Costanzo, elementary
supervisor; William Buckley, sec"

The 19th Tri-County Simulated
Disaster Eltercise, held annually
during National Hospital Week,
will focus on response to a supposed earthquake.
According to Meigs Emergency
Medical Services President Bob
Dyer, the scenario for ihe drill,
scheduled for sometime during the
day on Tuesday, May 14, was
developed by the three area hospiials and the Mid-Ohio Valley
Industrial Emergency Planning .
. Council {MOVIEPC).
Involved in the eltercise will be
emergency medical services, fire
· departments and law enforcement
agencies in the tri·county area,
which includes Gallia, Meigs, IU!d
Mason Counties. All three acute
care hospitals in the area (Holzer
Medical Center, Veterans Memorial Hospital and Pleasant Valley

Hospiuil) will have the opportuniiy
to test their emergency depanment
operations. Also involved will be
Lakin Hospital in Lakin, W.Va.,
the Gallipolis Development Center
and Woodland Centers in Gallipolis.
This is the one time each year
that all join forces to test the emergency preparedness of each facility.
A simulated· earthquake will
· take place in each of the three
counties. Specifics of handling
each county's emergency disaster
drill will be coordinated on a local
level by the individual hospital and
the other county agencies involved
in the exercise.
In Mason County, Pleasant Valley Hospital and their emergency
squads will coordinate their disaster, their lime and arrangements.

---Local briefs-____,
Police recover stolen vehicle
A vehicle stolen from a parking space on Court Street in
Pomeroy on Sunday was recoveied Thursday.
Pomeroy police reported the vehicle owned by George Capehart
of Pomeroy was recovered on Barringer Road by a deputy of the
Meigs County Sheriff's office. The vehicle has been impounded,
Chief of Police Gerald Rought reported, and the BCI has been called
in to assist in the investigation.
Thursday Pomeroy police confiscated 30 plants of marijuana
from a sourcewhich they declined to identify. When removing the
plants an item from a breaking and entering which occurred on Sept.
I, 1990 was recovered. No cliarges had been r.Ied as of late Friday
morning.

Solid waste meetings set
The executive committee of the Athens-Gallia-Hoclting-JacksonMeigs-ViniOII Solid Waste District will be meeting Tuesday, May
14 atlO Lm. at the district office, 213 E. Broadway, Wellslon.
The policy committee of the AGHJMV disuict will meet Thursday, May 16 at7 p.m. at the Athens Coopetilive Extension Facility,
in Athens.
Contjnued on page 5

Students from the Holzer College
of Nursing at the University of Rio
Grande will be the "victims" for
the simulation.
Meigs County ·planning will
involve the countf s EMS staff and
Veterans Memonal Hospital. Students from the Mei~s Local High
School Nursin$ Assistant program
will act as "victims" of the supposed disaster.
In Gallia County, the Holzer
Medical Center has invited members of the Key Club at Kyger
Creek High School to be their "victims". Many of this same group
were members of the Ky~er Creek
l,luilders Club for a preVIous drill,
and will participate as their community projecL This will fulfill part
of-their requirements for Key Club
outstanding involvement. Sandy
Forgey. Key Club advisor, is working closely with Thomas R. Childs,
FACHE, Vice President for Professional Services at the Holzer Medical Center. These 20 students will

.

come to the hospital ahead of time
for moulage, which will add an
additional touch of realism 10 this
annual exercise, occurring in Gallia
County at a 2 p.m. on Wednesday.
A disaster drill is a requirement
for hospitals accredited by the Joint
Commission of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO). A written disaster plan must be on file and that
plan tested at least twice per year.
The coordinated effort of the three
hospitals, located in three separate
counties and two states, in staging a
joint annual simulated disaster,
takes this stipulation far past what
is required.
This combined endeavor of the
area hospitals and other agencies
and industries is unique and
requires a great deal of planning
time and organization. The chief
executive officers, along with
MOVffiPC,fedstrongcya~tthe

value of working closely together,
for the benefll of all residents of the
three counties.

Abel sponsors free school
attendance bill fo..- vets' kids
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) back to .the state from military
The House has approved unani- bases ... when either one or both of
mously a measure that would allow their parents were sent overseas,"
depend~nl children of people on
Ms. Abel said.
active military duty in times of cri''Reservists livinJ. in the state
sis to auend elemeniary or high were also temporarily unable to
school without paying tuitiOn.
care for their children when called
The bill, sponsored by Rep. to active duty and sent them to live
Mary Abel , D-Athens. was , with ~randparents or other relaapproved Wednesday and ~:~ow lives,' she said.
goes to the Senate.
The bill would change present
It would let members of the law, which n:cJuires parents to pay
armed forces with Ohio residency tuition to a district or to sign an
to move their children back to the affidavit slating their intent to
state to live with relatives or return to live in the dispict upon
friends for the duration of any sucb separation from military servtce,
mobilization.
Ms. Abelllid.
"During Operation Desert
The me111ure would not require
Shield and Desert Stoon, we found parents to return to the district.
that many children were being sent ·wbere the children attend scllool.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House commiuee has approved a
Democratic version of a state bullget bill that would increase spending by $300 miUion over the level
p'oposed by Gov . George
Voinovich.
In other developments in the
House Thursday, a committee recommended a bill giving ince~~v.es,
including tax breaks, to ulllllles
t.hat install scrubbers that allow
them io burn Ohio's high-sulfur
coal.
Meanwhile, the full Senate overwhelmingly approved a bill requiring that school dislricts set .mini·
mum academic requirements for
student athletes.
The Democrats' $27.1 billion
version of Voinovich's proposed
stale budget was approved by the
House Finance Commiuee 20-8.
The bill would reduce cuts
Voinovich sought in welfare, education and other programs.
The bill goes before the full
House on Wednesday. Approval
would send it to the Republicancontrolled Senate.
Committee Chairman Patrick

Sweeney said Voinovich, who
campaigned for office last year on
a promise of improved management, submitted a budget that was
both mismanaged and unbalanced.
Sw~ney, D-Cleveland, said the
governor's budget would have
spelled disaster for human services
and education-.
"The lrickle down of pain to the
local governments and the trickle
down of pain to the students in
school dislricts in this budget was
disastrous," he said.
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
Concord, said the Democratic budj!el may be out of balance. He said
11 proposed lalt increases the effects
of which had not been studied.
,
The House Select Committee on
tlte Federal Glean Air Act approved .
a bill designed to help Ohio comply
with the ac~ which orders substantial cuts in sulfur dioxide emissions
by January 1995.
In addition to giving financial
breaks to utilities that-install poUution-reslrictinf! scrubbers, the bill
imposes requll'ements on utilities
that switch to cleaner, out-of-state
Continued on page 6
•

Boyle buys out. other
RAC shareholders
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) The chief executive officer of
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
began the process of buying out the
other two co-owners before its
Jackson County plant was hit by a
bitter labor dispute, a spokeswoman said.
R. Emmett Boyle w'ill buy out
partners Willy Strothone and
Charles Bradley and become sole
owner of both Ravenswood Aluminum and the Onnet Corp., officials said Thursday.
,
Ravenswood
Aluminum
includes the Jackson County plant
and a smaller recycling plant in
Bedford, Ind. Onnet has a plant in
Hannibal, Ohio..
Boyle's purchase is scheduled
for completion July 15, acc:ording
to a statement issued Thursday by
Wheeling-based Oralco Management Services Inc., the pareiit com- .
pany for both Ravenswood Alu-

minum and Ormct.
.
Terms of the sale were not disclosed.
Ravenswood Aluminum and
Ormet will remain separate opera·
lions, the statement said.
"This was something t~at was
discussed long before the sttike at
Ravenswood," said Oralco
spokeswoman Debbie Boger. "It
should have no impact on lh'e
Ravenswood situation at all."
Ravenswood Aluminum has
been engaged in a biller labor dispute with the United Steelworkers
union since Nov. I. The company
say~ the 1,700 union members at'
the Ravenswood plant are on strike,
while the workers say they have
been locked out.
·
United Steelworkers Local 5668
Vice President Bill Doyle said it
was too early to determine what
effe.c t the sale will have on the
Ravenswood dispute.

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    <tag tagId="357">
      <name>owens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
