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1

Pomeroy-Middlepoet, Ohio

Tunlfey, Madl20, 1880

Deputies investigate theft

I~~ ~n:.:e:,~~.~~. . . .

10-lhe Deily Sentinel

Weather
Tonight, clearing with a low 20
to 25. Light winds. Wednesday,
Increasing clouds and warmer
with a high 50 to 55.
1
Exlealled forecast
A chance of showers Thursday .
fair Friday, a chance of rain
Saturday i'xcept rain or snow
north. Highs 45 to 55 Thursday
.and J"rlday and the 40s Saturdav.
Lows rnalnly In the 30s. .
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there were no signs of forcible Garage In Racine. When deputies
entry.
a~rlved no one was around.
Greg Erwin, Starc.h er Road, " Sheriff . James M. Soulsby
Pomeroy, reported to the depart- reports that the department took
ment Monday afternoon that a
a report of a hltsklp accident that
lawn mower, fishing gear, radio, occurred on Route 681 west of
.and a fan, that had been siored In Reedsville on Saturday. AccOrd·
an outbuilding, was stolen on lng to the report, an unknown
Feb. 3. The Investigation Is vehicle, around midnight, rlan off
continuing.
the roadway Into the yard at the
Hazel.
Barton residence and
The
department
reports
that
Continued from page 1
,;,____ Robert "Pee Wee" Riffle was
.da!'llaged.four bushes.
Sheriff Soulsby would like to
improvements to the plant will be
bills, and meet street depart- arrested Monday momln.g on a
bench
remind
residents of the Neighwarrant
from
Meigs
ment payrQII through the end of
made In such a way as to
County
Court.
According
to
the
borhood
Watch Program to he
accomodate future plant Im- the month.
report,
Rll!le
was
arrested
after
conducted In the Meigs Cou!ltY
provements, as the need exists
-Agreed to participate in
the
department
responded
to
a
Common
Pleas Courtroom this
and money becomes available.
Clean Up Rural Ohio Week, April
evening
(Tuesday)
at 7 p.m.
domestic
complaint
in
Racine
The finance committee Is to 22-28, as requested In a letter
Patrolman
Dave
·.
Williams,
around
3
a
.m.
Sunday
.
. meet in the near future to from Ken Wiggins, dlre.c tor of the
a
·
call
Athens,
willconductthemeetlng.
Deputies
.received
·determine exactly how much of Meigs County Litter Control
around 3:40 a.m. Sunday that , Allin teres ted persons are invited
: an Increase to customers will be Program. County litter control
three juvenlles were atte!'llptlng to attend.
:necessary to cover the village's work crews will be In Pomeroy on
to
E&gt;nter a vehicle at Codner's
· 10 percent cost of this first Tuesday, Aprll 24, to assist In the
' improvement to the sewage village clean up. If. Pomeroy will
provide the truck for hauling, the
, system.
· Council passed unanimously · county program will pay the
: the resolullon to enter lnio the landf111 fees for the one day .
Well, of Darwin, LaiTy (Judy)
Dutch Well
: engineering contract and start Litter control will be doing. the
Well, of Darwin, Richard (Chris)
· the ball rolling, with th.e under- same thing lit the other villages
Vern C. (Dutch) Well, 78, of Well, or Fredericktown, and
~ standing that after the treatment
of the county on the Othfr days
State Route 681, Shade, died Jerry (Susan) Well. of Darwin;
· plant is upgraded, the village during clean up week.. Council
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial "15 grandchildren and one step
: faces additional monumental ex- agreed to coordinate efforts with
Hospital following a brief Illness. grandchild; nine great grand: penses to begin extending sew· litter control, and stated that
Mr. Well was born July 9, 19li e hlldren; a brother, Ernenon
•, age lines to unsewered areas.
with Utter control picking up the
at Trimble and was a son of the Wen: of Pomeroy; several
' Following discussion, Council landf111 tab for the one day, the
late Valentine and Audlth Young sisters-In-laws and se.v eral nie: voted to accept the bid of $15,531 village Itself should l;le able to
Well. He was a heavy equipment ces and nephews.
· from Smith-Nelson Motors, cover costs for at least one more
In addition to his P;~rents, he
operator at strip coal mines, and
: Pomeroy , for a heavy duty clean up day. However, no
was
precedfld In death by a son,
was a member of Harrisonville
: plck\IP truck for the water decision was made.as to when the
Boyd
Well; five brothers, Dale,
Lodge No. 411, F&amp;AM; the York
· departrnent. Council accepted additional day might be.
Orville,Floyd, Dayton· and DoRite Bodies, Pomeroy; the Izaak
: the bid upon the contingzncy that
-Discussed with Anderson min.
a
ld
Well;
and two sisters, Hazel
Walton League; and the Cold
' the bid Includes a steel truck bed. nor street and sidewalk probElta
Mae Well. •
Hawk
and
Ridge Gun Club.
· Anderson Is to check with the lems, as well as ptoblems In
Services
will
be Thursday, 11
Surviving Mr. Well are his
: Pomeroy dealership and makfl specific areas with 'w ater leaks.
'
a.m.,
at'
Ewing
'F uneral Home,
wife, Audra Willard Well, of
· the determination. If the bid does In regard to water leaks, Anderwith
Rev.
Alan
Blackwood offiShade; a daughter, Donna (Guy)
: not reflect the cost of a steel bed, son said he would speak with
ciating.
Burial
will be In the
Morris, of Pomeroy; ' five sons,
: Council •Will purchase the truck affected property owners In the
Burlingham
Cemetery.
Friends
Denver (Florence) Well, of Hem· from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport, areas In question and make a
may call at the funeral horne on
lock Grove, Vernal (Louise)
: with a bid prlce of $15,500. A third determination as to what correcWednesday from 6 to 9 p.m. In
: dealership, Turnpike Ford, Calll- tive measures should be taken.
lieu of ·flowers, the family re·
: polis, entered the lowest bid of
-Instructed CouncUman
quests that friends make dona. $15,420, but the bid did not refect Larry Wehrung to obtain figures
lions to the Meigs County Senior
: a heavy duty battery.
on how much guardrail would be
The following couples have Citizens Center, Mulberry
Council alsP conducted the needed In front of certain sec- filed for dissolutions In the Meigs
Heights, Pomeroy, 45769, or the
: following other business lions of East Main Street and the
County Court of Common Pleas, · Meigs County Chapter of the
1
matters .
'
costs of the guardrail. Council
Mark Harrison, Pomeroy, and
American Heart Association, Ill
• -Following an executive ses- discussed the possl!lllltyof Instalcare of Bank One, P.O. Box 586,
Linda J. Harrison, Pomeroy;
: sion, gave the first reading of a ling guardrail In front of East
Reldun Ovrebo·Welker, Pome- Pomeroy, 45769.1
' resolution to grant employee , Main Street intersections ;~nd
roy, and Gerald Tunney Ovrebo: raises of 25 cents per hour ·any other sections of street
Welker, Pomeroy; Leonard Lee
: effective May 1.
!)ordering the river where safety
VanMete~, J'omeroy, and Janice
-Passed a resolution to io motorists Is questionable.
Lee VanMeter, Middleport; and
: transfer $30,000 from the general
Cathy Hart, Racine, and Monty
: fund to street fund, and $5,000
·Hart, Racine.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
·rrom general fund to the perm Is·
Seeking divorces .are Dale
Monday admissions -Robert ·
: slve tax fund, In order to pay
Edward Taylor, Middleport,
Rinehart,, Middleport; James
In the Meigs County Court of .from Mary Ann Taylor, Middle·
: winter salt biDs and other related
Common Pleas, the following
Hayes.. Pomeroy; and Roland
port; Naree Hale Florian from
Dill,
Pomeroy.
cases have been dismissed,
Edgar Florian; and Terence Lee
Monday
discharges -Thelma
Sharon Russell . vers11s Wayne
Brewer, Middleport, from BonChase
and
Roland Hewlett.
Russell; Melissa C. Bailey vernie Lou Brewer.
sus Clinton J . Bailey; and John
DallY stock prlees
Hunnell. et al, versus Malcolm
(As of 10:30 Lm.)
Lentz,
M.D.
Bryce and Mark. Smith
of Blunt, Elllti 6 Loewl

p,omeroy
.

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Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriffs·Departrnent are investigating a report taken Moilday
evening from Pam Asher, Route
2, Racine. According to the
report , Asher stated that some
money had been stolen from her
residence. She also reported that

______

- -.Area death--

Divorces sought

Hospital news

.NBA~reautts:

Emergency Medical Service re- Veterani.
•
sponded to eight calls for assist·
At 10:10 ll.m. the Middleport •
ance on Monday.
unit rosponded to a call on North
At 4:36 a.m. the Middle~rt First for Megga11 Ostermayer ,
unit was called to Rutland Street who was taken to Holzer.
for Robert Rinehart whO was
At 3: !10 p.m. the Pomeroy unit •
taken to Vete.r ans Memorial went to Eaat Main Street for Hospital, and at 4:49 a.m. Christopher Ed11vards · who was •
another Rutland unit went to transported to Pleasant Valley
.
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Larry Hospital.
Stephens who was transported to
The Rutland unit , at 8: 42 p.m., •
Holzer Medical Center.
· was called to Side HIIJ. Road for •
· Lena Hatfield who was taketi to
The Racine unit, at 8:36 a.m1, Veterans and later transported
went to Basl\an Road for Pauline to Holzer.
.,
Rose who was taken to Veterans.
Finally, at 11:31 p.m. the ,·
The Tuppers Plains unit was Tuppers Plains unit went to .;
called to Township Road 215 at Reedsville for Della Coleman •
'·
, 9:18 a.m. for Mildred Hauber who was taken to Veterans.

Controlling...

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Ohio lottery

~ Delsoit

tops
:Mnwaukee

'

Daily Number

651
Pick4
"0192

·page 3

Lisa Suennen, represen.tlng
American Blodyne, ' said her
company provides services for ·
state employees In Florida, indl·
ana and Arizona. ·
The board also approved a $2.9
million contract with Dentacare
of Blue Cross-mue Shield for
services for state employees as a
de n t a I m ·a In t e n a n c e
organization.
The largest school loan of$1.26 •
million was designated for the
Gal Ua County Local School Dis- ·
trlct. The 'state no longer lends
the money but guarantees bank
loans. The, Controlling Board
must approve any loan. however.
Other loans Include $341,000 for
Conneaut Area School Dlsttlct,
Ashtabula County; $151,000 ,for
Leetonia Exempted Village
School District; $234,000 Cor
Western Reserve Local School
District, Huron County; $70,000
for Western Reserve School
District, Mahonlng County;
$32,000 for Westfall Local School ·
District, .. Plckaway County;

·;

$13$,000 to~ Green Local SchOOl •
Dis trlct, Scioto County;· $242,000 .

for Frontier Looal School Dis· ~~
trlct, Washington County; and ,
·$90,000 for Southeast Local .
School District, Wllyne County.
James VanKeuren, director of
the Division Of School Finan~
for the Ohio Department or :
Education, said seven or eight :
more districts are expected to
'
apply for loans next month.

.

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Court grants
end to marriages

I

In the Meigs County Court of .·
Common Pleas a dissolution has
been granted to Vonda K. Burney
and Floyd L. Burney.
·
Tlmotlw Patrick-Gillilan has
been granted a divorce from
Luanne GIIUian.
· Joseph Curtis Wright has been
granted a divorce from Veronica
L. Wright.

•

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a1
Copyrtghtell 1810

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Gov. Richard Celeste .baB lllgned
legislation allowing C11yahoga
County to aak voters to approve a
measure to raile taxes on alcohol
and cigarettes to finance a
stadiUf!l·arena complex. ·
The stadium legislation, which
also applies w other Ohio cities,
particularly those with major
league franchiles, clearlld the
House Tuesday morning, 76·18.
The Senate then . ratified ihe
proposal, 26-6.
,
Gov. Rjchard Celeste signed
the bill ' Tuesday . night, and
Cuyahoga County commissioners were expected to vote Wed·
nesday ttiplactheproposalon the
May 8. llallot, The d~adllne for
committing It to the ballot Is
Friday.
The Senate also passed a bill
Tuesday providing new judge.

•

1

ship&amp;' In Licking, Aihens, Mahon· sold In carryouts • and superlng, Jian'lllton and Franklin coun- ' markets. She said It would
ties. That bill must tecl!lve House amount l1l 1 ~ cen Is a drink.
coi,)CWTt!nce In Senate changes
Campbell conceded that In the
-~tore being forwarded
to past, Cleveland was d\vlded ovef
CeieStt!.
.
the need for a new stadium and
Most, but not al~ representa- how to finance it.
''This time, the community Is
tives. a!ld senators from Cleveland, extolled the plan to bring a much more united on what type
of sports complex It wants," she
~ sparta complex with . a
baseb&amp;ll stadium and 'Indoor said. "We have been under the
aren11 to the lakefront city. But gun, and the community has
.,
bitter legislators from Suinmlt gotten It together."
County forecaat the end of ·the
Campbell said the~ Is a
Richfield Coliseum If the NBA partnership i&gt;Eitween Cleveland
Cleveland Cavaliers move and Cuyahoga County as well as
with private parties, Including an
downtown.
Rep. Jane Campbell, D· $18 million commltrnent from the
Cleveland, said Cuyahoga nonprofit Cleveland Tomorrow.
County voters would decide No more than 50 percent of the
whether to put atioiher 4 ~ cents financial support may be public
I8Jt on,a pack of cigarettes and to money, and none may be used td
·raise the taxes on liquor sold· In "operate the sports facility.
state stores and on beer and wine
Campbell said the Cleveland

Judgement sought

I

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. Oh6o VII., Mco:wwv

Qrlrlflnl • . . . . . . . . . .

..._.on•

....._...,....,of~=·-.,....._ C.. 7
. . . . . . _. ..
._ . . . .__...bMII. To-~ · IIWI*tMioonllillllwtD:

400 C.dot Blvd.
Oalllpallo, OH. 411131
(1114) 4411-3818

· ..... Co.

••tc•y
a.•
Itt. 3

11

Pom"'!'V· OH. 417119
11114) 912-7440

PIONe Send My Veteran of Service ,Eligibility Certlflclto

NQE ______________________________

~

ADDRESS
BRAIICH OF SERVICE ---~----,--SERVICE SEIIAl 10. ________.....::._____..,---..,----- AG._E~...,

~ou're

In'Ciitei
'To an Open Jlouseifor

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..

\

reattonscm
'

Where Generatipns Begin
tfie

.~w j'ainify-Ctnteretf Maternity Care Unit
at

Thsnk You Fot Vout Help In "Mskinf/1
Gtesf/ ',' Sines t985/
Lookinf Fotwstd To Anofbe.t Btest Yett.'

PCeasant o/a[{ey !l{ospitaf
%!fey 'l&gt;riVt
~oint Pkosant, mst 'Jifiainia

Suntfay, ·Marcfr. 25, 1990
fl'ours from 1 to 3 p.m. .

415 West
Main St.

PO"EROY
~ ·--~----------~--------------·

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....0. to Vwtc:ac In tM ~

1Mol811- Cout -· .._ "" ....._ _ . .... .. doo ........
...... Armed fcnll. ~,., bl ....lta.dfDr ftw .......... IIGAIM, .,.,,..,.
......,tortla You ...otboalltato-proolall..•-llle~qo. TIION ... a
Olio Vllley .._, ~~~~

992-6477

1 Section, 14 PagM 21 Centa
A Multlmedie Inc. N - -

•

Indians have agreed to a 20-year
lease at the facility, although a
lease has not been· signed.
But Rep. Ike Thompson, D· .
not swayed by
Cleveland,
threats !·h at the Indians would
leave unless a new stadium were
built. ·
HLet 'em 'g ot'' said Thompson,
'a conv~rted non-smoker who
w~nts ·to tax cigarettes for
cancer research. "I'll go see the
Toledo Mud hens."
'
•'As always, who's going to pay
the tax?" said Thom~on . "Joe
Slxpaok, who makes "$10,000 or
$11,000 a "year, or people on Socllil
Secuiity." . '
·
· ''This legislation Is destructive," said Rep. Wayne Jones,
D.Cuyahoga Falls. "It reaches
beyond Cuyahoga County and
, hurta· Summit County and other

was ,

Activities of.the Litter Prevention and Recycling Program
''are well underway" in Meigs
County, says Ken Wiggins, director of Meigs County's Litter
Control Program. ·'And April
wlll be the busiest month'yet with
Recycle Month, Keep Ohio Beau·
tifulMonth, Earth Day and Clean
Up Rural Ohio Week, all sche·
duled during the · month;' ' he,
adds.
For. the' ·month• of · April ·- ·
"R....,cle Mom!!;":;.:· the-local litter

_Announcements ......_

Nellhborhood Wateb
be observing "Fill God's House
Meigs County Sheriff James Day" on Sunday. The public Is
M. Soulsby would like to remind Invited to attend.
residents of the Neighborhood
Nwnber cbaD1e
Watch Program to be conducted
The Southeastern Ohio Legal
in the Meigs County Common Services: a federal . agency loPleas Courtroom ·this evening cated ln"Athens, serving the legal
iTuesday) at 7 p.m. Patrolman needs of low-IncOme residents In ·
Dave Williams, Athens, will Athens, GaUia, Meigs, and VInconduct the meeting. All Inter·
ton Counties In civil matters Is
ested persons are Invited to · announcing the change · of Its
attend.
toll-free number . Effective Immediately the new number Is
Club to meet
1-800-686-3669.
The Syracuse Third Wednes·
For further Information conday Homemakers Club will meet tact Timothy J. Foran, manag·
Wednesday al the Presbyterian lng attorney, Southeastern Ohio
Church Annex at 10 a.m.
Legal Services, 36 South ConSpecial service
gress Street, Athens, 45701, at the
The Racine Baptist Church will above listed number.

•

couniles that don't need them.
One of the finest faciliSen. Pa11i Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus,
ties In the NBA will be
: said a new domes tic relations
destroyed."
'
Sen. Lee Fisher, D-Shaker judgeship In Licking County was
Heights, said the proflosed facil- warranted according to caseload , ,
guldellne,s Issued by the Ohio
Ity would bring 2 mUlion people a
Supreme
Court. That judie will
year to downtown Cleveland a!)d
be
elected
In November.
Is "crucial to the economic
?fetter
said
a fourth judge on
development of not only Cuya·
the
Franklin
County Court of
hoga_County but n&lt;irlbeast Ohio
Appeals
also
fit
the guidelines,
and will have a ripple effect on
but that the Common Mleas
the economy of the entire state.''
judgeships In Athens and MahonBut Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Llma,
said Cuyahoga County . had lng counties were not justified.
· The court did not have time to
"pulled an end run" and there Is
no state assistance for small evaluate the need for an addicities that cannot have big league tional Domestic Relations judge
In Hamilton County Common
stadiums.
The blll creating · judgeships . Pleas Court, he said.
The House adjourned until
was passed, 26-6, with Sen·.
Wednesday
at 11 a.m. and the
Theodore Gray, R-Columbus,
Senate
until):
30 p.m.
cau tlonlng that the door hl!S been
left open for giving Judgeships to

~ountles .

Litter control

.Case dismissed

Am Electric. Power ..... ..... ...30%
AT&amp;T .. ............... ... ..... ........ 42~
Ashland 011 ........ ....... .., .... ..35')i
In the Meigs County Court of
Bob Eva,ns ....................... ... 12')i
Common Pleas, John Roush and
Charming Shoppes .. .... ......... 9~
State Farm Insurance Company,
City Holding Co. ·........ ...... .... 13
Columbus, are seekll\g $5,690.82
Federal Mogul... .................. 18 ·
from Chad,Wolfe, Racine. ·
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .._ .. ...... ..... 37
Heck's .... ........ ....... :... ..... ... .. 3~
Key Centurion ........ , ....... .... 13'Ji
Lands' End .. ,.... ... .. ..... .... .... lB')i
Speedlq tidlet
Limited Inc ........... ... .......... 41 ~
Multimedia Inc . ..... ...... ,.... :.79%
President myues G. Grant wu
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 2~
stopped by a policeman while be wu
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15~
driving hts carriap lbrouglt WashingShoney'slnc ..... .......... ... ..... 12%
ton, nc. He wu ilaued a ticket for
Star Bank ...... .. .... ....... :....... 18l&lt;t
speeding, but ratber tllu appear for a
cilurt trial; Grant paid a fine of $20,
Wendy's Int'l. ...... ..... ... ... ... . .' 4~
notes Tile Klda' World AimaJiac.
Worthington Ind .. ............ .... 21*

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Ohio.Senate passes stadium, judges' bills .

Who Have Honorably Serviced Ttutir Country
l.n Time of War or Peace

Stocks

•

PQmeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 21, 1990

NOTICE TO· ALL
VETERANS ·

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ToUJ, ....a,....., wtlltt a
lllclttlllall. 1o r ..., ....,.
lacreula1 .1o lt lo a mlliiTonJ&amp;Ittt, par&amp;IJ elllllll7 WMitt •
low &amp;1'0111111 •- lotdllweat
wlllda IJ lo 11 mpll.
Tlwnday, variable cl..n• - wllll a bllltt • lo II •
·Chance of rain II • percqt,

vot.40, No.z:lo continued from page 1

· Wetllhet

coUN11HG
-Two ''Cetakers" Interview hom'elesa mea at the Salvation
Army Iii Sacf!UIIeolo u ~ of a nattolllll U.S.

C..• Bureau tally Tuetda¥. Ia excbange for tile
· . ltlformatlon the homelesa received food., (UPI)

Census takes ·t.o streets, shelters
.

.

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By UBJIIed Pr- lnlernatlolllll
The Census Bureau's $2.7 million effort to counl America's
homeless In subways, shelters,
.abandoned buildings and
beaches went "very well," with
only one report of violence
against two of the army of 15,000 ·
counters, a spokeswoman said
Wednesday.
But sub-freezing weather In
many of the nation's largest .
urban cities filled abetters to
capacity early. In the evening and
forced the bureau to add a second
night to Its unprecedented effort.
And In some places shelter
workers waited for counters who
never showed up.
Census spokeswoman Rhea
Farberman said she did not yet
have a definitive list of cities
where a second night of counting
would take place but said "It's
.s afe to ' say tHere will 'be a

number."
"It depend~ OQ .how the
weather played," she said.
''There were places where, when ·
our enumerators got there, were
already fJUed to capacity and
closed. We were ready for this
and this 1$ a contingency plan.''
Dubbed "Street and Shelter
Night," the unprecedented effort
· late Tuesday a11d early Wednesday . was the opening of the
Census Bureau's1990count- the
massive, · once-every-10-years
tabulation of all penple living In
the United States and which
.federal officials claim will be the .
most comprehensive In Its 200.
year history.
"Overall, It went very well,"
· said Farbennan. "We had one
report of a robbery. It was fairly
minor. There were no Injuries. It
was In Fort Lauderdale, FJorl!ia;
A team of two was robbed at

~;;-Jttoi prdiit'llt~fif''Ur~lng'

knife-point of a watch and a ring
and a small amount of cash. They
reported the Incident to the
pollee."
Traveling In teams, ·the paid
counters wore bright, white vests
and carried two-way radios while
searching out those In 11,000
conventional shelters and rundown motels and hotels.
Many more soug~t out the
By United Presslnlernatlolllll
familiar street sights of the
Warmer lemperatures have
destitute pressed to hissing
returned toOhlowlth thetlrstfull
steam grates or stuffed Inside day of spring, although they ·
. wrappings of blankets, plastic
won't quite reach the marks seen
and weather-beaten cardbQard.
Others checked desolate ·hi- last week.
High pressure that was over
deouts beneath the concrete and
.
the
state Tuesday night caused
steel of, bridges and elevated
•
mostly
clear, skies
and the
highways, dank subway and bus
mercury dropped Into the 20s.
stations an&lt;l abandoned
Skies were to be partly to
buildings.
inostly sunny today and, as
Their orders were to count the
homeless even If they . had to southwest winds Increase, . the
mercury was to reach the mid·
' Continued on page 7
40s to mid-50s, about normal for

'

. By VALERIE KUKI.EN81U
· United Prea IDternatloaal
A Greyhound bus carrying 50 .
people on Interstate 81 In VirginIa was hll by three shoiB fired
from a pli!ISing car, but no one
was Injured, state 11011ce said
Wednesday.
~
The shooting was the !ales t
lncldet\t,of violence In the often
n,ated ltrlkl - the Uih IDipblg
at 11·bus, according to Greyhound
- since some 9,000 Greyhound
workers walked out on strike
March 2.
.· .
NegOtlatort for Greyhound and
Its striking driven. have bee!l·
talking to federallllecllator_s but
not to eacb oiher and reiiUllned
far apart In eftortl to cement a
contract tbat could · l»'lllg the
employees back to work.
''We're In toUC!b'' with both
llides 11)1 telephone but no "a~
,atantive converaatlou" ware
held, Paul Stueka~telulelder of
tbefederal Med!aifonalld Cone!·

'

lntersectlonofUnlonAvenueand
stress the urg'i!ncy of ~ctlng !O
Route 7, Pomeroy). "We hope
project the ·world for future
this arrangement wUI eliminate
generations, Wiggins adds.
the problem of careless dumping
Clean Up Rural Ohio starts In
along our township aiid county
April and· continues through the
roads, creating maj~r problems
summer . "Our program Is, tar·
for everyone," says Wiggins.
geting the week o! A.'Prll22·28 for
'l'he theme of this year's Keep special activities," · Wiggins
says. The local program bas
Ohio ~auUful Month (also
April) Is "Don'tLetaGreatState asked all flvel villages In the
Go to Waste. "Says Wiggins, "We
county to schedule their annual
live In ·a beautiful part of 'Ohlo spring Clean-ups during this
and we Invite all Meigs Counuans .time. ·- :~our program.,coJiectlon
· to gellnvolvei,W..vOiunteer cleaii·, cr.a:_will be ~~~r~lng-_on~ day Ill•:
u!J · ~ttorts;·· ~ofonly around the edC1!"8r't~i!"'VIlllie$ (lui'lng 1lllsi
home and farm, but In the week, and we're asking for lo~of
community and at public use
volunteers to help In the clean up
areas and businesses. With the
activities," he explains.
Last year, the cou1.1tr litter
Village.of Pomeroy observing Its
sesquicentennial anniversary .control program had help from 10
this year, It Is a great opportunity
Girl Scout troops, 10 Boy. Scout
to at tract visitors and tourists to
packs and troops. five 4-H Clubs,
the area."
four elementary schools, as well
Also this year, ' on Sunday,
as the townships and. vlllag~.
April 22, the 20th anniversary qt "We'll help your group plan
Earth Day will be cele!Jrated,
projects, provide you with trash
Wiggins reminds area residents.
bags and arrange for pick up of
"All of us are aware of the · the trash collected," he adds.
Also, If desired, someone from serious environmental problem~
which must be solved, lnchtdlng the litter control program will be ·
the conservation or valuable '· available to talk to groups or '
natural resources and proper
organizations about litter prev- •
disposal of solid waste," he says. entlon and recyl'lng.
.
F'or more Information about '
Wiggins suggests that in celebra·
tlon of Earth Day, garden clubs
litter prevention and recycling,
,. and other civic groups might
telephone 992·6360, or write toP. ;
select a specific area for a
0. Box 502, or stop In at the Utter
control office at PQmeroy.
beautification project. On this
special Sunday, churches around
"l.t's a good time to volunteer ;
your help," Wiggins urges, "and ·
the county might use their
services, bulletins, newsletters
we're sure you 'II appreciate the
and other communications to
resufts."
·

Warmer weather arrives for spring

•

Greyhound bus
hit
by
rifle
·
fire
·
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an

Meigs Countlans to start, · or
continue, recycling Instead of
disposing of all solid waste.
Nearly ali Items except' newspapers may be recycled locally
at either Tri-County Recycll!lg
Center, located at the lntersec·
lion of Routes 7 and 143 near
Pomeroy, or at Man~y's Recycling Center below the Intersection of Beech and Park Streets in
lower Middleport.
The Meigs County Litter and
Recycllt)g Program bas quarterly "recycle days", Wiggins
reports, "where newspapers can
be recycled untll a l&lt;ical outlet Is
available." Also, for a limited
time, the Meigs County program
has an arrangement for local
resideJtts to recycle old appllan·
ces (washers, dryers, stoves,
refrigerators, dishwashers,
etc.).
The appliances may be placed
al the upper edge of the litter
control parking lot (the fanner
. Ohio Job"Servlces building at the

progr~s ·underway

-·- -H. ..
.
cold air pushes In from C:anada.
Highs will he mainly In the 40s,
A cold front that was over the and there Is a chanceofprec;lpltanorthern United States early tlon, especially on Sunday.
today will drop slowly south and
On the morning weather map,
move Into northern ohio either · high pressure extended from
late Thursday or Thursday nlgiJt . Michigan across Ohio to LouisiAhead of the front wmbe some . ana. The high will move off the
clouds and maybe Isolated show.
East Coast tonight. A cold front
ers . .Qlghs Thursday will range
was located from Quebec across
from the. upper 50s In the north to
upper Michigan to the northern
Plains. The front will sink slowly
the mid-60s In the south, aboutlO
degrees above normal.
south and reach northern Ohio
Temperatures will cool of! for
either late Thursday or Thursday
Friday and the weekend as the
night.
. ~·
.
I

this. time of year.

'

llatlon Service said Tuesday . · weekend, said mediators ex·
"We'll be IIUigeeting or calling a plored several Issues with eacll
meeting aa 100n as we get some side to "see 11 som~ alternative
indication that there might be solu lions can be developed."
Wages and benef!IB have been
lome movement (!IY either
among the hurdles . since the
side&gt;·"
VIrginia State Trooper E.R. strike bepn March 2; lnvolvlna
Adams, who was lnvestlgat.lng many of Greyhound's 6,000 drivInterstate Sllncld~nt, salll three ers and 3,000 oiher union
small holes were found In the · employees.
Earlier Tuesday, a replacewlndlhleld of ihe bus, poalbly
ment
driver hired l)y Greyhound
from a 1!11a,ll-callber rifle. .
turlll!dover
tO !he U.S. Al;my,
waa
All tbree lholl lilt UN! wind·
shield near driver DaVId Kallbt, . on a warrant charalnl him with
but the Wlndlhleld remained desertion. Martin A. Sbaw, 28,
Intact, said State Police s,t. J.R. was arre•ted when pollee
Peter1. He said unallepllnter• of stopped the bus he waa driving
alai• from the holes bit Knllht, about ~ a.m. Saturday for a
routine 101 check on U.S. 101 near
but he wu nOt burt. .
.
cmcent
City, Calif.
'Thla Ia tUI'Yinllt ju1t a J.tttle
Army
offtclall . transferred
.too far," ll8ld Mull LawiOD, wbp
waa rldlnl from Noliolk to Shaw from the Del Norte County
Knoxville, Tena. "Whytakeltput Jail, w~ be was beln&amp; held on
n.GODINO IN 80VTII - A boat a cMr
a federal fugitive warl"alltaccu•on the paueaprs?''
a
to 1M ar~ ten .. &amp;Ilia mWI
Stw:llenacllllelder, wbo partici- . 1n1 blm ot military deserUon, to
..... AI....,.. ....,., ftla ..aal wa llllllle
pated Ill neaotlallc;l!ll between the FortOrd, Callf.,torprocesllng, a
.~ Monda,)' an Ill IMpea&amp;lo• ~ '11'1&amp;11 pvenineD~
Contln~ &lt;?II page 7
two lldel ID 'l'llclbn, Ariz., laat

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

Bmi!ill
~rib.

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~~--.- •..-.-.... c::::~ .....

'q!v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'
General Manqer

!?AT WHITEHEAD .
A!llllsiant.Publlsber/Coniroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inl!llld DaUy Press
Association !llld the Amer~an Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be len than300
wonts long. All letters are sui&gt;ject to edltlng and must be stgned with
name, address ;utd telephone number ..NO·unslgned letters will be published. Letters should be In gOod taste, addressing Issues, not personali.
.
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ties..

Bush buying time
for
Gorbachev
.·
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
'WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Bush is walking a political tlghl
r(lpe In dealing with the tranforming communist world, and trying to
buy time.
. Alter years of taunting the Soviet Union to free the "captive
nations " - Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia - the president Is now
urging the peoples of those countries that were !annexed by the Soviets
as the result of the Hiller-Stalin pact to hold thel ~ horses In the drive ·
forlndependence.
.
Bush 'has to reassert the American policy of self determination
when ·It comes to those three Baltic countries whose takeover has
n~ver bee.n recognized by the U.S. government. And yet there Is a
w!sh that It wasn't happening all at once with the disintegration of the
·
Soviet empire.
The president does not want to do any thing_ that would destabilize
the Soviet Union or Presiden t Mikhail Gorbachev's·government at a
time w~en he Is trying to move ),liS cq1,1ntry out of rigid
totalitarianism, and even to flirt with the Idea of a free economy.
· The United States does not know. what the Soviet Intentions are
. toward the three nations that have had cont.lnued diplomatic ties with
thll United States and even embassies In Washington, although few
believed they would ever beeome Independent again.
·
But this Is the moment of truth. The United States Is withholding
ro!lmal diplomatic recognltlon ·untll the Lithuanians gain control of
thflr 01!111 t~.j\~tory . That may take some doing since It appears that
G6rba~ J pparently will move forcefully to stop the se·cesslonlst
mpvement.
;I'he ne';" Soviet Parliament is expected to take up the question of
sec;esslon. But right now •that Is on hold.
;!a It's don' t· ~ock-the-boat time. Bush .Is Interested ln keeping
stablllty In Europe In this period of historic change. Gorbachev Is
worried that the Soviet Union will break \IP further with other
· republiCs deciding to go tt.elr own way. The International cartoonls ts
are already reducing the superpower to the Republic of Rus5ta with
Mo'?ClfW'a~'lts"5eat.
-· ' ··
Natlona:ltsm and ethnic rivalries, pent up for so long, are
rearlrtg their heads throughout Europe.
Gorbachev has his work cut out for him. To keep his Image as a
peacemaker who triggered the undoing or communism and held back
the Soviet Army to permit free electlolis Jn the satellites, he must
avoid use bf force.
,;·. .. ....
..w:
His perestroika and glasnost reforms liave led.to the problems.of
freedom that he now confronts. Perhaps lllftlld not foresee that a little
c
bit of freedom Is a dangerous thing -for dictatorships.
•
•
But now he has the
pmblem of reconctllag h'ts·hopes
for democratic
changes to contlnlie while holding his vast cbulltry together.
A house divided against Itself cannq1, ~"),!(!, And It will take a
special poUitcal greatness for Gorbachev to solve his problem. For the time being the Ideal for him probably 'woii11t be If he could sell the
dissident republics on a loose federattp~'wlth .JOI:!;Ie ties to Moscow,
but with most of the decision· p!Bklng ,1~ tq~;lt!!.ndS of locally elected
officials.
.
- ..; :
. He WOI!ld have to show the republics lh~t lfJs In their Interest to
maintain their afflllatton with the Kremlin .
..
,
Meanwhile, the United States Is a bystander, encouraging change
and also peaceful solutions to knotty problems.
A civil war In the Soviet Union would be.a tragedy at a tlmewhenlt
appeared that the remarkable revolution de-communizing Europe
.
would continue peacefully.
Still, the Russians have to face the breakup of the Warsaw Pact and
the questionable loyalty of nations forced Into their sphere after the
war; that In reality they were only standing in a house of cards.

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Detroit hands·MilWaukee. 117-96 defeat ·

Paga 2-Thl D., St tllwl .
Ponwloy-Midllaport OWo

By Vatted p,_ lllternailonal

Wadnudlly, Macta 21,1110

DO~'t. forget ·t he president's b~day . .:
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta ;

WASHINGTON- One doesn't
messaee from Mlkhall c:,rbawake the president pf the United
chev to Bush that had to be
States In the middle or the night delivered Immediately .
Scowcroft was prepared for
without gQOd cause. And someThe groggy NSC man kicked
sometblng or extraordinary lmtimes, even an urgent message ' the mesilage upstairs to his boss,
portance. But what dropped out
from the leader of the Soviet · National Security Adviser Brent
was a greeting card that read,
Union Isn't gOod enough.
Scowcroft, who dra&amp;ged himself ''Best wishes and many happy
We have learned of one such out of bed and ·h urried to the
retums, Mr. President."
late-night message from one White House to meet Dubin ln.
Tile (lay before, June '12, had
superpower to another that set
The am~sador Insisted that
been Bush's 65th birthday. ··
the White House staff scrambling Bush be awakened and given the · . Scowcroft was not amused,
whlle George Bush slept through envelope containing the critical
lind Dublnln Wl\5 clearly embarIt all.
communique. But Scowcroft did
rassed. He may ilot have known
At 1 a .m. lastl June 13, a
something for which he will that thf urgent messaee from
functionary In the White House probably forever pat himself on one world leader to another was a
situation room woke up the
the back. COJll!llunlque. But simple birthday card .
National Se.c urlty Counclr duty
Scowcroft did sometblng for
Someone In MOscow, maybe
officer with a critical phone calL
which he will probably forever
Gorbachev blrnsel f, had delayed
Soviet Ambassador Yurt Dublnln
pat himself on the back. He sending .Bush his bltthday greet.
had_just called the White House , Insisted on knowing what was in lilgs, and pl'Obably pushed the
and said he had an urgent the envelope first.
panic button. Theresuitlnaorder

r-oNce
vie .GeT eMoliGtl fbol? YoiJNG
GII\1-S
oH OIJR
~oor&lt;eP

iT'S. easY HoNeY,

~s,
~86!

•
to g;et the messaee to Bush :.
Immediately was taken llterally .;
In Washington.
•
Bush had received tllouaands •,
of birthday ~lngs on June 12, .:
but our White House sources say
the absence of a card from · ·
Gorbachev had caused mild
curiosity. Some had openly wondered If Gorbachev was subtly •:
chilling his relationship with ·
B b
·
~ ibe Interest of fuiure su!ier- •
power relations, not to mention
uninterrupted pres·tdentlal
slumber, . someone should tell
Gorbachev the Russ tan word .f or ·
"belated" In' case he forgets
Bush's birthday this year.
The president's last hlrthday
o!flclally made him · a senior ·
citizens, along with 31 rilllllon
other Americans. When he was •i
Inaugurated at the· age of 64, ·' ~
Busb became the fourth oldest
man to be president of the United , ,
St&amp;tes.
.
•
The oldest was Ronald Reagan
who slgned'on at 69, followed by
William Henry.Harrison (68) and
James Buchanan (65) .
·'
In sptte of his neW status as a ··~
Senior, 'Bush's age . does not :';
appear to bother American. vo- ·
ters. That Is prob11bly because he · ·
succeeds the oldest pre~ldent In !"
bls tory; and because Bush keeP&amp; . '
up a vigorous program of exer- ·
else that would weary you 0ger ·
people.
· ·~
. White House physician Dr. ·· ·
Burton Lee, ·who has known Bush·:·;
for a lona time, has observed that • •
the president's body Is about"lo-·· 1
years younger than his years.
"
Part of the credit sliould eo to · J
the fact that Bush gets a good' ·
night's st.;,ep while others handle :·
weighty matters of state.
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..

Keeping Ohlo's

ec~no~y

strong

.~

t~at

State Sen. Jan Michael Long ..,

One of the keys to keeping the keys to ensuring
Ohio's
Ohio's economy strong Is making smallbuslnessesremalncompetoUr children cannot learn as onlylntbestat'e'shlghsuUureoal ~
sure that small businesses ltlve Is seeing to It that the
effectively as they mleht'lf they mines but also In smail bus!· ·"
thrive. That Is the me5sage educational system produces IIare being taught In cl'a ssrootnsln nesses tn southeaat Ohio. we 'all .r.~
members of the Ohio Small terate graduates- who are capawhich the plaster Is falling from need ·to do all we can to lobby '"
Business Council, a division of ble ' of entering the workplace
the celllne.
congressmen to put pressure on ':,
the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, . with the Job skills both they and
Third, It Is Important ·for the the unaccounlable bureaucrats ''
brought to Columbus this week. their employers need.
state to recolllllze the role drug who mandate regulations that ' '.
Those of us In state government
As the ranking Democrat on
abuse In schools Plays In lmped- · sound fine tn Washington, but ~·
all know how Important small theSenateEducatlonandRetirelng)earnlng. Wemustmakelta that just hurt our local •
business Is to the health of our ment Committee, I have been
priority to Improve state support pocketbooks.
.
state, but It's Important to get Involved In trying to ensure that
for local,. drug education proSmall business Is alive and well · :
these kinds of reminders.
the elementary and seCondary . grams, Without · this kind of In Ohio, but It needs ' our help.
Since the 1981-1982 recession school students In my district get
commitment, our ltudents· can- Ohio's small business communput thousands of Ohioans out of a quality education. As I have
not be ' prepared to enter the tty employs over lialf of the ~
work, and wreaked havoc with stated many .ttmes In this coworkplace after graduation with state's work force. If small
the economies of small towns In lumn, where a child lives
the kind or readln&amp; and math busiDess ts healthy, there 1s a ·.
southern and south-central Ohio,
shouldn't determine the quality skills they need. . .
good chance the rest or the state' 8 - • ~
things have brightened. Jobless- or his or her education. That's
What Is really needed Is some economy will• be healthy too. . '.
ness Is down, though It stU! Is . wliS' I am fighting to see that
recollllltlon by the, federal go- That's why S!llall business health , :·
unacceptably high In many parts education reform In Ohio In·
vernment that not all wisdom Is ts Important' to.us all.
·"
or the state, Including ours. The eludes a means to more .fairly found Inside the Washington If you have any questions or ·.
entrepreneurs who run Ohio's distribute tax dollars to see that Beltway.' For example, federal cornments on this or any other ,:
small companies, defined as
poorer districts get a better Clean Air legislation pending In Issue of Interest to you, please '
those that employ 250 or fewer share. Second. I recently asked the U.S. Senate would tighten contact me by wrltln&amp; State .· ..
people, have been Instrumental members of the Ohio congres- pollution controls on Ohio power- Senator Jan Michael Long, Ohio
In sparking this renaissance.
slonal delegation and the U.S.
plants, force taxpayers to pay the Senate, Statehouse, Columbus, •. •
In state government, many of Education Department for more cost of acid rain cleanup through Ohio, 43266, or by calling me at ;
us have been Involved In trying to federal aid In repairing and , higher utility bills and, lnevlta- (614) 466-8156. .
!
encourage this recovery. One of replacing aging school building~. bly, lead to the loss of Jobs not
...

., '

Sununu is cool to ecofreak
hot air··
..
0

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Vincent Carroll ,

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Is really likely?
Over how long a consumers of the economy.
At a time when rational dissent
John Sununu, happUy, Is un· . has almost been banished from u
enemies he makes, then John period of time? Is It already
environmental debates, be Is just
Sununu Is the most Impressive Inevitable; or can It be averted? moved by ·their fervor. More
what this administration needs. "
figure In the current admlnlstra· What sorts of policies might · Importantly, he Is unlntlmldated.
'
tlon . . Almost slngle-handedly, make .a difference, and how
'
much
difference?
For
that
mat·
this White House chief of staff Is
helping to stall or scuttie ·the ter, would It be cheaper to adjust
.,
worst schemes bubbling up from • to the affects of warming&gt; as they
I
arrive pver many decades or
the environmental lobby.
•
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By United Press IDternailonal .
It Is no baclie of honor In Itself, hundreds of years rather than
'I
. Of COU!'Ie, to make enemies In the remaking Industrial society
.
environmental movement. Any today?
Today Is Wednesday, March 21, the 80th day of 1990,with :285 to
A great many zealots pretend
Idiot can do It, and many have.
fu~w.
1
What's different about Sununu Is to ' know the answers to such
The moon Is want~, moving toward Its new phase.
,"
that his antagonists respect as questlolll, but no honest, sober
. The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
well as fell!' him because he person actually .does.
.;
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Sununu
also
helped
prevent
a
Immerses hlmlelt In a subject
Those
born
on
this
date
are
under
tile
sign
of
Aries.
They
Include
·
'!.
cleanalr
comprcimlse
struck
by
before taking them on. And he
composer Johann Sebastian Bach In 1685, Mexican revolutionary and
also Insists that when CODI!der- the prelldent and Senate leaders
President Benito Jusrez In 1806, Russian composer Modest · :
ln&amp; a coatly new law, the burden from getting out of hand. AlMussorgsky In 1839, theatrical Impresario. Florenz Zlegfeld In 1869, .r
of proof must .lie with the people though the original ' Bush propEnglish theatrical director Peter Brook In 1925 (age 65) and ector • ·
who draft It, not with thole who osal was a strong (and costly)
James COco In 1930.
·
"
oppose lt.
packaee that attacked every·
That' 1 why, for elWI!ple, he thing from acid rain to urban
(and now the Bulb admlnlltra- pollution, powerful aenators
tlon) lavon a .billion-dollar re-. puabed for atlll more.ln !he end,
search effort on &amp;Iobel wanniD&amp; they conceded u-mu.ch u Bulb.
· On this date In hllltory:
StW, the clean-air deal proves
rather than a cruh pl'Oil'am to
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of ·VIrginia became the first U.S.
how dlfftcult It 11 to please some
reduce consumption , of foliO
secretary of state. He later was the 'third president ot the Uillted ,.
fuels.
envtronmentallst8, ·who've · d.e"
States.
"If you're. iOIDI to make a noUDced the result u a aellout.
In 1918, American and German soldiers fought the key World War
trillion-dollar declaton, If you're They etlpeclally dlallke the treat·
One battle of the Somme.
·
aolni to make a decllton that' 1 ment or new cars, altlulueb the . In lMI, 7,000. Allied planes droppi!d more than 12,000 tons of .,.
.aoln&amp; to 11tect a mDUon lobe, you bill could require tailpipe emil· explosives on Germany durin&amp; a slneki World War Two daytime ' I
·011pt to make It ·on the bull of a1o111 to be reduced not Just once
homblni raldi
.,
l
wllat you !mow and not on th\! In the next 15 yean (whlcb Is
In 1962; Scivtet Prernler Nlldta Khrushc:hev pledied ~t Ruula
J
· bull of what youremotloDI rnay iiW'IDteed) but twice. Envlronwould cooperate with the Unl~ Statl!ll In peaceful exploration of
•
lead you to feel," be aaya.
mentalllll lDillt 011 a IIW'antee
space. The Joint American-Soviet Soyuz space mlsslon was
'
Nolk:e that Su11111111 didn't call forthe lecOnd reduction, too,
conducted In July 1975.
· •J
global WarrDlni
"nODiellle " U
altbouJb tecbnoiCJIY to acbleve It
· In 1911!1, the U.S. aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk coUided with a ·
.
doesn't
exlat
some
rltbt·wtnaen
are
wont
to
nuclear-poWered Soviet aubmarln&amp; In the Sea of Japan.
..&gt;.
"I'm going out tor 8 brisk walk. My bod's pro. ·J
do. He UDdoubtedly realizes !hat
To envlromnental activists.
, ,.
duction of endorphins seems to be 8 lltt/6 on
the theory In widely accepted by federal law exlall In order to.
sclentllll but that the trouble lies extract the lut drop of trlbllt,e
~· ~ j.l
the low side. "
with the detalll.
A thought fol','the day: Playwrl&amp;bt William Shakespeare
/
from
corporate
male-facton
~
Such as: How mucb wlll'lnllll and never mind the COlt to
•'The cour~e or true love never d1d ~ smooth.··
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If we can Judge a man by the

Berry's World

Today in history·

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NBA roundup

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WI&lt;o'f. ·

.a irborne to grab thll rebound between Minnesota
Tod Ma'"y (left) aad Toay CIUilpbellln the flnl half of Tuesday
. atpt•i NBA aame Ill Oaklnd, Call. Blul• ICOfl!d a seaoon-bllh
·a poiBU to lead tile Warrior. to a 101-101 win. (UPI)
·

Marauder
nine commence·
.'
.
season
today ~st
~gan
.
.
By DAVE HARRIS
At
base for Meigs junlQr
.

fl~st

Terry Reuter seems -to hold a
Sentinel Correspondent
New Meigs Maraud~!f baseball slight edge ·uver senior Mike
coach Zpne Beegle welcomes six Walls. At ~econd It will be junior
. lettermen ..off of last.year's TVC Eric Heck
SOI;&gt;ho"tnore {lrlan
co;~.hamplon team as ·the Ma,
Warner. At third base Jason
rauders open up the ~990 b&lt;!seball Wright or McGuire will get the
season at home today against nod, with Stewart , Taylor and
non-league foe Logan.
·
McGuire splitting time at short
Beegle Is a 1983 graduate of depending who Is pitching.
Sout)lern .High School, where he
In the outfield for Meigs 11 will ·
earned all-state honors In base- be Walls, Phall or senior Dennis
ball and .basketball. Beegle Boothe In left with senior Randy
earned a .baseball scholarship to Hawley In center: Jay HumphVIrginia Military- Institute In reys a senior. or junior Tim Mays
Lexington Va .. befor~ transfer- wlllhold down right. Theoutxleld
lng to .. Bethany College. Beegle will be a weak spot starting ·aut
ended his college at Ohio Unlver- the seasoq for Meigs due 'to
slty )V~ere he earned varsity Inexperience.
Behind the plate wm be one of .
letter,s as a · member of t ~e
Bobcat pitching staff. his junior the premier catchers In Jn
and senior years.
· southeastern Ohio In senior I;:dThe strenghth of the Maraud- die Crooks, Crooks has an excel·
ers appears to be In the· pitching lent glove and arm to go along
start, catcher and the lrifleld. The with a good stick at the plate.
pitching staff In young but ··'Beegle expects Wellston to be
talented, the starters wlll be . good · again In the. ·TVC. while
· senlo~ Chris ~ SteWart, sophb· Belpre aiW&amp;ys has a godd club,
mores ·Terry McGuire and : but he also expects his MaraudJeremy Phalln, and senior ers to be In the thick of the race.
Shawn ~.Lamfiert. Stewart was . Non-league l)pponents on this
one ~0! t!!e.:J4iu'aiidiiis:;top, ,Una :years scbedule will beGalUpolls,
ll~St year, while McGuire and
I,ogan, Athens and Jackson.
Phalln h.a ve outstanding• arms:
• Terry Adams of GaJllpolls will
Also expe.c ting to see a lot of be helping Beegle with this years
action on the hill for Meigs Is · team, Ailarils has been an asslstKellh Hagen, ·Kevin Taylor and ant coach at Rio Grande for two
Jason W,tlght.
years. . ·

or

slvely In the second quarter,"
Milwaukee failed to do what Detroit coach Chuj:k Daly said.
only the Atlanta Hawks haxe
''O bviously, they're shoraccompllshed Jn: the past two thanded a couple.'of people and
Rl!lllths:· beat the De\roltPistons. that .makes a df!ference, but I
James Edwards scored 21 thought we play!!d very gQOd
points and Detroit outsCOred the defensively through pretty much
Bucks 36-12 In the second-quarter three quarters," Daly said.
Tuesday, posting an easy 117-96 • Milwaukee made 57 percent of
victory. The def~ndlng cham- Its field goal atte~pts In the first
pions recorded their-12th straight quarter and led 29-21 after one
victory and 25th In 26 games. The period. But the Pistons llsed a
Pistons lost . only to Atlapta 10-2 run to open the second
during that span . .
quarter and tied the score 31-31
"We're pl!lyhig pretty gQOd on Mark Aguirre's jumper with
right now, " Edwards. said. 8:45lefl.
"'There's still a little room for
Detroit broke It open by scorImprovement. I think we're Ing the final 12 points of the
about where we were last year." quarter . Joe Dumars, John Sal·
"I don't know how they blew ley and IWdman scored four
that one game,·' BuckscoachDel points each during the run.
Harris sal!! of the P,ls!ons' Feb. 23
Milwaukee had four conseculoss to the HawkS. "There are tive turnovers In the final 2: 52 of .
few teams tn' the history of the the half and was unable to take a
NBA that have won 25 of 26."
shot.
Detroit, 51-15, Improved to
''In the second quarter tonight,
21-12 on the road, tying the Los we. made a lot of breaks for
Angeles Laker·s for the best mark ourselves." Dumars said. "We
away from home. If the Pistons were In our defensive rhythm.
capture the NBA title this year, Fo.r the last 25 to 26 games. we
they • would become only the really haven 't shot that well. But
second team since' 1970 to win we've played good defense. "
back-to·back championships
The Pistons also battered Mil(the Lakers. won the title In 1987 waukee on the boards In the
and 1988) .
second quarter and finished with
Milwaukee, ptaylng without a 48-38 advantage.
Injured starters Jack Slkma and
"They beat us on the boards
Greg "Cadillac" Anderson, and we didn't stand much of a
made only 5 of 23 field goal chlmce;•• Larry Krystkowlak of
attempts (22 percent) In the l'lfllwaukee.silld. ·'They beat us In
second quarter, allowing Detroit so many different ways and they
.to 'take a '57-41 halftime iead.
thoroughly whiPPed liS tonight."
· "They started to miss some · Islah Thomas scored 19 points
shots arid we tlgh\ened up Belen- and Vinnie Johnson added 18 for
'

the Pistons. JUcky Pierce scored
21 for Mllwaukee In his first
game after missing two co.n tests
wltllstrep throat.
In other games, Indiana defeated Miami 112-98, Chicago
crushed Washington 122-97, Orlando upset New York 121-118,
Portland overpowered Houston
120-110, San Antonio defeated
Seat tie 128-106, the LA Lakeu
outpointe d Charlotte 109-97,
Golden State . squeaked pas t
Minnesota 105-101 and Denver
defeated the L.A. Cllppers 119112.
Paeen 11%, Heat 98
At Mlliml, Detlef Schrempf
sc.ored a season-high 29 points to
help Indiana snap a five-game
losing streak. Miami. reserve
Terry Davis paced the Heat with
just 15 points.

Anderson finished with 29 points,
while Jerry Reynolds added .]7.
The Knlcks received 28 points
from Ewing and 20 frOI!I Johnny
Newman.

Bulill IH, BuUets rl
At Chicago, Scotde Pippen
scored 24 points and rookie
Stacey King topped Ills career
best with 24 points, leading the
Chicago Bulls to a come·from- ·
behind victory. Ledell Eackles
paced the Bullets with 31 points,
Map: HI, Knick&amp; 118
At New York, Scott Skiles
collected a triple-double with 23
points. 12 rebounds and 17 assists

(8ee

NBA o• Pap 'l
'

SPRINO TIME
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SENIORS ·
OF

1990

CARS
- TRUCKS - VANS
.
•Quality Tires
•Fast, Friend,ly Service .
'

Sprint Ia here and to tM area'~ Htlion that IMCIM
graduation tl•e. Tho· Q~aDty Print Shop in Middle·
port offer• a full line of graduation auppllos - IICIIIIe
cards, announcements, memory books and 1111ore.
We've boon serving tho n..,!s of the graduate for
over tw~nty years.
So · Seniors, when . you think of trtl!luation an·
nounce1111ents and supplies, shop whore your parents

wvour One Stop Tire Center"

GENERAL
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THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP

992-7161

992-3345 01 992-3394
255 MILL .
MIDDIEPOIT,

NOUN SECOND AYE.

mEET

MIDDIEPOU, OliO

.0110

MONDAY~

FIIDAY 8:30 10 5:00
SAlUIDAY 9:00 10 12:00

SEE.....80i JONES
co ·

Eas.t em ·sof~ballers to begin
plOy ·Thdrsllay .against Lancers..
1

The Eastern girls softball team
·Mandie Harris, Mary J\nn Kibble
currently has 18 pfllyers trying
and Angie Murphy. Also looking
out for a starting berth In this
to play In the outfield are
T)lursday's borne OP,ener against
sophomores . Carrie GHI,llan,
Federal Hocking, March 22.
Mary Jo Reed, Amy Well, Lisa
· Eastern has 7 returnees ·back
Golden and Michelle Laughery,
!rom wbloh . to build a strong
along with frosh Michelle Dona·
foundation, but lost, four Imporvan and Misty Newell.
'
tant seniors from last'year . Lost
Douthitt contlnued," With time
~o grad"uatlon · were Trlsb
outside very limited because of
Spencer, Amy Hager, Heather
the weather we have got a few
Flillaw, and -usa Pooler. Said
gQOd days In outdoors, Including
·EHS coach Pam Doutl!lit, "Trl·
a great week of, practice last
sha ;was our number one pitcher
week. We really need · work
last year with Amy Hager doing
defensively. I ihlnk that In time
· most of the catcher's duties, so
and Ia Itt Ue more playing time
those two positions are going to
under their belts that this team
be hard to fill." · - 1
will do fine."
Eastern has 18 girls out this
"Hitting has looked good so
year. 001 of the '18,14 played last
far . I am very pleased at this
year and 7 of· 14 back were
point with their hlttlnlf. We have
starters from last season, gainseveral girls that have really
Ing quite a bit of (!]aylng'tlme,
Improved In this area since last
Despite the wealth o"f retur(See EASTERN on Pa&amp;e 4)
nees, EHS has just one senior,
Amy Murphy. ·
Dou!hltt said,' 'We have a lot of
The Dail{Sentinel
•:. good 'attitudes, determination, .
and some all-around good ath,
(tl8P8 ltHII)
letes. All · the girls have been
A DIYIIIoa of Mdbnedla. lac.
. '
wogklng very hard In pre-season
Published every arternom, Monday
w9rkouts and seemed verydeterthrwab Friday, Ill Court St., Po·m!ned In having a good season."
merOI'. Qblo. by the Olllo Valley Pulillshlnl Compooy /Muftlmedlo, Inc..
According to Douthitt players
Pomeray, Ohio 6~719, Ph. 1192·U56. Seworking very bard at pitching
cond class p01ta1e paid at Pomeroy,
are senior An.!Y Murphy ,juniors
Ohio.
.
· Edna~riiP· Toby fllll, and
~ember: United Press International ,
Mandie Harris:. and sophomores
Inland Dally PressA•oclation and tbe
Oblo Newapaper Aaoodattoa. National
Tina Connolly and Lisa Golden.
Advert !lin&amp; Represeutattve, Branham
·At the catching poalilon EHS Is
NewiiJOper Saleo. 7:13 Third AYI!nue.
loooklng to junior Lorrie Baker.
New York, New YorlllOOJT.
Lorrte Is working very hard, I!U t
POSNASTER: S...ci oddl'ela chanp
· •'does norhave ~uch expaJ'ience
to The. DollY Sent-.., m .Coun St. ,
at this poeltlon and Is still a little
PomerDI', Clilo - ·
shy of the position."
8VIIIICBII'TIOii' IIATEII
, Douthitt Indicated that she was
one
' Weelt
IIJ Center
......................
• ·- ·
..............
- uo
trying to get a couple other girls
Oae Moatb .................................. 6.10
, Interested In catching.
,
•
Olle'Y• ....................... ...... .. .. ,,72.80
· Lookln&amp; to play first base Is
, -IINOLBOOPY
Tina Connolly, Carrie Morrissey ·
PIUCil
Dotty ........................ ........... 25 Cenu
and Edna Driggs, wheli she Is not
ilubRrlboraaotd..lrlnlrtopoy thl&gt;corpitching.
rler _!1101 remit Ia odvuoo direct to
At second bae LeeGillllu and
TMIIIUY lllldlall on a3, lor 12 moatll
Tabby PbiWP,. will be spllttlq
Cl'edll wUt hi&gt;IIWD ciiTier uch
' the tlrne .there with CatTle
GIUDan and Carrie Morrissey In
No oubacrlptiOM by.mall ponnUted Ia
'arMi Wllere holD! carrier ~ervlce 11
back-up roles.
lvalllble.
Sl!oriltop will be the aame as
second with PhUllpa and Glllllan
........... Cou!J
battling for the starUq nod.
13 WNb ................................. ,f}9.:M
At third wUl be Cal'rie Morrt•·
13'1.16
.WNb ... ............................... f!UII
aey, Tina Connolly, and Lon1e
I ' llfsflpC..o&amp;J
Baker. WCil'ldq bird tor ltartlllf
II WNb .................................. Q).IO
SWNb .................................. tf().30
roles Ill tile outfield are ltlllor
uwet~ta .................................. m.fO
Amy MUrphy ,Juniors Toby Htll;

-··'

'

.

' .

. .

.
'

•

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TO
0111·992·2133~ ·

..

'

.•

•

Our Mortgage Loan ~esentative can tell you how to get:
• Low corppetitive fixed rates
• Low down payment for qualified buyers
\. • ·Noapplicatioo fee
• ~w or no points

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• Fa&amp;t approval
and closjng... usually within two weeks
..

"

• Personal·
service
'
'
For m.OrB informatitm, call Millie M~tlkiffat 992-2133 anytime between
8:30-3:00 ~y through Friday and 8:30-12:00 Saturday. In
Rutland callJoan Mayat742-2888.
•

•

l

•

.

=

...
__....
•w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

,. ..1

-

~

. '·

..

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.

Q

••

~

"

"
_,DIC

IMNK OHE, ATHENS. NAIA NltTOI,.. - l ' U I I
-

~

01t1o

"'

' __~::~"':""' . . __ ...... _._··'t-- •::tf_

"'

�,

..

'·

• I

Page ~ U. Daily Santinel

~·~~ llc'IY,

Ponaoy Mlddlapoct. Ohio

Mach !1. 1180

0~1 of an ~r Ina! turnout of 42 . have a lock on his shortstop

g
. '
33 are stlll vying for position,
giving bead Winebrenner and
assistant Bill Hensler a . wide
selection to choose from .
, Winebrenner listed the follow·
1 as 5tren bs sa 1 " having
Jig
gt
Y ng,
five seniOrs gives us some much
needed experience and leader·
ship. All are returning lettermen.
We shouldbeagoodhlttingteam
and· should be sound
defensively. "
Senior Doug Lavender retilrns
as catcher, Jason Quillen returns
at first base with a .286 batting
average of one year ago, .267
hitter returns to the outfield,
Jerod Moore, a . ~ batter joins
Cleland, while senior Brent
Shuler, a .435 slugger moves In to
replace Porter' at third. Senior
exchange student Javier Bo·
thollo joins the squad . as a
catcher In his first ex{ll;!rlence
with basebalL
JunlorToddGrlndstafflooksto

position, while the other retur·
nee, junior Andy Baer will share
outfield duties and return as the
only pitcher having any varsity
pitching experle~tce.
·
u fr · th reserve 8 uad are
P om e
q
Colin Maidens and Jamie Ander·
son battling It out (or second
bas~. Mark Taylor expects to
help out In the Infield and will
help with pitching If he can
overcome an early ankle Injury,
which bas put him behind..
Michael Kincaid will be bat·
tllng loran lnftel~ position, while
Arnie Dugan wlllduelforplaylng
time In the outfield.
Wlnebrenll!!r said of Bothollo,
a Spanish exchange student,
"Tiils Is his first time ever
playing baseball, but he's the.
hardest working player on the
team."
Sophomore Scott Lisle and
freshmen Jeremy Dill, Eddie
Sawyers, and Kyle WlckUneare

NIT roundup ·

fourreserveplayetsexpectlngto
see some vars IIy plaYIng,II me.
''We will have : a lack · of
pitching this year aa only one
players returns with any varsity
pitching experience, Pile bing Is
alwayu keyfactorlnhlghschool
b ball and will be even more ·
ase
Important now that the league
bas gone to a Monday·
Wednesday-Friday schedule,"
said Winebrenner.
M~!len, G =~n, dT~lor,
a ens, r , ta an .. wy. ,
ers have been working out In the
bullpen 1'!. hopes of joining Baer
In the starting rotation.
Winebrenner continued, "We
will be lacking In overall team
speed with only ' two playets
consistently being able to steal a
base. This 'Will also hurt \IS
defensively ~t Urnes. Doug La·
vender Is .t he only catcher with
any experience and he will b.ave
to stay healthy." · ·
The SHS coach noted that
,.

. pactlcea have IO~welialld that
·1111 clilt! Ia Joolrl•g to nrard Io tile
upcomlq • • - He abo noted
that hll~!1ub allould Improve with
t!xperlence, llavlq to ~don
lt!lllltiiDg early In th!' season to
win blllpmea.
HaYing lost nve · lmporlal)t
seniOrs will be a blgloas tor tile
To~:~~acJoes, buta atroag nucleu•
retuuto,formthefowldatlonfor
thlsyearsteam.

wr"".::n~ f~r: ~~on~~

-tSIIuJor&gt;L :..................... :.............u
llDIIr La-dor L ................................12
llaUOU»L ...................................l~
Jerad - L..........................,.....,... l2
Juca
~

t::•·L.... ............................;M

=ar..'::i:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.1i .
Marl T~tor............................. :..........u

Mldlaetl!lncald ....................... ,..........u
Arnt•llqan....................................,...n

Colin Matdells ........ ............................. 1~

J a m t e - ................. ,................11

L&lt;l_....,,_ ,.
Andy

·

Baor·L ....................... .,. .............1,1
~

Jeremy~~~~.... .. .:.' 9

a
81 rn KyteWtddtne ....................................... 9
and Oak Hill should be the teams Eddie s.,.yera .............. .........L ...... ,.• »
·to be•t I the league. the reatot the Mldi Mams ............................. ............ s
league should be well balanced. ~"! ~~;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::
We shOuld be competitive I f - Joey Hensler .................. ,...: ................ 9 ·
can get some help from our Jo1utCbaney .... ......... ..... " .., ..............~ 9
young pitchers. Hopefully they
will Imp~ 81 the seaaon Keith Joneo ..................................,...... 9
P!'Dgresses.
.
Todd Harnsm ................... ,..........:;.....
Weather ~rmlttlng the yuung · ~.!.~~~::::::::: ::::::;::::::::::::::::: ::::::::lo
Tomadoes will take .to the Cbru·EbenbadL ............. I.... ...... :..... :.. .tQ
diamond this Friday In CAr IIIII Drummer................r .............. to
Ravenswood.
De

:

ll::'=r:.:::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::': :
tg

li!:::l;;.J;;:::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::l8

Plafei' ·. I!OO'niEIINVABIITY

YMr

~..~~~j,;'~~:::::::::: :: : :::::::::::::::: :::::: ::Jg

·DePaul tops' Cincinnati 61-59;
will
meet
St.
Louis
Thursday
.
.

....

~

.

.

~

·
points In the second haif. Lever·
8 United Press lnternatlopal , ball, Howarll grabbed It and p_olnts.
Joward 'to Murphy to winning laye!llt In at the buzzer.
'.'T~at's our last·secoild. con· tis Robinson chipped In 16 and
basket worked like a charm once
With the score tied 59-59 and necllon," Howard said..
Louts Banks 15 tor the ~arc11ts.
a aln for the DePaul Blue
DePaulll)boundlng the ball with
-DePaul; 20·14, will travel to St .
DePaullasHostat Alum\1! Hall
&amp;monsTuesda night.
tO seconds left Tuesday, Murphy Louis Thursday for a matchl!P March 5,1977. The Blue Demons
s e en Howi.-d's follow of a
tO&lt;!k a pass and delivered a with the Bllllkens. St: Louis
bad a 42-game wll\lllng streak at
Cb~c~ Murphy air ball with two three-polnl attemptfrom the top edged Wisconsin-Green Bay 58· the 5,()00.seat campus stadium
5e 0 ds remalnllig lifted DePaul
of the key that was well short. But 54 tp advanc~.
before moving to the more
~
~
•
victory
over
Cincinnati
Howard,
.
who
flnlstled
with
13
'Cincinnati
.
f
inished
,.
Its
first
spacious
Jlosemont Horizon In
1 59
1
a~d Into the qu;irterflnals of the . points, grabbed the rebound and . seailon .under new coach Bob 1980.· Their first-round NIT vtc· ·
National Invltatlont'ournament.
banked lt,ln for the winner. The Huggins 20-14. .
tory overCrelghtonmarked their
Mu h and Howard ccom·
Blue Demons' extended their . DePaul also received a gamereturn to Alumni Hall.
binedrpf:r the same type of
Alumni Hall winning streak to 45 high 18 points frflrl! Dav,jd Boot)l,
Cincinnati scoreq the first five
las t-second heroics In a victory
games.
.
15 from Kevin Hollall!l' and 11 , ' points of tbe second half to go
over Notre Dame at South Bend
"It's called the power Murphy from Murphy:
.
ahead 30-28. The Bearcats
Feb 20 Murphydellveredthealr
play,"saldforwardDavldBooth,
Cincinnati was led by Andre stretched that to 34-30, their
· ·
who led the Blue Demons with 18 · Tate, who scored 13 of his 17

• · J .ancers
·

Eagles Open b aseb· aII Season

~U~amst
-e·

·
.
.
By SCO'IT WO~E
.Chris . Lance, catcher/ right last year and a .383 hitter. .
ieague careers. With someexpe·
Currently 20 players are vying
field~ . Howle Lawrence, out·
Durst, all·SVAC honorable rlence they'll improve ."
for a starting berth on the 1990
fielder Scott Ml~er, Brian Balr mention choice, shared team·
The SVAC has gone to three
E~stern Eagles baseball squa.d ' ley, Matt Sisson, Floyd Ride!\·
high l;&gt;attlng honors of .452 and games a week which will put
which opens Its season ·this
our, Chad Sinclair, Michael was 6·2 ,on the ·mound as a . more of a stress on pitching with
Thursday, March 22 at home
Marlin, and aU-district first freshman. Horner Is a returning non-league games In between.
against Federal Hocking In a . baseman Wade McQueen, 'whO .381 hitter, Jason Hager hit .312,
Also the state has put a 11-inn!ng
non· league tilt.
·
andTlmBis.seUhlt.5601n25tlmes limit on pitchers for any three
was a .452llltter.
Eastern, desptle a rainy spring
On a positive note Eastern has ,at the plate In a late season
given da;;:s.
'
·
1
and many make-up games In
·
Asslstlnt ·coaching duties for
six starters or part-time starters starting role.
1989, finished 12·6 overall last
returning to form a very strong
Currently, seven seniors,
the Eagles this year . will be
year aq~ ,ll-3 In the ' SVAC. · ' nucleqs. Returning lettermen seven juniors, 6 sophomores, and
handled by tortner Eastern star
. Eastern' was third behind South·
include seniors Jeff Horner and 1 freshman are vying for
Charlie Ritchie.
ern (10·2) and league champion
Scott Fitch, juniors Jerrod positions. · ·
Eastern opens Thursday · at
Oak Hill 03·1).
Barber and Jason · Hager, and
Jon Bissell, a transfer student,
home against Federa,J Hocking.
Eastern made it to a 17th
sophomores Tim Bissell and Jeff who played as a freshman Is back. · (Scott Wolfe ..ls Eastern's head
ranking statewide lllst ~~~son
Durst.
.
this year as a senior, along with
baseball coach)
before bowing In the tourpam.ent
, . Senior Kenny Caldwell, a two· senior Shil\l(n Bush.
to Trimble.
Eastern hlld aver~ SI!CCessflll
year starter, may ·miss this
, , " Eastern lost 9 seniors to
season or part of It because of · scrimmage against ·Alexander
EASTERNVARSI'n'
graduation - third baseman
knee surgery. He was·all-league and hit the ball well.
Player '
· Year
Besides Fitch and Horner
Scott Fltcb·L ....... .... .. .... ....... .12
..4 0Ul"meS
(Continued from Page 3)
returning to starting roles,
JeH Horner·L ............... ..... .. .. 12
. ./:1.
u
•• •!.............:==.;;;;.;;.;.;._,;;...___
Hager, Barber, Bissell and Durst
Jon Bissell .............. .... ....... ... .12
Trail Blazers i2o, Rockets 110
tribute to all-time Lakers great
should also regain their
Shaun Savoy .. .......... ...... ...... ..12
At Houston, Clyde Drexl~r . Kareem' ·i\,bdlil·Jabbar ... )"ho re· , positions.
· .
Shawn fiush ..... ......... ....... ., .... 12
· scored a season· high 41 points · tired last year. Armon GilHam
'Look.illg· good In ' remaining
Kenny Caldweli-L .. ..... .. ........ .. 12.
and grabbed 16 rebounds as led CharlOtte with 25 points. .
openings· are juniors Matt Fin·
Matt Flnli!W .......................... 11
Portland Increased Its winning Warriors 185, Tlmberwolves Ill . ' taw, Mark Murphy ,Chris Adains,
Mickey aauer .............. ,........ ..11
streak to 10 games. Otis Thorpe
At .Oakland, Rod Higgins,
sophomores Michael Smith and
Paul · ~rwln .......... ................ .. 11
Jed Ho'u·ston with 27 points, willie replacing the Injured Chris M,ul·
Rod. Newsome.' Mickey .Bauer,
Jason Hager·L ....... .......... ...... ll
Akeem Olajuwon had 21 points ·!In, hit a season-high 26 points
Paul Erwln,1Tony ,Maxey. Kyle Jerrod Barber·L .................... 11
and pulled down 20 rebounds." . and ·· guard Mitch Richmond
Fausnaugh, and Scotty Baker.
Mllfk Murphy ........................ 11
Spurs 128, SuperSonics 1~
·. added '24 ·'o lead Golden State. ~ · ".Pitching illas going to one of Tim Blsseli·L. ............ : ............ 10
At Seattle, David Robinson Minnesota's Tony Campbeh
our strong ' points, but with . Jeff.Durst·L .......................... 10
scored a game-high 39 points to ; seorel34 points In a losing effort. ' Caldwell out we lost that ~dge.
Michael $mith ............... ...,... ..10
lead San Antonio. '[he victory
)filch and Durst,our big winners Rod Neysoine ....... ................10
Nu11eh 111, Cllppen 11% '
was the· Spurs' sixth Jn seven , At J)enver, 'Alex English' last year,will be my' mainstays, Tony 114i!XeY ...... ,... ~............... 10
games. Sedale Threatt · had 19 scored · 28 points ~uld , Denver ,while Tim Bissell and Michael Kyle Fausnaugh ,.............. :....10
points to lead Seattle, which had blocked a season-high 12 shots In
Smith are coming along well Scotty Baker ... ........ :.•... . .. . .. .. 9
a four-game home winning
Its victorY over the Clippers. Fat . after having had good pony L-denotes lettermen
streak broken .
Lever produced his fourth t-riple· ·
~
Lake~;S 109, Hornets 97 ·
double of the season: 17 polnts,10 . · 1:':..-tem
'' ..
(Continued
from Page
3)
~
----~..!:,;:;
· ~At Inglewood, Calif., Byron assists · and a game-blgh 11
Scott contrlbu ted 21 points to lead
rebounds. Danny Manning led season. · Overall, offensively. I ~ on."
the Lakers to victory In a
the Clippers with 25 points.
think we wlll be OK. This group of
Eastern opens .Thursday at
.
: ' ' .
.
.
glrls.has a lot more speee that we home against Federal Hocking.
. l,lave had In illo~ · tlme."
,
"As I stated befOre after the girls
play a few.games I think they will
be all right. With only one senior,
If this group sticks together they
could really be tough the next
Pro results
n.IWI'II'' MKunl!!l
couple of years. We have some
Da
llu
.at
Orlu*o,
•liN
NATIONAL BNJKETBA.LL A.~ YO(',
net I'OM AI Boa-'oa. ......
EIUIIf'rn Co nlfn!nt:l'
very good talented athletes In
Po.,t~ M 8u AntOIIIo, nl~
Atbtntk· Dhibllon
,
this group as· sophomores and
Dfonwr
II
8uitlt,
alp.
T~am
" ' L Pel.. Gl
l'hlladof' lphta ................ 11 %1 .II% juniors.' ~
,
NATIONAL ROCKE\' LEAGUE
NE-W l 'o rk .................... :tl tl .618 1
Walt~~ C....,.,.~
·
"With
the
weather
P.,rmittlng
81\o!oton •• , ..................... .JM fl .JIIol 1\r.,
Palrlek DlvMion
WW!bln~ o n ~ ............... tl U .3Jt II ~
we
have
a
good
schedule.
We will
Trfllll
W L T "•· GP GA
N- Jf'rM')' .•••.••••••••••• , i;i Jl ,UI U
x-NV
Rull"'a
.U
U
lZ
Ill
2111
tU
be
playing
some
tough
non·
Mhunl ............. ............ 15 It .tl-1 tl
New ,,._,. .•.•. 3, A II 'n: !H !IK
league
schoolds
and
I
think
the
· W•W•••• - ~···u M s n n• t11
( 't&gt;nlnt.l Olvl~ kn•
Ptttalbll
rx"
.......
a~:
•
a
lfl
••
w
teams that will be strong In the
IWI: rnlt .......•..•............. 51 1$ .77: NV llllaa•n ... 2t N 10 til !ttl %71
Cl•i caKV .......................-12 n .lilt II
league
again this year wlll he
PhUaddpllla
....
21
u
t
8'2
ns
!71
Mllwaukl•r .................. JI Sl .5!1l 151,.,
Symmes Valley, Kyger Creek
ln.an;a .......................Jt: :u .-IRS II
991-6674
1\da~n~~Dtvl•»n
All•lllo ••.......•....•...••... .J I 3-1 ..an II!Jw
and
Southern.
Don't
count
us
out
ll·Bow&amp;H
..........
.u
u
1
.,
U$
21$
611 UST lUll $11DT
(1f'veli•n d .. :•......•.•.•.. .. .31 3-1 ..... %t
. .. .fflle ......... -lt t1 K 111
Orllndo ....................... l1 41 J:IA U
though, because we'll becompet·
POIIIIOY, 01110
X•MOIItul ...... ,. 'It I A1 nt tn
ltlve and more so as the season

largest lead of the game, before
OePaul came back to tie the ·
score 34·34.
.
The teams then traded .leads,
none larger _than four pol~ts, for
the rest of the way.
, Murphy !!ailed his third threepointer ofthe game from the left
wing to put ~Paul ahead 59·56 .
~th 1:59 ·1eft. But Banks tied It
with a three-point play .with 27
seconds left, and Booth fouled out
on the play.
·DePaul brought the ball down
courtandcalledallmeoutwith10
seconds left, setting up the
winning basket.
At St. Louis, Anthony Bonner
scored 18 points and added 17
rebounds to lead the Bllllkens. St.
Louis, which lost the NIT cham· ·
plonshlp game last year to St.
John's, used a 10-polnt run In the
second half to erase a 29·26·
halftime deficit.
In other second..round action,
New Mexico nipped Oklahoma
State 90-88 and Hawaii deseated
Long Beach state 84·79.

.

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...,.n.fthall.... __.._:_....

.-----------ow

Scoreboard ...

......

.-H.vdei"'I ....... :U II

M"nuen Conltrelll!f&gt;
Mldw'"'l DM•Io•

Tf'wn
W L Pet. Gl
UIMh ............................-11 II .71! Slln Ani onlo ..... ............ U tl .17~ t 'h
Pallall ........................ .35 tt .~ 1'7 II

.se 11
n .nt II
.JK .:ra. 11\lt

O.nW'I' ...... ........ .. ...... .Jt M

HeuMto,. ...................... .J 1
Mln,." ota ................... 11
('hutlotlfl ..................... ll

)I

.11'! S5

Parllk IMvlalon
L.A. Labn~ ......... .... ....tl II .711 Portland ............ .......... IR Ill .711 l ltt

Pho!•lx .......................H H .IlK

-t 'tt

Sflllllt .........................3S It .1111 It

r.. lden StaiP ................3t

3~

,tC II
L.A. OlpprrA ...............te -M .JtC U %

S.w:nmtMo ................ .Jt n .H8 a
1\tf'IMIIIIJ'II rftl••
Or.._. 111.
New Veri!. Ill

~·- lit. 111.-nl •

Olk ... Itt. ......... tl
Dfj . . .

8•

71
31

..

117, lllhra 11M.

iU au

Ca':'lph.-41 Collftnitcf'
Narrt. DMM~n

W L T " "· GF GA
• . Ill
I Ill 21t
~· ~~·
%11
Toi'OIIIe ~ ......... SI Sl :1 'II all all

Tum

.

li-Kt. t.lll• ....... 31 •
~~:-CIIIcap ........ J1 II

Mha_.llla ....... at 311

J);troll ............

.

!,

t

•

......

U II ., 211 ft1

lhnJ•f' Dh-ll .. n
x-t:alprj .. ......11 II If n
x-84I'MIIIoa..... u n 11 Q
. ........... ......11 •
~
"'I
X•Lft Allpl...l l .. I ,.
VAHOuwr ....... tl 41 II ll

m
ftt "'
••
!IIJ !7S

Jll

au

til ••

n.,,..... ut
A.loMo liS, SuUie IM

'hflll ..........

,er.,.
v.-.•wrt.DIINit

WMIII ... •I.NYie..-.r.t
~...-..... I, New
I

... . . . . . t . . . . . .

Stop·bl .ancl Let. Us _S~ow lo.~ . "t
Our. "New" Wolff Tanning Beds,:.
1

LA. . LUII!I'\t Itt, 01 II'W.W 11'

Gol*• Ma1e 111. Ml•ecu Jtl

We.... o'••-•
Ml.-niU PIIWflplll .. l : • p.m.

N..- .ff'f'_,. II ......., .. 7: . p,rft ,
Qlupoll A.l ... l.- , 7: 11p.m.
Cltvef_. II ......, I p.m.
LA 01,.... II UtD., toM P•l11· .
Qlll'lltte II Pll-.lx, t : •p.m.
MI1...U It IJICI'IImell&amp;o, Jt: Jl p.m.

. SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI
PIZZA· BURGER

S1.34

QHbee II R....,.nl, 'J;:U p.m.

.Cal-olhttolo.T,a,...,

T•,_.• II NV a .. I'Q. t lllf.m,
Mellllbe........,... t :Q .....
IIIWI ....... I;:II,.m,

......_..............._,.,.. _
a....._
~

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

• ....... Dii.........
Ne.- .~er., 11 Olleap, •111111

NY ........ , .. Lu All ..-. •IJM

Y,

1

"TANNING APPOINTMENTS"
FROM 11:00 A.M.-9:30 P.M.
7 DAYS A WEEK!!

NEW RELEASES .
I

•STEPFATMEI II ,
•AN INNOCENT

IIAN

•SHOCKER

'

•

99 MILL SIRED

REVOLUTIONARY

••

'
_ That's what they
said when a little band
of colonist!! took on the
British Empire In
1775. Ani\ won.
That's .what they're
11aylng today about
A.L. WUllams. In 1977,
this brand new
company took on the
largest, most powerful
industry in America the Ute Insurance
Industry.
And won.
ID1988: '
&lt;
.
\
8.1 blllloa of IDdlvldaal We IDsuraace plaeed
In force tbrougb MILICO•"
·
SZII'U biWoa totaiiD force (more tban any ·
''
other ilfe lnsuruce compaay ID America·)
i
Our competition calls it "a nuke"
••1
We can it a revolution.

i

i

'
DENNIS L HOCKMAN
AND ASSOCIATES .
614-992-7066
657 High Strttt, Middleport, Ohio'
'

'

.

WITH FRIES..."$1.99

~·
•

••
•

Y
REPRESENnNG

·', ADOLPH'S DAllY VALLEY

ALWilliams
.
A...

. "It tile ... tf tile Ptn 1rey ••n• lil.. l"
POiinOY, 0110
PH. Hl·255.

'
•

Ill~

.

. . . , -AIIIiol-

~ttnotac.:UJIIIII 'I·--~ DUI~GA.

I

··
.

•.A.L. WUIIIaml fiJWlltadll . . . -11111111 IINMatOfMM. . .IItlt ~r,aad

'

, W•-•~&lt;Mn-'Qil.

s·m· allwood Wa.t"ves..J•ury
·

'

,.

'

'1
.

.

daughte,r·ln·lMaw,idM'
r . danledMprs .

.rDotkeeCposm~lllnrg.t-------

0

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C

Five were flruicl and two other:; squealing tires and $10 fine for
" forfellitt bonds ln1..J be court of Illegal registration, and Joe
~ Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Drummond, GaiUpolls, $25 and
~ Tuesday night. ·
cost, disorderly . manner, and
Flnec;l were
Pierce,
and costs, destruction . of
, Pomeroy,
$425 Michael
and costs
with $200
property.
three days In jail, DWI; and $25
F.orfelting bonds In the court
= and
costs, no operator's license; • were Dwayne Fisher, Middle-·
Melissa J . Dalley, $10 fined only, port, $100 bond on disorderly
~- running a stop sign; Jerry
-manner, · and $210, resisting ar·
~~ Collins, Middleport, $10 and rest; and Todd Edwin Evans,
costs, : S(Jueallnfl ·. tires; · Tim Barte!YIIIe, ·Okla. $60 bond on
. Smith, Racine, $10 and costs for running a stop sign.

fi

i~

Pomeroy
Court
report
Three were fined on charges of and $63 and costs, expired

" night.
· Fined .$375 and costs on the
&amp;charge were Arlie Malone, Ra·
~ cine, and Ricky Stone, Middle·
~rt, both also fined $63 and costs
for operating under suspension;
.:t"'a.ftd Robert L. Rime,. Pomeroy,
~ also fined $63 and costs for
" operating under suspension, $43
it and costs; left of center, and $43
• and costs, a second charge of
under suspension.
~ Also fined In the court were
:;; Roger Dll~rd, Jr., Pomeroy,
~ reckless 9perauon, $163 and ·
!'I costs, reckless operation; Mat· .
: thew Dillard, Rutland, $63 and
= costs, driving under suspension

=

~
·
~ Hospital news

=

,,. '

•

VMn

• Tuesday admissions ~ Wll· .
: !lam Todd Norton, Pomeroy.

Thai order, Issued by Portage
County Common Pleas Judges
Joseph Kalnrad and George
Martin, required that all legal
notices be carried lit the Legal
News, published by Dally Legal
.News Inc., unless cowisel re·
quested otherwise.
Writing for the majority of the
court, · Justice Andrew Douglas
said county jud'ges may have
their own calendar printed In a
weekly publication If there Is no
dally law jpurnalln the county.
. However, Do11glas wrote that

registration; Michael Stanley.
Athens, $113 and costs, and three
days In jail, public Intoxication;
and Roger Estep, Middleport, $88
and costs.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Benjamin Gerber, Lancaster, $55 speeding; 'Christine
Greene, Shade, U3. failure to
yield; James Conrad, Charles·
ton,' W. Va., $63 OReratlng under
suspension; Anthony TomaceiU,
Galloway, $43, Illegal left turn,
and Terry Thompson, Albany,
$43, Illegal left turn.
·

The Phllathea Soclety"of the
Middleport Church of Christ wlll
observe Ladles Day at Kentucky
Christian College on ~arch 29.

lmRUGEIATOIS,TY~
GAS &amp; EUC~ IANGES

COUNTY ·\,
APPLIANC'ES
621 :Srd AYI,. G •••IIi '

Pll. ""'·16H ,,, ,.
lOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

MEIGS COUNTY .
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
'

'

·spring Banquet
Dinner &amp; Dance
SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1990
ROY lL OAK RESORT
SOCIAL HOUR
DINNER (Steak)
6 P.M.-7 P.M.
7 P.M.
DANCE 8:30 P.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
ADMISSION
$25,00 PEl COUPLE $15.00 SINGLE
WILL IESEIYE I AILES FOR 5 OR MORE COUPLES
IESERYATIONS NEED TO IE IN IY UICI 16, 1"0
AT IHE CHAIIIEI OF COME~CE
FOR MORE INFOIMAIION 992·5005

p
e· f e· r 0.. u
To
A·
nna
·
unce·
·1 . .
. •••

·' ,

~

·

'

,

·

... the .creation of a new
experience in childbirth.
Pteasant Valley Hospital has long been recognized In
our community for our progressM:.and famlly-&lt;XIented
maternity services. We're taken tile concept of
family-centered matem!tY care one step further with the
opening this month of 'Creations'- our new maternity
unit.
'
From the moment you ftrst learn you're expecting, we're
llere to guide you tlvough your pregnancy and llelp make
the experience of gMns birth a posltM: one for you and
your family.
Our private room5 are warm and comforting u well u
medkaJiy sophlsdcated. and our specially deslsnecf birthing
beds allow you to labor, deliver. recover and bohd with
your baby In the !IlTie roan.
:You and }lOIII baby may spend as much tbne together
as you Dke. Ow skilled nurses, cwho care for bot!) you and
your baby. are always nearby to provide support In every
aspect of newborn care and parenting ~Dad Is Invited to participate In labor. delivery and
bonding and may room In with Mom and baby - a &lt;&gt;cotDim"lf!"'r
chair n:dlnes for comfortable sleeping. Grandparents and
big brother and sisters are spedll guestS. and 11e welcome
to visit Mom and the new baby right In tllelr room.
For more Information about lilrnlly-centered maternity
care at Pleasant Valley Hospital, cal (304) 675 4340,

INSURANCE

..
'::
AGENTS sav•&amp;

~!::=,~

-85 COUm

: 'Would you like to work 40 hours each week,
•
; travel at company expense, and be away
from home Monday to Saturday and earn
: $300.00 to $500.00 per week, with excel·
: lent corporate benefits. If this is you aiMI you
•
"' have an enthusiastic out-goil• personally
"I and would like to work with other enthUJias·
1 tic out-goh. penoSiJHes In our company,
: caH 304-372·4657 _(Collect Calls are ac•
•
1
ceptld) or apply in penon to Sue Taylor at
I Super I Motel, Ripley, W. Yo•.• ·
J Accepting caH1 .or appllcati0111 bttwHII
!
9 AIH PM or 5 PM-9 PM.
.S.___.....__T_ue_•.-..r_lhr_u_F_ri_da.-y_.~·-~-.....,..&amp;

I

L-. -..-...

GOOD USIO
WASHERS, DIYBS,

I

DOWNING ·CHI.LDS
'
.MUUEN. MUSSER
1

"We are fully persuaded that II
Is unrealll;tlc to believe that the
general public would purchase
Legal News to become appraised
of puling events of a political,
religious, commercial or social
nature," said Douglas.
Douglas said the Record·
Courter, with 25,000 clrcVlation,
meets the requlrementt, as a
newspaper of general ctrcula·
lion, and that Judges could make
·no restriction limiting that news·
paper's right to publlab legal
notices .

•
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-----------------..-'"""------~~-----------------------\
.

t--....;·.;,'.;.··--- - - - - - ' 1
.

the Legal News, with a clrcula·
tton of 251, does not quality 81 a
newspaper of general circulation .
for the purpose of destpatlnl
where all county and municipal
court calendars are publlahed.

Correction

. Sorority to meet

At 3:27
a.m .,Millo;!
Rutland
No. 2was
for
called
to Meigs
· Bernard Hudson to Veterans
. . The Preceptor Beta Beta ChapMemorial Hospital.
Racine at 6:52 p.m. went to ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Bucktown Road for Woodrow meet Thursday, 6 p.m. at the .
Hall to Veterans Memorial · Grace Episcopal Chu reb P arlllh
.House. Members are to bring a
Hospital.
At 8:34 p.m., the Middleport sack dinner.

~ -·~;~.-~N;$ $;;·; •.

!/..

•

COLUMBUS. Ohio !UP!) The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday that countylud&amp;esdo
not have authority to designate a
specific publication to exclu·
slvely carry legal notices.
The hlgb court also held that a
legal newspaper published once
a week II not a ''dally'' Jaw
journal.' as defined by law.
The court ruled In favor or the
Record Publishing Co., publisher
of the Record -Courier In Ra·
venna, which complained that ·a
1983 · court order was
unconstitutional:

·EMS responds to calls

!'~ Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesll~y
~ ·

Kenneth L Haley

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'

~ DUI In· the court of Pomeroy

•

_ __..Area deaths-- Court rules on legal notices

tended Illness.
Born on June 7, 19211n Bedford
Townahlp,
be was the son of
KeDDeth L. Haley, 59, of
BJ BOB BOEPUCB
,.
Charles Ho.,.on and then It's oH
Maye
Hart
Cumings, Pome~:oy,
Gallipolis, formerly of Rutland,
I don't know how we're goana to Anchorage. Ala.U, where
died Tbunday at lfolzer Medical add the late Victor Cumings. He
llandle tj)ls.
Mary Ann will visit aJlother son · Center fo1lowlng a lengthy' was a longtime rural mall
· Cohu'nbus;
and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
carrier and retired from the
Illness.
· Franklin County
Geol'le Hobson. And .then It's
Born at Carroll, Ohio on Oct. Pomeroy Post Office.
_.d State Offt.
back home.
Besides his mother. ht~ Is
29, lQI, be was a son ot the late
c~ls are emSollllda like Mary Ana could
Lelaild Haley and Cbrll Stilwell survived by hll Wife, Gladys'.
)lrol!ed In thll
end up being a weary traveler. · Haley, who aurvivl!l and lives on Cumings, Pomeroy; a son, Rei
·pollfllct on the
----~Happy Hollnw Road In the (Kathy) Cumings, Syracuse; a
disposition of
Tbe Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Rutland area. He was employed daughter. Jenelle, Cincinnati; a
't he old Ohio PeDepartment 18 spoiiiDrlne a fund . at Bob · Evans Restaurant at brother. Durward (Nina) Cum·
nitentiary site In Columbus. It'a, drive to raise money for
logs, Pomeroy, and four grand·.
Gallipolis.
.
been standing empty for a long equip~!.
. '
'
In addition to his mother, Mr. chlldr~n . Amber and Adam Cum·
time - now suddenly It's a big . Des~nated Jnd!VIduals will be · Haley Is survived by four daugh· lngs and Whitney and Breyden
&lt;Jiroblem - a $5.2 million one. On visiting homes within the fire 'ters, Mrs. Wendell (Debra) Nor· Haptonstall.
&lt;top of that tbe be.au Uful spring district during the next few
A veteran of the U.S. Army,
rls, of Bidwell, Mrs. David ·
l!owers got embarrused· by the weeks asking for donations of
World
War II. he was a member
(Kimberly) Warren, of Crown
~old and win~ on the flrst day of · $15. The selected Individuals will
of
Drew
Webster Post 39, Amerl·
City, Mrs. Steven (T&amp;IIlJIIY)
spring and bung their heads.
be carrying appropriate ldentlfl·
James, cif Gallipolis, and Mrs. can Legton, Pomeroy, and 40et8,
What a bummer. ·
cation. In appreciation of the John (Christie) Barcqs, of Mid· Volture Locale No. 776.
donations, the department will dleport; five grandchildren; , one
. Funeral services will be l,leld
~ . Far away places lflth strange
give donors a certificate entitling brother, John ~ey, of New Friday at 1 p.m at the Ewing
;$oundlng names. ·
them ·to an eight by .ten co tor
Lexington, Ohio; one sister, Mrs. Funeral Home. Eugene Under·
" And far away places It Is for portrait to be taken at tile
Robert (Judy) Miller, of Ru· wood wpll officiate and . burial
Mary Ann (Susie) Sorden of department's headquarters.
tland; .and also a special friend, will be In Wells Cemetery.
:fdlddleport Who will leave on
Friends may call at the funeral
Yvonne Sexton, of Gallipolis.
April 2 for China on a ul)lverslty
Laura Hoffman, 1704 W.
Besides his father. Mr. Haley home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m
'i!xchange program. , ·
.
Mound St.. 'CoiWnbus, Ohio,
W81 , preceded In death by his Thursday.
1.• A long-time empioyee .at-Ohlo
43223, . would like to test the · wife, DQrls Liter Haley; an lllfant
UnlverBity where she wor!QI In memory of some of you Mlddlf· · son, Jeff; · and one brother, ' ·Dutch Well
Alden Ubrary, Mary· Ann app- port historians and . long-time
Robert Haley.
lied fqr participation . In the rresldents.
Services will bent Sunday, '. 2
Masonic services for Vern C.
~excban11e program ·and was the
She writeS athat she has been
p.m., at the Hunter Funeral (Dutch) Well, 78, of State Route
line seleCted from Ohio U. She Is going througft some possessions
Home In Rutlant! with Rev . Miles 681, Shade, who died Tuesday at
the first civil service employee of her late husband Including Trout officiating. ' •trial will be Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and the first female to ~ some picture postcards. One of at Miles Cemetery. Friends may will be held this evening (.Wed·
:accepted as a program them lsaphotoofBungalowPark call at the funeral home from 2 to nesday) ; 7:30 p.m .. 1 · ~ .... - ·
rpartlclpant.
In Middleport. It Is very old and 4 and 7 to 9 on Satl!fday .
. Funeral Home. CaJUn&amp; ..~- _
,· Mary Ann will be flying to · undated since It never went
the funeral home will be tonlgl!t
,Hong Kong and from there will go · through the malls. Mrs . Hoffman David H. Cumings
from 6 to 9 p.m.
to· Wuhan University In Wuhan. would !Ike to know If Bungalow
Mr. Well's funeral will be ·
.•where she will spend thre~ and Park Is tile present General
David H. Cumings, 68, of Thursday, 11 a.m., also at the
one-half weeks. AI the university Hartinger Park or If ~as what · Harrisonville Road, Pomeroy;
funeral home, with Rev. Alan
'She will l!e lecturing on acqulsl· was earUer kriown as Pyth.lan died Tuesday at Veterans Mem· · BlackwQod officiating. Burial
.tlon and au tomaUon and Will be Park which she remembers as a orlal Hospital fiollowlng an ex,
wlil be at Burlingham Cemetery .
&gt;teaching .l converslitlomal Eng· training camp In World War I. ·
.USh. After that, Mary Ann will go Personally, I thought that Bun· ..
~~al
llo&amp; .a
to Beijing where she will meet galow Park during It's existence
'several people with whom she was more uptown In Middleport.
Buford Smallwood waived his and In lieu of a fine or land
·has worked at Ohio U., when they
Perhaps, you can satisfy Mrs. right to a trial by jury 'and forfeiture, was ordered to pay
were In Athens as Interns. She Hoffman's curiosity. If so, drop entered a wtltten plea of gilllty to $4,000 to the Meigs County Law
will spend a week. as a guest In her a note at the above address.
a charge of trafficking In drugs Enforcement Trust Fund.
lthelr home which will allow her
L
-------when he appeared recently In
In another court matter, a
It's time to count beads again. . Meigs Common Pleas Court temporary restraining order has
:time· for tour trig the country.
-Then It's offto another city In the You'll be getting a fol'll) to ·before Judge Fred Crow IIJ.
been Issued agalns t the defend·
.Republic of China where she will complete from the U. S. Bureau
SmaUwood was sentenced· on ant In the case of Flint Greer
:spent four days with other of the Census Yla mall. If you the charge to six months In prison against Debra D. Greer.
·friends who~J~ she also ll)et while don't respond·, then someone
·.they also were working In the . visits you gets you Involved In the
head count.· If you're lonely you
·Alden Library. ( .
might welcome the company :· And you think that's all? No on the other hand, maybe you'd
Threecallsforasslstancewere Fire Department assisted GaiU·
way.
pgefer to complete the form
answt!red Tuesday by Meigs . polls Fire Department In Gallipo&lt; • Mary Ann will then go to Seoul,
yourself. Just what we aU needed 'Emergency Medical Services lis and Addison.
"! ~!&gt;rea, to visit her SQn and
- one more form to complete .
units.

=

COMING MARCH 2'
•DEAD POD'S
SOCim ·
•THE ABYSS
•BEST OF THE BEST

The o.lly Seutiuel Plgr 5

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

t

'

we-...., .• •....,

nt, u

MI .... IRe • ...... 7: • p.m.

Ul U!

ll-&lt;:IIEW piQaH berdl

r.rta-.1........ , ..
0t11wr

1

q.twt&gt; ............ n w .,

..

PEOPLES CHOICE·VIDEO ..

NB'

..

· At 1\lbuqueriJue, N.M., Luc
Longley made a four-foot jumper
wllh two seconds left to l;lrealt a .
tie a1Jd lift New Mexico to the
quarterfinal round. The Lobbs,
who have won nine of 10 games,
Improved to 19·12.. Tl,ley host
Hawaii Friday.
.,
Longley, a 7·2 center, finished
with 11 pointS, while teammates
Kurt Miller led New Mexico l!(lth
24 points , and Rob Rob bills
finished with 23.
•,
The Cowboys, 17·14, were led
by .Darwyn Alexander, who
scored 19 points.
.
At Honolulu, Terry Houston
scored a game-high 27 points.and
hit five free throws In the last
minute to lead Hawaii to tlie
quarterfinals. Troy Bowe bad 16
and Chris Gaines and Vincent
Smalls added 15 each for the
Rainbows. Tyrone Mitchell led
Long Beach. State with 18 points
and Luelous Harris added 17.
Hawaii, 25·9, set a school
record with Its 25th victory. Long
Beach State finished 23-9.

•

'

M.-cit 21, 1990
rBe4t of the Bend

What to do with p.eri

Soui~em to start .baseball season. friday at .Ravenswood .·.
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senllael Correspondeat
With 33 players vying to make
the varsity club, the Southern
Tornadoes of Coach Ml&lt;;k Winebrenner hope to improve on their
second place finish In the SVAC
·
··
of one year ago and regain the
crown they won just two seasons
ago. The Tornadoes open this
Friday, March 23 iit Ravens·
wood, W.Va.
Southern finished 9-9 last year
an!\ 10·2ln the league behlndl3·1
Oak Hill. Two games with Kyger
Creek were not made up.
Graduated from last year's
squad were five seniOrs - Mike
Amos, a .233 hitter lfnd SVAC
honorable mention; Mark Par·
ter, an aii·SVAC player who
'batted .,'!86; Tndd Lisle, an
'all·SVAC player, batting .379;
and Chris Stout, who at .407
garnered SVAC honorable men·
lion. Also gone is Shane Simpson
and one transfer.

Vltdn I~"Y•

ext. 253.

'

reationscm
Where Generations Begin
A member of the

IJd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITALFoml/y of ProMslonols
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LOG HOUSE- 140Z.

FlEISCHMANN'S • 16 OZ.

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Ham .......·••• ~.;••••••••••••!!•• S2 .29
Meat Salad.~•••••••••••• u....... 89&lt;

Candidate. balances work, family
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COIIPLETI UNGI OF SnUS AND COLOIS
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THUISD,AY, FIIDAY &amp; SATUIDAY ,

JB.LOW

DAYTON,, Ohio (UPI) - A Troy woman who learned 'in
January she was an astronaut candidate say- motherhood and a
car~r are not only possible but essential.
"You don't want to deny family for a career. It's a c)jallenge
but It's well worth It," said Nancy Decker Sherlock, who has a
3· year-old -daughter.
·
·
Sherlock, 31. Is .a fll&amp;ht Instructor for the Army and the
Natlj1nal Aeronautlca and Space Adm!DIItr,uon and a student
worll'lng on a doctorate In industrial enetneering. In January, It
was announced she was one of 23 candldrtes selected to begin
training at Houaron's Johnion Space Center on July 15.
..
S))e said her husband, who wu recently transferred from
Korea to Callfomla, Is "totally supportive and io\llng."
"'I'here's no greater joy than havlnt a family to l)lare success
with. I'm very happy t she told students at Alter Hip School In
Dayton Tu~ay.
Tile 1977 graduate of Troy Hllh School wu a helicopter
tralnblrlutructor In Alabama before belna uslpec:l to NASA
l'tN )'RI'I 110.
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IANQUET - 21 OZ. BOX

· Cooked Ham•••••• sucrD...Ib. $ 1.99
Slfl801
Jumbo Bologna •••••••&amp;•• S1.3 9

fruit Loops ••• ~••••••\\.\~•• S2 .69
• ••1611
Peas ••..JLa••• 2/*1.39
Corn ......~J.&amp;a••• 2 /S1.29

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Sunday, 11

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-·

EATON, Ohio (UPJ) , ·- The Pr!!bie County sherltrs
department has issued an arrest warrant for a former hi~
school principal who allegedly stole $1,263 from the school
district.
•
·
John Morton Jr. resigned trol!) the Tri-County Norlh Hlp
. School March 7 and Tri-County North treuurer LyM Ferguson
flied a grand theft c.h arge against hlm March I3.
The~rrest warrant alleges Morton depoSited~ ~heck PIIYable
to the school district in hl.l · personal account without the•
.d istrict's approval. He remalried at large TUesday·. . .

BOX

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StOcks

Ex-principal solight

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'·

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DIN1Y MOORE - 7 I /2 OZ.

estimate ltlllh !acta alate, race - the City Rescue Mluion,
and sex. Jndltrerence and reluc- where ~ homeless people were
tance were common response but ataylng Tuesday nlfht, and the
cenaua
taken were told not to Salvation Army's Harbor Light
By United Preu laleriiiJIDaal
continued nslng Tutlday, and
Center, which had 55 beds filled .
press
tor
auwera.
the Choctawhatchee crested at 9
Spring's first full cjay bore an
·
At
the
Baloney
Joe's
shelter
In
Census officials said they wer·
uncanny r.embjaace to winter
feetabowfioodatate. Tbeentlre
Portland,
Ore.,
census
workers
en't
aware of the mission and
In the East, with temperatures
population of Caryville, 800 peogave
0111
cipretiel
to
entice
tho~q~ht the center waa a perman·
diving below freezing In sou them
ple, has ~ evacuated, said
some
of
the
62
men
In
the
shelter
tnt
group home and not a sheUer.
states Wednesday, wet snow
Washington County Admlnl.ltra·
to
talk
with
them
and
fill
out
the
·
"
How
can you call yourself a
tor Rater Hagan.
making New England's roads
.........
forms.
·
brief
census
and
you can't come to the
sloppy and flumes decorating
Rain fell In much pf New.
.
In
Dallas,
at
the
Austin
Street
most
well·known
shelter In the
the mid-Atlantic.
England, where up to 14 Inches of
Shelter,
the
Rev.
Jerry
Hlll.
the
,
city?"
said
John
Everett.
night
High pressure made sou· heavy, wet snow lelt thQuaands In
.
director,
was
unenthusl·
shelter
manager
at
Harbor
Light.
"Eve·
therners shiver and . prompted V·ermont without power ,
. astlc but allowed a team of 10 rybody knows about this shelter
frost and freeze warnings SPIIwnl'd dozens of traf(lc · mi~nsus takers Into the facUlty .
-but evtdeptly they don 't." ·
~ llllft ~ '*"'' .
a· ~
thro'!ghout the region, although. ·shaps and caused the Connect!·'
' "We · 10 through ' thiS every
skies were relatively clear. The cut River to overflow Its banks.
.._.~:. ·
=:""'l..:..l
damn year," said Hill. "It people
•,
.( G·..,.c.a... ·m~l ttiiM'M II'UI"I tJ 'oMto o'ou:~..
mereury dropped to 31 In KnoxAlthough rain fell Iii much of
don'i
know we have a homeless
ville, Tenn., and farmers acro8s the region, many areas were
WEATIIBB MAP - lllp pna1111n will tlomiiMe tile
Continued trom page 1
problem
the Carolinas and Virglnla were blanketed with snow, including
u.a; willa ~ ... mllll colldlllo•. A - 11t1r111 .,...~ will will." by now, then they never
warned about possible damage to
the village of WliUamsiOwn, VI .,
spokesman said.
IIIOft t!U'•IIP tile o....a ...._ltetlloallvlq t11em a ....-... er
· In Detroit, census takers ap·
crops.
where 14 Inches accumulated,
Greyhound hired Shaw the day
· nln ud - · Blp •• · an and faluklel wtllpmallf~ 1 the
~&gt;~~renlly aldpped two of the city's
Flooding from rains that
the N,ational Weather Service
the
strike began but had not
MkllaMa .. tile W•t C..t. Tile utreme Norlllena U.S. Will be
,l_a rgest and best-known shelters
lashed the region earlier In the
reported.
la¥ndid by tbe ant (',.dlen cold lroat.
finished hls background review,
t
An estimated 8,500 customers
week continued to make trouble
Scarpino said. " We didn't know
for Selma, Ala., where state · of the Central Vermont Public · mont, ·· with •t least 50 cars mating rite for dozens of spptted'
he was an Army deserter," he
officials said as many as 1.000
Serclce Corp. were left without
leaving area highways, Vermont mole salamanders. Each spring,
said.
. Today, mos liy sunny wlth a
power from two to five ' hours · State PoUce dlapatcher Susan the love· struck artphlblansleave
people could be evacuated before
Shaw disappeared May 28,
high
50
to
55.
Southwest
·
w~n
s
the waters recede.
Tuesday morning and afternoon.
.
1987,
from the .364th Supply and
N!!deau said. '
their holes in an Amherst hillside·
lncreasln&amp;to
10
to
20
mph.
.
Two rain-swollen rivers In the
'Meanwhile, lftOtorlsts wef!! .
In near~ Amherst, Mass., the and cr,o ss Henry Street to·get to
Service Co. at Fort B~agg, N.C.,
Tonight, partly cloudy w a . a spokesman said. He was placed
Fiorid.a Panhandle.-. the Chaeta:
having a hard Ume negollatlrig . rains triggered an annual spring·
mating ponds across the road.
low around 40. Southwesfwlnds on the desener rolls on June 27,
snow·siick roads 'ln central Ver·
whatchee and Apalachicola ""
io to 15 mph.
·
1987.
Thursday, variable cloudiness
The weekend talks in Tucson
with a high 60 to 65. Chance of conapsed when Greyhound nego,
.
I
I
rain Is :10 percent .
tiators accused the union of
WASHINGTON (UPI)
ence to your deliberations, This
Frldar lllr0111h Sunday
refusing to budge on Its demands.
Former President Ronald Rea- Videotape is des,igned to bring
Generally fair Friday and Greyhound said the company has
gan appeared Wednesday before hlm here. "
Saturday
with a chance of ralnor already offered "ail It can
the jury In John Poindexter's
.The jury watched attentively
DEFIANCE, Ohio iUPI. - ·A De !lance County JU'venlie Court
Iran-Contra trial tllrough video- as Reagan, looking fll and clad In · snow in t~e north Sunday and afford" and that the union
judge , has Issued a gag order In the cue of. a 14-year-old
, taped testimony In which he a dark suit, answered the ltrst • rain In the central and south. demands "three limes as much."
Ayersvllle youth accused of shootlnc his mother and a family
Highs mainly In the upper 30s to
Late last year Greyhound
Insisted he dld not know aboui · quesUonil.
. friend earlier this month.
'
' .,
'
upper
40s.
Lows
will
be
In
the
30s
of!erl"d the union a three-year
if,ey parts of the scandal and
The pr~cullon rested Its case
Judge Stephen Ruyle Issued the order Tuesday during a ·
friday and between '25 and 35 contract that Included a 6.9
never
ordered
aides
to
lie.
·
Tuesday,
argliln&amp;
that
Poindex.
pretrial conference for Josef Burket. The youth Is charged with . ·
Saturday aad Sunday.
. percent Increase In wages and
. In ltsfirst.~uUdayotpresenting . ter, ~3. wu a mastermind behllld
two coun!s 9! delinquency by re~.On of aggl;avated rnurde.:.
:,
benefits In the first year. Union
their case, attorneys lor Po index· the worst acandal ot Reaga'n' s
. His trial "':Ul be held A,prll .5 and April 6 In Juvenne Court .
members,
citing a 22 percent pay
ter,
who
was
.Reagan's
national
·
presidency.
·
' The judges order prolllbHI prosecutors, defense law~ers or
cut
they
took
when the company
security
adviser,
began
playing
The
retired
Na\'y
rear
admiral
other authorities' trom publicly discuss inc the cUe.
·
was
sold
In
1987, rejected the
the
nearly
eight
hours
of
video·
Is
charged
with
five
felony
counts
Burket Is being held In the Wood Gounty juwnde.detention '
Dally
a&amp;eek
prleea
after.
lying'
to
Coneress
and
then
ot
taped iestimon:v. given by the
facUlty for the Aprli 5 shooting of hls-inother, Karen Burket; aJ111
(AI eflt:• Lm.)
Greyhound has hired aboul
tormer president In Los Angeles trying to'block ltslnvestitatlon of
a neighbor, Carolyn Kauffman, in the bOy,' l home:
:
Bryce
lllll'll
Smith
1,000
non· union · replacemenl
reb. 16 and 17.
the scapc:lal. He is the hi&amp;hest·
No motlve.for the shooting has been etwn. aurket Is an el1hth
or
Blullt,
m111
6
Loewl
drivers
Although a transcript of the ranking administration official
grader In the junior hlfh division ~f Ayersvllle High Schpol.
testimony was released last to stand trial In the Iran·Contra1
montll, the videotape Itself was aflalr.
0 Am Electr1c Ppwer ............. 30%
In hls t.estlmony, Rta&amp;an said" ATit:T .. .... ...... ... .... .............. 41~
not a) lowed to be broadcast until
t
-, .. .,. ,
It was used In court, so the at least 12f times that he could' Ashland 011 ... ,.................... 35J.a ,
Bob Evans ........................... 13
. DAYTON, Qhlo (!)PI) -One of three high school sfudenta ·
flve-ma,., seven-woman jury was not remember events, someCharming
Slioppes .. ..... ........ 9Y,
charged With beating ani! decapitating 17 .ducks in a, , ·~elng It for the first time t.lmes including major P41rts of
City
Holding
Co ....... :·........... 13
the scandal .
.
Miamisburg park was selltenced Tul!sday to 90 days Ill jail arid·!; .. Wednesday . ·
Federal MotuL ... .... ............ 18~
fined $750.
·
,
·
' ·'
However, the contents of the
But Reagan did not waver froni
GoOdyear
Tlt:R . .... .... .......... 373,4
Ste'phen BreediJii, 18, who pleaded · flllllty to a charge pt
tapes held no surprises because the position he has taken since
Heck's
..........
.. ..... ........ .. .. .... 3Y.
cruelty. to animals, was also ordered to ~rve five weeks this
of massive media attention that the scandal broke In November•
Key
Centurion
........ .. ..... ..:. .13%
surrfmer at Carriage Hili Farm working with animals.
resulted when the printed trans· 1986, saying even today he Is'
Lands'
End
.........
............ .... l8%
unaware or the crux ot the affair!
Miamisburg MunlclP41l Judge Robert Meesham Jr. suscrlpts were released.
J•c
........................
40J.I
Limited
pended $500 of Bree&lt;llng's fine and &amp;Odaysor jail timeprovldinl
Ali players In the trial satin the - that profits from secret arms'
Multimedia
Inc
.
..................
~%
Breeding performs the community lervlce.
,
their us.uai , places Wednesday sales to Iran were funneled to the .
Rax
Restaurants
.................
. 2'4
Nicaraguan Contras when U.S.
A second student, Richard Garrison Jr .. 18, was to be
andwatchedReagan'at~timony
Robbins
It:
Myers
................
15%
sentenced Tuesday, butts In the ErWin County, Tenn., jail on an
on four television monitors set up ald to the rebel.l was banned.
In an area that could have Sh011ey's Inc.. .... .. .. .. .. ......... 12~
auto theft charge. Christopher Wysong, 19, is schedu~d for
on stands in the courtroom. U.S.
Star Bank .......................... .18~
!.
·
,
·otstrlci Judge Harold Greene dlre~t bearing on lhe Poindexter
sentencing next Tuesday .
Wendy's Int'l. ...................... 4%
· said he expected It would take case, Reagan Insisted that even
-«
!
'
-~
~Worthln&amp;ton lnd .................. 2i%
until mid-day Thursday to play though keeping the Contras func·
ail seven houl'll and 40-minutes of tioning was a priority, he always
Reagan's testimony .
ordered aides to act w)thln ihe 1
.
After explaining to the jury · law.
DAYTON, Ohio ·;UPI) - Auto dealer Steve Ta:tone has
•'I said that whatever we do,
that the special arrangeme.nts
canceled plans to participate in a Democratic primary ilebate ·
for Reagan's testimony · were that we must continue helping
because a follower of I:yndon LaRouche Ifas also Invited. · •
made for the former president's the Contras, but we must do It
Tatone said lie planned to appear at tl\e April7 debate at Clark '
convenience,
Greene also cauti- wwlthln the law," Rtagan said.
$tate Community College until he learned Donald Scott was
Probably the mOilt unusual
oned jurors that Reagan's stateattending. Tatone said he accepted the Invitation when he
ments should be regarded like part of Reagan's testimony was
thought he would be debating Jack Schlra, a retl,red Air Foree
those or any other witness.
hls Insistence that he still does
colonel from Springtlel!l whO Is also vying for the Democratic
"He is a witness tor thedetense not know for certain about the
nomination tor the 7th Congressional Dls(fict.
K . . . VIlli·~ .AI.
I
and should be considered as diversion - arms sales money
T~tone sadl LaRoliehe candlda~es' •'wild accusations" end up
being transferred to the Contras · '
dominating debates and other candidates cannot present their
such," Greene said. "The mere
fact that he Is tes tltying on - a fact that became known very
views.
. 11075727'"
.
.
. But Scott said a lively debate serve• the public, adding, ·'To
. videOtape should make' no dlrter- early In the scandal.
me (the .refusal to de~ate) kind of belittles the people .,ve are
running for office to represen, t." · 1
,,
IIU...
• . · SIIIIIDDID....... $2.19

u•

6/8 oz.

JUMBO
ROU

CAN

Price!

LIL' HUGS
FRUIT

PAPER TOWElS

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PUNCH or GRAPE

1-PLY

NO SALT
..

~Low

Price!

continued tr1111...:....;...,
page 1

Gag order issued in youths case

'

~Low

..'•.

¢

¢ MUFFIN

MUSTARD

DRESSING

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MARTHA WHITE - 7 OZ.

.. ___ _____

Weather

24 12 oz. CANS

NA'iURE'S PICK • .46 OZ.

"S
'U.S
Ce....

NAltOIVoL WIATIIIII I'OIIICAITTO 7 All UT ,__

..

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70

Ohio

.Ciwl8e of sftlsons
hard to ·notice in East

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fJI Plln:hall)

RT. 62 NORJH ·

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COME IN AND IIEGIITEI!I FOil IIIEaOK
GYM lAG
Coupona .

POD&amp;oY'S QtJ.u.tTY IKOB ITOU

SHOES
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I

1be March meeting of · the
Reedlvllle U.nlted · Metbocllst
Women was helllrecentJr at. the
home ol Mrs. UWan Pickenl.
Mrs. NIIIICY Buckli!y presided
at tile meetillg which wwuo- .
pened with \prayer by Mrs. Grace
Weber.
,
,
Forty shut In ciuls were te-.
parted and cants were sent to ·
several who are sick In the
CO'liJ!I unity.
April 7 was the. da~ set for a
bake and rummage sale on the
Methodist church lawn.

built .a hlll of dirt, then placed the
ceramic building, plant, and
moss, and finally graveled paths
through the garden.
Members answered roll call
with the name of a desert flower.
The, subject or ~s . Roy
MIUet s devotloliS was "Spring"
with scripture reading, poems,
"
and a prayer.
The hostess displayed 15 twigs
from trees near her holllle for
members to ldentlly. Mrs. Bar·
ton was the winner.
Door prizes were awarded by
the hostesses to Mrs. Robert
Wood and Mrs. Buckley. .

MIDDLEPORT ;_Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, annual Inspection,
Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Inspecting
REEDSVILLE- The Eastern
officer
will
be Deputy Crand
High School Winter Sports Ban·
guet will be held Wednesday at · Matron June Scott. Home chap6:30p.m·. at the high school. Each ter gr~tnd organiSt will be Bea·
famny Is to bring one meat, one trice Kuhn. All members .·are
vegetable and a salad or dessert urged to attend.
dish. Table service and drinks
POMEROY - The Wotnen's
ivlll be provided.
Fellowship of Meigs County
ChuJ:Ches .of ChriSt will meet at
RACINE - The Southern At· the Pomeroy Church of~ Christ on
hletlc Boosters will discuss the Thursdi\Y at 7:30p.m. .
'jl'inter sports banquet on Wed·
nesday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
r
Group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
;'
THURSDAY
.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
· REEDSVILLE -There will be Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
revival services at 7 p.m. nightly For ·Information call
Thursday through Sunday at the 1-800-333-5051.
Fellowship Church or the Naza·
REEDSVIL~ -The River·
tene In ·Reedsville with Rev.

;\re you
at
. risk
for diabetes
.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANIIIIIS

Tbe secona party i-as held to
celebrate his birthday adli bls
cousin's, Mike Laughery. The
party was held at the home of
their · maternal ' grandparents,
Theodore and Beckie PUllins. '1\ .
cow cake and a baskelbalf cake
wer~
Jean and•Angle
Spencer, Chuck and Donna Pul·
uns; VIc and ' DeniSe Laughery
and Michelle, 'rom ·Pullins, Sta·
' cle Hall, Noelle Pickens, Scott
McDonald, and Opal Mathers .
Sending cards and gifts were
Gary and VIckie Cline, Jeremy,
Joshua, Jason, and Jennie, Gaya
Tuttle, and Louise Pitzer.

Danyel Van Gl!rtener, an ex·
change student from Holland,
was the guest speaker at the
recent Hemlock Grange
meeting.
··
A
potluck
dinner
preceded the
c..... ~,..
guest speaker with guests from
other granges of the county and
~--...---,;;;;;;;.;;.;.;;..-;.;,;,;;""""' others who were In attendence.

................
,_a,..
__

or of black, Hilplnit, cr Amttica)
Van Gartener's talk pertained
lndilll dclcenl
, to customs of his country with
If you IIXnd t1Yfft 5(1 poinll. you compariSons to the customs of
1111)' but bi&amp;fuillr; for ci¢ 1111 YoU America. He Is the house gue~t of
I

~:~~-::.::'~4

v

Mr. and .Mrs. Sonny Haynes,
Bear Wallow Ridge, and he
attends Meigs High School.'
The regular grange meeting
was held following tbedlnner and
guest speaker, with Zlba Midkiff,
master, conducting the meeting.
Helen Qulvey, home econom·
lcs chairman announced a black
berry cake contest for the next
meeting . .
The annual grange banquet
was announcec) for April 20 at the
Salisbury Elementary School.

Hayman in teen pageant

can delermine if a liledicll
..__ dialocloc:10r'
•
1

e

serVed to

Dllbetel~orADA's

bela llll'onnlliaa SC:nic:e

1 Ill

1-liQO.ADA-DISC. In Virginia lind
Wuhington, D.C., call (703)

¥9·

lSOO.

'I

Thanb, Ann, for helping us ·lllat
Americanstotherirbllld~of

di"""'ea. It il villi that we get die
word out, and )'011 are die DnD MIG
can do iL- STERLING nJCJqBR,
CHAIRMAN OF THE BO~
AND SHBRMAN M. HOLVEY'

M.D., PRESIDENT, AMERICAN
· DIABETBS ASSOCJAnON J'
DEAR MR. TUCKER AND DR
HOLVEY· Gild 10 help ' Now let'·
. . _ ..... ' 1o

.....,.. u"" r -"
/1

will ...,.:....~ ....•

* ptlllillf,JO., 111?

IUIIUW • • _ . , ,

Wflll ID

illlprtM JOIIT IOd4l di/11? Wrile/11'
·Allll 1tmdr•1' llftl.bootlel, "How ID
Male Frind1 tmd Slop Btf111
LoM/y. "S.IIdallf·11ddmsed,lo111,

'·

11562, ClricQo,1ll. 606ll.a162. {!II

finaliSt In the 1990 Miss Ohio U.S.
Teen Pageant. The announcement was made by George and
Eileen McCluney, state directors
tor the Miss Ohio U.S. Teen
Pageant.
Tbe pageant Is the official state
preliminary to the Miss u.s.
Teen 'Pageant to be held In
August In Atlanta, Ga. Miss Ohio
U.S. 'l'een will .recelve a host of
prizes Including a cash award, a
cqlor portrait, jewelry, crown,
banner, trophy, and an all
expense paid trip to the national
pageant.
.
The pageant will be held In
Colurrlbus on April 21 at the
Radisson North at 8 p m
Miss Hayman was ~1~ chosen
an All-Star · Cheerleader at UCA
Cbeerleadlng Camp at Athens In
June of 1989.

.•

.JUSTIN--D. BROWNING
.

DAN'S

.

Accepting •applications
The Melp,County Cdoperatlve
Parish will be taking ·aarden
applications on Wednesday, :
Thursday, Friday, and Ma~h
27·29 from 9; 30 a.m. to 12: 30 p.m. ,

'

Music slated

c

An even lng of music wlll be
featured Saturday evening at the
Faith Gospel Church at Long
Bottom. The service begl~~f. at 7
p.m. and special singers will be ·
featured.
·

THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE
'
AND

Y

PANTS

•

Secretary.

~u~o~ WICIEI EASTE. '
"
. · BASinS
•

EASTER DECOUTIONS

......~sIUS
.....".......~". 99C.

200Jo Off 1 ITUl

Will Ati.ot h&amp;iUUSI ,
Of CAilfDII-- CAliS.
YOV}t 1990 EA.S"''E~
~ADQUAR'l'ERS~!!

Umi..G &amp; DICALS AVAILAILE
.

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J71 ...... StCIRd.

Dido

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COMMISSION OF OHIO
lly: Ga!y E. Vigorito,

SPECIAL PLUSH EAml

CHILDREN, YOUTH &amp; ADULTS

'

.

All interested parties will be
given an Ojlponunity to be
heard': Further information
may be oblained ~ con·
tacting the Comnission at
the lbove address.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

eEGGS •STUFFED ANIMAlS
•CERAMICS •EX~I
• NATUIAL AND FASHION GWS

400Jo Off J ITEMS 01 MDII .·

--·--------~(----------~~~----~,--~

•

ficas of the Public . UIIMtle&amp;
180 Easl
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43261!-0573.

CANDY AND EASTER BASKETS ·

300f0 OFF 2 ITEMS

..

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Commission,

IUSSELL STOVQ
BOXED &amp; ASSORTED EASTER ·

r-'!"'!1-~------~---------•·

SWEAT

-,

!}

bus Southern Power Com- ·
pany, the operalion ol iis
Electric Fuel Corilponenl
and related mattm. Tlis
hearing is scheduled IO
beQin at 10:00 a.m. on ·
.March•:II.. 111!10; .at the, of· . , ,

Tamara Hayman, daughter of

bllliMu-llre
ett.,lope
tllfd ti, clwck
"'
motleY O'der
for $41j&lt;(llrU
ill· ,
Cl/IMI poiiiJp twl lltutdW.,) ID:
Fr#Dtdl. do Allll Lllltder1,1'.0. Boz
CtllllldtJ, IIINiSS.af.)

·•
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The Publio UtiNlies Commission ol Ohio has set lor
IIUblie hearing Case No.
110-02-El·EFC. 10 reviefl
the luel procurement prac· ·
llces and policies of Colum·

• you ·~T., -- .e~. Dan and Faith Hayman, Syra·
WaniDHR illfunnllion about~· cuse, has been selected ·as a state

bela? Conllcl your loc:al

.."

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•6

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~maylileldyuYeMIW

..,,.

Browning birthday

Justin Douglas Brownillg, IOD
of Doug and Terri Browning,
observed his first . birthday on
Feb. 17 with two parties.
The flist party was held at the
vieJ . Garden Club will ineet
TUPPERS PLAINS -There'
home
of htl paterna:! grandpar·
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
will be a soup supper O)l Friday at
Reellsville Church of · ChriSt. · the St. Paul United Methodist eil.ts, Rufuil and.oJosle SrowDII!g.
Hostesses will be Betty Boggs,
Church In Tuppers Plains from . A clown cake was 'served to Greg
and tlonna Jilrownlng and Steven,
KI!Ii Young, and Nancy Wach.ter.
5-7p.m.
·
and
Browning.
I
FRIDAY
POMEROY. -Any · Individual
I!OMEROY - The Pomeroy
Interested In working with the
Senior Citizens Dance· Club will . 1990 census may take that test at
have a round and square dance
the Meigs County Ubrary on
on)Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music
Friday. Test times are g;30 a.m.
wl~l be provided by the Happy
and 1:30 p.m. Tbose taking the
Hollow Boys from Athens. Ad·
test must provide two forms of
m!Jsslonls$2perpersonandthose
Identification. ·For more lnfor·
attending are to bring snacks for
matlon contact the library.
t~e snack table. The caller Is Jim
~rnahan.
MEIGS.-The Bosworth Council R &amp; SM wlll hold a special
· I BURLINGHAM ~The Modern
meeting Friday at 7: 30 p.m.
Yf'oodmen Youth Club will spon·
There will be work In the super
sor a family program on Friday
excellent master degree. · ;
.· at 7 p.m. at the woodmen hall.
Music will be by Denver Rice and
SALISBURY - Tbe Salisbury
ihe Bedford and Lodl History
Elementary Basketball Banquet
Group will be there and slides
will be held Frida:!! at 6 p.m . at
Will be sho~. The public Is
the school. A pizza party will be1nvited.
·
held.

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The Daily Sa ttinai-Paga 9

Pomeroy-Midclap'.llt. Ohio

:n the' news~---lnjury

II

. VIIW 1'.- 18&amp;enatleaal
FEBGDIANIA: The media
onslaught has already started In
aatlclpatlon of a new royal baby.
The area around Portland Hospl·
tal Ia London Is swarmlni with
~:!&lt;Ju!pm~t-laden photographers
staking out their territory for
when the duchess of York, the
former Sanll FeriUIOD, cheeks
In to give birth to her second child
with Prlace Andrew. Even
though Fergie Isn't expected to
be admitted until next week,
some photograhers have been
camping on the sidewalk for the
past two weeks. More than 60
B·foot ladders already are In
. place aroul)d tbe hospital for the
big event and camera crews ate
reportedly paying hefty fees ior
vantage points from balconies
across the street, Including a
prime spot at the Royal N atlonal
Institute for the Blind .
SHE'S BAAAAACK: David
Letterman's least favorite guest
has been arrested again at his
Connecticut home. Margaret
Ray, 38, of Paonia, Colo., was
caught by pollee early Monday
aftero.Letterman called pqllce to
report her trespassing at his New
Canaan home. Ray had been
released from a state prison only
three days earlier after serving a
sentence for breaking Into Let·
. Ierman's home and the latest
arrest marks the sixth time she
has been caught at the talk
show's home since 1988. She was
held on $1,000 bond and was to be
returned to the prlsop.

..

Hemlock Grange meets

. of dillbelcl. Only

-·· ....... .

· Named to the nominating com·
mittee were Mrs. Plcke~ and
Mrs. Peg Buckley. ,
A game was played with
everyone receiving a prize. Thl'
door prize went to Mrs. Frances
Reed.
Refreshments 'IYI!re served to
Mamie Buckley, Nina . Boston,
Pearl Osborne, Joim Lawrence,
Francel Reed, Nancy Buckley,
Grace Weber, Maxine White- ·
head, and Ruth Anne Balderson:
The next meeting will be at the
home of Frances Reed.

0eo~nle

.
.
By WilLIAM C. TROTT

barrel class. ·
The Meigs County Ric!ln&amp; Club
The resignation of Church
met at the hOme of Pete and
as treasurer was acc;:epted '
Riffle
Cindy Scott on Flatwoods Ro•d·r
and
Cindy
Scott was nominated :I
.
The minutes 'of the previous
to
fill
that
offl.
c e.
meetlag were read and approved
t.MITII:R CONTEST WINNERS - Salllbury Elemealary won
The next meeting will be held
· and the club discUssed the show
'~=;~;eo~anty Utter ContetJt this year. Stildeatl partlclpatla&amp;
at
the home of Pete and Cindy ·
In
September
and
voted
to
held
at 8. .
were, front row, .J~r 1 MarJorie BaJar aad Beat•
'
Scott
at 7:30p.m. on April 9.
have
an
all
contest
show
In
June
Wh~ey. Backrow, MeiiMa Wbaley,MlchaeiLelthelt,aadDorothy ·
'
New
members
are
welcome
·
and
have
a
$200
guaranteed
•
Lelfttelt. The prize money, Ia addition to lhe fundll railed from the
llt~r colledlon, was UBed to purchue playiJ!'OlDid ball1 and Jump
ropes for tile silldentl of the school.
·

out In May . .
The reports of the secretary ·
and treasurer were given.
Refreshments were served to
Lillian and Warren Pickens, Ella
and Ronald Osborne, Maxine and
Ernest Whitehead, Grace and
Denver Weber, and Ruth Anne
Balderson.

James Kittle, Winchester, Ky.
John Douglas, pastor, aDd the
congregation, Invite the public to
attend.

-

Meigs County Riding Club meets ·;

Community ¢alendar
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS -The Ohio Valley
Cburcl! or Go(j, Route 50 East,
will hOld a revival Wecmesday
through Sunday at 7: 30 nightly.
The evangeliSt will be Joe
Beasley.

Sentin~l -

Reedsvtlle UMW meets

Reedsville CBC has meeting
Pauline and Donald Myers
hosted the March meeting of the
Community Builders Club.
Ronald Osborne presided at
the meeting In which several
Improvement projects were
discussed.·
Plansweremadetomeetatthe
Pickens' home In April and to eat

'Vttl1.. r ~l'f· Mllalt 21, 1890

• Vi:'utrnrdiV, Match 21, 1810
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.Page 8- ,

Garden Club meets

Mrs. WIUiam Buckley showed
two gardens she and her son had
made In shallow wttery bowls.
For thz demonstration on "Grow
and Secret Garden" they first

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Tbe March meeting or the
Chester Garden Club was held at
the home or Mrs. Earl Dean with
Mrs. Woodrow Mora as assistant
hostess.
Mrs. Richard Barton discussed
"Crops In Pots" on bow to have a
vegetable garden In containers
on a patio.. She stated that weeds
are less of a problem with dally
watering being the main chore.

.

The · Daily

The )Jerid

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NEWMAN AND GBJGGS:
P.W ·Newmaa had a bandage on
his right hand when he showed up
In court In Bridgeport, Coiln.,
Tuesday fo.r the opening argu·
ments. In a dell owner's sull
against him. Newman, dressed
In a navy blue pin-stripped suit,
white shirt and red and gold tie, .
smiled at the crowd and ex·
plalned that he suffered the

wben his 7~pound Loutsl·
ana swamp dog, Griggs, lunged
· on the leash while they were out
for a walk. The dog was given to
NeWman by the Loulsana Legis·
lature while he was filming the
movie "Blaze." Newman Is. be·
lng sued by JuUus Gold. who says
be· deserves a, cut of the money
from Newman's food company
beCause he helped start the
business.
CRAFT BACKS OUT OF JOB:
Chrllltla~: Craft, the anchorwo·

man who lost her job In Kansas her age and appearance and for
City, Mo .. because of her looks. not being deferential to men. Her
bad to qult her job with a San victory was larer overturned on
Francisco television station be- . appeal.
• GLIMPSES: l'ves St. Laurent
cause of a back problem. Craft,
Is hospitalized and missing the
45; was hired as a flll·ln anchor
tor the 10 p.m. newscast at KOFY Paris fall-winter fashion show. A
and had been on the job dnly 11 spokesman said the designer Is
suffering from extreine fattgue
days before a herniated disc
drove her out. Craft, who also Is a
caused by the strain of preparing
his collection. "It· s not cancer
flrst·year law student In Sacra·
and H's not AIDS," the spokes·
mento, won a lawsuit against
Metromedla TV In Kansas City
man said. "It's serious. but let's
not panic" ... Unda Bloodworth·
after she was demoted beCause or

Tllomaaon, the executive pro- '
ducer and creator oft he "Design· ·'
ing Women' ' sitcom, has ~ached '
an out-of-court Settlement in the
AJI)S death of het mother.
Bloodworth-Thomason and her
brother, Ralph Bloodworth. had
sued Methodist Hospital In Mem·
phiS, Tenn .. Its blood bank and •
three doctors , claiming their
mother, Claudia, 86, died of an ·
AIDS·talnted blood transfusion. ,
Derails of the settlement were
not announced.
)

••
•

.BIG BEND •••

Your (.:ouununity Mintlt&gt;d
Lo¥·-flriced SUJ)("rmarkt&gt;l!l!!

ODLAND
. WE SELl
MONEY ORDERS

OHIO VALLEY FOODLAND'S ,,.,,.

1O'H

BIRTHDAY

SALE·

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Estefan
injured
in collision
SCRANTON Pa. iUPI)
Doctors treating pop singer Gloria Estefan, who suffered a
severe back Injury· when a I ruck
rammed Into her private bus on a
. snowy highway, said they believe
she will be· able to make .a
complete recovery.
Estefan, 32, lead singer of the ·
Miami Sound Machine, was
sleeping on a bunk In the back of
the bus ·when · the collision OC·
curred during a light snowstorm
Tuesday. Five members of her
entourage also were Injured.
"At this point, we are looking
for her getting everything back.
She Is not panlyzed In any way;
shape or form,'~ said William
Pfeifer, tht: traui:n3 Sl!r&amp;eon who·
treated tile singer at Community
Medical Center In Scranton.
Estefan, who suffered a ·broken
vertebra In the center of her back
was In stable condition early
Wednesday. Pfeifer said he did
not anticipate any paralysiS .or
permanent lmpalrmen t.
Brother·ln·law Jose Eslefan In
Miami said doctors ga11e the
singer her choice of treatments:
surgery or six months In a cast.
Sandy Friedman, a spokesman
for Estefan In Los Angeles,
confirmed that she may need
corrective.surgery.
.
•·
Five members of the entour·
age, Including the singer's bus;
band and son, were Injured when
a tractor-trailer truck plowed
Into the rear of their private bus,
shoving It Into a second tr\ICk, on
Interstate 380 near Tobyhanna,
about 20 miles southeast of
Scranton.
Tbe Impact of tbe collision
shattered the windows lri the bus.
Ronald Jones, Estefan's bus
driver, described the scene as
"pretty beetle."
"We were stopped, waiting for
them to clear the 'road. I didn't
see hJm.comtng," Jones said. ·
State pollee said the accident
occurred at 12:10 p.m. during a
light snowstorm. The bus was
stopped In · traffic on the ' snow- ·
covered highway because ·or a
previous accident when It was
hit.
Estefan was en route to a
concert with the Miami Sound
. r,iachlne at the Oaondlga County
War Memorlalln Syracuse, N.Y.
The rest of the group~lreadywas
In Syraculll! preparing for the
concert,. which was later
c·anceled.
·
"I'm surprlaed they weren't
hurt more aerlously. Tbey got
whacked around pretty good,"
state pollee CpL Joleyh Kearney
said.
Estefan'a b111band, Emuto. 37,
their son Naytb, 9, 8lld IChool
teacher Lori Roolle)1, 32, all .of
Miami, and Joaea, 36, of Madl·
sonville, ~ .• were treated at
CMC and relelled, aald hoapltal
spokesmall Marty MeGurrtn.
Barbara Areaeblbla, 25, .ot
Hialeah, Fla., Gloria Eatefan'a
wardrobe asslalant, waa llated In
' stable condition, also with a back
Injury, McGurrin said.
EmiUo Estetan's Injuries were
not serious, hospital officials
said. F.lnfllo .Estefan'a brother,
Joae, said Naytb l!ad auftal eel a .
broken collarbone.
Pfeifer said Gloria Estetan
told dOctora lhe waa aalelp In 1
bunk at the time of the accident.
She wu the ~ aerlously
Injured of ~ JIIOP)e aboard the
bus, be Aid.

---

.

· GR~EN

PEPPERS

39C£A.
()N\ON Sf.TS
AND
SEED
POlAOlES
NOW
AVA\lABlE

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HOLLY 'FAIMS GRADE A

'"''

-

WHOLE

s.LB.

ASSORTED
PORK CHOPS

BONELESS
ENGISH ROAST

'"1

'".,

' .,

SUPERIOR
SUCED BACON

99
TWIN POPS

'

Nama: ..... ~ .•....•••.•.............•.......•.

AFREEZER

~

'

....
Addreaa: ..... ·.............................. .

City: ........................ State: ........ .
Phone: ......•.•................ :............ .

f'OODIAND ENTRY BLANK

�Page 1 0-The Daily Sentinel

~Quirks

.

tlons to determine wbelher tbe
NYACK. N.Y. (UPB - After who frequently writes on occult
unusual force he experlencet Ia
touring a supposedly haunted tOpics; hac! no legal obligation to
In fact due to pllltergetsts."
house, the Amazing Kreskin said reveal that the 5650,000 house
If mysterious voices from tbe
he encountered . a "strange was Inhabited by the spirits.
force" but stopped short of
Kresktn, an entertainer who · other world shOuld urge him to IJO
ahead and ~ke. an offer, tbe
buylngthehomeuntllhecanhOid specializes In the paranormal,
mentaU.&gt;t said.he would use It liS
a seance . and determine Its told an audience at an Atlantic
a
museum for his parapsychol-·
spiritual value.
City, N.J., casino Saturdav that
ogy
library and other profes·
The 18-room Victorian house In ·he might be Interested In buying
sional
memorabiilo .
Nyack, overlooking the Hudson the place, but only If It really fs
River, came to public attention packed with poltergeists.
last week when a Manhattan
After touring the hotnp with
judge refused to allow a spooked Ackley Tuesday, Kreskln, ',Vho
Rotten Sneaker Contest plcka
buyer recover a $32,500 deposit does not use a first name, said he
winner
he and his wife had made toward " plans to make an offer ·on the
MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI) -A
Its purchase.
house because he felt a strange 14-year·old Rhode Island youth, ,
The couple said they wanted force present there."
,
who may have been a 'shoe-In
·aut when they learned the home
He added, however, that the
from the beginning, walked away
was already In habited by ghosts . offer would be contln~nt on his
with a year's supply of footwear
The judge ruled the current "being allowed.toretum and hold
as winner of the 15th annual
owner, Helen ·Ackley, an author a seance under controlled condl·
Rotten Snea.k. er Contest.

alize others, and that anyone
caught playing such games
would be placed tn segregation
and cited.
McClure said If that Is the
policy, other games shOuld be
outlawed including chess ,
checkers , Risk and . Strategy.
because. they Involve killing or
demoralizing the other players'
pieces .
Monopoly would havt' to be
banned, too. McClure said.
"The goal is to take everyone's
meney and thereby demoralize
everyone else and be the richest
and only person left owning any
property," McClure wrote In his
suit.
·
Amazing Kreskln tours spooked
house
·

in the news

Inmate sues to play Dungeons &amp;

Dragons promotes satantsm as
Dragons
its critics have charged. In the
~ : SPOKANE. Wash. (UPl i - A
federa~lawsult he filed Tuesday.
&gt;state prison inmate ma v not be
hepresentedatwo-pagedescrlption of the game and its charac: thrilled about Jiving behind bars
~ but he's so fo nd of Dungeons &amp; ters, including the cleric. druid,
:. Dragons. he Is suing for permls- magic user. Illusionist. palldln,
( slon to pla y the controversial
ranger, fighter , thief, assasln
:· role-playing game.
and monk.
·
. Kenneth McClure, a medium·
H~ said Dungeons &amp; Dragons ,
: security Inmate at the Washing- " teaches trust. honor, memory.
· ton State Penitentiary In Walta
leadership. how to bargain and
: .walla; said he spent ·$38 on two . how to save mon!"y. "
The prisoner said 'he was told
; advanced Dungeons &amp; Dragons
• books, only to have them seized · by a prison lieutenant that the
. : · by prison guards,
·
prison does not allow games that
McClure denies Dungeons . &amp; . req uire players to kill or demor,

Wedneadav. M.-ch 21, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

•Ices
~

---

Area~s

• The

o,-vs ,1
3
6•

•s...

,._, flh• Dubli CIIIDn to Mlkt cerrection.·

!

'Alii thM m1111 ,. Pllid 1n

t

..,.,.et.,.

.

Ciethe CounlY

-

'""'Code 814

C.rd of Th..u

Hap..v Acl•

&amp;46-G•IItpottl

In Mtmor1em

Yerct Ill•

M7 -Ch•hitt

poe..

-MONOAY PAPER

.,

,,'
,.•
j

'•

.RIOAV PAPER
· . lUNDAY ltAPiflli

I

'•
"lENTEN SPECIAl"

"lENTEN SPECIAl"

BUY .ONE

BUY ON_E

••
•

r•

.•

2·l.8. PKG. FROZEN

B-OZ. PKG . lEGS OR FLAKES

South Atlantic
Whiting·Fillets

Louis Kemp
Crab Delights

GET ONE

GET ONE

FREE! .....

•

.•
••
I

~

.• ..
•

Milt~~
fol' OptlfOYOI

Coun.

0111o.

•nd wttlw;aent:
ESTATE NO. 21111&gt;t ' Fifth Panfil Account of
TriVI IUmu, G!Mrdlen of
Boullh a.y Ronoom.
·
ESTATE NO, 2S1 23- Fln.ot ll'ld DlltrlbutlveAccount
of Chorlu M. McGrath. Exo..
. culilr oflhe Ellale of 'l;ort A.
McGrolh; D-uod.
·
ESTATE NO. 28182-FI;
· All end Dli11rlbutlve Account
.of R1111t II'. Fronk. EX8011rill
of IIMi E110to af Beulolt L.
'lrodfuril, 'D eoeuod.
ESTATE NO. 211111- Fl·
llll111d D111ribt!llve Account
of. Amald R. Knltht. E -111( of !he E-o afEvllynG .
· Knight.
ESTATE NO. 211188- Fl·
. n.ol Md Dlotribuln Account
ofluo EHM Zlllde'. E~or

,I

' I

FREE!
.

9-oz. eox

•

Freezer Pleezer
Ice Milk Bars

Sun-Maid
· Raisins

•''

••
"

f~~-

BUY ONE

~

NO ONE Ulllll 11 YWS

SSO.OOPIIG• ·
IONUS GAMI Ill 41

All PAPII

GET ONE

"

Downyflake
Waffles

Help wBnted

: '·

'

.

.·

rnuNTAF'i REE'
•

FREE'•

Ntw

8-0Z. BAG

•

FREE!

ln,,~:~c~~~~

•••
•

FREE!

This cheese Is ·

Single Candy Bars

.,$,88
For

THIS IS NOT A BUY

.

32-GL

from Sugar
C,..., home

8

of the Anllsh• .
• REG.
SALE
............ ,......... '2.711 lb. •:1.211b.
.............. :........ 3.00 lb.
2 .10 lb.
...... ............... Z.ll lb.
Z.311b.
... ....... :.... ....... 3.111b. 3.011b.
........................ ,..........: .. 2.811•1b.
2,311b.

LIMIT 1 WITH CDUPOII It •11.11
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE I ·

LIMIT ONf COUPON PER FAMILY

... ·... ~ ...................... 3.00 'tb.

. , FREE ITEM

'

,

· /

i.

ir J

'

•
••• •
•
•

FRESH

Gr1de A

.I•,,
•

, trllnecl at.rt to

. rNkinl

~~-

Kroger

.

.._Wat.....

Rabblta.

Egg1,

La-"---

'"· CHOCOU11: Yellow, Pink.

Gai.$20I

U..c. G.-.n, White and Milk.

l~•t ... O•~lft- 01t ltl11e Are Llwtfl

WI -

OHIO VALLO lULl FOODS

THIS IS NOT

SM WT·IIAII ·
PO.IOY
.

f

'
•'

••

I

t

.Jo Hill ...........,•• 915-4411
~~~ H•pp.......... MI-2217
Oltlca............... 182-2251

Full Sllectioll Of ~er •ald1,
Wr• 111111 Thl11s To Fl .......

Skim Milk

49c

•'

Jean Tru...i .. ~ .. MI-2810

. 111111t you In

• ,&gt;

D.5% WWFAT

P..ul

49c

lllllfY E. Ctll•d
tt2·8ltl

Chocol• .·

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

Each

(

Wehevee

......

•

'T""

f

r

.

~···

-- .......

...

USIIEJGS

In Loving Memory
Of Our Slater,
JUANITA
HOSCHAR

March

21, 1989

THE PEARLS OF
MEMORY
Whit did you l10ve
when you went
from me?
YIIU left methe Peerll
·of Memory,
Strung on the thr10d
of the golden yeeril
Of love and of (eughter
Of
end
P-1• of more worth
then the J-elen

-ROOFING

I

• P,lumblng

Work

992-6215
.

P"""ror.•·30-'89-2
Ohio mo.

PUIMIING &amp; HEATitG
Now loGtien:
161 North S.C.... :
Middleport,- Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Fiehlng hppll•

Phone
811(1 Here
MINISS PIIIHE
16141 "2·6550

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
MIIIIOIIITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

Tlb tht pain Mit of
pal~.

Lot us do II for you.
¥lilY IEASOMAIII
HAVE IIFEIEIIaS ,
AnD6P.M.

10

2·1-'10-1 ......

110111 .
Fill DIPT.

....... lluldlng

. EYDY·
SA1.10GH1 .
6:30 ....

niY8r bt
Counting my Peerlt of
Metnory.

factory chtkt
12 Gautt Sholguns Only
Strkktly E.,._.
10.9-tln

Brot.h art 8t Silttlra
end Famll•

See

Stop In and
DALE HILL

OVIII .REPAII
ALL liliES
lrl111 It In Or We
Pick Up.
KEN'S APPUANCE

'AT

PAT HILL

SIIVICE

DODGE

992·5335 or 915-3561

S. lhlrll,

Acrea ,,..
OHice
· 217 L Sac. Po.oroy
POIIIIOY

JO

Public Sllle .
&amp;Auction

CHARITY AUCTION
EAmiN HIGH SCHOOL
.
. GYM
'
s•DAY, MARCH 25-1:30 P.M • .
Numerous Items Already Donated
With Mor1 Arriving Daily.
ITEMS TO IE DONATED FOR .THE' AUCTION
. MAY IE LEn AT THE SCHOOL ON.
SATURDAY, MAl 24-1·3 P.M. or

'ti0-1

GIFY SHOP

SUNDAY, MAl 25 .
12 Noon to -1:30 P.M.

ClU '915·,329 to have your
donated it... picked up
Spon10rtcl by Academic Boolttrl end :•.
The II• Of '92

. GREG BAILEY

IS NOW OPEN
FOR BUSINESS.
IN ITOCK: _,..., , _

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING
· A Great Combination"Qualitr and leaionable Pric~•"

eo... ecom-.y ,._

V•• OCII'/ llrd lot._
•Cam... llrdBot..
•founlaln alrd 1et111 • PW•
Door, F-. Atttololrt)l i
Oth• Ylnl Omom.....-

WE GO Tllf EmA MIU-..'"
992·6110
OHIO

Ui &amp; Sa•e!

USa APPLIANCES

.MAIN STREET
PIZZA

willun

LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUAliTY
· FIE£ LOW D£UYEIY
POMEIOY AND IIIDDLEPOIT'S ONlY
LOCAUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP•

IP
up

Dti'S · APPUAJICE
SEmCE
. 992-5:135 ar 915·3561

· Pizza-Subs-_Salads·Daily specials
.
992·2228
.

acr.. ,,.. hit Office
POMROY OliO
Jb/30/lt tin

I

me,,

K and J CONSTRUCTION

(Abaft Pine SllapJ

DAY

••••part

992-6421

, SYI&amp;CIISI, •o

,,

·

Y. C. YOUNG II

36629 517
POIIIIIOY, OHIO

949-2168 .

'GUN SHOOT

I

, •-roy, Ohle .

Extorlar ..

985-3365

FREE ESTIMATES

· remembering
Lonely or lolt I could

8

992-7479

Work

Custom Built
Homes,
Remodeling &amp;
RepeirWork

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
.Painting ·

No-one can 1teel them
or uuw epert
Theie .,...... thlt .,.
hlcldan within my
heert.
Beautiful pe.~rta on 1
golden atring;
Fondly I keep them -

•.

Rentlllt

CARPENTER SERVIa

c•ma. OHIO

Gutters

ta••·

•Mobile Home
Parte
•Mobile Horne

-Room Addltlono

ElWIN
CONSTRUCTION

·Howard L Wrltllll

NEW - REPAIR

MOillE
HOME PAll

YOUNG'S

'Middleport, Ohio
.
1·13•11C

Who peiMCI away
. one yeer ago

2·

J&amp;L

11

INSUUnON

Wllfar Stealel o•
VIIIYL SIDING

Y1NYLIIPLACMNT
Our rapid growth as th~ area's newest and finest Skilled Long Term Care Facility has
·a-menrecl opportUnities for RN's, and LPN's,
tq become a part of a rqponsive, well manlpl Health Care'pelivecy, Team.
.
' Come for a viJit; talk to us about your experi·
ence, and we will talk ro you about Over·
b~lt's competitive . wises and benefits of.
fered on what is truly a ·:srare of the Art"
Nunilll! Faciliry.
.
.
Stop by fa an . i~iew. or phone Sally
Gloeclcner, D.O.N, at (614).992-6472,1Uld let 111
show you that all nunin&amp; homes are nor abh.
~33

" ',I

•
••

12 Gauge

' 1-15-'to-tla

Wt can......,. and ,..
core ratllaton and
hlattr cor11. Wt can
ahG acid bell and red
ouf radiaton. We alto
repair Gas Tanks.·
Pl1 HIU FORD
992·2198

OVERBROOK ·CENTER

"t·MIO
.._.

Factory Choked

It, 33 Nlll't•••

Grant A. Ntnrl&lt;

SER~ICE

LONG 1011011- 6 rliOIII
cabin liltint on 114t cr eWilh
a view of the. Ohio River.
Newly remodeled, carpet,
electric heJI, .rll. and ranee.
$21,500.00.

10 A.M. 1HIII 3 P.M: EVERY 110111 ON THE 110111

KROGER

1:o0 P.M.

Starts at

•Lot Rentela

·3271

1614)

IIAIN ST,. IUTLAND .

In uamory

great summer place, has 3
lots, indudin&amp; river Iron'
late. $11,000.00. ·

CANDY CLASSES

U.S. GRADE A

California
Head Lettuce

. AIITIQUllY - One
home w4h 3 bedrooms. and
coal lurnace Would make a

TtftatlY •• FRIDAY • SATURDAY
MAaOI 21 • 22 • 2!

.'

••
•

2 .80 lb.

•

lartJ:c~lllll

~
•

-,..-..,c.;;,....;.:.~;;;;-- --. ·-·-- ------ ..... 3.40 lb.
.)

•

•

l

3 .10 lb•
2.110 lb.

POIEIOY - Commercial
start youi ow~ bu. siness. On Main • Street.
$37,500.00.
Bu~din&amp;

'
story

2.10 lb.

.. ........: .............: ..... 3.110 lb.
........................ 3.00 lb.

.

PORT - 1978 ~lar
Home lilting on 2 lots in
town. 2 c• &amp;•age, N.G.F.A.
heat, garden area. also hill
sell con!lined AIC unit Ail
appliances go. with house.
$39,500.00.

EYDY SUNDAY

DUMP TRUCK
Sand· Stone-Dirt

for

EROY~

0 • 43764

MILKY WAY , 3-MUSKETEERS,
OR PEANUT M &amp; M'S CANDIES

M &amp; M Mars

V:iJ

-~

1i

N~WLAND
ENTERPRISES

•Brake Work

tlon ol tho lrull. not '-•
lhM flva deyo prior ta tho
date Ml
"-lng.
Robert E. Suall. Judge
Common Piau Coun.
Pr-e Olvlllon

~

NEW LISTING - P. .
Nice neigh~rhood,
4 bedroom home. sliding
glass doon in· tivillg room,
oak trim woodwork, carpeting, air condilionin11. apt,
over garage for rtntal or
Wll'kshop; And much morJ!!
$42,900.00.
. .
'
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·

DOZER
SITEWORK - ..ROADS
CLEARING

•Oil Change 8o Lube

2

r01111?! lndudes a heal pump,

stcnge shed and lm one
lol you! $43,000.00.

leaiOO..It Prim"

PH. 949·2101
.,_.... 949·~16d
· Day or Night
NO SUNDAY uo••~

AUgnment

central ai, e•aee and large

GET ONE

BUY ONE
14-0Z. PKG . WHITE, WHEAT OR ONION
Kangaroo
Q~; Pocket Pita Bread
GET ONE .

.

NEW LISTING - TUPP£15
PLAINS- Would you beiil!le
you cou~:l'find a 3 beltotm
ranch w~h tun basemll'll in
rea condition wijJ thlt 2
acres you want for ellllw

lllrctlandl18 .

IN THE OEU -PASTRY SHOPPE

'

· - This neat home is re~
for immediate occupancy.
Five rooms w~h 3 bedroOms,
large lot. cllrpelinB- rang.•e
and 2 car garage. $141900.

54 MlacelleiiiOUI

Moore's
. Cheese Twists

'·

IM·2211
NEW LtSTING- PiliEROY

•Public Reletiona/Outreech l)lrector
•Fund Rilsing/Raaource Director
If you or anyone' you know ore intareittd inof tht11 VOLUNTEER positions, 111111 rts!lllll ond
ltttar'·af intant to: ·
Ltnora G. ·Homme,
Araa I Special Olympics
· 219 Fortne DrlweH,

GET 'ONE

WI ~M~Uirilnt to lho .......

Hll;
My life they enrich end
. my grief dlepel .

...........
POMIROV, OH.

'Dhlo .

BUY ·
~

GAMES

FilE£

POSITIONS
§pedal · NOW
Dlymph AVAILABtEI

12-- 13-0Z . FROZEN

GET ONE

FREE!

.r

OPEN 5:00P.M. .
GAIWS STMT 7.00 P.M.

AREA. .a··.

'

98

"to llld a-..nto or to mil·

2

EVERY THURSDAY
· VFW POST 9926
MASON, w; VA.

.

•
•

~

BINGO

"At

•Front End

c01111 ""·the 21111 ca., ;g~~~~~;;;1
3 Announcements
131 21. 110
wll~~be~fa~r~h~l~or~lna~be~lare~-~
Melt~~ County..Ohio
alice

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp;GAUGES

7U~3011
•Tira Sale•

~d

.

12-CT. PKG . FROZE'!

uld ICOOUntl virlt ... con•kt-d Md aantiNied from dey
10 dey untl flnolly dlopolld
of.
··
Any lntMulwd
moy file wrilten uotptlano

Jov•

11

tBUY ONE

of AprM, 1110olwhloh time.

-·-"-'-

'---

I

o-.....

ot the &amp;t.te of Thoophllut
Laull Smhh,
· E8TA:rE NO. 2S317 .:...
Flrd ond Flnll Accoum Of
Moxlno lh•lll. G1111rdlen of
Audrey .........
Unlu• botptla,. ,,.
Iliad ti.elo. aold -unto

'"· 949·1101 ·.

or 111.949-2160

"

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

D•c•••t.

•

'••

R. L HOLLON
TIUCIING

IUTUND niE
. SALES and
SEIVICE

~

PubliC Notice

. IN THE M•TTER OF .
smi,.EMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROlATE COURT.
MEIGI COUNTY, OHIO
""-'nto ...d Y - 1 of
lite fal0..1ng nomecl llducl••'- h..,. fled lri lho

,•

'i

··•-"•ctn•

PH. 992·5682 .
. or 992-7121

... e.tlmetM' .

NO SUNDAY
•

,_.,Olio

CALL

•FlU DIRT

PubliC Notice

... lsaWt

·~F

BISSELL
BUILDERS

112-Pttw
IH-._...,,""'·"
. 11?:- luHIIC

· · GAS OR ELECTRIC

Offlq

RHidentlallo
Commercial

117-..... Cool¥~•

~LMAKES

992·53115 ... 915·3561

•••-c~··
143- PO"IMd

rices. And More~

WithLo

•

•
•'

~&amp;8-LIOf'

·' 742-Rutltnel

!IISSEU
SIDING CO.

PARTI AND SERVICE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR
AI,. Tr••••lt~l••

•GRAVEL
•UMESTONE

Cou!IIY,

'

H.al::; Coolllf, ·
bf 1ralloo1
Senlee

, Oat Reeultc Fasi

- 2 :00P .M. THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M IIIUDA'V

lt. 124,

OIISIB, 01110

~

''

1

comoL

.. .

WE RESERVE THE RiGHT TO liMiT QUANTITIES .
NONE sow TO OE.Ai ODC

'

- 2 &lt;00 P.M. MONDAY
, ' - 2 :00 , ,M. TUISDAV..- 2 :(10 P.M. W!ONIIDAY

TMUASDAY PAPIA

COPYRIGHT 1990 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, MARCH 18. THROUGH
SATURDAY; MARCH 24,1990, IN POMEROY. OHIO.

•
'

~UIIAn

. -'- 11 100 A.M. SATUROAY

TUUDAY PAPER
WEDNIIDAV PAPEfl

ADVERTISED ITtM POliCY
Each of these advertised items is required 10 be readily

.•••

'
.
bAY .EFOR.E .F'lJ •.LICATipN

tNSUI.ATION '

MUCI

1111'S APPUAJICE
SED Ia

-.171-A•III• 'Grewe
773- .._on
·

2n -Lot•rt folio

oSLOWN IN

FIIIUCE

Roger .Hysell
Garage

HUMPHIEY'S

675-~ - ,lee~e"1

Ponoorov

oALUMINUM SIDING

4-6-11-lfl '

ArNCodelO• ,

112 - M i cldl_,.,.,

n•.:c•.,.., o'"'

••3 .....-AreiM• 011t
379-Welnui

D1ily Tribune; relchtnt Mr '11.000·h0nt• ·

.
COPY DEADLINE -

.0&amp; / cley

M•on C,o . . WI/

Metfl Coumy

- ANa Cocte 114

311 -\ltm:on
24&amp;-Rto Grenell

Wtll atto ....,.., in tr'll '-1: . ,l. . .nt Rqtlter •nd th• Gelli ·

available for sale in each Kroger Store. e•ceQI as
specifically noted 10 thts ad . If we do run out of an
advertised item, we will after you vour choice of a
~omparable item, when a'llailable, reflecting the same
savings or a raincheck which will entitle vou to purchase
the advertised item at· the advertised price within 30
days . Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item
P!.!rchased .

16

... 2
.10

'f~llou:in~fl elephont&gt; exchantes
.
...

• A clns..._. ,_,."_..,.,, •'•-' '" lhe OaUv 5enuntlt.._ ·
, ceot,- cllilifitd dllsMI¥. &amp;uaW.•• CerCI enellegtl - ~Otieet )

•

0

•VINYL SIDING

FUINACE

992•2269
EVENINGS

.:liO

Classified po,es cqrer th~_ ·

'PrtCt~ Of H for all c•l!illl•lt•l" doloiDIIIH'IC"e oi ~~ COJ1.
•1 pot111 Mnll¥pe OtUv ~ .'
inlll II not .....,..... , fot .,,.,, efltr flrll d~t~~ , IChtcll
. ... , _ . , , flftl d_, ad runs in .....-1. C.. l ....ort' 2 :00 P-""

•I

.:ao

" " • ••• ior cor~McU1W. runt . bt'O...,. u-dft'SWIII De lh•ted
eM:t'l ,.., u ••ar••• N1
'

""'"'"• M1111 . ,OIIIIia or M11on eoum. . !'Y'Uit be pre·

'

.

.... oo
. .. 00
18.00
.1:1.00
11 .30 / diV

- - --~·.-

BILl. SLA~I

O"'r 1&amp; Worcll

Rill

11

t.)onthly

•

•

15

10

, 1 .10 dteca"'"' to; •H ,..;d '" 1ctwanoe
Mil - Gr.;e;...,.v enel found 101 undll' 1t 'w orda wjlt Dl
run 3 dati It no ctiii'Dt

•

RA
Worcll
111
111

· ··-·

"SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·,
"UGHT HAUUNG
"FIREWOOD .

Number 1. Marketplace

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992·2156
MONDAY thru F. . AY I A.M. t!i. 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

··~------------~------~-------------;~~---~~~~
- ~
· ~~=·~======~

-r .

11

The

Ohio

Pap Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760
EOE

-DOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772

.,......

SUN'S UP TANNING

DAVI'S

h

-~~·1, . .I

WetNIIyl

... 1'

.....,. .,.g aiAYicl'

Per Molt 2 _, 4 DVIIIe

......tfor .

llomlllls. . . . d1112 •

Taoumtlh."'-'
llW&amp; an

'

. . ll I IW., lllftl II, . .
1 S1alo11 ..........~ ............................. •1.50
6 51111.............. _
'11.00
12 S.allns.----:.~ ..................... SJO.GI
15 Slllilftl....- ....................... SJJ.OO
FIIST YISIT'FIB ..,.. POSSaYMOll
LOTIONS - STICKERI .
Cal S1nn C1l1•1-. 141·~1JJ

••

�M..:h 21. 198Q

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY
l wilnot•• I
-

51

· The

Houllllold
Goodl

':1::.' sa:~1A-4\1~s·

Television-

.,.., loy ClAY L I'Ot&amp;AII

tt toro•y

.... l d l o r l l r -

olillfU.. , _, ....., -

.4•

·

125 ol Hoy, DIJto IIJJI•
good. f14-317·7411.
.

J
I

~·112,

I

Jl'· okl lull tiiH J1d .....
••••
- -3031. · Coli allor 4p.m.
.,

I

... -

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..

:::::::,;a.~ ~
J •Z.\

=~-:- olor 1:00 PM.

•

.,._30M?H_

'

1...:a·

'm11~

··~

.

:

~~ ~'

for Rent

·

I.

'

finding juggling a job lnd
IChOolloM_¥111y

600D 6RIEF, .

&amp;"';.0:,:£
TV 1;1
e101 Arlll'l GJtlftth

'' IF THE I-IEART OF A fM.N
15 DEPRESSED WITH CARES,
THE MIST 15 DISPELLED
WHEN A WOMAN APf'EARS"

ANOTHER HOME RUN!
THIS 15 OUR WORST
6AME EVER!

d1 aar:::.oln Point

• ()) 1!11

(D Oa.rul Htgh Michelle II

l_i i i &amp; 'J
~oiM!M!iii~~

~nrnent

44

........
!]) • •

I

_a

Il

I' I I

l!l 3-2·1 Camact 1;1

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
lHE SE SQUARES

S Top Card Contestants

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S •
TO GET ANSWER

lGlJ allHe-Man
Tli'"'a Comprony
etDCIINewoi;J

combine entertainment lrivlo
with tht luck of the draw.
'GI Hangln' lrl

1!11

w~~ae• 01

..&gt;" ~TN£
Coun 1;1
IIJ Monoyllno

•
0 Mllml VIce Crockett and
Tubbs stumble onto an infant
smuggling operation. Stereo.
a .l'elra And Feotlvalo: 1!111
,COUnty Fair The·rair features
performances by Conway
Twilly and George 'Jonas,
and events Including lraelor ·
and horae pulling.
D Abbott And Cootello

.... end I ondod In , _ YJr.
glnlo end Ohio, 304-2734447.

9

ec a

Wanted to Buy

AL'WAYS' SfF
THf GLASS A$

X

~·

t-fAt.F FuL t. •
vNJ..!fJ, of cou~st

7:0&amp; I]) Jalleraona

7:30 e!]) F~mlly l'aud

Motorw- llluo1rttecl
e
E.,.,.lnmant Tonight
e ()) -a·o Famlly(J)

g

_$0Mf0Nf FL$£

rs·.,..,Gt.JY.'Nti.

1!11 • 0 J-rdyii;J

.
3·21

GIIDi M'A"S'H

IIJ Cronflra

D Night Court

7:351]) Sanford And Son
· 1:00 !]) MOVIE: Wa'ra No Angelo
(2 :00)
.

e C2l a Unoolvld

Employment Serv1ces 12
11' Help Wanted

s,...,

AVQN I•• AI' .-_ I Shlrtor
~~14,211.

AVQN • AI

.nu. Coli

w..vor--2845.

Myll-1 Report on lhe
capture ·of an escaped ·
Waahlngton stale convict. 1;1
(J) CoiMae Baaki!HH
.
Ia II • (I) Growing.Pelno
Mike casta a beautiful Dul
seamlngl't_untalenled girl in
his play. t:;J
&lt;D I]) Dlicovar. World 01
S c - Herbert the robot ,
and thelatell _in artitlclal
Intelligence. 1;1
.
1!11 eiD Nao'mal Lila The
lamlly anxiously Illes 10 gel
MaK 10 lhe airport. C

SHuatlon
Wanted

Slilrtoy'l
Love ... c... - ·
Will .... lor 2 lldorty ....
llvlolory - · . In my homo.
81Mf7·SolciZ ..,......

Mllrtlyn

Deplnt Na

. . .,

ChrWian

wotMn

s.~~~

my

'

UR T• Sorvloo.' Tapping,
111ftunlna. ohrubo, . • . - · Pruning Hodgoe. 114-

.......

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.

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1110 ,.,....- Sllnblrd, 4cvt,.
11,aaa 11111oi. P8, P8,' AIIIAI
N&lt;lo, t17011. Colt allor 4p.m.

··-···
-· ............

.... _ . . Doy 0... Clntor.
Solo,-........-· ...,
I Lift.· 1:30~
.111. .
211-ID.
.............
.Dioplftl
lllQWI!I.I1

PI,

Plllnllng lnl.tor Ellorlar, Eio.
R

ll&amp;b~,_ .............14-

.......

4411U1

-

plcldld

lop,

_.,~

.......

if!lorfor. 14300. .a,ooo

mUM, 114471-1111.

lnlorlar •

Ui.tor

oolnllna· Re-oeo• lurnlohlll.

:::a.=:""'::'tl"ri
_ , . Ubrory lo -

-

lor on odul

11130 Elllorn
,_,_ "'"""' Spocloll: 4d
TniiiN, 1410:
.... .., .......

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.........

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1un11 or ...., IHII!iiilod """"'·.
..... bl
AI
evenlnp, . . .,.... anll 111lnor ,,. . . .421 .

--lo.
hi

C.H {or en

•p allltll•ll,

11~

Elm S300 IO $100 por -

Aaadlna 8oolat at ....._ CaH
81&amp;-47S7440 Eld. 8303.

Bullnell

OpponunHy
INOTICE I
otiC VALLI¥ PUIUIHIHO CO.

11 :u:u• IIIII you do
bo L
-pecplo,... · - ·
ond NOT 10 rnonoy

·=.. --,...-

614-112

• 112

..

1 112
1184 CMvy Clio- 30
3422.
1184 5)odp Dlylor&amp; Fulr
loldod. .... ....... _
po~l. bCIIIInl .ldlllcln. 114-

I

. . . . . .

J

1IJ Hu~ Chronicle

I!) Amertc8n PlayhoUN The

after-effects ·on an older
Japanese-American couple's
divorce. (1 :30)
1
1!11 etD Jake lind '1111
Fa-n Jake it visited by an ,
old friend who has boon
hired 10 kill him . I;J
11J1 Larry King Lival
G]J MOVIE: Sony, Wrong
Number (2:00) Sta&lt;eo.
a Neohvllla Now Counlry
music's honest a~aro' are
featured' live. •
&amp;:30 • a • (J] Anytlllng 1ut .
Love Divorc.d and available,
Marty's Iormor fiancM

c

I BETTER
MOSEY ALONG,

LOWEEZ.Y

l RECKON
I'LL SEE
YOU AT
CHURCH

TONIGHT

PARSON.!

....... :;:..:~·-.-.:~·

...

• ••

ln:pls
-~ lnidl, I:JID.I:OO

t

....... -..

· reappears. 1;1

j

:.1r·a· ....u.-nte.
- ......
•w.
-yo.

blale

10:00!]) 701! Club-_Witll Pat

Plumlllnl•

Ralle!tlon

ew

' Heltlng

taNBC-Ipralai
Thl New HOllywood. Tom

Brokaw tokes an in-depth
look a1 the new tranda In
movie-making, tht recipe for
success 11 the box office.
and the changln&amp;buslnesa of
film produellon.
Cll Legandl 01 loge

ASTRO.QRAPH
.
.

BEDEOSOL
•

• • • (J] Chi!la ._..
LIBRA (a.pL - . :DI WithOut even
K.C, Ia wrongly involVed In
lrylng, the a1tentlon of otherl wtU be fo.
t11e
murdlr of a Vlatnarl\81e
culled on you today. Thll It well .
nattonai.I;J
gpod, provided yau keep In mind that lit
IIJNiwawho wtlf be waldllng might not 1!11 etD ~ Ylnnle
oarlty be YliW .ctml,...
fl!ldl dirty work while llvin_i.
ICOIIPIO (Oot. M lin D) In managlrfallop hOUH . 1;11
1ng IUbOrdlnatal=,
be nellher too
twliiht
hlrlll nor too
. A..,_. al,
lteWI
don't • t11er11 to
1111ng1 you - · t
'
do f0111'811f.
I ,..., 21.,... 2ID) Be' vaty ... IAGITTAIIIUI ....... Dec 211 Bull- 10:30 &lt;D Oe.-rlde 111aon Guardian
01 The. Aalriforalt
laallve today regarding frlandt With
ahould be ttMied lndlller·
1!)11111111"
On !CIIIIa
whom you Ml c-e tl you link up with ent1y today. A 1111ure to do_, ... ., ,
Cltilatopller
PlurnmW
plavoqniiD · - H k ._
t OIIIIflt-01..... , It thJI't requl!ed OCJUIIIIUm 1 polltttill1
VIadlmlr
Nlbokllv
In thll
~yourday.
. protltUie_.,.lntoa".-."
drllftlllc rwncttnant ol a
C
21._ :D) Conlider CAl IICOIIII -CDaL
.1111. 11)
-.re dlllworad II Cornall
. your~~~~ equal to lftYOIIt! wtth w11orn . . matt1e
be lllltd 1n 01• to 01• ,..
, Unl¥ertlly an Klllka't
p~'relnvOIIMd today, but not lllf*IOr.
llllouahlpl today. TIJn II a p a INIIty_
Metamorphoalt,
tlnobllllh bahaviOr on Your blhall will you might 111'&lt;!110 COIIIMd with lndlvldotherS to toeareapacllor you.
, ua1t you UIUIIIy l1lllke Mllllort to IMikl.
LIO (.allr
II) Guatd aplnat AGUAIIIUI (-.
11) Today
lnCillnlllonl today to thlnlc you can per. • you m1g111 11e a muc11 belllr lllkw thin 10:41()) MOV1I: Tile
. (1:41)
form Willi when you.._ only llcllchet you Will be a~· In tha llnll lilY.
lnlannatlon With wiiiCh to wort&lt;. Beii-Cie- ll'o not wMt you NY ,ou're going to do t 1:00 ~~··CIIIII'IMIIOIIOrw•,I ..... KJna
COUld laid to your ~lal. .
t1111 oounte. IIIII wt111 you IOIUIIIy do. ,

dictions for t11e y - ahead by 11!&amp;illng
$1.25 '10 Aatro-Graph, c/o this nftiPa·
per, P.O. Box 91428, Clewland, OH
101·3428. Be sure 10 alate your zodl·
oc atgn.
·
TAUIIUI (April _ , 211) Foculing
on the lralltl" of ot11ers today could
caueet!wn to taka a cloaer look at you.
Wilen you're put under the miiQIIIIytng
It might malla you aqulnn with

gt•.

!'-fort.

..

........ ,

c.-.

In the .year lhlld you are likely to es-

., didn't get . . CIJI'IIY contral ilijA(Ivl job.
Som1Qr11 not1cec1 my 111011 don't match."

tor

. ' .

-tute

......

•fv!:.
o

.

,_1111111.,.

E

tablloh mare amblllouo Olljlettv.

..........

a '••

a

mer

a

t&amp;= .. --

'*'

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=

'

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........
lcz

I

etll •

Cll lnt-11 T-'11111
• 0 Alltlllo Hili
0 llant,!fM . \

EAST .
.KQJ4
•2
tJI095
.8',7 32

•
l

, SOUTH

..
I.
• 985

.... Q87654

.... 32 ' .

-.

Vulnerable: North-South
·Dealer: North
Soulll

. Wesl · Norllo

'1•

Pass

All pass

4 NT

Pus
Pus

6'

Db!.

·

"

Eul

Opening lead: • 3
l . - - - - - - - - ' - - - . . . J' '

.

might duck a spade, hoping that West:·.::
held three spades with tlie ace of
clubs. If that were tl\e layout, after '
ducking a spade and rulfing out biJ diamond losers, declarer could rWI bis ,
trumps and squeeze West out of either
the club ace or a spade trick.
'

-.
"ll

'

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.

·· ...

'

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•

..

.

.. '

.'

..
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'

'

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....
'

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....,

,·

~-~- I

.-·
I.

specialty
_41 Skiing
· resort
41 Bridge
expert
47 Assistant

., .
~·

'

....
"' '
.

DAILY CRYFI'OQU~- Hen's how to work It:

3121

~.

~ ·

AXYDLBAAXit
II LONGFELLOW

'

"

One letter stands for anD~r. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. -Single ltitters
· apostrophel, the lencth and formation of the words are ali
hinta. Each clay the 'COde IItten an different.
c•YPTOQUOTE

s.aJ

IHZO

y_.

}'OUIMIIIhan you haw In the (lilt. Thll
• 11 a1 Will and goocl.pro~a, a you do nO!
taka on more t11an you can handlll.
(liiiNII .,_,.. 11) Action tak·
.. 111*1 tha ldvlol 01 a k~
(.... a IIILB)AWI-Inlen- PIICII "-aM .. . , 11'1 belt
COUld leid you to a dud and atrwt toclay. IMamllllk•
you 1M .. ttanatU,IIndlllllltllloutyouonto- . not to 11y 10 mutuw•ld . . . . cllf
thing today tllat 111111*1011111111 will be llf1llls a1 1 frllnd today ...... you truly
cr I dl •to your O!lll'llnii(IItll and f*·
good
far you llnanelllly.llllarl jUmping ' ~ w1111 you're doing. 1 you l1lllke M
capllona. Arlal, )'OUIMIIIO a birthday ..... Sandrarwaw AltrooGrlpft,_ In, you'd belilrOI! a"!!' JIIIIN"'*olal•. - · It ooutd ,..,. In INIIUII,_..

nNk•"

z-

WEST
•3
•10
+KQ664
.... Q10 .9 54

"

.44 Egg

«

BERNICE

For Solo: 3IJr ~112
- · ,_.., ~~~- Gil
·--.114-+IMI1 •

ee

'R:lRKY PIG"

I
•
I

SUNDAY~

tor

Low MO,DOO'o. 114-1317 oJ.
terlp.m.

Rec11

WATCHII-G
TOO MANY
c.A.RTOONS•

YOU SHORE PREACHED
A POWERFUL SERMON
ON 6AMILIN'

---··.:.~....-""'

8:00 8!])
Night Court Oan·s
ecslatic about 8 'job offer
from a top New York law
firm. (R) 1;1
g
(J] Doogla Howaer,
M.D. Ooogie is tempted to
join a prosperous, upscale
pedialrica c(inlc: (R) 1;1

•

Trallor and 2 loll $11,1100. 304811-1118.

e (J] Head 01 Tho

i~aChaH
a

OR lYe BCSN

A DUCK ...

.'

h . -......... ollotlng.
........ Ell

otl~·~~~------~:::::___~

T09RI~ME.

QUACKS&lt;!.'

1184 Oltlo Cllllllll Cieri.
lroduthln. Dlloll,10 ....
on ,,......,..... -.olly.l14441 2l01AIIeri:P.M.

I.---"------

=44::.1:.:RE=A=D~.....,----.,-I 21

on.

Wllllliineh

promi88s 10 lhree dlffe(enl
girls. !;I ·
1!11 eliZ Sydney Sydney
trias to get someone to take
her seriously as a deleellve.

I

t7 .
.KJ6

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Beldam
1 Alan Jr.
or Nathan 2 Altar
at
constel_
5
lhe bil
lation
3 Erudite
(be
restless)
4 Genesis,
Dry
place
10
• T
b
5 Task
1,, rem le
- 8 Concealed
12 Entrance .
Ynltrdtly'e Anewer
13 As of now 7 Caucasian .
14 Step In •
language
18 King (Sp.) 8·Boundary 24 Scholars 35 San
17 Big-,
9 VIctim
25 European
,
11 Metal
river
!laly .
Calli,
19 Run into 15 Dennis
28 Father . ·341 Beyond
21 Tooth
O'Keefe
(Fr.)
38 Lohengrin's
movie
28 Thrill
wife'
substance
23 Drooping 17 Psyche
- (sl.)
.40 O'Neill
27 Grow
18 Single
30 French
play
toward . 20 Pastry
painter 42 Fish
night
22 Venison, 32 flefuge 43 bistaH
28 woman
-34 Croaker
Romney
In white
29- market
30Asa of fact
31 Word of
comparison
33 Before ..
34 To and·
37 Infuriate
39 Bring
back
41 Grlllee,
e.g.

Clo.. Arvid makes ill-advised

t

IEITHSR I'M
,t.SKI~ THE.N\

POLLY WA.NNA
QUACKS:R!
POL.L.Y WANNA

TIOIIIr
h11.. ..,iM~~~-~~~--~Ior~~~~~==~11_
, ... MUOiong, ....., . _,

holldlyl. - : ....
JM!Ot*, be In fl I I
good
helllh, compu..r ...,..... . . or

Willing lo 111m ...

·-"'·,_,
-

;

MORK MEEI\.

·

11H Oldo Doftl . . .._.,._
~ii/ AC, "" rull1nt

I
_,_
........
=
Will do

·~··

Ill, , . _ trunk, nJIIy

1:30 D II

•J • '

by THOMAS JOSEPH

lllukil (NR) (2:40)

-o Co"'!,.£~ Edition,
PI, ,AC, AIM"M ..-reo,

or-.

,

CROSSWORD

Cra'I!Y IRJ (2:bb)

r

..

"'·'

.KJU

Here is a deal from a rubber bridge
game in Italy many years ago. Declarer was Camillo Pabis Ticei, a member
of the famous Blue Team that won numerous world team championships in
thP 1980s. As you can see from the bid·
ding, club bridge was just as emotion- .
al-as Italian opera. And none can deny
that there is high drama In the play of
a dOubled and redoubled slam COO·
tract.
It was not bard for Pabis Tied to determine that East's double was based
on spade length behind the North band.
· So be went to work. He won dummy's
ace of spades and cashed dummy's
trump king. Then he ruffed a club,
. played ace and ruffed_ a diamOnd,
ruffed the jack of clubs and rolled his
las! diamond. The stage was now set.
The king of clubs was played from
'dummy 'and declarer discarded a
spade. West won the ace of dubs and
was stymied, with nothing left bpi mi·
nor-suit cards. Pabis Tied ruffed the
return in dummy and shed his last los· ·
in&amp; spade to make tbe slam.
Although declarer might bave made
tbe contract without East's rash dou·
ble, It's also possible that he might try
a different tack. For example. he

1:01 ()) MOVIE: The Mlslllluri

't

,

NORTH
HJ.II
• AIO 76 2

J•-• Jacoby

By

1D MOVIE: Middle Age

I

... -.-- ..
11H

a~

l

OJ Oen'f'logo
ID 1- MW Mill,
mil

BRIDGE

lPG) (2:00)
g .PilmiNIWI
GlJ ...,_, She Wrote
. Sometl1ing Borrowed,
Someone Blue

•

..

'

Detain- Ripen- Visit - Lancet- PANTRIES

e aD MOVIE: Road laamH

~

'

' ,

iefore a storm, the grocery slore is lilled with People·
who don't want to be caught with their· PANTRIES
down.

lwPM....-¥'•
Cll lporlaCintar
• e e ()) c-uttatr
1IJ l!l MacNeil 4hrer

· NawiHour

.

SCIIAM-I.ETS .ANSWE~S

1:351]) Andy Ortlflth •
7:00 ~ ~ l _Mrt. King .

Wlrll• AucUon s.mc., 11 yra
••...-il .........~._ _t,JcOn-

I .

_
by fil li ng in the missing warda
L._ L-L...JL...J-.J---1
yoo develop from step No. 3 .below.'

.

~u=N-1;1

Public sa_
le
&amp; Auction

'

I

NIC Nightly Newt

1li lpallol.ook

..

Husband to wife: "Boy I'm
i _
,.;J
·
glad those guys left. Their vac·
. . . . . .
ation was over 6 months ago
and we're still suffering from -··
R 0 D HI R ~ -- effects !" .
_1-_-,;.1;...;;1..,::;.,1;.:-.;1..,5~~-'1 Q Complete lhe chuckl,e quoted

1:061Il lllledl' HHibltllae

. 1:30. ~

••

C0 NK K

V E ERY

0 WOIId today
G]JJam
·, · D Clla111o In Charge

Lost &amp; Found

"

•

I I 1I I .
1

Ill Co 1:1 1;1

I

............. ...
renl, .... _ . . ..... loll,

&lt;

•

I

DRYNOE

I

1:011!]) Hanlcaille And

+

2''

r

0

EVENING

42 Moblll ltomM
for Rent

I

~TV--M-for

8

•'

low to fom1 foor ·..mple -dJ.

I

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THEY HAVE A BIRTHRIGHT TO A CERTAIN KIND~
CARE. - MARLO THOMAS
"'
C&gt; 1110 by King F-llyndlcall. InC.

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�Ohio Lottery

Hornets

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.

D My Number
608

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3230

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1, 6, 8, 18, 39. 43

STORE HOURS ·
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

Vol.40, No.221

,.------.
--!"-----,
POWELL'S COUPON. . I

Sl 00 OFF

Chuck Roast ...:..... .
BUCKET "BEEF
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CU uLre Ste·a·k ·••••••••••
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ROAST

GOOD ONLY AT POWHL'S
COUPON" EXPIRES MAR. 24, 1990

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24 PACK .12-0Z. CANS
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Sliced Bacon •••·.~.o:. $119. ·

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COR~. KING - WHOLE 6-8 LB. AVG.

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Leg Quarters ••••~... 4
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PRESERVES

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Livers .••••••• :~·••••••~·••• 49

CHICKEN
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LONGACRE . .

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GOOD ONLY AT POWELL'S
COUPON EXPIRES liAR. 24, 1990

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POWELL'S COUPON.

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onto the main track. ~Ike katt.
brakj!lilan, of Galloway, threyr
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SUPERIOR ASSORTED
.

"A Conrail 'enltJne de~alled 4t
the switch on Wednesday' after·
· Carpenter, reports tbe
C'o uniy Sheriff's
• ·

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Conriill engine derails ·

32 OZ. JAR

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.

Polley com,mlttee members of
surcbar.tes ' could put lndepend· predtctlon rt!g&amp;rdlng surcharges
the AGH.TMV SQ!ld Waste Man- ent •haulers out of business, . had come true. "There's ilo end
agement·Dtslrlct voted at Wed· especially those · haulers who to this thing," he said, appar·
nesday night's publiC hearing at serve areas of the counties ently"meanlng that II surcharges
McArthur to veto a proposal to . outside of municipalities. 11 such dori'.t provide the, needed revenue
lncrellse district surcharges to • "-ulers were forced to give up to operate the district, then to
landfill du!DpiDg fees. Had the · their conectlon routes, the prob- c~lltlnually Increase the
.proposal not been vetoed, sur· lern of Illegal dumping would surchwrges Is notlheanswer, but
,cbar11es to landfill fees wlthlil the likely result ··
,
Instead may cause more
district would In the next few ~ . However, even without public problems.
")veekl' have raised to $3 for In Input to veto the propollld aut·
Proposed legislation to amend
dlatrlct solid waste,$6forlnstate charlie Increase. It bad appar· the nate solid waste law to
· ·but out of district. and $9 for out . ently been deddild In a ineetlng · remove· veto power frOm the
of state garbage. With the veto,
of the district's board of dlrec- . lariest municipality In each
current district surchargeS of . tors, held earUer W~Y at county ""should be called the
$1.~,$2.M and$3.75wll!remaln
Athens •. to ·veto the ·PfOIIOied ·. Jac~ Bill," Evans said,
In effect.
·
Increase anyway. Tbedeclllonof · . "since it came about because we
Most of the Individuals from the bOard of directors w• based exercised our veto right."
throughout the . slx:COunty dis· uponMiddlepOrtVIllage'svetoof
Although all -policy committee
t.ict oi Athe.ns, GalUs, Hocking, · ~he propoaed Increase at their members agree. that comprom· •.
Jackson, Meigs and . VInton at· · regular meeting on March 12.
tse Is necessary to pass a10-year
tending laat night's hearing,
. As the state's saUd waste law Is solid waste management pliln for
were either Independent trash . written, the largest municipality ille district, as required by state
, .I '
ha11lers or environmentalists.
ln. each county ofthe dll~t bas law, , many do not agree that
Several of those In attendance
veto power. Miildleport Is Meigs remo~al of the veto power _Is
spoke aga:tnsl the proposed sur· County's largest municipality.
necessary to ensure passage of
char~P,! Increase.
This Is the second time a the plan,
.
· Ha~lers who s~ publicly municipality within th~ solid
However, poUcy committee
were agalDSt the surcharge In· waste district haa exerclaed Its · members do not like the Idea of
a&amp; McArthv. Tile Muleys. 8lld
LOCAL CONCERN - Mlddleporllnall baulllr
crease because they felt It would right to veto, with the first time financial responslblity for eper·
many otller lnall llaulera tllr0111boul tile
Roger Manley, at left, and hla · IOR."llslen to
adversely affect their.businesses being early 0n after the district ating the dlst.rlct falling back on
sli:-eouatJ dlollrlct, a&amp;lend diltrlct meetlnp oa a
commenls at lui nlsllt's J1Uhllc hearlns of the
by forcing them to have to raise · was fonned, when \he .City of their home counties If the district
replar jluls.
AGHJMV Sblld Wiulle Manaiem~nt Dlstrlcl. The
customer prices In order to 'cover Jackson -vetoed proposi!d sur· cannot generate enough molll!y
tbe higher fees. ·
charge fees. .
Qn Its o\vn. As required by Jaw, If
'
,. ·
last year when revenue fell short · Covington, Ky·:: which has been
· Ep\llronOineiltallsts · were
JackSon Mayor Tom • E"'ans expenses cannot be met within basis.
Actually, this has already
of the amount needed lo pay lees contracted to develop the 10-year
against the proposed Increase said at last night's meeting' that the district;· then the pltrticlpat·
In
the
district,
with
all
happened
to the engineering firm, scs· management plan. But even
because they agree that higher he was glad to see that Jackson's lng· counties will have to share
six
counties
having
l;leen
billed
Engineers, of Cincinnati and
the expenses on a · per capita
COntinued oh page 9

BEEF

Sl·79

Pomeroy:. Middleport, Ohio, Thu.,.day,
. ~arch 22. 1990 ·
.
,
.

Proposed laDdfill tipp·

'

' U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF Ll.

.

. Copyrlglnect 1110

3 LB. OR MORE

CHICKEN

Ill

'

.
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. .
sUN.~ MAR. 18 THRU SAT.,.MAR. 24~ lCJ90

'.

By Uillled pfe.e lalerUttolllll
the 40~.. ,Clouds were moving
Warm weather was on ~p 'for across the state but W!!r'e ex·
Ohio Thursday, but a return to . pectee! to ,give way '1o some
wlnter·llke temperatures Is sunshine Thursday morning.
ahead for the weekend. .
A concentration of clouds ana
The arrtval of a cold front by rain was over the mid·
evening Will cau~ a shift In the . Mississippi Valley. The clouds
winds to a ·.northwesterly dlrec· were forecast · to move east
ti!nl overnigbt. COld arctic air · toward the'BuckeyeStatelaterln
will then plunge Into Ohio as well the morning. · · .
as the entire region.
On the early morning weather
The cokl air will settle over map, high pressure w•n!ong the
Ohio Friday and remain through · East eoa&amp;tfrom New England to
the weekend, There{s a potential the Florida gulf coast. A broad
for lake effeqt snow In the- are~a of low pressure extended
. from Texas to north of tJie Great
extreme northeast Friday·. ,
But dunns tbe day Thursday. Lakes.
strong ' southwest winds along
Low pressure centers were
with periods of . sunshble ~re ·over northern Texas, IoWa and
expected· to boost temJIIlr~tures just north of Lake Superlor. ' A'
Into the mid 50s · and 61111 by · warm front extended from the
afternoon.
.
Iowa low across Michigan to
'Fhe northern ~OIIQ~eJ; wl.ll be · Pennsylyanla while a cold front
~
·
. dampened som-llat by · a trailed to Colorado.
weather system tracking just to · The Iowa low·was expected to
the north of the state, the merge· with the Canadian low
.National W~ther Service said. .Pear Lake SuperiOr In the afterThechanceofralnwlllbelllghest noon. dragging the cold . front
over th~ northern counties dur- across the Greal Lakes. 'The low
lng the day. .
was expected to head nottheast
: Winds "Weft forecasl 10 In- Into Quebec Thursday ntht.
·creaseduriqtbeday. Southwest
By Frklay morning. the cold
winds were to rite to 15 to 25 mph front shcilald reach froni. NeW ·
statewide, wllll speeds up to 35 Ensland across the Tenbessee
mph expected~ Lake Erie. ·
Valley to Oklahoma, with Arctic
, Early mOI'IIIbla temperatures
high pressure building Into the
were llulte mOd
with
readings
In
plains states durlnJ the day.
..
,
~

Tickets on sale for· Chamber
.·o f Commerce
dinner,
~nee
.
.
.
Tickets tor the Melp County ·
Chamber of Commerce dinner·
dance 10 be tleld on March 31 al
tbe Royal Oak Resort are now on
sale.
· :
·The steak dlmler will be aerwd
at 7 p.mJ to~ lit a datlee ,
from 8 p.m. ' to mlllti!Chl with
music by crouwer.
During •the evenlg there wiU
be an oppor1WIIty toView IIWMeigs ~ touaty llrochure di!Yeloped by tile Melp COUIIty ·
·Regional Planning Commtalton
and the Meigs County
COmrnlllloaera.
·

•,

tiona In the county will be
available W thole attending to
view. ·
··
.·
1
Tickets are avallabli! from
Chamber Board members,
Bruce Reed, Lenny l!;lluon, Tom
~.Ron All!. 8111 Ne• • Dave .
Baller, Joe Oark, Mary Powell,
Dtcll Olvelll, Larry Hoffman,
CIJIJ_ck Kttc:btJJ, Dr. Nlclt RobinNl!l Mille GerlaCh, 6r It the
Metal CO,iallt)' Cll8mber office.
'~'~CUts are allo avallable at
Royal Oak, Simon's Plcll·a-Palr,
Mlildleport Department Store,
BUr Clothlen, ~ Jennifer
SJ~eet•-

.

.

A display table will be let up
AddltiDaal ......_ .. t,_ ttl the
·for the brochure exllllllt 'and , · dlliner-duce
!ned
'lUcie&amp; taken from varlouJ locatram the Ch~ber Cllflce•

"M;;''be. .

'
·
JlrW ofllle Pome..O, ,rlunlor GlriReCiut~l'N&lt;DD
. lll!t were kept billy on Wednesday sluffing bap Wlth coupoae for

lbe ulllllll .r.&amp;.lonllow wWell wiD lie lleld aa Metp KlgiiScllooton
:tprll 8 a1 1:30 p.m, Advisor far the II'OIIP Is Jla&amp;lly Pr1ee ud
co-leader Is Kay McEiory.

IAR. 24. 1990

'

·Grant ·extension s6ught.by ~o1mnission ·
•

· AlthOugh lcical buslnes~an
Roger Davis has requested that
the Ohio Dep!lrtment of Develop·
ment elltend lhe lime perloo In
which grant monies through that

•

agency may be spent to start the
Meigs Manufactured Housing .
company, the extension of time
cannot be considered without
additional lnfor:matlon. Accord- ·

f

1

lng to a •letter ,totheMetgs County
Commissioners, the department
of development needs a revised
':9mmltment of outside funding
o the project, In the fonn of
leiters from prospective money
lenders, as well as a narrative
:summary of projeCt changes
since development funds were
committed over a year a11o.
The original grant agreement
called for the funding to be uled
Within 12 monthS after signing
the agreement. The 12 month
period expired before'C hrlstmas,
1989.
.
Commissioner Richard ' 'Jol)es
dictated a letter to Davis In·
structlng him to send the requlred lnfonnatlon to the state.
Jones also forwarded to ~ills a
copy of the letter wlllch the
commissioners · received from
lbe departtnent of development.
In another matter related to
ll'tnt"moaey,IIU'oush tllt'l drpart·
meat of developmeatj the commlllloners received a etterfrom
Don Poole, of the Tuppers
· PII\111-0U!ster Water District,
•Iiiii for Information on Com·
· lflllaltr Development Block
GriJit fonnula money. · AI ex·
platbed by ~Ill, be'
In·
til lll!ted Cbe tile water dllll'lct's
IIJ:IIrd of cUreeton In a .._.aq
e~rl1er thii month to q!IIY IDr
CDiiG fundi for a water line
allltlilon to the nara-S..te
Rotate Ill area.
Tile commllllonera are ·lltld·
lng a: letter to Poole lnforinlng
bJrn that the appropriate time to
apply for CDBG _ , Ia late

w•

·~..-. tll'b'taUt "•••

}111111111

t ........, ...... -

I!PJII ltl 1 p u1od. "

Greg Bailey, representing
Home Creek Enterprises. Pomeroy. met with the commissioners
. to dlscu111 a proposed road
closlns In Salisbury Township.
The road In question Is a portion
of old Route 124 which dead ends
In the vicinity of the Full GOspel
Lighthouse Church near Pome·
roy. Bailey Is constructing a
building near the ojd road whl.c h
. he will own, but which Win bouse
the U.S. Soil Conservation Ser:
vice. Bailey hopes to close tbe
portion of t.be road In order to
l;lelter facllltate ' parklng at the
new bulldlft$. If closed, the
portion of road would become the
property of Home Creek ,
. Enterprlles.
Although the commissioners
are In accordance with the
request to~ cl01ure, the matter
was tabled until a meeting at the
site can be arranged with the ·
c;ounty enat- and others.
,
'
Fo~q an opening of bids, :
the comrnluklnera approved .;
four local baab,llome Nadonal, ::
Racine; Central Tr111t. Middle- •
port; Bank 0ae and FllfiMI'I. ,
Bank and 8avinp Comi*!Y-• .
botb . Pomei oy, ~ depooltorles· ,.
for actflle county fundS over the.
next.:two ,..,., to be 111ec1 at u.
dltcretiOfl of tbe COWity :
treuurer.
•
Finally, after meettns with :
Sberllf J - M. Soulaby, the :
commllllollera apeed to pay a •
$182biDior•troftllecounty's
radio tran •••• lilly lllatJH,
' alld abo w : h ti.DIIII!III
lor SlllioaBaiL, JaltiOIIIiU•

P'lll'; aa• ., •r .,,. •
..... ltlli4 l1t' tiJi .....
tlllmiMI'.

,

GOOD OILY AT POWELL'S
COUPOII

-

ol nil! II • ,.ree•l
P•ty ciii!Q 1'?1daJ, wit•

IIJP- .,.__ .........

Kieker 942243

Reserve The Right To
tlmit Quantities

atpt, wMII a
C'nre

•

...

.

•

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