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' Daily Sentinel
Pege-16-The
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
'!'Vednesdly. April4, 1990
~~~~~~----~--~~--~~~==~~--~~--~~~----~~~~~

Snow, heayY
By Vnlted Presalnteroational
Snow fell In -portions of the
Middle Atlantic states early
Wednesday, blimketlng some
areas with up to 3 Inches, while
New England was bat tered by
driving rains and Vermont faced
the threat of flooding caused by
melting snow.•
The National Weather Service
sa,jd spring snow shOwered parts
of West Virginia, Maryland and
western Pennsylvania, where
overnight temperatures dipped
Into the 20s and 30s. l.lght rain
prevailed over most of eastern
Pennsyvanla and southern New ·
Jersey, where readings reached
Into the low .40s.
The force behind New England's extended rains, a low off
the Atlantic coast, began drifting
north of Maine, forecasters said.
Heavy rains brought a · fiOoc:i
watch to Vermont, where more
than 30 Inches of snow fell In the
past two weeks. The combination
of melting snow and the steady
rains contributed to fears of
flooding In poor drainage are11s.
Wind whipped · heavy rain
across the region, while temperatures topped out at about 45.

rain fal)e in . East;

region. : . The states w~re dry
derstorms developing in t-he
except for Ught rains showering · Texas Panhandle began moving
Iowa ,- uuilois and Indiana. • ·
through parts of northern Texas.
Widely scattered showers and
Dense fog and Isolated light rain
thunderstorms continued .aci'oss
developed along the Texas·
much of New Mexico and west·
Louisiana Gulf Coas t, · .
ern Oklahoma as an upper- level
Ca lifornians · experienced a
disturbance moved ' in from
warm evening after the hottes t
Arizona.
day of the year Tuesday. Hlglr
Scattered showers and thuntemperatures _ll_roke Into the 8j)s

SOu~ has

over most of the Interior of the .
state and In parts of the San
.Fra ncisco Bay area.
Oregon posted temperatures in
tne lower 6()s along the coast and
In the upper 70s inlan4, contJnulng a period of warm days 10 to20
degrees above normal.
Washington basked In mol:(!
fair weather. A heat trough

frost warnings .·.

forming along the Wes t Coast Is
starting to raise temperatures
toward the .70s.
Idaho enjoyed continued warm
weather In the 60s and lower 70s,
while Montana was partly cloudy
and cooler on both sides of. the
Divide. A .warm air mass over
Nevada brought abbve-normal
temperatures to much of the

Bake sale
The Reedsville United Metho·
dlst Women wlll hold their spring
rummage and bak.e sale on
Saturday at the church In Reeds·
ville from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The
Young People's Class wlll se11
homemade Easter candy and hot
dogs at the sale. In case of rain,
the sale will be postpones until
the next Saturday.
Lod•e .to meet
The Pomeroy Lodge 164 will
meet tonight (Wednesday) at
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Temple.
.
Trustees io meet
The Bedford Township Trus·
.tees wlll meet In regular_ session
on Monday at 7 p.m. at,the town
hall.
Easter ecg hunt
The Racine American Legion
Post 602 wlll hold Its annual
Easter egg hunt at the legion
home on April 14 at 1 p.m. All
area children Invited to
participate.
Band booaters io meet
The Southern band boosters
will rrieet Monday at 7:30p.m. All
parents are urged to attend. The
birthday' calendar will be
discussed.
MiddlepOrt alumni
The Middleport alumni associ·
atlon Is making plans for the
dlMer 11nd dance to be held May
26 at the former Middleport High
School. Invitations will be mailed
·and anyone Interested in serving
as an officer for 1991 Is encouraged to contact the current
officers, Karen Pooler at 992-2448
or Judy Arnold at 992-5172,
co-presidents; .Jerry· Vaninwagen at 992· 7551, vtce president;
Cheryl floush at 992-2683, secretary: Joe Young at 698-82.1,
treasurer; and Clnda Harris at
992-2451, decorating chairman.
Donkey basketball
The Rutland Fire Department
Auxiliary wlll sponsor a donkey
basketball game on April 12 at
7:30 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
center. Admission Is $3.50,
adults, and $2, children and
senior citizens, In advance; and
$4 and $2.50 at the door. More
lnformallon may be obtained by
calling Carrie Morris at
742-2580 or Joan Stewart at
742-2421.
. Mlnl·goU opening
The Middleport Park ~ n· Putt
miniature goU course wlll open
Aprll16 at 4 p.m. The goU course
will be open seven days a we,e k
with the following schedule,
Monday ·through Friday, 4-10
p.m., and Saturday and Sunday,
noon to 10 p.m.
The price will remain $1 per
pers.on per game with prizes on
certain select holes.
•
Revival
· The Faith Gospel Church In
Long Bottom will have revival
April 16-21 at 7 p.m. nightly.
Jimmy Stewart, Albany, will be
the speaker. There will be special
music each night-.
Blood pressure clinic
The Harrisonville Senior Cltl·
zens will hold a free blood
pressure clinic on Tuesday from
10 a.m. to noon at the townhouse.
The public Is Invited to attend.
Revival
The Hysell Run Holiness
Church will have revival Tues·
day through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly. The speaker will be
George Williams, Point Rovk ..
There ·will be special singing
nightly arid Pasior Robert
Grimm Invites the public.
·
Singers Include, Children of od,
Tuesday; Gabriel Quartet, Wednesday; Harvest Trio, Tburs·
day; Dan Hayman Singers, Frl·
day; Kimberly Herdman,
Saturday; and Dan Hayman
Singers·, Sunday.

,

Daily Number
843,
Pick-4 .
0758

. .I

BIG BEND••• Your Family Owned
. .LOW PRICED
SUPERMARKET

Yol.40, No.231 ~
Copyrighted 1990

99C

E

aox

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursd!IY. April 5, f990

road baSe and patching material.
By NANCY YOA.CHAM •
Although the pug mill currently
Sentinel news Stall
In use by the department Is quite
A r!!Quest from Enj~lneer
old, It inay have some trade-In
Philip Roberts to advertise fqr
value, Roberts said. He antlcl·
bids on a new highway depart·
pates a purchase price of about
ment mixing trailer, commonly
knoWn ·as a pug mlll. was · $70,000 for the equipment.
approved Wednesday by the · Yesterday was the last day the
commissioners could receive
Meigs County Commissioners.
A pug mlllls used to mix liquid comments on a request from
asphalt with aggregate to ·make Robert Allen, doing business as

DON'T MISS ANNUAL SCOTT CONNELLEY ALL STAR GAME
CINCINI!IIAn IENGALS ws. COUIGU AlL STAIS
PLUS HIGH SCHOOL AU STAR GAME

THIS FIIDAY AT UIIIVDSITY OF 110 GilliE, 7 PJI.

Ridgeview Carry-Out, State
Route 681, Scipio Township, to
transfer a C1·C211quor trcense for
beer and wine carry-out only, tQ
J .a mes R. Hill and Early W. Hlll
at the same address. Since no
public comments were received,
the commissioners will not be
requesting a hearing by the Ohio
Department of Liquor Control

ALL PROCEEDS GO TO FIGHT CANCER

TURKE1S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio Senate, despite argu·
ments thaUt would lead to loss
of JObs, approved a bill Wednes· ·.
·'diiY to raise the mlplmum wage
In small businesses to $4.251n two
years, putting them In line with
federal guidelines.
Senators, wbq tried to remove
a . section that attempted to
regulate bouts that 16· and
17-year-olds could work, cast a
29-3 vote on the measure and
returned It to the House. The
House will be asked to·concur In

a

BONELESS TAVERN

. WMIIIIEY

Pink
Salmon

HERITAGE HOUSE
i 1'0fa
Milk

1°/o Milk

79

Plastic

Gall1111

Cookies

,.,_$129

ness matters.
·-Entered Into a· servicemaintenance contract with Mosley Elevators, ·ColUmbus, for
quarterly Inspections of · the
courthouse elevator at $100 per
quarter.
- Upon · recommendation of
County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien and Prosecut11111: Attor-

•

•

ney Steven L. Story, agalnll!bled
all ·bids for a computer system
for Meigs County Court.
-Approved payment of travel
and related expenses for Joan
Tewksbaty. director of the Meigs
Gounty Tuberculosis Clinic, to
at.tend a June seminar In
Jackson.

UUY'S.

Vienna Sausage

Senate changes, since the Senate
Commerce and Labor Commit·
tee sent provisions that pertained
to youngsters shoveling snow and
mowing lawns, and doing door·
to-door sales to a subcommittee
to put Into a bill that covers the
hours young people can work.
The mlnlnum wage for employers not covered by the federal
minimum wage will go from $2.30
an hour, to $2.82 with the
effective date of the law, and to
$3.35 by Aprll1, 1991, and to $4.25
by Aprlll, 1992. Employees In a

tipped business, such as walters
and waitresses, wlllgofrom$1.15
to $~ . 01, then to $2.13 by next ·
year.
. It would affect businesses with
annual sales of less than $500,000.
Sen. Cooper Snyder, R·
Hillsboro, who cast one of the
negailve votes, said he was not
clear on who the bill would help.
"As costs and prices rise, the
consumers are going to demand
less,'' he said. " Increasing
wages raises prices of unskllled
laborers. Some workers will

have th_elr hours reduced, and
some will be eliminated from the
job market .
"Some of those working these
jobs are not the breadwinners,
but working to supplement a
family Income,'' he sal&lt;!. " II
many would be. lifted out of
poverty, the cost of unemployment would be worthwhile."
"We need to pay people a
reasonable wage so they can help
themselves," countered Sen.
Alan Zaleski, D·Eiyrla .

•

Sen. Richard Finan, RClnclnnatl, attempted to remove
a provision that said .the 16- and
17-year-olds could not work ·before 7 a.m. or .afterll p.m. during
the week and 1 a.m. during the
weekends during the school
term. He said It might affect
young farm workers who do
much of their work before 7 a.m.
••Jt shOuld not be part of a
minimum wage· blll/ ' Finan,
·
maintained,
He found support from Sen.

Scott · Oelslager,· R-Canton, who
said that some school-aged child·
ren are working late hours and
tes taking away from their
school performance.
"We owe It to our kids to
protect· them and school should .
be their first priority," he said.
But Sen. Richard Boggs, DAshtabula, said there was plenty
of time for the young people to
find work after school.
Finan's amendment was defeated on a voice vote.

Ohio lawmakers approve tax bills ·

In bankruptcy and Is subject to a
Beatty Jr., D-Columbus, a deBy LEE LEONARD
takeover.
fense attorney.
VPI Statehouse ~porter
Rep. Robert Hickey, D·
The ·legislation ellrrHnates the
COLUMBUS - State lawmak·
" lrteslstable Impulse" . test of
Dayton, said Ohio should follow
ers moved swiftlY toward spring
Insanity from the law. Uhder that
England, Canada and 22 other
recess Wednesday, sending to
states In closing a loophole by
test, defendants have a defense If
Gov. Richart! Celeste bllls allowwhich felons are able to escape
ihey can prove they were unable
Ing the state to tax mall order
prosecution by pleading Insanity. to refrain from committing the
sales and merchandise b(lught on
act, even If they knew It was
The bill passed, 76-21, but not
TV marketing shows, and probefore opponents said It was
wrong.
tectihg Ohio companle~ In . the
The House Is scheduled to
event of hostile corporate . unnecessary. ''You don't see one
-out of 100 !fsanlty..defenses that , reconven~ _ThuiJday 111. 10.a:m .
takeovers, -....
· .
are successful, " said Rep. Otto and the senate one hour later.
Also sent to the governor In the
rush toward adjournment ,
planned for Thursday, were a
major drunken driving reform
bill and legislation narrowing the
courtroom defense of Innocent by
reason of Insanity to prevent It
from being overused.
An Intoxicated occupant of a and get out of the car, but being
On Its way toward the govercar
parked on Court Street was unsuccessful, he used his flash·
nor's office was a bill raising the
pulled from the burning vehicle light to break the window, open
state's minimum wage from
by a Pomeroy policeman early the door, and pull the man to
$2.30 an hour to$4.251n two years.
safety. ·
That bill cleared the senate and . Thursday. morning.
Mud
Fork
Roger
Butcher,
Coming to the scene to assist
'needs only House concurrence In
Ro.ad, Albany, was not Injured In Patrolman Fields were Capt. Joe
-..__...c1umg1es Thursday.
the Incident which occurred at Kirby of the Pomeroy Pollee
The state could realize up to
1:59 a.m.
Department, Sheriff's Deputy
$100 million' in extra revenues by
According to the pollee report, Jeff Miller, the Pomeroy Fire
taxing qu t-of-state catalog sales
Patrolman Joe Fields was walk· Department and the Pomeroy
and. merchandise purchased by
Ohioans from TV shopper shows, lng down Second Street when he unit of the Emergency Medical
noticed smok~ coming from a Service.
sponsors said.
The car was to·t ally destroyed
vehicle
parked on Couri St .
The bill cleared ·the House 9J.4
NEW MARKET COMING - Beb's Market and . employee&amp;, Is schecJuled to open during Easter
As
he
approached
the
·
car
he
In
the fire. Butcher, who was not
and the Senate quickly agreed to
weell of sborily ther~afler, !lependlnc on weather
GreenhoUIIetl, Inc., whose corporate office and
spotted
flames
underneath
and
a
Injured,
was taken to the home of
conditions. The markets are owned and operated
minor amendments.
orlliDal markef hi located In Mason, will open a
man
behind
the
steering
wheel.
friend.
No
charges were filed,
The corporate takeover bill
by the Bob Barnltz family . (OVP photo by Mindy
new bulllaeAs In Galllpoll8 across from K·inart.
made
repeated
efforts
to
get
pollee
reported.
He
was approved by the House,
Kearns).
Co1111truct1on. which IS being done ·by market
the man to respond to his shout ~
80-18, and received 28-4 Senate
.concurrence.
Sponsored by Sen. Barry Levey, R·Middletown, It prevents a
company In a hostile takeover
from using Its newly acquired
assets to retire previous debt , or
Terry D. Michaels, Rutland, was arrested Wednesday
. .
.
to sell off those assets at
evening for driving under the Influence and without a valid
Sale of a used backhoe was
used backhoe, the highest of the a problem In financing the below-market values.
operator's license, acccordlng to a report from Meigs County .
approved and the proposed pur·
nine bids received.
purchase .in view of tlie fact that
The btu also blocks the use of
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Michaels Is confined to the county
• . chase of a new tanker truck f9r
·David Nelgler of the Racine the department's receipts from
the new acquisition to secure
jail pending a he$rlng In Me~s CQunty Court.
the Racine Fire Department
Fire Department appeared be·
the Letart Township fire contract
loans or pa~ salaries of home
considered at · Monday night's
fore · council to discuss the pur- have been decreased since levy corporate officers:
meeting of Racine VIllage chase of a tanker truck and was
receipts are now split between
Rep. Wllllam Batchelder, R·
' ·
Council.
asked to report back with lnfor·
Racine and Syracuse.'
Recovery of a 1977 Yamaha dirt bike, owned by Kevin Jewell,
Medina, complained that the
c;:ouncll accepted the bid · of matlon on the cost · .
Beech
Grove
Road,
Rutland,
was
reported
by
the
Meigs
The clerk reported that the measure will protect IncompeElza PuUlns, Coolville, for the
It was noted that~ere
mav
be
sheriff's department today . The bike was reported stolen
deed
for the fire department tent management at the expense
.'
property on Long Run has been
Sunday from a _yarci sale at· a residence on Route 124 near
of shareholders.
• received. r
·
Hilltop. The bike was found In Leading Creek by T9mmy Wilson.
The propoaal was lnltlatecl to
Roof replacement on the build·
The bike has been claimed by Its OWJier.
protect F&amp;R Lazarus of Clncln·
log at the Star Mill Park was
natl and Columbus, whose parent
Continued on page 6
discussed and the clerk was · company, theCampeau.Corp. , Is
authorized by Council to seek
bids. The opeping was set for 4
·on Monday, Aprll16.
p.m.
WASHINGTON (UP!) ..... Per percent and 1.7 percent
Issue
II funding for street
capita Income In Ohio, Michigan
r.espectlvely.
,
·
repair
projects
was discussed
I
Wisconsin, Indiana 'and Illlnol~ · The report showed that U.S.
and
Council
approved.
a
resoluIncreased by more than 50 per capita Income Increased 63.4
tion submitted by Mayor Frank
perc.e nt over •the past several percent to $11,923 In 1987 from
Cleland
requestln~t that the Ohio
WASHINGTON- U.S. Senator fluidized bed combustion- holds through the Clean Coal .Technol·
years while thr· population of $7,295 In 1979. The country's
Department
of
Pu
bile
Works
Robert
C. Byrd, P·W.Va., said
the promise of reducing sulfur ogy Program, which Byrd eatabthose states remained relatively population grew to 245.8 million
Include
a
section
of,Pearl
Street
Wednesday
that
West
VIrginia
emmlsslons
and nitrogen oxides llshed In Collil'es&amp; to promote the
stable, acCording to a new In 1988 from 226.5 million In 191KJ,
In
the
1990
project.
The
mayor
"America's
show·
much
more
efficiently
and much . useofcoallnanenvlronmentally
will
become
Commerce Department repart.
an 8.5 percent advance.
also
presented
lilfotmatlon
to
case
for
clean
coal
technology"
Jess
expensively
than
conven- acceptable manner, . and · for
The department's Census Bu·
Ohio's per capita Income In·
·co\lncll
reducing
the
height
of
with
the
realization
of
AmeriCan
tiona!
technology.
'Ibis
will
mean which he has obtained $2.7 bllllbri
reau said In Its •'Local Populacreased 55.5 percent to $11,323 In
prior
to
paving
the
Third
Street
Power
(AEP)
Corpor4cleaner
air
at
lower
cost
for
all In .federal appropriations
Electric
tlon Estimates - East North
1981 frorn $7,284 In 1979, while
roadway.
He
noted
that
the
street
tfon's clean coal conversion of West VIrginians," Byrd said.
throughl992:
,
Central," that population growth
Michigan's rose from $7,688 to
"Most Importantly,'' Byrd ·
Under the clean coal agree.
lntheflvestatesfrom1980to1988
$11,973 during the same period will be higher than the slde.walks the Philip Sporn powerplant In
It "~lndlng dowu" doesn't take New Haven, Mason County.
.
added, "this Is a wln-wlil sltua· ment with AEP, the government
was well below the U.S. average
for an Increase of 55.7 percent.
place
befOre the repaving Is.
"This Is the largest and the tlon for the environment, energy. wi!J ·provlde $184.8 million, or 28
of 8.5 percent during that same
Indiana's per capita lnCQme
. period, with the number of
Increased by 55.1 percent from done. Action on the 'project will most forward looking clean coal · ' and the economy. This new perctllt of the 'tundlnJI. AEPwlll
technology being developed by provide $472.1 million, and the
Michigan reslden ts actually
$7,14110 $11,078, accorlllng to the be handled In · the recessed projects on the boob,'' Byrd said
meeting scheduled for 7 p.m at a ceremony In his U.S. Capitol AEP can clean up the environ· St11te Of Ohio's Coal Development ·
drooping by 22,000 to 9,240,000.
report.
·
.
office at wblch officials of AEP ment while encouragblg the use Office will contribute $3 r.:lllllon.
WlscoMln experienced the
Per capita lncomr · In Illinois Monday, It was decided .
Clerk Jane Beegle reported and the U.S. Department of of high sulfur coal and helping to ·
The project calla for the
highest population growth In the
jumped from $8,064 In 1979 to
re111on during the eight-year
$12,437 In 1987, a 5U percent that the annual Insurance audit · Energy signed the cooperative preserve coal mining lobi In construction of a 330-megawatt
period with an Increase of 3.2
Increase, while WlscoMin's per has beell completed. She also agreement to fund the M60 West VIrginia and the Ohio unit at the Sporn plant with
VJilley." ·
operatjon scheduled to llegin In
percent, while the number of
capita Income Increased 57.7 noted a check for local govern· mllllon project.
residents In Ohio, Indiana and
percentto$11,4nfrom$7,214, tile ment from 't he County Auditor . · "The technology that will be
The project Is being funded 1996.
Dllnols grew by 0.5 percent, 1.2
report said.
used' at thla plant -pressurized
«;ontlnued on page 6

Albany man pulled
from burning vehicle

14.75 01.

.' ca•

79
AICNWU

A Multi!Mdil Inc. N-IPIPI&lt;

Despite. arguments, Senate OKs hike tn mtntmum.wage

SUPERIOI WHOLE

\1.

and will submit the r!!(!uest for
license transfer .to the state. ·
Local bu.Uder Greg Bailey inet
with the commissioners and
Engineer Phlll'p Roberts to clarify property lines near a building
project In the Pomeroy-Laurel
Cliff area.
The commissioners also conducted the foUowlnl! other bust-

•

•

GlAD£ 'A' fiOJlN .

2 Sectlono, 1 4 Pia• 2&amp; C.nto

Commission seeks ·bids.on road equipment

. EASTER CANDY .
CHOCOLATE

•

0

WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION
MAXFIELD

••

at

··''

Low tonlcbl In mid 3tll.
ChiUICe of IDOW Ill 8G perceat,
Friday, 40 perceat chuce of
11110w flurries or rain. JUp In
mid 488.

·- Super l..olto
l-14-18-27-39-44
lOcker 349403

:' Page 5
•

Midwestern states were gener·
ally above freezing, but a cold
front from Canada began push·
lng colder weather Into the

Meigs
announcements

;·

Sliver State.
.
;
Utah experienced a few !hun·.
derstorms .at Mgher ~levatlons . :
Temperatures continue In the ,.
70s, warmer than normal.
;
Typical spring weather pre- :
valled In Wyoming, where a few -,:
showers and thundersbowers ·
lateTuesdaydlsslpatedandgave ...
Wi1Y to partly cloudy skies.

Ohio Lottery

l\fqten
tournament
underway

•

2/99&lt;

Local·news .briefs-----.

Racine Council considers.buying
:new tanker for fire department

Rutland man charged with DWI

~

Stolen bike recovered

.

OSCAR MAYER

Cooked

Ham

$359

1 11.

OSUIMAYER

low Salt
Bacon 111.

S2 79

OSCAR MAYER

Population stable in
Midw~t; ~come is ~p

OSCAR MAYER

$2 59
~r~OWN $179 ~;::.:IlL S2 59
RED RIND

BOLOGNA

~~:pt~

lJ.

OSCAR MAYER

GARDEN NEEDS •.•

........

::tc=~~~

$3

IA9•••••
99
•. .
$299
MAIBLf ROCK ......... M9.......
VOLCANIC SYONE....IA9....... 99
POniNG SOIL .........,,u~....$269
ONION SETS
c.
TOP SOIL .................!.Ut·..... $199 YELLOW
...............·,....... 59 Ll.
COW MANUIE ......... M.W~....$2•9 WIIITI ..,..o.,~•••••••••nu•••• 6 9 ( 1.1.
PEAT MOSS ............. M9....... 99 WIIA~E SEED POTATOES

$3

$6

W. R•.ve The Right to Uml OUintlttll. •

'

Prie11 Efhc:thte Ttvough
. . Saturdey, Aprll7. 1-.cl.

.

(

UIDA

•
. ••
"~'•

.Byrd ·calls Sporn's ney; clean coal
conversr,on _technology 'a showcase' ·

I

I

�/

Thursday, April 6, 1990.

Commentary

'

·'

;

~v

·

.,...,__..._-r, ........... d.""'

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
·

"'- ·

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH.
General Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller.
A MEMBER ot The United Press International, Iiuand DallY Press
As!;OClatlon ;utd the American Newspaper Publlsllers Association.

...

· LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be i.,.s than 300
words long. All letters are subJect.to editing and must be signed wttll
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing lss.\!es, not personalities.
·n· ·

Polls switch; death
penalty
gains
favor
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WOD't

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Jack

d r 11
Sandi 1s 1
WASHINGTON- PltyNicara· Aiency ban!Qng Intercepts.
n ta eaders an
~wers
Ortega Is scheduled to relinto enrich themselves and strip
guan Pre;;tdent Daniel Ortega.
Chamorro of a starting base.
He lost the election and now all he quish power on April 25 to Vloleta
One opposition leader called
has to console him Is tbe Cllamorro. In a gracious concesthe law "the theft and decapltall·
multimillion-dollar fortune that sion speech after the election last
he and his family socked away In month, the hypocrisy sUpped zatlon of the go!Kis of the state. ••
Another called It "a huge send:
Panamanian banks while they easily from his · tongue: "The
off party" for the Sandlnlstas.
. · elections test the will of Sandlfeigned socialist ilusterlty.
The new Jaw, combined with
Highly classified Cent.r al Intel- ntsta revolutionaries whil never
another one pardoning' criminals .
ligence Agency reports say the have sought to cling to power,
Ortegas are sitting pretty. Or- who were born poor and will be !or crimes committed until April
25, amounts to ljn Invitation to
tega and the Sandlnlsta ·party satisfied to die poor...."
Now, for a reality check: While wide-scale emllezzlement over
ruled Nicaragua with a superfl·
the next month, according to the
c!al commitment to distributing the Sandlntstas have been cleanCIA analysts.
the wealth. The truth Is, the Ing out their decks, they have
We can't help but think back to
wealth was spread to a limited passed a little piece of legislation
Inner cl'rcle .who have now that puts a lie to their socialist the Sandlntsta's protests tn 1985
proclamations. The new law when we reported on the propbecome Marxist millionaires.
We first reported on Ortega's grants permanent property · erty holdings and money-making ·
capitalist ventures In 1985. The rights to any person now occupy- ventures of party leaders. They
claimed that each house the
CIA has since been abl'e to Ing government property. It Is a
confirm our report and get more blatant attempt to give more leaders lived· In and each comdetails through agents In Nicara- than 10,()00, property titles to pany they ran was. actually
gua and National Security

.

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correspondent
WASHINGTON - With polls disclosing that most Americans .
strongly favor capital punishment, politicians are scrambling to ··
embrace the death penalty.
·
Tile gro)ielin!ftor votes at the expense of principles Is not a pretty
sight.
'
Martin Luther King Jr., the non-violent martyr In the civil rights
struggle he led, must have spun In hlsgravewhenhlsformerdlsclple,
Andrew Young, repudiated his longtime opposition to capital
punishment. ·
Young, who served as ambassador to the United Nallons and mayor
of Atlanta, wants to be the first black governor of Georgia, which he
now Insists must retain "the right to put. mad dogs to death."
In the Florida gubernatorial race, Republican Incumbent Bob
Martinez brags In his televised commercials that In his first term he
signed 90 death warrants. The TV spots display the face of serial killer
Ted Bundy, executed last year In Florida's electric chair.
Former San Francisco Mayor Diane Feinstein sprinted ahead of
California Attorney General John Van de Kamp In the race for the
Democratic nomination for governor when she cameoutfor the death
penalty. Now Van de Kamp, once an opponent of capital punishment,
boasts In TV spots of dispatching prisoners to death row.
And so, depressingly, It goes. New Y.ork Gov. Marlo Cuomo, an
Increasingly lonely holdout against the death penalty, calls the
stampede of the pols rushing to embrace capital punishment "the
ultimate political cop-out."
.
· Since the Supreme Court in 1976 declared the- death penalty
constitutional, there have been 121 executions, most of them In
Georgia, Florida, Louisiana and Texas.
On Tuesday, condemned killer Robert Alton Harris could become
the first Inmate to die In California's gas chamber at San Quentin In 23
years. Harris, 37, was convicted of murdering two 16-year-old boys In
leaders lel\rned a lot
San Diego on July 5, 1978.
!rom more than 70 years ot
A federal appeals court judge bas stayed the .execution, but the
failure, but the biggest lesson of
state Is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse that decision on
Monday.
!
all Is that you can't ll.nker with
the human heart. There Is no
If Callf6~nta executes Harris, opponents of capital punishment
fear, more states are likely to employ the death penalty. There are
such thing as The New Soviet
Man or Woman - and there
more tllall 2,200 death-row Inmates..
.
The death penalty in the United States Is a crapshoot In which the
never Will be.
.
dice are loaded against blacks and the poor.
It's too bad this news hasn't
. Forty percent of those now under sentence of death are black. Most
filtered through to Western Inteldeath-row prisoners can't afford private lawyers,
lectuals. In this ~ountry,- reStill, It has been argued successfully In the co\Jrts, if anyone
formers stU! talk !!bout resh!lp·
deserves execution, Harris does.
lng human nature to pr.omote a
Just six months after serving more than two years In prison for
pet social goal. Among the worst
offenders are the Greens, that
beating a man. to death, Harris shot and killed the two boys after
stealing their car, which he Intended to use In a bank robbery.
vangu~rd of radical envtronmen- ~
For that, the state of California condemned Harris to a convulsive
tallsts who Include such widely
death by asphyxiation as his heart and brain are deprived of oxygen.
quoted figures as biologist Pa111
Cuomo contends correctly that meeting violence with violence by
Ehrlich .and World Watch dlrec·
executing murderers "demeans and debases us."
' tor. Lester Brown.
Amriesty International, the human rights organization th!ll has
The Greens don't merely want
mounted a worldwide challenge to capital punlshmel)t, is also right
to "save the planet" - a tall
enough order In itself, one would
when it declares: "The .death penalty Is not a punishment. It's a
crime.''
·
suppose. No, they also lnterid to
alter the way the rest Of us think.
As the Chinese wo1,1ld say, In
sinister euphemism, the Greens
want ~o "re-educate" us.

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~ont't
So~let

Letters to the editor

Appreciates support

Dear Editor:
Jackson and the Athletic
On behalf of ·Eastern High Boosters.
School Athletic Department, I
To each of you we thank you for
would like to thank the following making these events possible.
people for all their help and
Also, on behalf of our coaches,
support with our fund raisers we student athletes and cheerleadhave bad recently. For their help ers, I would like to take . this
with our animal alumnl ·basket- opportunity to.express our gratl·
ball games thanks to: all the tude to the parents and to the
players who participated,_ At- community for their support.
hletic Boosters, Doris &amp; Dery I Many people have worked hard
Well, Jim Huff, Tom Hunter,Ron and spent many hours In raising
Ash, Don Jackson, C.D. M~ln­ the money for our athletic
tyre and Charlie Riley. A special
program the past two (2) years .
thank you to Tim Baum tor all his
With slncerr appreciation we
help In organizing . the mens
thank each of you, who helped In
games.
. any way, for without you athlet. · For their help with the Harlem Ics at Eastern High School would
All-Star game thanks to: all our not have been.
coaches who participated, Ike
Respectfully,
Spencer, Jim Hill, Charlie Riley,
Pamela A. Dou thltt
Doris and Deryl Well, Jenny
Athletic Director

Anderso~

. ownM by the state. Come April

25, even the Sandlnlstas will have
to admit that the l!!!rks we said
they enjoyed now belong to them
free and clear.
·
Nicaraguans have had reason
to suspect Ortega's taste for the
finer things In life, In 1985 on a
shOpping spree In Manhattan, he
and his wife bought $3,500 worth
of designer eyeglass~. He likes
to wear Italian leather jacket&amp;
and other status symbols.
But - a point ·In his favor Daniel Ortega Is the least thlevlng of the Saldlnlstas. He Jives ·
modestly.ln a house In Managua.
His brother, ArmY Chief Humberto Ortega, Is another story,
He goes home at night to an
opulent housing compound complete with a small park.
A hlgh·lev~l Nicaraguan defector, Major Boger Miranda, .conflrmed soDI!Idetalls of therOrtega·
lifestyle. 'i'h~ CIA has slnc_e
uncoveted several bank ac··
counts ln~ama traced to the
Ortega
hers and totaling
mo~n
million.
~e CIA believes .that Sandl-ntsta Interior Minister Tomas,
Borge Is worth more than $1
million.
•
Another Sandlnlsta leader,
Bayardo Arce, has been sporting
a new red Volvo and, according
to one observer, "wears literally
· pounds of gold jewelry."
.
· The .Sandlnlsta hierarchy:
shOpped at special stores supP,·
lied with Imported Western·
goods at cut-rate prices. They:
took vacations at Black Sea·
resorts In the Soviet Union and
flew to Cuba tor medical treat..
ment. All of this was accomplished on official published salarIes of about $50 a month.
President Bush Is now pushing
for $300 million In aid to Nlcar.agua. Our advice Is to post-date
the check until Chamorro Is In
office. Otherwise, the Sandlnlstas will find a way to give
themselves .- a going-away
present.

Brown Is utterly Insouciant
about tills goal. In the current
Issue or World Watch magazine,
he and two staff writers sketch
their warm and fuzzy vision or an
Ideal society In 2030. Wouldn't
you know It: Not only will
"Individual prloltles and values"
have been transformed by then
(It's either that or the dljstbln tor
humankind, they say), but mate-·
rlallsm Itself will have withered
In the Interest of creating a
"sustainable" world.
No kidding. ''It will become
unfashionable to own fancy new
cars, clothes, and the latest
elec;tronlc devices. The potential
benetlts or unleashing the human
energy now devoted to produc·
lng, advertising, buying, consumlng and discarding material
goods are enormous.''
Better yet, "as the amass)ngot
personal and · national wealth
becomes less ·or a goal, the gap .
betweenhavesandhave-notswlll
gradually close.. ."

..

It's easy to make fun of such
people, given· their quixotic
cause. Blunt the human tendency
to amass goods that make life
more comfortable and pleasant?
Suppress our fascination with the
new; Improved and distinctive?
Stop us from comparing our
status with that of our neighbor?
Good luck - but yoi.t might as
well try steering Roseanne Barr
to ·a finishing school. Human
beings didn't suddenly become
acnutstlve or Inventive with the
birth of capitalism, even If
capitalism did give· them more
space to exercise those traits.
As tempting as It Is to mock the
Greens, though, It also would be a
mistake. Lenin and Mao could
have been ridiculed In tllelrearly
years for similar reasons. They •
too we)e determined to remake
society · and human nature
slmultaneous)y.
Of course, along the way they
become somewhat Impatient
with the toot-dragging qfmllllons

They callltthe "ABC" bill, the res trlctlve rule that precluded all
ActtorBetterChlldCare,ablllto but three amendments to be
provide federally subsidized : offe~ed, two that would have·
child care to millions of working '- changed the voucher provisions
parents. To keep It In the of the bill and a third that would
vernacular of. the classroom I have permitted another version
would give this bill poor grade
of a child-care bill to be substlnot beCause or what It IntendS t~ . tuted tor the "ABC" measure
accomplish but because of how.It that was ~ltlmately passed.
Intends to address the child-care
I supported tills substitute
·problem at hand.
legislation In that I felt It would
. Few will debate that some have accomplished most of the
form of child-care bill Is neces- same objectlftS as the "ABC"
sary ln . today's fll5t paced so- bill, but at two-thirds the cost. At
ctety. The lncreiiji)ng number ot the same time, It would have also
single parent households and the given parents much more latlrlslng number of so· called tude as to where they placed their
"latchkey" children who go children for such care. The
home from school to empty substitute, unfortunately, failed
by a vote of 195 to 225.
,
homes because of their parents'
employment underscores the
As a means of acqqalntiDg you,
need for action on this Issue. ·
with the thrust ofthe !&gt;Ill that was .
However, the creation of a new. passed, let me highlight the main
$30 billion five-year child care provisions for you:
· program Is not what ma'ny of us·
-weir king famUies with young
By United Press International .
Today Is Thursday, April 5, the 95th day of 1990 with 270 to follow.
In Congress had In mind. First of children and Incomes of $20,000
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
all, almost two-thirds. of the or less wUI be eligible for the
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
money will I{O to low-Income: earned Income tax credit proThe evening stars are MerGury and Jupiter.
families In tlletormOftil.xcredlts ·. gram mentioned earlier.
ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Arl\!S. Tiley Include
with not stipulation that It txi
- It will allow Head Start
· English philosopher Thomas Hobbes In 1588; Benjamin Harrison,
spent for child care. Secondly, . pre-school education programs
signer ol the Declaration of Independence,ln 1726; English physician
the form of care that It permits Is
to offer full-day, year-round
Joseph Lister, who Introduced antiseptic surgery, In 18'J:l; educator
essentially Institutional care In operations.
Booker T. Washington, In 1856; actors Spencer Tracy In 1900, Melvyn
govern-m ent sanctioned child·
- It Will create school-based
Douglas In 1901, Bette Davis In 1908 and Gregory Peck In 1916 (age . care centers. The bill as passeii
programs for before and after
73): novelist Arthur Halley In 1920 (age 70) and Impressionist Frank
greatly limits the options of
school care for "latchkey"
Gorshln In 1934 (age 56).
. parents to send their young · children.
children to church affiliated or
- grants will be prOVIded for
On this date In history:
.
n e I g b or hood c h II d ~ care
child-care providers through
programs.
·
block grant programs tli the
In 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were sentenced to death In New
York for stealing atomic secrets for the Soviet Union.
Normally, when a bill of this
stateswlthaportlonofthlsgrant
In 1968, violence erupted In several American cities ln response to · size and significance Is brought
money to be used for vouchers to
the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
·to the House Door for constdera- ' low-Income parents.
.
In 1976, reclusive b!ll!onalre Howard Hughes died of kidney failure , tlon, It Is subject to change
- It wilt also provide money to
during a flight from Acapulco, Mexico, to Houston.
through the amendment process.
the states to establish standards
In 1982, the British fleet sailed to recapture the Falltiand Islands
In this case, however, the bill
for chlld·care centers and train·
from Argentina.
·
was sent to the Door with a rather
tng for the employees of such

FIRES SHOT - North Stars' Mark Tlnordt fires a shot toward
the Hawks' net over Chicago defenseman Keith Brown's stick
durlnr the llrst period ol the game Wednesday. (UP I)

v~~nt Carroll

In their rrli~ whO just W'?~ldn't
: adopt to:"tiiJne-W,Idealism. ,And
about that time, the blood of
Innocents started to now.
.'
It hardly matters that the
Greens generally renounce violence and are In no position yet {(j ·
force their will on anyone. They
display a totalitarian-like Impatience with the human heart and
a contempt for universal )ong:
lngs to Improve material living
standards. Wrote one Greenish
zealot In The Los Angeles nmes:
~ ·until such ·time as • Homo
sapiens should decide to rejoin
nature, some of us can only hope·
for the right virus to come
along."
. ·
The right virus to come along! ·
Indlvld\l'a ls no longer matter to
such Ideologues; only the social
. vision matters. So beware: As Is
often the case With utopian
dreamers, there could be hell to .
pay on the·way to this paradise. ·

'D-'___

c_on_g_._c~a_r_~_nc_e_M_i_lle_f

centers.
- businesses will be ottered
financial grants as an Incentive
to create child-care facilities.
In the 'irst session of the 101St
Congress, the Senate passed Its
own version or a child-care bill,
so now the House bill will go to a
joint Senate-House conference,
where the differences between
the two bills will 11ave· to be

worked out.
President Bush bas Indicated
he Intends to veto such Jeglslatlop·
If • tt Is sent to his desk for · ·
signature with the objectionable
provisions I've discussed stnl
Intact. Personally, I stand with
the Administration on this Issue,
as I, too, feel tlult these bills as
presently constituted are overpriced and over-regulated.

Berry's Wqrl~

Today in history

'·

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..,,

. , R-.Jo_

- ~~.;;:.~~~
. "Hey, man, you're RIGHT/ St~ndln' on your .
IHNJd Is a p~ of cake,with this hair styM." \

Canadlens.
All · series are best-of.7, and
switch sites after game 2.
Smyth Dlvl•lon
Klnp· 5, Flames 3
At Calg~rp, the Los Angeles
Kings are asking "Who needs
Wayne Gr!!tzky?" after stunning
the defending Stanley Cup cham·
pion Calgary F1ames In the first
game of their series without help
from. their Injured center, who
will also miss game 2.
Jets 7, Oilers 5
At Edmonton, Dale Hawerchuck celebrated his 27th birthday by scoring a pair of goals to
lead .Winnipeg to an upset of
Edmonton.
The Oilers. were dominating
. play alid enjoying a 4-2 lead at
2:04 ·of the second period· when
goaltender Blll Ranford was
beaten cleanly on a slap shot oft
the stick of Moe-Mantha from the
bluellne.
.
. The Jets went on to score the
next three, IIICludlng the gamewinner by Brent Ashton at 9: 55 of
the third period.

Page 3

in ~90 Stanley· Cup opene~

Ranford had a bad game, but
The North Stars were ellml·
sa.ld he was not .particu~rly
nated In the first . round of the
nerv011s for Ills first iJiayoffstart
playoffs last season by tile St.
wllh tl)e pners.
Louis Blues and goaltender Greg
"I felt good In there," he said
Millen. Millen was In the nets for
after the game. "I just didn't
Chicago Wednesday night but
make the big saves and to win In
this time Minnesota beat him.
the playoffs that's what you have
"Casey Is . Just· takln~ the
to do. I didn't feel like I was
opportunity to prove what lie can
fighting the puck, It just was one
do In the playoffs," North Stars
of those nights. "Norrla Division
coach Pierre Page said. "It's all
North stars%;· Blaekhawksl
new to him. It's Just his second
At Chicago, goaltender Jon
year starting. That's all. He's 27.
Casey frustrated the BlackIt came !liter for him, but better
hawks all night wltl1 brilliant
Jate than never. ", .
saves to lead Minnesota to an:
Brian Bellows scored the only
upset victory. .
goal of.the first two periods, then, .
Casey, playlng In .only the
after Denis Savard tied the score
second ·ptayoff series of his
1-1 at 5:01 oi the third, scored the
career, stopped 30 of 31 shots In
game·wlnner 53 seconds later.
beating the Blackhawks, who
"I think what you saw was a
were 1 of 9 on the power play.
total effort from our team In the
"lthlnkweneededtocomeout
sense that everyone played the )
and try to get a win as soon as
roles that were expected trom
possible," Casey said. "That was
them and everyone followed the
Important for us bec!luse of what
game plan well," Bellows said.
happened last year. We lost two · ''No oneputthemselvesaheadof
tough ones right away, and we
the team tootght, and that was a
kind of just fell apart after that."
big key."

BIW!I 4, &amp;Japle Leafs 2
twice and rookie goal tender
At St . Louis, Ron Wilson, who Curtis Jos!)ph stopped 'J:l shot s to
thought hts playing days In t"e , ·lead St. Louis ,
NHL were over last year, found
Game 2 In the bes t-of-seven
hlmsel! · a playoff hero. The Norris Division semifinal · Is
veteran defenseman scored scheduled for Friday In-St. Louis.
·

HOW-TOSAVI
G·WITHYOIR
EW

INSERT

Spmner
•
b a1ts
• best £~,or w htte
bass at Racine Locks &amp; Dam
1

will Improve on warmer days.
By Unlled Press lnleriiMional
Crappie
anglers should use 132The Ohio Department of Natuounce
jigs
tipped with minnows
~al Resources' weekly fishing
or
maggots
. .·
report:
Southeast
Ohio River - Some white bass
The Daily Sentinel
were being taken In the past week
near the Racine Dam. Use small
(USPS U$-1.)
splnnerbalts at 'mid-depth to
A Dlvillloa of Multknedla, Inc.
bottom, and %-ounce jigs.
PUblished every afternoon, Monday
Tycoon Lake ,... A few earlythrwgh Friday, lll Coort St.. Poseason largemouth, crappie and
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Jlshlng Corripany ! MUltimedia, Inc.,
bluegill are being taken from
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
nearshOre areas. Use small jigs
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
tipped with minnows or maggots
Ohio.
to catch bluegullls and crappies.
Member: United Press International,
Small splnnerbalts and nightInland Dally Press AssOCiation and the
Ohio Newapaper Anoclatlon. Nattonal
crawlers drifted In shallow areas
Advertlalni Representative, Branham
work best on largemouth bass.
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue.
Central
New York, New York 10017.
O'Shaugnessy Reservoir POS'IMASTER: Send address changes
Saugeye 17 to 19 Inches long are
to The lllltly Sentinel. ill Court St..
Pomeroy, 01\lo 457ti9.
being taken In fair numbers.
Anglers should concentrate their
SUJI8CRIPI'JON RATES
efforts on cloudy days and use
By Carrier or Mot« Route
One Week .... .......... .. .. ...... .... ,... .. .$1.10
chartreuse or white grubs.
One Month ..... .. .... .. .. .... ..... ..... ... .$6.10
Hoover Reservoir - Walleye
One Year ......... ............. ...... .. ... $72.80
fishing has been spotty, though a
SINGLE COPY
28-lncher was taken last weekend
. PRICE .
Dally ........ , .............. .......... .. 25 C..nts
below Jhe spillway. Much of the
good walleye fishing Is along the
Subscribers not deslrlngtapay the car·
rler may remit ln advflnce direct to
rip-rap shoreline from the dam to
The Dally Seatlnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
the first bridge. Anglers are
basls. Credit wlll be gtvencarrlereach
week.
using a variety of Mr. Twister
lures tipped with ntghtcrawlers.
No subscriptions l:)y mall permitted In
areas , where home carrier service Is
Lake Erie
avatlable.
'
Male walleyes are providing
fair to good fishing action In the
Mall Sut.crtt&gt;llono.
laaWIIe Melp Caunly
nearshore waters of the western '
13 Weeks ...... ......... ................... $19.21
basin reef complex. Anglers
26 Weeks ......... .. .. .... .. ............... $37.96
52 Weeks ............. ..... ..... .:.... .... . $71.36
should slowly drift fuzzy grubs
Outolde Mel p County
tipped With minnows for the best
13 Weeks ...... ....... ... , .. .. .... ......... S20.BO
opportunity to catch walleye In
26 Weeks ........... .... ... ................ $40.30
52 Weeks ............. ........ ,............ $75.10
early April. A few steelhead trout
are being caught In tributaries of
northeasiern Obto.
· Northwest
Maumee, Sandusky Rivers Walleye fishing has been very
slow, though angler pressure bas
been moderate. Very few ·fish,
...
mostly male walleye, are being
taken In this unseasonably cold
weather. Fls)llng action should
IntensifY shortly after the onset
of more seaiona.ble temperatures predicted for next week.
. Northeast
.
'
North · Reservoir - A few · ,
wal]eye are·belngcaught,lncludlng a seven-pounder taken this
week. Angers are drlft·flshtng
with nlghtcrawlers. The best
areas tilts,. time of year are In
water two to four feet deep.
Portage Lakes - CraJlples are
being taken In fair numbers from
water 10 feet deep. Fishing action

r--------r----,.

try to c~ange human .nature ·

The ABC ·Bill rates a
a

, By JOHN SWENSON '
• . UPI Sports Writer
They say the playoffs are a
whole new season, and Wednes: day night a trfo of underdogs
proved It by shocking the NHL
elite of the Clarence Campbell
· Conference" In the first game of
the preliminary· round Stanley
Cup series.
· .
The Calgary Flames and Chicago Blackhawks, both regUlarseason division leaders, were
knocked off respectively by t~
fourth-place Los Angeles Kings
and Minnesota North Stars: Tile
powerful Edmonton oilers were
upended by the WinniPeg Jets.
The only favorite to prevail was
the St . Louis B)ues, which overcame the·Toronto Maple Leafs.
The Wales Conference opens
Its playoff series Thursday with
matchups lfetween the New York
Rangers and New York ISland·
ers; New Jersey Devils and
Washington Capitals; Boston
Bruins and Hartford Whalers;
and Buffalo Sabres and Montreal

)eave early____:~&amp;=-=D_a_le_Va_n~At...,..ta.
°

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TJiE MEIGs-MASON AREA

Alb

·

Leaders.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
~m~

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The -Daily Sentinel

U~d~rdo~ win three ·c~ntes~ ·

2-The Dally Seatilel
Pom81oy-Midtlaport, Ohio
Thu,acley. April&amp;. 1990
Page

The DJ~ily Sentinel

Poriwoy-Midcleport Ohio

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Eastem, girls defeat·.
.Waterford squad, 8-5
.: The ·Eastern Eaglettes of
Coach Pam Douthitt recently
defeated two opponents here at
Eastern High School, where they
defeated Waterford 8-5 In a
non-teagueboutandKygerCreek
5,3 In an SVAC girls softball
contest.
.Eas tern ·ls 5-0 overall and 2·0 In
the SVAC, while Kyger drops to
4'-1 and 2-1.
.
. .Against Kyger Lorrie Baker
was 2-for-2wlth two singles, Toby
Hill had a double, Amy Murphy
w.as 2-for-3 with two singles, and

slve game: the fourth and fifth
Innings we started getting our
bats going. Despite the weather
both teams. played well and both
pitchers did an excellent Job."
In the accompanying boys
baseball game the contest was
called after two and one third
Innings with Eas terbn leading
·2-0. The contest will start over
from scratch sometime In the
future. The baseball team has
been Idle all week because of the
!n$!lement weather.
Against Waterfard Eastern tell
~aryJoReedandCarrieMorrls · . behind 1-0, but came back In the
sey each had a single.
bottom half-of the frame for a 2·1
, .For Kyger Creek VIcki Noble lead. After a scotelesl second
bad two doubles and was 2-for-2, canto Eastern took .the lead for
while M. Conkle and Y. Ragland good in' the third . ·
each had slpgle~ .
Tabby Ph!IUps reached on an
Eastern had 17 stolen bases error, Edna Driggs singled to
• (\esplte the rainy weather ;~nd score Phillips, Mary Ann Kibble
committed just one error. KC . reached on an error, and All1Y
liad three thefts and committed .. Murphy had an RBI single.
five ermrs.
Driggs and Gillilan reached ·on
· Edna Driggs again pltc~ed a errors to score K!~ble, the score
super game, picking up her fifth now 5-1.
win of the year In five starts,
A single by Lorrie Baker, two
walking just one, giving up four fielder's choices, 3nd a two-RBI
ht!s, and striking out eight. VIcki single by Kibble Jed EHS to three
. Noble suffered the loss, walking more runs for an 8-1 score·.
stx,and fanning eight In a respec·
Close reached on a single In the
table effort.
fourth for Waterford and Deming
In the third Inning Eastern followed with safely · with an
broke a scoreless deadlock when error to score a run: NichOls
Baker walked, Reed singled to reached on another error 1 and
advance Baker to second, and both scored on a three base
both pulled o!f a double steal. throwing error, the score now
Baker then scored on a wild pitch· 8-4.WHS added a single run In the
that got by the catcher and seventh but could not overcome
Eastern led 1·0.
'the Eaglettes.
If\ the top of the fourth frame
· Coach Douthllt stated,' 'We did
not play well. I am just gtad that
Newell reached on an error for
Kyger Creek, the with two out~
gamewas~htndus.Wewerenot
Noble hit a ground rule double to
patient wlt~J&gt;Ur hitting and made
score Newell and tie the game.
several base running mistakes
KC was not yettlntshed as Conkle that dould have cost us tl!e game.
followed with an RBI slllgle, and
Defensively, we had more error
-Ragland followed In suit with
another RBI single for a 3-1 KC
lead.
SPHING VAlli Y CIN~MA
With two O\lts In the fifth
4~L ~,,;4
frame, Carrie Morrissey
reached on an error. Amy
: Murphy bunted safely to advance
Morrissey to second and both
advanced on a wild pitch. With
runners at second and third, Lee
Gillilan reached on an error that
scored both 'runs to tie the game.
Lortie Baker reached on a
. controversial bunt lh;at left all
hands safe on first an~ seeond,
then Toby Hill slammed · the
game-winner: a double that lett
the game at 5-3 Eastern's favor.
With Kyger Creek at bat In the
sixth Inning with two outs the
game was called beCause of rain.
Coach Pam Douthitt said,
•'Our "Iris played a great defen·
- -""

,·

· I. LOOK through newspaper!
2. REMOVE your new color insert!
3. OPEN right side up!
4. CHOOSE the items you need!
S. ARRIVE at the nearest NATIONWISE~
, 6.SAVE BIG!

····$sluti111 The 1989·1990
· -· S.V~A.C. Cbsmpion ·. ·
_Es$fB,n Esg/sg

Sports briefs
Football
Tile Los Angeles Raiders and
the New Orleans Saints will play
In the NFL's American Bowl at.
London's Wembley Stadium
Aug. 5. The Los Angeles Rams
will meet the Kansas ,City Chiefs
In BerOn Aug.ll . ... Former N.Y.
Jets star -Mark· Gastineau wassac)ted by girlfriend Brigitte
Nielsen. Nielsen, the mother of
Gastineau's 4·month-old son,
moved to a Beverly Hills, Calif.,
hotel.
than our first three games
together. Hopefully, we learned
from this game."
Eastern may play a make-up
tonight and travels to Sol!thern
Friday.

SEATED. 1 It Row. 1to r: Mike FR!St. Shewn Savoy, Sc!ott Fitch. Ken Caldwell; 2nd
Row: Tim Blllell. Chris Adams. Mark Murphy, Jeff Durst, Jeeon Hager, Scotty S.ker:
3rd Row: Mike Wheeler, Randy Moore end Matt Finlew. (Not pictured Charlie Riley.)

EASTERN FINISHI:D THE SEASON WITH A 16-6 RECORD
OVERALL AND 13·1 IN THE SVAC FOR THEIR
FIRST SVAC CHAMPIONSHIP IN 19 YEARS

3RD
RACINE
949-2210

ST. RT 124
SYRACUSE'
992-6333

•

••

�•
Thursday,

OhiO

1990
~

Cardinals outlast Reds, 10.8;
Giants. roll over 'Iridian~, 13-6

: APPLIES TAG - Padres catcher Mark Parent
~r) appUes thetas to put out the A;n.ela Doonle
· HIU that would have scored the tleiDc run lq .t~e
bottom of the ninth Inning Wedne!'day In their

Palm Sprbtgs training camp. The Padres won the
same 6-5. The Angels will break camp here and
move on to Anaheim for their series with the
Dodgers April&amp;. (UPI)

.

•

'

New York {'nicks end losiflg streak

By WILL DUNHAM
t~ . ~IJittni:- all five games · this
Ul;'l Sports Writer
·•. ~" slfiiSlln. The Bullets, 28-45, had a
Ktkl Vandeweghe's best game
three-game winning streak
snapped.
of the sejli.OII, helped New York
Knlcks .~,i;'lt--$tu Jackson lio\d "; ~·~It's a confidence booster',,"
hts hea~tll~ ·:;- at least for cfrie ' .sa,td EW,I\g, . who Is averaging
night.
'
.
35.2 potilts and 12.2 rebounds
~gatnst the Bullets this seas.on.
ThelongdormantVandeweghe
'Right now we feel good."
scored a season-high 21 points to
complement a 37-polnt, 17.Bullets Coach Wes Unseld
rebound effort by PatrtckEwtng,
blamed the loss on Washington's
helping the Knlcks end a four- Inability to contain VandewegH~
game road l&lt;;&gt;s,lng streak with a
and fellow long-range shooter
118-107 vtctory 'o ver the WashingTrent Tucker (14 points) ,
·
ton Bullets Wednesday night.
"I still don't think Patrick
''It makes me look Uke a better
Ewing was the reason why we.
coach, doesn't it ," said Jackson,
lost," Unseld said. ·:we let
whose team has won two straight Vandeweghe go and Tucker, two~
and Is showing signs of coming guys who should be stoppable in
out of a protracted sl~mp . "We most cases." ·
.
looked like a good basketball
New York outscored Washingteam out there. I) l~ks normal- . ton 16-6 over the final 5:13 or the
like what some or the other good
second period to forge a_64-58
teams do. "
halftime lead. Kenny Walker's
Ewing scored 6 of his · 16
3-poln( play Ignited the run.
thlrd·pertod points during an 11-0
The Bullets used a 7-0 run to
run that gave New York a 96-87
gain the lead at 83-81, llut the
Knlcks responded with their 11-0
lead with 1:54 left In the third
.. period and the Kntcks never
run to take command.
trailed again.
Elsewhere, Boston defeated
New York; 42-31, has won six
New Jersey 125-106, Cleveland
straight against Washington, Instopped Atlanta 101-95, Golden
:

State topped Miami 128-114,
Dallas dumped San Antonio
104-98, Mtlwau(!:eeedged Indiana
121-116 In overtime, and Charlotte beat Denver 116-112.
Celtlca 125; Nets 106
At, Boston, Larry Bird scored
43 points, 17 In a pivotal third
quarter, and pulled down 15
rebounds as Boston handed New
Jersey Its 25th consecutive road
defeat. The last-place Nets, who
have fallen behind Mlamttn the
Atlantic Division, are 2-341n their
last 36.road games.
· Cavaliers 101, Hawks 811
At Richfield, Ohio, Brad
Daugherty scored 24 points and
pulled down 13 rebounds and
Mark Price dished out a careerhigh 20 assists to lead Cleveland
over Atlanta. The triumph tied
the teams In the battle fo~ the
· flmU playoff spot ln the Eastern
Conference.
'-·
Warriors 128 Heat. IH
At Miami, Man~teBol blocked
six shots In the second quarter to
·hold down Miami. Golden State
was led by Chris Mullin with 30
points, Rod Higgins with 25 and
Tim Hardaway with 20.

'

PLANT CITY, Fla. , IUPI) -,
Terry .Pendleton's 3-run homer
and Tom BrunanslcY' s 2-run
homer, both off Danny Jackson,
power(11! the St. Louis Cardinals
to a· 10-8 exhlbttton win Wednesday over the Cincinnati Reds.
Brunansky also had a 2-run
double. and VInce Coleman bad
three hits.
Cincinnati's Chris . Sabo collectec! three hits, Including a
2.run homer, giving htm nine hits
tn his last 11 at-bats since new
manager Lou Ptntella gave htm a
two-hour hitting lesson. Barry
Larkin also had three hits.
Joe Magrane, 1-0, got the
victory despite being rat tied for
eight hits and four runs In three
Innings; . Jackson, 0-1, surren, dered five hits anli six runs over
three Innings. Clnclonatl's Rick
Mahler, battling to remain In the
starting rotatlpn, gave up seven
hits and four runs In flve Innings.
St. Louis ripped Jackson for
four runs, In the flr~t Inning;
highlighted by Pendlf,!ton's 3-run
homer alter Willie McGee had .
doub.led In a run.
Cincinnati cut the Cardinals'
lead to 6-5 after four Innings, but
St. Louis scored f0\11" , times off
Mahler In the fifth. Coleman and
Willie McGee singled, Todd Zelle'
delivered a sacrifice fly, Pedro
Guerrero produced a :1 -run dou,
ble and Brunansky, who had
S!Dashed a 2-run homer In the
third, socked a 2-run double.
' Training Camp Newa ·
The Ctnctonatt Reds will rely
. on a 43-year-old rookie making
his National League debut to help
them better last year's fifth·
place flnislr In the National
· League West.
Who Is the rookie? None other
than Sweet Lou Pinlella. After 21
years In the American League,
f~t as a player. then as a
manager-administrator, · Plntella replaced Pete Rose at the
helm for the Reds.
While Plnlella · ts a major:'
league veteran, the challenges he
will face this y ear are certainly
new. But 11e does not see a
.problem In mi&gt;vtng·to ihe league ,
where "I;&gt;H" Is a dirty phrase.
"The big concern for me,"
Plnlella said, ''Is not switching
leagues. It's getting to know my

·Ruddock KOs Dokes in 4th round
NEW YORK !UPI)- Donovan
"Razor" Ruddock wanted to
make It clear he Is a heavyweight
with a big punch, a punch he
considers the hardest in the
division.
Ruddock made his point. on
former heavyweight champion
Michael Dokes • c bin Wednesday
night before 12,624 at Madison
Square Garden. Now he would
like to make It on Heavyweight
champion Buster Douglas.
' Ruddock hit Dokes with a
sweeping left uppercut early ln
the .fourth round, rendering
Dokes out on hts feet. Ruddock
followed up with a right and two
hard lefts and Dokes fell face
first on the ' canvas. Referee
Art)tur Mercante Jr. counted him
out at 53 seconds of the round.
"I knew when I hit him,
something was gotng to happen, "
Ruddock said. " I have so much
confidence In my power, I know
when I hit somebody on the chin,
they 'll go."
Ruddock Improved to 23-1;1
· with 16 knockouts whtle possibly
ending Ookes' career at 41-3-2 In
the scheduled 12·round bout:
-Ruddocl!:. said he had not.,
sparred since suffering
sprained right hand three weeks ·
ago. He was wary of ustng':".lf.
Wednesday, but the left was
· enough.
After three even rounds, RuddQCk struck quickly In the fourth.
The first left knocked Dokes back
Into the ropes and Ruddock .
- -stepped In to finish htm off. ·-;;:--;:
·· 'A left hook is very e~sy tO'&gt;
block, so I had to use a
combtriatton of a left hook and an
uppercut," Ruddock said. "My
trainer calls It a 'smash." '
.Dokes was unconsclpus fJlr two
mlitutes and did not respond until
his body was Iced as his cornermen looked on with concern. He
finally rose about seven minutes
after the knockout and left the
ring on hIs own power,
Ringside physctan Barry Jord~p saJd Dokes .would be .awakened every two hours during the
ntght on what he called a "neuro
watch. ''
"I was nervous, " Jordan said .
of the tense minutes after the
knockout.
''I really did think I was going
to hurt htm, but that's my job,"
Ruddock said. "I have to take
him out of there. We're gladiators. If I was on the other side of
the coin, the same· thing would
happen to me. He was defenseless, but he was st111 on his feet!'
Dokes admitted his career was
probably over.
"If I can't beat a guy like
Ruddock, my odds against Douglas are sltm and none," he said.
"There Is nothing I can take

· personnel. I would have liked to mas Dunbar collected four hils·
and scored the winning run on
have had six weeks t o asses,s my
Jeff Conine's 11th-Inning double
players.
to pace Kansas City In a spilt'
''The big thi~J~ Is staying
squad game.
healthy. Last year the club had
At Haines City, Fla. , Roger
an abnormal amount of Injuries. ·
Clemens pltchE!d seven SCOJ:I!less .
They finished f11th. This Is not a
Innings and Bill Buckner had
!11th-place team."
If Plnlella can resuscitate the four hits to give Boston the
victory In the other spilt-squad
Reds, maybe he'll become eligigame.
ble for Rookie oftbe Year honors.
At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
In other news, the Milwaukee
Brewers announced they will pitcher. Tommy Greene singled
give free rides home to f11ns who In the go-ahead run In thi!'elghth
drink too many brews at the inning and third ba5eman Jim
ballpark. Miller Brewing Co. ot Presley hit grand slam to l11t
Milwaukee will sponsor the Safe the Braves over the Yankees.
At Orlando, Fla., the . Twins
Ride Home Program.
"We want to create an environ- pounded 15 hits .In defejlting the
ment that' not on~y is enjoyable Tigers. The Twins will pJ,ay their
for our fans but also one that final ~xhtbttioil game Thursday
promotes their safety and wel- at Tlilker Field, their spring
fare," Brewer owner Sud Selig home since 1936. Next spring, the .
said. ''That Is what th~ program Twins wm train . at the Lee
County Sports Complex In Fort
does •.,
In exhibition games, Montreal Myers, Fla.
At Bradenton, Fla., Sid Bream,
defeated Los Angeles 4-1, Holls·
ton defeated Toronto 6-l, Kansas · trying to bounce back from.three
City edged Boston 7·5, Atlanta 1989 operations on his right knee, .,,
topped the l'lew York Yankees · hit two home runs to power .
10-5 and Seattle shutout tile · Pittsburgh. Bream capped a ,
ftve:run, first Inning with a 1
Chicago Cubs 4-0.Also, Minnesota defeated De- three-run homer, and followed
" trolt 7-4, Pittsburgh beat Phtla- that with a solo homer in the fifth. ,
delphta 8·5, San Diego edged Bobby Bonilla added a solo home ,
Caljfornta Angels 6-5 and San run In the third for the Pirates.
At Tempe, Ariz., Brian Hol· Francisco stomped Cl.e veland
man
tuned up for his Opening
13-6.
'
At Scottsdale, Ariz., pitcher , Day start against the Angels by
pitching five scoreless Innings In
Scott Garrelts drove In six runs
Seattle's shutout of ·the CubS . .
with a three-run homer and a
bases-loaded triple to help the
Giants butld aJ2-0 lead after two
IDDings.
,•
· At Vero Beach, F!a, , Dennis
Martinez continued his lmpres·
slve spring with six strong
FOI USIEI
Innings and Tom Foley belted a
two-run double, carrying the
Uhs, M.,, Tulps,
!r
Expos past the Dodgers.
lyaclntht, Hy*llfltiiCI•,
At Kissimmee, Fla., Mike,
i'
Caladiums
Scott and Pan Schatzeder com.ALSO: Coniple'to lint of
bined on a two-hitter and Glenn
Y•tallll allll Wding
Davis homered leading the Astros over ~e Blue Jays. Scott wUl
Plants, l._.lng ud
be the ·Astros Opening Day
Foliage Hanging lkllbts.
pitcher against Tom Browning of
Fruit and Flowerilltl ''"'•
the Ctnctnnatt Red.
Shrubs, Aialeat and
At . Plant City, Fla., Terry
'
lhododl.tr- .
Pendleton's three-run homer and
Tom Brunansky's two-run ho·
HUBIAID'S GIIENHOUSE
mer, both off Danny Jackson,
SYIACISI, o•o
powered St. LouiS.
992-5776
At Winter Hav~n. Fla., Tho·
0 en Dall 9·5· Sun. 1-5

a

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRINt SEASONI

Thursdly, Aprl&amp;, , 990

54th · annual Masters Golf. Tournaritent begins in Augusta
winner of this 10 '
me~t six
times and a winne~r:t week In
his ftrstsenlor'sevent and Greg
AUGUSTA, Ga. - Another Norman, often a chalienger but
decade of major championship JleveraMasterschampton.
golf begins Thursday over a
~ 'I love the way this tournapiCture p!!rfect landscape that ment Is run," Norman said.
has evolVed from an Indigo ~ere .Is no other tournament
plailtattonlinto one of the world' s" like .It In the world .. And, natupremier sporting venues.
rally, the overriding thlng 1s the
"I love to 'play here " Greg course. It Is a course' I love to
Norman said on the ev~ of the play.''
event, "because It Is an
Institution."
As another decade dawns, a
That Institution- the Masters new generation of players has
- will be contested for the 54th appeared to challenge the famlltime at the August'a N!!-tlonal · lar names o( the al)s. Rookie
· Golf Club ·wlth the 85-man field sensation Robert .Gamez.
!'~!presenting a unique mlX.of the Tommy Armour III and · the
game's past, present and future. Byrum brothers- Tom !l!ld Curt
. Gene Sarazen, golf's patriarch - have come to the tournament
at age 88, will hit the first ball of for the.f lrsttlmeby vlrtueofthelr
the tournament at 8:30a.m. EDT recent victories on the American
and play a ceremonial nine holes tour. From overseas Irel11nd's
with Sam Snead, the winner of Ronan Rafferty and Australia's
135 tournaments.
Craig Parry are making their
They will be followed by a Initial trip to the Masters.
steady stream ol players .who
At the other end of the scope
will..Aibce again test the htlls, are the established superstars
va~ys and diabolical putting . who are all threats to win surfaces that make up what has
Norman. Faldo, Curtis Strange,
becotne one of golf's treasured Seve Ballesteros, Payne Stecourses.
,
wart, Mark Calcavecchla, Ben
On dlsptay will be 19 former
Crenshaw, Sandy Lyle and the
Masters champions, five ama- all-time leading money wtlllll!r In
teurs and 21 players who are American golf, Tom Kite.
making their first appearance In
In the middle Is a group of still
the tourname.nt. The opening
Improving players who have
round was expected to be played .made their mark around the
In sunny, ·mild weather with world but are stiil In search of a
big win that would elevate them
westerly winds of 10 mnes per
hour.
Into thesport'sellte-ChlpBeck.
· As 1~ the custom, the defending Jose-Marla Olazabal, Davis
champion - Nick Faldo - w111 Frost, Paul Azlnget, Tim SI!Dpplay· with the current U.S. son, Mark McCumber ani! recimt
Amateur. chaJ'!lplon - ~hrts
Players Championship winner
Patton. But the twosome that ts
Jodie Mudd. ·
certain to draw the largest crowd
Finally, In a class by himself, Is
willbemadeupofJackNicklaus,
Nicklaus, who at age 50 Is still
By MIKE RABUN
UPISporta Writer

Results
Exillltl'nON S'I'ANDINOS
Br U•led Prwa .. &amp;era&amp;to_.

Team

Amerk• Leape
•
W L

Pet.

Clnf'land ............•............. J.7

4

-4'1

Tau .................................. 7
Seattle ................... ........... ... t

S .583
5 .HI
Be.l&amp;oD,, , , ,,, , ,,, ,,, , ,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, '
Jlt-!11
CallfonMa ........................... . s· 11
Detroit ••.•:·............. ........... .. . !
Ku. . OI)I ... .. .................... I
Mla_.ota .. ...... ................... 1

· Mltwa.llee ............. ............. .s
llaiUnto~ .. t ....... . ... ........ ... . .. -1

'CIIIcqo ............................... t·
New Yerk............................ &lt;l

5
5
I
'7
I
7
7

-

....
.liS
.liS

7

J11

Al4

.t17

To,...• ,.........
,................. ...
NM .. IaiLe.,_

3 m

Plttbflh ........................... 1

:s

New York ............................ 1
Pllllll4elplll&amp; .. .... ....... ........ ... ,
UsAIII'f!llllA ......................... I
A&amp;lu&amp;a ........ ........................ l
Ro...t•n ....... ........~............... l
Clllcqo ................... ............. s

2

S
4
4
4
4

.m

.ltl

........
.......
.111

....
.tn

I
I
'7

.Ill

SUI Fr~d.co .... : ................ 1 7
St. .................................... 2 . ,
WtdaeldiO' Rnlfl•

.411

~"

Mell&amp;rell 4, lbA All piM I

..Uiu&amp;a It, New York (.U, I
IWtlmoref, New VorltiNL) I

St.u•••.a•..a••
lloate•l.h..-..tol

n ... ,....

n~~&amp;U•s

Jlaa- CltJ 1, ....0111. Illna.

a..tena.x.... at,.l

MJii. .ota 7, DMroll-4
Su Fnacbce II, DII'Ntbad I
Seattle 4, Clllleqo ( NL) I

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Sale ends Aprjl30,199o.
•

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Newl'l,.lll, Wutll ... •lt7
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Clewlu.lll, AtiUia II
Mllwutku 1~1, bdl- Ill, OT
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Orlu4lo at Clllcap, l: • p.m.

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GeWen State at New olrr.ey, 1::11p.m.
a..llltoeal W•lllllnat-.ap.m.

Ml~~~neta ,, . ''llf"Wte, 't.Jip.m.
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Salmon fishing trip for two to Alaska . .
RUDDOCK LANDS . PUNm - Heavywel&amp;ht challenger
Donovan "RazoJ;'.! Ruddock (L) tai.d~ a pucb. on the face ol
Michael Dokes ·• during the second round .of their WBA
lntercontl!lentat. Heav)'Welsht Championship llght Wednesday.
Ruddock took the title from Dokes with a KO at :53 seconda of the
fourth round. ( UPI)
·

poll,

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SPIIIMl Dl11011
IIAIIMAH IOUDU TIUSUIES
Saturdel, April 7, 9:30 a~Ro6 pm
. _ -ty vocdonlll c~··
FilE AD11SS10N
Crafts o l'kt- wH• lodd•U.
Do0111ioo 12·2

dldn t do me any good that they .
paired
with Nlck,laus. I was
scared odeath. ldontk~how
Igottheballonthetee.

PIZZA

.

remember the first time I

·
S900 ,.. M.
New VCRs From.---

a. Dlep . .............. :............. 7

.........

••

•a

cam~ here I was 19 years old. It

DOMINO'S

New Washers from---

away from Ruddock. He beat me roqnds, rocking him with a
and I've been around and fought counter-hbok late In .t he second
some tough guys."
round. Most of Ruddock's big
Dokes, 31, held his own with the punches were countered over the
RuddoCk · for three . first three rounds.

,

·
.
being given serious constdera- late.
chanceatvlctoryoneholeearller
1
Uon as a p06slble winner.
Nicklaus' dramattc_vtctory In when a 2-foot putt skidded by the
"Jack Is confident " Norman 1986 started a streak that has cup.
~ald. "His ambition is to win a Included Larry Mtze's 150-foot,
"My heart always tx;ats faster
tournament on the senior and sudden death chip sho,t to beat on the first.~ of a major
regulartourtnthesameyearand Norman (1987) , Lyles birdie _championship,
said Stra_nge,
now he 1s halfway there. He has , from a fairway bunker at the who later this year will try to
been working out. H.e bas lost 72nd hole to ~at Calcav~chla by become the second player In
.weight . He has a new driver. His -a shot (1988) and Faldo s25-foot history to ~~n a third straight
pride Is unbelievable. He doesn't
birdie putt on the second sudden U.S. Open. I started trying to
want to let go. He wants to d~!ath hole last year which locus In on this tournament three
compete at his best.
downed Scott Hoch, who lost a weeks ago.
" All of a sudden he is playing
like he's'35 instead of 50. "
Whoever wins this week, the
Masters Is likely to produce
811 W.MAIN
another chap~r of lore for golf's
,; . ~
memory book. The tournament,
POMEROY
1.\ "' \
after all, has had quite a run of
" \

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eWIIO Nobooa! Au.-,.Pano

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:Speed~ay )adds 1~

:entries for Indy
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) Third-generation driver B1ll Vu;kovlch Ill was among a group of
.drivers nominated Wednesday to
',drive 16 entries foe ihe .May 27
Indianapolis 500. ·
· The entries Increased to 92 the
number of cars for the annual
.Indianapolis Motor Speedway
'classic.
.
Speedway offtctals said additional entries might be postmarked ~fore the deadline.
Allo en~red were veterans
Stan Fox and David "Salt"
Walther, plus r~les Mike Groff
and Jeff Woods.
Vukovich, 26, of Coarsegold,
Calif., wu named driver ala pair
of 'Lola- Bulclla for Hemelprn
Racing of llldlanapolla. Hemelgarn also enterecl• two ~lber
Lolas, but lilted no drlverl.
Vukovich became lbe first

.....

'500'

•

third-generation driver to compete at Indianapolis In 1988. His
grandfather, Billy Vukovich,
won the race' In 1953 and 1954 and
was killed while leading the race
In 1955.
Fox, 37, of Janesville, Wis.,
also will have his pick of a pair of
Lola-Bulcks entered by R. Kent
Baker Racing of IDdlanapolls.
Walther. t2, of Dayton, Ohio,
wu named driver for a 1987
PeDike-CoBWOrth and a 1988
Lola·CoswOI'th entered by
George Wal !her, . his father.
Walther last raced at lncHanap0111 In 1919. He wu serloully
lnjurec!ID 1973 In a fiery crash at
the rain-delayed atart of the race.
Groff, 28, of LOs Angeles, will
have bla pick al 1988 or 1990
Loii-Coawortbl enll!recl by Antonio Ferrari and EUromotorsport
Racing of Indianapolis .
. '.

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�Pomeeoy-Middleport Ohio

Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

1hwldaY•.Aprl&amp;,

,._..._ Local .news briefs...- - - Racine Couneil... continued from page 1
eontinued from page 1

Deputies probe accident
Meigs CQunty sheriff' s deputies i~vestigated a Tuesday
· accident on private property. According to the report, around
, 9:55p.m. Tuesday, Virgil Hudson, 18, of Syracuse, W,!IS backing
+from a parking spot at D&amp;M Pizza, Syracuse, when he~uck .
the le!t rear fender of a parked vehicle owned by Jeffrey
Beaver, Racine. There was light damage to Hudson's 1976
Dodge as well as. light damage to Beaver's 1983 Ford. There
were no injuries or citations.
. .
·
Frank and Mary Wells, of Flatwoods Ro!ld, reported to
au thoritles that some old coins, etc., are missing from their
home. The Items were last seen March 9. Investigation Is
continuing.

.Census workers test Apri~ 13
Residents of Meigs County will have the opportunity to be
tested for Census jobs at a sessl(ln to beheld at the MeigS County
Public Library ln Pomeroy on Aprll 13.
·
Time for the 30 minute test ls 10 a.m . and 1 p.,m . .
Those Interested In Census positions as enumerator or crew
leader are to register with the Ohio .Bureau of Employment
Services In Athens or Galllpolls.
Further Information concerning Census applications and
testing may be obtained by contacting Cheryl Cox, U.S. Census
, Bureau Dis trlct Office RecrultlJ!I OperJitlon Supervisor at 1808
Masslevllle Road, Chillicothe, phone'663-4733 ..

Squads have 6, Wednesday calls

-

.
'
Six calls were answer~ Wednesda;l). by units of the Meigs
Emergency Medical SI!J;yices. ' ·
At 5:21 a.m., Syracust! ,wen~ :to Yellowbush Road lor Mona
.
Lisa Haynes to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Fire DepartJitent at 5:18a.m., assisted by Chester
· Fire Department and Pomeroy EMS, was called to a structure
lire on Dark Hollow Road.'
At 7:16 a.m., Pomeroy EMS went .to . Spring .Avenue lor
Audrey Arnold who was iaken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Syracuse at' 11:57 a.m. transported Edison Brace from Vine
Street to Veterans Memorllil Hospital, then to Holzer Medical
Center. ·
·
.
. At 12:23 p.m., Pomeroy went to High Street for Paul Bush to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, .and at 5:12 p.m. , to Butternut
Avenue for Jessica Blaettnar to 'Veterans Memorial Hospital,

----Court news----

was Incorrect and that the . tee was au tho !'bed to spend up to
costs, speedlq;bJohn L. Nor- '
Middleport court
adjustment will be made this $200 for new trees.. Hilton Walfe,
Three were lined and t\Vd man, Athens, $100 and costs,
month. 'l'he annupl permit fee Jr. was given ·approval to make
others forfeited bauds In the drlvll!i under financial risk
from Manley's Refuse Service repairs on the dump truck and
court of Mlddlwport Mayor Fred ,suspension. and $10 and cqsts,
David Nelgler met with Council
has ~n paid, she said.
;
running a stop sign.
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Bll Bird, Third St., appeared to discuss the July 4 celebration
Forfeiting bonds were Arthur
Fined were James Van Meter,
before council to discuss closing and the need for more COIT)mun·
R.
Petrie, Middleport, $210, drlv·
Middleport, on two charges of
·
the alley which runs between his lty involvement.
lng
under suspension; and ~r­
disorderlY manner, $25 and costs
Council discussed securing a · On each charge~ James R. nard E . Hunter, Cheshire, $52,
two lots. .He said that he Is
considering building a garage biU collecting agent since the
Grueser, Jr. , Middleport, $20 and speeding.
which would extend .Into tlfe current one Is resigning. Anyone
• alley . CouQcllman Carroll Tea· interested should submit a letter
lord advised that ln the ~t. to the clerk. .
Clerk Beegle reported that the
Council has declined to close
alleys unless there was some village at the end ot March had
benefit . to .the !:Pmmunlty. No $178,249, ln all accounts with
· action was taken on the request. receipts this year to the current
Dally slocll prices
.
.
Don Rilfle, ·spokesman for the date totaling $30,898.86 and ex· . ' l
(Aa of10:38 a.m.)
. CLEVELAND (UPI) ~There Bryce aad Mllrk8111•h
skateboarders, again appeared pendltures to date totaling
before Council regarding a skate- $55,444,65. She also noted that the were no big jackpot w111ners In
ol BluJit, Ella. A Loewl
board laciUty. lie was advised Super Now lnterestfor the month Wednesday's $6 million dollar
of February totaled $707.63.
Super Lotto game, Ohio lottery Am Electric Power ,............ 30%
that Coun~ll still does not have
Balance In the various village · ofllclals reported. ·
AT&amp;T .... :.... , .............. ..... ... .41~
make
additional Information
accounts at the end of March
The winning numbers were 1,4,
Ashland Oil .... .................... 36%
that judgement.
,
The annual appropriations or- were were $18;460. 78, general 18, 27, 39 and 44. There were 140 Bob Evans ..................... ;..... 12%
tickets with live of .six of the Charming Shoppes ....... :....... 8%'
dinance was amended with more . fund; $28,999, street mainteC) ty Holding Co............. .. ...13Y.,
money going into the water nance and repair; $4,013, state winning numbers for $1,000 each.
Federal Mogul. ............... .... 17Y.,
revenue account. This was done highway; $33,039, fire depart- There were 5,981 ,with four of the
six winning numbers for $75 Goodyear t&amp;:R .... ,.....: ........ 36'Ve
to provide funding to the Board of ment; $78,865, water revenue;
•
Public Affairs lor the new $4,381, cemetery; $3,687, water each.
· Heck's ...... , .. ... .......... ........ .. . 2%
There was one big winner' In Key Centurion .................... 14~
backhoe which was purchased deposits, and $6,800, cemetery
·
Wednesday's Kicker game for Lands' End ......................... l9Y.!
through the Ohio Department of endowment.
$100,000 ·before taxes. The win·
Transportation's . Cooperative
Limited Inc.. ."........... .• ~ ... ..... 42
ning Kicker numbers were Multimedia Inc, :...... ........... 78\2
Purchasing Program.
. 349403. Flvetlcketshadftveofslx Rax Restaurants.,.... ......... ... 2~
Authorization to repair two
. Ve&amp;erans Memorial
of the nubmers for $5,000 each.
weed cutters was given to Street
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 15'!1.
Wednesday admissions
There were 68 with lour of the slx Shoney's Inc ............... ....... .12'Ve
Comlssloner Glenn Rizer. Repair · Lena Hellman, Pomeroy.
numbers lor $1,000 each.
of_a radio on one of the fire trucks
Star Bank ..... ....... ... , ..... : .... .18~
Wednesday discharges - Ml·
Saturday's Super Lotto jackpot Wendy's Int'l ...................... .4%
was also authorized.
cliael Childs, Iva Rayburn, Paul
·The tree replacement commit- Saunders.
Worthington Ind....... ........... 21%
will be $10 million.

No big winners in
·Ohio's Super Lotto

A total of $676.26 has been
coUected· for the Heart Fund ·in
Olive Township, Grace Weber,
chairman reported today. Sollcl·
tors ln the township included Klla
Young, Shirley Barber, Mary
Blse, Connie Rucker, Ruth
Durst, Hazel .Barton, Teresa

Evans, Florence Wyers, Nina
Boston.. Jean Fortney, • Betsy
Herald, Susie Francis, Cathy
Spencer, and Bonnie Richards:
"Do not count y.our chickens before
they are hatched," was first said by
Aesop, the Greek fable writer.

1881 TIDRUI SID

(

::=nrans.

. WAS

:r~~·

*16,547

·iat 24 Va!Ye·E!Jg.
·NNFM cassena

..

=r::vs SJINOW.

·Power Seats
•AMIFM
Cassena .
•loaded

DEAlD REJAJNS IIOA1E. TAX AHD tnu EXTRA.

1181 PRDBIIL

Stock I 9702

oOual Powar Seat

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FINANCING
AVAILABLE TO
QUALIFIED

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.NOW

.SJ4,111

DEALEIIIETAINS IIOA1E. TAX AHD 1IIUl EXTRA.

lal RAilER 4X4.

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n

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•AtNFM CUsina

•loaded

30°/o 75°/o

TO
OFF
SALE STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1990
10:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. ,...

_, ..!OP
SllVD .DGI PLAIA • GAWPOUS, 01.
(614) 446-9511
SOllY, NO CIAiGI CAIDS

d
presente

'

•

ed by area
· church

H'cks h

NOW

810,911

1988 FORD RANGER 4X2 SIOCk t 8828, .._
198811ERCURYTRACER,4 Door, S10Ckt8964. Yel~ow
1988 MERCURY TRACER, 4 Door; SIOCkt 8986, Reel
1989 EAGLE MEDAL, 4 Door,stoc:kt 9207, BIKgu1dy
1989 EAGLE PREMIUM, 4Door, stockt9214, Whlla
1989 EAGLE SUMM, 4 Door, S10Ckt92t9, Tan
.1989 EAGLE PREMIUM, 4Door, S10Ckt9224, Wtita
1989 ~ERCURY SABLE,~ Door, Slol*t9317, Red'
1~ FORD E·150, cargo, Srxk~ SMr
1989 FORD BRONCO,lJ.150,S1ockt9658,Col. 'Affil

•

.'

. .

:Harrisonville
.
...
··happenings
'

•AWFM Cassebl

~~

•loaded!

115,768

NOW

•

8

11,991

1989 FORD RANGER 4X4 Srxkt8959.a~oe
1989 FORD MUSTANG, 2 DoQr, S10Ckt'9945, Red
1~9 FORD.TAUR~, 4 DoQr, ·Srxk 19943, etue
1989 FORD MUSTANG, 2 Door, sloCkt 9913, Aed .
1989 FORD AERO WAGoN, 5mck ,·9911, Red
1989 FORD MUSTANG,2 Door, stoc:U9885, Bl~oe
1989 FORD FEBnVA, 2 Door, 5mck' 9803, Reel
198911ERCURY COUGAR XR7, Sb:kueoo. Witt
1989 UNCOLN TOWN CAR, 4Door,!bktl8745. Bilek

.

J

l(,e/"~01( -~

.

.

..

SptipJ FlitJilute
. ·.,IB•ingtl ,·

Mrs. Ester ·Brandan, Jackson, :.
spent the weekend with Mrs . Lola :
Clark.
'
Mrs. Jetti Arlx visited rela·
itves In Florida last week .
Miss Robin Gibson, Columl:!us,
spent a few· · days .with her
g~:andparents, · M~. and Mrs. Bob
Alkire.
Mr. ·a nd Mr,s. Robert Mahr
attended the recent wedding of
their grlmdsOII, Gary Joe Foley
Jr., at Apple Grove, W.Va.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and·
\\1r.s,. Robert Mahr were Deb,ble
Foley anc;l, ,~ons&gt; Columbus;
Sanda Fole)l .and children, Mil·
waukee,' Wls.; Becky South and.
children, Racine; ·and Gary Joe.
:.
Foley sr. ; Syracilse.
· Mr. and· Mrs. Sam Stlenmentz
entertained Sunday evenrog with
a birthday dinner for their ·son,
David. Others attending were · '
Penny P}'klemore and daughter,
and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dlll and
children.
'• .·

SALE
·.

.

3M SCOTCHOAIID STAIN
IIE~EASE PII~CTION

•5 ;::;.:··
•a.ti-Stlll

•

ioiOO'IIo MIOCO •

oiiooi--::,~.

SQ. YD.

• W•-Y
•1 Hwo

•1• Colwt .IIUTMUD WITH,..
I

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. LEVEL-LOOP CARPET

s16 79
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LIVING ROOM SUITES

'.
-,Count;y,
Early American a·nd Contemporary
Styles.
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-Beautiful long-wearing covers .
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-Quality Brand . names include Berkline, Craftmaster
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lMr£1110 YEAI WAIU.Nn

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I

WAS
•Automatic Trans:
•kllelval Wipers
113,659

•Rallellost

ALl MERCHANDISE

'
WAS
. *21,572

WAS

•Tit'M1eel

AT THIS LOCAT,ON!

. Fourteen junior high students p.m. In the hJgh school gym.
trlct will be having registration
dents from the Harrisonville,
for kindergarten lor the 1990·91
Salem Center, and Rutland areas
.from Eastern competed recently Included In the program will be
In the Ohio Music Education · the fourth gra(le recorders, beschool year . . ·
.
. are lo register at Rutland . .
Association District•XVII junior ginning band, advaQced band,
Klnderg;trten attendance 1S
Parents are to bring a record of
high solo and ensemble contest and high school concert band . .. now a requirement for entering
lmmunlzatlon for one measles
held at Ohio University's School ~is concert will be tile tune up · the first grade: 'Any child whose
(rubeola), Ol\l! rubella (German
of Music. ·
performance before the high
tilth birthday fallS on or befare· measles), one mumps (all ad·
William R. Hall, band director, school band competes In the state
Sept. 30, 1990, has·to be entolled
mlnlslered.after first birthday);
four OPT; three polio sabin; and
called It a " verysuccesslulday ." ·_ band contest In Columbus . on . In idndergarten 1n otderto go to
He went on to say "the students · Aprll28.
.
· thelirstgradethefoUowingyear.
a recent TB skin test (within one
-· had tooverc6me their Initial fear
The public Is Invited to attend · The registration schedule Is as
ye~ before entering school) are
.· of performing by themselves, but both the concert and the contest follows.
required lor admission to school.
they son learned that they could . performances .
l'cimeroy Elementary, April
Pare~ts must also provide the
stand on their own. Ultimately, · p•L
25, rrom 9·11 a.m: and.t-3: 30 p.m. · chUd s birth certificate.
that makes them stronger musl· ·. t.a)'_
Kindergarten age students from
AU parents who have.chlldren
the Pomeroy and Salisbury areas
of kindergarten age are asked to
clans . and· more conflden t
• }leoplw.' •
A play will be 'presented by the are to register at Pomeroy.
register at this time. The number
· Students recelvln su rlor
Mt. Union Baptist Church, "A
Middleport Elementary, April of schaal personnel needed ls
ratings were.Andrew'{,.oll,~om·
Place .For You" on .Golgotha's 26, from 8-11:30a.m. and noon to contingent upon the number of
. bone; Christine Studer, french
Hill, off Route 143, two miles 2:30p.m. KUldergarten age.stu- students whq register, and the
. horn• J 11 B
fl t . Ch
.south of Carjlenter on County dents from Bradbury and Mid- count.needs to be as accurate as
·
· • u e rown, u e, . ar·
Road 14 Pastor· Joe N Sayre
·
·
·
pos'slble ·
lene Dalley flute· Dawn Foley .
·
·
dleport areas are to register at
..
·
..
the public. The play
Middleport
·.P arents having questions con·
Clarinet.• . L•·1·sa H•0 ffman, c 1a·•· welcomes
. Ing · regs
. I tra. tl on are encour·
•rinet; · Karen Morris bass cia·
wIll be presen ted ·AprII 13 at 7.
.Rutland Element.a ry, Aprll27, . cern
p.m.
from 8-11:30 a .m . and noon to aged to contact the .elementary
rlnet· Jared Riden'our xylo·
principal ln that attendance
phone; and Kim Michael, Lisa
1
bOOt}
area.
Hoffman, Dawn Foley, and
·
Parents with children who wlli
Karen Morris, clarinet quartet.
· Rev. Carl Hicks was hOnored chips and dlp, co!lee ·and pop
be of age to attend the first grade
Receiving excellent ratings
were served. All refreshments
next year, but who are not
were April Smith, cornet ; . recently foUowing a prayer meet·
Brandy Barber, clarinet; James
ing at the Apple Grove Church. were furnished· by Dallas Hill.
attending kindergarten this
Ewing,. saxophone; Joe Karsch·
He was honored for serving 60 ·There were . 11 members and
year, should contact the County
nlk, snare·drum; Kim Michael, ·, years In the ministry.
three guests present.
Superintendent at 992-3883 to
The church will als'o be having
make arrangements .to check
eligibility for entry into the first
clarinet; and Charlene Dalley,
Refreshments, Including a Len!tjn service om Aprll 11-P
ti;:Umpet.
'· cake Inscribed ''Happy 60th and Easter sunrise service at 6
grade. This must be done before
.lfh.e blPld's next performance ·.Anniversary
Hicks," ~b , a.m.· The publiC Is Invited to
school starts In the rail, accord·&gt;
wlli be 'the annual spring concert . sandwlclle$, Ice
plidd , attend.
lng to the superintendent.
sc~eduled for April ' 24 at 7:30
R
. eV ·

OUR LEASE HAS

EXPIRED·!

·Eastern musicians
K-indergarten registration
·ranked in competition s;_h;,!~~J~! ~e}Nl,!;l~

Hospit81 ne:ws

. liD MERCURY SABLE

.•

Aprils; 1990
Page-7

to

Bur17 · ·ftis Is A l.iln.... ft111e Offer· Sale .End.i 81at., Aprfl14

Releases heart fund drive tobtl·

Thu~.

'·

Stocks

WOOPS ••• We Overlooked These Beauties
·And Now Oar Loss·JI?To11r Gain!·
:

WEATHER MAP - A cold Canadian alrmUI has settled over
mueh of &amp;be nation. Sprelldl111 precipitation from the Rockies east
aloa1 &amp;he Gull .Coast to &amp;he Anand~ Seaboard. ,The wintry,
' temperatures aaliocla&amp;ed with thla alrmus will aliO produce JUI&amp;y
wlnda and snow sqUalls In the vicinity of Lalle Superior aad Lake
MlchiJan. Saruey skies and mUd temperatures will prevail west of
&amp;he Rockies.

The Daily. Sentinel

1990

•

Sl Q49

SCI, YD.
1NSTMIB1

SERTA. SALE

I

Honor
rolls
'

PdM~~O~ELEMENTARY

;'li'lrst 'Grade: 13enjl Call, Andy
Davis, Nicholas DetiWiller, Ash·ley Hannahs, Curtis · Hanstlne,
.~ells sa ijouser, Andrea Kraw~­
.Zyn, Derek Miller, Chris Pickens,
•Justin Robson, Clara Sanders,
Brenna Sisson, Emily Stivers,
· ,Cfirlstopher Ward, Danny ThornIbn , Aja McGlothin, . ·Julia
Kennedy , Terra Barton, Thad·
deus Bumgardner, Jessica Chap·
man, HoUle Griffith, Breyden
Hap tons tall, Sarah Houser, April
I.:arge, Shannon Price, Jonathan
Runyon, Alex Shuler, Ashley
Thomas, Christopher Yeauger.
Second Grade: Tod Daniels,
Wesley Thoene. Adam Thomas,
Whitney ThOmas, Ryan Well,
Michael Williamson, Amber
Blackston, Jackie Buck, C.D.
Ellis, P.J . Erwin, Amber Per,
kins , Ryan Pratt, Jennifer
Shrlmplln, Julie Spaun, Chris·
tian Welker:
·
:Third Grade: Jessica Matson,
flenjam in Molden, Bonne Smith,
Kasey' Williams, Chrissa Brahllm, John Davidson,' Jennifer
l{eck, Amy Johnson, Krls tina
Kennedy, Sean Powell, Brandy
Snider.
·
: Fourth Grade: David Ander·
son, Wendt Daniels, Steven
illcCullough, . Scott Sellers,
Vfendy Shrlmplln, Amy Smith, .
Michael Brown, Jerlca Clark, ·
Oay Crow, Danlelle Grueser,
~onald Hlrtl\, Michelle Rams·
burg, Amy See, Adam Thomas.
:Flft.h Grade: Erin Krawsczyn,
Jt~dle Sisson, Chad Molden,
'I'aryn Doidge, Stacey PriCe,
Stacie ·R eed, TaraGrueser, Whit·
ney Haptonstall, Jessica McEI·
roy, Heather McLain, Danny
1
Cobb. . ' .. •
.
Sixth Grade: Travis Abbott,
Anne Brown, Corey Darst, La·.
Deana Grover, Alicia Haggy,
Palma Wiles, Israel ' Grimm,
Susanna Henderson, and James
White.
D.H. : Sfephen 'G rueser, John
Cleland, Rex·Ftowers.

. ··SAXONY CtRPET

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;;lp t&lt;$ih

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- · ~-

�•

~

.
Thursday. AprilS, 1990

Pomeroy· Middleport. Ohio

Plige-8-v-The Daily Sentinel ·

.,
i .

.Cys,tic Fibrosis b(rnejit Sunday .
.'
Point Pleasant MOOSe Lod~e 731 prizes_are being donated by area
will be holding a. Cystic Fibrosis . btlsinesses and individuals. ·
Benefit Dinner Dance on Sunday,
t.\-priU at the Lod_ge, ·
The buffet dinnet w.ill be from
.'
\:30 • 1:30 p.m. An auction will 1,1e
held from 8 • 9 p.m: .with· the dance
followin4 until midnight witli dool"
prizes being.given away.
.
.

.. .

All ·SPRIN·G
FASHIONS :

. The glle$t ~
ihe even~
.
will be. Olarlotte. S..,_,•ft
mg
..........- ••
~ of campaigns f&lt;r Ken·
tuck¥/ West Vuginia Chapter .of the

for

CySII~ Filmsis ~~

cbild for tile lodge. She is
the claughta' of the Lodge Gover-

pos1er

nor Rick Buclc:.

FRIDAllND ., .
SATURDAY ONLY

·

. Cystic Fibrosis primarily aff~ts
the Jwip; . J181KZ$ and sw~ ·

the Am~rlcaa Association of University Women.
• 'ESSAY WINNERS ~...hese . Meigs ,Cqunty
are Valerie Karr, Nicole HID, Amiulda
.
·Pictured
-stude!I.IS are the third aad•fourth gade wlnlllln of
Theiss,
!IDd
Ashley Mc51DPey: _·
·
: the essay coates I for the Women In ~toty'Montli :spoiiiiOted·by lhti Middleport-Pomeroy branch pf -

.

.

L

:

~

...

·-

_I

·20°/o.oFF·; ·.

.

"Punky" Buck, 6, is the

glands. lt causes the ~Y -to
produce a thick, . sticky mllCus
which clogs the lungs leJdirig to infection and luilg . damage. The
mucus build- up also lllllki!S digestion
difficult: . ~Wnalely
30,000 ~~ ~le m the U.S.
have Crs!JC . 1bros1s. . . ., .

To rilake ·R3ervations caD 6751880. There is a $20 donatiOn per
couple. All iwclion items and door

An Faster special at Hailmark!
.J'~r&lt; tll-._

-~- . l{ jf '.
~

. women are front, ~ttee &amp;U.mont and !Warla
Frecker. Back, Billy Fra,ncls, Daniel Otto, Katie
Manlcke, and Laura Easanan.
'

POSTER WINNERs -Fifth ud sixth grade
winners In .the Women Ia Hl!itory 1\lonth poster
· con'test sponsored by the Mldc!leport Pomeroy
br!UICh of the Amerlc!lD Assoclaton of University

I .

.

Boy ~out. di~ner

'

to feature All-Pro ..
.

Carl Lee, all-pro wide corner- made possible by many people
back of the Minnesota VIkings who contribute · their tlme, tal·
wm be· the keynote swaker, ents and resources. Last year the
'])hursday, _AprU 12, at the Annual Tri·State : A~ea CoulK)il; ' Boy ;
Le~dershlp gifts. dlnl\er,· spon-· · Scouts of America touched the ·
sored by· the Tri-State Area lives -of over 3,6oo youth In a
Council, Boy Scouts of America. - ten-county three state area.
.The dinner will recogn~ lndlvld· Many Scouting activities are
uals and buSinesses who have made possible by the gene~ous
pli'dged ·S125 or more to the contributions of area businesses
and · individuals who believe
Ttl-State Area Council.
; The ~out1n1: experience Is Scouting can tnake a difference
in the lives of yo,uth today,.
The Leadership Gifts dinner
wUI be held at the Ra\!issonHotel
In a recent Monday evening . lij Huntington on Aprtf"12. Carl
..session in the Five Points Class, . Lee will be available for signing
autographs at 6 p.m. The recep· .
Ellen Rife lost the most weight
tlon and dinner will begin at 7
and the runner-lip was Judy
P·'!l·
Individuals wishing io at:
,
. Eblin.
In · a recent Tuesday evening
session, Mason Class Kathy
Honaker lost the mos twelglft and .
the runner-up . was Roxann
.
Barton.
'New members are being accepted in the classes and lilformation may be obtained by
calling Jo Ann Newsome ;1t
99'2-3382
or 992-5052 or 773.5333.
.
.

.

Slinderella meets

.

tend the dinner and meet Carl
Lee should contact the Scout
Service Center at · 523-3408 to
pledge their support and make
their reservation.
Lee, an ·All-Southern Conference selection at defensive back
In 1981 and 1982 for the Thunder.
in&amp; Herd at Marshall University,
reached the pinnacle in 1988 as a
corn~rback wtth the Minnesota
Vikings. Lee was chosen for the
NFC 'All-Pro team and was
Included on ihe ·,.All-Madden
Team''. He led the VIkings with a
career-high eight Interceptions,
tying him for second in the NFI;,
third In the NFL, and ·was the.
second:best single seas~n mark
In club history. ·

·''

"'

'

: Littlethings ·
: are Worth
. Alot
zn

the Classified $ection!

...

FIJRNl'I\JRt
1RU'JJ_.!-.NP
QOD.IID

.

with ;my $10
Hallmar.k purchase

oOOO . -

........ ~

...-

'r

Stop In, Or Call To Recelye AD AppUcatlon ...
· We'U Proce••·Your Request Quickly , ..
When ApproVed, You'll Have Bundreclll Of
· ,Items To Choose·Jl'l:OJD - ··
· Along Wlth Eu)' Monthly Payments!

'.

The Crayola® Bunny Figurine .. ·
witll fillable Easter egg is approximately
·" 2'Vs" tall x 4W' wide. Retail value $10..
· Come .in soon to a pflrticipating retailer ·
.·because
supplies are. limited.
.

.

/

'--'
·-~ .l : :_

=.
.- ~
.
.. .
.

Csll Collect (614) 742-2211 For More lnfarmBtltm
.•FREE DEUVERY

SERVICE

RUTLAND.
.

FURNITURE
ST. RT. 124, THREE MILES OFF RT. 7
,I:IUTLAND, OHIO • (Q14) 742-2211
HOWl: Monday.Soturday, 1:30 aln•l pm
Thullday - ClaM-At Noon
.
.'

..

Gal!iPQiis

,.

Candies Bloomers
46 Court Street ·
•..

446'1779

-.

,,

'

•

'

· ~- eBANK FIWCING

,.

'·f

'';•

.
.

'.

. "fJ'" ..

-

t

..

..,

''

'

•VISA/MASTERCARD .•
ACCEPTED

By United Press ln&amp;ernatloaal ·
. · .
HEMING,WAY DISPlAY: Wllat would El'llelliJt!mlnpay
. have thought of his granddaughter pOsing nucje for Playboy? ·'I
· would hope he w!&gt;uld have been thrilled," said a~:tress-model
MBI'gaux Hemlapll)' . At an appearance· in · New Yor~
Wed.nesday to promote the Issue, she said .the Pictorial is a
chance "to shO'f off my new body ." .It's also somethjng of a .
. rebirth for Hemingway, who has gone through the Betty Ford ·
Clinic to quit drinking -and lost 75 pounds. "There's nothing like .
putting my botll)m doUar on thiS, so to speak," she said. "This Is
'probably the most positive thing I ever did. The pictures are
very pasitlve." Heml!lgway says her siSter, Martel, tbought the
photos were great but her-father; Jack, hli$_n 't seen· thep~ yet.
OF'F.CQVRT WIN FOR LENDL: TenniS star lvaa .Lend_l is
suffering tl\rough the chicken pox at )lome In Greenwich, Conn., ·
but there was news ff.om London to cheer him up. A court has
awarded him libel damages beCause the Today newspa~r
printed allegations saying he had an affair with high-~ lass call •
girl Pamella BOrdes. i..endl~s attorney had tolcj th.e court that he
. never met the woman and that the report "gravely affected and
hurt hlm both personally and professionally ." Lendl, whose
damage aw11rd was described as "substantial,'_' Is the third .
person to sue for libel Involving reports of links with.Bordes, a
former.Indliln beauty queen and _Parli3ment researcher. His
case marks the second time In a week that Today, which Is '
·owned by Rupert M!lrdoch.· had to torlt over for libelln,;;
someo~~,e. VIIICOuat Llllllley recently w~ awarded f56, 700 for a ·
story that wrongly claimed he had ~n banned from a pub for
•
· . . ·
ihrowlng ~leer.
FORD GETS A .BEtTER KNEE: _Old football
players
like
.
' .

•

• •. -

?

"

•

.. ... .- -

.·

Gerald . Ford never die. They 'Just undergo ·knee surgery.
Doctors in Rancho Mirage, Calif, . o~ated Wednesday to
correct problems that started during Ford's .career as a center
In high school in Grand Rap ((Is, Mich., and the University of
Michigan, where he was an All-American: Ford, 76, agreed to
'the elective surgery because of continuing problems with his ·
. left knee; but otherwise he's In good health, a spokesman said.
CALL THE RAT HOn,JNE: Chicago Mayor Richard M,
Daley is a rat-buster. Using a garbage can in a West Side alley
.as a podium, patey declared w~r on rats Tuesday by saying,
"Rats are a menace to the clean and .healthy environment we
. want for ourselves and our families. Rats are ·t ough opponents.
· You have to · break off their food ·supply. With garbage
. containers, an effiCient poison baiting program and an
education program, City Hall is providing the tools needed to
tackle our rat problem. " He even set up a - rat hotllne
(312-744-RA!S) for -citizens to call to report problems ..
GLIMJ.&gt;SES: Actor John Cu!llick says he's ·lnnocent of two
miSdemeanor. drunken 4rl'\&gt;lng ·charges. Cusac_k 's attornf1Y
. went to court In Beverly Hills; Calif., Tuesday to enter the pleas ·
. in a~v!lnce of a May 4 hearing. Cusack, 23, was driving a rented ·
Jeep that hit.another vehicle oh Feb. 23, but no one was 1\Urt ...
Bernadette ·P eters spent two hours a day In a makeup chair
getting· slathered with pancake makeup and fitted wtth false
eyelashes so ·she could play Tammy Faye ·llakker 1n the
upcoming TV movie "Fall From Grace." NBC will air the
movie about evangeliSt Jim Bakker and his demise on Sunday,
A.prll29, the first day of the cruciai network sweeps period. The
movie was authorized by the Bak~rs. . &gt; _ .
_

'The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

EASIER
SAYINGS
. FIOM
SWISHER
LOHSE

.PHARMACY! ,
. IUSSEU StOVEI ,. .

IUSSELL STOYEI

MARSHMALLOW EGGS

JELLY BEANS

CAnON Of 12

·s1..99
. .· .

lEG. 12.35

12 OI.

169 .

NOW '

TUMMY BUNNY
IEQ. 69•
Pt.oi.

NOW

REG.
.
12.75 . NOW .

' '

MARSHMALLOW
· PEEPS

SOUD MILK CHOCOLATE ·

.'

No limit to passion of a female Thin air vendors: V IIIDdJ~'• eventually · number as many as
$2,500. .
moose?·
. ballooning problem
15,000.
.
Fines, usually oniy a wrist·
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich.
KAMPALA, Uganda (UP!) "Itt az Avon" Is tl)e Hungarian
slapping
$30, have shot up In
(UPI) - Passion, even In the Ugandan businessmen · have equlvalenj of Avo11 Calling, the
many
instances
to $1,000. Occacase of a female moose, appar·
made a JtUiing In the ·past three slogan used for decades to
sionally.
they
reach
$2,500 as the
ently has no limit.
years by selling latge.quantlties advertise · the co-mpany's
penalty
for
driving
without a
, Female .moose from -Canada of · al)soluti!ly ' .nothing to the products.
liCense
.
.. . have ~n swimming the' icy St. government, a senior offlcll\1 . -''There's a great pent-up deBackers cheered .the law Wed·
Mary's River from Canada to get · said.
·mand ·for quality products" in
.
nesday,
but some said they
,to the male moo5e lri the upper
.The practlce,: called "supplY· Hungary, ~aid James E. Pres ton,
It would produce any
doubted
Peninsula, said. Rob' Aho, a state lng ai~," is rampant·tn the East Avon's chairman and chief exec·
immediate
results because ffil!ny .
' DepartmenHlf-•Natural ResourAfrican capital, said tile govern· u live. officer.
,_
Spaniards
have
found Ingenious
. ces -b!Oioglst wtio tracks the ' ment's Inspector general, Augus- ·
-Hungarians spend an estiways
to
·
!!Void
paying traffic ·
beasts.
tine Ruzlnandil.
·
mated $116 million annually on
fines.
.
"In recent years there seems
It ls most often carried ·out by · cosmetics, and Avon said it hopes
The death rate on Spain's roads
.to be more moose cominwacross the most financially skilled,' · to quickly capture a 5 to 10
has
doubled in the past five years
the river from Canada," Abo said
educated and !lfticulate, · ~bus~ percent share of the market.
and
Is now the highest in Europe,
Tuesday. "They are excellent nessmen, who sell ghostly goods
officials
~said. Spain, wtth a
·swimmers."
and non-existent services to the 'Spain cracks ~own on reckless
of about 39 mUIIon,
poplllation
.Abo Isn't sure what the attracnat}On, usually with the CO!IDI· driving:
· .
had
a
highway
death toll of 6,500
. tlori is, · excepj that Michigan's
vance of government officials.
MADRID (UPI) - Spanish
In 1989.
·
· bull ~oose se~m to be younger Ruzinanda said.
.e
.. :.
authorities began cracking down · · Speeds on Spain's hlghw~ys
· and more virile ,than their
Rlizlnanda said hts depart· on daredevil drivers, described
average 87 miles per hour,
, . Canadian counterparts. Wha·
ment has uncovered ·m ore than as· the' most rf!~kless In Europe.
officials said. The new law sets
·tever the cause, the result should
~.000 air-supply cases In Just the They impdsed a new series. of
be a bonus to Michigan. The DNR past 36 months. But only 80 laws that lliclude fines as hlgh·as · the. national speed limit at about
80 mph.
Is ·predicting a record 35-40 calf bUsinessmen have .been charged '
births this spring.
In tl\ree years because the cases
' One determhled anlinal is Bull
;~re so difficult to prosecute, he.
· No. 29. Abo said last sumnler he sald. DOctors, engineers, archi:tracked No. 29 on .a trek -fsom
teCts, policemen and ·others are
M11rquette Co11nty 165 mUes east
reluctant to inform on ·· their
to Chippewa County, where the colleagu~s. Ruzlilanda
St. Mary's nows.
explained.
'.
"He's been there with quite a·
few cow rnoose on a number of
Dln1 l)onl, Avon calling In
occasions,'' said Abo. "Lastfall; Hungary
1 saw, him with two cows. Those
· NEW YORK (UPI) -"Ding, "
cows weren't on~ we brought .In · Dong. Itt az Avon" will be heard
• (from Canada to Mlcliigan). I
hlter thiS week through a _par red
. believe these were moose who
Iron Curtain· when Avon Pro. came In from Canada by
ducts Inc. Introduces ·door-tothemselves."
·
door cosmetics sales In Hungary.
Abo said he has seen another
Avon said Wednes~ay It In· ,
male · near ·Baraga with more
tends to s !art recrul ling ,
. than one.cow. He didn't disclose
commission-paid sales represen· ·
· the bull's nurnber, but noted
tatlves in Budapest. It expects
·';'he's doing his share to increase
the Hungarian sales force
. " could
tJ~e Michigan moose population,"

·aoxons ·.

49 (

REG.
19&lt;

NOW

lEESE'S

NUTS

PEANUT-BmER
EGGS .
itEG.

.40'

NOW

FIOM OUI MACHINE
IUY 4 OUitaS
GO 2 OUNCES

2-7&lt;..

"FREE''

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenn•h McCulough, R,Ph .
Ch•t• RHfla R. Pf't .
Ronlld Hwlnine. R .Ph .
, Mon. lhfu Saa. 8:00a .m. to 8:00p.m.
Sundew 1U:OO • .m, to 4:00, p.m.,
PR~SCRIPTIONS

E.· Mllin

59 c.

· Pll . BB2-2Bii ·

Fd•'tJiwo Servi;ft~ .. ~om•oy. o·H.
op .. w·~ Nigh" 'Ill !

OFFE" GOOD
THROUGH
MONDAY,
APRIL 9,
1990 ·

.~

ANN ARBOR,' Mich. (UP!)- into football players.
"That doesn't mean that there
Consuming mo~ calcium in the _
might
not be some advantage to
diet does not apjll!ar fo prevent ·
growing
bigger bones, oot even if
bones from thinning, according
yoli
could
build more bone, which
to · a 20-year st!ldy released
qjlestlon,
would It be advantageI
Thursday.
ous
or
would
It sl'!'ply be lost?_"
, ; The study, begun In 1962,
Garn. a fellow at the Center for
~xamlned the self·I'!lPOrted eat· _
· lng habits of-745 adult men and Human Growth · and Developwomen over a 20-year period, ment, presented the findings 111 a
focusing on calcium and phos- joint 'meeting iri Miami of the
Alner-ican Assoc;tatlon of Physl·
phorous Intake.
The researchers compared X- cal Anthropo,ogy and the Hufuan
·•
ray ·measurements of the sub, Biology Council.
· Garn and his colleagues define •
jects' hand ·bones taken between
1963 and 1965 and agajn in 1985 to , bone' loss as the difference .
determine both relative ·and between gain In the outer surface' ·
of bOnes and loss In the Inner ·
absolute bone loss over time.
"We found that adults with surf.ce. While bone gain con·
tlnues into lhe !!Os In both sexes,
high calcium Intakes didn't lo5e
Inner loss begins to exceed outer
less bone and that adults with low
calcium Inta-kes didn't lose more • gain In the early 40s ro'r ~omen.
and 50s for men. ·
c,, •
bone,''·\ said Sian ley Garn, a
While researchers have long
professor of nutrition at the
. Unlverslfy. of Michigan School of thought that women suffer. more
Public Health,
· ; . from osteopor~s tllan men ..;.
Up to 15 million Americans · _d ue In part to the high fracture
I!ave some degree of os teoporsls, . rate among women after age 45.
.- Garn and colleagues found tile
or brittle-bone disease. Govern·
amount of bone loss In males IS
ment guidelines recommend conn.e arly as great as . that in
suming 1,200 mUIIgrams of calfemales. Men In the study lost an ·
cium a day to build_bone s~·-as a
. average of 8 percent of bone
. hedge against future bone Joss.
between age 50 and 70, while
. But Garn said 'his research
women losi 12.percent.
suggests such efforts ~re ineffecThe study alsi&gt; measured· the
tive because bone Joss is a direcr
Impact
of clgaret te smoking;
· function of bone size: · ··· :
alcohol and the use of antlhyper·
"The more bone you 'have, the
tenslve drii&amp;S and found . no
'more you have io Jose,'' be said.
correlations between these fac''You don't create more bone by
tors and the amount of bone or ·
stufflnjl . calcium Into young
bone Joss.
women any n.ore tllan you crea,te
rllOJ'4! . ~IIICie by stuffing steak

,

' JO\UI I)(?E

'7l'

20:.year swdy disputes
.calci_urh, bone loss link

.,

Subway wins honor.r
:'Accordl11g to.a recent national
c~nsu~!; suryey, Subway Restaurants· were-rated as the most
p6pular sandwich shop In Amer·
ica for 1989.
The chain has over 4000 res tau·
r!\nts nationwide with many .
locations in Ohio and West
virginia.
....... '.
:"It is gratifying to dlscove~
tlrat our customers have recognized our efforts," salll John ·
Ralrden, owner of the local
S'!bway Restaurant. "Our ma·in
service of delicious food at a good
p~ice to our customers." .

'

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio ·

.

·'

..

QUirks in the ne~s._'------·-··--~------~
,.

.

• .. . . ?-

'

.....

..

'... .

r---feople irz' the news~------~--~-,

The MI. Union Baptist Church'
will conduct E;,as ter S)lnrise. service on the hill at the cross at 6
a.m. on Easter
. . Sunday.' ·

-

•

' Thursday, Aprl6, 1990

Sunrise seroices
'

•

~· '
'

'

'

&lt;

'

' ··,

•
..
•

.'

Gallipolis

•

Full House of Cards
Ohio River Plata ·:

' '448-7330 . .

.

•

•

The CR()S.S"·.
II

Sed-•

.

. 15,000 10. FT.

.

Provides complete end sale feeding
of plant n\,ltrients essential for
proper lawn growth.

•o.ooo so. FT...........................tl.tl

28.97

TURF BUILDER PLUS 2

' .

Cleans out dandelions and broadleaf
weeds as iJ feeds wilh Turl1luilder.
Helps maintain a healthy, green ,

TURF BUiLDER _
PLUS HALTS

lawn all summer lon9.

5.000

, FT.......

5.000 SQ. FT ...............................I.t8

SOIL

50 0/0
/4

. II. Controls crabgra ss. other
wh1le supplying a full

Bu ilder.

OFF

CYPRESS ROSE
33 cu. ft. cypr••
111ulch

1.99
40LB. lAG

OIIRREO.
4.18·8.19

.. ·AU. SUNCASTe LAWN EDGING .
SALE 2.49 to 4.411 A""""-oi'-Yduly.,.S
lnG!obtlll ~ 81rong ~..

POmNGIOIL

All l)tlrllOIL ....,to uu;
Ri!Q. 2.411

~· Sl,99

SALE

3/7.99

•

BAG

HUMUS or TOPSOIL
patch -bar~ spols in your lawn.
COW MANURE: Deodorized
purified. Weed lree . Non ·b~rning .

~----------.-----------~r---------~~,---------~~~------------~ : 1
1 GALLON
• ASSOITED · ·
8AIIIS
All
JUNIPE.S
AIIOIVRAE

PRIPI
IIIIGIVRU

.n•••
1 •••• Ct.

Baptist ·~hurc:h, Middleport, Ohio ,
. '
.
.
Pal111 Sunday, Allril a-.7a00 P.M. .
Pullllc Is infted te '"_. ·

TURF BUILDER . .

POTTING

SHRUBS

Fir~t

Paitor# J

22.49

ASSORTED

· The Easter· Cantata
"LIFT HIGH

15,000

2.99

.....

··~·

_IIIOIVRIE

· ANIOIA
...
SPINEY

"IIIII

AZALEAS

........

Reg. 3.69 .
SALE

~ I.e99

2.99

AIID . .E .
.

.... IO.tt &amp; 9.99

SALE • •

99

FRUIT
TREES

12.49
· IEGUW 10.99
DWUF

Apttlt,

,

...

Chlny, '-h

OPEN SIIUIDAY

7 AT 8 A.M.
SILVEI . . . . PLAZA-iAWPOUS,
. OHIO
•( \. ,

•

,

',,

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Apri &amp;, 1990

Pomaroy-Midclaport. Ohio

1990

Easter eggs go on display; Tappin' Sunday scheduled in .Ohio
.

'
'

•·

By SANDRA L. I,.AT~J;R
United Press International
·The approach of Easter brings
out the ornately decorated eggs.
This Decorated Egg Show at
· Stan Hywet ,Hall In Akron features hundreds of decorated
eggs, which wlll be displayed In
the Carriage House through
April 14. Tours of the Manor
House are also available.
·
Maple . syrup activities are
coming to an end this weekend as
the weather becomes warm. This
Saturday and Sunday wUI be the
last time.to see how sap Is taken
f~o'rn the .trees and .boDed Into
syrup.
Tappin' Sunday Is held on the
village square In Chardon and, In
. -nearby Burton, the traditional
· Pancake ·Breakf&lt;!St Is served.
· Both events are In Geauga
County, the maple syrup capital
of Ohio. ·
And from a different flavor, at
Orchard Ridge· south of Logan,
Sassafras Days Saturday and
. , Sundays .through April 29 pro. vtdes the opportunity to see how
: .. sa,ssafras Is taken from the
ground and used In food.
.Otber events tbls week:
Hannah's Spring .Boutique at
the Online Computer Library
Center In Dublin Saturday fea·
lures Amish quilts and many
hand-made Items.
Art for the Animals will be held
. : Saturday at the Betsy Mllls Club
In Marietta. The Ohio Long Rille
: Exhibit can be viewed Saturday
. and Sunday . at the Lafayette
. ,Hotel in Marietta.
•·
.
A Spring F'es tl~al of Arts and
Crafts will be held saturday at
Bath High School near Lima.
The Home Idea Expo will bli
held Saturday and Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Auditorium
In Columbus.
The Tri-State Gun Show will be
held Saturday andSunday at the
Allen County Fairgrounds In
Lima.
·
Guided tours at Lawnfleld In
Mentor, the home of President
James Garfield, are held each ·
Saturday morning through April.
An Au to Swap Meet will beheld
Sunday at, the Medina County
Fairgrounds 'In Medina.
· The Mldwes t Ceramic Show
will be held Friday t~ough
Sunday at the Hara Arena In
. · Dayton.
The Longhorn World Cham- '
· ptonshtp Rodeo will be held
Friday through Sunday at t.he
Ohio State Fairgrounds In
Columbus.
Dinner cruises a board the
Valley Gem Sternwheeler in
· Marletia begin Saturday evening
and are offered each Saturday
through Sept. 30.
.
On the Ohio lllslorlcal Society
~~Chedu~:
.
·
-Public W11lks througl\ the
· Cedar Bog Nature preserve near
Urbana each Saturday and Sun·
·day In Aprll.

..

-Easter Buffet Aprll15 at the Museum: '' Art of the Ordinary"
Colone!'Crawford Inn at the Ohio through Sept. 9.
VIllage In ColiiJIIbus. For reser·
-At the Wayne Center for tl)e
· vatlons, call614·297·2684. .
Arts In Wooster: A functional
On the Ohio Departmeat of ceramics exhibition saturday
Natural Reswces schedl!le: '
through April 21.
-Wildflower walks Saturday
-At the Spirit of'76Museum.ln
and April 22 at Lake Katharine Wellington: Antique Doll Display
State Nature Preserve In Jack- weekends through April 29.
son County; Sunday througb the · -At the Akron Art Museum :
East · Fork State Park In Cler- · "Selected Works from the Fred·
mont County.
erick R: Weisman Art ·Founda·
-Traditional music April 12 tlon," Saturday through June 10.
and 26 at Quail Hollow State Pa_rk
· -At theKetterlngTower: Fine
In Stark County.
arts juried show through Fridai
On the sports schedule:
. • -At Ohio· Wesleyan Unlversl·
· ,-Ohio. State Championship ty's Mayhew ' Gallery: ' Wpod
C::ycle Race Saturday at !he sculpture by Alan Paulson,
Marion County Falrgro14nds In through Aprll13.
Marton.
-A't the Mansfield Art Center:
.Bicycie Toun:
"The American West," art works
-Sunday: A Freebie Ride and from 1820 to 1920, through April
Olllo Spring Tour, 25·, 50·, 64· and 15.
100-mlle rides leaving Amherst.
-At the Cleveland Museum of
216·988-5016.
Art: ··•May Show for 1990,"
-April '14: Little Ohio Spring through May 27; a traveling
Tour, 15·, 32· and 64-mlle. rides exhibit of 120 photographs by
from Massillon. 216·452·6935.
Margaret Bourke · Whlte,
Special Exhibits:
through April 15.
-At Bowling Green State
--At the University of Dayton
University: Undergraduate Stu· Creative Photography GaiJery:
dent Art Show through April 29.
PhOtographs by Karen Thomp· · ·
-1\1 the Dairy Barn Southeast· son through Aprll16.
·
ern Ohio Cultural Arts Center In
-At Den)Son University In
Athens: .. "Barn Appetlt," , an Granville: ''Rhythm and Blues,''·
exhibit on the theme of food as art a Smithsonian Institution collec·
and im as food, through May 20. tlon depleting black American
-At the Cleveland Children's popular music from 1945 to 1955,,

, I

I

sS$$ PFe·EasteF
.

.

~

FLORAL

.'

jtl.

.....

NICE
SELECTION

;.,c
t ' '

"'

LAMBS ............... $100. $140. $300

. DUCKS·····~·····
-·
...............,•••••••••••••• ~........ 60&lt;
t

SUCKERS..............................25&lt; TO $12 5

.,.

.

(
99

$2

'

·

01

8 1~2'~

VONELL PLUSH
. SfANDING RABBIT
•·.

EA(H

..

25°/oo,
CHILDREN'S
ACCESSORIES

S9 99 EACH

Hats, Purses and
· Hat sets.
'.

Full line of molds
and candy making

supplies.

~fQ~s~®e~

CHOCOLATE-

White, Pink,

'

Yellow, Lavender,

A Delicious Russell Stover:Assortment for Every Taste

· Green, Blue

VALLEY BULK FOODS

514. EAST MAIN
POMEIOY

992·6910 '
•• Accept

,·~Ho~e Fashion?"® ··
Qu~hty

. ·· An .American Tradition
· Quality Since ·192 3

for Ove~. 60 Y~ar~

"The Tasteful ·Gift to Give"••

Food st-ps

Classified

•'

.

·oR

CAFFEINE FREE

PRE-SEASON .
SALE!!
.

SHOWN ABOVE:

5 Pitce set: 4T' umbrella dininc table
with 4 huvy dutr arm chJirs.
RI;G:.' 843

.

o•y 5499

SAVE

$299
'

2001II0.TO 5OIJ/o
OFF•.
-~~

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED 1 NDAY
'Ada outlide Meigs, Gtllil or Maton eountil&amp; mutt be pr•·
Plid.
,

15 PACk

•Price of ld for •II c•it•lletter~ is double price of ad c~ .
'7 point Nne type only uted .
'
'Sentinll it not rnpontibtt for errors 1fter first d•· !Check
"tor errort fint derr ad run• fn p1per1 . Cell bBtore 2 :00pm
dill lf'llf publicMion to make correclion . •

'
FLOWER
01
VEGOABLE
SEEDS

'Adl thll mutt bt ~id in • • c • 1re

FlEE BED FIAIU Willi
PURCHASE OF sn

S69
._IIIJ

·Rid • W.td Clau ............_..J!~~:..!~.!~~...J.!P..~.~!-.!..S699

HELP!

Happy Ad1

Yard Sal•

.

'

DA'v· BEFORE PUBLICATION

-11 ,00 A .M SIITURDAV

- 2 ;00 P.M. MONDAY
-

-

Z:OO P.M ..TUISOAV
2 •00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

- 2 c00 P.M . THURSDAY
-

2 :00P .M . FAIDAV

Classified paf(es corer the
follou:inf( telephone ex(h.anf(es ...

The Easter Bunny
· Will Be Here
Sat, April 7, 2·4
Sun., April 8, 12-5
Wed., April 11, 6-8

Meigs Countv

M .. on Co .. WV

Ao.. Code814

Area Code 614

Ar11 Code 304

'4 46-0,tllipolit

t82 - Middlepon

876-Pt . Ple•ent

387-Ch•hire

Pomlt'OY'
9115 - Ch•ter

Gallil Counw

311-Vint,o n

241-Aio G"nde

84'3 - Pon•"d

&amp;43-Arabla Dial
378 - Walnut

1•1-R~eine

• 211-Gul'ln Dill.

•

•

•'

•(

OPEN DAILY ·9 TO 5
MONDAY 8t FRIDAY

9T08

f9.00

.so

•13.00

.05/doy

$1 .30 / day

AIHIIILI nt:e 1111~ IllS
1- Card tJf Th.,ka
2 - ln Memory
3 - Annouctm~ts
4 - Gi~tetwly

S - Hippy Ada
6-Loat 1nd Found

7 - ·Y•d l1te (p1id In 1Ctvancel
8-Public Sele &amp; ·Auction
9-W.,tld to luy

Ml'rl:h .t 11111 s I'

56-Butlding Suppll•

56 - Pau for St111
67-Mutical lnttrumanu
58-Fruitt &amp; Veellabl•
!!19-For S1le Of Trade

11 - Help Wented
12- Situltion Wlnted
13 - lnawrence

14- lutin•s Tralnin;

16-· Schoolt &amp; lrtltruetlon

,1111 - Redio. TV&amp;. CB Rep1ir

17-MttctUaneoua
18-Wtnted To DO

F;HIII .\iljijlllf'S

&amp; I"'~· tr1r.k
81-Farm Equlpm.m
&amp;2 - Wanttd 10 luv

83-uve.. octc
64-Hav &amp; Grain
66 - &amp;ttd &amp; Fattiiler

.•
"'

&amp;71-Apple Grove

~

247-lltlrt filii
742- Rutlltld
117- CoolvHia

•Y-Leon

7?3 - ·M•aon

882-New Haven
196-Letart
937-Suffllo

21-lutin•• Opporhmtty
22 - Mon~r

to Loan
23- Prof•tional 8trVICft

Hr ~ -11

hlole

3.1 -Hom• for Sal a
32-MoiMie Homes for Sale

33-Farmt tot 1111 ·
3•-Bustn•• a·utlding~
3&amp; - Lott &amp; Acreege

Tr onsporlitlron

71 - Autot for &amp;ala
72 - Truellt tor I ale
73 - van. 6 • wo ·,
74-Motorevcl•

71-loalt &amp; Moi011 tor Sill
71-Auto P~ttl &amp; Ace• tori•
77--Awto Repair
78 - Camping Equipment
79-Camp•• &amp;: Motor .Homa

I;IIIJI
41 - HOUHI for Rent
·
42- Mobite Hom11 tor Rent
U-F1tm1 for Aerit
44- Apirtment for Rent
41- Fwrnittlld Aoomt
••- speee for Rent
47-Winttd to Atftt
41 -Equ~ent for Rtnt
•1-For le•e

Sl~l

vII:I~S

11 -- Home lmprowm.,u
12-Piumbing• Hilling
13-Eac.,lting
·
l.t-ll. .riolf • ""'te•atktn
11-0.,•11 H.ulinSJ
11-Moblle Home R...W

---

17-UIIM!IterY

'3. Announcementa

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
VFW POS1' 9926
lWON, W.VA.

992-6.91

786 North

Second
.Mltldleport,
·Ohio ·.

OFIN ScOO PJA.
UIIS SfAif 7.ot P.M.

.... .

NO CINI-11 YEllS

•so.oo .. ..
._

.OFSJIIF
,.

''

All PAPII -.cl flAilS

FIR COFFEE
II

11. 124,

,_oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK·

REPAIR

Alto Tr••••1..1..
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
4-25-tfn

GIEG BAILEY

I .

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAl. CONTRACTING

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

Masti&lt; - Certaintttel S
Vinyl Siding
Seamless GuHer
· Replacement Windows
llown Insulation ·
, Storm Doors &amp;

Announcements
3 AnnouiiCIIMms

A Great Cambination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
. WE GO THE EITIA MIU .....
992-6110
DHIID

Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992-2772

m4

H·'to-lmo.

-· t-

- b i r d dog, coll-1p.m.
11tiW •12.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGEs
"At RlatonGblt P_ricts"

PH. 949-2101

or los. 949•286d
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

SMALL ENGINE
· REPAIR

L-hd at Vahy Luu1..r
In lllddlepert, Oh.

=: •
-

RUTLAND
SALES .and
SERVICE

Stock Parts for
Homollto, Woodeater,
'Tecun\aeh, Briggs &amp;
'
Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FilE DEPT.

114-1112-24lll ... -

All MAKES
lrlng 'lt In Or We

Pick Up.
IEN~S

APPUANCE
SERVICE

992-5335 or 915-3561
Aaoss F..- Past Office
217 I. S.C. '-•Y
POMIIOY, 01110

3/6/'90/ltn

DOZER
SITEWORK - ~OADS
(LEARING
N~WLAND .

ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt .

(614) 667-327i
Grant A.

Now lllcation:

•Tire Soles
•Front End
Alignment . .
•Oil Change Ill Lube
· •Brake Work

PAT HILL FOlD
Middleport,

Ohio

1-13-lfc

liowi.rc! ~; Writllll

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
ts
Downspou_
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-29,68 .

Junlt-.1,-Poll a-, ,CUt•l 114-

=::t.
SYIACU$1, OltiO
IAiiowe Phza Shop)

IS NOW OPEN·
FOR IUSINE$S •

1.

llx
!I- alldlna g - polio:spm.
-·
114-171-21114'~

= ..
:1311.

":'::~ ~-...,~

8

Lost i

IN STOCK:· oCim•t Porch .

110•• •Cem•erv FloWer
V••

•CI., Btrd Blthl

•Cem•t Bird a.thl

•Foumiln Bwd Baths •

Plus

De•. Frop. Anglls 1nd

I

B'i&gt;: From Ua &amp; Sne!
992.·5926 ¥!5tl . .

USED APPLIANCES ,
to

D~Y

WAIIAtm

..ASHEI$-$100 up
DIYEI$-$69 up
IEftiGEUTOR$-$100 UJI
IWIGD-Gis-EIK.-$125 up
FIEEZER$-$125 up·
MICRO OVEN$-$7! up

KEN'S · APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or915-3561

FoU'ncs.

-"not--.

-:Moto,booalo.-Nblo tap. -,_ to good

-

114-tl24112.
LOOT pool slick ~ a.Set\lrdly nlgll; REWARD,

.,....,.MM.

- - Gary .......... -

LOOT: Rod IL12IIonlo••-

-onfrankRd - ..~. n.1ounc1, i14-• ••·
........1.

7

Yard Sale

Aaon ,,_ Past Office

POUIOY, OliO

Gallipolis

10/30/'19 tin

I VICinity

R• .L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENCINE
CENTER ·

3 flftllly Ylnl 1111: Fit • 11[11 ~
lo I 11413 - · II. Iarina ,..
loy. W lown - - · 1I" T.V.,
1\llln lied • mon,_, mlea.

CHESYEI, OHIO

•w YAIIIIIAII &amp; ICHO

USDMOWDS

·
-•lolhlnt·
I Fomlly Ylnl lalo: ConllftMY

•GRAV,EL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL !)IRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

PIODUcn

Sarwlca.CIIIter • IDC

lpR Parh and

Serwlca,

HOURS: M-F 9· 7 :

949-2969

3/ 29 / 80/ lfll

1· 11

HUMPHREY'S .

CUMATE

CONTROL

Heating, Caollng,

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION ,,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New.._ 1t11tt

Retldentiel 8t

''FrH Entm.tei"

Commercial

PH. 949·2801
or .... 949·2860

COUNTIY
MOIIU

NO sutiDA Y CAUS
' 4.16-16-lftl

.... ,. ...
EUM HOME
...~

Senior C"'- alit!

HOME PARK

Good Rat•

•Mobile Hame
Perta.
•Mobile Hame
Ren•l•
•Lot Renpla

T.L.C .

209 Seuth 4tlt St•

• 992·7479
lt.SIIhrthof
OWo

••••roy,1·12·'11-lftl

v.w.
PAm&amp;

~~~~~·
"I.OW.
*SHRUB

ia .TREE

TRIM anll REMOVAL: .

SEIVICE

NEW. USED
PARTs ·
For Rabbit•

Jette, Golf,
Bua•

Beetle •nd

614-742·2115

J.ft........ , ..

'

.,...., u.

Sat. 9-1; Ctooed Sun.

9_85-4422

OAI OR ELECTRIC

Taoin-. Frldly only. N .
3 family, ·--141, .... ~
t-4; mile; &lt;MJ ,. c rder and tapea., •

••••• IWan, Chain
Saws, W....ten.

PART~\~~~~VICE
ALL ·MAKES
915-3561

IKNy. 114-1112-1071.

2·1-'90'1110. pl.

CAU

.... OffU

ald.

Gray, inola oat1 1 -

Noill-.!,,tc&gt;od nu-. To gr..
_
.. ailod-lnll»

Oth• Y•d Orn~m•t• ·

992-2196

FURNACE

·Dr

&amp;p.m.

JO'S GIFT SHOP
We can r~ir and rt·
core r!lll~ators and
heater cortl. We can
alta acid bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

-r

-old. AKC
hlahlond
· - · Ono
I'II'ICIFM.
Hill ..

..... Nat COfttltll4tltf . . . .
-.n. Coli 114oiiWM7 otter

SALES &amp; SERVICE

I· J5.' 90- tin

·SERfiCE

01 110

,_toao"-llolo,-.,

MAIN ST., IUILAND

llfrltoratlon
Service

FURNACE

Nolth Ttltrci,MI•Iflrpan.

161 North Second
MilldtlpOI't; Ohio 457 60

742-3088

Bashan .luldlng

klaan, lltar
AI&gt;~~ &lt;MJ. 814&lt;441-

..... _&lt;MJ,pu .. - .. .._
......... Oood •toll dog. CooH

""'-RTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4·cycla

enain•

. Giveaway

Ilk • till poll c;.- • ~
with
,.... 1&lt;MJ1 aood
laome,.......,..

. BISSELL
BUILDER·S

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

31 - Retl llttte Wanted ·

New- Lima ·Rd., Rutland, Ohio
1 Session ......- ••! .................- ......... ·13.50
6 Sessions..................................... s12.00
12 Sessions.................... ~........ ~ ..... 120.00
·1S Sessions ................................... 125.00
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

· K and J CONSTRUCn.ON

51 -Household Gooct.
12- lport:lne Doo•
153-AnliqUII
54-Mite. Mtrchendi..

f mplny1111~nt
Sr~r vrr:r.s

~;v:o 1/2. OFF

.
CORNER OF 3RD • OUVE
GALLIPOUS
448·304&amp;

u .oo

fbtll are tor canMCulive runs. bto!Wn up days will b• chltged
fnr aar:h ~"" •• •parate •da.
'

Pubic Notice

PRICES
GOOD AT
MIDDLEPORT
STOlE
ONLY.

.20
.30
.42

.4.00

:. ·Ott Re•llte Fast
.••--------------~-----.

WOOD - GLASS TOP - CHIOME - DASS
TEN SETS MUST FIND A HOME THIS WEEK

FREE DEUVERY

15 ,·

Rate

Roger Hysell
Garage -·

·up TANNING

Call Susan Colenran,

.•·••&lt;.11

-OVER STOCKED ON BEAUTIFUL DINEnE SETS!

~~

15

. Monthly

cept - cl•sified dilptav. luain•• Card and leg II noticlll
wiH ela'o eppeer tn the P1 . Plt. .nt RegNier •nd 11'te G•lli·
polis DailY Tribune. ntiChin; owr 11.000 hom11
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY, PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

t5

6
10

•A ctaaatfied ld'ttel'tiHm.-.t piKed in Tht 01ily Sent in .. It• ·

HEY KIDS

best HIRng mattr.- ~t
the wory lownt prices!
. (loteout of Last Tear's Cowen.

C•d of Th.,kt

In Memoriam

16
16

1

3

~fFie

ldl - GiVIIWay ancl Found ads und• 16 wo,ds will be
tun 3 dtrtlt no ch•gt.

Words

Davs

Over 111 Wordl

'

'

LOTIONS - STICKERS

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

RATES

. 'ReCeive 1 .10 discount tor Ads peid in adVInce.

$100 I PACKS.

o..,.

•I ..t lling Sbt, tht vry btst

'

POLICIES

II•I IIMIIIO
.

BEAUTY
T
CLOSE-OUT SALE!

TWIN SIZE AT ONLY

TO PLACE AN AD CALl 992-21.56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

DIET PEPSI

PATIO &amp; POOL FURNITURE

This area's large~ selection of outside furniture! Choose from over
'50,000 of inventory..
-Tho lhwist Colon and Fabrics-

'

992-6717 Home or·,
992-62~~~~-C:,.Op:

· factery cha..
12 Gauge ShOtguM Only
Strkktly Ellforlllll ,
·10·9-tfn

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

'

DIET PEPSI

LIFESTYLE

0111 2nd St.
For Appt. Call

EYERY
SAT. NIGHT
. 6:30P.M.

'

.

CAl

.

17" PLUSH DRESSED
FLOPPY RABBIT.

I
&lt;,

Business Services·
.

Faith Church hi Antiquity at 7
.. ~~DAY
for adults and $2.50 tor children.
SYRACUSE -A Big Bend Girl · p.m. nightly . Rev, A. Stewart
The price Includes salad . and
Scout' service unit meeting will Invites the public. .•
dessert. ·
· be lleld .7 .p.m. at the Syracuse
Gral!e School.
RE;EDSVlLLE -The Olive
WILKESVILLE-The Pythlan
Township Trustees will meet In . Sisters will have a smorg11sboard
KANAUGA -Revival is now In _the Reedsville Firehouse on
dinner on Saturday from 5-7
prognss at the Silver Memorial rhursday at 7:30p.m.
p.m. at the hall. The price Is $5 for
Freewill Baptist Church In Ka·
adults and $2.50 for chlldren
nauga with Rev . Dennis Parsom;
POMEROY -BAG LocaJ.,32, .., under 12.
and Rev. Jack Parsons. 'There Pomeroy, will be meeting at the
will·be special singing each night Meigs County Public Library on
REEDSVILLE -There Wtll be
and the public Is invited . to Thursday at 8 p.m. .
a men's slow pitch softball
·attend.
tournament on Saturday and
. MIDDLEPORT -The XI
Sunday at Reedsville.
POMEROY ~ The Salisbury Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
· ·Township · Truste~ . will meet ·Sigma Phi Sorority will sponsor a
~EDSVILLE -There will be
Thursday at 7 _p.m. at · tl)e games party on Thursday at 7: 30 an arts and crafts sale on
township building. The public Is · p.m. at the old American legion
Saturday at Eastern High School
hall in Mlddlwport. The partY Is
invited to attend.
sponsored by the Eastern At·
open to all Beta Sigma Phi hletlc Boosters.
:: RUTLAND - The Rutland Sororities.
Township Trustees wUI meet In
SALEM CENTER -The Star
TUPPERS PLAINS -The La·
regular session on Thursday at
Grange and Star Junior Grange
6: 30 p.m. at the Rutland Fll'l! dies Auxiliary VFW Post 9053 will meet In regular· session on
, -Statton. The meeting Is opened to will meet In regular session on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the grange
Thursday at 7:30 _p.m. for elec·
• the public.
hall located on Co11nty Road 1
tton of officers.
· near Salem Center. All members
.are urged to attend and a potluck
LONG BOTTOM - The Mt.
:' Olive
CommunitY Church In
.RACINE -There will be a supper will follow the meeting.
' Long Bottom will have revival regular meeting of the Racine
· ; Thursday through Saturday with
iiENDERSON _:_The Gallia
American Legion Post 602 on
. services nightly at 7 p.m. Pastor . Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. Refresh· Twllers Sq11are Dance Club will
. ' Lawrence Bush Invites the
ments will' be served following holdla dance on Saturday from ·
·, public.
8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
the meeting.
Community Center In RenderMIDDLEPORT -There will
.
son,
w. v a. The caller will be
MIDDLEPORT-The Evange, .·be a resident and family councll
John
Waugh and the dance Is
line Chapter No.172, Order of \he
open
to all western square
; :meeting on Thursday at 1: 30p.m.
Eastern Star, Middleport, will
dancers.
, 'at Overbrook Center.
have Us regular meeting on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Officers
CHESTER -The regular
POMEROX. - The Pomeroy are- to wear· street dresses. 'board ·meeting for garden club
. _Group of A.,.: and AIAnon wlll
members will be he!d Saturday
: •meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
FRIDAY
at the Chester United Methodist
· ·sacred Heart Catholl~ Church.
MIDDLEPORT - There will Church. A potluck dinner will be
, be an Easter bazaar llhd bake
.
held at noon. All officers are
• : TUPPERS PLAINS -The · sale sJ)onsored by the Middleport encouraged to allen\! the meet; 'Meigs County Beef Cattle Associ· Presbyterl;m Church on Friday Ing to help plan for coming
• atlon Is sponsoring a beef r;eet·
from 10 · a.m. to 5 p.m. and · activities.
: ·lng on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
· 'the Harley Rice Farm on .town· at the Sears Catalogue Store.
CHESTER -The Chester Fire
: -ship road 313, Rice Run Road.
· Department will have a fish fry
S~TURDAY
onSaturdayfrom4-7'p .m.at the
•'
•. .POMEROY -The XI Gamma
MIDDLEPORT -There will fire house. The price Is $3 and
: EpstiOn Chapter, Beta Sigma Pht be a bake sale In front of the
Includes fish, · french fries, and.
:.SOrority will have Its tea on Department of Human Servi~es cole slaw. Beverages and pte wiH'
•;rhursday at the home of Jenny building on ~
· Street at 9
be available as will carry out.
: ~mlth. Members are to meet at a.m. on Saturda
e sale Is
·::the upper Pomeroy parking lot. sponsored by the
st Baptist
SYRACUSE -The Meigs
:"Bring aU. completed necklaces.
Church of Mlddlepo~t for Its · County Law Enforcement Ex.
building fund.
plorer's Post 230 wm have a car
. POM~ltOY ·• -The Meigs
wash Saturday at Chancey's
; county Public EmplOyee Ret!LONG BO'M'OM -The Mt.
Food Mart In Syracuse from
: rees, Inc. will meet at the MeigS Olive Community Church, Long 10:.30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
::eounty Senior Citizen Building at Bottom, ivlll have a i'adto broad.1 p.m. Thursday. ·AJJ retired . cast on Saturday from fo: 30-11
SUNDAY
government persons are Invited a.m. on WMOV 1360 AM with
POMEROY -The Meigs
. to attend. A district officer will be Pastor Lawrence Bush. ·.
County Choir wjll present ·'The
'attending.
Crucifixion" by John Steiner at 2
PAGEVlLLE -There will be a
p.m. Sunday at the Trinity
, , ANTIQUITY -There will be a
spaghetti supper on Saturday at 5 Congregational Church. An offer·''three night revjval Thursday p.ni. at the Scipio Senior Citizens Ing will be taken to benefit the
: through.Saturday at the .Spiritual Center lnPagevllle. Thecostts$4 Meigs Mlnistetlal Association.

-At Miami University In Olilord: "High Tech-High Touch:
Compu~r Graphics In Prlntrnak·
tng," through May 27; An exhibit
of Eastern European and Central
American art objects; a folk art
collection; both through Aug.10.
-At the Hoover Historical
Center In NQrth Canton:· "War
Years at }Joover: World war II
Remembered," a yearlong program.· A victory garden ts
planned for the siiJIImer. Several
. USO dances are planned. For a
schedule: 216499-0287.
· On the theat.r lcallchedule:
-"Funny Girl;'' at the La
Comedla Dinner Theatre · at
SpringbOro through May 6. Call
513-7464554 for reservations.
-''The Boys Next Door," at
the Cincinnati Playhouse In the·
Park througli April 29. 513421·
3888.

SPRING ARTIFICIAL

1 FT. RABBITS ..... $800
RABBITS •••• SO&lt; TO

I

celebrities, ·and paintings ' by
Vlnceilt LaGamblna • through
May 6; "Cowboy~. Indians and
All that Jazz," a display for ·
children, through May 27.
-At the Columbus Cultural
Arts Center: "Ohio Designer
Craftsmen: The Best of.,;t990,"
through May 13.
-At the Cincinnati Art Mu·
seum: "Innovation and Tradl·
lion: 20th Century Japanese
Prints from the Howard and ·
Caroline Porter Collection,"
through May 20.
..:...At the Western Reserve
Historical SOciety In Cleveland:
"Founders: Cleveland's Jewish
Community Before the Civil ·
War" through May 27; "The
Year In Review," a sampling of .
recent gifts to the . museum,
through Aug, 1; "Just Another
Pretty Dress" through Sept. 2.

·Community calendar

'

BUSHES

Hand ·Dippe4 .
.Easter ·
Candy

'

through April 2~.
-At the We.x'ner Cenl&lt;!r In
Columbus: "Art In Eut;~~pe and
·America: The 1950s and 1960s,"
through April 22.
-At the Columbus Museum of
Art: 'Wild Spirits, Strong Medl·
ct ne: .Afrtcan Art and the Wilder·
ness," through April 22.
-At the Alma Gallery in
Lima: An exhibition of artwork
by artists of Japanese heritage
living In Ohio through Aprtl 28.
-At the Toledo Museum of
Art: " Prints and · Drawings of
French etcher Charles Meryon, "
through April ;!9; ."A Page In
Time: Treasured Books from the
Toledo Museum of Art Collec·
lion," through June 3.
....,.At the Butler Ins tltute of
American 'Art In Youngstown:
" Portraits" by Duane Michals,
kuown for his photographs of arts

11

Ohio ·

I

.

*UGHT H~ULING

*FIREWQOD

•Ll SLACK
992-2269
IVI.IGS

-J

Ru11111181! Po~Httw~an
,,..,,
LI
•·
lpnL
Ch-.April
.....
·GalltjlatiL

CJnlr. N. -

lo~. •:

Aldgl, Tep IW,Itlll-. Ill.

-· ..... -·1 .. ..,_
'toni- . . . . . . lipDIOII.141.

-

·

�.

-

,.

,

'

~

•

'

I

..

."'·"

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Pomeroy,
Middleport ,
&amp; Vl~lnlty .
Garogo

April

1111.

tO:Oira.m.·?.

T.V.,

. Thursday. April

Pomeroy- Middleport,
51

Apartment

44

for

Rent

KIT 'N' CARL YLEe by Larry Wrlaht

HOU18hold
Gooda

1187llonlfl-'llour ........
1111111tnC .............. 114- •.

Go04I
G - living. 1 1nc1 a bod- - oppllo- T.V. Ina.
1011. ODon
,_, opi~- II Ylttoao I l.m. to I p.m. Mon..a.t.
t14~~~lnd
R.....a.
ApartiMfttaln lllddllpan. Frotn =-~ 127 w . Qolo
11111.
"'"'"""'
:10.
Flrol month
ron! he Apoll
to , _

tlo7.

fumK..,.,

c:lothee, ml.c. tlema., 234 Muf.
blny Ave., PoiMI ov.

who

75 Bolta &amp; MalON.
for Bile

1

1:00 (]) Hlrdca... And
•

Moeaunlalll;ll

• Cll ill
. , i l l .....
.CJ)
tw 111ar Therau...,_.
• (J) • •

T111 T....,._ Alllll-.

-~ f'IWI7·7110.
CIOrbOjjo ·~ Sllrt
II

45

I(])

ill NIC NtgltttJ ......

1«

Q

IJH, JUEaf f'tAYIOO
~RANC.t,• OUR!

. 7:00~ aa -

· i

.

Cil PM M•g••IM

(!)~

e

NoWIHOw

~~CourtQ
~

r

CREDIT DE.PT.

Employment Services

TttAT Ail-E oursTAN.,,NGr
Z.'L/. ~AY' I'Vf G0 T A . Ill
f,ANTAJ''hc ALJTO ' l.OAN,

Help wanted

AVON • All .,_, Colt Marilyn

.w..v... ~s.

Plc-Fu-

~410

AVON I • All I Shi~IJ
ISt*rl, ~1421.

Round 0111 Tobit, llunoln Pllyfo
llnl!&gt; Lilt Toble/2 ........ 4
iiibonloiiir.,.;coiiid ohllro mo• ·1n
-nd, Olhllnd, Agl
WLI.
112 IIIIo .......... Rd. Pt.

my-.
...._.lOIII
r.qulrwd. 114446-7342.
Babyallor- In

Three

..

DAIYEIIS

Holiday Inn
Golllpollo, Ohio
Slturday, 417110

c-

10A.II. to2P.M.
If you are at teBt 24 yam old,

con -

1 drug 10111n lnd tllo
DOT p/lnlc:l~
IIIII to ua.
Appllcotlono wtll bo
and , _ IIIII wll IIi gtwn.

a..,-

lCome~
or

... .oqul,. ~rtl
our collndar
u
7. Conte ....
wMh : C
IHT'L, INC;
,_733-2771

r.l erchandt se
- do fllll!lllnlng "' "" llotllor ofllnctd
2 , . - yard,AnyOuhldo
·"""'
..,.,._,

wrn .do 11wn m&lt;Mlng In llolaa,
omco

-a_,.

·

''
Wll ..... In Galllpolll
ltiL 114 ... 2301

EARN MONEY RHdlng - 1

Eapo-

wldar

ond
lllirtalor-mtniiiUIII5Jrl

nperilltoe In allte. end ~true-:

turll atMI lobrlcotton

roqulrtd.

tnwl'lnce, vactlon end aood
- · Sind ,....,. to D. K.
Lnton Fobricatorw No. I .Witeon
St, Porkorobu'll, WV 21101 .
LICENSED

OCCUPATIONAL

THEAAPIJT

Full or """ limo; -daya
only. OpportunMy ID In a

.guart• ton Dloll-up 11,000. Coli

11141 chllllnglng
PIO(Irlm.
Very COIIIptlllvt
•lliry •net blnltl r a ' ap
PIO(I~VI

COnllct Ttm' Boa. Holzor Cllnlo,
814 448 U44. EOE-M. '

~~..=::..:P:t£

"'"'"" to: lmporlll 1n1uronco
Agoncy, P.O. Box 2745t
Clonlond, Ohio 44127.

114-112-34311

Price R8dl n d to Mid• lltlte.
3br, ..... on a - with goroge
1n tun • n• ..
nooa win CIA. Gilt
In nlol

,,.,fs.

:a

DJIO.

By owener: Recine, I

100111

ec-.

.

•ncl

~.:on:::-·~ ·~~~

2271.

~ 8uoln111
NA-ntllt... Scone cctllgo
ntCMMry, 111ea up. hal,::'~

Trlbuntl-.11_25 Third A,.noa, oaf.
llpollo, "" 41131 .

- · 514-44e-0141.
In Mktcl1port, 111 Peart StrMt.
1Wo .,.,.,. l.._, total

Nlfld time Bor llonogor, wMh

8181 otter 5 p.m.

Domlnoe Pizza, POn:teroy I Gal·
llpolle. ClllloCII lloto.
Pa~~tme

notp

wntod:
DoWntown. rwpect8bte arwL
¥/MIIoncl nl~donly. Boittndlr
I woM,_.
ID bot Qo130
c/o Qalllpolll DallY Tlibuno, 825
Thlnl Av-. Dallpolll, OH
48831.

2812.

ooom, illllng room

oltct~

on a dilly .
. &amp;...Oiconta
• muat hi"' 1 cn.u~~Mw"Vric.., 11
and muat ohow povot of -

· •
quiltIMu- ·conrr;.
_,.-.rcr
IICI Dr. fl . Chori11 Holliday II
114-74a4tt3ori14-112-21Q.
Wondy'o Now Hiring. lor day
ohllt. A - In - · lionThura, 2~p~m. E.O.E.

12

Situation
Wanted

=••d

'

I br, hOuM In clv, .,.., MhociJ, . ..,.., lo tumlbn. 114-446Will OC01I or 1111 on 00... 1444.
trlcl. Sorootl clown _ _ . .. 114PICKENS RJRNrTURE
-7572, 114-441o1110.

no,.,., 1250,

houM,

""'

-...
hold

fvrnlllolng.
rnl.
Jurrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WY,
Clll304-e75-1 450.

Four bedroom hauM far rwnt,
llutbsrry
Hta.
No , paiL

Plckcna FumMuoc

-·

Rolw•ow,

doooclt

•

p.m.

ou"•·

:1:111 otl76-2411.

2br trolftr0 AC,
.,. 4111110.

I

w rlilln&amp;

-~IOI
1tllt ~-· GT, Elo. 304-178-2all
Ohio
11

:::&amp; .·

WV . .·
11._

HE SAYS HcSqoT
!:YES IN n-IE aa.cK.

:1414:

llp.m.

OFH!e&gt;HGAD.

r DoN'T WANT TO

13!:' ~UNO IF HE: .
E:\I'ER CRISS.

-·

'
=

·'

• 2181 Annual Dow

'

_ , ooo-. .,...

13,000. 114-25&amp;-1112.

&amp;3

111111 YW Rlllblt Dlllll, rune
s:;t
liking, $100.

11~

Uvestoelc

Fllr fllgo tor 111e, Falon
Boothorl Hoa Fo!nw. .,..,._

2141, 114471-"2370.

'•

72 Tl'ucks for Sale

·,m F-110,· l'ood
~·

wMh - ·
Good Cond, ··~

lNe-.
-•IL Colt Dovtd' . !
....... at 114)1112171.
,.., :d. . .: . .....

Home

'

ocpoJr,
~·
- - WGfll, .
111 lr~ca~,
~ np~~te,.._ · 1
l1ib0. Colt 114-t112.ut:l eMir 1110 C~avrotat, !_ qu-r ton, 4 . . . _ . . I
-drlvo,ltoN-11.
till·'~
7~t-m. or teave m
ga.
IDD pI
1 - 1111l , .
Rla'd IIYr, old,

u.._tn

DD THr WASHIN',
IRONIN' AN'
CODKIN' II

'THAT'S ALL I'M

THAT AIN'T
ALL YO'RE
GOOD FER,
MAW!!

,

YOU HAPPEN TO BE

TH'SOODEST
PLOW HAND
IN TH' HOLLER

. GOOO FER!!

p:t"'.&amp; ..... -. .....

·

82

&amp;

~:·:.~:~·. ··~Lift.

.!'

(!) Undar I'IN .
ill • • Knol8 t.andlnl Pat

··, ~•

PI, liiiFII, 114-

•I
'

381.aon.

121il0 lrll'"!1 -

hot _,.,. onooor,

""-· -

t3 000. -

481-111113 dari:OO Pil
1811 , _ F

~-

Mobile
Homt,l14-211-8120.
11n Horizon ta • II moblll

=·.

IC""'
Rltota-llot

~

two

·

and -

Couot----·
a

--·-1J.

river, 7

.....

lt781noo.
plua
utllltlll, clopoolt, • - -.
nopol8,114'4411-4121.

Houlna.

a bl*oom -.1111.,.. mon~h,

3111 EOH.

·

-....... -

ntco. 114-741-31111

lin In 1 CO!TI8 1111t Danny
hlis Iter with 1111 car. Q .
aJEvanlng,.._

1874 111u11a. a t J ..,.., ""'

NEW O'IWI FUIINIIHID lPTI

• •,..., 7,

I

•o=

14H lll•lp.rn.

1AI.

NOW OPEN. 0111 ANO TWO

~too

DloYII ~
87Hm.

"We're paying you to dsydrtJBml Stop
thinking· about work."

;

".._

,.. ""'* ........ 100. .
.... .....

I

dll:rl. 114-111'-

are go-nlng you on me year ahead. Ideas are likely to come to you todey
Send lor your A81ro-Graph predlctlona when you're oft In some quiet pitoday by milling S1.25to Aalro-Graph, alone free from dlltractlng, outaldllnc/o lhll newapaper, P.O. Box 91428, nuences. Try thlltechnique II you r1lld
ClevelAnd, OH 4&lt;4101-3428. Be sure to lmh thoughts.
.
.
alate your zodiac lllgn.
.. SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Now. 12) COnciHIOna
TAURUS (April :zo.Mer 20) A fPUr-of·' In general IQilk hopeful lor you II ttola
BERNICE
the-moment InvitatiOn might be extend· time. Malntlln an optlllllatle OiltiOolt,
ed to you today that could turn Into even II It appear• you m tempotlllly
BEDE OSOL
something rathel Interesting. Cortllder stUCk In a rut II a Cllange occun, Hwill
It, _ , It you have a previous ·· be sudden.
. . eng11geme011.
SAOITT AIIIUI (Now. »DDG · 11) Cr.- - - - - - QIIIIINI ,..., 21...tuna 20) Unexpected ' ·rear and llnancea could be , _ two
chengaa are po8llble today that could · moat fortunate .,._ tocr.y. Ull your
eneble you to nnallze a llltuatlon willet\ Ingenuity and r4180U~ to ICItK... • .:.
·
hal liMn extN!Miy hard to tie dOMI. vanoe your lnterlllt In bOll! - · ,
:. • ~.".: ..__. 'lllrtbday-.uur
..
Mov1111wltuy 11 yoUipot an opllllng.
oCAIIIIICORII 10.0. ......., 'II) You'l
' CANCIII (June 11....., 12) 1181 Ill poe- Ihave your _, tpeclaf techntqula lor
lllble, limn your 1n~t&amp; iocr.y ro Ihar\dlllll tltlngt tod~¥ thallltauld Will
thOle .of a mental nattn rattter than out to , _ ~ U.. tttem ,._
. phptcal-. Your mind will bl WO&lt;k-1 pdiiR ol hoW - . 1 tMr may ap' lng blttar than your miiiCIII.
.
· ~ 111 otharl.
.ln·tha year 8helld you nllkely to make LIO C&gt;lulr ....... 12) Your ftnanclltl AQUIUIIUI • - · your /ireatest ga1n1 Jull when It lOOks tranda took rather -raging at thll ~
ll~e -.ythlngJI artndi(Jg down 10 1 , llmund tl1lra II a CIIIIICe ~ou mlgllt do
• hilt. Nev,ar Qhll up ragald• o1 out- ' IIOIIIIIhlna 1101-u.y tod~ that can•
ward ~.
either maka or
you money,
...... P' ... 11·Aprtl· . , Dllcard diGO (Alii- DalpL 12) A ~t '
your ..,_,. PfOOICiulw II you'N b11ng IUIPt'IM c:outd blln llore lor you IOCialafymjad by ~
'to tmpl- ty today. Tlllta ICIV8ntaga ol It lmmedl-~· aome

'@

•w

, • .,..... 'IZ. ... .....
....,_ ....... 11'1ditcr

-..4'2: •.•• - - . I n

- · 51

''J

.,,~

1Mori:OOPioiii04-4JS.117:1.

2 bodrooon Ifill. tor NnL carlllllol. Nlol llatllng, IIUndrv
locltMin lVII-. Cill ltwt:f·

· 11

-.~ .

""""*'•...,
;ooo •
....
-..
.........
-..
.....
tfiiMIJ...7..!Inl. ...~

oclrlgsral•,

ro~~tg~Ntoo, 11""171-2212.

f71.1

E:f.illtlllt
.
.
.
-. . .

.r.ll.'l
IIIN,

~--·
111ow

1874 Mobile Homo, :lbr, ...
con11, • - . a dryar, !1'1111 a

AWirdl Clifton Dnla star ol
the hit TV series A!llln. and
gospel music suparellr
S.nill Patti co holt lha 21st.
Annual Dova Awards.
~ MOVIE: W-n In tha
Derk (1 :00)
.
1:30 ern a o.....r Norris hll· •
Jluon with a Czech planlat

lhet WeldOn lnvltiCI over. Q
10:00 ()) 700 Qub .WJit flat
Rail liOn
•repraenh
~ a ·u . Law Rolllnl
1 tamlty whOM
houH Wll deltroyiCI by

lull,

· - DodgiD-110, lrucll. Rovll
8E
11+1
I 114-24WMI. '

(II ChHrl Before the
clrcumclaion ceremony,
Frasier kll!napa his son. (R)

· From Augusto, GA (T)

2 ull troller, ICrlpor

ma.

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Distaff .
1 Foal's
IIIIa
mom
62 Vapid
ammoniac 3 Delaware
9 Smell
city
10 Popular
4 "1muslcal
Camera"
12 Adversary 5 Duck
13 Bower
6 Under·
15 Dutch
handed
commune 7 Swiss
16 Stripling
river
18 Summer
8 Generous
(Fr.)
11 Revolve
19 Prepare
14 Fortlfl·
21 Radiation
cation
unit
17 Susan
22 Memorable
Hayward .
period
111m ·
23 20 VIscous
processing
lo louch
24 Burn
27 Love
ol Paris
28 Actor
Frartclosa
29 Colloidal
substance
30 Anger
31 Discharged
33 Name (Fr.)
34 Ending
lor hero
35 Work unit
31 MaKim
40Complele
42lndlgo
plan I
43 Byzantine
empress
44 Purpoee
45Menu

·o

. llooqull
11i14 ..... .., Grand
Ll, ucen.nl aondltion, MW
tiNI, 1111101111, 41,100 mi-. Af.

'1111

Olfto

'

'

r,.

bloao•wour

todly
stf~V,blc••tltllpartlculartypeotop- Ironia Plttttet'ttltlp
~ can htip you c:fn:um. 1 portunlty does not ~t Haell ~00. 0 h1118
Ill IIIDDflll
~ tile IOIIdbtoctcoL Gil a jump on 11r. ; Jraquelttly.
·.
are nol11111811y aflllnt!d·
by ·~ the 1nftu1no11 wlllch ~ (..,._ D-0i1t. 23) Your best
·
· , ·

frllllfiiiPIVMhal

'

'

I ,•

,,

(2:00)
.
'10:301Il Ma1111ptanlltMft
Charlotta teltl M01. Umber!
llboul har hulbanc:f'a
laiCinatlon. Q
.
&lt;!JIIV•'a Den Ule Is A

I

_

...

'

.I

q:aoir.~Q.

'

'

•

415

t

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

• Cnlolt • Clint

.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

. . i l l .....

(I) l111h 1 TOIIIDhl

...

~=~

Yesterday'a "
23 Editor's
29 Martini
.term
Ingredient
24 -"The -" 31 Sally or
(Newman·
Marshall
Redford
32 Inhibit
film)
36 Declaim
25 Cigar
37 Merri·
shape
ment
26 Wind·
39 ,60 sees.
llower
4f"- pro
27 Apostate
nobis'

f

Poam

a=-••

. I

DAILY CRVPTOQUOTES..:..·aere'• how to work u:

• o New Twilight z-

,

ta~. . . . . .

oca••IIJT_.....
11:»
...TaltiiMIIww

:,or the tine L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
.apatrophes, the length and formation or the words are all
;hints. Elich day the code letters are dirferent.
I
CIIYPTOQUOTE
I

J

'

4sl

CVNVM

.:c ...

:::r:.~
11:. . . . . . . . . . . . .

11:00~=--(1)
=•*From
( "'*r"• CA (T)

wflh

'

.....

10;01 (I) MOVIE: The Daflanl OMI

eom.t~ottal

1.., ,.._

by THpMAS JOSEPH

who thinks atle's 1 psyChiC
leads Max to a hit !TIIn&lt;Q
11)1 UIIJ lUng LMI
1111 Me-1st Round.

au.

·-v

CROSSWORD

(PI 3) C

Oltvor 3 point hMoh tr1011or
wltroftl: end ,_., lxlcket, chc,

pc.-

..

e (2)

~

'ibr. ou.rt: lila ~rtl

.

-----...J

Ol .• D Mal: MaN"Oe:
r.- Cannon An amneaiac

1tllt Dodao Dlytano, mllllllll,
tS,OOO miT-. 11,000. IIIII
......, la.n of
per
month, 304-4784381 .. 1175-

tK

+HS2

s•

ldlllr is stalking survivors of
the Alamo. Q
1D (!) M1-*YI Sir Peul ,
Berbwne'a death has made
his family probl~blic.

&gt;

-

IIILIHI-.

~~,~~·i':ilji

12t0 por inOnlh. 304..7U411.

Jlm'o
'*:'h:~m;
31,
w..t =,~tip
, 11

In Zlnlll -

'

•eant

the beart ace and played a dlamonct to 1
SOUTH
tdummy's ace. How nice that Eaat's 'j
a A 10 8 4
UD&amp;Jetoo was the king, but South now
.AQ
bad to .tiptoe home with care. He l
tQI0874
played the qul!!!n of hearll and then
+QJ
three rolinds of clubs, discarding one
of biB srnaU spades. He then played' · Vulnerable: Both
dummy's king of hearts, letting anoth· :
Dealer: North
I
er spade go. Nut he succeufully s.oot•
Wert .Nor.. Eoat
the ace and king of spades,'
I+
Pus
w.t loUowing with the three and si:r- 1 a
Pus 2NT Pus
spot. He wu now at the croaroads. s •
Pus
Pass 4 +
Paa
To bave any chance for the con- 1 •
Pass 4 •
tract, be needed West to bave another . I NT.
Paa
Pasa
All pass
black card. U be could guess which it 6 •
wu, be could ruff a card in that suit
Opening lead:' • 2
and then e:rit with a low diamond.,'
Wesi·would win the nine ol diamonds
. --::....,..::.
but bave to lead away from the J-8 to 1'--:--:live declarer hla cOntract. Eventually
Si:r no-trump woru out better. AI·
South played a spade and ruffed lt. ter the diamond king drop1 under the ,
Wilen West followed with the jack,, the ace, declarer plays out four I'OWids of
endplay poaition liad been reached. clubs. S111ce West cannot throw a dla· ·
Deelarer led a low dlamoad, locking mom!. it becomes eaay to eliminate •
West on lead and making the contract. hearts and spades from the West band
Wbat would bave happened if West and throw West in at tbe finilll with a
bad laiJe.carded with the .Jack of diamond.
·
spades on the lecODd blglo spade? Per· , lurw llt!Oby'• - .. "Jocobf • ~·­
·ba"" declarer Would bave mil-·-·-' Jlt!ObyoaC.nla- tomrl«&lt;iftUolllof•-·
rae •""'
Jlt!Oby} .... · · - .,
ami played a fourth club.
..
1,
r=Onr•l4
BoUo.,. ,..,; t
s.Oa.'

~Top Rink Boxing

_____. ..........
.
.
.
.
::t.. i144•a:= =
Aon'U 'tV -....

~

.Q72

+

• • eCil Young A*'- A

Mil, trocla, I :ON:OO Wlll!dlp, t•l p.m. l14 141 1101

Porta btl Whlotpol . .h .......
Toppon clolux gu rongo, bolh . ,._ ~klrmlllongth,
oxc cond, ~ouolnqu- only, a - , IIAI. cciild,

2 or 3br trohr 10 rnllel out 141.
114-3-.

olloi.

-

-linn

NtwiUHol
30W75-1410
:!.~":,·~...mold,
- : 4 dr. - · Ml; I dr,
rrWtr..· ...
..
; .QuUttd
twine, ....
·full,
7H774 or 1
~!:i po. dlnn:tto, ., ..;
: Olnnattl Htc;·t - . ohllr, 3
g - p , - KlrnboU pllno •$410. 114 ctr11
- 1 1 1 0. nrm. 304oncl tobtlo, '"""' lite; bod_,. bode, 6adollng. ~on-.. ms.ane. ·
d i l l - ond babv-. .112
mile Jerrlcho Rd. Pl. Pit
.t, Lilli: 1318 lb. tobooco. .30
- b , Colh ~&gt;nly. 514-448WY.

required.

ms. tt4-IN·1810 .. .,. . . .

--~ 13,200 Gf
Call IA-421-1417.

Wlda ~ron- a
trHlOI"' I h&amp;¥11 &amp;aile. Buy,

112

$125 ollpaelt. ., ........
1104.
.
plul

--·---·tart-

.. . . ~., and .,.,.. s.t~

-.

pump,
bilullfv 1 - ldtchen,
a
..,. ·groclooa
- · on hoonc
Iorge
level tot. 1!111
••• '-!!,100, now, 848,100. 514-

man wtll coro lor n=Llilllw,..,_,conlrll""
1111n. Colt
aft~rlpm. 114- v
ad,_"!!. 0ono1 •

lnlllllllloil 1o """"'

F - E'f!lipmiOot lor Silo: 11111
.....,. ~ TNctor, 1131, OUI·.'

. ·
000 -

-

Thlllora. Locll8c- Dlatrlct 10.10 two .,.._, mobile
Ia -lofng quoiHIId -Iconic homo, 110 oond, ~.
lo iranoport on SIH lilidant to
Atllono, Ohio l.'!':.'•nd A-ut)

w-

lnMoL 11' - 1122
0... ,_. Cat p..-. ,...,.,
""" .... blnc, full lint,
- l m a - dlllvsrylupply,l14 ... m2

li,7Ull. 080,
OlftCiy
- -304
·

1:00

Rort . ._,unity, lllturoo, :lbr, lnoluclng 1
.,aedoue mater ba*wm,l full
bllha, llmlly .-n, lomlllvlng

114-112· 32 Mobile Hom11
for Sale

1111,

oololgoiial-

, , . old Nlllonal OUttll hoe
111111 taonlly pool. th24', 4'
oiiOD
wMh
·
- CoRlo t.-.
llltsr.
Umhtd onlyl

~

--.....£ . . .

'

tASS

WEST
.J63
.J32
What long-winded bidding to reach t J 9 6 2
a abaky · six diamonds! Declarer won 8 7 s

SOnS.

1111 II 121,800. Colt 114-1112·

oummor oo-., Will Columblo

Llovlng Rood

APP'~
••~a

.-

~~~~-~~~ olngnlllobll.
Cruul-t. c:.attet.-n~~. . =a-=.::..::.....
=:-:.:;.l...,bod-,--wt-:::u:-,-=-,....,...···
llot...,., t'umlluoc. CMoll us Porlcct ~~~ man- ond
0111 tor quatly 1o tow prtc11 on ~. . -ton.

3br loclltd I , 111111 """' Ga~
lpollo, R - 1 1o dlpollt
114-446-3411;

I-.,

708 Inn rr.ctor, ...... front, :!pt.

hMoh, w/M1 round bol"!z lnt'l
rotoo, 11,11111; 410 Inn .,. flal.

ABOYE QIIOUND POOL SALE

+A K 10 I

· stapa to provide 100&lt;! and
ahallar tor birds and
mammels.Q

owrm;';l;, -P·~·,.~ cao to lllddllrlciii ...ft.'iMnlory. Priced to

to - . , _ l o r tllo

-

-oY·
_.rod.

FO. loll ltr•OWI!or: Spring VII- 2 bedroom trllw, JJC. 304-178-

~ - · bildc, 3br, , 112 lillha,
2, cor gorap, AlC, pool,
lli'lplllce.
tilliiMnt,
city

•-•o
~

GOOO

42 · Moblla Homes
tor Rent

-- ·-ground

great kleH Ia Nn blr, 114-28f..
5455, lt4-28e-6Ne onytlma .•~
tii'Sp.m.
'
N&lt;lw likinG opptlolllono at

Wv.

2 .. 3 bodra.n- lor- .Wa-c; doyora,
In
11-M723. . · ~r;::,•·R~If.'

III:Z·l'UII.ahr I

130,000/yr lncoma - 1 1.
Datllll. (1) 80HI7400o Ext. y.
4HZ.

EARN MONEY Rotdlng - 1

fliorNII dlnlna tobtl, I choln A
ohlnl h ..ch. Collol 1o lnd
llb!IL lllo&lt;l · 514-14t1.

lightly .

VIdeo

'::': ro'siMI'·•o:.,!!'

-lor0C0111n8y-.lt4-

llllry piUI comirtllllon
rooumo
to P.O. Sox till, · - ·.
OH
ol!l14.

olio-.

,,4_74....

Rrnla ls

.K 10 6

at the campus mlllllry
dln~i~
·
·
ID
PNvlewa Goaa

1187 P..- Fl:ro·opori ~
4 •• 5 ......... tift, - .

..

NORTH
+Kt5

Tread1ng

(!) Wild ,t.oneolca ~rn eaoy

m. 1178 3

41 Hou181 tor Rent

L-1

Loclclng
··
.tnt
...fedtorIndlpondablo
traveli wll Nmteh
car, would like to work wllh
compullr, • II copobll of doing
tight
und quoltllcotlono
to: eta Box 030, Galllpolll Daltv

1100. FUll ott 11n11

31 Homea for Sale

114 3U M!2, 114

ton truclc utiiMy

BRIDGE

roast

•-••twtnboda.toomadl. 1 extlftllon . . lor
OamDdl 1 .m-1 chair. 1 8lt
poriobtl bod rolll. 1 two drowor
lllna ooblnet. Hlnd!llldl qulno.

'i-'1

" Tundra- Sonic- Knack- Z/PP6f - CORRECT
1\n error doesn1 be?&gt;me a mistake," announced the
college professor, "unttl you refuse to CORRECT it. •
I

Twentieth Anni-ury
1:30 e (]) ill 0 1 - WCMICI
Col. Taylor prepares lor his

·~~51.1~'?

Nollnglc-

NOT to
tllrough ... moll ,... ....
tnvwfiglltd tho ollortng.

only.

11)1 flilniiNIWI

Who

(2:30) ·

. 0 Murder, 8lle Wrote
• Amatlaan Muatc Shop

WOO SAID

bod

.......-

K - Too

tltlo Bulolt lklmo- A..r,
Joacllld.
tow m111111, ._..... _.._.....;.....;;...,.._,;__.~;!' ·
OMICPtlon ....... .,447N7U. 81
Home

...

•

.,,,........, •.

·

."II.=~
in
Jolluctt

~

=~=~btl -ric&gt;

3 .,.,.

212 Mulbony Avunuu, P-nor.
2 .at..,, 3 li:OI.-n. Shown ...,

.• (I) , _ Dollllltl
Myatarlaa Sister Steve's
former fiance wltneaiea a ·
murder.~

-_, - --

2 b o d - - . •Hirttord,
•• 1121011.

.

. Marble countertopa ore
Installed In the kllchltn. Q

'f . ..

--lor
..............
-

Q

e a1 Nltloilal Oaagl8flhlc

FIIIIST, THii MACHINI"
MUSr ~ 'NRNI"Q
ON.

tat ·

SPI VIC('S

1

and goes to see a conCert In

~ lnd-....

114-t4N014"""'-

conalcllf lf'tJthlna of "'"' •
r,~· A'oldng $21,000.

'

v....... defies her parents
BaltimOre.

lETTERS

-eel

• (]) ill Colby - -

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

NaDnL1...

. . . . Streit, Mill Ill 1F art. Wilt

AJSOLLJTELY ;
fAI.ULOLJ$ t&gt;IIT·
(

giL&amp;., ANP AN

ALLEY:·OOP

'
'
.·
~~-··--·.,1

1

1D &lt;!Jlltle Old 11ouaa

--IIIIK •

me.

Q

1:01 (J) Natlonlt Oea. .phtc
ErpiDNI' Earth Day's

IN011CI!I
thlit you do
buefnna wllh ,_.,..you know,
ond
11nd -

2 b•d ooon home tocmld .. an

-'*..=..·- ·

Fully.

~ Night Court

7:31 (J) SantoRt And Son
1:00 I]) MOVIE: Ml• Annie
il-r (2:00)

~ MOVIE: UndiiCO..,
·-(1:00)

OliO VALLEY PUILIIIINO CO.

Rea lE sla te

lt.

,_II~-

-

t

llolllll "" ..... 10.10
--.114-MM.

BUI!Ma
Opportunity

DJroclor
ot Point -11n1.

11~M57, ., . I

f &lt;lllll :;llflpl•r',
,~ !.tvhiock

"""""" llood. -

10t81.

lor
ContiCI
of Nurolng, C... H -

=

1tll2 Cldllllo boupo Duwtlla,
, . . -.-.PM&amp; nogotl-.
pllane:IIIW7N401.

11113
ISepd, $110.11

proved
·

Ft nanc ta l

--·

~
Wlllu• 304'-;1321,
811 -..; 114 he 111~ Fifth

11~

1114.
'
',
WUI lloul - y boaold lrllll,
lunlt
or ui!Wiiiilod 4

..

lafiA•f.~tdYI. Q

IIJI Croaall!e

CoNS'O'I~A"r. ION LOAN! •

Mualcal
11112 Ford LTD, $1300. 114-446lnati\IIMntl ·
..,.
~-·
. ~. ' I:GII :
--,;,;,;:PIAN01~~CA;;;RI~;,...-·I 1t112 - . : IUI-Ic, 111G Coloh.... truilt - ·;
:· .
"111nlng" .....,_ -lny ruttr peas cd,. wtth . . . - l a,ooa. .,_,...,..
'
.

Ctoonlng.

Rlf••• provided.

A Te~fliPIC CfliPIT CA~P

tm -OMIIIntd,
ent1 a n, •.
1111
full ·IWIIIna.

57

0.1118, •nd ...._ aaunlla Ex- - lnd "-&lt;&lt;lbtl• ., ..

1112-2821.
WIU
do

.

'

"""' ~ to TLC, ~~ 11087dlya,
lteniO HI 1-241-ttltl
.... P7M. 1~
........ LIU
MP

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandl18

Aulloncl, • - lo Hlnllonvtlll.
114·742·2147.
.

130r008
IIOionllll.
Datooll. (1)"·11J6.187400o
Ext. Y·

Enth,_ . LPN ltnlbtl
·-ule. .

.•• wv.

m:..:"·--- suo.- ''
, . .. ' · - 14 ft. . . _ .

Abbott I Collello
7:01Cil Jaffaraona
7:30 e (]) Family Feuci
CIJ Ladlea Pnl 110wt1na Tow
• • EntMII'"-1 fonlghl
• (I) Mllllll'l l'llltlty

~

I' I*

r I' Is I' I' I' ·1· I
~~~~E~WLE f~:l.: L I I I I I I I I
PRINT NUMBERED

By l&amp;!llet Jacolly

ill Mil* A-~

~ tiAVf At-'"'f ¢8TS

annoyed you about television,
was PQOr ·········?"
·

SCIAA\ LITS ANSWIIS .

.

,~q,· Wheal Of

po

•

w a Mrt.IUIIg

• al
(I) .CUINIII Altair
ID &lt;ll MeaNitlt LattNr

FRANK AND ERNEST

•

1\11 CSI. NeWe Q
T!Wae'a C.ntpMJ
• op Catd Contatama
combine entertainment trivia
with tha luCk ot tha draw.
~ Hlnllf!t' In
1:31 (J) Andy Gilfllth

glnla and Ohio, ~7.

Granny asks, "Remember

"? when the only thi.ng that

L......L--JL....,..L.......L:....L......J you develop from Slop No. 3 below.

Q

(!) 3-1·1

I

L-....L--JL....,..L.......L.--1 T

· !E::ci:::
.....
eon-

~
Wool Ylr·

obOul Joining lnll
prot.elon, ·come tllfk to ue at:

I

8:01 (J)IIaWiriJ HI••••

oxpor..._a..:=-no-.
and
In

thinking

rI I I
I:t j.' ( l{I ·Io ~~rr:~.~ i~~h:h~~~~gq~~:d~

· J. P 0 L· E E

aJ WCMICI fodaJ
0111-Man
.
0 Chaltelln Cllalga

ROASTED THEM ONE .
AT A TIME ..

Wlntlr '"""ton Sorvlce, 18 yro

ROAD lEST
APRIL 7, 111111
Uncotn ond - . tllo
driving lon:t of CRST IHT'L,
INC., llau18 - 1 lrllght
tnroughoul thelJ.S. 11 ,... . .
an nj&gt;erloncod dri-. a racOnl
drtvlng ocMol gradoalt, ot lUll

. I I' I I 1

ot tha bui)OniC lllaauo. ~
(!) R11 . . . RaflltiOw Q
• G]) Andy Grlflltlt

BUT IT WOULD 8E
&amp;ETTER IF HE JlJST

1:30

11

..F'...,T,:....:;.H.,::.O..;.:N:..;C;......~1_

Follow the devutatlng return

Eloaonl 211r, 2 - . , , . ::.:·
1 112 Nth. CA.Qf. dlllla-w,
dteJ J I 1, playgroung. 2 pooll;,

Public Sale .
&amp; Auction

ltd

I 1~IPAYA
l* I I' I

- · 0 0 0 -...... " .......

&lt;Zl 11oulbll (PI 2 01 I)

I'

tho '
be-

low 10 form lour Jlmplt -ds.

DlgMt

• Yord llle At&gt;rii7,1::JO.? North of
Eaatom High School, Al 7
acroa from Rlgg'i Uaed car
Lot. Rain canca11.
·

8

Aaorro"ff t.nurs ol
0 lour
ocrombltd -dl

I lit Uioo

Tnurtday.

Saturdoy1 April 7, 8-4. 515 8.
Sacond Alit. lllddloport from Fomlly b;;itor.

....

lolloM lop CI.AY I. POUAII __;_ _ __

OIU.

.,.ury. Clll 114-112-7781.

13

'::::' S~\\.41~-~i-!f%• won

......1 . . . ......

1 - 11U1oJ DaliJ

EOH.

lnoldo Sale. WIIMI houM bolllnd
Foodlond. Clean ckllhoo and
mite. T-y. Wtdnooday,

The Daily

Television
Viewi

74

County Appl-.

Ohio

Ponwoy-Midclaport.

'.

'

KVCB

HCGRCV
•LFNVC

GRAM

0 R , TZRJ

QHM

G R.A

IFMOZ . - VMJH

OR

"'
Z H NV

IRJIVQS

. Yeeter..,'e C.nte ~~etea BY DINT OF nAIUtro
AT IDIOTS YOU RUN THE RISK OF BECOMING
IDIOTIC \'Of,JRSELF. - GUSTAVE FL\UBERT
Cl1. . loy ICing F - 811

1 1811,

Inc

�The Daily Sentinel

Th~day,April5,

Ohio

1990

.-

~~

~REMODELING

.
.,

Donald's

.

Ohio Lottery

'

.64 .tops

Dl\lly Number
852

Ma8ters ·field ·.

CELEBRATION

'

Pick-4
9717

Store To Over 3,000 Square Feet
And Stocked ft Full
Of The Latest In Top Quality
Hunting and Fishing EqulpmenL
we Have The l.a'gest Selection
In This Tri-Collnty Area •
For Yourself!

Page4

••

Saturday, April 7th, 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. • SW,td~y, April 8th, 12 noon - 5 p.m~·

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

.

.

"·i .,

Cloudy &amp;on!Jht. . Low In
upper 208. Chanee of snow 30
percent. Mostly sunny Sa&amp;ur·
day. Wgh In upPer 401.

•
en 1ne
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 8, 1990

•

2 Sectiono. 16
A Multimedia

25 C.nu

Syracuse firemen .to
help repair swim pool
Remington ThUI'Kiirbon

The Bell Shotgun Value On The Market: .
Includes 2 Different Barrels!

Long Rifle HI·Speed 22s

The Remington Modal 870 Express• Combo
with 28"
ban.~ .nd 2(f' llug bamll.

Brlck500

$899

- -.....~-12GA.

%11}ingtou..

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY

SATURDAY AND
SUNOAY 'ONLY

.

Remington EXPRESS~ .
Extra Long Range Shells
12-16-20 ga.

$269.99 .

,

50 CT. BOXES
CCI BLAZER

SATURDAY AND' SUNDAY ONLY.

.

Jobless rate· is

$1999
PS-20 .

SAL~~mingto,_
.,

The Remington Model 552'" BDL Autoloader·
Same styling as Remington pump-ac11on rilles in
a semi-automatic.
·
.

ps* -

$36999

•Dependllble

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•WJNGMASTEK•
12 GA. OnLY
..

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-ut

· Thtlllmlng!Qn Modell 1-87 •Pr1111llr'" Aulololcler
,,.. ;. Compensating Gas Syarem ilat shoots all

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1~ ~;GULAR
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•

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•Made rn U.S.A.

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$36999

65%

LET OFF
JENNING~S

. I
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Good Looks And Great Performance
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·the New Rarillngton Model7oo· 'AD I.
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$32999
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c

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270 30/06

LocaJ b
•
.. netS--------.,

Deputies arrest Guysville man

.

I MODEL 1000C
HIGH
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STORE rvlANAGER S HANDGUN SALE
Slnee 8t4toJl On Band Diller• In

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FOXFIRE II CRO$SSOW
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yt$·¢ ;;,
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MASKCAMO

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(i;Smith&amp;W?.sson

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l~qmington.
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. .

John a. Public .
EXp.1·91 .

CREDIT LINES
TO 11500 WITH

f,lo'

·. Mas on woman
known. · ~ shot; no

to create .health proble1113 · · , c":;~J!!::

870 "Spedal PUrpose• .

.

i

BOW

.

Lead in wa_ter supplies

ua..e• Us Out"
65%
LETOF.F

lI

_,catch

Gun Ca!~-~ • ltnlves • Scopes
Bundfll .C iothlnl • Boots
Holsten • .And A Whole Lot More

t1lj')

iVf7+11990"

6999

1211auge ammo interchangeably

$

~N~\"4
.

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PVJir ACIIOI'I
Tho Remington llodel 870" SP lbgnum ·
Thil rugged, nongille gun is designed so h
Nt'fl
oranywory bird
'
""""" performance~ all -mer condition
-Raliebility o/8111" double slide bw P'I1'P action
oNDnrallocht Plrlarjzed finish cwr bomrl 111d raceiver

.

,Th!! Shotgun Success Story Of The Decade
., .• ~ously popular shotgun ·leahna PresiUIII-

ll'ra RamlngtDn llodol 7400"' Canllfflra
SlrDIIIJ•. dependable aull&gt;loading rilkl

·

The Rlllilnglon llodtl 527" till """"' Action Fltld....,.
Orrly .22 pump action rilas11 made in America
•Selin-linished
stock
drrrcketlng

oConala...,t

AUTO. LOADER 27p 30/06

. . $19999

,22 PUMP ACTION

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·-de In U.S.A.

down in March

SPINNING REELS

$4999

99 e

27030/06

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NO fiSHING ·TACKLE IN GALLIPOLIS

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PUMP ACTION

•Smooth, lining, drrpendablo
lliQiarrre action

TRADmONAL RIFLESCOPES

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$

22 cal.
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Tho Renringliln loblel '/!iOO-

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'Ainrliti

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_...

20CT.
BOX

.

$699

=

SATURDAY ~NO
SUNDAY ONLY

By KATIE CROW
·~
Greg Bl\iley, who along with Jim · Committee, and assist the manager of London Pool on matters
Sentinel Correspclndent
Clifford, Is purchasing the Nor·
A "save the pool" committee man Grueser property where
regarding the maintenance and
has heell fanned by the Syracuse plans are made to construct 20 management of the pool and '
Fire DeJlarlment. ·
apartment units. He requested various related activities; to
This was announced Thursday council to consider annexing the · work with the Syracuse Youth
League and assist as needed In
night adurlng the Syracuse VII· property piior to the construe·
Iage Council meeting.
the maintenance, preparation
tion start. Council will move on
Since the village · .ttself Is the an~xatlon, It was decided, and scheduling of the ball fields ;
financially unable to make neces- as soon as the necesary paper- superviSe landscaping projects
sary repairs, the fire department work can be ·completed. The
at the marina, and work with·
scout leaders and troop members
has volunteered \O assist with the complex will be single fl.oor
who will be doing work In a
project.
dwellings for the elderly to be
.
The pool needs a new chlorine known as Waters Edge.
community service project;
systei:n and a new pump. The
Councilman Jim Pape 'pres- work with the Sy~acuse racket'
club to promote the use of the·
estimated c;ost to purchase supp- ented a liSting of pool manager
tennis court, oversee the schedulItes and make the repairs Is duties and a job description for
Ing arid general supervision of
$5,000.
·study. Teresa Tyson-Drummer
· To raise money for the pool has been In touch with Mary
the .workers assigned for the
summer as laborers for maintework, several projects have been Powell, Meigs County Park and
nance of the pool, ballflelds,
pianned by the firemen. A car Recreational director, regarding
wash will be hel(! on April 14, a student attending Ohio Univer- tennis courts, b113ketball courts,
beginning at 10 a.m. at the sity · or Hocking Technical ·• park grounds, and marin!! area.
Attending were Mayor Eber
Syracuse fire station. Anyone College becoming a director for
·Pickens, Janjce Lawson, clerk- ·
wishing to volunteer to · assls t the Syracuse Park.
treasurer, Jim Connolly, Chief of
·should contact one of the fire·
The job responsibility of the
Pollee, and Council members,'
men. On April 21 and 22; a Oea student would be to coordinate
Pape, Tyson-Dr.u mmer, Kaue:
market will be held ~th spaces the activities ot the Syracuse
available to the public of $5 per Park Committee, Syracuse Pool Crow, Minter Fryar.
day for a 10 py 10 foot area.
.
.
On Apr1122, flrelJien will have a
chicken barbeque, beginning at .
11 a.m. The firemen are asking
tor donations of time, money and
food tor all of the events.
Meeting with council In regard
to this were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cobb, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Imchange In the March jobless rate,
Wo\\S.HINGTON (UP!)
boden 11M Macy Plc!Cens who are
which, 1J11s ),!overed 10' tlle ·•a me
A~,rj~a's .civilian jobless . rate
beading up the, acllv!Ues. full
range for the last 18 months.
deciiDed
to
5.2
percent
In
March
support of council was pledged to
Construction hiring slowed last
but the slim 26,000 Increase In the
the projects since all proceeds
month, in the wake of massive
of
new
non·farm
jobs
number
will go to tbe pool repair. The
blrlng during the unseasonably
firemen are .asking church suggests a rather stale economy,. warm winter, wblle the number
the
Labor
Department
said
groups and other organiZa tlons Friday. · ·
··
o{ Jobs at the nation's factories
to beCOme ln~olved by baking
dropped by 30,000.
Factory
Jobs
continu~ to
cakes and pies, or contributing
.
'
vanish
In
March,
and
the
overall
''Manufacturing Is clear.Jy at a
Items · tor the flea market .
Increase In new jobs was the
BEwARE OF LEAD IN WATER SUPPLotsgeiUnl a drink of water. Water which hll8 Bet In
Also meeting with rouncil was smallest gain since June 1986 steady di!CIIne that has continued.
LeeWIUiamsofAnneS&amp;.undenlandsthedangers
lines for more &amp;han a1x hours can become
even though the reS't of the
when the number dropped by economy Is healthy," said Rusof lead pollonlnr; and he knows H Is important to
eontam!Da&amp;ed through contact wllhlead ulderlng
110,000, government eronomlsts sell Sbeldon, an economist at
"flush" &amp;he water lines In t~e mOrning before
of the pipes.
'
said.
Mellon Bank In Pltsburgh. ·
•'Little job growth took place In
Over the past year, thenwnber
the natiOn's business establish· of factory jobs has plummeted by
ments, " said Janet Norwood,
250,000,
.
.
commissioner ot the depart''Employment declines have
menes Bureau of Labor Statls·
been particularlY pronounced In
tics, which complied the monthly the lnl!Jor metal and metal-using
report.
Industries . within the durable
· ·
OVP New1 Staff .
The national jobless rate for goods sector and apparel In the
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Regional Lead Polso~lng Prev- Torres, since lead cannot be
Gallla, Meigs and Mason January and February stood at non-durable sector," Norwood
SenUnel News Staff ··
ention Agency .
seen, tasted or s.melled whe~
County. law enforcement agen· . 5,3 percent and ' the December said.
·
Concern about what lead In
The health agency has these dissolved In water.
· cles banded together this mornrate was 5.2 percent. Including
With the 26,000 gain In nonwater supplies Is doing to child- suggestions:
To ·emphasize the Importance
lng to locale a truck allegedly military personnel, the March farm jobs, the total . lor that
ren has prompted the Meigs
Flush any faucet which has not of protection against lead polsonInvolved with the shooting of a
jobless rate was 5.1 percent.
category stood at 110.3 million
County Health Deparlment to been used for six hours or longer
log, Torres referred to a story
woman early Friday morning.
The figures are adjusted to people In March, _while the
Issue an alert to parents.
by running water for one to five which Clinical Pediatric's pubAccording to Gallla County reflect seasonal factors.
average weekly hours worked
Leadlsknowntocreatenumer- minutes or until It becomes as llshed recently·. It was abOut a · .Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury,
After strong gains In employ- held at 34.6 hours for the second
011$ health problems .Including
cold as 11 will get. The Water that 13-month-old il!fant with lead
Greta Logan, a Mason County ment in January and Febru,ry, straight month, the Labor Demental retardation, according to comes out after flushing will not poisoning whose source . was
resident, was shot In the head most economists expected little partmem said. .
Nonna Torres, R.N., nursing have been In extended contact · traced to . using lead contamlwhile riding as a passenger In a
dlrectot;.
with lead pipes or solder.
nated water to prepare her
compact car approximately
Torres noted that th~EPA has
powdered formula each
three miles below the Gallipolis
~
established a maximum lead
Use only water from the cold morning.
City limits on State Route 7 near - content of 50 parts per billion In water tap for drinking, cooklqg
The article reported that dur- the Intersection of State Route .
publiC water supplies and are and especially tor preparing . ing the patient's first 10 montbs,
218 at approxtmQtely 1 a.m.
working towards revising the baby .formula as hot water Is she was fed reconstituted pow- Friday ..
maximum level to 20 parts' per likely to contain higher levels of dered fonnula withoutlron. The ·
AcCording to Salisbury, three
· Guysville resident Michael Stanley , 23, was arrested
billion In' the near future.
lead. Cold water can always be parents' routine was to make 32 shots fror:n a handgun were fired
Thursday evening on Gold Ridge for walking on the roadway
However, she pointed out, even heated for use.
ounces of formula each morning from another vehicle, one strlk·
while Intoxicated. Meigs County Sherlffs Deputies were In the
when publll: water sources do not
II was also noted by the agency
using first draw water from their log tbe victim In the back of the .
area on a report of a subject wandering around a residence
contain excessive amounts of that wafer In buildings less than · kitchen lap. ·
head.
when they found Stanley. There was no one home at the
lead, the use of lead pipes or five years old with lead pipe
The family lived In a threeA suspect In the shooting· has
residence. Stanley was taken to the Meigs County Jail .
copper pipes with lead soldering soldering may have a higher lead year-old house wltb a municipal been questioned and released on
Also on Thursday ·night, deputies Investigated a deercar
forlndoorplumblngmaycontrlblevel than older buildings since water source. The plumbing hls 'GWII recognizance, Salisbury
accident on Route 7. According to a report, Sharyl 1&lt;. Bush;
ute to unsafe amounts of lead In mineral deposits have not yet consisted of &lt;:OOper pipes .with said. Law enforc~ment officers
Route 4, Gallipolis, was traveling south on Route 7 on Massar
~!,rime drinking water.
coated the lnsldl! of the pipes to soldered joints! After the child's
are still looking for a maroon
Hill, north of Eastern High School, when she struck and killed a
As a pf!!Ven~ve m~asure to
prevznt the direct lead-water health problem surfaced, 1be Chevrolet truck with a white
large doe deer that' ran Into the P!lth of her car. There was Ught
water was testedforleadandthe , topper, bearll\g West Virglnta
lead poisoning, Torres cited contact.
damage to the\left front tender of the vehicle. Busb and folD'
· several points regarding water
Tbe only wily to determine If first draw morning water was
plates, Salisbury said.
children In the vehicle were u.nlnjured.
and 'lead safety as Issued by the water h!IS a high lead content ts found to havealeadcontentof130
The sheriff said his departCincinnati Health Department by havl'ng It tested,- according to parts per biUion: However, after ment, the GalllpoUa City pollee,\
a five minute flush, the lead . the Ohio Highway Patrol, Meigs
Two people were Injured and cited In separate c;ruhes
concentration fell to less thar\ 10 County Sheriff's Department and
Thursday morning In Meigs County, according to the
partsperbiUI9n. wellbelowlvhat the MasOil County Sberlff's De·
the EPA has established as the partment participated· In the
GaiUa-Melgs Post of.the State Highway Patrol.
and
lobbying
refonn,
compreacceptable
maximum
lead
conensuing
search
for
the
suspect
;
In the crash Thursday at 6:45a.m. tn·Sa!fsbury Township on
BJ LEE LEONARD
henslve
drug-fighting
Jegtslatent
for
water
safe
to
consume
whose
name
has
not
been
. S)R. U3, 1.2 mUes west of the junction of S.R ..7, Cora A. Loftis,
UPI!Ita&amp;ebo- Reporter
In addition to lead In water,
released.
40, of S.R. 143, Pomeroy, was Injured and taken by the Meigs .
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Gen- tlon, unemployment compensaTorres adv!Sj!S that some toys,
No charges have been flied In
County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where she was
eral Asaembly adjourned Its . tlon refonn, and solid waste
recycling.
pottery
and
·
glassware
contain
the
shooting
Incident,
and
the
treated and released for bruises.
spring session Tbur9cfay after ·
Legislative leaders said those ' lead In the paint. Recently James. Investigation· Is ongoing, &amp;ailsLotus, drlvlns a 1986 Plymouth Caravelle, pulled out of a
sendiDg almo!lt two dozen bills to
bury said.
private driveway 11nd headed east on S.R. 143 when a 1973 Buick
Gov. , Richard Celeste for his bills will be dealt with during the · Industries, Inc. announced a
recess. The two chambers plan
voluntary recall for Slinky. pull
Logan was taken to . Holzer
centurion driven by Todd D. Eada, 26, o~ R11tiand, hit Loftis'
slpature.
toys In the-form of tralns,lvorms,
Medical Center for treat.m ent
Caravelle In the ten rear side.
Sent to the governor were bills brief June ~alons after the May
seals, frogs, caterpillars, dalma·
and the ho8pltal baa refUsed to
Loftis was cited for failure to yield.
establishing a pilot 'jlroject for primary election.
Another temporary casual:y of
tlolis ancS kittens. The red paint release her-condition or types of
In the crash-at 8:40 ·a.m. hi Salem Township on C.R. 1, 1.3.
sheep farmers to use against
mUes west of S.R. 124, Danny J. Kirkbflde, 39, of Albany, was
coyotes, cracking ·down on the recess was a bill raising the . used on the eyes, tongue, and .Injuries.
cheeks of the toys may contsln
FoUowlng the lnltlalshoOti!'g,
taken by the Melga County Rescue to O'Bieness Memorial
.. ti'UIIncy and delinquency fil state's minimum waaeto$4.25an
excess lead. .
the vehicle carrying the vlcltim
· Hospital In Athens, where he was treated and released for f.aclal
school, and giving school dis- hoiU'. That bill has passed both
Parenta need to be alert to the drove tow.ard the City Pollee
tricts a way of working around chatnbers but was sent to a joint
cuts.
dangers of lead polaonln&amp;, con- . Department for asals lance,
Kirkbride, driving a 191N Niasan pickup truck, was headl!li
automatic real estate tax conference commit"tee to Iron out
. differences.
'
eluded Mrs . .Torres, who sua· where they stopped. and the city
norlh when be went off the left llde of the road and hit a tree. He
recluctlona.
·
The livestock protection bill psted that any questions be contacti!4 the sheriff's departwas cited tor failure to controL
· ·
Left bebiDd In the rush to
ment, beglnnlng the search,
Continued on pase 5
adjournment we11e major bills was sent to Celes!f on a 93-4 vote dJrected . to the Meigs County
Continued on pase 5 ,
Health Department.
Salllbury said.
deallna with campaign finance

f

~-

$17

~

:

..

'Tuio l.njured in. Meigs crashes

• · •awmakers ad•J.Oum
.. Oh10

- --.-..

.

•

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