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                  <text>Ponwoy-MidciiPQd.

Page 10-The Daily ~ etiliel

r---Local news briefs... ---,
Continued from page 1
.,
position, but the brake was not set and the tractor was In gear.
WachS, an-·EJks Club member, had recenuy been appointed
manager of,Jhe Foodland supermarket In Pomeroy.
.
Also on the scene was Sheriff DenniS R. SaliSbury, Chief ·
Deputy Carlos Wood and Dr. Edward .Berklch, Gallla County
Coroner.
The body was iaken to Waugh·Halley·Wood Funeral Home,
which Is handling the funeral arrangments.
""
·

Langsville man hurt in wreck
·'

A Langsville rna-;; was injured In a t;.,o.truck wreck Saturday
at 3: 10p.m. In Salem Township on T.R. 24, 1.4 miles east of the
junction of S.R. 124, according to the Gallla· Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
·
.
·
Rex E . Shenefield, 62, was taken by private car to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was treated and released for bruises
atld cuts.
.
.
Shenefield, driving a 1972 Chevrolet C-10 pickup, was heading
east when in a sllgbt curve, he had a head-on colliSion wltha 1986
Nlssan pickup driven by Tony J. Woodyard, 27, of Waverly.
, Woodyard w.as cited for failure to yield.

Miller rep to visit area
A representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's office
will conduct an open door session on Wednesday from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. In the court house In Pomeroy.
Anyone having questions concerning the federal government
Is Invited to discuss them with the representative at that time.

Meigs Clurmber to meet Tuesday
The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will meet Tuesday
at noon at the senior citizens center In )?omeroy. The guest
speaker will be L~:e Wedemeyer of Meigs Industries. All
members are encouraged to attend the luncheon meeting.

Scholarship applications available·
Applications , are being taken for the Bob Roberts
Scholarships to be awarded by the Pomeroy Alumni Association
at Its annual reunion on 'May 26.
Applications for one of the two $500 scholarships must be
received by the scholarship committee no later than May 2.
Applicants must have a parent or grandparent who was a
graduate of Pomeroy High School and the application must
Indicate the name of the person, the relationship and the year In
which the parent or grandparents graduated.
A transcript of grades rilust be submitted along with a short
resume by the applicant, a recent photograph, and Information
on where the applicant plans to attend college and the date of
enrollment.
AppliCations are to be malled to the Bob Roberts Scholarship,
co The Pomeory Alumni Association, Box 202, Pomeroy.

Palm Sunday 25 years ·ago
was one of Ohio's deadliest
By United Press International
- .Palm Sunday 25 years- ago
turned lntooneofthedeadllestln
Ohio 'history as 12 tornadoes blt
various parts of the state, leaving
57 people dead, hundreds Injured
and dllmage In excess of $40
million In 1965 dollars.
Palm Sunday 1965 fell on April
11. Storms began late In the day,
with the tornadoes breaking out
late In the evening and going Into
the early morning-; -·
·
The tornadoes were unusually
. strong and remained on the
ground for many miles,, accord·
lng to records with the National
Weather Service. The longest
irack was 28 mUes from ·a
tornado that crossed Plckaway
and Fairfield counties. The sbor·
test track was less than 1 mile In
Greene County.
.
The first tornado crossed the
lndlana·Ohlo border just south of
Wlllshlre In Allen ~qnty just
· ~·· ·

----,

I ;•

after 9 p.m. The last tornado
occurred at 1 a.m. "Apnl 12 In
Cadiz, Harrison County, at the
opposite end of the state.
A tornado that !,raveled
through Lorain and Cuyahoga
counties was the most destruc·
tlve because . It hit a more
populous . area. This tornado
completely obliterated the Lo·
rain County coqtmunlty of Pittsfield, damaged parts of La·
Grange and Grafton, _a,nd went
through Columbia SIIIUon. It
then passed through Strongsville
In Cuyahoga County.
Tornadoes claimed two lives In
Van Wert County at the start, 13
In Allen County; 16 In Lucas
County as It leveled the extreme
northeast part ofToledo; three In
Shelby County, and tore 53
freight cars from the middle of a
68-unlt train; one ln. Seneca
County; 18 In .Lorain and Cuya.
hoga counties; and four In Union
and Morrow counties.

Springlike temperatures return to Ohio ·.
northern Ohio early ' Sunday low 60s. There was a slight operations slowed.
If growers have not alreadY
night, but skies were mostly chance showers could move Into ·
clear otherwise, with tempera· · the western part of the state by done so, they should seou.t.whel!ot.
and fruit for any signs of damage
lures at dawn In the upper 30s to late afternoon.
But the mild, dry weatller will from the cold late last week.
mkHOs.
It was to be a pleasant spring
be short-lived. Showers will Temperatures dropped Into the
low and mld·20s Friday night.
clay Monday, with temperatures spread over the state MOnday
One benefit to the low tempera·
climbing Into the upper 50s and
night, obscuring the arrival of
the ' full moon, with widespread lures may have been some
reduction In viable alfalfa weevll
rain expecte«j Tuesday . Thunder·
eggs
or larvae. Producers should
storms are also possible. Highs
regular Inspections for
maintain
Tuesday will be In the 50s and low
and treat accordingly.
thiS
Insect
60s.
as low as 30
After
drppplng
A cold front will pass through,
percent
Monday,
relative
humid·
the state Tuesday. ushering In
.
lty
should
remain
at
60
percent
or
another round of colder air.
Forked Run at R.eeds~lle ·Is . · provided are two cots, two six
higher
Tuesday.
Lower
humid!·
Highs Wednesday Wlil only reach
one of the 23 state parks Jhere foot foam sleeping pads, a 60
ties should lie present the latter
the upper 30s and 40s and snow
ihe Rent-0-Camp program Is quart cooler, twO:burner pro·
half of -the week and provide
!lurries
will
be
possible
In
the
offered, according to the Ohio pane stove, camp llgllt, fire ring,
some
time to aerate storage bins
Department of Natural fire extlngqlsher, throw mat, .northeast counties.
However, It will then begin 'and livestock buildings.
Resources.
broom and dustpan.
On the eapy morning weather
warming
up again. Thursday and
This means that camping does
Rent·A·Camp sites are avalla·
map, high ~essure was centered
Frl~ay should be fair, with highs
not require a trip to a camping ble from May 1 through Sept. 30.
over
the Middle Atlantic ·coast
of 45 to 55 Thursday and 55 to 65
supply store for equipment. For All reservations must be made
and
It was to provide Ohio with a
Friday.
Lows
will
be
35
to
45
nomoretbanS17anlgbt,famllles by niall, and a $10 deposit Is
Wednesday, 25 to 35 Thursday southerly flow of mild air Mon·
can enjoy a tuUy equipped . · required with each application.
day before It moved off the East
and In the 30s Friday.
campsite through the programs Checks should be made payable
Coast by MOnday . night. A cold
Growers
were
advised
to
finish
and reservations are now being 11to the Plvtslon of Parks and
front
was over the northern
nagging
outdoor
chores
Monday,
taken.
Recreation and mailed directly
Plains
and a low pressure was
before wet weather and the
"The equipment provided Is of ,to the park of choice.
over
the
western Plains. The cold
arrival
of
t~e
next
cold
front.
Dry
Applications forms are avallaexcellenthquallty, and this helps
will
move southeast Into
front
weather Is forecast Wwednesday
make a positive first experience ble .from participating parks or
Ohio
late
on
Tuesday and then
through Friday, but soft fields
for tbenovlce,"saldStanSpauld- by calllng the Obla State Park
the East Coast
move
to
along
other
wlll
keep
tillage
and
lng, chief of ODNR's Dlvison of Information Center at 265·7000.
Parks and flecreatlon. "It also
The23stateparkswlthRent·A·
gives Inexperienced campers an Camp equipment In addition to -~----Weather-----opportunity to use good equip- Forked Run are Alum Creek,
ern part'of the state on Wednes·
Soulb Central Ohio
ment before Investing In lt."
Barkcamp, Blue Rock. Burr ·.
Mostly cloudy Monday night, day, with fair weather elsewhere
·
Oak, Caesar Creek, Deer Creek,
with a chance of showers and a through the period. Highs will
TheRe.n t-A·Campsltes Include
East Fork, Findley, Geneva,
low near 50. Chance of rain Is 50 range from the upper 30s to the
a 10 by 12 foot lodge-type tent set . Harrison Lake, Indian Lake,
percent. Showers and a chance of 40s Wedne~day, from 45 to 55
upon a wooden plaUorm with a 12 Jefferson Lake, Kiser Lake,
thunderstorms Tuesday, with Thursday and from 55 to 65
Lake Hope, Lake Loramie, Mau·
foot square dining.fly shelter and
picnic table. The tents can
mee Bay, Mount Gilead, Paint highs between 60 and 65. Chance Friday. Overnight lows will be .
. between 35 and 45 early Wednes:
of ral11is 89 percent.
accommodate four adults or two creek, Pundersol\ • . Stonellck,
day ,,between 25 and 35 Thursday
Extended Forecast
adults and three children. Also St.rouds Run, and West. Branch.
morning . and In the 30s early ..
Wednesday through Friday
Friday.
·
Snow showers In the northeast·
By Untied J"reu lateraatlonal
· Springllke temperatures have
returned to Ohio with ·the arrival
of the Grass Moon, but the
Buckeye State wlli see at least
one day of chilling temperatures
this week.
A few clouds moved across

EMS has 16 weekend c•s ·
Meigs Emergency Jvledlcal
Services answered 16 calls for
help over the weekend.
Saturday at 4: 09 a.m., Pomeroy was called to the Meigs
Sherlfr s Department for John
Young who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:59 a.m., Pomeroy was
called to the Overbrook Center,
Middleport, for Ella Schultz to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 10:39 a.m. was
called · to Salem Street for Ed·
ward Martin to Holzer Medical
Center. ·
.
Racine was called at 11: 31 a.m.
to Route 338 for Velpba Stewart
to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and at 4:24p.m. to Yellowbush
Road for Mona Usa Haynes t(}
Veteraps Memorial Hospital.
At 6: 25 p.m. Saturday, Pome·
roy was called to State Street for
John McKenzie to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 10: 04 p.m., Pomeroy was
called to High Street for P au!
Bush who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. .
On Sunday at 8:21a.m., Pomeroy was called to the Amerjcare·
Pomeroy Nursing Center for Ann

Michael w. (Mick) wachs,43,
of 12 Vl11ton Ave. , died Sunday In
Gallipolis. He was the store
manager of Big Bend Foodland
In Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 24, 1947 In John·
stown, Pa., be Is survived by hls
step-father and mother, Francis
and Julia Jacobs Bischof.
Also surviving are his wife
Rebecca (Becky) vanDyke
Wachs; three sons Kurt Michael
Wachs of Wright-Patterson AFB,
E 1 M tth
Oh
~a:c~~· anJ0 ' Br!n~ E~wa~~
Wachs, both at home; a daughter
KlHoa J.;ynn - Wachs, also at
home; two grandchildren; three
sisters, Mrs. Wllllam (Jane)
.Stanka and Mrs. Robert (Rosemaryl Bambino, both of John·
·stown, Pa., and Karen Tomak of
Orange, Calif.; four brothers,
Robert Wachs of Lindenwald,
N.J ., James Wachs of John·
stown, Pa., David Wachs of
Minneapolis, Minn. and .Terry
Wachs of Pittsburgh, Pa.
·. He was a member of Galllpolls
Elks Lodge 107, where be was a
d f tb
·
·
past Exalted Ruler an o
e
board of trustees.
·
Graveside services wl11 be
conducted Wednesday, at Pine
· Street Cemetery,' the Re,v. AI
MacKenzie officiating. Friends
may call Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.ni. at
Waugh·Halley-W.ood Funeral
Home. An Elks service will be
held at 8: :!0 p.m. Tuesday.
In Ueu of flowers, contributions
may be made to the Elks PER
Scholarship Fund, In care of the
Elks Lodge, 408\S Second Ave.,
·
Galllpolls, Ohio, 45631. ·

Wilma Harrison
Wilma L. Harrison, 79, of 425
Salem Dr: , Pittsburgh, Pa. ,
formely of Gallipolis, died Mon·
day at St. Clair Hospital In
Pittsburgh. She was retired from

Reds top
Astros in

'

.. Pick 3

'90 opener

934
· Pick4
6579

•

'

De£endant found in
• d ge
COntempt by JU

Stocks·

/

..

w•na

which will open May 1; and the
Men's Wednesday League which
. starts May 2. Call the club house
to sign up.
Alumni to meet
• Officers of th~ Rutland Alumni
Association will meet Monday, 8
p.m. at the home of Richard
Rupe, Wright Street, Pomeroy. ·
The theme of this year's
reunion Is "The Nifty Fifties."
' The banquet will be held May
, 26, 6: 30 p.m. The.cost Is $10 per
person.
i For graduates unable to at·
tend, the membership fee Is $2.
' Anyone Interested In helping Is
Invited to attend tonight's
meeting.

Middleport (_:ouncil
approves pay hike, .
another paid holiday

Revival slated
The Vanderhoof Baptist
Church will have a pre-Easter
revival Wednesday through Sat·
urday at 7 p.m. nightly.
The evangelist will be Charles
Ferrell, Pine Grove, W.Va.
·
· There will be special singing
each evening featuring . the
church choir on Wednesday,
Russ Spencer Group on Thurs·
day, Tommy and Marty Fuller·
ton on Friday, and The Kin Folk
on Saturday.
The P!Jbllc Is Invited to attend.
Offices lo close
.
The officeS of Pl'aoned Parent·
hood In Pomeroy will be closed
Wednesday due to a staff
meeting.

5 l•gt IIOI'IIIIflll •
Sturll~ c:ollli'ucllan
En~mtl 11nllfl.

•

S159 S119

WAIIIDIICLUSll

rull111irrer • 1111r licks •
T.. llltlflllrlll • 1rtw11.

COMMERCIALLY ENGI
• Heavier
gauge steel
construction
• Super
Storage
Cabinet
• Built for
home, office,
garage,
basement.
canning
supplies,
.workshop

· COLUMBUS. Ohio t.UPil Edge sends out cleverly dls- he said.
The_s,\Jlf!l~attorney _ ge!l~H!.: ~ l!l!iil'ei!•&gt; maiiiii!I&amp;'-- WIIIcll make _ s;:~l~brezzt' ., s~ld he has , r~
ojf~~ flle&lt;j s~fi .~«;~llc;ll!Y8gainsta,.' ~pie believe• they hi!Ye won a ~~~Yilt~ . 1."!0,, ,comp.\alnts ·• Wut
Worthington firm for alleged use prize. When they telephone to Consumer's Edge. ''These folks
of fl~~t_!v_e .. so.llclt~tl~ns for a verify the prize, they ~re .giY~JI a have as th~lr . Intent ripping
litiyh)g club·."'
.
. sales pitch for the buyers' club, corlsuiners off," ite said.
The attorney general cited as
In the suit filed In Franklin he said.
one
example the. free gift of a
County Common Plea$ Court
said
consumers
are
Celebrezze
seven-day·
, six-night Las Vegas
against Consumer's Edge, Attar·
told
they
can
save
40
percent
to
70
vacation offered by Consumer's
ney. General Anthony Celebrezze
sought $250,000 In civil penalties Percent through the buyers' club. Edge. Upon reading the fine
and $45,000 in refunds for "Rarely, however, have. print, however, the consumer
members been able to order . discovered he· must pay an $85
consumers.
merchandise cheaper through registration fee, . and trav.el to
Consumer's Edge· than could be and !rom Las Vegas by Grey · '
The attorney · gener11l told a
press conference Consumer's
obtained at 'ocal retail stores ," .hound bus.

Local news briefs---.

·Sl29

Truck crash injures·Pomeroy man
A Pomeroy man was Injured In a truck crash Monday at 8: 30·
a.m. In Chester Township on S.R. 248, 5.2 miles east of the
junction of S.R. 7, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
Donald R. Folmer, 32, of 34225 Flatwoods Rd., was taken by
ambulance to Holzer Medical Center, where he was treated and
released for bruises· and scrapes.
Fotmer, driving a 1985 Ford F-700 straight-axle truck owned
by the Ohio Qepartment of Transportation, was heading east .
when he ran off the right side of the road. At that point. the truck .
overturned.
Folmer was not cited In the crash.
~ •

·-·

•

I

FUINI1UIE, APPUANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COVEIING

.

Europ~an host~ges

released

-·

About.iOochlldrenarelnvolved
In the Youth League activities,
according to Wise. He talked
about everytHing the parents and
other volunteers have done to
lniprove the field Including In·
stal)ing steps on the hlllsld&lt;;! with
lumber purchased by the village.
Wise also noted that as far as the
lights on the field, he should be
credited with getting therrt.
·
' He also stated that the Youth
Leaque was upset . about not
having restrooms to which
Mayor Hoffman replied that
money for construction of the
rest rooms has been approved

and. the plans completed but
funding as yet has not been
released.
_
Wise also ques tloned how
much of the Income tax had been
spent on the park. The mayor
noted that more than 10 percent
had gone to recreation last year,
that, In fact, about $30,QOO haC\
been spent on recreation In 19.8\).
Wise said that the Youth
League had spent $7,1)()() In 1989.
He spoke of the need for tele·
phone service. said that a pay
phone had been Installed, but
that what was needed was a
Continued on page 5

Deputies probe theft
of gun frc&gt;m trailer .
Meigs Sheriff's deputies are
Sou)hern Cil!lo .COal Company
office at Point Rock. The Incident
Investigating the theft . of ~
shotgun from a trailer owned by occurred between 11 p.m . anil
Norma Coleman, Hudson Valley
midnight Satur~ay .
Road, Reedsville. According to a
Rick Chancey, Minersville,
reported that sometime bel.ween
report from Sheriff James M.
Souls by, Coleman had been In the 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. Saturday,
hospital and returned Mond~y someone stole a bar type grill
night to find the trailer had been from his 1978 Ford Bronco while
entered and ransacked. The only It was parked at his residence.
thing r-eport~,&lt;;\. missing; was a
Rollert W. Riffle, Racine. was
12-guage· Mose'Berg shotgun.
fec'l!ntly •·•sentenced In . Meigs
Coleman's neighbors told her County Court to sen;e a term of 17
they saw. . two _vehicles at the months and 20 -days lh the Orient
trailer last Friday night and Correctional Institution on
lights were on In the trailer. The charges of OWl, dl'lvlng under
vehicles left shortly after dark.
suspension, fleeing an officer,
· criminal damaging and proba·
Investigation Is continuing.
On Sunday , deputies took a tlon revocation following an ,
report that security officers incident In Racine. Riffle Is In
found a window· glass had been custody of the sheriff pending
broken on a vehicle parked at the transportation to Orten t.

-

Launch delayed at least 48 hours
By WILUAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer •
CAPE CANAVERAL; Fla. The shuttle Discovery's launch
on a hfl;torlc flight to put the $1.5
billion Hubble Space Telescope
In orbit was delayed at least two
days Tuesday because of troubl~ ·
with the ship's hydraulic steering
system.
"We w,Ul scrub for today
because ·of a problem wl th
auxiliary power unit No.. 1,"
NASA launch commentator
George Diller said shortly after
Discovery's countdown stopped ,
at the T·mlnus four-minute
mark. ''We will now have an
analysis of the data and look at
our options ."
It was a frustrating dlsppolntment to shuttle skipper Loren
Shriver .~5.- co,plloL Charles
Bolden, 43, fllgbtenglneerSteven
Hawley, 38, Bruce McCandless,
52, and "athryn Sulllvan, 38, who

climbed out of the stlll·fueled
space shu-ttle about. 45 minutes
after the countdoWn was stopped.
A new takeoff date was .not
lmmedlat.ely announced but
launch director Robert Sleek
ruled out an attempt Wednesday,
pushing liftoff to no earlier than
Thursday at 8:44 a.m . and
possibly longer.
He said Monday that If Dlscovery Is not launched by Friday, the
mission will be delayed eight
days or so because of required ·
11/0rk to open the shuttle's pay.
load bay doors to recharge the
-space telecope's batteries.
Shriver and his all-veteran
crew had been scheduled for
liftoff on the 35th shuttle mission
at 8:47 a.m. Tuesday, but the
countdown was stopped when one
of the shuttle's three "APUs-" _
failed to perform properly.
The auxiliary power units ,
which are not fired up until the

T -mlnus five-minute mark In the
countdown, are crucial because
they provide the muscle to move
the shuttle's wing flaps, rudder
and rocket nozzles for steerlllg
during the thundering cltmb to
space and during re-entry.
While the shuttle can fly with
just one operational APU, con·
servatlve flight rules require all
thr!"e to be performln.g properly
before a ship can be cleared for
liftoff.
The delay also Was a 'dlsap· ·
polntmept to the hundreds of
scientists and engineers w.ho .
have devoted years to the space
telescope project, already run- .
nlng seven years behind schedule :
and more than $1 billlon over ·
budget. Whenever It gets off the
ground, the costly telescope
promlses to...teJLolu.tlonlze optical
astronomy.
When Discovery does up, ·
Continued oon page 5

Malfunction cause
of unpaid claims

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -None.
Saturday discharges -James
Bentz, Ruby Stewart, Kenneth
Hartley.
Sunday admissions - Anna
Cook, Pomeroy; John McKenzie,
Pomeroy.
Sunday disc barges - Wlley
Ours.

A divorce has been granted In
MelgB Common Pleas Court to
Gloria L. Slayton from Russell L.
Slayton.

State files suit against firm

' By CHARLENE HOEFLI.CH
Sentinel News Staff ·
An ordinance providing for a 25
cent an hour salary Increase for
village employees effective May
1 and another paid holiday next
year was adopte,d by Middleport
VIllage Councll Monday nlgbh ·
The hotlday to be add!'~!' to
those already received by em·
ployees Is President's Day .
CQuncll also established a sick
leave policy for those retiring
from village employment . It
provides that retiring employees
receive pay for 50 percent of their
accumulated sick leave with a
maximum of 60 days to be paid.
The policy passed by a vote of
4~2 with Bob Gllnlore and
Williams Walters voting against
the action because they felt the
percentage was too high and
would cost the village too much
money. The other council
·members, Dewey Horton, James
Clatwortny, Paul Gerard and
Jack Satterfield, voted In favor of
tile 50 percent payment.
Gene Wise, · president of the
Middleport Youth League, met
with council to discuss the
problems of keeping the Hartin·
ger Park ball fields In good ·
playing condition.
, .Wise,oald that while he •haa had .
good coo!lera:t'lon ·· f~om· Mayor
Fred Hoffman and Roger WIIU··
ams, recreation "director, the
league needs more Input with the
Middleport :Recreation Commission and j)etter cooperation from
the members. He said that he has
repeatedly asked the Commls·
slon .for a lawnmower that tlte
Youth League can use to keep the
grass cut a~ound the fields.

· BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) my babv e:lrt."
rls, French state·O\"ned televl·
A French government plane slon network Antenne 2, citing
Three hl)s tages - a Frettc h
left Paris Tuesday to pick up the diplomats In Beirut, said the boy
woman, ·her Belgian boyfriend
three. officials said.
and their baby daughter -were
died of fntestinal complications.
. Abu Nidal's Fatah,Revolutlon·
freed Tuesdav In front of the
In December 1988, Valente's
arv Cot,tncll said It snatched two other daughters, Marie·
Frencli Embassy following ne'go·
Valente, two·other daughters and Laure Betllle, 6, and Vlrgl.nle, 5,
'tlallons between Belgian offi·
five Belgians from a pleasure were released In Libya and
clals and the Abu Nidal extremist
boat off the coast of the Israeli· rejoined their father, Pascal.
group.
occupied Gaza Strip Nov. 8,1987. Betllle.
.The.. release~also came after
The group accused the captives
Llbvan leader Moammar Gad·
Besides the group of hostages
of spying for IsraeL
hafi last Wednesday called for
seized off the Gaza coast,18 other
Houteklns said the remaining Westerners, eight oft hem Amerl·
the release of Western hostages ·
four Belgian captives have high cans, , kidnapped In Lebanon
to mark the Moslem holy month
morale and added, "We keep remain held there by pro-Iranian
of Ramadan.
high 'hopes that they will be freed extremist groups. Among their
Five gunmen In two cars
too."
d~opped Jacqueline Valente, 31,
demands · are. the release of
Valente Indicated she was kept hundreds of Palestinians In IsFernand Houteklns, 42, and their
at a remote hideout.
baby daughter, Sophie, near the
. raell jails .and freedom for 17
·'We are ail in a good condition Arabs- con.'ilcted of terrorist
main gate of the tree-shaded
but we- are tlred oi traveTing, " activities In Kuwait .
French Embassy In west Beirut
she said.
shortly after daybreak.
The Fatah Revolutionary
She also acknowledged She had . Council said Sund~y It would
Embassy security officers
given birth to another baby In respond to the appeal by Gadhafl
then accompanied Valente, who
wore a velvet jacket, Houteklns· captivity but said the baby boy, by freeing Valente, Houteklns
and their baby Inside the who she named Palestine, lived and their baby girl, Sophie.
only a year.
.
building.
•
French ambassador Rene Ala
"I kiss all my relatives,"
said the boy had died despite
•
Valente told reporters Inside the
embassy, "I'm fine along with · treatment from doctors. In Pa·

Hospital news

Divorce granted

the l&amp;boralory work for the M~lp Count)'·
LAB WEEK OBSERVED - As a part of the
Department
of Health. staff pictured at the
observance of National Laboralory Week, April
luncheon
are,
left to rl&amp;llt, front, Karen Clark,
8-14, . at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Cecelia
Usle,
and Nancy GrHIUb, pbleboto·
CLA,
Mrs.
Usle MT, the lab department supervisor,
ente~lalned laboratory slaff members with a · mist and secretary, and hack, Julla Quallll, MLT,
Julia Wlll MT and assistant supervisor, Lareq .
luncheon Monday. Mrs. Usle bas announced that
her department effective this week wtll·be doing · Riffle, MLT, and Sheila Taylor, MLT.

Three
'UTILITY CAIIIIET

2 Soct!Qno, 12 P•goo 26 Cento
A Multimedi• Inc. NewiPaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. Apri110, 1990

MOW OPE FOR THE
SPRING SEASON!

v...

Low loni&amp;IM In mlds 48,
Chance of rain near teo
perce•t. Wednesday, hl&amp;h In
mid 408. Chance of preclplta·

Page4

Ohio Super l..otto jackpot grows

Cole who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio six tickets $100 each and 9,022 :
At 8:44 a.m., Middleport went
two-of·slx tickets $10 apiece.
:
Lottery ottlclals said Sunday no
to South Fourth Avenue for
tickets· were sold bearing all six
Dorothy Pierce to Holzer Medinumbers In Saturday's Super .
cal Center.
Lotto drawing for a $10 mllllori
Pomeroy was called at 9: 41
jackpot.
a.m. to the Pomeroy Pollee
That means the top prize for
FOI EASTEI
Department for Christine Pulllns
Wednesday's !Irawing will be at
whO was treated but not . least $14 million.
Lilies, Muml, Tulps,
transported.
.
Saturday's wlnnjng numbers
Hyaelnths, Hydrangeas,
Syracuse Fire Department at
were 6, 12, 14, 20, 26 and 28.
Caladl- .
11:44 a.m; was called to a brush ·
There were 240 tlcltets (worth
.'
ALSO: Complete llno of
fire on Route 124 at Minersville.
$1,000 each) sold bearing five of
Pomeroy Fire --r5epartment
tablo and
the numbers and 10,795 ($75
was called at 12: 33 p.m. to a
Plants,
Blooming and
apiece) with four otthe numbers.
brush fire on Condor Street.
FDIIogo llanghig llaslcots.
In Saturday's accompanying
At 5:12 p.m. , Middleport Fire
Kicker game, one ticket was sold
Fruit and Flowering Trill,
Department responded to a
bearing all six numbers In exact 1
Shrubs, Azalocis and
brush fire on Zuspan Hollow · order. The correct combination
Road.
lhododlndrfor the $100,000 top prize was
Pomeroy at 5:52 p.m. was
HUUAID'S GIDNHOUSE
451289.
called to Wetzgal Street for
SYIACUSL OliO
Eight flve·of·~lx tickets are
Naree Florian who was taken to
worth $5,000 each, 95 four·of-slx ,
992-5776
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
tickets $1,000 apiece, 909 three-of·
0 on Doll 9-6· Sun. 1-6
Pomeroy at 7: 25 p.m. was
called to Condor . Street for
Chester Arthur to · Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
, Middleport at 9: 14 p.m. was
called to Overbrook Center for
Roy Showalter to Veterat;ts'Mem·
orial Hospital. ·

Meigs ·a nnouncements---

ea
· deaths

Michael Wachs

Ohio Lottery

Rent-0-Camp offered
at·Forked Run Park
.

Name 11ew officers
New officers were elected for
the Faith Gospel Ladles Circle
when the group met at the home
of Mary Allee Blse for their April
meeting. VIrginia Walton served
. Gallipolis Developmental as co-hostes-sfor the meeting.
Center.
Sandy Cowdery led devotions
BornMay3,19101nRac!ne,she
with her program "Only the
Gardener.'
'
Was a daughte.r of t.h e late Dale
·
.
It was reported thatdthe group
Lee and Lillian Hobsledder.
b
She was married to Ted John·
made 116 shut· In calls urlng t e
son and Chancey E. Harrison,
past month.
both who preceded her In death.
VIvian Humphrey won the door
Surviving are two sons, Terry
prize.
Johnson of Saudi Arabia and Ted
MemberS' and friends atte~td·
Johnson of Pittsburgh, Pa.; six
lng the meeting Included Cheryl
grandchildren, three great·
Eddy, Bobble Reed, Pat Martin,
grandchildren; two brothers,
Erika Boring, VlvlanHumpbrey,
Jake Lee of Racine and Russ Lee
Thelma Smith, Nell Wilson,
·of Westchester, Ohio; two siS·
Audra Ruckman, Verna Rose,
ters, Norma Tasslan of Ctncln·
Emma Durst, Diane White, Lynn
nail, Ohio and RoSe Clark of El
and Tommy; Dolly Reed, Pearl
Campo, Texas.
Baker, Sandy Cowdery, Tammy
Servic~wilt-be- announced by -.~Gowderq;-and Debbie Barringer.
Waugh·Halley·Wood Funeral
GoH leapes slated
Home.
Get out the clubs and sign up
·
for golf league at Jay Mar Golf
Club. The club's golf leagues will
be starting soon, Including the
Ladles Monday Evening League
which will open on April 30; the
·
•
Ill the Meigs Common Pleas
Men's Tuesday Evening League
Court case of Denise Darst
against Richard Darst, the defendaht bas been found In con·
tempt of court for non-payment .
of $2,592.56 fat past due obllga·
Dally stock ·prices
tlons to Bank One, Athens, and
non-payment of $'152.35 as his
(As of 18:30 Lm.)
Bryce
and Mlll'k Smlih
share of· marital debts. The
of
Blunt,
Elllll 6 Loewl
defendant has been sentenced to
20 days In jail.
Am E.lectric Power ......., ..... 30';4
· In the case of Teresa C. Carr
AT&amp;T
................. ........ ... :..... 42
against Ronald L. Carr, the
Ashland
Oll ......... ....... ... .... .35%
plaintiff bas been granted judg·
Bob
Evans
..................... ...... 13
ment against the defendant for
Cl1armlng
Sboppes
.... ... ........ 8%
back taxes and Insurances In the
City
Holding
Co
.................
.13lh
sum of $378.55.
Federal
MoguJ...
.................
16%
. An action by Melissa G. Bailey
Goodyear
T&amp;R
...................
36';4
against Clinton J .' Bailey has
Heck's
......................
..
.........
2%
been dismissed.
Key Centurion ..................... 14
Ucenses issued
Lands' End ........................... 19
Limited Inc ...................... 43%
Marriage licenses have been · Multimedia Inc .......... .... :.... 76lh
Issued In Meigs PrObate Court to
Rax Restaurants .............. .... 2lh
Douglas Alan Burns, 37, PomeJl,obblns &amp; Myers ................15%
roy, and Frances Lorene Lui·
Shoney's Inc . ............ ..........13%
kart, 40, Racine; Jertfey Don Star Bank.; ......... ........ ........18%
Friend, 34, Rutland, and Mitzi Weney's Int'l.. .... ................. 4%
Ann·Klaiber, 36, Racine.
Worthington Ind ........ .... ...... 21'12
'

Monday, Apri 9, 1990

~

992-3671
. ,
DOWIROWI POIIEIOY I OHIO

Kindergarten registration April 20
Registration for the Southern Local School District ·
kindergarten will be April 20 at the kindergarten building In
Racine from 8:1:;.11 a.tn. and 12:30-2:45 p.m..
Parents must provide their child's birth certificate and
Continued on page 5

-

·I
Jo

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
computer problem In the Oblo
Department of Human SerVIces
that lias caused a backlog of
more than 4,000 unpaid Medicaid
claims Is expected to be cor·
rected by Wednesday.
Jim Burnosky, deputy director
for Information systems for the
state agency, said Monday com·
puler experts are working extra
hours to ensure that Ohio phar·
macles, which are owed about'
$250,000, get paid In the next two
weeks.
"It Is a problem," he said. •·we
e~pect ttnal adjustments to the
system (Tuesday or
Wednesday)."
The problem Is a computer
program c~lled CRIS-E (Client
Registry Inflirinatlon SystemsEnhanced), which Is designed to
Unk the names of the people
eligible for Mecllcatd to the
people who write the checks to
pharmacies.

A NEW 1.00&amp; FOR NOB'DIIJECOND - Tllll ·
lot oa Nortlllleeoad St. In Middleport, vaeu' for
.evoral )'tll'l after a fiN d•Wa)'eclllle atNcl• e
lllea occupied by Empire Fltnllhtre, II &amp;allltlc• a
new loolt. All at&amp;radlve brick atnatare II ll!lder
co!IIICraclloa li)' Creative Cotdrlle&amp;OI'I owned by
Mlteh Me141o- 'nle flnt Door of llle two 1tory
llulldlM will be oeeupled by llle ~rlptlotiSbop

wdt ij.e - a d ••ry will be av....hle for
profeMional ~.The buiJdlnc, t8 X 18 feet, will
be • feet lltcb ... llave an .. , brick fron' wltll
pal..dtan wladCJwl, Meadows anllclp!dea that K
will lie cempleted by June 1. Here Jack Ly-.lell
and Michael Roull work on the front double
doon.

-·---:."&gt;-----' ...'.---~ ·-~-~--...:_-.,..-----------·---;--~--;):----:--7----- · -:J~ -

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�•
1990

Commentary
'

.Wellston edges Meigs 4-2 .in
TVC tilt; .girls split in ·2 tilts

Page-2-The Daily Saati1el
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, Apri110, 1990

'

Another CODtroversy___Ja_ck_·_A_nd_.e_rs_on_.&amp;_·_l)_a_le..:;_Vi_an_A_tta_

The Daily Sentinel

'

has launched Its own
tty and to convince consumers
WASHINGTON - The Fo'od
Investigation.
that BST mUk Is safe.
and
Drug
Administration
was
far
Ill Court Street
But
Instead
ofbetngdlssuaded,
But some experts remain un·
from humbled by Its' r.ecent
.
Pomeroy, Ohio
the
FDA
Is
barreling
ahead
with
convinced.
Dr. Samuel Epstein
generic
drug
scandal.
Instead
of
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
BST
for
wtdes·
plans
to
approve
of
the
University
of Illinois
· being more cautious about the
pread
u5e.
Ami
the
chief
critic
of
.II~
School
of
Public
Health
has been
·approval of drugs · and food
ts!m~ · ,......._,._-r,.......,;o::~,-=MT
·
wl
thin
the
agency,
Dr.
a
food
safety
advocate
· for 30
additives, the FDA looks like an
~v
Richard
Burroughs,
was
fired
years.
He
challenged
'
the
beef
agency bent on self-destruction.
after
he
raised
Qbjecttons
to
tlie
.Industry
for
injectlilg
growth
The debacle du jour Is the
ROBERT }... Wlii!GE1T
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
review process for bovl!le soma· ' rubber· stamp . treatment BST hormones lnt11 cattle, and now he
Publish~•
· · General Manacer
was gettli\g.
. h'as turn~ Ills attention to BST.
totropl!l (BSTJ ·-:- a synthetic
years
ago;
the
FDA
Five
Epstein recen.tly stepped up hls
growth hormone injected ill cows
PAT WHITEHEAD
BST
on
test
approved
the
use
of
after s~Irig the test data
attack
so they wUI give more mllk. Last
Assistant Publisher/Controller
cows
pending
full
approval
for
!rom
the
BST manufacturers and
fall we exposed the confidential
widespread
use.
·Many
Amerl·
how
the
FDA treated that data.
studies from three companies
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
cans
have
already
tasted
BST
Epstein
told
our associate Tim
that make BST, Those studies,
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
mUll; because the milk from the Warner that the FDA approved
submitted to the FDA as part of
test cows has been mingled with
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
the sale of BST mllk from the test
the approv!!-1 process, showed
words long. Ali letters are subject to editing arid must be signed with
regular
supply.
the
cows
without proof that It was
that cows injected Wjth BST may
name, address andlelephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
The
synthetic
hormone
ts
made
safe
for publlc con~umptlon.
lose weight and suffer low
II shed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues. not personall·
by
Monsanto
Agricultural
Co.,
Epstein
CI\IIS the BST approval
fertillty rates •. anemia and mastities.
·-·~ ~·
,.~
American
Cyanamid
and
Elanco
process
the worst el!ample of
tis . And the jury .Is stU! out on
·'
·
(a
joint
venture
of
Dow
Chern!·.
"suppression
.and manipulation
what effect JIST will have on
'
cal,
Upjohn
and
Ell
L1lly.)
11tose
,
data"
by
the
FDA that he has
of
people whO ·drhlk milk from
companies stand to, ·make an seen In his 30 years · as a
treated cows. . . ,
·
estimated $500 mUllan a year off watChdog.
.
·
A senator and 'two representa·
BST
If
widely
accepted
·by
nurroughs
was
the
.Inside
lives have asked the FDA ·to
farmers. The companies have watchdog untU ' the FDA fired
scrutinize the way It has handled
embarked on a massive publlc him. He was a target animal
the BST . approval process, and
rela.t tons campaign to wln safety reviewer at the FDA's
the General Accounting Office
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
friends
In the farming commun·
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- The Democrats seem to have composed a new
ETTA~~~~o fOI(f V&lt;011:n\ ~l).J :tei.B&gt;12A"""U \....::../
"../
version of the old ditty In which the girl asks her mother If she can go
HULMEif·i,
·
0
. ~od
swimming and is told, "Yes, my darling daughter, but don't go near
~el'r
,
ihe water."
•
"':.~
--~
_,_
Meeting last month In Indianapolis, the Democratic National
Committee adopted a lengthy resolution abhorlng "negatlve·political
,:,..
'/
0
attacks" by Democrats against other Democrats during the
0 "'1
/\Q o
presidential primaries.
Starting with 1968, the resolution said, such "lnternecln~warfare''
lias done the eventual oemocratc candidate more harm than any
Republican and had "the net effect" of electing Richard Nixon,
Ronald Reagan and George Bush and of driving "millions of former
·Democrats from 'our ranks."
All that having been said, the resolution called on the chairman of
the Democratic National Committee to find ways to conduct
. . '. . 0
primaries that will ensure open and vigorous debate among the
,, (&gt; o· ,'candidates without producing "the type of self·defeatlng results that
0 u"o'
have hurt our nominee and our party during the past generation."
· 0
This conflicting directive to national Chairman Ron Brown to foster
energetic.butharmless campaigning for the presidential nomination
Q
is the "don't go near the water" feature of t he resolution, but there is.
.0 .
spmethtng else about It that begs examination.
10 .
That is the resolution's underlying premise - .that lntram11ral
·coo ..
Democratic disagreement ha.s had a major role In the party's loss of
0 \}
~
all but one of the last six presidential elections. ·
' '
·on the other ~Ide of the ballot, It Is true that GOP candidates
frequently claim to subscribe to an "Eleventh Commandment" ·'One Republican does not attack another Republican."
But that Injunction certainly was violated In 1980, when Bush,
seeking the GOP nomination, referred tq Reagan•s·tdeas as "voodoo
economics." and much more recently in 1988 when Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas accused Bush of te111ng lies about hlm. As we all saw, both
Reagan and Bush went on to win the presidency after these knocks by
•
fellow Republicans ..
· Nor have all Democrats who had to survive attacks by their fellows
~
,
·
gone down to defeat.
'
~
Way back in 19!)0, J9hn Kennedy was the t!lrget of liberals who
THE 6AH~
COUL~I'·l'T
wanted Adlai Stevenson to have another shot at the White House, and
.
.
who pictured .the Massachusetts senator as a lightweight who had
·
nothing going for htin but hls father's money.
Fifteen years later, Democrats organtzed.agatnstJ!minyCarter as
)le rolled up 1976 convention delegates, coalescing at one point into an
ABC movement- "Anybody but, Carter."
Thanks for mung out · your Bureau.
·
global model that ever, because
Carter was criticized as a Southerner by Northern Democrats and
census 1arm. s evera
·
1d
h
So data pours out steadliy we now come from all.,over the
ays ave .
as a conserva tve by llberai.Democrats, but he won the nomination
now passed, so I can give you the freshets, streams, rivers, Ntaga·
globe.
··
.
'and the election anyway. It inight be argued that these attacks dld
key results
ras of numbers. And It's usually
Economic growth Is back on
nurt hls presidency, but they did not keep htm out of the White House.
You thought 11 took longer than pretty good data; America has
track. Th,e Idea that the real
The point of all this is not to argue that Internal bickering has no
that? That because there were been the pioneer in the hardware
income of Americans had
harmful effect on politlcal·parties.'lt surely does hurt some, but If the
480 000 people hired to conduct and theory of the social sciences.
s.topped growing was always
Democrats start believing that Is what beat them In 1968, 1972, 1980,
th~ Census,' that be e ause
(A century ago a Cens~s eng!·
suspect.Itlsclearnowthateven
1984 and 1988, they probablll are doomed to keep on losing.
9,360,000 penclls were worn down neer Invented an automatic card·
If It happened, It's not happening
Their problem, and it does 110t take a rocket scientist to define, Is
by &lt;;:ensus workers, It wouid take punching device; he then set up a
now. Incomelsup-andpoverty,
that they have failed to combine good enough candidates and Issues to .
•
company that would later be
unem(.'oyment and ·inflat.lon are
hll 1 •
attract the votes needed to wln the presidency . ..
a ~·s t~~e, thetirstactualresults called I.B,M. In the '30s, Amerl·
down. That's 'why we can
(barely) afford e~penstvehealth
.of the Cens~s won't be published c11n scholars 1tgure4 out how to
for months, and the statistics and ·make sampling work.)
care, and why we live·longer.
·
Ul b
All that is what lets me tell you,
we have more schoollng than
,.
t apes
w
e com1ng· ou1 for
.
· ·
f
many years. If you are breath· now, In staccato bursts, what's
ever befo,re. The rates o young
lessfordetaUs-llkethefertU!ty happening, atattmewhenwhat's
people graduathig from high
By United Prt.~s International
r ate s of Korean -Am er tea n . ·going on 1n America Is of unusual
school and college are at all· ti~e
Today is Tuesday, Aprll10, the l OOth day of 1990 with 265 to follow.
women between ages 25 and 29 Importance. After all, suddenly
highs. ·Don't as~ what they re
The moon is fulL
who were born In Korea - don't we're the only superpower left learning.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
be
the most tnfluentlal !latlon tn
The suburbs of metropolitan
; The evening stars are Mer~ury · jlnd Jupiter.
• But Ironically, partly because world history.
areas are booming. The "rural
the decennial Census Is so
And we're doing pretty well.
renaissance" - the move from
·
urban areas to rural areas - has
.
Thusly ·
'
comprehens l ve, an d par tlY b e·
cause the U.S. government sta·
America Is becoming the !trst
stopped. Los Angeles will over·
tistlcal personnel do such highly universal nation. - Because of
take J'i!ew York City .as the
professional work, we already Immigration of Asians, Hlspan·
biggest metropol~tan area .. The
know most ofthe Important stuff. tcs and Moslems, It can be said,
Washington, D·.C .·Maryland·
The blg Census ts what forms the . finally, that Americans come
VIrginia metro a~ea Is surging.
Phoenix and Tampa-St. Peters·
grid for our statistical system, !rom everywhere. It's the most
w_p...N\
Including the monthly sample Important new demographic fact
burg · are out of. s l g h t.
surveys taken by the .Census of our times. We wl)l be more of a
Mtnneapolls·St. .Paul keeps on

.

.

The Democrats.
dodge reality

..

'-"'0 ,. , G Q -,,

,G'" .

u

---·--

The Eastern Eaglettes of
.Coach Pam Douthitt are ana roll,
boosting .t heir record to 8·0 last
·night with a 3·2 win ~ver league
.contender Symmes Valley, In ,
girls softball action. . Earlier
· ,, ·Eastern. had defeaterd Southern
In a SVAC game, 12·1.
· Eastern Is now5·01a theSVAC,
and g.o overall: Symmes Is 3·2 in-...
'the SVAC, Kyger Creek 4·1 and
Southern 3-1 before last night's
PlaY..
Mary Ann Kibble had the lone
Eastern hit.
· Dee Blankenship had two sln·
gles, F. Connolly had two singles,
Rhonda Stevens had a single, and
.Lori Freeman had a single for
1lYmmes V!llley.
Edna .Driggs agatn j?ltched an
great game, but .was hit harder
'than In her previous eight out·
'lngs, which were all wins.
Driggs, a hard thrgwlng jun·
nior hurler, was the winning ·
pitcher with five strikeouts and
no walks, with one hit batter.
Lorrie Baker was the catcher.
, Jan Clifton was the Symmes
.pitcher who suffered the loss with
'eleven strikeouts and six walks
~as she and Driggs hooked up In an
·exciting pitching battle.
C. Smathers and Schneider
were the Symmes catchers.
Driggs struck the first batter
out In the second and ran on the
call third strike, but reached on
an error, went to third on an
overthrow and then came home
,on another error, the score.1·0.
In the fifth inning Smith, a hit
'batter reached base, · .Conl!olly
and Freeman both bunted back
to back for base hits to load the
bases. Blankenship then reached
on an error to score Smith f~om
. third to give Symmes a 2·0 lead.
Eastern. scored two in the
bottom of the fifth, when Mary
, Kibble, · a pinch hitter singled,

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SHOOT BULLETS

America,.come to your Census . Ben Watten~erg

.

Today in history

Berry's World

~1
10 e&gt;uy
AN ELECTRONIC
.TRIG6ER\NG .

weekly

DEVICE fOR

A BOMB.
CERTAINLY.'
NUCI..EAR,

or&lt;

1-\YDROGE.~ ~
\

•

v

•

S~teho~se

The Ohio General Assembly
this week took a major step
toward making our state one of .
the nation's leaders In eFadtcat·
lng drunk drJvlng.
_
The Senate and Hou'se passed
the sent to Governor Richard F.
Celeste legislation, S .•B. lSI, that
Increases fines and llcj?!!se su~·
pensions fOr drunken-driving of·
tenses. The. b111 o~~Iso limits
occupational 4ftvtng prtvlleges
and milkes It a traffic offense for
16 and 17·year·olds todrtvewttha
,lllood alcohol content of 0.02.
These new restrictions will take
place 90 days 'after Govern&amp;r
Celeste, as he' .has promised,
. stgns the b1ll. .
· I was please~l'to support this
blll with Its· tougher enforcement
provisions, bec(luse there Is
nothing more Important as a
state legislator than making sure
that our citizens are protected
!rom drunken drivers. The per·
sonal tragedy of losing · a loved
one In an accident caused by
drunken driving hits llome too
hard to allow anything but
society's most severe dlsappro. '

growing .. One day the culture will
catch up, where ls the suburban
equivalent of "Thank God I'm a ·
C t B ,,
oun ry oy ·
T!te Northeast will be shown as
the least populous region of the
~unt1·A:at your heart out,
amue
ams.
Minorities are doing better
. than reported. There were about
· 125,000 black college graduates
1ft 1950. The number has doubled
eat;h decade since- to 21l)1111on.
fllspanlcs are upwardly mobile .
ln the way that Poles and Itallans
were earlier
·
Women are doing better, movlng Into better Jobs, making more
money relative to men than they
used to ..But, h~ney • t)tey shrunk
the kids, the 80s were yet one
more decade when our fertUlty
Fates were well below what Is
required to merely keep a
1 tt
t bl
tl
popu a . on s a e over me.
In all. Folks from everywhere,
living In big urban swaths,
making money, not having very
many children, getting educated,
getting ready for the brave. new
world just now dawning.

The Daily Sentinel
CIJ8P81tMII)

report ~..,.--_Se_n.--....:.Jan_M_.Lo_n_g

val through stiff penalties.
.
One of the key parts of the b1li Is
the fact that police wm now have
the power to confiscate drlvlng
privileges on the spot for drivers
who refU$e to take a sobriety test
and for drivers charged with a
second drunken driving offense.
The suspension of driving
privileges would continue untU
the individual appears before a
judge, who would decide whether
that suspension was appropriate.
This Is a big change from current
laws, which allows drivers cited
lor drunken driving to continue to
operate their motor vehicle unttl
their court arraignment, which
must occur within five days.
The b111 also creates a new
offense of aggravated vehicular
·assault. This would make ' It .
either a third or fourth degree
felony for a person; wh1leoperat·
tng or participating In the opera·
tion of a motor vehicle, to
"recklessly cause serious physl·
cal harm to &amp;!!other." ·
The b111 would establish
tougher penalties for fourth and
subsequent drunken driving of·

game, Stewari aitd Kevin Taylor
combined to give up6 hits, strike
out 8, walk 4 and hit two batt~rs .
· Seymore led thewinnersai the .
plate with two singles, Ratcliff
added a double, and Orender,
Pottill:ndJ\'sh.ley each singled.
Jason Wright led Meigs·at the
plate with two singles, Taylor
and Wright each doubled and
Walts· singled.
Meigs ·will host Trimble in a
make-up game on. Wednesday
night.
. .
Unescore: ·
Wellston ..... .'.......... 200 001 1-4·6
Meigs .................... 000 OlO 1·2·5
Stewart, Taylor (7) and Crooks ·
Hendershoot and Frisby
Glrll epUt pair
The Meigs Marauders girls
softball team recently spilt two
T.V.C. games wtth Belpre and
Wellston to even their record at 3
and 3.
Belpre defeated the Maraud·
ers 12·3 In . action last Friday
night,
Trtcla B!ler led the
Mar!luders at the plate with . a
single, double and.a triple. Kathy
Lambert added a double, Shan·.
non Newsome, Kristen. Stanley,

fenders . These penalties would
consist of a fine of $750 to $10,000,
and a minimum jan term of 60 .
days. The current fines range
from $150 to $1,000.
The bill also v.tould Increase
fines for first, second and third
time offenders. The new fine
ranges would be from $200 to
$1,000 for first offenders, up from
the current $150 to $1,000. For
second offenders, fines would
range from $500 to $1,500, up from
the current $150 to $1,000. For
third time offenders, fines would
range from $500 to $2,500, up from
the current $150 to $1,000 fine. .
The blll also provides s!)ectflc
misdemeanor penaltl~ for drlv- ·
lng whtle their . licenses are
suspended due fo drunken dr)v· ·
lilg violations. It would authorize
counties or other muntctpaljtles
to use vacant or abandoned
publlc buildings as minimum
security Jails, and require courts
to send third and fourth·tlme
drunken driving offenders to
alcohol lrj!atment programs.
Another key provision aimed ·
at dtscouraglrig underage drink·

A Dlvloloo ol Moll..,edla, lac.
· Publlabed

lng would make It a mtsdemea·
nor for people urider age 21 to
present a false or altered ldentlfl·
cation card or driver's license to
buy beer or liquor. The penalties :
would range from a mandatory ·
fine of $250 for first offenses in a ' ·
mandatory fine of $500 and a
mandatory 9&lt;J.day license sus· '
pension for third and subsequent .
offenders. Under the blll It also '
wlll cost , more to r~lnstate ;
driving privileges after license &gt;
suspensions caused by drunkel'\ :
driving violations. The b11l In- •
creases, to $125, the existing : ·
Ucense reinstatement fee.
;·
. As tough as these new penal ties · .
are, they can only be an add!· :
tlonal step In a long fight to '
eradicate drunken driving from :
our roads. Under the b111, a new :
select committee ts set up to •
review over the next three years :
the effects of this legislation.
;
If you have any questions about •
this, or any other legislation :
don't hesitate to write Stat~ ·
Senator Jan Michael Long, State- ;
hpuse, Columbus, Ohio 43215 or :
'
call at (614) 466-8156. ·
•'

every afternoan,

Monday

, t11r....., Friday, 111 Court St., J'o.
moray, Oblo, by the Ohio Volley Pub. Uablna Compa~~y,.,.ultlmedla, Inc..
Pomeroy, Oblo f5711!, PI&gt;. 9!12·:11!16. Second c1-.. pootaae paid at Pomeroy,

Ohio.

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''

'

United 'Prell International,

Jnloid Dally Preaa Auoclatlon and t n.
Ohio Newl)lllper Auoctatloo. National
:AdveMIIlni Repreoentattve, Branham
~New!IPIIPI!I' Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New' Yorl&lt;, New York 10017.
.
POS'JMAS'n:R: Send adlftu cbanl'l
to 'Die Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St.,
Pllmeray, Ohio tl'lle.

,

IWICIIIPTION RATD
•OJie WHit
117 ()arrW.
.... ........ ......................
- · - JUO
Olle Montb ................................ .16.111
Olle Year ................................. m.tMJ
81NGU:COPY
PRICK
C.Uy ............. ,..................... 25 Cnta
Subl&lt;rlben not d..lrlnltopay the car·
rter may remit Ia adVuoe dlred to
Tbe DallY llellttael on a 3, eor 12 rnoatb
bMia. Credit wiD belfveac~rrloreaoh

-..

No iubicrlpllona by mall permitted ta
orou borne corrle' oervtce II

--.-.-

livaltallle.

..... CoooiiJ IJI.Jf
13Weeiii-•• ~...............................

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112 ........................................ I'IUII

.....
CoooiiJ . ....
131\'-.................
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....................................... ..
1121\'...................................... rrs.to

'.

ChriSsy Weaver, Kim Osbo.me,
and Jara Humphreys each
singled.
·
Tara Gerlach took the loss for
the Lady Marauders giving up 12
runs on 12 hits, 5 walks and 7
Meigs errors. Radabaugh picked
up the win for the Eagles striking
out 10, walking 3 and giving up 9
, hits.
The Marauders beat Wellston
as Kerr! Black slammed a three
run triple to a .li-3 victory.
Leading the hit parade f.o r Meigs
was . Tara .Humphreys with 3
singles, Chris Weaver a single
and a double. Kin\ Osborne,
Tricta Baer and Marsha King
two singles. Kerr! Black added a
her triple, while Shannon New· ·
some, Kristen Stanley and Missy
Sisson each singled.
Tara Gerlach pitched a four
hUter to pick up the wln for
Meigs. The Marauders hav~
played the )ast two games with
out senior pitcher Kelly Douglas
who has ~n out With a lnjurted
back. Douglas should'be back for
Wednesday nights makeup game
at l!ome against Trimble.
·
.

0

Tennis ·
.
Jennifer Caprtatl, the 14-year·
old phenom with a 13·3 record tn
her first three tournaments,
entered the. VIrginia Slims rank·
·
. .
· .
tngsatNo. 25 · Theprevlousmark
for a debut rankings entry ~as
Monica Seles at No. 8Btn 1988· ...
Pat Cash was ousted from the
first round of the$1 m11ltonJapan

"
· Mel MCI:ants sank a pair of .
shooting.
free throws l.S seconds later.
Johhson burled three three- Perkins then followed with a
point baskets Monday.
dunk, but Johnson closed out the
Vlade Dlvac scored 21 points scoring with a pair of free throws
and P':'lled down 11 rebounds In with 11.2 seconds left for the final
hls second career start for the
Lakers at center, replacing fhe. margin. · · .
Injured Mychal Thompson, who
.A pair of free throws.by Dtvac
suffered a hyperextended knee in s!Jlrted the Lakers. on a lO-O run
last Frtday's victory over the . that t)rought the L~kers from a
Phoenix Suns
'
· 37-41 deficit with 6· 06 to play In
·
the first half to.a 47-41 advantage
Rlley said he was pleased with with 4. 03 remaining
Dlvac's perforn;)ance.
Jo~on caP,ped the first-half
"Vlade did a heck of a job r-tJiywlth&amp;4~footbuzzerbeater
against James Donaldson," cltl· that awtsh~ through the basket
-ley said, "He (Divac) held ~ ,to send the Lakers to the locker
own. He showed us somethlnll r~wtth&lt;a' 564Siead.
tonight."
The Mavericks went on a ·14·3
A.C. Green added 15 .potnts tor run to take the. lead 64 •63 with
the Lakers: .
6: 10 remaining tn the third
Rolando Blackman .Paf:ed the quarter. But Los Angeles ans·
Mavericks with . 19 points ll!Jd wered wttlran 11·0 run and hatd a
Sam Perkins scored 18 polnta. 78-7l .lel!d after three quarters
Derek Harper· ad&lt;led 16 P;Oints
The Lakers Improved th~tr
befor~ bi!lng ejected for ll.ls leallle best record to 58.17 , !our
second tecllnk:.~I foul wtth 4:54.to games up on Detroit in the battle
play In the aame.
•.
for borne coiu-t advantage in the
The Lakers helil a comfortable playoffs. Los Angeles, which has
15-point lead, 109·94, with~: .~ to seven games remaining In the
playin_thegame,butR!leyhadto regular season, holds a fivesend both Johnson and Green game lead over division rival
.
W
back Into the game when Dallas Portland.
II
scored 10 straight points to tratl
1.09·104 with 31 .1 seconds
The league ieadlng Symmes
,Symmes sco-reil tn the first
remaining.
,.
Valley Vikings salled Into East· when Criswell drew a bunt
·
"
ern behind a Nordic wind and'left single, then was p!t;ked off with a · ,__ _.;..._ _ _ _ _ _,...
with high satls and a hard· fought fine throw from catcher Jason
4·3 SVAC viCtory over the East- Hager to firstbasema.n Shaun
ern Eagles here Monday In a
savoy, with an ~ns)llng run·down
ON CAIPET CLEANING
well-played battle at Eastern.
play. Gates foUowedwlth a single
WHOU HOUSE SPECIAL
Symmes Valley Is .5·0 in the and Renfroe a single for a 1·0
ON ANY COliiNA11011 Of I
SVAC, 5-3 overall and Eastern score.
drops to 6-2 and 3·2 In the league.
Eastern tlaq In the first when
lOOMS, HAllWAY - Uti
Eric Walls and Scott Fitch Durst singled, stole second, and
·oNLf
hooked up In 11 torrid pitching Savoy doubledshlm home for the
duel, that saw 'only eight hits In tle, 1·1.
ADVANCa CUAMNO
the entire game.
Symmes took a 2·1 lead In the
Defensively the game had s e c o n d w 1 t h a h t t .
SEIYia
some blg plays, but the few batsman(Wall), a stolen base,
C46-3915
-~·errors made proved costly, East· and an error from short.
ern making two and Symmes just
In the fourth a walk to Wail, &lt;1
one.
stolen base, and a single to center
Walls picked up tHe wln, going by Jason Sheppard gave SV a J.1
five Innings, allowing all th~ lead.
'
Eastern hits, striking out four
EHS tied ln the fifth when ·
and walking four. Chad Renfroe
junior Mickey Bauer was lilt by a
got the save with two good pitch, Matt Flnlaw hit a line shot
Innings of work, fanning two and
back to the pitcher which was
walking just one with no hits.
' mishandled and Jeff Durst
Fitch, despite a decent outing,
tripled with just one out. Wall
suffered the loss; his first of the fought back out of the ,tnntng to
season with a 3·1 personal retire the side, 3-3.
record. Fitch fimned 5 and
The game wtnner came when
walked three, wh!Je glvlng up Renfroe had a loop single, wentto
five hits. .
second on the throw, wenttothlrd
The E'a stern httteru were Jeff on a passed ball, and scored on a
Durstwithatripleandsingleand passed ballforthegamewinnlng
Shaun Savoy a double.
run,4·3.
Renfroe had a double and
Renfroe sent down the Eagles
single, Jaye CrisWell a single, 1·2·3 tn the seventh.
Chris Gates a double, and Jason
Eastern goes to Waterford
Sheppard a stn~le .
tonight.

Open In Tokyo, fail1ng 6.4, 6. 7
By United Press l~ternattonal
(3-7)', 64 to fellow Aussle Mark
Ml!glc Johnson scorecl, a
Kratzmann. On the same "ourts
season·hlgh 38 points and set
a year ago Cash injured his heel - career bests for both free throws
and was sidelined the rest of 1989.
and free-throw at.tem~ts, helping .
the Los Angeles Lakers roll to
their eighth straight victory; a
Jlockey
11J.l06.trl!Jmph over the Dallas
Todd Hartje, a Harvard
Mavericks:
hockey player drafted In 1987 by
"It was a great win," Lakers .
the Wtnn
· [neg Jets, may become. Coach Pat Riley said "This Is as
,.
·
,
·
the first North American to play
competitive as I ve ever seen us
tn the Soviet Union's First
during the regular season. Magic
Division. Hartje, Anoka, Minn.,
and James (Worthy) are doing a
must first make the Sokol l&lt;:iev great job. "
club next season and w111 be paid
Johnson, who made eight of 13
by the jets during hls time In the' shots !rom the field and hit 19 of
Sovi~t Union.
22 foul shots, said Los Angeles Is
gearing up for the upcoming
Hone Racine
N~A playoffs.
,,
A field of four headed by
Every vtc~?ry is a blg one, .
Housebuster was entered In the said Johnsoq. We just want to be
· $75,000·added Lafayette ·Stakes consistent and now we have won
VV ednesday· at Keene land Race eight In a,row ·"
. .
Course tn Kentucky. The 7·
Asked about htscareer·bestsat
furlong race for 3·year·oids w111 the fr~ throw stripe, Johnson
be run as a betless exhibition. . said,"I"rn_.getting to the line a lot. ·
House buster wm be ridden by -more tlian at any other time tp
Craig Perret.
my career. Ithlnkitisbecauseof
mY Improved three·point

Carrie Gillilan went tn to .pinch.
run, and Lee G111llan reached on
· an error after bunting. Lo~rle
Baker reached on an error,on a
bunt to load the bases, and Carrie
.Morrissey walked to force In a
run, then on a,, Wild pitch Lee
Gillilan scored t.o tie the game at
2,2.
·
In the sixth inning Driggs led
off with a walk, Tabby Ph1lllps
reached on an error on a bunt,
Amy Murphy reached on a
fielder's choiCer to load 'the
bases, and Lee Gillilan reached
on a fielder's choice that forced
Driggs at the plate. With two out
Lorrie Baker reached on an error
to score Ph1lllps with the game•
·
'
winning run.
Toby H111 perhaps saved the
gan\e In· the seventh Inning when
Connolly had singled and wentto
second. On a hard hit ball to deep
center field by Freeman, Con·
noUy tried to tag and go home
from second. A strike by H111
from centerfield to Lorrie Baker
got Connolly out at the plate with
the would-be tying run. ·
Coach Douthitt stated, "This
was a good wtn for us. Edna
(Driggs) again ·p itched well, but
with Symmes bards hitting we
had to play good defense, and our .
defense was .really put to a test. .
Edna s~.ll pitched well, they just
hit )!er.
Against Southern, Eastern
.scored three runs in the first
lnnhlg when L. Gillilan led off
wtth a single, Baker singled, both
stole bases and Toby Hill
grouitded out to score one run.
Mary Jo Reed reached on an
error. to score Baker and Morris·
sey singled home Reed. ·
.With Edna Driggs on the
mound, Eastern never looked ·
back, holding SHS scoreless until
the sixth Inning.
After Amy Murphy, Gtiltian,
and Baker singled to load the
bases tn the second, Hill dell·
vered a sacrt!tce ny to make the
score, ·4·0.
Three errors prod11ced another
EHS run In the fourth Inning, and
Mary Jo Reed delivered a
run-scoring single In the next
fnime for a fi.O score.
A two-run single by Lee Gllil·
. lsn put EHS up 8·0 In the sixth,
before EHS broke lt,o pen with 41n
the seventh. Three errors and
three walks produced most of the
runs In that frame for the final
EHS score J2,1,
'
SHS had scored In the sixth
when Michelle McCoy reached
on ·an error, stole second and
third, then 011 the throw to third
came home on an overthrow.
Coach Douthitt said, ''Edna
pitched another fine game In the
cold weather. We hit well and I
was pleased with the hitting
because (CIIeryl) Pape'has )Orne
good speed and It gave the girls
sonte confidence being able to
make contact and"hlt her."
.
Eaatern hitter&amp; were Lee GIUI· ·
lan three slnglel(:t-for-6); Lorrie
Baker three ilnales (3·for-5);
Toby Hill a single and triple, and
slnglea each by Mary Jo Reed,
Edna DrlaJI, Carrie Morrissey,
Carrie Gillilan, aitd Amy
Murphy.
Eaatern· hosts Waterford tonight.

,,

SENIOR centerftelder Randy Ha;._tey of the Marauders pope oulln ihe Marauders 4-2 lou. to
Welllton Moaday nlcht.
·

. Wln
. .8th tn
. row,.
. . JO
1 . hnson hot
I Lak ers

spone
.. bMe. f S

Eastem girls remain
·unbeaten in 8 startS

.

05:.
...

Center for Veterinary Medicine.
Burroughs won early recognition
from Ute agency for his work on
the BST approval process, bu.t
after he began to rafse objec·
tions, he was transferred to a
make· work job. Then the FDA ·
· !Ired him for not pl!rformtng that
job satisfll!!torlly. TheFDA ~ays .
Burroug!IJ' !Iring had nothing to
do wtth·.hts outspoken comments
on BST.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D·Vt.' llnd
Rep&amp;. Ted Weiss, D·N.Y., and
John Conyers, D-Mtch., are tak·
, tng the complaints about BST
seriously. They ordered the GAO
to Investigate tne FDA review
process. But that .Investigation
may not be finiShed !as t enough
to. catch .the FDA.
. Sources at the GAO told us·the
tnves.tlgatlon Is ·Just getting of!
the ground and may be ham-.
per~ by trade 5ec~ets. The
highly competitive chemical
companies don't want to give the
GAO their trade secrets, but the
GAO needs that ln!ormatlon to do
an · adequate Investigation of
BST.

By DAVE~
The Wellston Golden Rockets
Jumped out to a 2·0 first IJU!Ing
lead and scored single runs In the :'.
sixth and seventh lnnlltg enr'Oute ·
to a 4·2 victory over the Meigs
Marauders. The loss the second
In a row for the Marauders after
starting the TVC season wi1h
three stratgllt wins drops the
Marauders record to 4·3 overall
and 3·2 In the conference.
TheGoldenRooketsscored,wo
In · th11 fltst . on a single by
Seymore, double by lfendershott
and a two run single.by Potts.
MeigS rnac1e It a one run gaine
In the fifth w)len Jason Wright
singled, stole second and scored
on a Terry Reuter dOuble. ~
·• Wellston scored single runs In
the stxth and seventh tcntngs. In
the fifth Orender was hit by a
pitch, stole second and scored on
'a base hit by Ashley, In the
§e.venth Wellston made 11 .4·1
·~hen Corvin was .hit by a .pitch,
advanced to second on a Wlllkand
scored on a Orender single.
Mike WallS and Jason Wr.ight
both had one out.singles to start a
rally for the Marauders In the
seventh, but Walls was thrown
outatthlrdtrylngtoadvanceto
thlrdonapassedballwithWright
advancing to second where he
scored on a double off the
left-center fence by Terry
McGuire to make It 4·2, but that
was . as close as the Marauders
could get..
•
Hendershoot was the wlnnhlg
pitcher glvtng up 5 hits, striking
outS andwalkiJigone. For Meigs,
Chris Stewart wws the starter .
and loser despite pitching a good
·
·

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�•

McGee paces Cards· 6-5.wm;
Dodgers open ·with 4-2 victt.ry
By Unlled Press International
Willie McGee of the St. Louis
Cardinals, who spent most of the
1989 season on the disabled list
With nagging lnjuryes, proved It
Is not that difficult to recover
from the lack Of playing time.
"I hit so much during tbe
winter and durtng the season,
that It's· just a .matter of me
swinging at strikes," said McGee
after he singled home Mut
Thompson wjih one out in the 11th
Inning Monday ,.sending St. Louts
to a 6-S victory over 't he Montreal
Expos.
'Tm here, I'm on this team
and I got a job to do, " said
McGee, who went. hitless In his
first four at-bats before coming
up big In bls last two. " When that ·
situtatlon comes up, I'm going to
do my best.
· TbQmpson drew a walk of!
reliever ·Mark Gardner aqd ·
Vince Coleman .-sacrificed.
McGee then grounded a single to
center, making a winner of Ken
Dllyley . .McGee also helped the
Cardinals tie the score with a
two-run double tn the ninth.

Montreal Manager Buck
Rodgers said he did not consider
walking McGee with first base
open.
"With two outs, I would bave
walked him," Rodgers said. "It
was · a rookie out. there
(Gardner) . He walked the leadoff man on four pitches.
"I didn't want to box him ln. I
wanted blm'iouse all his pitches.
He ·just didn't get the job done." "
Dellno DeShields collected
four hits In hls major-league
debut. DeShields, the Expos' No.
1 draft cbolce In the June 1987
draft, grounded out In his first
at -bat then added three singles
and a double.
"It's one of the best games
ever," DeShields said. "I had a
couple of twO-home ru11 games in
A ball.
"But .losing cuts it in half. -I
want t_o win. That's the name of
the game."
Elsewhere In tbe National
League, Pittsburgh crushed New
York 12-~. Los Angeles , topped
San Diego 4-2, Cincinnati downed
Houston 8-4 In 11 Innings and

Pblladelphta . at Chicago was
rained out.
In the AmertciUI League, It
was: BostonS,Detrbtt2; Chicago
2, Mtlwaukee 1; Baltimore 7,
Kansa:o City 6 In 11 Innings;
Texas 4, Toronto 2; Seattle 7,
California 4; Oakland 8, Minne·
sota 3.
. Pirates 12, Mets 3
At New York, Andy Van .Slyke
led a 17-hlt attack with two home
runs and a double, helping
Pittsburgh open 'the NL season
with a rout. \Tan Slyke, who
collected four RBI, helped hand
Dwight Gooden his first loss In
five Opening Day starts. Doug
Drabek lasted five Innings and
picked up the victory.
Dodgers 4, Padres %
At Los Angeles, Ruble Brooks
broke up Bruce Hurst's no-bit bid
In the seventh lnntng and belted a
three-run home run In the eighth,
ltftll)g the Dodgers. Fred .Lynn.
38, homered for San Dtegq In his
first NL at-bat, John Wetteland,
who allowed one run In two
Innings of relief, gaiiJed the win.

HOUSTON (UPI) - Barry
Larkin hit a two-out, basesloaded triple to highlight a
four-run 11th Inning Monday
night, leading· the Cincinnati
Reds to an 8-4 season-opening
victory over the Houston Astros.
With the scored tied- 4-4, Joe
Oliver drew a leadoff walk from
loser Charley Kerfteld. Mariano
Duncan, who had three RBI,
singled pinch runner Rolando

Roomes to second. Ron Oester
sacrificed and Chris Sabo was
Intentionally walked to load the
bases.
'
. Larkin sm11shed a llne.drlve to
right-center to clear tl!e bases.
Eric Davis followed wttb a
run-scoring single to give the
Reds-an 8-4 lead. Randy Myers
pitched 1 2-3 Innings to earn the
victory.
Houston's Glenn Davis was hit

by three pitches, tying a major
league record for mosf times In
an extra-Inning game. San Francisco's Ron Hunt. set the NatlQn~l
League mark In '1969. Jake Stahl
o.f Washington did It In 1904 and
Minnesota's Craig Kusick. -In
1975. Several players have also
done It In a nine-Inning game.
Cincinnati took a 2-0 lead tn the
second against starter Mike
Scott. Joe Oliver singled and
Duncan !tit a 1-2 pitch over the
center-field fence· for a two-run
homer.
Houston countered with a fo.u rrun second. Davis was hit by a
Tom Browning pitch and moved
to third on Glenn Wtlsoq's double
off the center-field fence. Eric
Anthony walked to load the bases
and all the nmnersadvanced on a
wild pitch. ·
Wilson scored ori l&lt;en Caminiti's groundout.. and Anthony
scored from second on Rafael
Ramirez's . single to right. Ramirez advanc;ed on Scott's sacrifice and scored on Gerald '
Young's double to the left-field
corner, giving Houston a 4-2lead.
Ctnctnnatt closed to 4-3 · in the
f!ftb. Oliver doubled,_advanced
on Duncan's groundout, and
scored on pinch bitter Ken
Griffey's sacrifice fly.
The Reds tied the score 4-4 In
jbe sixth to chase 5cott. Paul
O~ Nelll drew a one-o!JI walk and
stole second and 1'odd Bem:tnger
walked. With 'two out, Duncan
singled to tie the score.

,--- Loca.l news· briefs...-----. --Meigs announcements.--'

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By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Spprta Writer
The Boston Bruins may have a
long summer to admire the
regular season title !bey won by·
finishing with the most points tn
tbeNHL.
The suddenly vulnerable
champions, riddled by Injuries to
key players, are finding the
Hartford Whalers more than

·

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Rio Grande posts' 1-3 slate
• CedarvJ")Je,·· CSU
Amnnst
-e,.
A weekend road trip afforded
. the University of Rio . Grande
baseball team Its first foray Into
District 22 and Mid-Ohio Conference action, but resUlted In a 1-3
series for the Redmen.
Rio Grande fell to Cedarville
s_aturday, 1-0 'and 11-1, at:td lost
the first part of Its doubleheader
Sunday to Central State, 9-5. The
team rallied In the nightcap to
defeat the Marauders, 8-3.
The Redmen are now 9-10
overaLl, 1-3 In the district and 0-2
In conference play .
Cedarville nearly shut down '
the Redmen rriacbtne ' In the
opener of Its twin btll, posting
four hits while holding the
visitors to two. Rio Grande's hits
were each made by Jimmy
Kearns and Donnie Becker.
Taking. the loss on the pitching
mound was Darrell Marcum, .
whose record went to 3-2. Both.
teams recorded two errors
apiece.
The Yellow Jackets exploded
for 15 bits and limited the
Redmen to three In -the second
contest. Kearns, Mike Coman
and Chris Curtis had one.ht! eacb
tor . Rio Grande. Cedarville re,
corded one error and the Redmen
were credited with tWo. Mike
Voorheis (2-2) took the loss.
Bob Young went two for four In
the first game against Central
State, which saw Rio Grande
advance on six hits and post three
erNrl• The Marauders had eight

••

Whalers take
2-1 lead in
NHL playoffs

WMIIIIa&amp;t~taalhtdi . .. K:Ji p.m .

s..ua. It Utatl, 1: J8 p.m.

De&amp;Niat......_
qdeap Ill Mllwullee

EMl

p.ni.

lh•tenat_N_ J•r-,., 7:11p.m.
lhll'llonM.Cbll'lotte, ,:at p.m.
Mlt..uke• lit Orlluldcl, 7:38 p.m.

bits andinowed four errors. Rob
Kuhn · (1·31 pitched ·.,for Rio
Gran~e.
,
·
Andy Bulach (1-3) took· the
mound In the final game and
succeeded In holding Central
State to eight ·btts, while the
Redmen batted In 10 for the win.
Kearns was two for three at the
· plate, whiJe Young, Marcum and
Brent Bissell were each two for
four. Rio Grande committed two
errors and the hosts had one.
Continuing .
lengtify road
schedule this week, the Redrrftln
were at Urbana Tuesday, will lie
hosted by ~fiance Friday and
travel to TUfln on Saturday. All
are doubleheaders starting at 1

a

p.m.

·

· Sports briefs
Olympics
The West German Interior
Minister says he thinks It possible a united German team will
represent a united country at the
199201ympics. TbeEastGerman
news agency ADN said Minister
Wolfgang Scbaueble hinted bts
government bas provided mcmey
for joint training camps between
the two Germanys.
Soccer
' Egypt's leading soccer team,
AI Ably, lost $40,000 tn gate
receipts Saturday because fans
decided to stay home and watch a
popular soap opera on television.
The home team won 5-0. ·

th~~a~bh~~:~~~

Five calls for assistance were answered on Monday by Meigs
Emergency Medical Services' units. ·
At 1:22 a.m., Rutland was called to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Kenny Taylor to Veterans Memqlial Hospital.
TuppersPlatnswascatledatB:34a.m. toRoute248forDonald
Folmer to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy went to McGrath Road at 10:08 a.m. f.o r As'ton Bush
.to Veterans-Memorial Hospital and at 10:57 p.m. to Second St.
.for Ivan Eblin to Veterans Memorial Hdspltai: '
··
·.Health· Net at 3:55 a.m. transported Geneva Young from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to St. Mary's Hosplta~ .

Launch~,, continued from page 1

-,.
.
..·\
~ ~
DIJNCAN HOJifERS - Cincinnati Reds' Mar'lo

Duncan a
five for his efforts as Clnd01matl
Duncan' Is greeted at horne plate Monday after . · played the~
· ~;:::,:l~n their season opener In the

hitting his second lnnlrig two run home. Reds' Joe ,
Oliver scored on !he play and Tom Browning gives

Houston

(UPI) ·

1\

Oriol~s

·

,· . ·

·

·

By .ERIK K. LIEF
victory, while Gregg Olson scored Robin Ventura to provide
UPI Sports Writer •
earned a save for one Inning of the winning· margin wjlile five
Sam Hor.n, provided a fresh
work. Jeff Mqntgomery was Chicago pitchers held M'llwaukee
start by his qew team, used
vtct.lm'!zed by. Tartab\lll's error . to ju~t four hits. Barry Jones .
went 1 2-3 Innings In relief to get
Opening Day to display bts
for the lcyss.
talents.
·
the
victory and Bobby Thigpen
Horn said be told bts. mother,
Horn', a player who toiled In the w~o Is recovering from a stroke co)lect.lng the save. Tony Fossas
farm system of the Boston Red In San Diego, be was going ·to took the loss for the·Brewers.
Rangers t, Blue Jays 2
Sox for eight seasons as a dedicate tbe season te her. ..
At Arlington, Texas, Nolan
"This was' the first chance for
quantity of minor consequence,
Ryan threw five hitless Innings
pounded out four bits, Including me to do something for her,"
for- his 290tb career victory and
two three-run homers ana col- Horn said. ''I'll call her tonight,
Harold Baines drove In three
lected six RBI to lead the but. I just hope she gets to see the
.
runs to defeat the defending AL
Baltimore Orioles to a 7-6 victory· . highlights." . . ,
tn ·ll Innings over the Kansas City
Horn hit a three-run homer In
East champions. Ryan emRoyals.
'
the second Inning off Bret Saber- barked on b'is 24th season at age
''This Is just a 1 reward to hagen and • added a score-tying 43 and moved closer to the
300-wln plateau.' Ryan, who
myself," said Horn, .wbo earned three-run shot In the eighth.
Elsewhere · In the A:L, Boston struck out four , found relief help
a spot on the Orioles' roster only.
last. Saturday. "(Manager) dropped · Detroit 5-2, ' Chicago fr(lm Mike Jeffcoat and Jeff
Frank (Robinson)' and the &lt; clipped Milwaukee 2-1, Texas
Russell. Todd St.ottlemyre took
coaches, and the rest of t-hem all topped Toronto 4-2, Seattle . the loss.
' '
made ~me feel at home ·from the downed Caltforn'la 7-4 arid OakMariners 7, ·Angels 4
At Anabetrtl, Calif., Ken Griffirst, and this was the first time I land defeated Minnesota 8-3.
Red Sox 5, Tigers 2
fey Jr: colleded four b.its lnctuciwas able to come out and show
what I could do."
At Bos10n, Dwight Evans deli- tng a three-run homer that
The designated hitter provided vered a three-run double and
capped a five-run fifth inning.
Dave Valle contributed three hits
more offense for •the Orioles Wade Boggs ·went 3 for 4 with
and two RBI In Seattle's 15-hlt
Monday afternoon than be did In three runs scored to pace Boston
all of last season. In 1989, Horn to Its first Opentpg Day victory
attack. Winner Brian Holman, tn
played In 33' games· and had no since 1985. Roger Clemens, wbo
his first Opening Day start,aihomers and only four RBI.
lowed just three btts over five
didn't allow a bit until the sixth
Innings as Seattle won Its opener
Kansas City Manager John Inning, earned the win. The
Wathan said, "Just too much rtgbt-handei' worked 6 2-3innlngs
for the first time in four seasons. ·
Loser Bert Blyleven, making bts
Sam Horn today, tba~ was the big . while giving up three hits and two
12th Opening Day• start - · the
problem. He was always a good runs. Lee Smith itotcbi!d the save
fourth-most In history ·: - · depower hitter but ·d!Hn't get .too after working out. of a basesmany chances In Bosto'n."
IQilded jam . .Jack Morris, Jn his . parted after surrendering five
runs and seven Iitts In five
Baltimore's Jo~ Orsulak 11th consecutive Opening Day
Innings. Mike Schooler finished
scored on Danny Tartabull's . start, allowecl all five runs and
for it save.
two-out error In the 11th Inning, took the loss~
.. •
·
A's 8, Twins 3
extending the Royals' Opening
White Sox 2, Brewers I
At Chicago, Scott Fletcher's
Day losing streak to five games.
At Oakland, Calif., Dave Henderson and Terry Steinbach hit ,
Jay Aldrich picked up the seventh-Inning sacrifice fly
back-to-back seventh-Inning ho-mers and Dave Stewart picked :
up his third consecu live Qpenlng
· Day victory to lead the world
cb8JDplon5. Stewart lacked his
usual sharpness but' scattered
seven bits over his 5 2-'3 Innings,
and Rick Honeycutt pitched 3 1-3
Innings to earn a ·save. Alan
Anderson was the loser, glVtng
up four runs on seven bits.

Sports bJi.efs
Auto Racing •
Kenya's Marlboro Safari rally
begins Tuesday, a 2,605-nitle trek
over the roughest, mostobstaclerkldeil motor sport course in the
world. Some 70 drivers Will face
the hazards of leopards, fiOO(Is
and stone-throwing locals.

·

,,,I'Hi

'
~,,,,

.1,,
,.,. lor '"''"" ,.,

'"'-• ahliuld IIIII ajleciol cer inaur-

tns~YS · &amp;fVp AWARD
Oakland Atlile&amp;lc, Rickey
Henderson, shows off bla 19811 World Series MVP Trophy,
preiellted to hbn before the seuon ·opening game, by American
League Presldel)t, Dr..Bobby Brown (left) Monday, (UPI)

~ LOOJ{ING'FOR--EASTER
r

OR SUMMER WEAR.:.

~TOP

INTO RACINE DEn. STORE,
-RE QERE'S ·LESS fURl-UP AND
MOll RIASONA. . PRICES. . .
YOU'U. FIND TOP GRADE MERCHAN·
,, '
DISE....
DRESS UP IN LADIES' SUIYS, DRESSES,
AND 3 PIECE AJIIIE, SKIRTS, CAMP
SHilTS IT-TOPS.
FOI CASUAL WEAR STRIPED' SKIRTS
iA.ILOUSES, CIOP·PAIITS, TOPS Ale
SHOhS. ·

Sports briefs
Law
A 40-year-otd woman from
Clarence, N.Y., Is seeking
$200,000 from Buffalo Bills qual'·
terbkack Jim Kelly, claiming be·
threw beer-ftlled balloons at her
during a 1987 picnic causing her
to have a root canaL Kelly's
lawyer says the quarterback was .
merely playing with water balloons With children.

Post to meel
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 wtll meet Thursday, .7:30
p.m. at. the post home.
Triolo slog
Dan Hayman and the Faith
Trio, and the McDaniel Trio wtll
sing Friday and Sunday at 7 p.m.
at the Hysell Run Holiness
Chapel near Rutland. The public
ts tnvlJed to attend the revival
services.
Meeting canceled
TbePreceptorBetaBetaCbapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
not . meet Thursday due to
Maundy Thursday. Members are
reminded· of the Founders Day
dlnnef on ·April 26 at · the Down
Under In Galllp&lt;ills at 6:30p.m.
Woodmen plan potluck
The Burlingham Modern
Woodmen wtll have an Easter
'potluck dinner on Saturday at the
woodmen hall in Burlingham at
6:30p.m. The public ts Invited to
attencl. Meat wlll be furnished by
the camp and those attending are
to bring a covered dish.
Auxiliary bake sale
The Women Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital will
have a bake sale Fr'iday begin·
nlng at 10 a.m. tn the lobby of the
hospital:-·
Revival slate.d
The Syracuse Nazarene
Church will have revival tonight
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
with Rev. Ron Roth as special
speaker. Sunday services wtll be
held at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Library to close
The Meigs County Public LIbrary will be closed Easter
Sunday. Regular hours will reswrie Monday. ·
Easter egg bunt
There wtll . be an Easter egg
hunt on Monday from 1-3 p.m. at
the firehouse In Harrisonville for
the children of Scipio Township
Sunrise service
The Zion Cburch of Christ wlll
bave a Sunrise Service, "Were
You There" on Easter morning
at 6:30 a.m. with choir and
Individuals participating with
scriptural quotations. Robert E.
Purtell, minister, Is director with
Jeff Arnold, a~companlest . A
breakfaS'I. will follow the program. Tbe morn lng message wtll
be "WI!at tbe.Cruclfled Sale,\ upon
the Cross." .
Hymn Sing
There will be an all night hymn
sing at the Rutland Freewlll
Baptist Church on Good Friday
at 7:30 p.m . and sunrise service
· on Easter morning at 6 a.m.
The church will also have
revival March 30-May 5 with
Paul Bartrum preaching.
Easter services
The Hysell · Run Holiness
Church will bave sunrise services at 6 a.m. with communion on
Sunday. 'Sunday school Is 9: 30

L-----------------------....1 ·

who finished

fourth In the Adams division,
used a 5-3 victory Monday to roll
to a 2-1 series lead In the first
round of the Stanley Gup
playoffs .
The matchup was one of four
' series . played Monday In the
Wales Conference. The Montreal
Canadlens nipped the Buffa:to
Sabres 2-1 In overtime in the
other Adams Division clash to
take a 2-1· advantage' fn their
series.
.
In the Pat lick Division, the
New York Istande~s beat. the
New York Rangers 4-3 In double
· overtime ·to pun to within 2-1 In
· their series, and the New-Jersey
Devils edged Washhigton . 2-i to
ta.k e a 2·1lead .ln that serl~s.
'the Camp~ll Conferen~ resumes play Tuesday night wttl)
Calgary at Los Angeles, Edmonton at Winnipeg, Chicago at
Minnesota and St. Louis at •
Toronto. The Kings, Jets and
Blackbawks lead their series 2-1,
while St. Louis has a 3-0 lead.
All series are best-of-seven.and
switch sites after Game 4.

Continued· from page 1
immuniZation records.
Immunizations required Include three polio. and boosters,
three OPT's and boosters, MMR, andsa recent TB skin test .
Children must 'be five years of age on or before' Sep1. 30 to
register. ·
·
There wtll be .no regular kindergarten classes that day.

EMS lws five Monday
. calls ·

down ' RoYals 7-6 in
Reds ·outlast Astros, 8-4 in 1·1 open~r; · As bo~b Twins, 8-3 ·

Scoreboard ...

The Daily Sentinel Page-5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday. April 10, 1990

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

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MASTERCARD -VISA - GOLDE.N IUCKII"'E

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Hospital news

To end mariage

Veterans Memorial

Filing In Meigs Common Pleas
Court· for- dissolutions of marMonday- admissions - Mary
riage ·are Stephen . Fr!!derlck
Goodwin, New Haven; Iva Po· Baloy, Pomeroy, and Rebecca
well, Pomeroy ; Della Coleman, · Lynn Baloy, Pomeroy; Kelly
Reedsville.
Anne Beaver, Pomeroy, and
Monday discharges - Helen
Douglas Wayne Bea l(e r,
WilL
Pomeroy.

Clarification

.
The Kenneth Mankin who was

fined last week In Pomeroy·
Mayor's .Court _is . not former
Pomeroy resident Kenny Joe
Mankin, now of Florida, and a
brother· of Middleport resident
Shelly Wood.

Licen8es issued
Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs Probate Court to
Richard Eric Sayre, 21, Racine,
and Gina Marie . Knotts, 31,
Ravenswood, W~a.; Doy Ray
Nltz II, 21, P.omeroy, and Peggy
Dawn Estep, 18, Middleport.

,.,.,.

_ _ Area deaths _ __
Doyle Hudson

.

Middlepori

Sunrise service
There will be sunrise services
at the MI. Union Baptist Church
on theh!Uat thecrossat6a.m.on
Easter Sunday.
Gospel sing
·There will be a gospel hymn
sing Aprtl 21 at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Silver. Run Baptist Church In
Cheshire. Singers will be JoAnn
Wellington and the Unro~
Family. ·
Revival
The ·Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ will have Its second annual
spring rev.lval . April 16-22.
Speakers for the week Include
Robert Foster, Bob Thomas,
Dick Damron, Tom Lawson,
Mike Leavitt, and Jim Girdwood.
There will be a youth rally on
Saturday. Services are 7 p.m .'
nightly and 10 a.m. Sunday.
Grange banquet
The annual grange banquet
will be Aprtl20 at 7:15 p.m . at the
Salisbury Elementary School.
The spe,a ker wtll be Patty Dyer,
Pomona Grange lecturer .
Denver Rice will be In charge of
the music. Adult tickets are $6
and children's tickets are $5.
Ttc)!ets may be purchased from
any grange master. Deadline for
tickets Is April 15.
Bake Sale
The Queen and Kt ng Bees 4H
G:lub will 'have. a bake sale
Saturday at Gaul's Market In
Chester from 9 a.m to noon.
Choir to sing
The combined choirs of the
Racine Baptist and Methodist
churches will present the cantata
"Alive" on Sunday at 7:30p.m. at
the Racine Baptist Church. The
choir Is under the direction of
Mary Louise Shuler and pianist Is
Lq Ulan Hayman. The public ts
Invited to attend.
Final sign up
Final sign up for the Rutland
Baseball League for boys and
girls will be Saturday 10 a.ni. to 1
p .m . at·the Rutland Civic Center.
Coaches are urged to aw~nd.

council.;ontlnued from

phone in the booth. He mentioned
that last year six emergencies
occurred' and that phones of
people Jiving In the neighborhood
had to be used to summon help.
He questioned how long the pay
_l:lhone would be there without
· ·vandalism.
Arrangements were made !or
Wise to meet with the Recreation
Commission and the mayor
Thursday night to go over some
of the problems. Councilman
. Gerard then asked Wise to come
back to the next council meeting
to discuss solutions to the
problems.
Mayor Hoffman reported on a
meeting be had attended In
Columbus regarding public transit funds . He said that It appears
1991 funding wtll be at about the
same level as 1990 for operating
of the cab company.
The mayor was au tborlzed to
proceed with filing an app)lcatton' with the Ohio Department of
Development for $4lll,OOO for
housing rehabllit.atlon and street
Improvements. The general area
designated for the project Is
Pearl, Beech, Oliver and the area
south of that, Mayor Hoffman
reported.
Council authorized Triplett En·
gtneerlng to proceed with ·engineering proposals for the pro-

C.e metery . .Friends may call at
the funeral borne on Tuesday
Rutland area resident Doyle from 6 unm 9 p.m.'
In lieu of flowers, donations
Theron Hudson, 73, died Monday
may
be made to the Meigs
at the. home of a sister In County
Chapter of the American
Charleston, W.Va.
CanceF
Society or to the Meigs
Mr. Hudson was · a retired
County f'ublic Library.
welder and a staff member and
bus driver for the Meigs County
Senior Citizens. He was also a
member of the Rutland Church of Wilma HatTison
the Nazarene.
Wilma L. Harrison, 79, of 425
Survivors Include his wife,
Salem
Dr., Pittsburgh_, Pa., died
Nadine; iwo sons, Richard and
Monday
at St. Clair Hospital',
William; a stepdaughter, Judy
Pittsburgh.
Reynolds; two grandsons; a
She was born May 3, 1910 In
granddaughter; a brother and
Racine,
daughter of the l~te Dale
four sisters.
L.
and
Lynn
Robs tetter Lee.
. , fjjneral wvtces wtll be Tburs- ·
She
was
a
former resident of
day, 1 p.m., at the Snodgrass
1929 graduate of
Gaillpolls,
Funeral Home In South CharlesRacine
High
School
and a retired
ton, W.Va. with Rev . · Riley
Gallipolis
Developemployee
of
James, Rev. Sam. Basye Jr., and
mental
Center.
She
also
attended
Rev . Franklin Goff officiating.
the
Holzer
School
of
Nursing.
Calltng hours at the funeral home
Mrs . Harrtson was preceded In
will be Wednesday, from 2 to 4
death
by- ber husband, Chancey
and 7 to 9. · Burial wtll be at the
In May 1979. .
E.
Harrtson
Cunnlnf!bam Memorial -Park at
She
Is
survived
by two sons,
'St, -'Aibans, W.Va.
Terry Johnson of Saudi Arabia
·and Ted Johnson of Pittsburgh,
Ann Cook
Pa.; two brothers, Jake Lee of
Ann Beegle Cook, 89, Rock
Racine and Russ Lee of West
Springs Road, Pomeroy, died
Chester, Ohlp; two sisters,
Monday a,t Veterans Memoria I
Norma Tassi an of Cincinnati and
Rose Clark of L'Campo, Texas;
Hospital following a brief Illness.
six grandchildren; and three
She was homemaker and was
born' · Dec. 24, 1900 In
great -grandchildren,
Pennsylvannta. ·
She was a member of the
Racine United Methodist Cliurch
She was member of the Racine
Grange and Dorcas United
and Eastern Stat Chapter at
Gallipolis. .
Brethren Cllurc b.
Funeral services .Ju be con·
Mrs. Cook ts survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Anthony "Lila"
ducted 1 p.m. TburS'A~ at the .
Roth, Pittsburgh, Pa., Sill grandRacine United Method~Cburch
with Rev. Roger · Grace
children and eight great
grandchtldren.
officiating.
.,
Burtal wlll be In Greenwood
.S~e was preceded In death by a
.Cemetery In Racine.
·
daughter, Grace Stafura, and a
Friends may · call Waugbgreat granddaughter, Emily
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
Stafura.
Wednesday from ~to 9 p.m.
Services will . be held on
The body will be taken to the
Wednesday at 1- p.m. at the
church one hour prior to
Ewing funeral Home.
Burial will be In Carmel
services.

a

It' 1 Steto'Auto COf!IP811i•' MO&lt;Ieiilt Auto JIQficy.
l'horllteaerolowor. Thocov.,.._.

...... ,__

Space Telecope's near-perfe~t
Shriver and company will spend
their first day In orbit cheeklng
94.5-lncb mirror, and Its five
·out Its systems and tes!Jng the
primary Instruments wtll detect
ship's 50-foot-long roboi arm,
I ight. emitted from stars. and
which astronomer-turnedgalaxies shortly after the "big
astronaut Hawley plans. to use
bang'' explosion thought to bave
the day after launch to release
created· the cosmos.
·
T~e big bang · Is' believed to
the tillescope Into space.
' Veteran spacewalkers
have occurred between 10 billion
McCandless and Sullivan will
and 20 billion years ago, but the
exact age of the 11nlverse IS
check out the suits and tools they
would use for an emergency
uncertain· by a factor. of. two,
prompting ·astronomers to split
spacewalk If the telescope's
the difference aild· say the
electrlctty-productng solar arcosmos Is roughly 15 billion years
rays fail to unwind properly or I!
Its antennas do not unfold as
old.
One of the major goals of the
planned.
15-year space telescope mission
The schedule calls for Hawley
to release the tefescope ·into
Is to refine theageo!theuniverse
to within 10 percent and to gather
space on .the second d(iY. of the
mission. ·
·
evidence that may help a$trononiers prove whether. the universe
''There's no question , I will feel
will continue fo expand torever
more nervOIJS about doing this
or one day collapse tria cataclys- .
than anything I've ever done on
mlc ·"blg crunch." .
any of the flights I've flown
Assuming a 15 billion-year-old
before," Hawley, veteran of two
universe, the space telescope
previous space missions, said In
should be able to detect light
an interview. ·
·
emitted from · stars and galaxies
Shriver then wtll back the
14 billion years ago, that Is, from
shuttle away from the telescope
while engineers at the Goddard . objects so far away It took light.
traveling 186,000 miles per ·seSpace Flight Center In· Greencond,14 billion years to reach the
belt, Md., carefully activate the
' space telescope. ,
··
·
Instrument's many systems.
Along with answe.rlng sucli
The astronauts, meanwhile,
fundamental cosmological queswill conduct a series of relatively
tions, the Hut?bl~ ,Space ·Tele;minor experiments for the rescope may pvove once and for all
mainder of their itve-day mission
whether ·planets circle other
before · gliding to a landing at
stars and whether enigmatic
Edwards
Air
Force
Base,
Calif.
". "
black holes serve as the power
Able to detect the glow of a
source for blgh-~l)ergy quasars ·
two-cell flashlight a quarter of a
at the edge o!.tbe universe .
million miles away, the Hubble

a.m. and worship service Is 10:45
a.m. and 7 p.m. This will be the
last night of revival with George
Williams. Pastor Robert Grimm
Invites the public.
Revival
The Ash Street Freewill Bap. tlst Church In Mtddlepor.t Is
having revival Monday through
..fulturday with Clovis Vanover,
evangelist, at 7:30 ritghtly.
Revival
The Faith Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, will have revival Aplil
16-21 at 7 p.m. nightly with guest
speaker, Jimmy Stewart, from
Albany. There will . 'also be
.special slnglilg.eac night.

page~-

Thunderstontts sweep
aeross Plains states
By tJnlted Press International
Powerful thunderstorms
rumbled through the southern
Plains sjates early Tuesday,
dumping 'heavy rain In Arkansas
and tornado-stricken Oklahoma,
while snow fell ln. Wisconsin and
showers drenched other parts of
the Mldwes t.
'
The National Weather Service ·
said · severe thunderstorms
belted northern Texas . where a
tornado wale]! was · posted, .a s
showers mtitstened parts of New
Mexico. Patchy, mostly · light
rain fell In Louisiana and the Gulf
of Mexico.
Severe thunderstorms dropped
hf!avy rain and hatlln.tbeeastern
two-thirds of Oklahoma In the
aftermath of a number of torna does that roared across southern
Oklahoma Monday night .
·'There's damage all over. the
city, and some Injuries, 1 ' a
dispatcher at the Ardmore,
Okla., Pollee Department said.
In s.o uthwestern Cotton County ·
tn Oklahoma, ·where · another
tornado touched down, Temple
Pollee Cble! Charles Mooney
· said, "We bad strong winds and ·
damaging hall, with several
power lines blown down and trees
uprooted. A roof was ·titown from
a mobtle home, but there were no
Injuries!'

A'tornado watch 'was In effect
In western Arkansas. Jsolated
thunderstorm's drenched parts of
the state, including areas near
Fayetteville and east of Springdale, the NWS said.
In the West. a frontal system ·
off the Oregon and Washington
coasts veered northward, delay Ing rain at least temporartJy..
Skt~s were cloudy late Monday
over Southern California.
Wisconsin had another· rude
reminder of winter Tuesday, as
snow flurries coated the northern
part of the state and Wausau fell
to 34 degrees. To the east, Green
Bay had sleet and 35 degrees.
Rain fell In Milwaukee and
Madison.
Rain fell over much of Michigan, while thunderstorms
. pounded parts of Illinois, western
Kentucky and · southwes 1
Indiana. ·
Scattered showers were repor ted tn 1he mid-Atlantic states ·.
of Pennsylvania and West VIrginia, wbtle skies were cloudy over
Maryland and New Jersey.
Thick clouds hung over north·
ern New England. while skies
over the southern ba)l of the
region were mostly clear.
A laqie high-pressure area
camped over much of New
England Tuesday morning

------Weather-----Fair Thursday and Friday,
South Central Ohio
with
a chance of showers on
Sho)Vers and a . chance of
Satu~ay.
Highs will range from
thunderstorms Tuesd~y night,
the
.
mid
30s to the .mid 40s
with a low between 40 and 45.
Thursday,
from the mid 40s to the
Chance of precipitation Is .near
50s
Friday
and from the mid
.
mid
100 percent. Mostly cloudy a,nd a
60s
to
the
mid
70s Saturday.
chance of showers. Wednesday
Overnight
lows
wtll
range from
morning and becom lng partly
the
upper
teens
to
the
20s early
cloudy during the afternoon, with
Thursday,
from
tbe
mid
20s to the
highs between 45 and 50. Chance
mid
30s
Friday
morning,
and In
of precipitation Is 40 percent.
the
40s
ea,rly
Saturday.
Extended Forecft!lt
Thursday through Saturday

Scholarship applications to
be accepted up to May 21
Applicants must ha ve a parent
AppliCations for the Bob Roberts Scholarships must be re- · or grandparent who was a
ceived no later than May 21, not graduate of Pomeroy High
SchOol and the application must
May 2, as earlier reported.
Applications are being taken Indicate the- name of the person,
for the scholarships which will be the relationship and the year In
awarded by the Pomeroy Alumni which the parent or grandparAssociation at Its annual reunion ents graduated.
A transcript of grades must be
on May 26.
Applications for one of the two submitted along with a short
$500 scholarships must be re- resume by the applicant, a recent
ceived by the scllolarshlp com- photograph, and Information on
mittee no later than the May 21 where the applicant plans lo
attend college and -the dat e of
date. ·
enrollment.
Appllcations are to be mailed
to the Bob, Roberts Scholarship,
In care of the Pomeroy Alumni
Association, Box 202, Pomeroy.
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and MarJe $mlth
of Blunt, Elll~ ." LQewt

Stocks

jects funded through Issue 2. For
the Cottage and Beech St. project
a cost of $1 ,400 and for the Mlll
Street project , a cost of $4,290 Am Electric Power ... ......... , 29~
was approved.
AT&amp;T ............ , .................... .42
The Middleport Fire Depart- Ashland 011 ........ ................. 36'
ment was authorized to proceed
Bob Evans .......................... 12~
wit b advertising for a new fire
Charming Shoppes ............... 8~
truck. It was noted that · the bid
City Holding Co ....... : ..........13¥.z·
specl!lcatlons are ready and that
Federal Mogul.. ................. .16¥.z
after a mo~th of advertising,
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... , ... 35~
then 60 days wlll be available to · Heck's ................................. 23A
work out the financing.
Key Centurtot] ..................... 14
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
Lands' End-...... .-: .................. 19
'from the state jail Inspector
Llrrllted Inc ........................ 43'!1.
regarding the upgrading of the
Multimedia Inc ................... 77¥.!
local jail. The only recommendaRax Restaurants .............. .. .. 2¥.
tion was for a written procedure
Robbins &amp; .Myers ....... .. .... .. .. 16
manoa!.
Sboney's Inc ........."......... .. .... 13 '
Council accepted the bid of
Star Bank .......................... .18~
$7,100 from Jim's Farm Equip·
Wendy's Int'l ...................... .4%
ment for the village's backhoe. It
Worthington Ind .................. 21~
was the · highest of six bids
received on the used equipment.
Again the question of whether
Pomeroy Vlllage Is contributing
to the oper.atiori of the public
transit system (Blue·Streak cab)
was raised, and Mayor Hoffman
reported that Pomeroy bas contributed only $1806. during the
three years of operation.
Cleanup week, April 22-28, was
again noted. The mayor's report
showed receipts of $6,309 for the
month.

NOW OPE" FOR THE
SPRIN8 SEASON!
FOI ElSlEI
'
Liles, Milnll, TuRps,
Nyaclnths,
Hydrangeas,
.
~iUIIII

AlSO: CDnlplot1 line af
Vtgttablt and Bidding
Plants, IIDomlng and
Foliage Hanging Baskets.
Fruit and Flowering Tr-,
Sh~ubs, ~zaleas and
llhotlodtndr•M
HUUAID'S·_GIDNHOUSE
SYIACUSI, OliO

992,5776
Open Dailv 9-5· Sun . 1-5

· COUPON

HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

fr• Eladranks '-rlttg tlltl wl .. .;v• by tel'- liN iRg Aid c.t• at

MIDDLEPOn FAMILY PRACTICE CENTER
l. B. DAYO, M.D.
306 SECOND AVENUE
THUISDAY, APRIL 12, 1990
9 Ul. TO 12:00 NOON
IELTONE HEAliNG AID CENTER
1312 EAftllll A~INUI (U. 7);_GAWPOUS
. WEDIISDA y I APII. 11
9:00A.M. TO 4100 P.M. '
CALL 614·"6·1744 011·100-63&lt;1-5265

UMWI . - UAW PROVIDER

Call T. •frw lluntlttlr 1,100,634,5265 for

~11111&amp;11111

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY ALICENSED HEARING AID "~=~:•
Anyone who htt trouble h-lng or. underttendlne oonnrlltlon
.. Invited to hllft 1 fr• h•tng tMt to- Hthlt problem c111 be
helped! Brine thle coupon wltb you for your FREE HEARING
TEST of e71 ftlue. Adultt only, P*M-

· Enjoy 'the flexibility and liquidity of a CD
which is automatically r~newable and redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary
The 7-Day-Premium CD
is another example of our
Commitment To Customers.
.
Call or visit you nearest
Central Trust office for details today.

· S10,000

MINIMUM DEPOSIT

Maximum depcair 199,999.99. Substamial penalty for early wirhdrawal.
.
Interest paid to principal and compounded weekly.Rates cffecrive March 9, 1990,
and slbjecr to chang~ without nodce. Yi~ld atsum~ that 'rated rate remoim
comrant for 1 full year with no withdrawal! of imcrtst or pril'"ipal.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
The Baralc Tho&amp; Malee• Thiwr• Happen.

. COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

•
\

992,1881

441--0902

Middleport

Gllllpolt

'
Member FDIC

.

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Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

TU81day, April 10; 1990'

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP

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ADDED Tbuc·li
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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AGE---"MON£

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ACE
PHOIIE ~-=.,...,--.----==.,------'-

CONTEST

_,PHOIIE --------~---

ANDEI$0N'S ,_-NITURE

RULES
·
1. Just color one or more:of the draw'ings on
2.
3.
•

5.

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these pages, . fill in the blanks and take
your entr·y to the sponsoring store before
S:OO p.m., April 13, 1990.
.
Entries will be judged in two difference ·
categories: ages 4-8 ~nd 9-12.
Children may enter as many pictures .a~
they like but con win only one prize•
Crayons only may be used to color. pic~
tures. · ·
Decisions of the judge will be final.
o

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MIDDLI!I'ORT OHIO

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10; 1880

By The Bend

The. Daily S-entinel .
- Page-'S

The 72nd annual meeting of the
Pomeroy High SchooL Alumni
Association has been set for May
26 In · ihe Meigs illgh School
cafeteria, Chark!s Kitchen, an·
nounced today.
The banquet will be served to
alumni and guests at 6:30 with
the ~ance to follow In ·the same
location from 9 p.m until mid·
night. Tickets for the banquet
and 'dance are $12 each and Is
open to both alumni ami their
guests.
Tickets may be purchased at
Francis Florists or Swisher· ·
Lohse Drugs, Pomeroy; or by
mailing a self-addressed
stamped envelope to. Pomeroy
Alumni Assoclaton, Box 202,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. When mall·
lng for tickets, alumni are asked

to Include the malden pame and
the year graduated ~Jnce classes
will be seated together.
The dance Is .open to thepubllc
and "The Gentlemen III" will
provide the music. For those
attending the dance, but not the
banquet, there will be a charge of

$5.
Reservations for the banqu!!t
are to be made before May 22.
1&gt;eat1ng Is available for only 450
graduates and guests. ·
Two aca~mic. scholarship will
be' awarded to a child or grandchUd of a ;Pomeroy illgh School
graduate. Donations are being
ac~epted to the Bob Roberts
Alumni Association Scholarship
Fund. In addlti,on a Charles
Gibbs Memorial Scholarship will
be given.

Confederate Veterans' group .
'
'
names Ashley state .recruiter
.

The sons ol the Confederate
Veterans of the Civil War has
named . Keith Ashley ol Rock·
Springs as tbe recruiter lor the
state of Ohio.

~=l~rf~~:J~~~~~:~::

of
, of the Confederate Army. A)ihley
Is the great· great. grandson of
Willi lam Zoll wtckll!ll!; who Is the
ancestor of the Meigs County
Wlckllnes .
Ashley explained that the recruiter's position. Involves handling of memberShip requests
Officers were installed at the different colored candle for each and · the organization ·of local
recent meeting of Ohio TOPS 570 officers. Mrs. Smith read · an units called camps In Ohio. Ohio
article for each candle and office. currently has no camps, but It
held at the Carpenter's Mil In
Nancy' Manley was the best
Pomeroy.
New officers · are Lennie -loser and Berrilce Durst was the
Aleshire, leader ~ Peggy VIning, .runner up.
assistant leader; Susie Dreyh!U,
Diane Herdman won the fruit
secretary;
Virginia
Dean, · ·, basket.
treasurer Doris Bailey weight
Winners of the heart contest
recorder;' and Mary 'Martin,
were Cindy Faulk, with runners
news reporter.
up being Trlna and Brenda
Hazel · Stanley presented a
Faulk.
program
.of hlstot'lca! chlir&lt;:.hes
Vlrglna Smith was
the
The group will meet tonight for
she
has
visited at the recent
installing officer and a rainbow
weigh In from 5-6: 30 p.m. with
meeting
of
the Circle of Helpmg
theme was carried out with .. a
meeting to follow.
Hands of the Zion Church of
Christ held at the home of Ida
Murphy.
Mrs. Stanley showed pictures
. Plans were .completed tor the departmental officers, VInton
of
St: Joseph's· In Bardstown,
25th anniversary dinner to · be County Salon 612, and, Galila ' Ky.; St. Louis Cathedral, St.
held May 7 at the Trinity Church County S'alon 752.
L01ds, Mo.; Old North Cllllrch in
Mrs. Martin appointed Iva
in Pomeroy at 6:30 -p.m. -at the
Boston, Mass.; Chapel at West
recent meeting ox the Eight and Powell and Marge Fetty to the
Point; Smith Memorlalln Arkan·
Forty, Meigs County Salon No. decorating and gifts committee.
sas;
MI. Carmel Spiritual Center
Veda Davis and _Iva Powell
710, held at the home of Iva
In
Nlagra
Falls, Meeting House .
conducted a memorial service
Powell.
·
at
Bethany,
W.Va. ; and Thorn
Mary Martin opened the for a deceased member. Others
Crown
Chapel
in Eureka Springs,
meeting in ritualistic form and taking part were Catherine
Ark.
Iva Powell gave the prayer. The ' ·Welsh, .Mary Martin, Florence
Lucille Allen, l preside[\!, con·
· pledge . was led by Catherine Richards, and Lu111 Hampton.
dueled the meetmg and roD call
The annual report forms were
Welsh.
was answered with a Bible verse
Special · guests
at
the given to each officer and
containing the word spring.
anniversary dinner will Include chairmen.
Kathryn Johnson had devoticins using a reading, "My
Beautiful Moment" which chronicled the growth of young girl
who had to use crutches and how
The Meigs High School class of Mlller, Jim Morris, Steve Oller,
she overcame obstacles In life.
1970 Is planning Its 20th reunion to William Robert Ratllfl, Joe ReyMrs. Johnson also read a poem,
be held on June 23 and efforts are nolds, John Rltchhart, Roberla
being made to' compile a current Salser, Danny Smith, Fr;10kRay
''Open the Door.' '
.
Work day at the church will be
l!stlnl&lt; of the graduates.
Taylor, Sherry Ward, and Terri
Wolfe.
The committee has been un·
Tuesday.
able to secure current addresses
Tammy Dummitt will deco·
Anyone having the current
on several class members Includaddress of any of the -students Is
ing Robert Blankenship, Nancy
asked to contact Mary Gilmore
Blumenauer,. Donna Branham, at 992·0620 or Bette Hoffman at
Nlke Bremberg, Mike Caruthers, 992·3308, or mall Information to
Bridget Johnson, a second
Penny Caton, Judy Combs, Don Mrs. Gilmore at 34684 Rockspgrader at the Middleport Ele·
Hartung, Rose Hartung, Karen rings Road, Pomeroy.
mentary School, made the honor
Hayes, Sherry Hayes, Sharon
roll for the fourth six weeks
Hicks, Hazel Leah Kiser. Joyce
period.- Her name was
grading
Lunsford, Jerry McDaniel, Betsy
The James R. Hill who Is In the not Included or the orlglnalllstof
process of establishing a carry· honor roll stullents submitted for
out business in Rutland Is not the publication.
•
same James R. Hill who is
Jon and Angle Grueser, Silver
manager of Pleasers Restaurant
Ridge, Reesville, are announcing
In Pomeroy.
- the bll'th of a daughter, Suzanne
Ralph Pratt, Middleport Is a
Michelle, born Feb. 9 at
at University Hospital ;
patient
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
where
he
was scheduled to
The winner of the Cobra- 16
The Infant weighed seven
undergo
surgery
ioday. Cards
Channel Scanner In a fund raising
pounds and eight ounces and was
may
be
sent
to
Prall
at Room
event sponsored by the Chester
19 inches long. ·
,
1083,
Doan
Hall,.
University
Hos·
Volunteer Fire Department was
Mr. and Mrs. Grueser havz
pltal,
Columbus.
Arnold Veon, of Coolyllle .
. three other children, Stacy, age
six; Jon Josh, age four; and
.
Lucas, age two.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs.
Charles
Grueser,
MUST I FILE A TAX
Minersville;
Jackie
Carl,
IOURN? .
Minersville;
Ray
Ginther,
Portland,
Whether yau IRUitli!t a tax rtturn
Great grandparents are Ruth
gttWally .,_. • wlltther your
Thomas a~d Wilma Seaman.
gross Inc- ulltllls the inc. . . requw-t __,,for your
FERRIS WHEEL - Ople Cobb of Sycam~ Street built Ibis
ferris wheel with hay rake teeth. Tbc ferris wheel stands six feet
·high and revolves by a motor, with six seats containing various
animals.

·TOPS meets recently

has four camps of the ladles'
organization. the United Daugh·
teu of the Confederacy, to which
Mrs. Keith Ashley belongs.
The purpose of the organlza·
lion Is to maintain the history of
the Confederate culture and
' army but In no way sanctions the
attempt of the Confederate states
to secede from the Union nor
condone slavery, Ashley
explained.
.
Any male with a Confeder.a te
ancestor or ancestor's brother
who fought for the ~nfederacy
may contact Ashley lor member·
ship-Information.
·

Circle of Helping Hands
meeting held re~ently' ·

Eight and . Forty meets

· Reunfon planned for anniversary

rate the tables for the Easter
sunrise breakfast.
The mother-daughter banquet
will be Ma:,:ll with the theme ''I
Remember Mama."
The ladles .,.-lll)Jost the Meigs
County Mens Fellowship on April
23 and the Meigs County Womens
Fellowship on May 24 .
The next ~eetlng will be June 7
at the home of Mrs. Virginia
Wyatt.

SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
Nazarene Church will have revival Tuesday through Sunday at 7
p.m. nightly and 10:30 a.m. on
Sunday with Rev. Ronald Roth as
special speaker. The public Is
Invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS
Vanderhoof

C:::;;jii

..-!tal status age.
feu lillY • • re~~uirtd, or w1111
ta. lilt a · - if:
,
•Yeu ""allfy for 111 Earntd IncCr....
han a rotund ht YM.
Yeu'rt rlll"irtd.te ftlt to obtalll ·

· . . ICAII. UBLEI. I.A.

yeur rtfvnd.

ey.., owe addlti..J tax..
.
ltar io mind that " • ihoio9t a ftdtral rot urn is not rtquWtll, yeu •ay lot rt·
quirtll to tilt • stele or ltcal rolurL Do yeu hawt""tlflom ..._.haw,._ tax
laws tfftct yeur return? CaK yeur ltcal H&amp;llllack offlct.ltltor yot, stop by
fht ont -r•t yau. Wt'rt riiMiy to ._,, youl

H&amp;R BLOCK

SUZANNE M. GR1.JDIER
(

618EAST MAIN

992-6674

ooid,
•"•..,_ 1 .10 . .ooum

11

.3

11

•

15

Of

MINh cou.._ must b• pr•

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

tor •• ,.w'" ..,.,.a

•Pt'-'of Mil .... -*6 c.UI l.n•t ........ Df'IGIOi ea COlt.
•7 .-nt ..... "" _., IMCI
· · - · Ia 001 ttllionlillle tor - • tiler fltot dl\'. ICheck

Mto•• 2 ;00 "~"'

........ :~ ...... ,..,..,. '" ...,.;.., . c.ll

of,,..,_...

T.L.C.
27Yrt. Exp.

Mli . . .L . . . .

Refor•-

-~

• -

EVENINGS

1 1

....

1

ve••

0-

Prln.... -·

In""'-·

.

usa IIOWIIS
.W TAIIUI &amp; KIO
PIODICIS
.

s..,.._c.t.r
. II(
._,
_ s..
....

............ .a.ht .
Sews, ..........

DUMPTftUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

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

HOURI: M-F 9-7
Sot. 9·1: Clattd Bun.

(614) 667-1271

949-2969

3 / 21/10/dn

7-1....111

"FIREWOOD

992•2269

EAGU IIDGI
SIIALLEIIGINI
C.EIITII

aiAIIIG
N\WLAND
ENTERPRISES

.

BILL SLACK

-=:Oh·

SITEWOII - lOADS

--

HUMPHIEY'S

R. L HOLlON
TIUCIING

OIL
S1695 4 Qt. Mtnt.

CUMAR
CONTROL

··· C.SI&amp;,O.O

Ill£ . . . .
MOVI 18RAI.

laatlng, Caalng,
. lafrl1tratl.n
Sarwlce

•!JRAVIEL

CONY. .NQ STOll Rill

•tiMESTONE

CHIStEI
QUII SlOP

•FILL PIRT
•ANYTiiJNG
AT :ALL

St. ltl. 7 &amp; 241
ClllsrD, 01110

s.th 4th St.

-.UIW -1

. Mkllllepoft,

"LIGHT HAULING
'

,.2-6173
209

. 112-21H

IUIII.ST., nn.A•

C. Tltla IIA 8%: Thlo prollrem wil eduMo In :__..:::.!:.._ _ _ __
IOnO!ermtl'llln.lngotpubilcly .
... ....1 Not'~
funclod lnotllutlono lor
,....., C
..,.
poll·hlgh ochoot trtlnlng.
I·W•u.
NOTICE OF AUCTION ·
Pllrllclpente In thlt t ... nlng,
.........r .......... w-.
, _ , mull be In long
Notlct lo horeby glv1r1 that
-nlcellon
In
term training. four 141 yew the boerd ofeducetlon of tho
Adamt. - t o
,Atl-t,
Public Notice
dear• progrtmt ere In- Mel- Local School. Oiltrlcl.
dueled.
~
Cl
iiiOdl,
Clntpn.
a.tm-. llrowlt. · -·
1
D. Title 118: Thlo progrom ::'f~r c;.-:':';.e.:: ~ .":!!::~ John w; Corm.,; and EX~
Cotumlll8na, f . . . .ct. flY·
eiiJible youth 14-21
ot Molat High School, Po· CEPTING AND RESERV·
o i - during tho tum· . mtroy, Ohio. commencing lNG til aoal. "" and !Ill
otte,
CWIIL
GNuga,
~~:fl~~ ;~, ~:;~~~ mtr .Choot
HarnU· 1
I'
brNk lhr~-h It 7 00 p M
A H
underlying the ume with
torr. . Han-. Hlghl•d.
-•
'· the· "following
on pr 12
Work ExperltnC.. Job Club.
1810,
de·• the r II ht t o mIno on d operate
....,...,., Jefi8roan, L!lw•
other....,. pl•ning explo- tcrlbed portOntl property: , for tho umo.
' - · Madlaan. Mahonlrig.
rotlon tctlvltloo, and rtme._.,, ,Iota ot Fl•t• . Alto IIHiiol-lnti r•l·oe...,.._ ·MIDmL ·M thll .,ount.
cliel educallon. W•r• Olaoowore
· toto ofiuattd In tM Town·
alar.-. Mu•
of a CERTIFIED
E. Title 8% l,_,t.,..: lo
Thr• (3} Electric Rengeo thlp. County and State afo.
ldntlum. Noble. Pany, Pick·
poyoble
to the funding In lddlllon to thote
Thr• (3} Gat Rongea
rotllld. ond In told Section
Mfty, ..... Porta... Preble.
Termtoftalothlllbecaoh 18. Town2. Range13ofthe
Raae. lclota. ll8rlr, Trurn· llherllf, OR CASH, tor 10 .-that 11 larned b_...
of tho purdl- upon t .. performance of the In the form of c•h. or • - - Ohio Com1111ny Purch••·
bul. Tu10 r •••· VInton. .... !'rogrtmming tlllad or,o•-·acheckpay· BeginningS. 2&amp; deg. E.. 10
W....... Md W•hlntttan ...... • • lie req11lrwd lit " "
to contingent upon opeclilad oblo to the botnl af edu.. rodt 20 llnlui trom Fenny
Countloo. Ohio. IUty 1-· time ""' bid Ia IIGCAjited.
The FULL puroh- prloe gutdellnet.
· tlan of the Mlltlt Locol 'Smlth'o N.W. cor- on~ In
•~M peroan, tlrm, DOiporD·
F. EDWAA: Thil program Sohool Diltrlct which II ,.. tM center of lha roecl;
lion Of -lly who-.._ lhlll be Pllld TO THE SHEA·
IFF within THIRTY 1301 dayt
- • • qulredotthetlmoolthopub· thonae N. 19'11 deg. E.• 13
"""' ..... ...., lhli appll- from tM d... of ute. Md on · -who orecMtlocltad
u_,ployad dueto lie ouctlon from the hlgheot rode; thence I. 41 Y.o deg. E..
cotlon tlloutd nolbe grontad
to do
· 10, the • ,... layoff "' plant clo• bidder.
.
o'?onr:dtt•~or~ rsce~9;!-1.-dce
- . t file with tiMi Com· failure
putOh•• ........ edjudgtd Ina. Actllrllloo 'lnatude A•
lnfllrmlllllon
con•nlng
the
• ~ ~ · v n " '·
wr~-­
-tmtnt. Job Club. ond ouc:11an - thellle oblllned w.. 13 r&lt;Hh: thenae N. 157
Mtallne t~ n11ane. on or In contMipt al Court.
.·
d-. 15 rodt 10 llnko; thence
Pullllc Notlot II henby gl· C..._..._ ·~-lng.
Wora April 30. 1110. On~-" .._
lit the
of tho
tNI
all
ouch
,....
prop.
(71
Golll•~::.
CAA
will
Molgt
-High
'Schoal,
42lit.
l
N. 22'h d•g. W. 7 ro• 17
• • ... ·Commit... . ... anytobe"'!ldll Public AucIUbmll elect
lly to tho PDrnorov Plkt.
PoflltrOJ, llnkt . to the place of begin·
celv•
written
- tn
- IIC·
• tion may be tublacl to t Fe- SDA#24 Admlnlttratlve ~n· Ohio (Telaphano: 1114-992· ning aontllnlng one aero. ro-.
tcf
tNI• affect
·•d
oervlng frCNR thlo grent one
_..,..,. ,.,._for . , derol Tu Uon that moy not tlly .t he ch-llllco ofap- 21681.
... utlngulthtd by ........ pllcontt •d ptrllciPIIntt to
The boenl reoorv• tM Iorge ch•tnut trM and one
...... '-lnu
ond purchaln of ...., ouch tho ..lorlt to which the tet~ right to f"'ect ony"' til bldl. -cherry tree. Solng known I t
... ....... diiCidld Dn
rMI
pr-"t ere · urvtc~ to vltloo tho relwont perJano Fry. Tre•u"" tho Peach Forie School lot
the, baolt of the lnfDrmlllan
"
tho F - T•• Lien farmtiiiGtl lllnde'*·
Melat Local School Dltlrlct ond being tht tome pre...,..._ In tllltppllaotlaot
· fundi
1•1 20 27 4 3 1
mlooo convoyed by Fanny
(8' All
Mdllllaftidevltt •t lllllad Index . tNI lo kapt by .tho
' andprogro~m
ng _~_ _._:_f_l_._o_4_•
..
• _ SmlthtalotrdofEducation
County R - - to doter· 1-'t
perlo!'"•nce
~the apptlcMII. · - In·
. by dMd doted November
fornietlon ....., be oblllnad inlne H Notlot of a ,....,.,: lllndor• I!'•IUblect to fa·
doral,
&amp;tete,
and
BDA#24
Public
Notice
·
·.
30. 1989, recor- In Yo·
Tex
Uen
h•
boen
fllad
w~h
I!Y aontiiCtlng tho Public
to 'ony auch ,....
luma 102. p - 248 of told
,01111,_ Cammletlon of r•pect
·
1he a - I t uummary of
SHERIFF'S BALE OF
Melgi County OMd Ra·
Ohio. 180 Elll Broad peap1rty.
GeHit-Melat
Jomoo
M.
lautoby.
lhorlll
CAA
JTPA
REAL
EITATE
cordt.
"
Street. ~but. Olllo
PY'IO.
THE ITATE OF OHIO
Being tho uma rMieltlte .
A. DINapoli. ....,..mrnrng for
43211-0173.
,
A~
MEIGS COUNTY
eonvoyad lo Hence Jo~•
Complete p1ogrammlng • ·
(4110, , ..
BTUZIN AND CAMNER tallt tre ovollllble for review
THE CENTRAL TRUST ,
tnd Ethel · Jo-. Melgo
. 11797 N. High s - 11r the public. For iurlhor InCOMPANY Of
County Deed R.,_da:
Ntllc NotiCe
Sulto 134 lorrnallon; P,leile cell the
.. SOUTHEAITERN
Par&lt;;el 2:
.
Worthington, Ohio 430815 Gllllo-Molgo CAA JTPA Ad· ·
OHIO•. N.A.
The following real ootote
BHERIFF'BIALE
(8141 8815·4882 mlnlo......,.
.Oiflae
of
. VI!
lituated In the County of
CABE NO .. IO-CV-115
(4110. 17, 24 3ta ·
. Chelhlre 3117· 7342 or 992·
FREQERICK W. KLEIN.
Meiga, Townllllp of lolle151528.
AKA
bury tnd State of Ohio, and
The s- of Ohio, -ga
Gotlla·Malgo CAA 1o on
FRED W. KLEIN. ET AL
bounded and dillorl- a
County, tt. l'urtuant to the
Public Not'Equal
()pportunlty/Afflr.CASE NO. 81 CL 227
fo"owt: lht foHowlng rell
·-lotued
rnandof.,aodorof'
trom the Court of ,.
In purouance to an Ordor Mllte tltuate In the Nort~mallve Actlcln Employer.
PUBLIC NOTICE
c-non- olaald · -In accordoriae
141 to, 1tc
of Bote dlrect8d to meln the -tOne Cluorter of Soction
with thor• ·
County, •d to me dlrectH.
tbovt Mlltlad octlon; I will - No. 18. Ballobury Townohlp,
,.., tho octlon of Cltllent Fe· qutr.....,ll af the .Jol&gt; TrtlnliC
Notice
offer
tor tale II public auc· Melga
County.
Ohio.
Pub
:c~arot lank. • fedortl Sav· lng Pilrtnorohlp Ac:t of 1982. ·
,....;.;;;;;.;.;.;,;.;;.,;,
__
I
tlon, 11 the front door oi the bounded ond d•crl- a
lnga lank, Plaintiff. v. Wit.· llectlon 104, the following Courthou•
In Pom•oy. foiiOI(ft: Beginning el the
I...,E.MorrloandlandraK. Job Training Progrom lo
Ohio, In the obo•e nomad Nort'-t corner of 127
NOTICE OF SALE
:Montt. otat.. O.lendonle.l. ovallable for public review.
By virtue of· . , Onlar of county. on T-doy, May 1. 17/100 ecro trocuecorded
·
. P'f!IO
,....,. M. Soultby. Shorlfl,
lilt IIIUed out of tho Com- 1880tt10:00e,m .. lh•fol· In DMd Book 173, poge
GALUA COUNTY.
ohlll offor for Ill• II C'!l"a
mon PI- Court of MeitiJ lowing cllecrlbed rNI-te, 1&amp;9. on tho W..t lne of Sec·
MEIGS COUNTY PLAN
tl
tho
ga
County, Ohio. in tho c•• of t~lllted In the County of tlon No. 18; thence Eat
(11 1he hauto•• Uw,.,ao Olornond lavr,tgo • loin Meit~t.. and tho Sllte o! 140~ fHI to the centor of
In 1111
of
the rced; thence .North 27
Company, Ptllntlff, vt. Don Ohio. to wit :
Situated In tho Vlllogo of deg. &amp;0' Wat 20&amp; feel
C ......... ·ot ot .. Dtlend·.-:.;o::· 1 FUndi. Tho Clolfa.Mtlgt
Caunty Of elong the center of tho'road:
upon • Judtlt~~tnt thor· Middleport.
,:;tat~d. a.nl.
CAA It the Subracipltnt of •lt.
Melgo
ond
Stttt
of Ohio:
thence North 18 deg. 40'
ein -*'-'~· being cfollowing detcrlbed ••• JTPA lund for Oalllo ond No. 88-CV-113 . In uld
Being Lott NoL 129 lnd Weot4811Hialongtheaen- . . , _ , . , to wit:
Mtiga Countla
Court, I wll offer for llle at 130 In Pelmor't Addition to tlr of tho road; thence north
· llltuot••f 1111 Caullly of
f211he Gtiii-Malga CAA the front - r of tho Caurt- Bhllflleld. now lr_por_ 38 cleg. 30' WHt 1110 leM
In the lUte Of Ohio. •• daltvor
tctlv~
hou• In Pomoroy, Mllat Into and a jllrl ofthelllllltl•of elong tho centor of tho road;
•dlntheT-nolllpofllallt· lloo for 1M foii.....Jng JTPA County, Ohio, on tho 11th Mlddloport, Melgo .County. · lhenae North
74 dog.
,bury an~ bou.- ond de- Tllln: TltlaiiA 78%; TltlaiiA day of May. 1180. ot 10:00 Ohio. For 1 mort definite d• 40' WHt 373 tiona
•t o - •loltawt: .
IIA II%; Title liB; 8% A.M.. 1M folowlng londl ocrlptlon of llld lott, ·Nfor- tho ..,... of tho road;
.
In llectlon 27,
tnd IDWAA.
• tJIIUIIed
and t l n - ' t loclled ot .,,. It .herelly - · tO -the thence Narth 13 dag. 30'
, Fnatlon 33, Town 2, Ranga
OiiiO .u..... of 412 8~ Fifth SlrHt, Middle- MrMIYad plat t"-1 on ,.. W•t. 700 feit olons tho
13. 8 II I ury T - n =
~ port, Ohio 4157150. .A com- cor~ In 1M olllce of the Mol at cent., of the road; tt.nae
; Me~g~CountY.S-of
South 80 cteg.· 111' -t. 80
plelelogal d•crlptlon of tho County R-cltr.
.,d 11a1111 · , _ iuly de· •rv- 10 determine end
RtforDHd:
Volume
loat Ilona the center of tho
loll-•:
-.y 1M ldtrrtlfl-lon of
,oc:cltod • foli-o:
811&amp;.
Malat rood to tho Well line of Sec·
Iaing Lot No. 1381n lhol· 240. County llecordl.
tion t,lo. 18; thence aouth
•the~~ el~:-o:~:s.:· CAA: de· field. In the VIII- of MldP&lt;-'Y It located ot 1 170 lett tiona the llaport.
Melgo c_.... nty.
Fourth A-u•. Mill- · llno of Section No. 1S to tho
, Fraction 33: t'-ae North Ito - - In occor· Ohio.
·
·
~ alOng the .... liM ofaald danoowllhthepolloy-td
Rtf~on~ DHd: Volume
I~J~~Orh~lo.
.
pltce of beginning. oontllin·
•F r -,33. 1110
lit March 115, ttto pu~- , 2151, 111111• · 303. Mllgo
approtaad 'at lng 27 - • ·
,., ... to' 1 point; ihanoo lttiact Et;O/ AAP
lllte- County Oeoid A-ell.
tnd connot be
bcapt oil logll hlghwoyt.
.Wett ti!Mogt line. 1100 f - ment. All Ftdorel and • for
than two-thin..
Baing tho tame rNI•IIte
Stld reel lo oubjtct
·-•••toanlr... plnln Ltwo oot_,.,ID
Clvl to tecruad1190 rul atlll
apprtlttd ¥tlue.
convayad to Henat Jothe .-tora pt porty liM Alghtt- Equal Opportunthe loll-a de·
ond E - Jan• by retho -tlng -erly lly . . followed Md adh•td
rul
-It
•-te
1n
In
Volumo1t8.
poge
Tht · - d•crlbed rMI
·right al way 11M of State to.
of Melgt In tho 233 of tht Mtlgt County
•tote h• bean •olgriad
; lloute Number 143 •d tho
1151 GeHit-Meiga
CAA Auclllor'o Porcel Number:
tndTownohip DHd Recordl.
•rNI polnl ot ......,nlng lor u-. • clcH•t• entry tc· 111·00100.
bounded
The pr~ ln. Ptraol t • It
.
tho lond "-eln .._arlbed; _,nllng ty- to Int....
•• fallowo:
It lo...., on Pel hlaok Road
l'lallllt• known a: 412
(County ..... 111llfiPICIIdrllll·
· thM"'! north 7S dtgr- 04' · - fltetl contrOl. tc· S. Fifth St.-t. Middl-rt,
00" Watt along t line. _,n&amp;lng. audit, and debt Ohio 417110.
, ... 'h '10 7/10 rill• from
1150.33 fwl to.., Iron pin: oo-lon proCidu- end
Routa 33onthelllft h - R!AL
ESTATE
APthlnoo Harth 11 dtaro• 1M.,...... clllbu,... •d oc- PRAISED AT: t33,100.00.
oflheraod.
·
Ptrqlo t • II apprtload tt
OT 114'" Eatt along 1 line. ~lnu of lu ..... - · The rNieotll•- be
2aO.I15 fwl to ., Iron pin; In tc.aardtoiot -~~ required. oold tor looo then two-thlr*
t27.100.00 .,d cannot be
thlnct North . . dtgr- '-11- ......-..
oold for .... two-thlrdl
the opprtllad value.
11' 20" Eatt alont a line,
Ill ''OIIItm -lvltloo por
of 1ho ..,.,...... votua. The
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
117.11 fwlto.,lronplnln tllla . . tt - • : (NOTE: on
property loolltd In tha vtl·
of-·
the . . .IOfl prapOIIf liM Appllcllnttlptrllalpantt rtlea• of Mlddltport. .,. .,.
Jamill M. loulo!&gt;Y
IOid IIPIIatlly from prOp-Shorlll of
County
the Hitting -terly celve --~~~~- - ptrt of
. right .at way Hne of ltata tho JTPA
tliort.
trty on letlobury Twp: The
14!10, 17, 24 3tc
.
proparty In lllltbury Twp. ,
·· ·R - Numbar·143: thlnoo - - • • u - to help
Iouth 17 dog.-- 00' 00" ...., client pion the ........
w• be told • t unit, '
Wett ........ tile . . - - of
goolt;
TERMS OF BALE: The
Public Notice
. pr-'Y llniiDIId the Hill· •d • I fir• lliljl tO the
-•· ·
purch-...
lllg-tert,rtghtofwayiiM _,nty
tlllnlng
lOOn
hit bid
II DOctptlld
NOTICE OF
ofa-R-Number143, walling Itt. A - - It
thell be required to 81 ~ ot1t
API'OINTMENT OF
324.11 fwlto the polnl of uttd to hllp tllllfkl• 1!1/all- '
· tho day of lila, In ••h or
FIDUCIARY ·
by cortlftad chlolc, payable
Md oolllllnlng emo - • .c it* funclng
llld ttr;;llll In thi
On. Allrll 4, 1110. In tho
1...
1,.- . ·
JTP
the ·
-10
of of
Mtlgl
Probate
' c .,... ... • funding it u.... Melat County
Ohio,
tiMi
••
of ......
for
- I I bie to help MID fund lim~ c-. CataNo. HIIO,IIabort E. O.VIt. R - 1,
In
lydetarlllad•fol. ~ ....... of ...... ...........
Ohio 41741,
~ ot a point
A. Title IIA 7ft: (11 Job appoLtted e-n.. of
tiMi . , _ of ,Einorl 0...11.
JMIOUdllttt~ofaald 'Ciull, 2 · 3 - . . 121 Cleo,_...., 33: thlnae North trOOtftT_,..(CRT),..,... dlct ... ~. ••• of Aoutll 1.
!!laoltt the - 11M of, Nld IO lllllllnlum of 12 ....... LonllfVIIL Ohio 41741.
Roborll.luok.
,_...., 33,, 1110 ... """" per
but not to
. . . . . to a point; . . . . .
I td 104 lillie i'lrlt
Pl'otlele Juclgt
Wettlllongallna.IOOfMI 001 II alkll1 ·.........
-LtruiK. N•.... ao8. Clark
(41 10. 17, 24 . .. .
lroRpln •
to lullllntl 1111ente 1101•

Qood Ret•

PlT 1111 FOlD

"SHRUB • TREE
TRIM anti REMOVAL·.

tlvlty.

·~·-

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

614-742-231 s
3·2!F9CH lila. pd.
-- - ·-

oa,~v~~:~i:law~~~

.....

Reaidentl•l •
Commercial

CAU.

985-4422

...tin
COUIIfiY
MO...
1·11·

.

.

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

JO'S GIFI SHOP
STUC... O.O '
, ..... Piu. . . .)

HOllE PAll

lt. U41 Paa1tr., OW.

IS NOW OPEN
FOI IISINESS.

· •Mobu.H-

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Ptm ·

. REfAIR ·
AI•• Trllllllttlo•

IN STOCK: oCemtnt..._ _•Com-..y-

•Mobile Horn•
Ren*Ie

•Lot

v•• eea., llrd ...._

Aant-t•

•Cement llrd lnhl
•Fountiln 81rd ...... ""•
O...F,.....Ant*IINI I

• 992·7479

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

,••,.,.Ollie '

lt. II 1lertlt ef

OtM Yird OmiiMnta
B~!r. From Uo .t San!

99: ·5!211

1-12·'·111

liew•d

CON-'S

L Wrltllil

MIIOIIIOIH

OHIOIIVR

•as-. ..

ROOFING

IVIM.ASTIIIGS

NftV- IEftAII

OPINt

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter-Cleaning
· Painting

APil 1 1Hiu julY 1

FREE ESTIMATES

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

•11 LOOATIO.
DlVI'S SIIALL
ENGINE IEPAII

.

2531W81t .....
P••r•y, IIIII.
.

H()URS:
.
Thull. ltiru Sun.
10 a.m.-1 p.m. ·
WHOLEBALI·RETAIL

PARTS ANIUERVICE

........

For IIIIo II Z and Wi ale

2.7 ...15

ltoak Pent for H-1111.
w-..or.'reoullltah.

' It, lt. JJI, S • •

9492:~1~!.

1/!.5!1 .

a,_ a 81fattcM•
Pl. 992-3912

. 4/I/'Wo/1 -

1-21·11-1111

1---------·

I

I·
I

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

PI.I-NG &amp; IIA11NG

.,

. 161 North Stc....
Mld •• art, OW. 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
992•5135. 915-3561

Aaan ,,.. ,_, OHJce

~AOa~~=:~J:

...,aa In

pr...,..
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.
. . . . M'OO''Witlllalll

. . . . 11.00 ....... fllllnt

:!:1..•ell" 8:'-.! J~;.:

CUSTOM IUU
IOMIS &amp; GARAGES

...,,.. Eltlm....'~

"Atlti-·IIPricH"

PH. 949·2101
or lat. t4f·2160

Pll. 94t-2101

., .... 949•216d

NO SUNOAY

. Dqy • Night

NO SUNDAY CALlS

-•CIOWAYE
ov• HPAII

'AIL IIlilS
llrint It In Or We

Hdclp.

Ill'S APPUAIIG

SIIYICI

"~·5335 If 915-3561

=. . ...,_.
'

Acna · - , . . OHila
117 L S.C. Pt•u•r

K and J

POIIIIOY, 0.0

tn"111%
..... lltlfl'lty

........

•NEW HOMES •BIDING

•GAt:tAGEI ,

•RI!MODI!UNG

•GENERAII. CON1l1ACTING
A Gl'lllt CiiiiiJIMtlln"Quallty 1111!1

R••••l• ,rll.."

....,1
UP T
...... ..., .........
WIGOMIDU

992-6111

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FIIS1' VISir fill LOTIONI - .,..,,.,

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.
;11• 21" 1Mt ...... a 1M.
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?e.II .... to. point .. the .... -Older Wortl·

..

...

ptDtl·ll-.

,..... .. WilY ... of . . . . ..... ........ - · - (41
v....,_T~v-Out. aeo ltoUN
.... point of
-lmurn. ........ .........
,.,_ lttt - • liiNin -. nlloll w11 lie $ t o . .

110u11 ............ 141DIMI t11e

BISSELL
BUILDERS

IISSILl
SIDING
.._. CO.

.

_,job

=In=-·

' •VINYL SIQING
•ALUMINUM 81D.ING
•BLOWN IN
INIULATION

:

to-.

.t

SERVICE

-lloilr , ..........~.-

.. ..................
------·.

•Tirelelee....
•F ftint End

........ Wt . .
llltldtllilll_ ...

IUM HOMI

,..

•Brake Work

, For Rabbit.
Jetta, Golf,
Beetle and Bu1.

'

U2-3011

.....
..,..........
...... -

IUTLAND
SAUSGIMI
SDYICE
Alltl!lment
•Oil Chllnge • Lube

PARTS &amp;

.:so·

-lou•-·

'

I

.ao

IICthlltloo :·i imilif:t..
IIA 78% but with the odell·
lion of Work Experience ••·

MontiiN•••·

I

OHIO

•

.... eatt

G- ·G--.

I

MAsON " POINT PLEASANT - NEW HAVEN
773-5514 . 675-1121
882-2135

0.., 1 I Wardl

c.......

i

PEOPLES BANK

v.w.

- ~ -&lt;

. LEGAL NOTICE
Nota 1o ..-, -AtfortiA·CIIlCorpon.tlon h• ltad
... lpplioellan- tht ......
Ha Ullltloo Commit.., of
Ohio .(Cate No. 10-323-TP·
AACifor authority to...,.,d
ho c:.rtltl .... of Putllla Con- • • • end ......tlty No.
' 11 ln91'defto-ldelnl....

Seniors at Meigs Higli School .
will present three one-act plays . ,
In "An evening of Theatre" on
Friday, April 20 at ·the high
school.Openlngcurtalnwlllbeat ·
8 p.m Admission is $2 for adults
and $1 for students.

DISCOVBB Dll DD'J'E.RENCEf

ilatt
t4 .oo
ti .OO

tnt tiH'I _.., .. . . . . . . .....

.u.-.-.

ad-

1·11·'10-f' mo.

Ylnt Ill•

!!!!!!!!!!
,..lc Notice

Senior plays ·

We trim the "fat" so you pay le'ss'for basic-:flnanCial ·
servtces. That's why our passbook sav.ings account .
. has 112 service charge, ill! minirtmm balance, and n2
limit on the ril,lillber of monthly transactions, in
dition to paying a competitive interest rate on balances over $100. There .1§ a better way to save!

992-6717 " - .,..
992-6244 Gar...

NEW &amp; USED
.PARTS ,

........,

1ft Memo1_.

Springs Grange will meet Thurs- ·
day at 7: 30 p.m. at tlfe hall.

We're NOt
A "Piggy" Bank

For Appt. Call

,.

~ m.
• • to mike tonectlon.
.....................d .....,..• .,.
. C.tl
Adl

•
ROCK SPRINGS -,.The ROCk

-·

•

18.00
.42
t .13.00
.10
MOnthly
1&amp;
t1 .3Q/ dty
.01/day
" ....,.tor con•MM tuM. ~ttok.. '-'•CI"':I will .. ctt•ttlf
10

• ....... - ............., - · '-041ftll ........... ,,..,.,.,.. will be

•

.

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

..

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary will have a
donkey basketball game on
Thursday at 7:30 p.!J!. at the
Rutland Civic Center. Admission
is $4 for adults and $2.50 lor
children and senior cltlze'ns.

Oarification

Winner announced

Wordl

1

y

;;.;;;.,. Metea: &amp;.llle

GALLIPOLIS-There will be a
meeting of the Diabetes Support
Group on Thursday at 7 p.m. In
the French ~ room at Holzer
Medical Center. The guest
speaker will be Dr. Barbara
wiseman.

Omitted

' Hospitalized

• DIVI
·

· 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

CHESHIRE -There wlll be a
free clothing day Thursday from
9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building In Cheshire spon·
sored by the Meigs Gallla Community Action Agency.

a

Grueser birth

TO PLACE AN AD ClU 992·2156
MONDAY thJu~' FIIIDAY I A.M. "to 5 P.M.

'

510 1/t 21111 St~ lllillllllltMirtl

.

.

Baptist Church W!ll have a ·
TUESDAY
CHESTER -The MI. Herman . pre-Easter revival Wednesday .
through Saturday- at 7 p.m. ;
United Brethren .Church will
nightly. The evangelist . will be
have ' revival through Saturday
with evangelist Lamar O'Bryailt Charles Ferrell, Pine Grove, ,
W.Va. There will be special :
speaking ·nightly at 7: 30 p.m.
There will be special singing. slrtglng e;~ch evening and the 1
public Is Invited to attend.
!
Robert Sanders; pas tor, invites
the publiC.
'
POMEROY - A representa· •
live from Congressman Clarence :
HARTFORD -There will be a
revival at the l"athers House Mlller's of!Ice will conduct an. ;
open door sessl&lt;;&gt;n on Wednesday l
Church In · Har)tord, ·w. Va.
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightlY . from 11 a.m. ~o 1 p.m. In the court •
hovse In Pomeroy. Anyone hav- :
There will be special singing and
lng questions concerning the :
preaching and the public Is
federal government IS Invited to :
Invited to attend.
discuss them with the represen·
tatlve- at this time.
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Tru!;tees will meet
POMEROY -The· offices of
T~esday, 7:30 p.m. 111 the town
Planned Parenthood In Pomeroy
hall.
will be closed Wednesday due to a
REEDSVILLE .- The Eastern staff meeting.
Lpcal Board of Education will be
THURSDAY
meeting In special session on
POMERO.Y
-The Pomeroy
Tuesday for · the purpose of
Group
of
A.A.
and
AI-Anon will.
undertaking a tour of the dis·
meet
Thursday
at
7 p.m. at the
trlct's buildings and dealing with
JTPA
office
In
Pomeroy.
pecsonnel matters.

HARRISONVILLE -TheHar·
rlsonvllle Senior · Citizens wlll
hold a free blood pressure clinic
from 10 a.m. to noon at the town
hall. The public Is Invited to take
advantage of the service.
POMEROY -There wlllhbe a
revival at the Hysell Run Holi·
ness Chapel Tuesday through
Sunday with George Williams,
pastor of the Point Rock Church,
as speaker. There will be special
singing and services are nightly
at 7 p.m. Pastor Robert Grimm
Invites the public.

IICIC'S CAl WASH

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Community ·calendar

POMEROY '-The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
will hold Its monthly meeting Ol}
Tuesday at noon at the senior
ciilzens .center In Pomeroy. The
guest speaker _wili be Lee Wede·
meyer, Meigs industries. - All
members are urged to attend the
luncheon meeting.

Business Services

Classified

Tuesday. Aprjl10. 1990

Pomeroy Alumni Association
_. planning·72nd ann~l meeting

Ohio

•

Give~W~r

....... --..;•
4-aiii,IIM

•

�Paga 10-The

Seminal

____ _

LAFF-A-OAY

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

8

-

LoeC .. Found

.l'ound:=-.
.
.
.
.
.
... --.
Mlr. v.r, tdlndiJ.I1'

Aputmem

112 ·~

b:oolooed.

•::;;;..,r-,
..........
11
•
.

.I

7

44

.....

Yard sa11

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

I

51

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry WrlaJit

1l V8111&amp; 4 WD..
1 - 'l'ft ....... Xl.T, ...100.·
~.

for Rent
I

llglol . . _

Ohio

I

Television
Viewing

au.::'..a::/.

Von

County lpfl 100, .... Ooool
- opp~-, T.V. lila. 0Don
I. a.m. to I p.no. Mon...... 114441-1 .... 127 3nl. ttpollo; ~

•

11

The Daily

Rtorrange lett1n of the
leur ICrombled words bt·

TUES.. APRIL 10 •

to torm four simple words.

EYI!NINQ

II
l

And

1:00 (J) Hllnlca•

·=·. . .
McComllcll Q

e12&gt; • • e ,Cil

i

111

(!) NBA Todly
(lJ Voyogo Of Tho-

crew

~~

The

humpback

whale feeding behlvlor. (R)

1

1M WAITIN6 FOR A SC1400L
6U5 T14AT WILL TAKE ME TO
SCHOOL.AND FOR WHAT?

TO 6~T ON ANOTf!ER BVS, AND
60 ON A FIELD TRIP TO SOME
STUPID PLACE I'VE NEVER
HE~RD
! I CAN'T STAND. IT!

i•·~rc=t,HourQ
.II])

I 51l0ULD HAVE STAYEii'
IN ~RE- SCHOOL..

Overheard at executives
meeting : "Today a man is
known by the company he

/4Ntf
(!J WOIIcl today ,
· 0 He-Man

e .CNMI In Charge

8:05 w llevel1y lltllllltel
(2) 8 NIC Nightly Newt •

8:30 8

. 1l• • e(I)AIC-Q
SpomLook

(lJIIody ·~

111 eccaa-Q

ell]) Ttwae'a Compoliy

at Top Card Conteltonti

combine llll8rlalrvnont IrMa
with the tuck of IIIII draw.
• Hangln'ln
8:35 ([) Andy Qrllllth
7:00 ~ Sc.acrow I Mra. King

I

(2)

"· ~

. SCilANI-lETS ANSWERS

Rli/i,sh - Venus - Scout - Lawyer- CLOSE my EYIES
co-worker was reading a horror novel. "Isn't lhat a ··
book?" I as,ked. The co-worker jokingly replied,
during the real scary parts I CLOSE my EVES."

PM Megulne

(!). ~ ·

a at e (I) Current Affair
(lJ (!) MacNeil Loll,., .

NORTH

NeWaHour
'
~lewn.e~QI

=- " "'

•
....-

/ .r..•fo'r. .:r
.:~

·STOLE ITS

•••

'\'loMAN.

?~ ~,_, ·~
-:-!.

.........-,-.

A42
+A 86

a
a
e

7:35 ([) M8jor LHgue BIHIIIII

i

Tuoeder Nlaht At The
Mo~(3:00)

• • e(J)WhO'IThe

a frlencl backfire. Q

1171

-..

1•
s+

.

...-.iu•••••

.. _ . ..,_.1_

-·

won the king and en p ay king of
clubs and the 10, .overtaking with the
jack in dummy ..The fourth club came
n~~. U East ruffed high; South would
shed his low spade. II East ruffed low, ,
declarer would overrufl and then
trnmn a spade in dummy. Either way,
were there lor declarer.

e

1171 4114, """" - . 4 triolo

. . . . . _ ....... .,.... IIDt

........ .

2+•

I+

Eall
Pau
Pau
Pau
Allpa!S

Opening lead: + J

(lJ (!) No¥11 Explore how the
human brain perceives
music. C
.
IIAl
illl Reac;ue: 811 A pet
parrot eaves a family from ·
dtlath; a .y!JUng boy Is set
afire. C.
IDI!]) M•A•S"'f
.
(!J PrlmeNiwa

eon-tllolo.

Pass

Pus 3•
!NT
Pass 4.
•Drury convention

ro help

Bou? Tony's efforts

Norlll

West

Nourath (PI 3 Of 3)' NIC

Q

11

Vulnerable: North-South
. Dealer: North

Q

1:00 (J) MOVII!: Thlllbll (PI1
Of 2) (2:00)
8 (2) Ill MOVIE: 'Jellll Of

'~

+ ·AK2
.K107 62
• 10 8
' +KQJO

I afla.f.doopanlyt Q

f!:.

t

soum

(!) Melor Llague BIHIIIU
aD Enleftlllnment Tonight
(I) Mlllll'a Fomlly
.

'(!Jc-dte
Night Court

.QJ 84
+J9 7 3
+; 32'

.t

7:05 ([) JaftlfiOftl
7:30 0 (2) Fomlly Feud

f

EAST
.+Qt

+J 10985 3

e
.o

+KQU
+J9 i4

WEST

81111'110.
QD Muolc Row Vldoo
Abbott I Coatello

Auto Parts &amp;

• AS3

·

D Miami VICe Hard Knocks

4:311p.no.

78

'

I Vo,.,....Court Q

...,. - : .c-, u ··e,,, ku 2tllta
•..,
c- hate.

1-II·H

+76

i1J Murder, She Wrote The

Murder Of Sherlock Holmes,

Pt2

a Funnr Bulinlu With

by TH•qMIAS JOSEPH

Charlie ctoH. 111 Country

.

.

REME.MBER 11-\E. eca:&gt; OlD Dll8
W,f\W 1l1E. BIG UlUS WAS ZSA zstt
SLAR=m A(t:J? ? .

music stars aro tricked.
• Movie.
•
1:30 a aD • (I) Tho Wonder
YHI'I Kevin unhappily
discovers that he's got his
first_pimple. (R) Q

45 Spectral

DOWN
1 Nobel
physicist
2 Esau's
fatherin-law
3 Clothing
· size
4 N.Z. tribe
50.K.
6 Woodland
deity
7 Ripen
8 Not a
'!brand
name"
9 Hoi~

.II])

M8jor Lliogue
BIHball
I:Oilaa •(I) Roaeonn1 Dan

and Roooanno scramble to
gat a law answers out of the

IRS. C '

(lJ 'tlli'IOIIIIIna The way
U.S. securlfy was damaged
by the Walker spy ring IS

f.lorch'illdiSC

discussed. C

IIAl

ee

MOVIE: 'FO!IIIddln

23 Caloric
guideline
24 Chiel
25 Drew
rearward
26 Former
C!lpllve
27 Nix!
12 Disposition· 29 Headgear
17 Etna is one 31 ':Viva
(abbr.)
Villa!"
20 Remainder
star

N~' CBS Tlllldey Movie

Hou•llokl
Gooda

'0 lluclwelJ~ LMII
,._
King

---

Tuoacllr Nl(lhl Flghta

l , 1 111 '1l''}f'lH

. l . •' .!

·

18 N....vlle Now Country
mualc's hottest stara are

c,

J•. r.,

featured live.

1:30

a aD e (lj Coach Hayd.en

follOws Chrlstlno and a friend
to the opera. Q .
10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pat

Robeltlon

e a e (I) t~~~rtyRmathlng

.•

41 HouiHior Rent
hwiilltlon Gill .....,......2 ...

2 01' I ttJ OOCII . . . . brent
1n Ponwow.11.......,..

21 . llluiiMU
Opponunlty
Do you noocl ..-v?8oN A_.
..a •m 10ol0%.. Rlollv• own

-t

=-··-·114-11111IARN MalEY llndlng
po ooa , . - . . IICIIantill.

.......

. AIN'T CHURNED
YET, PAW

1117 ...... IIX-7, QXL. toodod,
loW ....... 1/0WMI', A-t .....

10:20 (I) MOVII!:

Forum
·
Crllle: U!INIII lcluo8tlon A
lOOk. at urban ICIIooll
·

(lJ
(I)

114MI ....

through the eysa of thrll
teenage~.

18 Crook I Chll•
11:oo~ S e a - a Mre. King

- - - ....,. . . ....,4p.rn.

1112·-.....

i
.

'

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

....c........ f
I.

elll r:1., llf Palell

J ........
... nr' ualllllk. ~
175-1-.

Graph predictions lor the year ahead by LIIRA ,..,._ 2S-Ocl. D) If you perform
mailing $1.25 to .Aatro-Graph, c/o thll . some type of work today where you will
newspaper, P.O. Bcx 91428, CleVeland, 'be compensated lor your 18Mces,
OH «101-3428.Qe sure to atata .your make certain the price Ia established In
zodiac sign.
.
, •
. advance. Take nothing tor granted.
22) Huly ludgTAURUS jApri120-Maf 20) Strive lor a SCORPIO !Oct.
latr balance In an lmportanl partnenlolp menta today could put you In InvOlvearrangement today. II you're the 11'- menta that do not MrVB your belt infer' · and the other guy Ia the hiker, It's not 'IIIII. To avokl thll occurrence eYIIulta
: going to work out too well.
'j· lltuattona belore you IMp ln.

24-f!o¥.

HM1Nt....,21-.lune20)'(ou're~ ,

•

ble ol handling your MaigNIIInta today,

SACII.TTAIIIUI (llov. Z1 Dec.l1) True
humility II ., admirable VIrtue, but to-

provided co-workera do whet'l expect- day you might hUmble yourlllf unnoced of them. It they dljlllp their tullo on , -tty. 11'1 bell lo let at IMit a llfl"
you, II COUld be mora at,_ lllan ""Y, '!Milt ol your 9 ahlne througll.
camel Clll carry.
. .
' 'CAI'IICOM CDIL ....,.._ til 8cJmeC
CANCIII l.lui!B 21..,.., 21)
ftfiMI
.
11'1 lleC llli'Y to be
wttll Whom you'U be IIWONed iloclllly to- when dialing with othen. Today, ho!wday n'ilghttry to oat you to t • 8baut a 1-.,you mft1111 do 10 with· tile wrong
friend who len't ~tJn order 10 Iatif '~ under I l l wrong condlllonl.
uoo your , commenli 8Qa1n11 Y!lll. Be , AGUAIIIUI (..... ...,. 11) ~
careful.
.
.
. you go Into battle todey, but ceriUI you
LEO (.llllr 21-Aut~- 22) ~ coUld I' haW 11111 lloppoi•l and beck-4111 upon
be denied yoUIOCIIY II you 1111 to (10 full ·•whtcll you're cauntlng. It oould gat rathoutwhenlmpartontobiiGI'---- erlonlly II you•,. the only M milking
cemed. lt you'l'll (IOinll to do IOIMihlng, , the
.
·
.m llce H a tol!ll cOmnillment.
'•
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today you might ~
Clmulllll- It llf1llhlr Cll!ftllulllor •1. . . . . . . . upon--~~~­
~ olhen 10 pullllll W0C1f ~your
IIOI'mlllorl. Mille lillie IIOWiy 81111 be
Todll)',- hOw•••· you might be rnuatt ~ .... you haW 11111111 IK!I.
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·your own, your mOat eucmatul encould. tum out to be JOint - - 1

ctea-•
turw. VournlghtCIMIIIVOhedln-11.

.-.a llllnlh fi-AIWI 11) Someoue

wlih anonc111 ~ might 101* to.
you todey (0 bell illnll'* out. Although

lt~tobelnllgnlllcarltlllllhiiiUI'-

,_. It 001*1 tum out 10 IJI a 1111 mora:
compllelled. Ariel, u.t}OUnllf to 1 !
birthday gift. Send tot your Altro-

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IDl MoliiJIIM
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42 Moblll tloniM
for Rent

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·

IDl Evening NIWI

BUT TH' BUTTER

TH' POPCORN'S

ALL DDNIII

OHIO VALLEY PuBUIHJio CO.
riUHIIMftdl that ~ do
bullnrJJwllti....-V.Uicnaw,
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Michael offers him some
financial help. Q
(lJNiw•"'*"
(I) Crflla: Urblln Eclucdon
ExplOre current prac;tlcea In
Amerlcl'e educational

system.

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duck
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river .
37 Plaything
39 "This _:_
for Hire"
(ladd
film)
41 Neronian
"Hail!"

Gary Ia olllnded -

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Church . _ lbtlon

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EVES AGAINST YOUNG

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"~'"'""'"" SURPRISE. -CHARLES o·ooNNELL
'\

�·,

Page- 12-The ,Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Lose your luggage? Ann wants to hear all about ·it
••

Dear Ann Landtrs: I was pleased . for !he things in your bag. flow do
to see a letter in your column from a we know your suits cost $400'1 Even
man who delivers luggage lost by wilh -JCCCip!S, lhe vllue of everythe airlines. Now I hope you will let thiilgdejneialel by SOpercenL We
a victim express himself. ·
wiD deliver it if we find ia. but only
I have traveled more than 75,000 if it's more thsn two hours late. If
miles a year since i 970. Most of my ·you can't hlog 810111111 the lirport
trips have been in the United SlaiCS, fm two llOin, dult's your tou&amp;h luck.
but business has taken me all over Can't wait? You11 have 10 return to
lhe world. My luggage has been lost this aiiport and check again. Who
so many times !hat I have stopped will deliver it? We dm't know.•
counting. The attiiUde of employees
My experjcncc widl a Japanese
of domestic carriers has gotten JW- airline: ~Bag lost? We 1re very SliT)'.
gressively worse. Here's what you
get when You complain:
"Lost your lugg~~&amp;e? Fill out this
form. Waii for lhe next flight. It
might be on that one. The law says
we have 24 hours to get it to you.
"Sorry, we have to have receipts

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Ohio Lottery

.Indians..

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of clothes (except shoes) will be paid Japan Air Lines in lhe United Swes. for..lhe purthase o( personal items:
for by Jap1111 Air Unes. If we are Mr. · ~awa said, "The gentleman · It usuaUy lakes seven days to traCe
unable to fllld your bei in two days, was m ~ probability traveling in a bag worldwide. If the bag ·is .not
we will pay you full value or $1,500, J1p111, or he received exceptionally foond wilhin that period of ti_me,
whichever is less. •
good tlelllllent on an inlmlllllonai
Japan Air LineS will compensate the
.
My bag was delivered within three flighL •
passenger fQ-Ihe lll(ls.
hoursi!YtauniformedJALcmploycc.
Thank you, Mr. Ogawa. Now,
Mr. Ogawa said lhe overall conThe next day, I received a gifi and a cepe of Mr. Foster's letter is correct . dear resders, how does this siliCic up
personal note of apology from lhe Asjans. he said, ml!ke a very big
with die treallllellt you get when you
lllllllliet of ball88&amp;e services.
lose your luggage in the United
effort to he accommodating and
Is it any wonder Japan is knock- coUrleous. This is a traditional asSlaiCS? Let me.hear from you. And
ing our socks off? •• FRED FOS- pect of their culcure.
pkfase use language I can print.
TER, CHES1ERFIELD, MASS.
And now for die facts as outlined
I~ a/q,lw/ r!411ing your life or the
DEAR FRED FoSTER: I'm sure by Mr: Ogawa: Inlel'll8lional regu- life _of a loved one? "A/folwlism: ·
Please accept our apologies along
wilh this shavinycosrrielic kiL Hen: your lcaer was of inr.en:st to every lations limit the liability of the car- How to Recognize It, How to Deal
is a coupon so you can have your · mlder who has lost his or l!er lug- · rier to $640 per bag. All airlines With//, How to Conquer It" ca11 IUI'II
taWldry and dry cleaning done at our gage. As you have r.estified, it can involved in international travel are
tltiltgs arONIId. ·Se11d a self-ad·.
·
·
expense. If your bag is IIOl found be a plin in lhe neck.
expected to adhere to this siandard. dTissed,
and delivered to your hole! by 10I ~ Alan Ogawa, manager Also Slandard, when a bag is lost or . Md . il
or rrwuy ordir
monow morning, a COIIIplele change of pau::ngcr and aiJport services for delayed, each passenger receives $SO S3 .6S
iiiCludes postage alld

'

Ann
Landers

~

postplned

. ANN UNDERS

Pick 3
50Q
Pick 4
7487

.. 1989, r.o. An_.~
TlmN s,.d...,... an•
Cnoa~or- Syndl"••

Low near 30. Chance oflft!)w •
31 percent. Thunday,
hlrh In mid tos.
II~

)
haltdlillg) to: Alcohol, c/o ANI Lalt:;
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill:
606il-0562. (ln ·CatUJdiJ , se11d
$4.45.)
ANN L.OOERSe

·e·...·

.

c 1990, Cniaw&gt;n Sy~•

WANlADS bring
VacatiOOMoney

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VoL40,

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No.234

April 1 1 , 1 990

•

2 Soctlono, 14 Pog.. 211 Cento
A Muhimolllo Inc. Newop-

Meigs board hires
teachers for 1
91
199'0 '

CPE.

· 1990 DODGE SPIRil ES.4'. DR.

'

. 1990 DODGE SHADOW-ES

Shadow 2-dr w/ES Plickage ,

SpiritES

Y-~

Eng.
Auto. Trons.
Air
Power Seat
Power Windows .
Power.·Door locks
AM/FM Cas$itte
Pearl White

V-6 Auto. Trans.

AM/FM Cassette
Air Cond.
Speed Control
Tilt Wheel
Power locks
Flash Red Clearcoat.

•. 1990 DAKOTA CLUB
' CAB
·

S1.2;94

1990 DODG.E SPIRIT .4 DRJ SED.

2.5 l,
5-Speed TRans.
Air
,.
. Speed Control
Tilt Y/heel
Cassette
Exotic Red Clear Coat.

NOW ONLY

$10,665

SAVINGS Of, $26~

1990 DODGE RAM 50 PICKUP .

Spirit
Dakota 4 x 2 Club Cab .

· Auto. Trans.
S.E. Decor, Air Cond.
AM/FM Cassette
Light Package
Tutone Paint
Advtg. Poe II
Tilt Wheil
Speed Control,
White &amp; (;rey

2.5 l Eng.
'

512,55

Auto. T~ans.
Air Concl.
Sp-.d Control
Tilt Wheel
Power Windows
Power locks
Cossette
Silver Clearcoat

SJ0,95
SAVINGS OF $3023.00

1990 PLY. ACCLAIM 4 DR. SED.

2.4 ·t Eng.
5-Sp•e~ ·Trans.
Step Bumper:
Tape Stripes

1990 PLYM•.SUNDANCE 4 DR•.-

Full fank of gas and 2
free oil changes with.
.every ne~ ·vehicle
sold •.
All prices are after Rebate, Fac,tory Discount, and Pat
Hill'a Discount. Tax not included. Prices good 'till

23rd of April.

recycle. ( OVP photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Nearly 50 attend:~·sol.id· wmte meeting
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Sla_ff
How to cost effectively recycle
was the matn topic of discussion
at Tuesday's . Athena, Gajua,
. !locking, Jackson, Meigs, and
VInton Solid Waste District meet·
lng, held In the Gasllla County
Courthouse, Galllpalls.
Among Items discussed In
regard to recylclng were bans of
certain Items aolng Into landfills,
!l'lan!l~tory . trash pick up ·and
where sorting recycla bles should
bedone.
.
In a nearly one-hourdlacusslon
of the matter, no conclusions
were made and a lively exchange
was heard between the nearly 50
COJ!Cerned citizens attending and
the 31-member pallcy board.
One thing was clear, thoughrecycling and reducing the waste .

p\llced In landfills .will r;:ostJllore

plan Is up tor review In tlve

th~~~~~~fr. ¢;s~SEngtD~r~ ~~:S~e/~~n:r~~~~!tto~:u~~:
the plan Is ready for review. .

to .the PDilcy boarjl ~ r~Iclng
methods, th~lr ·advantages and
disadvantageS were outllned.
Arnong ,problemsln' thebanof
Ceftl80 recyclabJemateriaJScUJ:·
rently taken to the landfills, the
engineers said a legal opinion Is
needed on the m•tter before
action can be take!J.
1
Next, what .WIII'be banned and
hOw and Whll will enforce It, and
what will be tne penalties?.
No conclusions were made, ~u I
the policy board directed the
engineers to took f11rther Into the
matter.
The panel did take action on ·
two recommeJ1d~tlcins during the
T!leeling. Flrsf to not consider
lnciJ~eratlon unUI the _district
· ·• ·

W.ith the second \ though, ,Iocal
he!llth departments and the Ohio
Environmental Protection
AgenCy may JICense transfer
fac!Utles.
• In other matters; the pOlicy
board elected officers for the
next Y,ear, Chairman will be Dale
. Neal of Jackson County; VIce
Chairman Terri Belville, Gallla
Co11nty and Secretary Wand11
Black, VInton County :
The next executive board
meetings will be AprU 2:i at 9 a.m.
and May 3.at 2 p.m. In Wellston,
and the next full policy committee meeting will be May 9 at 7
p.m. In the Athens County
Extension Otflce at Athens.

·, · •
tile Rutland ~ea. · .However, neighboring states and the so11th·
Facemyer reported ~~~ Tuesday •s
ern and western s !lites. .
meeting that thecompanywlllbe
Meigs Chamber: ol Commerce
President Bruce Reed com·
rebulldlllg their sawmill at Hobson, thus creating •bout 12 new · mended the company for Its
jobs In Meigs CoulltY- The new
successful operation and ex:
faclllt)l will be·callltd Facemyer
pressed pleasure that the com·
pany will be. rebuilding at HobForeSt Ptoducts.
Tf\(l Facemyer operation Is a
son. " 'I wish I could makf,! this
gro';l'lng ,P.oncern." Iii the Meigs · kin!t of announcement at every
County.Jack,son County, W.Va.
meeting;" he stated.
area. The c:Ompany 'ts a major . · A film explaining the types of
expOrter of Iuin!Jer, to ,Europe,
activities which take place at.
Japan and Canada : ~~ we)l as to
Carleton School-Meigs Industries, Syracuse, was shared with
~s
'" ChambermembersbyLeeWede. ·n
·
.
meyer, superintendent ·for the
Meigs County Board o.f Mental
Retardation-Developmental DIS·
abilities, and other board
Overnight vandalism at the Facemier i.umbet ·c~.· In the
employees.
Hobson area Is under Investigation by Mlddlei&gt;otf·Pollce.
Carleton School-Meigs IndusClllef ·or Pollee Sid Little repotted thai the vandalism was
tries Is on the May ballot
. discovered and reported by the owner Wednesday morning. He
requesting a new 1.:i mlll opera·
said that the headlights had been broken outon several vehicles,
!Ions levy. The levy would be for
·and that some equipment gauges were d11maged. Also that
three years only, Wedemeyer
other materials bad been moved and seattered around the area.
said. "It Is not a continuing ·
- The' comj,any bas offered a $1,0oo reward for Information
levy."
leading to the apprehension of the vand!lls, the pOllee chief
The film showed students and
advised.
·
adults participating In the differ·
ent programs which lire funded
through the local MR·DD Board.
Following the film , WedeA·jury of eight was seated Tuesday morning to hear the Meigs ·
'meyer answered several q11esCounty Court case of the State of Ohio against Thomas J .
. lions from Chamber members.
Richardson, Middleport.
·
He explained that the board
The case ·stems_· from a domestic dispute Involving
currently operates
a 1.5
Richardson's former wife, Cindy Sou-by Richardson. FoUowContinued on p~~L....
.
Contlniled on page 6

By NANCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel News Staff
A well-known Meigs County
business, the Facemyer Lumber
Company, will be rebuilding at
Its former site at Hobson, announced Denny Fal:emyer at
Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
. The. Hobson business was
burned out about two years ago,
and the company then relocated '
In Ripley, W.Va. The company
also lias a dry kiln operation In

'UMITED WAA'IANTY
2.5 l Eng.
auto. Truns.
Air Cond.
Tilt Wheel
Speed Control
Cassette
Light Group
Claret Red Clear coat

AlheM,·.. Gellla, Roeklnl, JaclaloD, Melp and
\linton countle~~. Amea1 thoee are the Increaalng
cost of decreasing wute and how to effectively

. One year limited contracts
were awarded to Cindy 1\llen,
Chapter I math and reading,
Salem Center; Rick Ash, math,
high school; Marjorie Blake,
nurse assistant, high school;
Paula Cllancay, Chapter 1 math,
Harrisonville and Rutland;
Donna Clark, .e lementary art;
Teresa Davis, vocal music, junIor and senior high ·schools;
Toney Dingess, Instrumental
music junior high and senior high ·
school, and vocal music, Salls·
bury; . Chrlst111e Dowler, DH ,
junior high.
Jo Dunn, sixth grade, Brad·
bury; Tim Dunn, DH, high
school; VIcki Haley, Chapter 1
reading; DarIa Kennedy, Salem
Center, first · gr,a de; David
Kucsma, high sehool D .E .; Lynn
McCarley, Brall~ry DH; ,Mary .
O'Brien, Salem ·Center fourth;
Mike Staggs, high school social
studies, Ann Van Maire, Brad·
buryLD,

Before th!l.board took actkln on
awarding tfie contracts, It approved unarl"bnously a motion by
Robert Sno~en calling for prln·
clpals. to be 'm ore critical In their
evaluations bf personnel.
The supplemental contracts ·
renewed for next year were Mike
Staggs, head football; Jim Oliphant, cross country; Clift
Kennedy, boys' head track; Fred
Baloy, assistant high school
track; Rick Ash, girls' volleyball; Dale Harrison, girls' assist, ant volleyball; Roger Foster,
girls' varsity basketball; Kim
Adkins, girls ' reserve
basketball.
John Arnott, girls' junior blah
basketball; Mike Stagas. athletic
facilities care; E;Ielinor McKel·
vey, yearbook; Fred Baloy, high
SChO&lt;?I newspaper: Toney Dingess, b!p!ddlrector; John Arnott,
John R'edovian. and Mike Wilfong , guidance; Eleanor Blael·
· Continued on page 6

Res'ea•chers step u·p e·J11J orts·'
• h•SU ur coal
to Clean up .hJU
·

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t:INCINNATI (UPI) - ~n·
gress' revamped Clean Air Actls
iQIPi.'tO mean .new resll'lctions
on the burning "Dr.'0h10'-wal,*
especially Ohio's · high sulfur
coal.
Still, coal is exjlected to remain
an ImpOrtant , and relatively
Inexpensive energy source for at
least several decades.
With that In mind, researcllers
at the University of Cincinnati
said Tuesday they are stepping
up efforts to find ways to red11ce
coal's envlronmental.impact.e
''Researchers are looking at
ways to remove sulfur and
nitrogen before coal Is burlled
and ways to clean nue gases of

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'lll. :· ·.......
...... ~
..ebut.ld at Hobson .
Lumber fi....
.a.a.
• '

Ram 50-Base

3.9 l V-6 Engine

DJIICU881NG WASTE PROBLEMS ...,.. .John
Vu Volteabu111b, •tandlnl, dlllcu- the problenul belnllound In lhe •Ud wute dlslrlct plan
his eomJ1111131, SCS EI_I11Hen, Is fonnulallnc for

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
1Sentlnel Newi staff
·
Numerous teachers for the
1990-91 school year were hired
and some supplemental contracts for sports and extra·
curricular programs were
awarded at Tuesdday night's '
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education. · ·
'Employed on five year contracts were Fred Baloy, . high
school Spanish; . Jamie · Blaet'
tnar, first grade, Katl!y Haley,
third grade, Julle Hubbard. sixth
grade, all at the Pomeroy Elementary School;' Deborah Low·
ery, .s ixth grade at Harrisonville;
Carmen Manuel, English and
math at the Meigs Junior High, •
and Chris Rouse; elemen·tary
vocal music. ·
Given three year contracts '
were Sue · McGuire, business·
of(lce , education at the high
school, and J.ulle . Randolph,
Rutland sixth grade.

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pollutants, Including acid rain
"The coal feeder appears to be
pollutants,' ' said university very cost efficient because only
officials.
_
llalf the limestone Is needl!d
' ''Projkts 'lncfude limestOne . compared to that requlieil _for I
Injection; ammonia sptay drying nue gas treatment," aald univerof nue gas and high·techclrculat· sity officials.
·lng fluidized bed combustion
In addiUon, the coal Is heated
systems."
In the absence of oxygen, so the
To clean coal before It Is result Is hydrogen sulfide gas,
burned, resear~hers Timothy not sulfUr dioxide, a common
Keener and Soon-Jal Khang are a~ld rain pOllutant.
working on a nov~l coal-feeder
"That's a lot easier to scrub,"
device.
said Keener. "It's a much, much
The device has two sections, smaller molecule and won't plug
The first removes elemental ·the pores In the limestone like
sulfurlncoalbyheatlngthecoal sulfur dioxide, wlllcll acts jusl
In an .oxyaen-free envltoament,
like a stopper going Into '
then limestone Is used In the bottle. " .
·
se(Olld section to trap the sulfur.

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bn•e 8
Vandalism acts investigated ' ·

Local

ne

Jury seated in tria(. Tuesday

2.5 l Eng.
Auto. l rans.
Air Cond.
Speed Control
" ·
AM/FM Cassette
Aquamarine Blue
Clear Coat
·

.$9969
SAVINGS OF $2329.00

Branstool named Democrats
·speaker for ~ual session .
Am01JI his honors Sen. BranSen. Gene · Bran stool, candl·
date for Lieutenant Governor stool has been ·named one of the
and present minority whip of the top 1Q legislators In ·Ohio, a
Friend 01 Ed.ucatlon by Sou- ·
. Ohio senate, will be the featured
theast Edi&amp;CaUon Association,
speaker at the annual Meigs
oemoeratlc ' Jefferson-Jackson and hu r.oelved the Pblllps
Day dinner to be held at the Medel for Public ~viee AWard.
Senlcir Citizens Center In Pome- · He. lll!rves on the LICklag Gounty
Agricultural EXteDslon'M vlloty
r(!y" on Saturday; April 21.
COmtnUtee and ls .a member of
Sen. Branstool Ia the ranking the ~lc Locl&amp;e-. "
, inmorlty member of the AgriculDinner will be served at p.m.
ture and Aaln&amp; commltteet, a with the proaram at 7 p.m.
member of the Financial Inatltu· Tickets are evallable fr&lt;lm uy
tions and Insurance commltiees Democ~lc commlt!H person or
and serves on theComrnerce and at the Davia-Quickel Insurance
office.
·
Labor and Rules committeeS.

COMPUTER COWB - "Paint Ilea lOIII been
recioptzed ae a deeoraalntr value, aad now the
colon avellable are limited onlq by jour
deeor-Uintrlmallnatlon," says Edie Klq. Kl. .,

... Iller ....... 'ftm, - .,. · - - .. lllq'
lbrdw-. Middleport. Here &amp;IHihMdemo•trllte
their aew oompUir billed palld color mlllclllnl
1y1Mem celled Color~ea.

Hardware firm offers new ·seroice

e

SEN. OBNB'BBANITOOL

King Hardware. Middleport, Is • only. takes minutes for the color
announcing a new computer to be analyzed, formulated and
· based paint color matching sys· mixed, at no .extra charge to the
tern called Colorgen. 'With this customer.
·new service, "your paint can be
"DeCorating posalbiUUes are
matched 10 almost anythln&amp;," endless," says Edle Kiiig. Paint
· aays Tlni' Klllg, store owtier. can be matched towaiicoverlngs
"Just bi'lng us a sample of tbe and borders, upholstery fabrics,
color 'y ou want, the size of e dllne draperies and window treat·
or Jarier, and In 1..1 tllan a , ments; ca~Ung or floorll!l,
minute, our atate·of-t...art ceramic tile, bedspreads and
eqlllpment will eenerate a for· Ilnena.
·
mula to rillx that exact shade In
"Paint hae long been re'Co&amp;·
any of our available paints."·
nlzed as a decoratlne value, and
· King Hardware's In-store Co- now the colon available are
tof1en computer wtll analyze any limited only by your. decorat!J'i
1
color sample . and pnerate a Imagination," she adds.
palntfonnula tomlxtbatcolor. It
In addition, Colorgen formulas

are adjusted for the light source
In your room · Incandescent,
flourescent or natural ll&amp;htlne.
Wella, mouldln&amp;s and trims,
fumlture l.lld room accenta can·
be painted to create a totally
coordinated decor, whether your
project calli for lntertor or
extzrlor paint, lalelC or oU baee,
flat, satin or &amp;lOla flnlsb, In
quarta for small clecoratln&amp;jobs
or gaiiOIII for larger Jobti.
And ahould you need mo~ of
your custom color, the fonnula
will be stored In the computB'a
meniol')', ''to be available tomorrow, next month or next year,"
Tim Kilig says.

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