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                  <text>2-The Daily Sentinel

Adopted child. equal to natural
.
child for inheritance: court
.

The Ohio S11preme Court ruled
Wednesday that an adopted child
has the same legal rights as a
natural born child of the adoptive
parents when It comes to laws
and wills governing lnherlt.ance
and succession.
The court's ruling Involved
Bryan Smith, the adopted son of
Ralph Smith Jr. who had sought
to Inherit a share of the trust
from Ralph's mother, even
though the will and a codicil. were
written before Bryan's adoption.
The Erie County Probate Court
had ruled that the-child was not
entitled to a share of Loretta
Smith's trust because he had not
been a son of Ralph Smith Jr. at
the time of the woman's death.
The court of appeal for Erie
County agreed with the Probate
Court, b1i t that decision was
overturned · by the . Supreme
C:ourt, and the .case was returned
to the Probate Court.
Loretta Smith's will was made
In December 1960, and the codicil
added Ill Julie 1964, three months
before her death. The will etab-

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I!shed a trustf()rthebenefilofthe
chilt!ren of her three children.
The trust was divided Into
three equal shares; each for the
benefit of grandc:hlldren
•'whether now living or born ·
hereafter." The money was to be
used for their education wlth
distribution of one haif of the
remaining amount . when they
reach age 25 and the o·ther half at
age 30.
At the time of'Loretta Smith's
death, Ralph Smith Jr. had five
children. He lllter divorced and
remarried. He adopted Bryan
Smith, who had been born In
August 1961, and has resided In
his home since 1967.
The adoption, through the Erie
County Probate Court, be&lt;:ame
final In July 1975, when Bryan
was nearly 14 Y,e ars old.
Ralph Smith's i&gt;ldest daughte~
received her education share In
1972. Bryan Smith wrote the ·
trustee, Central Trust Co. of
Northern Oblo, claiming to be a ·
beneficiary of the trUst. but was
told he was not a beneficiary.
Central Trust filed a declaratory
judgment seeking a determlna-

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tlon of Whether Bryan was
entitled to a share of .the trust.
In r~verslng lower"co~rt declslons, Justice Robert Holmes
wrote that as an adopted child,
Bryan was eligible to.t.ake part In
the dlstrlbutlon of the trust and
the questlon was at which time
the class of beneficiaries closed.
· Holmessatdltwas the Intent of
Loretta Smith that the class
could Increase In numbers arter
she wrote the will and after her
death. He said It was not
ne&lt;:essary to close the class until
the oldest child reached the age
or 25 tn January 19~. ·
Although Justlce Craig Wright
sided with the majority, he said
he believed the class closed In
1972 when theflrstmemberofthe
class received funds from the
trust.
Dissenting were Justice A.
William Sweeney and JudgeM;uy Cacioppo, siltll!g on assignment for Justice Allee Roble
Resnick. ·
Cacioppo and Sweeney said
they believed . the class closed
when Loretta Smith died.

.Attorneys
:suspended

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Pomeroy-MiCidleport, Ohio, Friday, April 20, 1990

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Eastern ·board hires
91~
personnel for 1

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Trust in. system makes court work
judicial system for some time, devised." ·
and as a lawyer. you are trained
She noted that the appointment
to be fair and Impartial, Moye~ system Is generally one-sided. A
It
have trust and confidence in the · said. As a judge, you have to put Democratic governor would apaside personal adv()Cacy, he .point Democrats, and Republl·
judicial system, and the Susaid.
can, Republican appointees.
preme Court of Ohio visited
Moyer
also
noted
he
favored
needs to be ·a system of
There
Gallipolis Wednesday to·show the
Supreme
the
appointment
.
or
checks,
she said.
·
citizens they don't just "pontlfl·
Court
justices
1n
Ohio.
Currently,
Justices
·Andy
Douglas
and
· cate from an Ivory tower."
Craig Wright see merit In both
The people inust realize, Chief justlces, by a d~lslon of · the
.voters;
ate
elected
to
their·
methods. They agreeilthe justiJustice Thomas Moyer said; the
position.
ces
need to be accountable to the
judicial system Is unique In that
Although,
a
justice
Is
fair
and
people.
"The people have
It Is delicate and fragile at the
see
a
conflictImpartial,
people
spoken,"
Douglas said of the
same tim~.
campaign
contributlons
and
fastate
ballot
Issue to keep the
Moyer, speaking to a group of
vorable
rulings.
Moyer
said
by
position
an
elected
one.
student and professional journal·
making
the
position
appointed,
30-mlnu
te sesFollowing
tbe
lsts, said the judicial system has .
that
is
taken
away.
·
sion
with
the
media,
the
justices
survived throughout United
Justice Allee Roble Resnick,
heard five cases . dealing with
States· history be&lt;:ause of the
on
the
other
hand,
favors
elecdiverse
Issues such as labor
confidence people place In the
tion.
She
said
the
justlces
are
,
disputes,
medical malpractice,
hands of the justices - the trust
part
of
ll
systern
that
may
not
be
suppre9slon
of taped evidence
they will be fair and Impartial.
"perfect,
bu
I It's the best
Issue.
and
a
firearms
Each ~u.stice has been in the

lsl~~~:n~~:r~~~~pleto

·These Are New And Untitled
.· 1990 ESCOR,. LX

1990 lfBUNDERBIRD LX
STOCK NO.'

DEMONSTRATOR.

29201297

UNITS
NOW

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WAS
*19,36600

88,971

Save Over sz,600

NOW

814,949

Save Over s4,400

DEALER RET AJNS REBATE· TAX, TITLE AND FEES EXCLUDED

DEALER REJ'AJNS REBATE· TAX, TIT~E AND FEES EXCLUDED

.

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1990 TBUNDJtRBIRD..........STOCK t 297
199o TOWN CAR. ................STOCK t 306

1990 P-150•• ~ ......._................. STOCKtM2
1990 RAN'OER. .....................STOCK f 348
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1990 Jr-150........ ~..................:aTC&gt;CKt Ms
1990 AEROSTAR. ................STOCK 1 a~
1900TAUR.US•••••••••••••••••••••••STOCKt 881

199()PR.OBE.................:.........81:0CJ[t37.
1980 TOPAZ,.........................8TOCJ[ tl83

1990 CROWNVICI'ORIA. ••.8TOCJ[t 412
1990 TAURUS.......i ...............errocx t 483 ·

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199PGRANDMARQ~......8'l'OCKt47S

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1989 SA.BiiE••••••••••••••••••••••••STOcx. 8317
1989 PROBE......................81'0CK t8880
1989TAURUS...................ST.OCKt8'702 ·
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1989111UST.ANG.... :..;;.......STOCK t 9888 '
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durlll1a MLTA meet1n1: Presenting the plaque !a
Jack Slavin.

Sunday Is the 20th anniversary
J&lt;enWigelns,dlrectorofMelgs
of Earth Day and special events County's Litter Contro) Profocusing on environmental con· gr:am, is encour811111 students In
cer~, ,co-!vatloJI ol_. natural
the milul
- . ~'· dlstrlc~s Isto
-;:;- . ' ty•• ~
.re~ea, ,wat4r -ilnd all' pollu- · take extra pride an tb.!l~ ~hoo • ·
tion, etc., wtil be held throughO'il
playlll'oullda, ballfle!ds,':'la1911s··
the nation.
·
and parking lots. Churches are
In Meigs County, .Earth pay alilo beIna encour111ged to plan
111¥lcs.·' the start of : Clean-Up . s~lal beauUflcatlonprojectson
Rural Ohio Week. From April their grounds and parking areas.
22-28, the Meigs County Litter
Also, Wiggins says It Is a good
PrevenUOII and Jlecycllng Pro- time to plant a tree for each
gram, along with vlllaifes, town- member of the family. The Ohio
ships, schools, 4'H Clubs, Boy Division of Forestry has a goal o1
and Girl Scout troops, commun- planting seven mUllon trees this
Ity groups and concerned volun- year, Wiggins explains. The
teers, will combine efforts to- DIVIsion of Forestry has proward cleaner, health.ler vlded Wiggins with pine seeenvironment.
dllngs which will be distributed
The colteet ion crew of the local to any local community lll'OUps
Utter control,pro&amp;ram \viii spend making a request for · the
· one day II} each of the county's seecllmgs.
,
· five villages, picking up litter
"And If you're not already
along streets anel sidewalks of recycling," Wiggins ' says,
•t he villages. The collection crew "Clean-Up Rural Ohio Week.ls a
will be In Middleport on Monday;
great time to start. With the
Pomeroy, 'fllesday; Racine, many problems facing us regard·
Wednesday; Rutland, ThUrsday;
lng solid waste disposal. rept·
and Syracuse, Frld4lY. Also dur- cling Is a must. It takes very little
Ing the week, 4-H Clubs_. SCQUI time · and a small amount of
packs and troops, garden clubs space."
and others Will be .working on
Wiggins reminds area reslspecial clean-up projects In their dents that Melp County has two
· areas.
private recycling operations
"which makes It easy to get your

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tlo•" from ·s atem' center, at Melp Hlp School·

·Earth Day to be obseroed

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1989AEROSTAR...............STOCKt 9911
198911USTANG.••• ~ ••••••• ~ ••••STOCKt

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Clay evening deputies spent over
Deputies of tl)e Meigs County
30 minute uprlghtlng the barrels
Sheriffs Department again disand traffic cones that. had been
covered that an unknown motorIst had knocked over a number of knocked over by a large car
traveltnc south . . Anyone With
reOectorlzed barrels on the
RDute 7 ' by-pass construction Information should contact the
area. A large fiashlng arrow sign . sheriff's office. Meigs County
bad also been knocked over, Sheriff Janies M. Soullby again
urgl!ll motorists to excerlse caucaus1J14 some damage.
tion In any construction zone.
According to the report, depuOn Thursday evenlna, Richard
ties discovered the damage at · L. Gilmore, Hllan4 Road, Pome3: 48 a.m. T,hursday. On Wednel· · roy, was traveling north on Route
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· ·Local news briefs.- -....
·: Middlepart ·woman cited

,
33 when he struck a deer that ran
Into the path of. his 1988 Plymouth. The Incident occurred
around 7: 30 p.m. near the north·
·bound park. No damage was
listed to the vehicle.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
James A. Leamond, Racine. was
arrested late Wednesday evenIng on a bench warrant .from
Melp County Court. He failed to
pay his fllie and to report of two
days )all on an early case. He Is
currently coilflned to the Jail.
Flnafly, deputies are lnves II·
gatln&amp; the reported theft &lt;!f a
lawnmower from the Paul Steinmetz trailer at HarrisonVIlle.

A MiddlepOrt woman was cited ina two-car crash Thursday at
11:05 a.m. In Salisbury Township at the junction of S.R. 7 and
Bradbury Road, accordlna to theGallla-Melgs PostoftheState
. Highway Patrol
.
Janet K. Carhahan, 33, of 60~ Coal St:, was cited for making
an Improper turn after her 1964 Ford Falrlane hit· a 1982
Mercury Marquis drivel! by Lenna J. Howett, 86, of 1100 Powell
St., Middleport.
·
\
Howett was drivll!g east on Bra~bury Road when Carhahan,
headlnrr north oil s. R. 7, turned left to Bradbury Road too short,
hltUnJ Hewett's car In the left front aide.

were

QIWeered Thursday by unlta of Meigs

.
RQtland at 2:57 a.m. wai calleCI to Melp Mine No. 2 fur
Thomas Stobart who wu taken to Veterans Memorial HoapJtal.
Syracuee at 10:48 a.m. .,..t to Melp MIDI! No. 2 for Steven
Broolll' to,O'BI-a Memorial~- ·
.
~ at 11: •• LJII. wu callld to a chimney fire at the
DaJiny KJna realdeDce 011 Jloullt U..
COntinued Dll pqe 10

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expect school boards to provide
the same type of quality educatlon," he said,
Jones, like Payn11, believes
that alternauve"·!lliariellll me-· '
lhoda mus_t be devlsejl to fairly
'qpeia.e, ; Ohlll'a seboota. "Real
ettate' taxes are no -longer tbe
answer," he stated.
JoDes '1180 took tbestatetotuk
for the colldltloa of area highways. "I don't believe we abould

Mexico and
atste Income tax
money tor education.
Jones also shared his views on
the-problem of uaeqUal !Undlni
for sebools. '1 don't believe It's
fair that you can vote oDe mUlln
Melp County for ICbooll, and
ralte $30,000, and vote the arne
mUl In another district In the
state and ralle SGOO,OOO, and 11111

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have to drive In Mlegs County,-ln
1990, on highways that were built
for the traffic of the 1930'a."
Jones believes that Improved
. highways lor all of Soutlleullnl
Ohio lllould be a .CQJII:em at the
.atat·~-'7365dayu_ year"ancl .­
· "not juit two month&amp; befote an
election."
Althoqh Jonet applauds the
monies tbat have been ear- .
Continued on paae 10

More road reflectors knooked down · :r~~~~:~:~:~~:ss:
use

Nine calls

'

newed for one year were Jim ball coaches.
Huff, state and federal programs
Bob Lang, assistant girls baa·
coordinator; Mary Price, special ketball coach, Arch Rose, boys
educatlnn coordinator, and Arch track coach; Geo111e Gaga!, &amp;Iris.
Rose. t ran spo r tat lo n track coach; Scott Wolfe, head
coordinator.
baseball cOach, Pam Douthitt,•
Extracurricular activity and head softbatl coach; Jim Huff,:
coaching supplemental con- senior class adVIsor; Nancy
tracts were not renewed because Larll!ns, junior class advisor;
of the state of external donations, DenniS Eichinger, sophomore
according to Dr. Dan L . Apllng, class advisor; Carol Brewer,
superintendent.
. freshman clas~ advisor; Gina
Those contracts to be cons!, ·. Tillis; yearboOk advisor; Mar~
dered . later incluile Pam Doil· Bartee. blgh school choir, II!'~
thllt, athletic director and volley- Bob Shaver, elementary choir. :
ball coach; Arch Rose, head
The reslpatlon of substltUII! .
football coach; RDn Hlll, Don teacher, Charlie Riley was acEichinger, C. D. Mcintyre, as- c~ted. The school calendar fiJ!
slstant football coaches; Don the 10!10-91 year was adopted, a!l4
Jackson, assistant volleyball appropriations for Riverview
coach; Bill Hall, marchJna band and Tuppers Plains Elemenlalj
director; Ruth Brooks, cheerFunds and the Tri-M Mu~
Honorary Fund were approved:
lead.e r advisor ·for the blgh
school; Tammy ,C apehart, junior' · Appropriations for the National
Art Honor Society were at&amp;Q
high cheerleader advisor; Clfarles Riley, head ~ys basketball ll'Pl'OVed.
.
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Next meeting was set for M&amp;li
coach; Zilne Beegle and Don
Eichinger, assistant boys basket23 at 7:30p.m .
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Candidates . share ·conc~ms

materials to market." Manley's
Recycling Is located In lower
Although Republican candlMiddleport at !he corner o( P11rk
datel for the State Rep~Menta­
· h streets, and · TrI· . tlve's 'seat frcJm the !ijth l)latrlct,
&amp;l)d.. Beec
· C()unty Re&lt;t&gt;:ci~ .~ -. located at , share 'll111YI91!- ~ ~Jllll &lt; con.,
ihe' '! unction 1
ilie Route 7
cer1111, ·. gauging the ·audlelice
by-pass and Rou'te 143 near
response at Wednesday night's
· Pomeroy. ·
·
LIIICOin.·Day Dinner In MldclleOld major appliances, such as
1)91't, It appears that Metp
refrigerators, stoves, dIsCounty Republicans favor the
hwashers, washers, dryers, air
local candidate, Commlslllolier
conditioners; hot water heaters,
Richard Jones, over Athens
etc., may also be recycled.
County candidate Larry Payne.
Wtalns says that 'appliances
Payne however, ape~ at
may be placed In an area at the
the dinner, pointed out that no
side of the Utter control office
matter what the outcome of the ·
which Is located at the lntersecMay primary, he and Jones have
tlon of Union Ave. and Route 7 at
agreed to work 101ether between
Pomerey. ·F rom there, the Jitter
May and the November general
cOntrol program will haul the
electlon. ,
appliances to the appropriate
Payne explained to the more
disposal faemues.
than 200 people at the !!Inner his
"ComeonMelpCounty,"says
reaSon.s for seeking the office pt
Wiggins, "Don't let a great state
•tate representative and ellsgo. to waste."
cussed his views on the Issues
Anyonewhowouldllketoasslst
];ierdneut In Ohio at thla tbne.
with area projects during Clean·
Among Payne'.s concerns are the
Up Rural Ohio Week, or anyone
lack o1 equal tundlni for schools
needing pine seedlings oraeneral
and waate In state 10vernment.
Utter control Information, should · Payne feela that (!ne way to help
stop by or call the Melp Utter
both of these problems would be
Control office at 992-6360, or write
to stop returnlna funds to the
the office at Box 502, Pomerey,
state's general fUnd, and Instead,
45769.
earmark those funds for
education.
•
Payne also believes It would be

STATE aBPaBUNTA'I'IVB IIOPitnJL' -

Melp

Co._,

· Commlulo•r Rlduri ,._ a.pe~ to capaue tile Repulleu
•amlaetlon for !Mate Repi'Nfttatlve frelr. tile M&amp;ll Dlatriet wllell
be f - Larry Pape, ef At' I Cou&amp;J, Ia tile Ma.J primary.
,.._ wu a fennd 1peatrw at Wedllndar'• U..ll Dar·l l l -

r. llll'tldll......

·Girl, 13,

repc)rted

• •
.Jill88mg
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Lilian Nakao, 13, 32501 Pleasant VIew Road,' Racine, hu'
been reported mlsalng by' her
IJII)ther, Ruby Pickens, accor4·
Inc 1o Melga County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
.
Nakao Is luur feet ttve lnehes
tall, has lout brown hair, dark
e)tes, and wel&amp;bl approxlmatley
120pounds.
· , $he biiJI been mllslna since
April 17 ·betwl!en the hours of 1
and 7 a.m., reporll the allerltl.
Sbi II .a llxtb &amp;rade atuclent at
Reel De Elllllfttary.

WlMil lut - · Natrao waa
warlna biUI! tallfl alloeiiDd a

Emerpncy Medical Setvlcea.

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Numerous teachers and some
classified personnel were re- ·
hired at the Thursday night
meeting of the Eastern Local
Board of Education at the high
school.
Given continuing contracts by
the board· were Pam Douthitt,
VIke Douglas and DOn Elclllnger. ·
Other contracts went to Doris
Well, . · Debbie Weber, Steve
Weber; Barbara Tripp, Cynthia
Linton, Nancy Larkins, ·S teve
Jewell, Larry Heines, five years;
Mary Price, Ron Hill, Rebecca
Edwards, Kim Conldl,- Carol
Brewer, three years; and Margie
Bartee. David Chadwell, Nancy
Circle, Lea Ann Gaul, Uncia
Shultz, Qlna Tillis, two years.
Classified personnel hired In·
eluded Carl Barringer, Lucille
Kimes, and Linda lipencer con·
tlnulng contracts; Elnora Ber·
nard; . Sa!ldy Bowe, Darlene
Buckley, Edna Householder, VI·
olet·Lambert Bruce Myers, and
Bob.Whlte, ~o year contracts. ·
Supplemental contracts re- .

By NANCY YOACJL\M
Sentinel Newa&amp;aff

EMS has 9 Thursday calls

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Wednesday -.loa In GAllipolis. Tbe JIIIUces
vlslled GIIIUpolla u part of the Glllllpolla
bicentennial celebration. (Tribune Jilholo by Lee
Ann Welch)
·
·

WEDNESDAY MORNING BRIEFING..:.. Oblo
Supreme Court Justices, from left, Andy Douglas,
Allee Roble Resnick and Tbomaa Moyer, briefed
stude!Jt and professloQal joumllll!lts before the

NEW DEMONSTRATOR ~IQUIDATION!

1990 EAGI.E-••••••••••••••••••••••••STOCK. 117
1990 EAGLE........................STOCK t 124
1990 TBIIJ'O•••••••••••••••••••••••STOCK. 201
1990 'I'EIIJ'0•••••.•••••.•..••.••..••8TOCK I 202
1990 'I'EIIJ'O............ ~ •••••.•..••STOCK I 219
1990 TOPAZ•••••••••••••••••••••••••S'I'OCK t 244
1990 ESCORT••••••••••••••••••••• .&amp;'lOCK t 21S4
198Cl COUGAR.. ••••••••••••••••••••• 8TOCK t 282
1990 ESCORT••••••••••••••••••••• .&amp;'lOCK 1 289
1990 RANGER. ••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••8'1'()(:][ 1 :110
1990 TIIUNDERBIRD..........S'I'()(:][t282

Piek 3
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254

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By LEE ANN WELCH

but this Is a legislative problem,"
tne court said.
·
Justlces Allee Roble Resnick
and Andy Douglas dissented with
the opinion.
"Appellant put forth sufficient
evidence which supported her
assertion that she did not close
her account and thai appellee
breached Its contract by refusing
to ,pay her deposited fu'nds on·
demand," ResniCk wrote. ".Her
action Is thus not solely based on
or dependent upon records which
the bank may ~ave d!!"troyed."

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Page 4

SPECIAL PRESENTATION- Al.D Ptice,.left,
was preRDted aplaq~~eonTIIundQIDmemoryof
Olive Pa&amp;e, "an out.tandlnc educator and
member of the Melp Locat Teachen Auocla·

WAS
•11, 17800

COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UP!- The
Ohio Supreme Court Wednesday
suspended two attorneys from
the practice of law, one of them
Indefinitely, for Improper~)' handling cases.
The Couri Indefinitely suspended Laurice Maxine Koury of
Amherst after she had been
found gUilty of grand theft for her
involvement with the estate of a
ellen t. Ti\e Court also suspended
Jane M. Grote of Cincinnati for
one year for not helping a client.
Koury re&lt;:elved an automatic
Indefinite suspension in· November 1986 after she was found
guilty of grand theft and .~nt­
enced to prison. That one-year
prison term was suspended and
she was put on .three years
probation.
She had been hired to draft
will for Ernest Nemeth, and was
named his executl;jx. After Ne&gt;
inelh's death she removed about
$27,000 In money and jewelry
from the man's home.
Evidence showed she gave one
diamond ring to a relative of
Nemeth arid Indicated she was
keeping a cocktail ring. Neither
Item was Included In the estate
Inventory.
Five of the justices voted for
the Indefinite suspension, which
was the recommendation of the ·
Board of Commissioners on
Grievances and Discipline. However, Jusdce Allee Roble Resnick, writing a dissention for her
and Chief Jusdce Thomas
Moyer, said such misconduct
warrants permanent
disbarment.
Grote was suspended for one
year, twice the length the Board
of Commissioners on Grievances
.and Disci -pline had
recommended.
'

· law, may be destroyed after six
years. .
"Without Its Internal records,
National, Clty can only speculate
about how and by whom Abraham's fUnds were removed from
her account," the high scour!
ruled. ''The problem Is that the
passbook proves only that the
account exls ted; It does not
explain how the funds were
removed from the account.
"We are not unmlild!Ul of the
potential for harsh results under
the clear maridate of the ststute,

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5315

Woman can't seek money from bank
account because it's six years late
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI)- A
·woman who 's aid she coUldn't get
her money from a bank account
twlli not 'be able to pursue her
claim because It was more than
six years after the latest activity
In that account, the Ohio Su·
pre me Couri said Wednesday.
Banks can destroy records of
accounts Inactive for six years.
Josephine Abraham said she
opened an account at Capital
National Bank In October 1~69
and by September 1972 had
$13,266 In lt. Site said she
misplaced her bank book after ·
that, and didn't find it untll1985.
She said she had not attempted
to deposit or withdraw money
from the account and had not ·
received the annual forms from
. the bank showing the amount of
Interest she had received.
In the meantime. the bank had
been acquired by Bane Ohio In ·
1973 and then National City Bank
of Clev~land In 1984. Abraham
; said she had never been notified
of the changes.
In 1985, when she tried to check
on the account, the bank told her
It had no record of the account
and that It must have been closed
between late 1972 and January
1977, with no funds In it.
:'ihe filed suit against the
National City Bank Corp. In May
1986, alleglqg conversion, breach
of contract, · fraudulent misrepresentation, and negligent
breach of fiduciary duty. The
trial court ruled In favor of the
bank, and the court of appeals for
Cuyahoga County agrioed.
The Ohio Supreme Court, upholding the lower courts, agreed
that determining the merits of ·
the claim· depended on Internal
records .or the bank which, by

Ohio I.Dttery

Rose pleads
guilty to
tax charges

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The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~lb.

Bm~ ,..,....._,~...--,-.~d·t==~

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

Page 2-The Daily Seutinal

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH.
General Manl!Cer .

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclat(on and the A/nl!l'lcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LET'i'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbOulcl be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
·. • name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be pub·
· llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personall·
. ties.
..

~U.S. faces challenge
~~f retaining 'firSt

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WASHINGTON - Joe Rl·
chards used to be a top.clvUian
engineer for the Navy working on
nuclear submarines. Now be
drives .a garbage truck In Con·
necttcut, all because he blew the
wlllstle on a blatani waste of
money by the Pentagon.
Richards' first mistake was
that he pointed out ,what he
illought was a costly .flaw II\ $5.6
mutton worth of sonar equip.
rnent. His sec1&gt;nd mistake was
that he wouldn't shut up and
rn ind his own business when the
Nayy failed to correct the prob·
lem. He ~as fired ·for
insubordination.
Hlchards was a construction
oversight engineer for the sophls·
ticated sonar systems on the
Trident atld Los Angeles class
submarines built by Electric
Boat, a division of General

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OOPS

IN CI\IIC$ .. •
IN t\\STOR"'I· ••
60VE~NMENT... .

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VEMOC~ACY 'SA
NlCE PLAC.~ 1"0 UVE

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BU'T! WOULPN'f

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WANTTOL~

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HOW lT WORKS ·

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Don Quixote dreams
For about 50 weeks out of the
year, I stew over how the federal
government is spending my
money. During the first two
weeks of April, I get severely out
of sorts over the way they collect
lt.

I do not like the Income tax
system employed In this country
to raise the revenue that is
wasted by Washington. No mat·
ter how many articles I read
about how the process Is being
"slmpllt\ed," the forms seem to
get more complicated. No matter
how many references I see · to
"reforms" which have eliml·
nated loopholes, I cannot shake
the feeling that the Leona Helms·
leys and Donald Trumps a're not
.
paying ·their fair share.
I want an Income tax system
that Is simple, equitable, effi·
clent. I warit a system that
minimizes the politicians' med·
dUng In my personal decisions to
save, .consume or contribute. I
want a system that does not
induce me to Invest In railroad
boxcars Instead of Innovative
new businesses. I want a system

oi flat tax

Joseph Speai£

that does not force me to family making $100,000 would proportions of their Incomes In ,,
subsidize squid fishing and avopay $14,450 (14.45 percent of total taxes. A levy of $3,000 on an •
cado farming.
Income).
Income of $20,000 Is more plirif·
I would like a flat·rate tax
~uch a system would thus be
live, they ·say, than a tax of $3 ~.
sysiem - not one, I hasten to mildly progressive; It would million on an Income of $20 '
add, that's anylh!ng like the protect the poo~; and every niillion. A simple flat tax would,"
scheme t,hat has much of Britain . person's Income tax could be require them to give up their' goal
up In arms against Prime Minis· filed on a single sheet of paper. of steep progresslv!ty.
.1:
ter Margaret Thatcher . Her Maybe half a sheet. If you added
Politicians exist to award taX&gt;•
"poll tax" levies a, fixed amount a flat tax on business Income, the brea'k s to contributors anci~
on all citizens as a means of total revenue raised woUld fl. friends. It Is the universe i~ ·,
low~rlng the property tax burden · nance the country. All that would
which they live. What would they
on wealthier classes.
be required to balance the budget do If they couldn't grant write- ~·
Any flat tax system earning each year would be an adjust· offs to pistachio growers and· •
this pundit's endorsement would rnent In the rate. Let the llama ranchers? .Deny the sky to,_,
have to protect the poor !lnd not politicians decide that figure and swallows, .the sea to sole; Bul'i) '
bui'den the middle class. I would let the voters hold them don't Slly no io tax·wrltlng.
•
prefer. one that allows but one accountable.
Average taxpayers would have
form of deduction . - personal
As usual, I tilt at windmills. to. ·under~tand that their tax
allowances for taxpayers and Fairness, simplicity and effl· burdens would remain the same, .,
dependents - then taxes all clency seem of secondary !mpor· or perhaps even be lower, despite .,
lncorne In excess of that amount lance to those who · govern us, the tact they are giving up thelr·
1
at the same flat rate.
mainly because all factions In· mortgage deducatollS'.
,.
If the rate were i7 percent, a
volved cannot see past their - Collectively, we would have to ';
fampy of four with total allowan·
narrow interests to focus on the accept an old idea that now ,,
ces of, say, $15,000andan Income greater good.
r
seems radical.: Tax sys"lm~, i
of $25,000 ·would pay $1,700 In
Doctrinaire liberals, for exam· were Invented to raise revenue .
taxes · (6.8 percent of total In· ·pte, do not believe that equal not to dictate social and eco~::
come). A family that earns rates · are fair rates. They sub· nomic policy.
"
$50,000. would pay $5,950 · (11.9 scribe to the New Deal no(ion
Dream on, Don Q. ·
,,
percent of total Income). A
that the rlch ·should pay greater

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East bloc .o f the West

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Move over, Gorbachev. Yo11've
Why compare Peru and the plated In some paNs of Latin
got a tough job, all right, an~ Soviet Union? Because the West· America- in Brazil, Argentina,
·,;
we're sincerely sympath~tic, bUt ern media have been fu U of
Meanwhile, ·intellectuals · Ukeo ;,
things could be worse. You could excellent stories outlining the Mexico, NlcaraJUa and perhaps
Peru,
to
name
a
few
sites.
Peru's
Herqando De Solo have,;,
be the next president of Peru.
wrenching decisions facing So·
Twenty
years
ago,
when
I
was
.
patiently
polntd out that "the••
Now there's a job for a certified viet and El!stern European lead·
an
exchange
studelitln·
Brazil,
It
traditional
left wing and rtglii ·,~
masochist, whose lndent!ty will ers desperate tO rejuvenate their
was
virtually
Impossible
to
find
•
wing
are
both
conce~ned mori, ,
be determined In a runoff elec· economies and usber In the
an
Intellectual
who
did
not
yearn
with
transferrln,
g wealth tha11 :.
lion within the next few weeks.
modern world. Meanwhile, how· for socialism. At the first party I
with
laying
th~
lnstltutlonal.Ji
As you know, Mikhail, In ever, .we've somewhat neglected
attended,
I
was
pulled
aside
and
bases
for
creating
it."
His 1986
Moscow you've only got 70 odd the fact that many Latin leaders
quizzed
about
multinational
cor·
book
"The
Other
Path"
beca.mQ "
,years of communist legacy to · are facing equally tough dec!·
poratlons,
Nelson
Rockefeller
an
International
best
seller.
. •.
dismantle. In Peru, you'd have slons that will also have a
and
other
assorted
bogymen.
Not
that
the
new
breed
of
Lau
11 .:
centuries of corrosive conditions monumental affect on the United
Fortunately,
Latin
America
Is
leader
Is
assured
success,
any."
to overcome. For starters, States.
·
a more congenial place today for
more than prosperity Is foreor· .,
there's the _yery bad blood
Gorbachev and company must free-market advocates - not
dalned
for Eastern Europe. But,;
between Hispan,lc and Indian create a private economy from
entirely
friendly,
but
not
lmplac·
the
mere
fact that "the other .. ,
populations. Then there's the the ground up; but much of Latin
ably
hostile
either.
Both
far
right
·
path"
Is
being
considered In the1
suffocating state bureaucracy America must unshackle a pri·
Hispanic Western .Hemisphere Is·
that survives, no matter which vate economy that either has and left have had their turn at the
helm,
and
gross
mismanagea
sign of how the world has truly ,,
party holds' power, prlmarUy to been. coddled with subsidies to
ment
has
discredited
them.
turned
upside down.
,
. smother competition and redls· the point that ills uncompetitlve
tribute wealth to favored groups. or crippled by overregulation.
Truly liberal economic Ideas Eastern bloc countries must cut
have been as foreign to most loose government enterprises,
·
By United Pren International
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Peruvians as they were to that but Latin nations must privatize
Today is Friday, Aprll20, the 110th day of 1990 with 255 to follow. :
old stick·ln·ihe· mud Leonid state-run monopolies. And lead·
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
;
Brezhnev. As If thai weren't ers In both reelons face powerful
The
morning
stars
are
Venus,
Mars
and
Saturn.
,
enough, thousands of MaoLBt . opposition from reactionaries
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
fanatics Infest the Andean high· and nationalists of the left and
,
Those
born on this date,are under the slgo of Taurus. They ll)clude r
lands, terrorizing the peasantry right.
French
Ern!Jeror Napoleon III In ,808; sculptor Daniel 'Chester '
In the name of a crackpot utopian
!!'he whole world wonders at
French,
creator
of "The Minute Man'' statue, In 1850; Nazi dictator :
dream.
the revolution occurring ·Ia tbe
Adolf
J:li
tier
in
1889;
sllen t film coniedlan Harold Uoyd, In 1893 and •
Say what you will about the communflt bloc. They should
painter
Joan Mlro, also In 1893; actress Nina Foch · :
Spanish
surrealist
Lithuanians, Mikhail, but at least also marvel that a free·market
in
1924
(·age
66);
actor
Ryan
O'Neal In 1941 rage 49); and actress .J'
they.'re polite.
~ transformation LB belne contem·
Jessica Lange lpl949 (age41).
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. "If Mattingly is worth $19.3 mtlllon, I ought to
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lack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Attd

Today in history

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Dynamics. The "towed array" deployed too close to the blades. raised· his voice and walked
out:·.
sonar systems, costing $500,000 The sonar is cut loose and the He wa,s fire for lnsubprdlnation."
each, are dragged on half·rnile- propeller Is damaged, making it He told our associate Tim
long cables behind the subrna· louder and more easUy detecta· Warner that he was fired only
rlnes. They are t~ eyes and ears ble by t)ie enemy. The Navy loses after he blew the whlsle to the ·
of· the submarines that detect · only· a portion of Its .investment 'Inspector general. ·
enemy subs at various oeean when the sonar Is cut loose, but
The Inspector general con· '
depths ..
the ship ends up In dry dock and eluded that Richards had a·
For three years, Richards the costs escalate from there.
legitimate gripe that should have
worked on the towed array sonar
Rlc])ards told his superiors · been taken serlou~ly by his' I
and was frustrat~ by the lack of · about the problems, and they superiors. But the lnvestigatorsj
interest -his superiors showed In raised the issue with Electric . also found that Richards' flring!l
constl'\ICtlon problems. He re- Boat In a meet lrig on May 6, 1988. had been justified because of"
·
ported!hat the long cables could Electric Boat agreed to t1x th,e lnsuborctlnation. · " '
not retract smoothly at high problem and pay for it. But a few . Richards makes living now ~
speeds whetl a submarine had to days lat(lr, Richards' superiors doing odd jobs. His house Is. in~
maneuver qulcttly. Submarine inexplicably told Electric Boat foreclosure. He struggles to pub
commanders would be forced to not to worry about lt.
food on the table. Eilglneel's wit~
cut the cables and dump the
Frustrated, Richards called his skills are in demand In the
expensive sonar on the ocean · the Defense Department Inspec· defense contracting Industry, but
floor.
.
tor General' s· Ottlce and they Richards says employers won't "
Richards also says the .cables . launched an investigation.
touch him becau!;e of his beet--·
.
have been cut by submarine
"
A month later at a meeting with the Navy.
propellers because they are with his superiOrs , Richards

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PoniiJOy-Midclaport, Ohio
Friday, April20, 1990
.

'Whistle blower'
fired
.
.

$Dong
equals' title
.
By HELEN THOMAS
•.
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UPI Wltlle House lieJ~Grter
; WASHINGTON - Pr~sldent Bush says he does not buy "some o(
·those el!tlst theories about the decl!ne of America."
.: "I don 't belie«e It," he ·said .. "I don't think the American people
believe ll. I don't believe our allies believe it."
; He made the remarks in an interview wllh a .gro.up of foreign
.COrrespondents recently .
.
; Asl\ed If he liked 'the phtase ."!lrst among equals" as a description
.of his vision of America's place In the network of democratic
alliances, he said:
\
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:; "Well, I think many of our allies look to us as the'ttJlt among equals,
)!'lven the blessing of the' size of our gross national product and given
our historic commitment to the securitv of others. "
:·.He added that "the real! lies of the worlt! are such that many look to
~s as ~ssential- in this lnstanc.e the security of Europe. Certainly,
..we've got to be dealt with on trade matters. "
;. 'The word at tile White House is that privately the president is
-concerned about. the economy, something Americans have been
'concerned about for some time.
·
·
• · In addition, .the balance of trade picture, the imbalance in terms of
'.Japan, the $3 trillion. national debt, the huge deficit have put the
lJnited States in a worriesorne position.
·
.
:' Is the White House wiJistllng in the dark? The astronomical bailout
·figUre for the savings and loan debacle that is bandied about runs
from ,$200 billion to $500 billion.
So the problems are out there, unfortunately at a time when it would
be salutary If Uncle Sam were feellng 'flush and could encourage
)long, with money and ltechnology . the incredible political changes
.~ a king place In the world, particularly In Eastern Europe.
• The United States has an important stake In keeping Its l~adershlp
)'ole. Bush certainly believes that. He is pushing for France to return
10 the military arm of NATO after a dramatic pullout by President'
·(i:harles de·Gaulle years ago.
.
·- In the same interview. he said that he did not want to sound
·:?chauvinistic" but he did not believe the American people want to
relinquish the privilege of having an American in the role of supreme
;pommander of NATO, which has been the custom for more than~
,-ears.
,
·
• . "People view the American presence as stabilizing, as having
}llayed a signllicailt ro~ In preserving a peace that, in terms of
~uropean history. is a long one, " he said. "And I don't want to have
this coming out In a ch11uvinist!c sense, but I think the Amer!call
,people have to feel the American presence is wanted, and part of the
~mmand s.tructure. ·
·
·
: , "I think, It contributes to the view that we have an Important role to
Jllay and the Europeans want us to have an important role to play ."
• · So while the political face of Europe Is changing, and Germany will
~oon be reunified, there is a strong desire on the part of theEurope!!ns
II&gt; permit the United·States to retain a dominant voice in its security.
affairs.
· But the day is corning, and U.S. leaders have to prepare for it, when
-America will be less Important in the scheme of things on the ·
£?ntinent. It would be foolhardy for them to lull themselves into the
, 1a11acy that the United States will retain irs primacy in a prosperous ·
Europe.
·
'. The United States still has the dynamism, energy and ideas to lead
)n a more democrl\tlC world. But not If It becomes bogged down In debt
.l has to.take a back seat to less hamstrung competitors.
: • has provided a securit~ Ulf\l;Jrella for the West and Japan, and
nkrolled the world In the fight ·agalnst communism.
: • But American officials have to know the time could come when the
JJnited States may be Invited out, and If not that drastic; at least , lose
its plaCe as No. 1.

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Com~entary
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get AT LEAST three or four million!"

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Fridly,

AJifl 20, 1980

Pon1e10y-Midcleport, Ohio

~astern girls remain
un~eaten

in 10 outings

Area t:acjng season· hegins tonight

'n,leEasternelrlssoftballteanila picked up yet anollier win,
well on Its way to an outatandtna scattering five hils, fanning four,
season as the Eagletll!l posted walklne three and hitting. two
\heir lOth win againsl 110 defeats batters. Carla Washburn suf.
Thursday evening with. &lt;I 174 ' fered the toss, walking 24, fan·
non· league win · over Federal . aing -two an:d allowing five hits.
Hocking. . .
Eastern went ahead 2·0 and
Eastern 10-0,Is 7.0!n theSVAC. never looked back, scorrn1 three
Coach Pam Douthitt's eats' more in t~e second to take a 5·1
only had five hits, )JUt took l!!ad. An eight run fourth Inning
advantage of 24 FH free pasSl!s broke' the. game wide open as
and one·hit batsman to surge EHS also left tlie bases loaded,
ahead for the win.
.
. the score 13-1 before FH plated
Edna Driggs, ulldefeated In . tWo In the bottom o of the Inning.
Eastern hitters were Carrie
her OWil/ personalprecoi'd at 10.0,
Morri~Sl!Y with a single, Lorrie
Baker a single, Toby_ Hill a
.
two-run double, Amy Murphy a .
.
twcrRBI single, and Mand1e
Harris a RBI single.
~
·
LeeGlllilanandTabbyPbillips
each walked four times, while
~
Harris walked three times and
aC
was hit once In addit!orn to her
single.
The Eastern Eagles. of Coach
Federal Hitters were Cindy
Scott Wolfe rolled to their eighth
Coler, Stacie Glass, Mary cauc"
win of the S~:ason Thursday With
sey,Beth Morgan. and M.
a 9·8 win over non·league foe
~rucker all with singles.
Federal Hocking.
.
Monday night Eastern's Edna
Eastern is 8·3 overall and
Dr!ggs.burled a no·hitter against
Federal Hocltllie is 1-11 overall.
Soutwestern, striking out 9 and
Sophomore reliever Michael
missing · a perfect game by- +
Smith picked up the save with
walking just one batter, the score
two Innings of relief,· lncluclllll
32.0 on the mercy rule after five
str!k)ng out two of the last three
Innings..
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FH b/1-lters. Senior Shal.in Savoy
Despite a determlnell~ effort
In ,relief of starter Scott Fitch 'Lisa Hall suffered the loss.
picked up the win. Savoy worked
Eastern's Lee Gillilan went
two and 2·3 Innings or' middle
5-for·5 with six RBI's and one '
relief. to walk two and give up just
walk, while Mary Jo· Reed with
· two hits. Smith did not allow a hit,
one triple had 6 RBI' sand a wal.k.·
fan~ two and waltcect ·one.
Lorrle Baker had three singles
Fitch. who developed a sore : and five RBI's, Amy Mu·rphy had
arm, fanned one, walked three ' two singles and a double. Tabby
and allowed three bits.
Phillips a double and single,
Mitch Gillian started for Fed- ' Carne Morrissey, Mandie Har·
eral Hocking, but did ncit get an
rls, Michelle Donovan, and Edna
out after fa~lng the fltst six EHS
Driggs each singles, while Toby
batters. Eastern pounded out
Hill slammed a double.
five hits off Gillian and Oill! walk . Amy Well walked three times
in giving up ·seven ·urst Inning , without' making ail ·out.
runs. Brett Lewis came on in
Rose was the lone SWHS batter
relief to get out of the Inning,
to make fn. to first, then stole
pitching well the rest of the way, · secorid, but did not advance
but suffering the loss as FH tied
further.
the score In the fou~th inning at
Tlie undefeated Eaglettes of
7·7.
.
Coach Douthitt are slated to
After taking a 7.() lead ill tbe · invade Kyger Creek tonight.
first Eastern was silent until the
' fifth Inning, wlien Filch singled,
Michael Smltli singled, Jaso11 '
Haeer had an .RBI single, and
Mark Murphy hit his second
sacrlllc;e fly of the night for two
Complete
of
RBJ '.s. Murphy's ·sacrifice blast
Ytgttablt and ltdding
was the eventual difference In
. Plant1, llooming: and
the game, giving EHS a·9•7 leail.
. ro&amp;age Hanging loslctts.
FH ,scored one in the fifth
before $mlili ·&amp;hut the door and
Fruit and FIOwlri~g Jr•s,
sealed lhe win. ·
shrubs, Azaltat and
Smith did his share with the bat
'
. Rha4odtndronl ·
as he had two singles, Scott Fitch
li'lnl Jeff Durst each had ·two
HilliARD'S GREEtltOUSE
singles, JeffH~er a slngle,.ROII
SYilCUSI, 1110
Newsome a slngle,.Matt Flillaw a
992-5776
'
double, and · ·Jason Haeer a
Open
.Deily
9-6; $un. 1-5
single.
·· &lt;

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es
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edjFe m
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.a nee

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPR1118 SEASON .

lint

er~~~~~~o;l~r~~~~~~gd~~

opening of the 1990 stock car
racing season which begins this
Friday evenlrig, April 20, at
Skyline Speedway In Stewart,
Ohio ·located on County Road 53
between Coolville and Athens.
Area drivers expected to be
vyll)g for the 1990 track chan'l·
plonshlps include defending
track champiOn Bob Adams, Jr.
(Champion In '84.'85,'86, '87 and
'89), Benny Hickle of Pomeroy,
Mark French of Mlilci]fport,
Chris Diddle of Racine. Phil
Davis in the Whaley's Au to Parts
':8·ball", Bryan Wolfe of Racine,
and Lee Floyd of Racine.
Another are driver missing ac·
tion at Skyline for a few years,
Mike Adkins Is also expected to
return.
Bob Adams, Jr. and arch· rival
Harold·Redman, the 1988 champ
from Tyler Mountain, W.Va., are
expected to dual In head to head
battle for tl\ls year's champion·
ship crown.
Adams, driving his 430 CU V·S
Black Bandit Camaro, won the
opener at Tyler County last .
Weekend. Adams will drive his
V·8 this week, but before ·rnonths
end hopes to debut an all· new,
super·lightwelght V·6 powered
machine built by the Doll broth·
ers in Greenwood, W.Va.
Four classes will be on the
-

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Y-1 motor, auto. tren1., AM ·FM Steri.o, eir cond., split
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·Reu""

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POSThiASTER: Send adll'ess changl'S

Me~gS

The Meigs Marauders erupted
for 11 runs in the first Inning and
coasted to. 1~'6 victorY ov,er 'the
'Prlmble . Tomcats '. T!lur•day
night at Mel~ High SChool. The
Marauders pounded Tomcat
pitching ,t,or 13 hits enroute ·to
their sixth victory In 8 ClOnference
games, and their seventh victory
in 10 games overall.
Meigs jlla)(ed with. out the
services of seniors Ed. ,Crooks,
Jay Humphreys; Chris Stewart,
and Dell Ills Boothe who ·were
unable to play because of a
previous. school commlbnent.
. . ,Kevin Tailor led thewinlll!rs at
tl\e pla'e gollie with 3 singles.
T~rry
added 2 dotfules,
Jeremy Piialln' a!ided a double , '
·aild a ·a lqle, Keith Hagen 2
slnetes, and Mike Walls, Randy
Hawley, and Terry M~111re and
Jason Wright each Chipped In
with a single. Gafchell and
Burdette had two sing~ each to
lead the Tomcats. • ·
.
Jeremy Pl\alin w4s the win·
nlng pitcher, the sophomore went
4 23 inninp, alrlklng out 5 and
walking :1, Taylor pl('ked up the
save strlkinl out 4 and walking 1.
P.balln had a no-hitter for 3 23
. ' ~ !linings. 'l'he first three Tomcat, · rwls were unearned.
.'
•
'Meigs will host Alexander Ia a
T:V.C. contest on Frlilay after·
noon with the llrst pitch at 4: 30.-·

Jim
Cobb's

to The Dally Sentbtei, Ill Court St. ,

lly C.rter or Motor Route

T-1
GM243
1495-B
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GM239
GM204
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1403-A
1339-A
GM-238
1324·A

FOlD·
·EIP
••f, tit, cniM, *· ....,..Ster-cnsllttt.

1916

1094-A
GM196

'

l~!,,.,

GlAND AM .......
916 IUICI lEGAL LIMITED •••••• S7

916 FOlD MStANG .-................. S499
Dr.4..-.

1915 IUICIIIYIEIA _..... ~........... SI49
Dr: LOADED .

915 GLDS. fiiiiZA..1••9sgr.............
teATCUACI-...

~t

Skyline'

•

.

agenda this year; the Super Late serve as pit steward and techni·
Race fans may see the ·stocll
Models, SernFlate Models, callnspector.
cars . at Skyline , Friday, then
Sportsman . and Street Stock
Last week, emp!Qyees of Sky· travel to Eldora for the Saturday
d!VIsi.ons. Latet In the year the 'tine Speedway had a !l'eellng to evening show, beginning with
.popular lMCA modlfleds wtlljoin iron out all the det~lls of this warm·ups at 6: 30 p.m.
the field, as well'.as two STARS .. racing season, stressing an or·
The top names In sprint car
sanctioned national events.
ganlzed effort to keep the racing racing will be on hand. the same
Track Promoter Darrell Willle program moving without delay .
drivers seen weekly on TNN and : .
has added several hundred tons
Hot laps will begin promptly at . ESPN and its host show, Thurs· ;
of new clay to the track's surface 6:30, time trials are at 7:30p.m., day Night Thunder; now Satur· ·
and increased the banking ev· and Racing begins promptly at day Night Thunder.
.
enly (rom top to bottom to 8:30.
Defending series Champion ·
,·formulate more racing grooves
Racing will continue weeklq Bobby Dav]s, Jr. wlll challenge
and better racing. Ail·new debris throughout the year on each and last year's United Sprint Club :
fencing, new guard rail, and every Friday evening.
·
champion and 8·tlme World of •
expanded parking highlight a
Weekend Events
Outlaw Cpainpion. Steve Kinser. :
much Jmproved facility .
ROSSBURG - Area racing Also on the trail are Sammy and ;
Many !!rivers not at Tyler fans admiring the open wheel ,Jeff Swindell, Mark Kinser, Jac ·
County last week have Indicated World of Outlaws Sprint Car Haudenschlld Iron) Millersburg, ;
that they wwre awaiting Sky· circuit, an get their fill of thE;. Oh., Rick Unger of Belpre, Bobby :
line's gr&lt;J.nd OP~:nlng tonight.
methanol burning sprinters this Allen, Danny Smith, Doug Wolf· ·
Another local, Jason Shain, son ~¥eekend with a double show, gang, Chris Eash, Dave Blaney of .
of .Dave and Terri Shain, Racine· Saturday April 21 and Sunday HartJord, and Troy. Ohio's "Can ;
,has earned honors
as the afternoon April 22 at the lnfam· .he do it?'' Jack Hewitt.
, Skyline Speedway i!Dnouncer ous Eldora Speedway In Ross·
Blaney , a second generation :
- this seasdn. Dave Shain will burg, Ohio.
(Continued On Pag~ 4)

I

cusPS u~&gt;t8tl
A Dl•lol.., of Multimedia, Ine .

Federalliad five li'tts, a double
and single by Lewis, a single by
.Blake, a Jeff McKibben single,
and a John Arnold single.
Eastern Is slated ·to plily at
Kyg~r Creek tonight.

:.·
thumps
Trimble··

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

GM240
178
GM244

TERM

MODEl

PIICE

CHEV.
CHEV.

CHEYmE

36

PONT.

SUNIIRD

CHEV.

CAY. WGN.

FORD
DODGE

EXP.

3,695
795
995
4,495
4495
5,495

48

93.41
"96.87
111.40
121.14
121.14'
125.35

5,495

36

155.80

5

24
24
36

181.12
193.48
193.48
200.85

CHEYffiE

CARAVELLE

MERC.
CHEV.

TOPAZ

DODGE

LANCER

NISSAN

STANZA

CHEV, .
MERC.
CHEV.

CAY.

WAGON
WAGON

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OLDS

CALAIS

5,795
6,995

..CHEV.

CORSICA

5

FORD
I)ODGE

F-150
, ARIES
DIPlOMAT

1982 HONDA
'
1989 CHEV.
1989 CHEV.
1989 OLDS .
1987 FORD
1989 CHEV~
1989 OLDS
1987 OLDS
1987 BUICK
.BUICK
1984 CHEV.
1989 CHEV.
1987 CHEY.
1989 OLDS
1984
1990 CAD.
1989 CAD.
1990 CAD.

6

48
36
36

C~YAUER

FORD

1

GM242 1990
U06C 1978

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·*Pick-A-Payment
'1,000 Rebate
on Each Car

CIVIC
CORSICA
CAVAliER

0,495
9,495

CIERA
BRONCO
Z-24 CAY•
CIERA

18
ELECTRA
RIVIERA
3/4 TON

CAMARO

· BUZEI
CUTLASS

1
1

36
60
24
24

215.1
217.69
217.69
12 224.94
12 224 ..94
60' 227.11
60 227.11
2
48 250.83
54 256.54
60 274.95
48 275.93
48
71.72
24 290.33
36 2
54 297.60
48 303.95
60

ELDORADO

36

SED. DeY.

60
60
60
60

R DORADO

SED. DeY.

CAD.

SED. DtV•

CHEY.

IWER

PAYMENT

'

571.00
571~67

586.02
609.94

--

"ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED WITH REBATE APPLIED AS CASH DOWN · .
PUIS TAX • TITLE

Jim .C obb

.CHEVROLET-OLDSMQBILE
CADILLAC~GEO, INC.
OHIO

'

'

�I

I

..

I

.

.

Friday, April20, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wi~ · again, . 7-3

Fxpos top Phils;.Dodgers
By C.J. HWU
UPI Sports Writer
Von Hayes thinks h~J,Sa w more
than a routine fastball on his firs t
trip to the pla te Thursday night.
Hayes, facing Montreal's Den·
nis Martinez, noticed that the
.
ball was diSCQJOfE'd.
"I called for the ball in the first
inning because you could see
tobacco juice on the ball•." said
Hayes, who was later ejected
from the game I for arguing a
third strike. " If makes the ball
darker. (Philadelphia Manager)
Nick (Leyva) complained to the
umpire too buthejustputtheball
In his pocket and didn't Issue a
warning or anything."
Martinez, 2-0, didn't give the
Phllljes . anything to hit either, .
hurling a two-hitter. He was

perfect through six Innings and
had a no, hitter Into the eighth as
he mixed his pitches up effec·
tlvely to keep the Phlllies off ·
balance.
Martinez, didn't allow a hit or
even reach a three· ball count, in
the first six Innings. In the
sevelfth, Len Dykstra fouled out
six pitches before walking to
break up the perfect game.
Then Darren Daulton doubled
over the head of center. fielder .
Marquis Grissom In the elghtb
erasing the no·hitter. The . Phil:
lies added their second hit In the
ninth when Tommy Herr singled
sharply to rlght, .but Martinez got
Sll Campusano to pop out and .
struck out CarmeiO Martinez to
end the game Jn register ing his
first shutout and ·rlrst complete
·
·

Friday, April 20, 1990

'

Meigs Court juror8 selected_..___ __

game of the season.
hits, wajked none and struck out
"He pltche9 well," Montreal
six In seven Innings for the
Manager Buck Rodgers said.
victory, The r!ght·hander Is 9·1
"He stayed ahead of the hitters.
ljfetime against the Astros at
He had good stuff. When you
DodgerStadlUmwitha2.02ERA.
pitch a two·hlt shutout, you have
Mets 4, CubS 1
to have somethlng ·going for y·ou
At New York, Howard Johnson
and he had everything going .for
doubled home two runs In the
him ton!jlht. "
.
fifth inning and Dwight Gooden
In other NL games , New York
extended his mastery over Chi·
defeated Chicago 4-1, Pittsburgh
cago, helping New York salvage
beat St. Louis 5-1, ;md · Los
the finale of a three-game series
Angeles topped Houston 7·3.
against the Cubs. J~hn Franco
Dodgers 7 Astros 3
hurled two Innings for his third
At Los Angele~. Ruble Brooks · save. Mike Harkey, 1·1, took the
belted a three-run homer and Kal
loss.
Daniels added three hit s a nd
Pirates 5, Cardinals 1
three RBI as Los Angeles
At St · Louis, [)oug Drabek
Dodgers ripped Mike Scott, 0·1,
allowed three hits over elght
in a tri~mph over Houston. Orel . lnnlngsandBarryBondsbelteda
Hershlser, 1.0. scattered nJne
two· run ho~er, lifting Pitts.
bu rgh to a victory over St . Lo\lls.
Drabek, 2·1. struck out five an·d
walked two. Ted Power pitched
the ninth for his first save. St.
l::J ·
Louis starter Joe Magrane, ·o.z,
extended his personal losing
.· The Investigation focused on
streak
to four games, dating
allegations that Rose bet qn his ·
hack
to
·last
year. N(agr'ane Iect all
own team.
.
NL
left·handers
111 victories last
Th e agreement Ros!', his (wo
year
with
18,
but
went wh\Iess
lawyers and a federal prosecutor
with
two
losses
in
six
September
signed earlier this week was kept
outings.
·
·
secret until Thursday, when It
was flied with Spiegel. The judge
wlll review the case Friday and
SPECI~L
decide whether its terms are
acceptable.
·
CARPET flEANING
Rose agreed to plead guilty 1o
WHOLE HOUSE SPECIAL
filing false tax returns for 1985
ON ANY COMIINAnON OF S
and 1987. In exchange, federal
ROOMS,
~AllWAY AND BATH
prosecutors agreed ·not to . file
additional charges , , The plea '
. ONLY
agreement noted that Rose ad·
mltted that his tali returns for
ADVANCED_(LEANING'
years.1984 through 1987 were not
correct .
SERVICE

::·.'

GOING OPPOSiTE DIREC'l,'I()NS - As the Dodgers' second
; baseman WIIUe Randolph breaks In one direction, Houston Astros'
· iecond baseman Bill Doran races In the other direction towards
: third base Thursday at Dodger Stadium. (UPI)

•

,.

:: Majors

Clncln•u ................. .... 8

1 l.&amp;cll -

•

$ an Dlep ..................... ~

Ll.os An ael es .. ........... ... 1

" .i31

·.

Wesl

By United Press lnkr llltlollll

;."

AMERICAN I...EAGUE

East

W L Pel.

· ~ Tum
~ New

York ............ ,........ .a

•• Detroit...........................

/w

3 .511

1

.f .511
-1 .SOl

1/w
I

I ..a44

l ift

:e

6 .-101
i .sn

• Cleveland .... ................. 3

~'

GB

4 .&amp;at -

: .- ~II IOn ..... .............. .... ... l
. ... .MIIwau llee .... ., .. .. ... ..., , .. -1
• llalllmore ......... ~ ........... -1
1
~

Ho•ston .... ... ................. 3

.

: • Toronto .........................&amp;

2

W~ l

I ./lilt - .

• : Oaldanci ....................... K
~ Chleaco ........................ t

t

CaiUOI'Na .............. .... .. :l
• • IUuu.a Clly .................. -1 4 ,Hf
• T~ ........................... -1 8 ..Jtfl
"'·• MIMW"MCI&amp;a .................... -1 t .-IIKI
Stalllt ......... .. ..... ......... !
8 .too
i •
ThuNI"' R e~~ ~t ll
, ~ Baltimore 4, De( roft %
• '" Clevelaad I, New York 0

·=·

,. •
.. ~

:e

.714
-1 .I:W

·~

3 ·

31ft

"Y!
-1%
&amp;'n · .

Mllwau~Rell , Texas 0
Oakland S, Seattle!

Friday Game~~
•
Bo!Jlon (Boddlcker 1·1) at Mllwukee
• ' (nler~t), ?p.m.
• (;:Chlci.IO (Peru 1·1) aa Cln"tehuld
· ~ (81!aneD-1 ) , '1: 35p.m .
... ~ . KaniiM City (Saberlukt"n 1·0) at
"'• Toronto (Siottlemyre ft..:!) , '1 r35 p .m .
~ ,.
Detroit (RoblnMJn 0-CI) at BaUimore
jO.,. (MII.cU .. 0), 1:15 p.m.
I~ CaiUornla {Ab bott ... , at Mln~ola
.. ,

i".

: •

cr.,... ••.•), 8:15p.m.

Nlf!W York (H-•1..,.. G-1) at Te ..u .
•

• J R.rall Z.l), i: H p.m .

• se .. l.le (Rolmaa ~l - 1 )
(Welc h 2-t), 111U p.m.

at Oatjand

.333

.333

:tV.

31-1,

5Y,

5 1~

.1\tl&amp;llta ..... ........... .. ...... . l
.l :l3 '
Tt11Jrsda)' Res ult !'I
~ew York -1, ChltllKO I
Molllreal 5, Philadelphia fl
Plltsbu rw;h 5, S:t l.ou.IS, I
Lo!i Anf'!l et~1, Houston 3
Friday Games ·
PHtllburwh (!l'erft!li 0-01 u Chlcaro
( Bicleeld o-8), 3: 2(1 p. m.
. Montre al (Smith I· I) IU New Yor•
(Duln«l·l) . '1 : 35 p.m .
Allanta ~ Clary O·t) at Clndnnatl
i Rijo), 1: 35 p.m .
Phlladelphl a · (Cook 1.{1) at St. loul• ·
(Smllh 1-1 ), K:35 p.m .
San Frand !l(lo (Ratfll:ht'l .1· 0) &amp;t San
Dlep (Whltwn a-O) , 10: As p. m .

Ho11Nion (hhalb B-fl ) at Los An.ph!ll
(Belcher 1·8) , Ill: S5 p.m .
Sat urda,y Garne!l
' Mortni al al Nrw Yod:
AU••ta at Cl nciMioit"
P'lltlbuJihat Chica1o. nlsllt
fhillldelpkla al St. Louis, nlpt
Houlllon al Lo1 Anse'es, nl1hl
San Fr.a ncl!!ICO at San Olep, niA:ht
ThMnwi .IQ' Sports Tran!lllctlOM
B&amp;!'(! hall
Boston- Recalled pll.ch6 Erkt Hetzel
lrcn Paw tucket of th~ lnWr•Uoral
l.eque (1\AA); optlone:d pitc her John
UiKier to Pawtw:tet.
· Cbltai{O IALI - Called up p~hf'I'K

·Vancouwr of the P&amp;clftr Cout

t.e.,...

IA.V.t aad pltchw John Hudelt from

Del Nil al BaiUmoh'
Chi~•IO at' CIMI and

B!rmln~am

ol th e . Southern Le~

lAM.

KaiUIU CKy at Toronlo·
Bo8tOD al Milwaukee

·

'

Ballketball
NBA - Fined A.k eem OlaJuwon of
Houllton U .OOO for p•tnc Gre1 Klle of
Sacramento In ltl e fac:e: flntd ,Jerry

Se ... lle Ill Oalllud
Nrw Yor• al Texaa . nlpt

NATIOr&lt;r.'AL LEAGUE

'

L Pel.

GB

4 .lie .J .100 5~ ·""
.$10
. .....

II
'l

' .tee a

.

San Franclsto .......... .... 3

.5M

J e rry Kidder and Jo.e Sepra lrwn

·
8 .. 11nt.,y Gam~
CaiUornla • MlnntAota

.,..,

.J
f
1
7

Reynolds of Orlando I:UVO aDd Bill
Lalmbeer of Detroit 1750 lor an aJ\erc•
tlon: llntd .Jamt:ll Edwarfti, ISCOU HMt·
itWM a•d \\'llitam lle.dlord OIDdhll lilt ~
each lor lea,.lnr the bench durtn1 the
Bl&amp;erc atlu .

·

Colles-e '
Arkan!llli·UUie Roek - NamedJmmes
Platt hawket~all coa.c h.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ba.s e· card shows, personal appearan·
ball legend Pete Rose expe· ces and gambling be)ween 1984
rlenced his second fall from and 1987. More than $25.000 of the
grace In less than a year with his underreported Income Is said to
agreement to plead gullty to be gambling profits.
"I made some mistakes," Rose
underreportlng his Income by
nearly .$300,000 on federal tax · said Thursday night. "It's now up
to the judge."
returns.
Rose, who had more hits than
The gritty former ctnclnnatl
Reds player and manager could any other player In history and
draw a prison term of up to six was once · considered a sure
years and a fine of $500,000 lfU.~. candidate for the Baseball Hall of
District Judge Arthur Spiegel Fame, was banned from the
accepts the plea agreement game last August after a six·
worked out by prosecutors and ·month lnves tigatlon Into allega·
lions of gambling.
his lawyers.
The · underf!!portlng was Jar·
gely for false reports on baseball

Area racing

· MHS girls win

HEMLOCK - The Meigs Ma·
rauder
softball team avenged an
(Continued From Pa11e 3)
earlier loss to Miller to defeat the
driver (son ot· Lou Blaney), may
Lady Falcons 9·7 Monday night.
be joined by his brother, Dale
The Lady Marauders jumped
Blaney, better known for his
out
to a qu!ck2·0flrstlnnlng lead
basketball stardom at West VIr·
when
Shannon Newsome walked,
glnla University and stint with
after
a Kim Osborne single ·'
the Los Angelos Lakers. Dave
Tr!cla
Baer cleared the bases
Blaney himself was an all·state
with
a
triple.
·
guard at Kinsman Badger.
Newsome
got
the Marauders
Hewitt, who likes the non.w!ng
started
In
tbe
third
Inning when
shows, was the winner two· weeks
she
drew
another·
walk, after
ago. at Eldora in the USAC
Osborne
was
hit
by
a
pitch Kelly
opener.
Besides these stars many local ' Smith cleared the bases with a 3
base hit of her own.
drivers are expected to try out
Meigs took advantage of Miller
their cars for KC Raceway's
opener April 28.
wl.ldness and a sacraflce fly by
Kelly Douglas to score three in
This weekend's· series marks
the fffth. Meigs closed out their
the first area appearance of the
scorlng with single runs In the
outlaws In 1990 and the first
sixth and seventh Innings. Other
appearance since USA folded
hitters for Meigs were singles
and Its members returned to·the
from Kristin Stanley, Heather
World of Outlaws. .
Hovatter, Newsome and
Saturday's show \leglns with
6:30 warm· ups. while Sunday's : Osparne.
Tara Gerlilcli picked up the win
afternoon slate begins at 12 noon.
Eldora Is located on route 118 for Meigs scattering 13 hits and
walking only one.
·
llbove Dayton.

=poston trips Montreal; .Rangers top _Capitals
~:;BOSTON (UPil,- Andy .Moog:

.qne of the NHL s best playoff
ilclalles. t~ok a step up to

~_,rfect!o~

m the _opener of the
,..ams DivisiOn !mal.
,. 1&gt;1oog stopped 20 shots for the
1)l'$t playoff shutout ofl]!s car~r
:Fbursday night ;tnd Dave Poulm
}core~ on a power· play goal in
~he second yeriod, leading the
:$los ton Brums to a 1·0 Game 1
r tctory over the Mon treal
.Canad!ens.
,0:: "I 'm as Intense l'"e been all
ear·•.. said Moog • who has. a
.. ague·bes t 1.68 goals·agamst
jlverage in the playoffs. "I seem
(O have
the breaks goin~my
way
..
,
·
, Game 111
2 of the best·of·se
I w . be P1aye d saturday
~res
night at Boston Garden
" Poulin · acquired !torn. Ph .Ila·

~

as

t
•,
ljelphia In a Jan. 16 trade, scored
fils fifth goal of the playoffs at
l': 37 of . the second period,
knocking home the rebound of a
kay Bourque
slap shot.
.
·~ "When you go up 1·0. you don 't
~xpect It fo ·last." said Poulin,
~' but we probably should have,
~nslderlng the way the goal·
~aders are playing." And If he'd
Jnissed the rebound? "We'd
probably be playing until
tomorrow."
:: The man·advantage opportun·
tfY began at 16: 11, when . Mont·
real'S Ilrlan Skrudland was
~ailed for holding Poulin in front
· tit the Canadlens' goal.
: · ''It cost us a hockey game I
Qtke the blame,'' said Skrudland,
~xplalning that the penalty was
i!Je result of his trying to get his
~lick back from Poulin, who was
j
IIQidlng It . "The bottom line Is, I
liwe Dave Poulin one."
~ Boston, which had failed on its
tJrst six man·advantage oppor·
kinltles, altered its power play by
Dulling the de!ensemen towards
file top of the circles. Garry
Calley. St!lndlng In the left circle,
Dassed .to Bo11rque at .the point
tnd the defenseman 's slap shot
ttchoc heted off the left pad of
. ,toalle Patrick Roy. Poulin, on
Jte right of the crease, knocked
111e puck Inside the near post,Just
Qi!yond Roy's desperate dive.
.; "I was a little upset, I was so
eJo5e to It, " said Roy . "It was a
(arbage goal. Anyone right there
eiluld score on that puck." ·
: The game paired the league's
0".9 best defensive teams, Boston
Jlllvlng allowed a league· low 232
l!alts and Montreal had permit- '

...

I

I
I

1ed 234.
•
. " Both teams play very disci·
plined hockey ." said Canadlens
defenseman Chris Chellos. ''This
.will be a good hard-checking
series.,;
Rangers 7, Capitals 3
NEW YORK i UPI) - A
split·second decision by Bernie
Nicholls Thursday night gave the
Jl!ew York Rangers the lift they
needed to defeat the Washington
Capitals in the opening game of
thei·r Patri·ck DIVI'slon final.
Nicholls' &lt;lecislon to shoot high
instead of low gave the Rangers
third
goal that quelle
was h-period
ington blitz and New ork
went on to post a 7·3 triumph.
Game 2 of the best·Of·seven
·
series IS scheduled lor Saturday
night at Madison Square Garden.
In the third period the &lt;;apltals
had the ~angers on the ropes
having r~llied from a 3-0 defi cit
to within 4·3. They kept applying

the pressur~ In the offensive
zone.
Bob Rouse controlled the uck
at the point, wo·und up and t6ok a
wicked slapshot but Instead of
finding the Ranger net the puck
bounced off Nicholls' ~kate and
slid down the Ice
. "I just tried t~ get 11 on net ..
said Rouse, "and he was able to
block it and get a little bit of ·
steam up and my partner wasn't
able t 0 ,· h h.im"
ca cga
·h
Nicholls
b
h
ve
c
ase,
ut
I e
ck just kept sliding toward
Capitals goaltender Mike L! t
"I thought I'd get it at the ~l~e
line . "said Nich 0 Us. "It j us t k ept
going and going."
fl na 11Y caug ht up to
· theNicholls
puck 15 f t f
L 1
ee rom u t.
He had a split second to decide
where to shoot.
. "I had tried to go throu h
Llut's legs before imd he beat r:e
. so I tried to put it over his pad ,;
·
'

.
sald' Nlcholls. "It just tipped the
top of his arm, arid bounced ln."
With the score 5·3 the flood·
gates opened.
•'That was \he turning point. "
said Murray .
Mike Gartner made It 6·3 with a
power·play goal at 13:26 when he
deflected Randy Moiler 's shot
past Liut from In front.
Nicholls gained a hat trick with
his sixth goal of the playo{fs,
· converting a Gartner rebound
from in front to m'l)&lt;e It .7-3.

· APRIL

ON

$9995 . ·

446-3915 .
_j

Walk For Our
~

·-

...

'

...

Children's Future
THE GREAT AMERICAN
WALK~ A-THON .

~ounty ·Jaycees

AP~IL .28, 19.90
10 A.M.

.

••

If you'd like to join the team effort of the
Meigs County citizens striving for a better
future for our ~hildren contact;
KARIN YOUNG - 985-3303
.

HONDA

CALL 992-3011

1985
FORD TEMPO G.L!!!.S!ti!M!!!I!.1•• 53550
2 Dr., 5 spd trane., air cond .. cloth interior, luggage rack .
1985 PLYMOUTH RELIANT •••~.~.r!'f.~ 52400
·

4 Dr.. Auto. , air., runa good.

1982 PlYMOUTH CHAMP •••••••••!!¥.'!!!.. 52250
2 Dr .. 4 spd. trane .. low mil•. eunroof.

1981 OLD$ OMEGA 4 DR.................. 51195
·v .s engine, cloth Interior, AM·FM·Cauette. Runs good.

1981 .CHEV. MONTE

CARLO~........~ ••••• S1295

} V-8 engine. AM-FM·C•saette. Loc•l car.

"Your ~ehlele Stwl•l• Pltee"

MANY MORE FIN£ LATE MODEL USED CAIS TO
'

m

·lawn

$ . . .-

1

5

YOUR IUDGET

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 11:30·1:30
FRIDAY 9:30·11:00; SATURDAY 9:00·1

BANK FINANCING
A

A real Stlhl
· With all the strength. durability and long llfe you
expect from a Stlbl·butlt trimmer ... but at an all·tlme
low price. ·
The new FS- 36 CUT 'N TRIM has many of the features of
Suhll; more expensive trimmers. and contllns new engineering advances ·
for easy use and mainten.ance.
·
• Lifetime Wlrranty on electronic lgnlt!on.
·
• New dual·ltne cutting head with automatic 'bump" line advance.
• • The rugged 30.2 cc e~ runs cooler and features a flow·througb primer
for easy starts.
• The FS-36 comes with a free palr of protect!"' goggles.
Now yell can have world-famous Sl'thl qUality bundled up in a trimmer
that cuts dOwn the tOUIIhest weeds and puts a trim on your
that would make a bar6er jealous.
All this in alJghtWetght. easy·
to-handle STIHL trimmer at an
.
unbeUMbly low prtcel

.

See the full'ltne of Stihl
ti1mmers and brush cutten
at your Stihl dealer.

OY HOME &amp; AUTO

•

..'

Case dismissed

Lottery numbet:s
.'
CLEVELAND CUPI) - Thurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·I
353.
PICK·3 ticket · sales totaled
$1,310,150.50, with a payoff due of
$453,460.50.

The case of Debra Scarberry'versus David Scarberry has been ·
dismissed In . the Meigs Countr ;;
Court..of Common Pleas.
• •
• •

________.,..:·,

..,...,;..

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

•

5315.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled ..
$241.918.00, with a payoff due of
$101,100.00.

•
•

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

To -

• be•ollully

arru.,.._a, Ju.. eall

· POMEROY
FLOWER SHO~

If'~ Am4!f'ica Sertcf. Love..
... "2·2DH er M2·5721

'"The

·Spring:dsed Car
Sale Speetaeular

•
•

'•

1985 ·Ford LTD Brouaham •• S3995

Fully Equipped, 113,000 mllea. Tan"Tn color.

1.9 84 Ford TemDO ••••••••••••••• S2195

Auto .. P8, PS, Air. Good Sondltion

1984 Ford Escort Wagon .••• S2195
·

·

1986 Ford Tempo ••••••••••••••• S3i95

6 apd. PB. PS. Nice car, low mileage.

1984 Olds Toronado ••••••:•••• S6295

Fully equipped. Good condition. Low mileage.

'

SEE RAY RIGGS

St. lt. 7

IIIah Schoel

Ntw Locatlen ..,, Entn

985·4200

.

•

•

•

PABRICS

DAilY ·sPECIAlS

..
6 spd. trans., AM·FM-Stereo, l;loth
air c&lt;lnd ..
low mils. Looka and rune like new.

In the . Meigs County Court ~t'
Common Pleas, Tertanee F ·; ,
Blankenship, Mtddlerport, Ia&gt;
seeking a divorce from Shirley ;
Blanke.nshlj\, Gallipolis Ferry. · •

Auto ., PS . .Red In color.

Soalh Central Ohio
Showers and a chance of
thunderstorms Friday . night,
with a low near 60. Chance of rain
· Is 90 percent. Showers likely
Saturday, malply In the morning,
with highs In the mid 60s. Chance
of rain Is 70 percent.
ExteDded Forecaal
Suoday thr011gll Tuetday
Fair through the period. Highs
will ran.ge from tbe upper ~s to
the 60s Sunday, arid from the 70S
to the lower IKis Monday and
Tuesday . Overnight lows will be
In the upper OOs or the 40sSullllay
and Monday mornings, and
mostly In the 50s early Tuesday.
'

A judgment of $6,479 for
foreclosure and sale. has been
awardect to Citizens National
Bank from Charles W. Pugh, et
al. In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas . ·
·

SUNOAY SPECIAl$ .
sa.
-··'!·-··········...........

.•

RAINDATE: MAY S, 19.90
.

· w~ther

Divorce soUght

IOUN1RY

~y: ·

Meigs

frnan, Pomeroy; Richard A.
Fllllaw, Pomeroy; David Allen
Roush, Pomeroy; Theda Hos·
kiM, Reedsville; WIUiam E .
PolleY, ·Albany; Patricia Ann
Chapman, Tuppers Plains; Rosemary R. Keller, Pomeroy;
David A. Doerfer, Pomeroy;
Carla Jean Aelker, Shade; Rick
Causey, Reedsville ·and Clara
Delortes Krider. Syracuse.
Elizabeth Ann Webster, R.u·
!land; Margaret D. Johnson,
Middleport; Carol J. Justis,
Racine; Clarence Aibef.t Lam·
,bert, Pomeroy; Gary Louis Ellis,
Middleport.
·Dan Edward Follrod. Pomeroy; DoJ181d Allen May, Pomeroy; Tina A. Hendricks, Syra·
cuse; ·Debra Kay Phelps,
Pomeroy; Cleon R . Pratt Jr .•
Pomeroy; Carroll Henry White,
R4clne; Rebecca Kay CotterUI,
Pomeroy; Linda J. Morris, Ru·
!land; Jo A. Bolinger, Pomeroy;
Theodore Delmar Connolly ,
. Reedsville; Fonna Kay CuDums,
Pomeroy; Aimee Qenlse Wolfe,
Racine; Gene Grate, Middleport; Edith Ellen Talbert, Langs·
ville; Clarmont P. llarris Jr ..
ReedsvUie; Joseph A. Swain,
Racine; Delbert Dale Powell,
Reedsville; Penny Lynn Burge,
Middleport; Karen R. Smith,
Chester; Barbara J. BuChanan,
Reedsville; James Leroy Jarvis,
Pomeroy; Connie Louise Smith,
Pomeroy: Dorthy Boggess, Mid·
dleport: Harry E: Johnson,
Pome~QV ,..

Foreclosure and sale

·.c.

FOR MARCH-OF-DIMES
Sponsored

Proctor, Middleport; ~Y Van
Tbe following area retld nts ·Birchfield. Albany; Helen R.
bave beet! aelected for possible Sauv.alf!, Syracuse; Lori b. Hill, Meter, Long Bottom; Hazel G.
Jury duty during the May term of Racine; · George BenJamin WU~n ; . Pomeroy; Greta M.
Melp Counry Court.
.
Skinner, Pome!'OY; Eva Lucille SUttle. Long . Bottom; Richard
Amos B .. Cross Jr., Langsville;
Robson, Po111eroy ; Carl H. PJat- . Woodrow Mora . Pomeroy;
Doris I. Mutll, Pollleroy; Ken· ter Jr., Middleport; SterUng G. David Lawson, Syracuse; Wll·
llam Boyd Deem, Long Bottom.
netb Allen Roush , Pomeroy,; "Neville, Racine; Orenda A Cook,
Kimberly. Carol Byrd, Dexter;
Rebecca J. Johnston, LaDgs· Pomeroy; Patrick Arthur
ville; · Guy R. Sarlf!Dt, Pomeroy; McCarthy, Albany; Gerald RI- Helen K. WIU, Chester; Timothy
Elizabeth
Duff')!, Pomeroy; · chard Douglas. Coolville; Fran· J . Smith, Racine; Jeanne f·
Mary G. Durst, Mldd.leport;
cis OQwler Jr. , Long Bottom;· Siawter, Middleport: Barbara cr. ·
Bolen; Albany; ManleY : A.
Larry E . Griffin, Racine; Lenore Danny L: Burbridge, Albany;
· Helen Miller, Langs ldlle; Robert Waynlta Harris, Portland; Jim· Christy. Middlepon: Randall K.
Lee Ritchie Jr .. Racine; Leah J . mle F . Evans, Pomeroy; Judith , Hall, Long Bottom; Louis Earl
Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains; Ml· J . Thompson, Albany; Mildred Young, Pomeroy; Helen LoUise
Stout, Albany; Alva B . Clark.
chael R. Stewart, Middleport;
Jane Hazelton, Pomeroy;
Langsville; Estella M. Ralph,
Robert L. Imboden, Rutland;
Amanda L. Stobart, RaCine:
Robert Clyde· Fisher. Mlddle- David Michael Rose, Racine; , Middleport; Jam!!$ J. Hawley,
pbrt; Betty Jean Taylor, Middle- Anne S. Goss, Pomeroy; Rodney Pomeroy; Thelma Vineyard,
port; JlldY Anne McGuire; A. Tripp, Pomeroy; William D. Langsville; Richard James Rey·
Langsville; Mell.ssa ,.\nn Scar· · Davis, Middleport; David Mon· nolds, Portland; Roger Wayne
Davis. Pomeroy; Phyllis C.
brough, Coolville; Charles J. roe Brlckles, Pomeroy.
Smith, Reedsville; Phyllis M.
Phyllis Gay Lattimer, Long O'Brien, Racine; Natban l J.
Larkins, Long Bottom; David Bottom: William E. Smith. Wise, Rutland ; Keith Allen Mat· ·
·Scott Edmonds, Rutland;
Pomeroy; Betty J : Carsey. tox, Pomeroy; Donna J. ;John·
Pomeroy; . Qlxle Kay Wolfe, son, Racine; Mary Beth Myers,
Denver V. Weber, Reedsville;
Helen M. Sal,lnders, Reedsvfile;
R!lclne; .. Bernard W. Hudson, Long Bottom; Geraldine M.
Tana L. Kennedy, Pomeroy;
Middleport: John Deryl Beaver, · Cross, Racine; Robert M. · John:•
Juanita Jean Sayre, · Racine;
Pomeroy; Robert. Earl Vance, son. Racine; J~hn W. Casto,
John Ray Newlun, Long Bot!Qm. Middleport; Rodney Keith Bai- Pomeroy; Harold WilHam Fetty.
ley, Pq!lleroy; Earl E. Knight, Langsville; Mae Belle Cleland,
James w. Wolford, Racine;
Betty L. Weyersmlller, Pome· Middleport; Cathy Jean Price, Racine.
Wal(!!r E. Green Sr., Vinton;
roy; Evelyn F. Foreman, Por· Rutland; George D. Carper,
Mark
A· Still, Middleport; fluey.,.
VInton; Julie Arlene . Cul11s,
ttand; Maxine Owens, Pomeroy;
Eason,
Pomeroy;' Robert Clay
Racine;
.
Davia
Allen
Smart,
Mary E. Dugan, Rutland; Cindy
Saltsman,
Racine; Richard
Sue Ellis, Albany; Joan Tewks· Albany; Charles Otho Landers.
Keith
Wolfe,
LOng
Bottom; John
Pomeroy;
Tanya
Sue
Huffman,
bary, Middleport; Harley Lee
Thomas
Northup,
Racine; Her·
Drummond, Dexter; Ralph B. Shade; Catherine Lorraine Mas·
man
Joseph
McMurray,
Ru·
Edwards, Pomeroy; Kathleen J . ters, Reedsville; Keith Alan
tland;
Johnny
R.
KJ.lin.,Reeds:·
Tillis, Rutland ; Harold Curtis Hayman, Racine; Kathy D.
ville; John C. Rice. R~vtlle;
Boston, Reedsville; KriSten D. Spencer, Long Bottom; Juanita
·
Llnda·C.
Will; Mlddleport;'.Yirgl·
Pape, Syracuse; Louise . Ula l. Whytsell, Reedsville; Julia G.
nta
.L.
Davis,
Racine; Sryan L:
Green, · Albany; James B. Tho- Johnson. Albany; Rlcbard Allen
Lynch,
Shade;
Mary Allee Sf-·
mas, Pomeroy; Dorothy V. Hen· Herman, Middleport; Janice Li·
muels,
Pomeroy;
Charles E :,
drleks, Pomeroy; Sheryl E. . sle, Syracuse; Nell Anthony,
Yost,
Racine;
Gary
K.
Willford,
Gibbs, Pomeroy: Arthur Eblen. Portland; Johnnie M. Brown,
Reine;
Murrell
0
.
Bailey,
AI·
Pomeroy; Ruth Kathryn Moore, Langsvlll~; Virginia. G. Barrett,
bany;
Mat
thew
Olaf
Peterson:
.
Pomeroy: Barbara Ann Crites, Langsville.
Rutland; Terre Annette WoOd:
Robert A. Harden, Syracuse;
Reedsville; Patty L, Harmon,
Long
Bottom; Keith G. KeMedy,
i{utland: Arlene Kay Barnes, Marjorie M. Walburn. Middle·
Rutland;
Glenn E . Young, PomeRacine; Edna E. McKinney, port; Jeffrey Charles Harris,
roy;
Chrl.stopher
S. Burke, Ra·
Vinton; Troy O'Brien Brooks, Portland; Frederick J. Stobart,
cine;
Julia
M.
Engle,
MiddlePor:neroy: Lacy Barton. ·P.ome· Racine; Dixie Kate Roush, Raport;
Jennifer
J
.
Hill,
Racine;
roy; Mariha · Greenaway, cine; Jeffrey Lynn Lewis, Pome·• Pomeroy.
· ·
·
roy; · fl{ary E. Neutzllng. Mlddie- Carl Wllllam Carmichael Sr.,
port-; Debra M. Wood, Pomeroy; Ruby P . Morris,
Floyd D. Pullln·s, Portlalld:
Pomeroy.
Avis Lawson, Middleport; Helen Middleport; Fred Batey Sinlth.
Jam!!$ T. R.ussell, Racine;
I. Nease. Racine: James Lee Pomeroy; Matthew Shane
.
Leslie
Elaine Gilkey, MiddleHunt, Racine; Shirley ·Y. Methe- Baker, · Middleport; Kaaron K.
port; Herman M. Kincaid, Mid·
ney, Ewlngton; Kat herlne H. Pickens. Racine; Michael P.
dleport; 'thomas R . Dar.st, Mid'
Swanson, Middleport: John G. Salser, Racine ; Laurie A:
dle!Jort; Gerold A. Moore,
Ray, Albany; Joseph .i. Stanley, Barber. Coolville; Stephen Brent
Pomeroy; Harry Michael Ca·
Shade: Hayward Wilbur Blsaell. Shuler, Syracuse; Joyce Ann
rleton, Coolville; Catherine
Long . Bottom; Roma J . . Cre- Barnhart. Reedsville; Kimberly
White, Middleport; · Paul B.
means, Rutland; Carl Creel Jo Follrod, ·Racine: Marvin L.
Roush, Racine; Oris A. Roush,
Chichester, Reedsville; Ronald Kelly, Middleport; Kathryn J.
Langsville; PamelA Kay Hof·
Paul easel, Middleport; Charles Hubbard; Pomeroy; Dentll L.
Arthur Ritchie, Coolville; John
D. Schuler. Rutland: John E .
Wise, Racine; Naomi R . Srouge,
Dex tei'; Charles RaymondLocatw Acr- the Str~et F..- H- llatien1allank,
. Wolfe, Racjne; Barbara . Lee
Third cuid Pearl Str•t In laclne
Karr, Pomeroy: Leo SamueU··
Curtis, Pomeroy; Bryan L. Hoi·
man, Rutland; Ruth Ellen
·oPEN SUNDAY 8:00A.M. TO 3:00P.M.
·Sellers. Racine; Barbara A.
Young, Rutland; Gregory A.
RII·EYE ......................-. 9S CHIC·N·NOODLES _ ....,;... 4.7 5
Deem, Reedsville; Ted L. Dex·
-OIN
6.95 ROAST .If ...................~.. 4.75 ·
ter, Middleport; Clara Naomi
STUFFED PORI! CHOP -.-.6.95 FRIED CIIC. UVEI-.......... 4.75
Ohlinger, Pomeroy; ·.
IAIED HAM ...................... 4.75 FISH DINNER ................~..... 4.75 ·rEdwin James Barber, Reeds·
•ville; .Barbara Sue .Black, Langs·
-ville; Bradley Bennett Johnson.
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 1:30 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M.
Pomeroy; Russell W. Moore,
FIIDAY
SAfUIOA y
Pomeroy; Orion W. Roush. Ra·
IEEF UVER &amp; ONIONS-. S4.75 lEANS &amp; COINIUAD ...... 1.60
cine; Norman D. McCain, Reeds·
IAIIED STEAII .................... 4.75 . MEAT LOAF .,,,_,,.......... 4.75 ~
ville; Gregory H. Boatright,
CHICKEN UVIRS ---....-.4.75 PORI TENDERLOIN ............ US
Long BottOIJI; Wllllllm Harold
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE CHOICE OF TWO VEGETABLES
Moody · Jr ., Middleport;
AND A DINNER ROLL
Dawnette · Elaine ·welch. Ru·
!land; Clell F . LaBonte Jr. , Long
Bottom; Marta Kay Blackwood,
Rutland: Edna Elizabeth Clay,
Chester; Marjorie L. Smith,
Pomeroy; Mildred V. Nash.
Middleport; wuuain \1. Hawley,
Syracuse; Jack R. Slavin, Syra·
cuse: Thelma L. Moore; Ru·
tland; Mildred M. Morris, Dex·
ter; Sherman V{. Mills,
· Pomeroy; tlla L. Quillen, Syra·
cuse; Betty A. Carpenter. Ra· .
; cine; Susan Lee Baker, M!ddle'port; James Allen RadciHf,
· Coolville; Ila t.. Darnell. Middle: port; Wanda L. KeiJer, Pomeroy.
Charldlne R. Alkire, Pomeroy;
Bonnie Sue Warner, Long Bot·
tQ~D; Robert Oren Bailey, Long
Bottom; Kimberly C. Shamblin,
Long Bottom; Harry Lee
spencer, Long Bottom; Elmer
Curtl.s Newell. Long Bottom;
· Loree Jane Banks. Pomeroy:
Myrtle QuUien. Middleport; Ka·
tbryn Mary Greer,J..ong Bottom;
Judy K. Cheadle, Albany; David·
Lee Triplett, Portland; Mabel
Glannalra Oliver. Rutland; Bar·
bara Ann Howard, Albany: Ro·
bert W. Vaughn, Pomeroy; Jopg.D_,
Sj!Ph Wilson Gray, Racine; Virgil
HYPONEXe 40 Ll.
Lee Carl. Pomeroy; Carl D.
John8ton, Portland; Paul D.
1.......: ...... SALE
~cl)ael, Pomeroy; · Freda M.
pg. D-.
carpenter, Portland; Wayne T.
HYPONEX•
Clelan!l, Racine; Warren Hughes
Calaway, Reedsville; Russell A.
strahler, Chester; Anna Pearl
pg.DScott, Mlddlepon; Wanda Lea
Monroe, Portland; Gregory Wll·
Uam Cunnilllham, Pomeroy.
~.Elaine M. Ralaton• MlddJt!. .
port; Lee s. Powell, Pomeroy;
SALE
Cbrl.s W. Baer. Racine; RuthAnn

r.

.,
h
·
l
d
Rose to p ea. guf, ty to tax C_· arue

;

The Daily Sentinel- Page

Pon•ov Mldclepori. Ohio

I
'

for not having the following
.items in our Apri120 .
Outdoor Uving sale.circular

PLANnNG MIXTURE .............

SALE PRICES VALID ALL DAY ON ITEMS LISTED BELOW

ALL SIMPUOTY
. PATTERNS .

¢
EACH

CRAFTS .

S1.99

MINI PINE or PINE NUGGETS .....:.. saLE S3.69
HYr-.xe 3 cu. n.
PINE lARK ...- ......:....-.......... ...- - SALE S3.49

a.iisA..us AC11VITY CENTER ... S5CJ.99
~.- .
FASHION KNIT PANTS....... ...--SALE Sl1.99
,..n_·
I
II"
.

'

·~licAme
..

•AIPbh
Anit
h

·mr

.... Wnder

2.J3

753.

· .~~Net

3:*1

• Select lace Trin
• 51!1 ecl ,.,
• \\Uwter•Unde"'
50~ E)'elet Tnma
(linil10)'1k)

2.J3 ·~
2.J1 • Lace &amp; 11alla

so~

*2YO.

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

• HaaUcloop

•

I.,

DIAWD

FILE CAIINET ,_,_.....-............----SALE S35.99

"'"-

IDIAW .,,

.

FILE • CAIINO .....~.MIIIIiiUIIJIIIJillllldiiiSAII SJ·5.99

'

SILVER .IDGE PLAIA
GAWPOUS, OliO

5 a*l
'

4B*1.

50~,·

• CAine TlnldJ,a,.

~

I

INSTOCICONll
liMITS.

.,lA.

�. . ..

.'

.

..

.

-.

~

,.

20,1880

Friday.

..-·

' .

7 fXPERIENCf THf JOY Of RIEL

&lt;

' ...,

~

..

·-

·~·

992-5432

ID.

21~:;:.e,C:'
HJ., S

'·

· ·.,.J

,._.,..,

• .

Nati4f1Wille
·

=.= .

•

m •., .. ,.•.,.,..y

FIH Doclon'
Prescrip-

HHUS

H-.titeSAws

·m. -

\RO.ai,_IVIII' IICU. .

(6141"2····.
(6141"2-5721

REEDSVILLE -The annual
math fair of the Eastern Local
School District will be held
' Frii!JIY from 6-8 p.m. at the high
: school.
.
.

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

.
P-oy

~

•

Fill&amp; SAFm

.•

SMIS &amp; SEIVKE
992-7075
~Gille

BILL QUICKEL

GIAmY IIACTOI SALES

SHOP

"'"""
,_..
211lltrtll

, 204 Cllllllw St.

•

992-2975

FISHER •
FUNERAL HOME

'-11'\111

264 s..th 21111

9:30 a.m.:

10:30 a.m.;
~~

w

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL IIAPTiliT
CHURCH, Conoer Alii and Plum. Noel
Herrmaan, put or. Suadoy~hoallO:GOa.
M.; Mormna Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed•-Y IOd Sahlrday Eft!IID&amp; S..V-11

'~~

~().

GROVE UNn'ED
DIST CHURCH - I'Mter, rt.v. C1r1
Hl&lt;b, 10 mn. ·· - Racine Ill Ill. Suoday Sdtool' a.m., .......... .10
a.m. Sunday ......,. ...,...._ t:IID 9-111.:
Prayer moet1aa ucf
111a1r 'l'lllln"-· 1: 30 p.m.
Mr. OLIVE UNITED METIIODIITorr 121, bflllad Wuaio¥1De. ClllorleJooo-.
putor. SuodayScltocU:31a.m:· 1D4!ft11tt1
wonblp. 10: _, lltuldoy and ; , . , _
........ .....,"" 1:110 p.m., '

OF CHRJST IN
Durham.
t:31a.m.:....,..
m....... .

•111•

'11tii'Cil

·

CHURCH

or

111:101

.. NO&amp;J!ldQMft

..=O..AN!Nr
...
cr- .· ).'.
-

ltk•

.

ALFR!lil - Ciun"b ..,_ t: 30 a.m.:
Woi'IIIID.Ila.m.:·UMYJ'I: 30&amp;:;i 0Jnv
~ ,.,..,..,, 7:30p.m.
• .......
ftr=:.(~borl
.
- Worlld)i t a.m.; Cllull!b

i~i~~~~~~~~ ~-

m.: uuw. Drlil Thanday. 1 p.m.; Coma.m.;Suoday
_BIIIIeSIUdy,T1tanday,7p.
ma- nrst
f~horl.
JOPPA - Worlldp t:30 a.m.: Cltull!b
~ 10:30 a.m. BlbloStlldy Wedn-,
• 7:30p.m.(~).
'
LONG 11011001 - Clourdlllollool 1:30
a.m.; Woreldp 10:30 a.m.; - · lllalr.
Wedoooday, 7:30p.m.; Conlmlltoloot Pint
Suadoy of Montl (Rfi, C!tarl• Elil·..,,
9: lOa.
• ·RE£DIVILI.E '· m.; ';.~~ Servl&lt;e ll:CJO'a.m.
~
TU
PLAINS · ST. PAUL ,..:.
C!turc:b Scllool 9 a.m.; Woroblp IG a.m.;
81bleFIStudy, ,_ay, 7:31! p.m.; Commu·
a1on rat !uadly (Ardier,).
.
C&amp;NUou. CLUJmlll

a.ur.a .,_

............
-· ......_

..........
..__ _.,
Re-

-~~w... ,....
llft.P..IIIIutlll
lift. Allller CniiiNe

ASBURY (Syrac:aoe} -WOI'IIllp lla m.
: C!turdl S&lt;llool ,,., a.m.; C!t.,..o Bible
Sllldy, Wedollday, 7:.!0'p.m.; .UMW, Drll
Tlleoclay, 1:30 p.m.; C!tolr
Wednoaday 6:30p.m. (T1tatcllerl
'
ENTERPRISE - Wonldp 9 1 m ·
Cburc:h S&lt;llooiiO a.m.; lllllo!lbd)l, Tu.i'.
day, 7:00p.m.: UMW, First Monday T-3(;
p.m.; UMYF SuOdly, I p.m. C!toJi. fte.
heonal. Clllldren's all:30 p.m. AduiiiOI·
l...bi,; Weda-y. (Rll&lt;erl
. FLATWOODS- Clntrcll Sc11oo1, 10a;m,
. , Wol'llllp, 11 a.n&gt;,; Bible Study. T1tufl.
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Suoday, l 'p.m. (RI·

CHuRCIJ. Pine
LO!aclt. ........

Cllolrdlaerv..,.
. ,,..; lllillday Scllool
10:•a.m.
1
•
•
•
. BRADitiRY CHURCH Of' CHRIST.
. Tam.Ruliy111, put.-. Sunday ~lloolt:30
a.m.; Larry ~ S..S. SUpt. Mornlq

..........
.........
RACINE

.

CHURCH 01' THE NAZA· .
RENE, rt.v. Jo.. lrltlleo, puler. Ora
- .. CllalrmM of .... _ o f ChrlltiU
Lifo. SuetleY lollool t:• a.m.; Manlnt
Warlbl lO:lil a.~; Evatic..eol - ·
7:110 p.m.; W.........Y llr\llee,.
•
7:00 p.m.
UIIQITY CHRIST!AH CHURCH. O.X·
ter. Woody Calk putilr. s.rv.... SUoday
10 a.m. aad 7 p.m. Willneod&amp;Y. 1 ~ni.
. DYEII'IILLE C!OioDIUNITY CHURCH. .
· Lloyd Sayre, SUpt. lunob~Y 9cllool 1:30 a.
m.: _ . . , wonblp 10:30 a .m. Suodav
.....,....,.,... 7 p.m.
'

·RACINE FIRST ' BIIPidl.

Stew

Deaver, PMICI'. Mite lllrtaer. Sunday
9cllool S.pt.; Su'*Y Scllod t:30 a.m.;
Monolni wonlllp 10: tD a.m.; Sunday
.......,. wanldp 1:30 p.m.: Wedll-,
~lllldy7:30JLm.

Ill alMMilNn'Y CHUROI,
B:rl'
\
l::rt'
liar I _, alii. putar; Ill&gt;
l*t
. . . . . Jlllter, . . . . . .
II

a.m.: wanltlDTP-1!1-:- m~n\.

~~~'lt~~RCH':ii

mUo~RI.-.rt.v.•aJ . Watta.putor.

Robert lloarl•, S.S. Supt:

9: ~ a.m.:
su~~~~oy

Sunob~Y ~llool

Mol'lllltl Woflldp 10:30 a,m.;
_.. ... IIII'VIce 7:30 p.m.: Wed·

a~

=

..
,.,_.,x

~boot »: 30 a.m.: mormaa wonltlp oed
ddldren.•s church. 10:30 a.m.: · IWIIIQ
-cltlna oorvl&lt;e Drlil tlll'lt! SuOdey(
7:30p.m.: lllledll ..,...., lourth Su,.y
ewntna. 7:30 P.m.; Wodtteoday Prayer
Me~tlnt, Bible Sillily llld YHth Fellow·
. obl_p, 7:~31) p.m.
' CHURCH Of GOD OF PROPHECY.
Loeatfl) CID 0. J . Wblte Rooil,of K=ay
160. Pat ... put,... Stoodly .,
10
a.m. Cluooal'orallact!L Jtullar Cllyrc:llll
a.m.: Mol'lllll wOI'IItlp 11 a .m. MuH
Cbolr Jlf"dl«!l p.m. S'!'!d&amp;y;-Youll J1to.
Cltllclna'a Clnncb aad Muh Blblo
. w.........._,:311p.m.
PE BAPTIST CHAPEL; ml Groat
Sl., Mltldleport. AIIIUalod wMb Soudlorp
Bapllat Coamltloa. David Bryan; Sr.. Ml·
nlllor. Suoday • - 10 a.m.; MontiD&amp;
w.-.Jttplla.m.; EvenluwanblpTp.m.:
Wedo.say _,..., 81blo aludy llld
P~J.8;m·
.
RCHOPCHRJJT. St.

" - ,..~

WOllam Antbtqor, S,•,S, Supt.; Su-y .

-I:3D

~, ~~~m:

''

vUie RO .. ~APltWJpPEL RI_Al'l. Cool!'
· - ··
- - pu ....
Suoday
•
I&gt;IOa.nL: wanldp ..,...,
10:,
3 0a.m
.•· Blllle-...,udw_.._.,,

~-Y

-.....

':!1-z.cr:..y
.:ni~I!IJ: ~':.::i:
morn11111 -.ldp 10 a.m.; Evettm.

'

'OD '

IQII:.!Op.

~v.~liT, Antol
"'·
ra. lllpi.Sunotay

pnyetiiTVI&lt;eW~T~m.
WESLEYAN

_ MBL~

.,....,.IY..,..... -r:,.m. ,......,_
Rtm.ANII CIIURC1I OF

'110:

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

No\ZA·

r~.:..or.?.-.~~p.m. ;..:..fci'!;
-~

-

~RCH OF CHRIST, MDier

ll.,-.._w, Va.flwodayBIIIIe!Jbd)I10
a.m.I_:Wonltlpl1·a .a . . . 1p.m.Wday mbleltub, +ulm-. 1 p.m.

UBERTY - . , y or GOD, Did.

w.

'I'IIMII•.
w•

41DI Lue. - . ,
Va. J . N.
Jill'!"· - = • l o o T : I I P-1!1-1
· ~!,~
,.t:illa.&amp;;W...

-·-··=

(Me-l}

.

•

ROCK SPRINGII- Cllurdlllolloal, 1: 11
a.m.; Worabl~ Ill a.m.; Bltlolltutly, was.
neod&amp;Y. 7:30p.m.; UMYJ' (Seetorit}
day, p.m.; (Juntora} ....., otaar ..,.
day, I p.m. (RDO!I}.
Rll'I1.AND- Clmclt ~ Jl,a.m,;
Worlltlp, ll a.m.; UMW F1r11 lilottdal
7:30p.m. (Crabtree}
'
SALDI CENTER- Cltordl Sdtooll: 1$
a.m.; Montbi1 Wo-p 10:11 a.~

sa.

e

. '

•

.....--..,.

. SNOIVVJLLE- Mom1aa Worlblp, t:oo
a. m.; Church ~)tool. 10:011' a.m. (lflrl'!tl .

IIOU'I'IIIIUI CWI'ID

.......... o....

' · •

APPJ.t .GROVE ,.- Cllurc:b So11oci1 t:IIO
a.m.: Mol'llllll Woreldp 10:08 a.m.:
s~~~~~yi.'rs.~~7:oop.m.
: Prayor ...
.
.m. · • (111dll}
B lfANY - . ~a.m.· Cllu!ll
Scllool10 a.m.; &amp;Ill it
,.,.;~ 10
a.m.; Dorc:u W-··
owlblp Was.·
•-.11111 a.m. (llak•l.
·
CAIIMEL - Clttlrdl 11o110o1 t: ill a.m.·

•Ill•

7 00

=

!ft''

.Ttlt,B

V':~.l.-'=i!!lttidlfScllolli '
Ua.m.;~

!::o":i* :\"

llorniD&amp;W~JI;da.m. lll1t • : :
lllulllayf: NICIIIIIdil dlaW Wilt~a
· tltlrd 'l'llunday:..!:30.~m..IJI!'II'l. 1
i''

~....

-

.....

7

m.FU;l!'!'l•lllldy,T

rad_q,_7:30·p.m.

-GOSPEL LIGJri'IIOUSI: 330e
HUIIId llottd, 1'1&gt;11101'0)1. Tam Kllly, - ·
tc.-. Dln!Q' Lam.l llfl, S. ·S.IIupt. sUIIIIIy

•'""''

rr

'iiAPi1ST 7

•s:~r-nldp

a~:=..~

'

·

-~'*'~"'·;"== IOI'YieoT·OO"ni
=J:!l:~=:·-:.::~WodDtod•v
Blbl

sr•· -

w:

--'-·-----

--·~·-"""':..,.--~·

·,

ot•....,
- . 7:.00· ,.m''. .

Sermonette ··

-

e

•

Beat of the Bend

Beating

th~ rap.~.

~.

purchased Monday . The price Is
$18 per couple or $10 slnaJe.
There will be no tickets sold at
the door.
Tickets may be purcbased at
KliC Jewelers, Gallery Hair '
1\fll, Swisher and LobJe Drug
Store, Anderson's Furniture,
Clarki Jewelry, The Fabric
Shop, Main .Street Plna, Hoods
Shoes, Oblo Valley· Bulk Foods,
Chapman Shoes, Farmers Bank.
Bank One, and the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce.
Also for the week.end there will
be a quilt shOw and sale at ·the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior cen-

'tel' on Saturday and Sunday.
. Hours will be from 10 a.m. t&lt;t 6
p.m . on Saturday and from 1P·.IJ!·
to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
· . •·
Admission to the show Is St.
There will also be other cr;#t
Items for sale and light refresl!·
ments will be available.
'
Those attending will be lnvltecl ·
to vote for their favorite qu91
with the winner to receive j8
hand-loomed rag rug.
On Sunday the churches
Pomeroy will be open for toun,
and a ·spokesperson for e~
.church will be on hand to give Its
history. .
·
.
:

fn

•

$l,I!IO FO. SENIORS - Tbe ~ Auxiliary
of &amp;lie Jooll Fraternal Order of &amp;lie Ea1lel, bM
conli'lbu*td at,OOO to &amp;lie Melp Cilua&amp;y'CoiiiiCil on
· Ailn&amp; for uae In 1enlor .ellbeDI II~· Here

Audrey Well and Helen I. Plckenti, auxlltai¥
pretllllen&amp;, (lretlelll a cheek to 8uua Oliver of &amp;If~
Ceater 1taff, pictured left to
(See •loey 1111

,... 10)

rl,...
.

•..

'

the Churcb Women United will be
at the 'church on ~y 4 at 12:30
p.m. Fifty-three sick and shut In
cplls were reported.
. Refreshments were served to
10 members and guests Mary
Hamril and Linda Hamm . .
I

.

"Poet's corner

"JF.8U8·UY8'' .I'

~!US, says I am the beginning
Jetbs, says I am the ena.
Jesus. says I wUI always Love you,
I w~ kJve you to the·end. .

Jesus, says I
says I
Jetus, says I
.Jnus, ays I
J~us,

am Today

am Tomorrow

am the Future
am toJ""eYW mo~.

Jelus, 11ys Love everybOdy
· Br BOB HOEFLICH
·
this year ~vera! alee door prizes ..Je1us,
..Y• take care
More and more It's get ling . will be awarded. Members of the Jesus, uys count your bl•stng~
.harder to beat
If. you are . Women's Auxiliary wUI be on _He wants to see ev~one there.
.an out-of-state
·
hand In severat capacities and' Jetus, uys U y(m ~ee 1&lt;111eanr hurtlntt
·
mall !lrder per·
SOJ!Ie 10 members of the l)oard of · help them all yoo can.
Tell them an about Jesus
son, ,the · days
the Meigs DivisiOn of the AmerlT!!ll thorn ol the promllodland, ·
' •
.
' . .
J
when, a r:'least,
ca.n Heart Association wl)' be 0!1 '.
uya tell the children aU about
you could beat
hapd also to assist with phases of Jeouo;
hlll love. and to teach them rtrht frtm
the sales tax rap
the cholesterol testlna. Several· wrong and to always trult In me
there's a new home walt~a.
have gone up In
other activities are stlll In the and
Nevermore to r01m.
·
smolle.
The
'planning staaes.
Martha PatiCI11
Ohio Legislature and Governor · During the week, the h'ospltal
4711118 Carmel Rd.
Celeste have a new law In effect
will alao honor veteran em·
Racine, OH
now which provides that these
ployees - those who have been
out-of-state companies must add
working there ~. 10, 15, 20 a~ 25
the Ohio sales tax onto your
years -and there will be an
pure hue.
·
employee cookout with Don BeeTeamed with the cost of getting. , .gle, Maintenance Department
merchandise so purchae_e d
Supervisor, presiding at thegrUI. ·
. By MELODY ROBERTS
Three nW'IIIng start members
sl!lpped In, the sales tax will now
The
Long Bottom Community
make iuch purchases even more
will be honored also dui'\Jii th~
A.ssoclatlon
will ' be staging 8
expensive . . Altho1111h the catalog
week . ln the observa11ce ot Na·
·
sp~lng
smorgasbord
. dinner on
!tonal Nurses Day and hospital .
business.·· seems to thrive April
28
.
at
·
the
eommunlty
judglna. from the numerous ca· · . personnel will again participate
talogs that I get - the new tax ' In the annual · trl-county mock building beginning at 5 p.m.
The all-yOu-can-eat diMer Is '·
J)'leasure Is a pain to those of us
disaster. ,
•.
$4.50
for adulls and $2.50 for
~ho like to pick oul something
Do try to make the May 6 open
children.
It will feature bam,
:and·get It shipped ln. However,
'house.
o ' t,urkey and dressing, homemade ·
dhe measure should be a shot In
-~-~---noodles, meatloaf, and more. ·
:Jhe;arrn to shopplna at horne. On
Many of you remember Mr.
Desserts
and dr.Jnks will also be
!the other )land,lt's a bltlrrltatlng
and Mrs. Joe Cook, Lincoln
.
Terrace,.Pomeroy, residents.
~ lind our Utile personal· "outs"
'which we've enjoyed, sUpping
Mr. and Mrs. Cook went to the ,
ManChester, ConnecticUt area to
) way. But, you know how It Is.
pur goveriUDents can always use · spend the . winter with their
dauahter, Dorothy June Corco'tnore money - It beats better
. ran. They were expected to ,
budgeting all to heck.
·
The senior Citizens Center Is
retutn home thlll month. HOw•
.
:
sponsoring 8 trip to th~t Buckeye
: Hope you will mark Suncfay, · ev.er, ihere are some com pUc aDinner Theatre In Columbus oil
1&gt;fay 6, on · your calendar to . lions. .Both Mr. am:! Mrs . Cook
Wednesday.
reserve some time to attend the
bave been hospitalized witll
There are seats avalla ble and
annual open house at Veterans
pneu1110n1a. , Mrs. Cook has been
more Information miy be ObMemorial Hospital.
returned to'ller dauahter's home
tained by c~Ung the center at
I The 'open house markl the
but Joe Isn't dolnl ail that well.
992·2161.
.
~oniDa Df National Hoapltill
He Is still confllled •to Room
Week and will be held from 1 to 4
11.26·8, Manchester Hospital,
Manchester; Conn. OfOM&gt;.
~.m. Free,;boteaterollestinawill
No doubt Joe would be pleased
Jie provtdedwttb tbe ven0111 draw
!'lelhod to· be 11aed. The labbrato bear from you. Many of your
lory lieaded by Cecellli Lisle will
remember Joe as the painter and
bave youl''resulta from the 1es tin wallpaper man for maay years .
jme hour or you can 11et 8 call·ln '
· ·AQC! Oliva Weber, lonner 1'111·
rain &lt;:.1! lf •you don't want to
stick 81'0UIId · that Iona. Blood
dent and Jont·tlme aeeompan!Jt
.......~will be takea and that,
tor INIIlY . Baa· atnd W.tret
A8110ofatlon mullcals, rellltaiDs
Joo, will be a free aervlce.
conftiled to St. Jolepb HOIP!tal til
; . On tile Other band If you do
Parlrerabura, W.Va., follow111a'
'!I'IDt to nil for your resulta,
illen! wiU be lblnp to do. Tours IIUI'P!'Y. C~l CID be MDI lo
The zlp, by the waf ,Ill
Ill tbe facWty will be ofte!ed and l'QCII1I
. .
lber- wtU be mullcal eall!rtaln· . 2&amp;101.
lnent on Ute o\11door patio wbere
llmealll will be 1ei'Yed by
, I'D be -~~~~ you IIIII tile okl
famDial'' plat'ft· and perba~, In
UtriUOII depertrneat beaded
IGIIIe of tbe aot 10 f1111Uiar
IM!kle Starcher. A varllity of
pleeel. ADd, of fe;ui'M, you'll be
·IMaJ~ literature will be
Waila\lle and for the first lime
111Jillna.
I.
,
1

HELPING 'l'8E HANDICo\PPED ~A JLiil&amp;
whleb Ill a piece of . eqllllpmeB ued lis&gt;
hudlcappecl eblldrea to eomrnwtee&amp;e ,.U
purcbued by &amp;be Lad... Aulllal')' .r tile t.oa1
Fra&amp;ernal Order of the Ea,-, lor Carle&amp;•

Sebool 1&amp;"1 at, Mantia Mace. Rent lllle dem~
ttratelt - ol tile parrot &amp;o Betty Smltfa, left, 1111111.
Bel• Plebu of tile Eqlel AuJdllal')'. wbldJ
provided tlte nM for 1111 piii'Chue.
.

'·

.J.nng .Bottom .news notes.___... . . . . . _____;;.;.___.._.;.;._~;:..

.

'Theatre trip ·
. set by seniors

~

--------

----·-

::.-~.t:•
n=.
ut,..;..
!IMti-1. ....,,
S
N-~ .......... . •
'

'

.HOtJNESS

. . . _..

~

Carrie Grueser read an arilcle
a_bout "Good Works." Also read
:were legends of Easler by some
·members.
Devotions were taken from
Gulileposts and Hilda Yeauget
read Luke 24: 49, and CarolYn·
Salser read "Worthy ot · the
·Lamb." Mrs, Sisson closed with
prayer.
.
.
Officers · reports were given
during the bu~lne.ss meeting and

m.

~~u:·a
s:;.::
' ii'ORNiH'G"'T,, _';!t.~.!t·

a.m.; - . .

set:VI&lt;e7:30p.m.~tllltii!'WIIdPI:30p,

9:10a.~:-..ma .Wol'llllpl8:10a.m.;
~ · llon!IHI&amp;C' 7:10p."" ·
E_.., ' WonNpl:illl p.m. •Weda-Y
Nll1¥ RAVEN CHURCII or THE NAOYelllnl' Bl!tle lllldy, prayer and praise 'ZARENJ;, Rev. Olettdoa Strlltld, puior;
7~m.
.
luoday li:ltooll:aoa.m.: WOit'lltlp..,toe1
FAI'I'H
PELCHuRCH,LonaBot10:30a.m.;Yoalh-Stolldayi·1Jp.
Stooday llcllool.-1:30 a.m.: Marilin*
m. Sutlday ...... llirv ... 1:11Dp.m.'w...:
Wol'llllp 10:15 a.m.; SUIIIII,vOYenlnt1:0l)
Prayer IIHtbiJ and Bible StudY.
p.m. IIUJIIIIItr ,7:30p.m. ); Wedll-y
·~SE'rJl,EMENT
niJitt 7:00p.m. (ltiiiUIIOI' 7:30 p,m.l.
d .-_
CIIURCH,Sun:
LMNG WORD CH&amp;liiER CHURCH
.:...,..r-'..!!""atca
, .012 ' 30·'1'1uaraob~Y
or GOD - Guy Bin-. ter. Saoolay
n1IS'I'
cini
.
Sollool t:30 to 11:111
arvteo . Va. Puler, BW=,
Ill: ill 10 11:• a.&amp;l
,.,..... - - . a.m.: luaob~Y 1
7:111 m. p,._
7 P.m.: M - Proyer lllivloe, . m-.'Udlllbl•
w:llldiQ&gt;.1:30
~'c.: ·
_~p.m . .:-yaoieW\11-..
'' I
·
...._...,,,.. ....,.'!"!'""!' ' R1J'I'LAHI) FlUJI: WJl.L 11AP1Wr Sa•
~:-"a.m.·
1om St. rt.v. Paal Tay!Ot, putco;: llilitay
.
Ullm:DFAlTH .
ltl.7oel'l&gt;p.nl.
IJII'I1ft'mMbll7.~
!BifOI'II!'-Puo.tiw.~S, -It,lr,
1QU111 BETHEL NEW TEsTAMI:Ifl'
~..:i·,;T:._~ S. ,...P L : f t CHUIICH; SIW.r Rldae. Duaao Sydall-

...,.,

Edith Slss&lt;in conducled the
.program, "Power of Love - To
.Care and Share" at ihe recent
pteetmg of the Forest Run United
·Methodist Women held at the
home of Evelyn Hollon.
, ~ . purpose of the program
•was to understand that the way to
experience God Is by loving
, ,pt!lers. Kathleen Scott helped
read. part .of the program. The
soq was "Jesus Loves Me."

------

.•

llft.C.IIIdia

BAPTIST.Kottallb Bmhb,
9cllool t:30 a.m.; &lt;llurc:b

"'iii1.iDii'ii...
It ;,m.
••• ... ~ .. 111.·~
• a. Rt.
L-.:.:-'•· ...._, ""; ; ; . Rov• .j.,, -=----~~~· t8a .......... ~,.:;,~ ._,.,, :=~~~-Y..,..Iq1:GOp.'!'.;

-•IIIIIIJ

JS~.m

ANT
puler.

!!':'!"Y ...,....
_ _,..,·a .

~-1 ~tiel ~&lt;;--·

Steven M.. Newman. the first
person to wall! arouad the world
alone, and author of the bc!911,
"Worldwalk,': will be the .tealured
apeaker at tbe Pomeroy
RUTLAND -There will be a
setqulcentennlal
Founders Day
round, square, and slow dance on
Dinner.
Saturday at the Ell Denison Post
The dinner wlll be held Aprll28
467, AmerlcanLeglon,lnRulland
at
6:30p.m. Ia the gymnasium of
from s p.m. to midnight. the
the
. Pomeroy Elementary
public Is Invited to' attend.
School.
.
N~wman
Invites those havlug a
.
SUNDAY
copy
of
hiS
book.to
bring It to the
POMEROY -The Big Bend
dinner
to
be
auiOiJ"apbed.
Boolla
Cruisers · Cilr Club will meet ,
wUI
also
be
available
at
tbe
Sunday at 7 p.m: at Pleaser's
dinner.
.
,
Restaurant. ' : .
I
,.
1 Tickets 'for .t he dinner must be
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The St .
· Paul United Mt!lhodlst Church In ·
Tuppers Plains will c;elebrate the
recent completion of Its ~uca· ·
tiona! annex with an open house
on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. The
public Is Invited to attend.
r,

.

IH'Yie8~17m.

. ~RCH ofMiddl-.lliC:, 'IIPe•lll.,
1' 30 a.m::
IDIWOrillltt. .lO:• ,.,.. lvoaMyero.P&amp;Iflr. •-Maolle-. , tiiOI'DIIII:HI'Vl.. atlOa.m.;·Sto""-,..,..,
;rm.; ~ _.... .-vl~'!LIIl! p.m.
Sr.. 'sutiday lctlod 11Dp1: ~ · ScltOd
laa Hlvke·7:10 p.m. ,.,_.,.,~'i'lttln-

IP'Im ta.lil.- Sultdiy.

I

- ' · llrct11Mr Chuck Mrl'll.....,,
puler. luaob~Y •S.IIoai 10 1.111.; "-~·-'
I!Vftllnl """1&lt;e1. a t 7 p ....
- aadwo-ntay
~_,

aerv.....,

. ., :t.ANDIIBLE

f

i

l.~;nLQWSHIP.l28MuiSt.,

w...,:=; .......

Ins oervl.., 7 tm.·,
"'onltlP 7 p.m.. llhallon'l;llol

vt:~·OF CHRIIT. Ell· . MOIISE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
, ... E. U.....,ootl, mt.lllft. Sattdly Cvrflllaa. pule.-. Suoday Sollool, 10a.m.;
!lcllool,t:30aa; *::?•onltlp,10:30 w~
lla.m.; Buday allht
am· --::.rrrja'HOO~p.m
•~- ..,......., 7:30 .p.m.: Mldweelt

'.e;.,ll.

* ...

vr · ~•n,

s,.......

Ddoy

•

'

mer.,.

!':':';"=·Cp 10

oo;.

Founders Day speaker named :

County Road 1 · near Salem
Center. An Easter egg. hunt-will
be held for the chlldr~n.

. Ferest Run UMW meets.....;..-_____

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. !lcllool t:3D a.m.; Mo.~Worlld;r.l0:30.
m.
oervlce, 7:30p. .
Bob Grimm, ~I.-.Sunti&amp;YIIo-t:30a.
Ewtlbta
7
m.; Wonltlp ·I O:IIa.m;: SilndayOVft...
~r;·;.erelllpf:;,c;:~ ' p.m: ...... , · MIDQLEPOJtTPENTECOSTAL; Tblrd
~~~~~'
·
ST. 'PAllL LllTJIERAN CHURCH
Av.. Rev. 'Clark Baker, puler. Carl Not·
M GOSPEL MISSION at Bald , Cotnor 1]11!,_ and Solli&gt;od Slo.. P.,:
llntltun, Suoday Sc...ol SUpt.
Kltob• ._tad Oli Cou~ Rood 31- rt.v.
T1te rt.v. Laure A. LHctt, put.-.
~hOol II a.m.' wltb o l - l'or aU ac•.
~~:;.~ Stondayllollooll:45a.m.Cbur&lt;:horvkell EveniD&amp;III'VI_.atlp.m. Wedo-.yBI.
"-" _ . . , •-"'- 7, p.m.: Wotla•
a.m. ·
·
·
III•IIIUdy at 7:30•p.m. Y0ullloerv- Frl·
00

.,.,_at~p.n\.

.moe.

.

'

$~oecf Q},,,
..........
.

IOI'Yice. 7:31p.m.
· 'lq p.~ p.m.; ~-..ay..-...
· SD.VER RUN BAPI'IST, Bill LIIIM
pu1or. s - UttiO. s. s. SUpt. Sunday
i.
IIARTFOIIDCJIURCHOFcHR
.... ~ " .. . . . _ . l&lt;e. · :GO~
Sclloollla.m.; Morallt1 wanlp, lla.m.;
ley},
•
.
~-·••
-•Va.
~
FAITK
.
IIAPTIIT
RCH. ·•
·'• '-•
~~ ..- · UNJON. HartiO~. W;
....,,_
SundayOYIIIIIntw~i 1:30~in. Prayer
FOREST RUN ..; Woreldp 9 a .; ·
moot
&amp;ndllble
Wedo- , 7:30
rt.v .. David· ......... putcr. au ...a .
p.m.:,.,.lll m1111111 . .
Cbun:ll, lltbOol 10 A.M.: Cllolr
ScJte.al
f:30 ...... , liUdaY ~ Thanday, 6:30p.m.; UMWtblrd
'
. REJOICING LIJ1: BAPTIST Clll1JICii
vtee; n a.m.; SUodojr _ . . , ('nlatcber)
·
- 381 N. tad A.,.., Mlddl ...... Sunday
1:31p.aa. W"*n' y ...,_yerm.U.,. 7:il ·
p.m.
.
HEATH (Middleport I - C!nucto Sdtool,
: : - 18a.m. Sultday ...... 7:110p.m.;
9:30a.m.; Morm.., Worlltlp 10:30 a.m.·
twe•
Wtd., T p.m.
FAIRVIEW IIIBLE CHURCH, ~Mart,
YOilth Group, l&amp;;:r: Wedllllllay lillie
~ CIIRIITIAN CHURCH,
W. Ya., Rt. I;.Joaooa
......,.,_t:illa.m.; Jft!Patt.....,
............
,..... ;
SollooiJI
r:r~:.t~·
l't!ll....... 1:0o~m.
aupt.;
wanldD Jl:ill a.m.; SU..:
a.m.;
~wartlllp7:~~ -~
...
MINERSVILLE - C!tardlllollool 9:00
Y OYiillnt ........ 'f.31 p.m.; WIIID•·
.....,.
- WOnltlp
·m.m,
tutil
a.m.; Wortldp oervleolf};OOa.m.; UMW
t:30
a.m.;
aorvlot.
w•-..ay
fVtltbla -.1:3D ~~-~--- ·,
ilEll llNrrf:D BR~N IN
lhlp'!!!."l'"--Y·1 p.m. l'l'ltalcber} • ,
1:30 p.m.
'•
-CHAPEL-CIIurc:b~hoaii:OO
CHRJJT, E - R. Blue. putor. Suoday
0UJt SAY!OtiJI LU'111ERAN CHURCH
~.m.: Worlblp Strvk&gt;i 10:00 a.m. (Kir·
kllooiiG a .m.; Gary .Reed, ~lldt,r.
Walnut and~ lha., Ravopowoool,
Ncrnlot IIOI'IDCIII,Ila,m.: s
1111111
V.o. T1te rt.v. GaOrp C. Welrlc*, piut.-. ·
'llo.u:ROY- C!tur&lt;:h Sc1toa1, 9:
..
&amp;ei'Yica: Chrll!tan Elldaever· 7:
p.m., .. Suoday IIChoalt:•a.m;; . _ , wonltlp
1 Won111p 10:30 a.m.; Cltolr nlb-1
na.m.
11Dnt
.... p.m
.. ... WIIIDI&amp;day,
ao p.m.7
Wedlleoday, 7: 30 P-J!I,; , UMW, HCIIod
Mld'weOk
prayor
meet
Tlleoclay, 7:30p.m.; IIMYFStiOdly,lp.m.

(SIA!elo)

?92-2121
106 .....try Avt.

Rt -IM~adCp.l!ji.LilonkSiump,puter,'

~-r- ···
....

AI...,.."

H13

Mi.lt.lrt

Rt.
l&lt;m.

.

Eatabllsbed

o....-41710

992-5141

7

"Di«''ity ends..,.~

·

'.i· '

RAWUNGS.C:OAJS ,

·

EWING FUNEIAI. ~

.,_,.,,Ott.

...........

.

on Saturday from 5~ p.m ."~t the·
fire house: Price Is $4.50 for
adults and $2 for children under
12. Prlc.e •Includes dlriner. des-'
sert, .and drink.
.
POMEROY ~There will be a
music fesllval .• ponso~~ by the
skilled nursing faciUty of· Vete·
ransMemorla!HospltalonSaturday from noon to 8 p.m. Admls·
slon Is $3 si!Jgle and $5 couple.
Children under 10 admitted free.
Music wtn be provided by Occa•. ,.·
slon, Charlie ~lly. Mud River,
and Abandon T.V. There will
refreshments, door prizes, .
~!owns, and lialkions,
. ,

===

POMEROY -The Bells and
J Bea11s dance club will have a
dance at the s~nlor citizens
,POMEROY .7'" . The Mldnlghi·
,!JuUdlng
OJ! Friday from 8-11' :
1
l p.m. Caller will be Jay Ha;rbert. CJoggers will be having a car
• Dance Is open for all western wash on Saturday trom 10 a .m. to
~ -dancers.
3 p.IJI. to at Pleaser's Restaurant
In Pomeroy. Proceeds will go
•1
RlJ'I'tAND -There will be toward the group's summer
tours to Flor~&lt;;~a and Nuhvllle,
skallng at the Rutland , Civic
POMEROY -The Flatwoods
Tenn . .
Center on Friday from 7-9 p.m.
· United Methodist · Church on
Flatwoods Road. wlll be ,h,aldllig
1 ·and on Suaday from 1:30-3:30
: . p.m. .
CHESU::R District 13, revival services Sunday through
. Daughters of America, will have Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. nightly.
·a meeting · and practice at the Rev . .KeJ;InY Baker will preach
• ·~
SATURDAY
.. , CHESHIRE -There will be a
Chester Lodge Hall on Sattirday · and the Children of God will sing
:gospel ·sll!i ·a t the ·suver ' Run
at 1 p.m. All members are urged on Tuesday.
.,
to attend. District 13 will be In;·
' .
,.
Baptist Church In Cheshire on
.Saturday at 7: 3o p.m. featuring
charge of the memorial at the ' MEIGS -The Mt. Moriah
August ·Slate session In Toledo,
JoAim~Welllngton and the Unroe
Church of God will have revival
family.
·
through next Sunday at 7 p.m.
HENDERSON -The Gallla . nlghlly with Rev. Bryce -Utt,
• SYRACUSE -The Save the . Twirlers Square Dance Club will Marietta. There will be special
·Pool Commit tee 'will have a flea
hold a dance' Saturday from 8-11 singing and Paslor Jim Satter·
inarket at the Syracuse Ball p.m. at the Henderson Commun- fleld Invites the public.
Park on Sall!l'day and Sunday: Ity ·center. The caller will be
:All proceeds will go towards Mark Clausing. The dan.c e .Is
SYRACUSE -The Meigs Ma·
repairs o~ London Pool. Spaces open to all wester square dancer. son Senior Girls Softball League
·rent for .$5. Bring own tables.
coaches will meet Sunday In the
SALEM CENU::R. -The Star Syracuse VU!age Vouncll room.
· • BASHAN -The Bashan Fire Oral!ge will hold a potluck dlmier If Interested In starling a new.
Ol;!partment Ladles . Auxll!liry foll~wed by a crange week team, · contact Jim Pape .at
wllthav.e a smorgasboard dinner program and gaptes on Saturday 992-3420.
'
.
•,
.
at 6: 30 p.m. at the grange hall on

·l

POlliO~ ~--992-6677

. 2141E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy .

172 lllrt• .s...l Aw~

l

' POMEROY -.The annual
' ;gra~ge banquet will · be held
. Trtday at 7: 15 p.in. ·at Salisbury
Elemen!ap' School. The speaker
will be Party Dyer and music will
, be provided by Denver Rice.
Ttcliets are $6 for adults and $5
for children.

I

. PIIARM:Y
w.

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

!

ln.~. Co. ,

a1 ~otumlluo 0
·tt4W.
~
' '
Mlllll

~7

•.

I
=:. .:::m=Al'
. :=Co=
·=m=m::=;=t=IJ=ti==lty~.;;:;c~a~·le;;n~d~ar~·
"'. ·
ll·

SWISHER I UJHSE

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
SNOUFFER

INt

CENTER,F.
Jolin . Fultl, M".
Ph. H2•21t1

"

~~--~----~~~--~~--~------~~~----------~~

'This Message and CJwrcJa DitectDry Spo~red ·By ~~. 1111~ Bruinetlt8 LUtMl On .'l'laU ~
·;. ~ MEIGS nRE .
TEAFORD REALTY.
P. J. PAllEY, AGENT
&lt;.row's Fall'iilr Restawant

,
a

.The Daily Sentine.l
Friday. Aprl20. 199o

-

· 221 W. Ma~ St., r-roy

••

By The Bend

I

.., _ , lt""llr FtW C6WM"

•

•' I

Included. .
· Ernestine llayman Is recuperatlng and will be vacatiOning In
Georgia this weekend to vjslt her
Aunt Hazel Higley. She will be
traveling ivltl! Mr. and Mts.
Elbert Fitzpatrick, Lancaster. o
Mrs. Bet!)' Loudin and Shan·
non and Mrs. WJlma Wamsley,
Cheshire, spentlheweekend with
Dorsel and Phyllis J.arkiDI.
Tom Hayman baS been on a
fishing trip'. His wife, Sue, haa
kept herSelf busy making coun·
tcy bunnies.
Delores Hawk and Robbie
hosled an Easter diner at their
Success Road borne. The alte~·
noon waa enJoyed by Easter eag
hunts, football, games, etc., and
a video tape wu made. Atlelidlng were Maraaret and Charles
Sinclair, Robert and Mary Allee
Bowles, Mlcbael and Diana Boo
wles and children, and James
Perkins, Mra. Ora
all of
. Sinclair,
.

.

Pomeroy; MeiodY Kobert, local,
Chad Sinclair, Matthews, N.C.
Stanley and Juanita Wel!s 'and
Irene SchaeJ: were In an au to
accident In Bt!lpre. Juanita broke
her foot and Irene broke a few
ribs. had a black eye, and lump
on ber head. Stanley's back and
neck are staYed.
Gueatl at the home of Paul and
Mlldren Ha11ber have bet!n Mrs.
Retha Day, Pomeroy; Rose
Barllh~. Middleport; Mary
Allee and Bob 'Bowles, Mike and
Dlilllt! Bowles, Jenny and Nick,
Cbatles, Marpret, and Ora
'S inclair, all of Pomeroy; Chad
Sinclair, Matthew•, N.C .
· To
Items In thlll

a

'
call Melody Roberts at 9115-42'15
or write P.O. Box 7, LoDJ
Bottom. 45743.
· :. .

"the Fr•lich

Qu!lllw"

''"'"''

"FOR MEN ONLY"

.

A 8peci81 FIMALE REVUE •

Friday, April 27, 1880 · .
8·10 P.M.
::
"FOR WOMEN ONLY" :
The Cllun Room

'

WllllhOpen
Coming May J, 1180 ·

ThelthAniiUIII
a.tllgiContaat
··
.... 1M .... ef .............:;'
UIIIPIIUS. 01. .
4U.ftll

Week••• Sp~tltlt
FIIDAY • APia 10, 1990

...J' .
"'

�Ohio

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
• Adll outMiv

·~·
"frre

M••~s . ~1111

,

Words

•d~

GNe.wav and found ads

~o~nder

.

, •

1&amp;

1 Carll Of l,_.,_._
2 lnM..,..Ofy .
3 Annoyc-.n ..n
4 Gtw,.ay

.30

.• 2

.eo

f1 . 301day

16

ilt•

.20

11.00
$9.00 '
113.00

16

.Oil l olly

6

Loll anti Found
1 V ani S•e&amp;pa~O .n ao.ancet
8 PuiJMc; Sal• • A'uc••n
I W•tMto a.,,

....,.,.Ms.

.

1 tio wot•• wdt•~

run 3 d-s. at no ch•ge
•Puce ot act tor all capnatttuers IS doubl u PfiH ol .t cost
• 7 po1n1 ttne
only und
·s.nultll '' no1 rnponlliH• for ttttor• ahm brat diW . fChiKk
tor enors hr st d~ ad runs tn PIIHtfl . Call b•IOt• 2 :00 p .JU

•w...-

dlf¥' a h et. pubiiCIItOU \0

Cln~.~i.fit•tl

' Ads that muat' be '*d •n advanc;v I11J
CauJ of Th~nt~•
Happy Acb
1!1 Mumon.n •
'r M d Sltl t~~
• A ct•llhed ,advt:fttl~tlnvnt PI&lt;~Cud 111 lh• Datty

Sun••• Ill IU ·

G.. li1 CouMy
•••• Code 11•

ctau•tutel (ttSPhtV . 8\IIIAWI G ~~;rd and 1~111 noHcn)
w•ll ;tlsu iiPPtlill' 111 I lie. Pt Pl•••nt Aeptlhn 'a nd th• G ..t._.

pul•s Oout, T ubluu:. •u ;u:hHltJ ow• 18.000 honurs

THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOAY PAPER
SUNOAV PAPER

DAY

BEFORE

446

317

PUBLICATION

2 •00 P.M . MONDAY
2 •00 PM . TUESDAY

256
1~3

2•00 PM WEONES.DAY
·2•00 PM TMURSDAY
2 00 P.M. FRIDAY

' 371

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
eupplieo .,.
Public requlrod by 8111111 Regulation, Rulo 37M·I1·21;
Qtllo AdmlnWtmlw Coclll.
to n&gt;utlnoly monitor the mJ.
crobiologlcal qogllty of the
drinking In tholr dJo.
lltbutlon II'- In ...., to
,~..... thot
lng ouppllod to · the con·

OF
NEXATION
N- com• Mn. llcln"
GNeO• end Wetero Edge of
lyncu• Umltod Pill-·
'lhlp ond h•IIIV pttltlon the
lloard ol County CommJi.
· - · of Mtlao County "'
lllow the enn-lon of 1
of lerid .....
cttod In Sutton TOWMIIIp,
1 00 Aero Lot 298 coniiiJn.
6.118 - · Into the VII·
of
ThJo ""~
lt ...mltledpul'llllntto
Ohio R...,ilod Code Section
708.02 " llq.
The IUbjtct prOperty J1
located dlroctly • 4 - t to
the northern corporation
line of the Vllloge tlong Col·
1181 S t - ·end bounded by
the Ohio RhNr, Illite Rout8
12'•.endeperctll-ln
Iutton T-n•hlp. A OUr·
wyed delorlpllon end M IC·
CUNgo mop of the Pln:tl to
be onneud It etlllahod h•·
tto • uhlllltt.
The praplltr Jo -nod
lndlvltlutl to
ll~ln" G -

*• - ".,.. ..,..,n ......,

Rutltnd Yllloge It Nqulred
to coiiiCtend . .mine • ml·
nlmum of one 111 mill'olllologlal •mple HCII ·m onth.
~ 'MIIIPI•

_,. enoly_.

lOr the month of Febryery
1810. • •
TIM

-

..

wat• depa: bhlftt .,_

......, llfpo to lneuNthltod·
~lido monitoring wll be
,_formed In the futuN.
(..ll!O. 11~: , '
·'.i

j

· PtiltGr ,_.. R. -.e
Sr. Md;jlll n-tbao of
,.... lllptllt CIMdt

Gu..-nD••t

· Arii:MaOttt

w•nu1

,aftll . thria •
IMy
•111ft• for hll Glt . .
1nil portiormonce In tho

742

,cllurdt. The co cp atioo
- n~1hlld throughout
the collltNCtlon of our

'c'hurcll -

- ~ly

~Ageln, M My
• ''THANK vou··.

1I

Pt . .......... .

576 ·
nJ
112
116
137

Rulllltd

~-··

ANti• Glove
...
H.wHewen
Let•t

21

.uff•

J&amp;L

ROOFING

INSULAnON

22
. 23

NEW- IEPAII

Now loatliH:

161 North S.CINMI •.
lliM...t; Ohio 451~ .

.s.anR'.tGutt..

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

llphi~tlllint

SALES I SEilVICE.

Windows

.....

Flohk&gt;g lutoP!J•
Phone

Wo

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

s.........

FREE ESTIMATE;S

949-2168 .

2·1·'90'1 110. p4,

S•viC411

~r..;;.

Billa Here
IIISIIIISS PIIOIII

· PREI&gt; EBTIA.!ATEI

16 Ul 992·6550

Ccill •"·'':"

JUlia PHONE
'· 16141 9U·r7!14

for ell of
pro....., .own·
••....,lbeJohnR .. ~
of Port•. Llttlo. 8"-tt •
Lentaa onlf 111 lnqulrleo
lhould be dlriCtod to Nld

, :,.BISSELL
.
··BUILDEIS

'

•sHRUB 8a
TRIM anti REMOVAL·.

.

CUSTOMIIii.T .

.....t.

•uGHT H~ULING

Notice lo being ftllld with .
the Vllloge ond T-nihlp
C,_pu.....,ttolheltltu· ·
"At IIIII '*It Prlct'i"
tory r..,hmtnto end notlo!t ahlll be fllod In 1 locel
.... 94t-2101
, _ for four co-tlw
Or ..... 9ot9·21ltd
WHblndlaetlngthfto h -·
lng 111111 be htlcl on thlo ..,
Day ... Night
- ' for •ftaltlon. Fur·
ther lnlonnetlon -.ct comNOSUNDAYCAUS
munlcetlon ..., be tfiriiCtlcl
to John R. IAntio. ,21 1·213 11.--~-.,.Eut Seaond .Street.. Po·~.:
m•!&gt;"f, Ohio M719, or the
ao..d of County Commie-

a.s i uncus

2.;

on

0
('
('

-~ MULLEN

TO HOW
FAST YOUCAN

1 0-01-1898·

('

A-20-1975

All MAlES
Bring It Ia Or Wa
Pick Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

"·

992-5335 or 9•5·3561

(!
(\

lena ,,.. Pflt
217 I. Sec.

POIIIIOY

(\

(\
(\

0

0

0

,,

(614)
742-2027

{l

('

"
INCREASE YOUR R·.P.M.
(RESPONSES PER MESSAGE)
WITH A WELL-PLACED AD TODAYI

T::a~~-Tr·avel"
4-11-1

GREASE JOI &amp;
OIL CHANGE

'

Celebrate With Us .... A LL 3's Special!

SJ695 4 Qt. Max.
' nn IEPAII

3 Days - 3 Papers - 3 Lines (15 wortls)

$3.33 .

MOVIE liNTAl
·
(ONVMNU SIOIE ITEMS

.

CHESTER
QUIK STOP

When you pl"ce your ad It will be listed In all 3 ol our
lll'wspapers: Galllpoll~ Dally Trlhune, The DRily Sentinel, and
Point Plt&gt;asant Register.

CHinn, OHIO
915-3350

4·8· 'flO. 1 mo.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENm

Namr ·- ----·-,----------------------------------

II.

2- ----~

·l. -

12 .-~..c__~-

3. _ __ __

R. _ _ _ _..L._

4. .
5. ._ _ _ _ __

·--"'--,---

fl.

13. - -.::....--:---;.--

14. ---.,--,'.;;•__,..__.,...

10. - ·- -- , . . - - -

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
I l l Court St.
Pomeroy, ·Ohio 45769

(614) 992•2156
lllft-r

s.rn. c.ter . IIC

lv• Parts 111111 hrtr..,

. 0Qly!
Mall or Bring In person.

-

. . YAIIMAII &amp; ICIIO
PICIIIm

Cash

6. ;_~-~~­

\

us••o~

- - - - - - . , -- ·clusllleatlon: -------~"-

_

t300.

Hullt ohlllor end llnlolgt
m.an
lt•loranll 1100. 4 ..,_.

Nit ........or lnd Int ....
biiMdat, attln.tor, ... _,

. Pomeroy,
Mkkllepon
' &amp; VIcinity

99· .&amp;•OIJ 011

SER~ICE

We calt repair and recore radlaflit:s and
heater cores. We can
aile acid llojl and l1ld
aut rlllliot..._We alse

•Mobile Homo
. Perta
•Mobile Home
Ren•l•
. •Lot Rent~~la

,.

J

9

Otll.ab Com, 8oybNnl.
ond Alfllfl. Call Koy F.,.... ofttr
1:00 PM ~11-1101 or 111-

2413.

PUbliC Sala
&amp;Auction

K-fll' 8Md Com

Transportation

Wanted to Buy

1111 P~..:~m, ~
11• . . - ,
• .. 11141 _..
·

992•2196
·· Middleport,

••••...,,Ollie

till Nova as :110. 4 _ . . . t&lt;&gt;~r tlrltH wl-, llotory

ClEARING

IS NOW OPEN
FOI IUS.ESS.
IN ITOCII:

NE.,WLAND
. ENTERPRISES

oc.no... -

..._ oc.m-.y FloWor

V•• oCior lltd ..,..

•FountOin l~d lotN • """
Dtor.F-A........ I '

G,_. A. flawlantl

-.

7·11-"lt-111

~, ...

• •..., IIWen, Cllela

·

UNDl'S
PAitmNG I CO.

....

111111011 DIRIOI

,,

11

s..n, Wu"••••a.
· .HOURI: M-F I· 7

.Bat. l·li: Clotod Sun.

.. 949-2969 :,

TIICIIIG
_. · CIISta, CillO
·•GRAVEL
•LiMES'TON'

DIRT .
•ANYTHING

?fiLL

AT ALL

985·4422

91.

,

. ..

ltlor1 6 JLIIL Jo.oh ...l
4·1·"10-1 mo. pd.
a\IINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
'BLOWN IN
, INSULATION

grown:t
==-.=~
FIM
training. No
-·
CalhJ
:IIIWn.otiZD.
•

Pr.....,..

·•·

I

DMod. 'WrttleR

-y-...

nOI ....rlmln
or

-~

Wl! lillY ALL NON FEIIROUI SCRAP. BATTERIES. ,,
8TAIIT1!R8.
ALTERNATORS. ETC .

510t!J

GIEG IAUY

AGreat Comlllnation'
"QuallfJ ancl l•sanalll•"Prieta"
WE GO t• EmA MIU.....
992-6110

, 992-6244 &amp;...aae • :
.·

4-11· '10-f mo.

.....

\.

SUN'S UP TAIIUG'..._ ................... Olllo

1 c~•-- .
' ........ '"·:--··~••;..,........- ......... •3.50
6 S.lli.-.-...........................,.... s12.00
12 S.alalti...................._ •.,._.... IJO.OO
15 S..lw •. ~......~........................ 12 5.00 ·
FIRST Vl5n FREE - POSSIIl YMORE

.

.

' AVON I All ANM I llhlrtey
' Spuro, ~78-1421.
• AMAT1!UR PHO'TOOAAPHERS
. WANTIOI
No lEu. ~'i'? f1,8DCI dally! CaH
1ooiCIN47
(UIIInln.) or
Wrtt•: PASE-338, tit 8. LJn.
· ootilwly, N. Aurora, IL 10M2.

-

I

21

Bualnaaa
OpportunHy

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALL£Y PUBUIHINQ CO.
............ ""' you do
butl.,.. wllh people JOU know,
lnd Nor to ot~lllf-llng.

=. . --.. . . .
ITRIIIE IT IIICHI
·
Wltll Slolo VI- 1 -.

41 Houaes ~Qr Rent

'l:i In' Ohio lor ..... lt4,U 83 .

2br.

3br tor rent Rio
~·- a VInton, 114-:141-tt•
•ft•lp.nt.
3br, llnt'IL..room, 2 -

tl4 ... '

.

........

42 Mobile Homu

tor Rant

A
ALL CMlt
bueln- ul 1-I00-741-t100.

Real Estate

I=-'-=::,::;=:;:::.-'-:;;:=-''::--:~-::;:::

ColrH

1"";;1;3DW::;:7J;·I; ;480.;:; ;-;:::::::;:Jl73:;1t;.

-1111111.
io •lllod;
Evening
110m
4-12.
Pof1o
.time or fulloll- 114 '441 0410.
114 ..., ....

Wldl

-

---

a.-.

.

II 44
,_I

Hollond 317 link • . . . - .

Bu.,.r: ~-·
cond.
a. bcitt good

63

UYaatock

72

Trucks tor Sala

up,

lmJ ClloYy llotl ton Dlok

~~~tm•
tm F-11'!11 forti Tnloll
,...., 114-4...
1134•

lond ...~,~"'r~'.o.
-~12,-111
1. '

Wit•

IIIH l'ord ji.IOO, N. PI, 12,400.
-~-1:110.

'IWobod-tNII•,o.....
, . - , -.en-tD71.

uniwnltllod,
.,....

no ..... ti-T·

Aplltment
lor Rant

73 vans a 4-wo•a
1m CJ.IIMP tor - or trlldo,
gooll lllftiL tt . - -

jiiiii,IOM'/NOtl.

)lip

=-*' . . :t.........
ltn CillO Aotlo.

Qeod -

...... 310 _llll... 1174 0...

Itt•

.
''The ••foot casket - the ~ lf*1g that
bolhei~ rnt1. Uncle Fl'l!d sbl..fOQI-four..."

..una

,
-.._:

-'boo-......................

!,111~'::...":.": :~~-rv~h=

w.-.

a.byllttor to come to ""' holM.
-.........
1or aping,
'"""'dlvo.
chi-.
1laht
MOn-Frl,

' ·

OINnet,

•i':;

"""' •tro::......
-"..
,.......•.......'"'.
Aaentlllyl w.rll .. -

....,.,.

I t ...2331 AU flU.
llpallllundlyt

__........._........-~·--~··
GIVIIIV(
. ...,

....

r or

Aeglnl

r•oonab'- tor qulolt aale. 1 _ ................................EHort Wogon. . . . · tl41194..81-3611.
' I•
N- on oa'- at PAINT PlUS, 61 f•nn Equipment
Chewottl,
....... -·ion,
H-uvarna Trfmmoro. .... ta ft. H41~~711 Ton Ford 1111
low .......
~
114flO. to NO. PAINT P~US, Jock· !niCk
.on Ave, Point Pte1unt, 3Q4.. ~:::.:::=-:.::;c-:--:-~== t41 · '
vtl75-4·~;:*::::.;;·-;;;;-;;;::::--.;;oz-;;;; til ·. MF Tractor w~r 1111 CUlt... - · V.., PAINT PLUS. llvo 20% on Round llll!z.!!'OW'"'I llachlno,
lltl l'ord ~. 4 CYI., "''"'od Interior lnd · ut- !~~"'1!!1."":.~~
...., ehll. 0oot1 oondliiott....
Pttibu'l Polntl, •~ 'and craft ae 11122 ·
4
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
. ll......ttll.
lu- · a 1l tll3 Hollond. liD - · d..,..., ,.,.,.......... -'loti;
Joi:"A.., Point P - . with tit-, 14700. '1118 ,.._. ApP;Iancn, !04-171-1084.
RC :Ill Combination llake Todu - R- Aa. aoald. 11ono Small ly.. lrlllor, t:l80; dor. 12100. L- UN, flOOd.,.,.,
Craot llotal. Call 114-448·7381.
riding ""'" mower, ualld I 114.e-148.
Lito Modo! Ford Tractor, · tumfMt, $160; 1m111 drop INf
lllblo,
w12 cholro, 140: tlda x AC Com plontor. 4 row, 40 Inch,
Wlllnlah mowtr, lit. buah hog,
'"'-'-'or S300 no-lUI. condRion. StiOO.
"""' .,.,.. holt dl-, f5,150; -~·- ~,..,.,....l~-....
' .......... 114-; CAll ll'l-882- dlyo, tt4Fergu.on
Tf'81ctor
wfiGider ""ta
~tas.
·
1182·7118
.,..,
....
12,1110. Ownor will II,.,..., 114·
28Wtl22.
WHITE'S ii&amp;TAL OElECTORB
Data fMd CompUI• F - . ,
Ron Allloon 1a10 8 - Ave; Full liM, bnlck. biM. ~I 1111,
PICKENS FURNITuRE
Qalllpollo, OH 114 m 4131.
chorwtl,. dellvll)' llrr
Now/1'-od
Bu~. lt-..on2
Hot 1 h&gt;ld turnlolllng. 112 ntl. Wo build bla Do- fam&gt; Jlm"o fom&gt; EquipM;' :~ 38,
Jerrlcho lid." Pt. PI-nt, WV, . 134,11111! I up, ll4ol86- Wool DIIIIDOIII,
717;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
-lon
.-finn
1o
t-aro I . lmplotMntt. Buy,
Nil, trodl, 1:-:00 -.,yo,
SNAFU~ by Bruce Beattie
SaLIMI-.
'

Qoma.

f\ nnoL:nr• ·mr nl-;

4

ca1.s- c••,.... 741-_~llJ'I

2nd St~ aldtllop111f

For Appt. Call
992-6717. H- or ,

•NEW HOMES · •SIDING
•GARAGES
•RI!MODELIIIIG
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

LOTIONS -- STICKERS

-

HUCK'S CAR WASH

A

a

.... ,.tloMI origin, ~

3·13-'to-dn

Kand J CONSTRUCTION

•:='""

lcant a!IJ
IW
M&gt;ployrMnt
or
·
b1a1ua of raoe, r111a1on. DOlor,

#1 Copper B,&amp;c· per lb.; t.
Cleen DIY Aluminum· Cena, 38~ per lb.

...... ..,..IDWI2...,..,

=:t'up,

Farm Supplres
&amp; Livestock

I

Rentals

Financ1al

llnlna ..,cation ond uport-

=~.;".;,:~='~=

:

FNd • .,.. J04..773-11tl or ,

............. I ..,....,
, _ ..,_~ oond,
tt,soo.-...
.
11114 llodg.
Tlntlo Z.
8l
lltj&gt;d 12,111. 814-441-·
'
•·
1711
•
1·••• Oklo CutMf su;:::
cloon 1 dlpl-,
81......,.711.

II

reeumee out•

daR- or nllllled to
llayoriJ::' Hollman, 237 lla.,.
91:. II
port. Ohio 45710. All
appllcollonl muot ... """od
by May I. The VHIIgt of Jlld.

l

3DW11-2*

o.- ·

••
FN 8 ...
"
. " gAiablel
•

prico

i:

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 1•3
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 50. S .R. 143
'HENOERBON; WV. : Rt. 311 Adj. to Slollro Equipment
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY• 9 e.m.· 7 p.m. 7 Dove
HEAINLIDBIEAI.NIIyl)l
. ~1:0 ·o.m. ·li p .m . 6 Deyo. Cloalld Sundoy
10o.r.n.·l p.,m.IDIIyo.CioalldSun.·Mo.n.
""''"''"''"'AS OF TODAY, MAR·. 13,-1.990

•. 4.1&amp;:-16-tln '

tMw

111"81 btMiftl . ..
to clhor VIlli~
mpiD)Oif. -ion wHIIn1111
be ovotllblo lor o 12 -

Til-COUNTY RECYCUNG

---nee:
-=··. . . . .

-.v..

llmo.. rn Bull 30 monthl old
1200 lb. $810; ..... dryer, $7&amp;;
Electric 1tove, 1100; H•mmer
Mill SIOO; 1143-448..088.

Hotlfllig_ .....,_ lnd - ARC llou 11,. Alllillenot
rihln tltil Vllllgo lind
!!1111! j)ounty, Dutlot ill ""'
·Houtlnfi lptCIIIIot wtn be to
MCOU,.e; ;worucAt 1nd aMIM
In pocUglna aqd · lacllltol~ng
FmHA lOaM. llatary, 111,000 ,_,

OffiiS 3 LOCA11011S TO SDVI YOU.M.

tUritiMecl.1

0.,_,

1ft

'

"=

~ ;
F - r ond Vogetobll Ptanta:
Old Location: A.,_ 1ro01
=.nna=~ ~=
No~h Gollt H.l. Location•
FNd
:104-ns.tltll or ',
t/2 milo up Mount Dll.. Ad. on
Loft, (Mount Olivo Rd. II by
Mile llYN IGWa-1711.
railroad In Bldw.l.l Cabblao,
•
Broccoli, Caullll-ar. f!:bO
llotery or ...... tool drtllng. I
,
_
Wol'-contplotoddQ.
,
dol., Olhar Yo g. 1
r
......., lnd - . 304- ,
Pl•nt., Low Prte»el 814-38111354
·
1115 Buick ContiMY UmltN, 1.0 DIYII
tnglno, vwy flOOd - · Ill Qu,._ Cnok lid. P11t1, ....
=~- rilllllgf. ....,_ 114lnd ....-,. • ,., ;:

CAIIEER~Dorou

The .,... of. lllddlopolt II

(614) 915-4110

•,

--

,---•.;.'e:::.':-:-"=-.-=~ I till

Cd llarllyn .

I -to -

6t4-IHI2-7; Filth

Ptono lor Nle 1800. IIQ!d -- .
304411-7821.

w..v......... ..
-ldntl

BoOda

Boollt 114 411 4810.

·MllDIId?
_ .....
. , doelrt to

.

·3/U/10/tfn

L L HOLLOI

·

VDTIWOIWU
HAVE IIRIIIIKES
AfYD6PA r

PH.·t49·2101 ·
.ar ln. 949·1160
NO 'SUNDA' caus

can 11~% ott w"h •dl JIM Plano
Sorvlco. Call Bill Word SOW82•
232&amp;· Wll"'• &amp;14 ..7..-; Mill

Help Wanted

AVON • M -

es~~~res

.

... .._ fh!llt. ,·

Tuning ltlanoe • '"Onuxr u we

Employment Services

.'

NG

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

114-

58

. IHhiiCiall•.,•
Latus.ltftry•

PIANO CARE

· Wonlod to buy tonn In 011111 or
. - - -nty. Ill! HIM or
· With or wlthoUI ltol-742-2211.

PH. 992·5682
or '92·7121

(6'14) 667-3271

v... om~ment. ·
Buy F.rom Uo A !!•v,e!
Oth•

li80d -'- - . Call

Alto
Trioe•leelo•
·
'
'

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-D'irt

•Com ... l~d­

-75.

REPAIR .

IA!IEMENT

i

Mualcal
Instruments

dRion onlv. Prempl poyntlrlt.
114 812 atr7.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

:

""M!t"'

.,
Oullte
antique or .-. Exc- • -

lt. l24i P01t11roy oltia

Improvements

------':u,;;:::;:::.---- .

WATERPROORNQ
'
R111 condition. 12,1100. u-dltloufl 111ft- _
... '
114-tii-'Jia or 11WIII011
, ...
reflrer&amp;DII
lmJ YW ....... , _ moiG&lt;ond fiM
matll. Call - c t I• ,
- . ~. 301 • ..,.
114431....,, . , or night. 11
~
A~
Bn•n•nl 0\
-11711m,..., . . . .. ...... . . . . ...,.""'·
"!
glne, very lltl'110041. D a D-ny. c - _. ot '
-00, :J04.1110
of'• I Ill -Indo. ClllmMy -"'"· '
p.01.
IIWN-1014.
1m Pontito ....._ 111111on . ~ ~
-~'
.._. mMY nw
IIHOiU
li
Wlgon, ¥4, AC ~
RooJiftg,
MWirOptlr, oldlng• .
1
... por11, flOOd - · ••• 114ry. odd lobi. '·
~"'
• 81W71-2ta, ullle'f1110 Chevy llallbtl 2 Mitch.
_,p., runO aood. lc&gt;olal ~ ;;;llcon'. :-"o' -TY;;;
. =s..
=il.._
:-:--c:-:
•P"'•:-;clol:::::;:;:1-:•
,,.... ond cu1. 11 ;aoo. :104'171- 1n z.nltlt ......,,.
-.
5111.
othlr l:lnNIL Houle c.JIII, aleo ..
1•1 AMC Splrtt1 -~-&lt;Y!,...a'*&gt; """'"""' ......... "ifY
""""""'· S800.11-1411T.
Ohio 114-4412414.
'
tll3 Chewy ~ Zdr hatall
btcll. se,aoo .... .......... 11100. 11oo11na ond aldtng.
VII)' good oond.II4-1321M.
lnd AddH'-. ' - .ootlmafot. ,

•r- . . _.

Roger .Hysell
· Garage

SITEWORI - ROADS

SYIACIISI, OliO •
(ANwePiua:sr.,J

--------- ~
81
Home
,

dltio--. M,ootl--

DOZER

JO'S GIFT SHOP

Serv rces

71 Autoa tor S8la

PAT HILL FOlD

lt. II llertlt of

Soolt

FanM Boo lnd WL111. Kay F•""' aftor 8:00 PM,
304..711'1101ori7W413.

r.ar GasTanlt, ·

·, 992-7479

tuW '

65 Seed • Fenllzer

Rlolt Peonon Aucllon ComPIInr
now bookl,. 1uc1lon., e~:­
HI'Iencll makia the dtterence.
· Llca-d Oh~ t&lt;•ntucky,' w..t
- VIrginia, 304-fr.l-6785.

u

o..;··

.. Ca-10 ....... lt4Mtoa1M oft• 4 p.m.

GoNg! Solo, Aprll 20 and 2t .
Itt I Bhoh A...._-. now •nd
utod 8:00 Ull 4:w .

CALL

IJ~.

..01,_, 4 • • ,,.namhd~·a.

&amp; VIcinity

Commercial

lltN
mut11t*('
angiM lof1

tDH Ford

fuol

Pt. Pieaaailt

Residential "

" -

-

8

"frH Eatlrn8t•..

St. lh. 7 I 141

AU, AD!I MUST RE I'AIO IN ADVANCE and recclvrd ·to h~ puhll~hed ·o·n
or hdorr '""April 3!1. l!HIO rdttlon.
·
· ·
l'lra.•r ll~t thr •·olumn you would like your ad to rnn undrr.

I. _ _ _ __

II,

on 514.

lafrlgaratlon
Slrvica

"UIW IIKIII~_I!~

I!U

· !rom
Ooller.·
lt.m.-4p.m.
55 - Family
llocond
--

FREE ESTIMAl"ES
,~.. tht 11*1111 ",... .

"Your
Conneetlon ~

'·'"'

l11teniationnl Cla.~.~ified Adt •erli.~ing Week .
·
April 22-28, 1990

Print one word In each space below .
~ach l~ltlal or group of flgurt's
rounls as a word . Count name and
addr~ss or phone number If used.

u
v•
"='
::'::mi. -·

Heating, Cooling&gt;

992-6173

3-19-"to-1 •o. pd.

9 • 26:.

-tr)a TRAVEL
PURSUIT

(&gt;

PhonP: _·__

chlldn!M -clclhlng,
lit-.
·

..

Auto Pans•

Acceuorlaa

,eo a 1184, .....- HouM. w..

{1

('

.

Offlc.

()

0
0

Don, Barb
8t Boys

MICROWAVE
OYEN UPAII

(1

IN THE
.

0

76

tin

('

DONE

('

Yard tlo'-: Sat, ADril at; H.
Kan.luga, a . - Holldoy Inn.

Y~rd tlo'-: Friday Solurday.
• ADril 20o21, lt.m.-4:M; ,Junclloft

CUMATE , ·
CONTROL

Good Ret•

COUNTIY
··o•LE
HOME PARK,

~

a

PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

4-f.i,.tlll

NO L~ MIT'

JtELENE B.

Lube

•Brake Work

EUM HOME

614-742-2315

·~

0

•011 Change 8a

. . . &amp;IHniF.Selller Cltl1- and

· EVENINGS

.......... , . . Office

·~

v.w.

992-2269

992-5335 or 915-3561

('

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment

g.......,. ...c.•

. 209 South 4th St.
MWdleport, Oli.

.SDYICE

('

742-3088 .

4/ S/"10/1 it&gt;o.

Jette, Golf, ·
Beetle and 81,11.

BILL SLACK

liN'S APPUANCE

In Memory

'

MAIN ST., lunAND

NEW It USED
PARTS
For Rabbit,

•fiREWOOD

up

~

s ...

• · • VlclniW

SALES
and
.
.
SE"IQ

"'"'""

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

St. lt. Ill,

··-·K-.·--...-...---...-

Gallipolis

IUTUND
niE
. '

Parto for Homllhe,
W!~"'''!· Tecum~tll.

247-4035

T.L.C.
27¥rt. Exp.
R....._

'

'

8 '3 Euw•llttA

_ , . Pllnll

~

0

10 e.m.·l p.m.

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

Yard Sale

7

84 Electr~cal &amp; R•lugwMttcm
85 Gunwal ti•ulmv
86 · Mobil• Hume A·e p•n
87 Up~olttef\'

PAlr'fl:.-Ji:VICE
For Mott 2 111&lt;1 ,._cycle

Thu,.. lllru Sun.

found
f1 '- tlly
School.
114·742-.

8 1 Hom,• lnlttrovitment 5
8 2- Plumbmg 6 H••••ll

ISH Wilt . . .

HOURS:

Found

FOlolld: Key ling !!IRh I Up

Scrv1r, es

, MIIOIIIOINI
IIEW L.IION '
DAYI'S SMALL
ENGINE UPAII

OPEN:
APRIL 1 THIU JutY 1

PubliC Noclce

r•l 20. 27: (51 4. , 1. 4tc

The Quells
Family would
like to thank
·: all friends of
their mother
.. who sent
. flowers and
· food in the
·. time of their
·"
loss.

CON.E'S
OHIO IIYEI
IIEIIS and
EYEun•os

Lo~•

6

77 ·· Auio A~au
711 , C•mpenp Equepm..,.t
79 Cllmpet• &amp; MolOf Hon'n

17 Mulicll ltttuumenu
51 · ftu••• • "'•'""•bl•
II for Sale or 1rade'

Mon., to LNn ,

Ut!l.

75 lo•1s&amp; Mo1ors tp r Sillt .
7Ei Auto P•rlt lo Acc:•aor••

II ·· Misc. M•chancMse
515 IUiidtng 5upp6••
51 Pet I tor Sah

8utm•• Opponunnv

old . 4,.,..,.,amo~o.tt-.

73 . \I ant&amp;." WO ' s
74 Motou;:vct•

112-S-tlnl Goo•
13 Anteques ,

PliiMIING &amp; HEATING

Mastic - c.f*_.S
Vlnyllwing

7\ _,",. ostor s•~
72 ltudtl for s ..t~

fi 1 - HOUMhold Goodi

W•ted to Do

ProiJ~u•on•l

·

Mcr ct1~ 11 1l:s e

461 L-."

iloward ... Writ_.

.-..

·pcN1111Uctlon of our nilw

&amp;75

116 Ctt• ..,
143 ..... _
1•7 -...., FaU•

117 ·

av........

_ . . ... totot11nd ....

..
... "·--·

"... c... 304

tor,...,,

• Qrep ,~ to 0'-'tr. lo •
' go&lt;l!d
' -·
Not
good
- - - · l1-t·1204.
' Klttlnt port ......... I _...

I ranspor1at10n

L.e••
'

1 &amp; · Sc~s • lnslrut:tton
11 A.c~eo·. TV a. CB R•P.••
17 'MIIC-'Ien.ous ·

MuonCo. . WV

••z _ _,
c•-•
Gel-"•

311 ViMon
2•6 · A.o GranO.

11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY

Public Notice

.

-,..s ,

'

Met.-Covnl'W
ANI COd1614

'.

,..,...,,

11 - He'o W111t..t
12 &amp;ttu.teon W
1 3 huuranet

fl•p""d. ;;HI., 11-ltNII.

15 - IMd &amp;. Fetu4u•r

Sentinel- Page-S

/~--

~1147.

..,,.. . . . good holM.....,.~,.
mar. pupplll , . , cf'tow,

LNet\00
folay 6 Gr••n

64

w... "

44 - A..,lmet for Atrnt
41 - fur,. Mil R•oms
46 5•c• tOf Rent
•47 - W ..t•d to Rem
41 ·• itiUIOfn.,.1 to• A•nl•
49 for

U - Bustn•• Tr.;nlf'lg

c:t~Pt

CO PY DE A OLIN£
MONOAV PAPER
1UESDAY PAPER
W[ONESDAY PAPEFI

'llf'

f ' fll'f'r

63

H..llly. ~
lllturod, I I pupjoy. 114-

I -

,.

The

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

..

., -.a-.

61 - f•rm Equepmwn
82 · W-ed to Buv

''Mill'

43 .F.,,.a

,') ltlll;it!:

I&gt; li&gt;t::,llll,k

.. 1 Hou•• tot R_,.t
42 · Mobia• Homw tor Aen1

St:l Vii."!

11 aKt·~

r (~rill

i .. lit:

31 ~ -R•• t .....

E111 plu yrr. 1.1':

""*tt COrriChUII

I

31 - tiom• tot I.-e
bit• Hom• tor s•w
mt tOt Sel•
us.n-...luiiiiiRfl
31 Lens• Act...•

.. · Kippy . . .

RM• .. etorcDn•cut. . ruM.bro""'•••wil"ch• ...

lor •~ d~ tl

•R•c'""" 6.60 chscount tor ach .-•d m "dvilnct;

o.,...u;w...•

Rltt
f4.00

~:

3
6
10
Monthly

or Mason counu• mtlll bv P"' ·

Giveaway

RATES

D•v•
.

Pomeroy~Middleport,

April 20, 1990

IIIII

1-~~CtwiM. .i
~ ~II I If "':!J!!,~

. . , , _ ....... til.-

~~

,_,._, OH t.-7-Na.

lrlmmod,
3DW7WIIB.
=--====-===-=-=c:::-:
-1. Call Otvld

--· -

- " ti4- 3471.
Rem dtHHG! MoMie Hom.
NpolrL':"'llng, _ , . . . - - .
lllab-. ~ elplrienc..

-·- -

·==I phd. 11.....1111 .
Plumbing &amp;
HNIIng

84

Electi'ICal ..

Rel~l'ltlon

-

�-!~~~!g~a~1~0~!1he~.~D~et~~V~S!!•~·~~·~··!_----~----~------------------!~~W~IMW~OV!:~M~kki~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------------------------~------~F~rid!y~~·~Ae!~~20~.~1~8~1Q~,

--Localliews briefs...- - Candidates... Continued from pqe 1
•

•

•

contlnued fl:'om page 1
Olive Township Fire Del&gt;artmentat 1: 11 p.m. was cal~d to a
trailer fire at the Swagger! residence at Reedsville.
Middleport at 2:31 p.m. went 'to High Street for James
At)tlnson who was treated but not trans'p orted.
Pomeroy at • : 36 p.m . went to Tuppers Plains for WI!Uam
Grueser who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 6: 29 p.m. wu called to Cleland Hill Road for
Buddy Kuhn. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
,
Tuppers Plains Fire Department at 6: 54 p.m. was called to a
possible structure fire at the Harold Hawk residence on Route 7,
north of Tuppers Plains.
. •
Racine was called at 10:48 p.m. to Tanners Run Road for John
Barnes to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Patrol cites Shaci..man
·A Shade area man was cited In a one-car crash Thursday at
2:30a.m. In Tuppers PlainS on Elm Street, a quarter of a mlle
east of the junction of_~R. 7, according to theGallla·Metgs Post
of the State Highway Patrol.
Barry w. O'Brien, 2t, Rt. 1, Shade, was cited for failure to
control and not wearing a seat belt after his 1981 Chevrolet
Malibu ran off the len side of the street and bit an embankment.
O'Brien was drlvlng .soutb at the time.

Commercial driv~rs tests set April 26

marked· by the state In recent
Caildldates for the State Senate
weeks for h!Pway Improve- · seat diii:Uased similar concerns ·
menta In the area, he questions at tbe dhi'ner. Both Clair (Buzz)
the tlmlllg of !be an-cements Ball, of Atbens County, and Dan
of the projects.
Hleronlmus, of Lawrence
Jones also poblted out that County, spoke at the dinner and
without lmprmied hlgllway., thla asked for the support of MeJis
area can never expect Industry. County Republicans In the May
"Industry won't come In, If they primary.
can't get their products out," he
said.
·
Jones !!nil Payne .also share
Meiga Court..
cone~ over the envtromrtent
and both feel the' state will have
In the Metils County Court of
to come to grips · With environ· Commo.il Pleas and order for
mental problems In the near $2,000 In l tax foreclosure actiOn
future, or the · problems may has been awarded In the case of
become too big to handle.
Geo111e CoWns, MeJis Ceunty
Treasurer, versus Tile Ohio
Valley Manufacturing Corpora·
tlon, eta!.
. In the MeJ.iB County Court of
Da!Jy s&amp;ock pries
Cominon Pleas, alt. pendlng ,fe(AI of 10:11 Lm.)
loq charaes aaalnst Chris topher
llrJCe aad Bark Smith
C. Cole, have been dlsml.saed.
of Ulan•, Ell II 4 .Loewl

news

Stocks

Am Electric Power ........ ,.... 29%
AT&amp;T~ ..... ~ •. ~ ·~ ............ -...... ;_
,...40~ ,

Begtnnbig January I, the State exam.
, ·
of{)blo adopted the com~erclal
Sergeant E. w. Kelly, coordl· Ashlat~d Oil ................. .. .... .361h
drivers license (COL) regula· nator of the Highway Patrol's Bob Evans •.......•.............•... l2~
lions mandated by the Federal COL testing program In the Channing Shoppes .... ...... .:.....9
Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1986.
Southeastern Ohio area, has · City HoldlDi Co................... 14
• According to Colonel Thomas ·announced tbatoneoflhenearest Federal Mogul.. ............ .... .. 17%
W. Rice, Ohio State Highway commercial drivers license test· Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34~
Patrol superintendent, this . lllg .sites to this area will be In Heck's ................................. 2%
safety act requires commercial Nelsonville on AprU 26, from 3 to Key Centurion ..•••.•.••.•••• ..•••• 14
Lands' End .................... ...... 16
1 drivers to be tested and speclfl· · 7 p.m., at the Trl-County Joint
Umlted Inc ........................40%
cally licensed to operate vehicles · Vocational School.
. I In the foUowlngcategorles: vehl·
Residents hlterested In the Multimedia lnc................... 77%
cles wei1Jhlng 26,001 pounds or COL testlngatNelaonvllleshould Rax Restaurants .................. 2"
large~; vehiCles designed to
call the Drivers Lleense. ExamJ. Robbins l Myers.... .-............15%
.carry 16 or more pusengers;
nation Statton at 593-7111, Mon· Shoney"s Inc...:.... , .......... :..13%
and vehicles which haul hazard· day through ·Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 Star Bank ........ :... ;..., ........... l9~
ous ' loads In quantities · which p.m .• for an appointment. Or cail WerJdy's Int't ... :.. :: .... : .......... 4~
Worthb~K'GD Incl.\ .............. :.. 21
require plac~lng.
·
Sergeant Kelly at 286414't
•
Deadline for possession of one
of the new classified drivers
elg8
llcense&amp; Is AprU 1. 1992 and about
325,000 drivers are expected to Dlllllel' Sa&amp;lriay
Point Pleasant. w. Va. featuretng
The Meigs County Democratic
apply for the initial written
the Spencers of ShUQh, Reflec. .
Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner
tiona, and Charity. The public Is
wlll be held Saturday at the
Invited
to attend.
f
senior citizens center at 6 p.m.
The keynote speaker will be
Committee to meet
Senator Gene Brans~!, who Is
lilso a candidate for lieu tenan I
A meeting of the committee for
the
Class of1940; Pornm:o{High
governor.
·
..
.,
. School, ri!U.nlon will be held
0..peJIIDI
••
There will · be a bend ' area Monday ~:t 7 p.m. at the home of
·gospel slngonSundayat2p.m.at Katie Crow l.n · SJ:yacuse. All
· the Bellemead United Metbodlst members of the class are Invited
Ira Eblin and Hope· Marie
Cbureh on .Burdette Street In to attend the meeting. ·
Eblin, parcel, to Homecreet
Enterprlaes, Inc., Salllbury.
John W. Youna and WUma F.
Youna, right of way, toMononga·
bela Pwr. co., Olive.
Elizabeth L. Upton, right of
way, to Monoqahela Pwr. co.,
Olive.
Michael Smith and Janeen
. .
Smith, right of way, to Monongabeia Pwr. co.,
.:
William R. Edwards and S.K.
aka Sharon K. Edwards, rtgbt ol
'
J way, to Buckeye Rural Electric
, Corp., Columbia.

M • announcernents,·
· · .·- ------

l

·Eagles ·make large

Meigs ·
property
transfers .

I

donation to program
Several thousand dollars have
been contributed to service organlzatlona bY the Ladles Auxll·
tary 21n. Fraternal Order of the
Ea6les.
.
A donation of $1.000, the largest ..
amOWit, was made by the group
to the Meigs County Senior
Citizens program and will be
used for tire purchase of some
. new dlnlJ1iequlpment. Thea,uxll·
lary also purehaaecl a parrot, a
communications Instrument,' for
a student at the Carleton School,
at a-coat oU750, and gave Sl.OO to
the Meigs County Public Library
for laree print boob for the
visually Impaired.
Other contributions· Included
$50 to the Syracuae "Save the
Pool" fund &amp;Jid S25 each to
Diabetes Research Fund, the

.--..------

-..
~

..••
.i •••
'~ :

.

'

J Addie Brown
1' · Minnie Addle Brown, 90, Ponie: roy,dled1bursdayatthebomeof
: Roger Spencer. · · ·
Mrs. Brown was a homemaker
: and was born Oct. 21, 1899 In
. Pomeroy to the late Millard
, Davis and Mary Caroline Roush.
' She was a member of the
: Enterprise United Methodist
: Church.
. She Is ·s urvived by a daughter,
• Mrs. Roger (Phyllis) Spencer,
: Pomeroy; a son, Harry Lew (Jo)
; Brown,' Orange, Texas; grand·
' children, Debbie Spencer, Pomeroy; Jeffrey and Elaine Brown,
Texas; . Paige Turner, Texas;
• Joseph Brown, United State
: Army, Germany; two great
: grandchildren, Leslie and Tana
· Turner; and several nieces and
·~ nephews.
; In addition to her parents she
· '. was preceded In deatb by her
1 husband,- Harley ·In 1966; a
; grandson, Qavld; five !lrothers
• and three sisters.
: Services will be Saturday at 3
; p.m. at Ewing's Funeral Home
• with Rev. Katherine Riley and
: Rev. Melvin Franklin officiating.
i Burial will be In Bel!ch Grove
: cemetery,
. Friends may call at the funeral
: home on Friday from 2·4 p.m.
· and 7-9 p.m.

'

: Pearl
i
[
·
;
;
;

l
,

.
:
•
;

•

SeOOy

Funeral serwces for Pearl
cecil Secoy, 76, of Syracuse who
died Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hopsltal, will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Syracuse
Methodist Church. 'rl)e Rev.
Wesley Thatcher will officiate
and burial will be In the Bearwal·
tow Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Rawllnp·Coats·Fisher
Funeral Home from 2 to4 and 7 to
9 p.m. on Saturday.

i Hoepital news
!

V«

"M-Ill

Tllunday admlilalons - None.
, Tllunday dllcbarlll - Mar·
, tu &amp;aa:v. Leona Karr.

•

J7!! Ford Escort ................... S1495
19 77 MercurY. Monarch ••••••••• S1 09
5
.

116,000 mllt1. Auto .. PS. PB.

1979 Chevy Camero ••••••••••••••
S1 095
.

•

lhe~~eir~~

Along
.. .. 81·8
Business ... ............... .. Dl·8
Comics· ................... lnaert
Claaalflecls ................. OZ. 7
Deatlla .... .... ........ ........ :All

Editorial'. ;........... , ....; •.. A2
Far,m .....•..•.•,....•...•..• D~-8
'·$porta .................... ... Cl-8 .

Bethania C. M. Church
travelers landmark... A-6

::

The auxlllacytrad!Uonallycar· :

rles out projects of.dlrect assist~ •
ance to needy fam!lles, pi'ovldtne !
food baskets and toys at Christ~ :­
mas time, and give~ lifts ot •
money to the tesldenti of the :- .
Meigs County lnftrmary. (See :
photos on pa•e 7}. . .
~

'

Vol. 26 No. 11
Copylighllld 1990

Middeport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant,

12 Sectiono. 98 P..oo
A Multimedlo Inc. Now-pet'

April 22. 1990

'

SPRING .

.

'

3 PACI

.

·POriED.SPRING ,
SILK FLOWERS

'MISSES TERRY CUFFED
SPOU .SOCKS
.

By LEE ANN WELCH
. Time~.Sentlnei . Siaff
GALLIPOLIS - After 20 years of waiting, the
residents of Gallla County w.til .see results on
relocating U.S. 35. A groundbreaklng ceremony Is
scheduled for Wednesday at 9:30 a. Ill·· on the Rio
Grande end of tl]e project. ·
.
· ··
According ~o tbe Ohio Department of Transpor·
tatlon, 'the ceremony will be held· In ·t he field
across from the sewe.r' plant, O!l State Route 325,
just off U.S. Route ·35.
· ·
Gov. Richard Celeste, ODOT Director Bernard
Hurst, State Rep. Mary Abel, D·Athens, and State
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D ·Circlevllle, will be
taking part in the ceremony.
•'So many people have worked for so long on this

'•

SALE .
'

16" &amp; 18" .

FITS 8'1t·11

project," Jolynn Barry Butler said when
contacted Friday afternoon. Butler Is the former
state representative for CalHa County, who Is DlJW
chairman of the PubliC Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
Butler will be at a utilities financing seminar In
N~w Yorl&lt;, and cannot attend the ceremony
wednesday. She has been committed to thiS
·seminar for several months, and could not
·
·
reschedule.
"I'm happy and It majces me rest easler
knowing construction will begin," she said. Butler
made U.S. 35 relocation her main focus in office,
from the time she was elected In 1983.
When the $61.2 mllllon state funding was

'

·

UCH

·I

OF 5

aiJPoi1 .

GALLIPOLIS- The Common·
' lty Improvement Corporation of
· Gallla County will bold Its Annual
' Meeting on Th~rsday, AprU 26, at·
. 12:30 p.m. hi the. Auditorium of
' the new Robert S. Wood Hall at
,. the University ol Rio Grande.
· w~••Jlalj,.,waa. .. chosen to ,
, a~ate •· presentatlon,by ;
Leo '8Chefer,,, i!!WIIfel!'"lUf"'fM w
· · washington 'qD ,C.) Alrp.orts
' nisi\' F'orce: .and Dt. Gerald
. Gor«)on, e!lfcut)vE,&gt;,dlrectorofthe
•. Fairfax County '(Va .) Economic
, '· Development AuthOrity.
Sc hefer ,and Gordon wlll dis·
cuss the · Importance of air
transportation· 8$ an aeronaut!·
cal engineer with British Aerospace, first carne to the United
States In 1965 to help regional
' airlines lntr¢uce the. first jet
. service to ·.small communities
. . around the c·ountry.
Gordon has been Executive

·. S9·99
•&amp; 15 Ll.

SllE

COFFEI·MAIE
NON-DAIRY
CREAMER

4 PACK

DIAL DEODORANT
..
-SOAP

20 oz.
lOBUS JAR

,

. DR., GERALD GORDON.
'i
r

'

'.

· ·.

,

'

Dlr~tor

of the Fairfax County
Economic Development AuthorIty ~tnce 1987~
Fairfax County, Va., 15 miles
southwest of Washington, D.C ..
has created over 118,000 new jobs
since 1977 with a balanced
Economic Development Cam:
- palgn emphasizing lndu~trlal ex·
pans ion, Improved alf transpor·
tattoo , leisure travel, historic

-;

I

I,

sites, recreational facilities, and
cultural opportunities.
Stanley E. Harrison, a Gallla
County native and member of tile
Washington Airports Task
Force, Is sponsoring Schefer and
Gordon to Gallla County.
The meeting Is .open to the
public and additional informa·
lion may be obtained by calling
the CIC office at 446-3662.

lATH
SIZE

Auto., PS. PB.

•

'·

....

"Thus," said Gara, '"the tie to efforts.
"In Johnny Appleseed'S lime,
Johnny Appleseed Is fitting."
· History and legend are greatly he planted trees to provide fruit ·
mixed together In the Johnny for the frontier settlers. TOday,
Appleseed story, noted Gara, , .' we plant trees to provide shelter
·'but tl;lere Is enou~h truth In_It to for birds and animals, to give us
make Ohioans proud to claim cooling shade in summer, to
provide windbreaks In winter
him. .
.
and
to help us combat poUutlon.
''The man planted a great
.
"Once,
frontiersmen lookl!d
many trees - apple· trees - on
uJ)on
trees
as enemies, tci be cut
the Ohio frontier. Now that
down,
•burned
or otherwise. dis·
planUng ·trees has become an
pose
of,"
salll
para.
"Tocli'y, we
ImPQrtan! part of a world-wlcle
•
looll
upon
trees
as
trjelids
and 1
effort to restore out planet, hiS
thlli'ii
,Jollnny
Appfteed
would
• name can become a shlnlnll
· for our coQaer~atlon Ulte that."

.' WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPllSunday's Earth Day should have
speCial meaning for Ohioans
because one of the nation's
best-known tree planters,
Joh.nny Appleseed, did much of
his work In the BUckeye State,
notes an Ohio historian.
· "Johnny Appleseed set an
example that can certainly s land
us In good stead today," said
Larry Gar a, who, teches Ohio
hlstorw ~t W,iimll)gton College.
"Mucli hls'Jilj! \li6rk'l!l'pla'rl·tl'ng
. trees . was done In Ohio in the
early,1800s." .
Appleseed was born John
Chapman In Leominster, Mass.,
In 1774 .. He appeared on the
no~thwestern PennsylvanIa
frontier In the late 18th century
and came to Ohio around 1800:
His first orchard In the state
was probably one planted near
Carrollton and much of his work
was centered around and i!l the
Mohican and Walhonding River
valleys. He h1ter moved to
Indiana, where he died In 1845.
Cara said. tree ·planting Is an
Important part of Earth Day
NEW
Charles Lovlnphlmer, right, was
observances across the nation. In
Installed aa
new Mldclleport Pos~asler on Friday by l.ou
Ohio, the Department of Natural
Jordan of the Zanesville Dlstrlci Office. Lovinphlmer comes to
Resources has set a goal of 1
Middleport lron'l Zanesville where he resides wilh his wife, Judy,
million tree seedlings to be
planted for Earth Day and Arbor • · and three daughters. He has been associated with tbe postal
service for 24 ye1U'•·
Day celebrations.

at

'

5199

20 years.
·
.
"So many have worked so long. I'm thrilled for
the people, the polltlcians, businessmen and
Industries who have working to get (this project)
going," Wiseman said.
The .bid for the section where ground will ,be
broken was awarded to Kokoslng Construction
Co, 'of Fredericktown., It is 4.(54 miles long, and
there were six bidders on the project. The cost of
this section will be $18.5 mlllloit.
The bid lor the 3.12 mile section between
Rodney Pike and State Route 160 has been
awarded to Shelly Co. of Thornville at a cost of
$14.4 million. Ther~ were six bidders for this
section.

'

authority

' ') SUPER HANGERS
.LTI-HOOI
CLOSO HANGERS

announced by celeste on avisit here last October,
Long said a better lime to be In Gallipolis would be
1990,..when ground was being broken.
Now, that wish Is a reality .
Long said Friday afternoon that he was pleased
to.see the proj~t begin, and praised the state and
local officials,who pUt so much effort Into making
.
.
the re.locatlon a reality. ,
''This Is a visible, tangible thing In terms ol ihe
project," Abel said late Friday of ·the ..
gtoundbreaking.
.
, "When the earth moves and people begin
working, It brings the project home," she said.
Tom Wiseman, president of the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce, was happy for the many
people who worked on the project during the past

Early Ohio 'Earth Day' activist
Appleseed plantings good example .

CIC meeting
.... features

$799 . .

FURNITURE
CO
..
.
.

.,

Beat the Berad: ·
No hotels are
barred these days...B7 ·

AI%· ;

teena&amp;'en.

It nme ui row

/··

.

E.

SATURDAY, APRIL 21st

Reds

udge signs
Day

Girls School, Board of Mental •
Retardation, Boys' Vlllap, •
Cancer Fund; Crippled Children, :
the God. 'Flaa and Country FuniS, •
the Heart Fund, Muacular DI.S· •
trophy Fund, the Kidney Fulld, ':.
the Speech and Hearlnll Founda- :
Uon and Its recreatiOn .fund, •
Leukemia SoCiety, an~ the
.helmer&amp; Fund.
.
•
•
In addition lhellf'ouplf!iltS25 to ; .
Rosemont Sctiool'ln Col~'1u•· a :
facility for · unwed preanallt •

.

Area
deaths

50 cents

su,iday

PHARMACY'S"··

LOT SA·LE

ouve.·.. .

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..

~

1980 Chevy. Citation ••••••••••••••• S495

Bush -plays . . the waiting_game · .

..1~9"6111,1rd. Ford'
Bronco ••••••••~••••••••••• S8954-Wh. Drive.

ISLAMORADA, Fla. (UP!) The patient pursuit of tarpon and
boneflsh was theorderoftheday .
But It was a far different walling
game that President Bush played
saturday while skimming across
the flats of Florida Bay with
fishing buddies In tow.
The situation In Lithuania •d
the prospect of seeing an Amerl·

Auto., V-8.

D..

.,

Shater Repair Clinic ~ All Bran-s ·
'

$395 .'

Included: Cleaning

Sana~

Dar Senice
All Parts Extra

OUR
CARING STAFF·
MAKES THE
DIFFERENCE ~

What sets us apart
is the Caring and.
dedication of every
single member.of
our staff.
· You're invited to stop
in anytime to o~e
th~ exceptional
people at work. ask
questions of .
them and our
residents, and
discover for ·
yourself the
vezy best in
nursing
home care.

448-7ll2

'

'

Oil!n&amp; 1

.

AdJUSting! _

Greasing

CAR DESTROYED- This 1979 Ford Pinto was
· destroyed by fire Friday evening around 7 p..m.
The vehicle had just been purchased Frl!lay by
Gary lljsell and had ao Insurance. The Pomeroy

TUESDAY, APRIL 24th
4:00 'til 7:00
p.m.
.

·stealt~ ·fight~r
NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE,
Nev.IUP,I} -:fwoF-117Astealth
fighters made. their public debut
,Saturday, swooping, soaring and
tipping their bat·llke wings in a
., brief 11y-by dempnstrallon that
provided an unprecedented look
at one of the nation's best kept
·secrets. ,
The two fighters took off from
. their remote base In central
Nevada and landed shortly after
' 9 a.m. PDT at Nellis Air Force,
about 140 mites away, after
circling · the landing area ln.

RAZORS lAY BE DROPPED OFF 011 IDYIICE · · .

MANY UNADVERTISED .
ITEMS PRICED AS
LOW AS

·auANTIT
:· AlE .

50~/o OFF
Prices
Good At
Middleport
Store Only

716 North.
Second,,...:
Middleport
992-6421 .
)

...

weeken~

Bush .acted obllvlo~s to crisis
as he soaked In the sun and sea
breezes of the Florida Keys,
hoping his well· known love of the
outdoors will underscore lils
(See BUSH, on All}

makes public ·debut

formation above sever.al thou-,
sand Invited (liles1s.
Existence of the $106 mil.llon
aircraft was ·not acknowledged
by the Air Force until 17 months
ago - ' five years after It had
become part of the U.S, military
arsenal.
The black, single·seat war
machine flew only night sorties
from Its base at the Tonopah Test
Range air field until November
1988 when the Air Force ·acknowl·
edged Its existence In order to
pave the way for daytime

maneuvers.
Saturday was . the jl'eneral
public's first oppor!imlty for a
close encounter with the·sinister
looking lighters.
The Air Force, braced for a
crowd of 1!10,000 curious citizens
at a base open house Saturday
afternoon, gave several thou·
· sand Invited visitors and the
news media a sneak morning
preview and briefing.
.
No one was allowed nearer
than 20 feet of the highly
'
(See STEALTH. on .\!)

.~

•

FINDLAY, Ohio !UPI) - A
. detective Investigating the dlsap' pearance of a 3-week·okl baby
said In an affidavit he believes
the lnfan t's remains wlll be found
at ·One of two pallet businesses
operated by a murder 1uspect.
Infant Cbrlstopller Huffman

beachfront resort hotel, awaiting •
developments that could shatter
the serenity of his vacation

Flre Department responded to the scene but the
vehlele had already become · fully -Involved.
(Time&amp;'Sentlnel photo by Dave Harris.)

l)etective believes baby's remains
at .pallet company
.will be -located
.
.

can hostage freed In Lebanon
created an undercurrent of anx·
lous anUclpation as Bush went
about a long-planned weekend of
sportflshlng. .
..
As the angler In chief showed
off his stuff for an ,upcoming
' 'American Sportsman'' televl·
slon special, the rest of his large
traveling party lolled about at a

has been missing since the April
11 ~laying of his mother, Michelle
Huffman of Fostoria. Her body
was found near Chillicothe.
One of two affidavits filed In
Findlay Municipal Court Friday
In support of a search warrant
Indicated that one of the sus·

pects, Christopher Doyle of Fos·
torla, was the baby'a father.
That Information was provided
by the victim's friend, Lucinda
Leisure, Lel•ure told poUce she ·
visited Huffman In ber Fostoria
residence about ~ p.m., several
· (See DETECTIVB, OD .U)

SD£P BARN GBOUNDBBEAJUNG - The

GallaCoutJApicullaraiSoele&amp;ybaa~mbarked

oa a SUI,. ., llve-,ear plan 1R whlcb co•lncllon
ol a aew a11aep barn .. tile flnl pbMe. Skeep were
prevlouflb' llo-d wllll llop under the barn
cllreeii,J beiiiDII &amp;be lltow areDL The GaiUpoll.s
Ellil Lldp No.
made an laltlal doatloa of
11,100 for 111e llan, 1o be ooMiracted b)' Carter a
Evans Co•&amp;nldlell of GaiUpoll.s and eetlma&amp;ed to

m

bJ Jane. Sltowa a&amp; Su. .ay'a ll'OWIII·
brealdq are (J...BI board memben Davld
Grabam and Bob Boward, Sltlp Meado,._, Dlil
Lodp rep-la&amp;l¥e; Gary Fellue. Galla
Cou&amp;, Fair Board presldeal; S&amp;eve M.-,
Carter A Ev-l Oily Roailb, Fair Boar4 ¥Ice
prealdeat; Pul Shoemaker,......,.._.. line• tor; and bollrd memben Eu1- BWoU 111111
. ,r»*ella .lealdD&amp;. ( TIID8-Senilael pllota)
•
be buUt

..

.

,
.

,
.
·

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