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                  <text>•

Tueed.Y. May 1•.1990

Page 10 The Deily Sentinel

r---Local news briefs.. ~--Continued from page 1
sharecropper Is eligible to run for the committee seat and to
vote tn the election. A· spouse of an eligible farmer also Is
considered to be a farmer for those purposes.
Nominating petitions, which must be signed by the nominee
and two eligible farmer voters, and other Information can be
oll,talned at the FmHA county office at 200 E. Second St.,
POmeroy, Urwin said.
FmHA county committees perform a variety of dudes,
Including decisions on applicants' eligibility for farm loans.
Two committee members are elected bY county lar111ers and
the third Is appointed by FmHA.

Cooler temperatures, rain arrive in Ohio

By \Jailed Presa ln't eraatlonal
·lwtth the arrival of the month of
May Tuesday, cooler weather
has arrived In Ohio.
'
May !, 'In a.ddltlon to being
Mayday, the international
workers' bollday, Is also what 's
known as a tross Quarter Day,
~rking the midpoint bet)ll'een
the spring equinox and the
summer solstice.
If tbe second half of spring 1990
Is anything Ilk~ the first half, the
Buckeye State Is In for lhterest·
The State School Foundation Subsidy payment to Meigs
lng times . .
County for April totaled $'187,690,57, according.to a report from
After six weekS of record lows
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferg11son. .
' '.
and record' hlgll&amp;, the first day of
According to the report Eastern Local SChool District
~Jejl to see
May was
received $152,859.64 In basic and transportation allowances with
seasonal temperatures, although
$5,488 of that amount going Into the school employees
they' will seem -cool compared
retirement fund and $17,080 Into !he state teachers fund, leaving
with the past 10 days.
a net paymeft to the school dlst:r.IC)t of $130,291.64. '
A cold front moved· through
Meigs Local School Dlstr.tct reCI11V.e4 a total of $433,090.34less
Ohio Monday night, .and highs
deductions of $14,887 for school .employees retirem~t and
Tuesday were to be mostly In the
$23,628 for ~tate teachers retirement with aunet 't)ayment to the
605, 10 to 15 degrees lower than
schoo1 district of $364,516.34.
Mol!daY.'s lllg)ls. Showers and .
In the · Southern Local School District the total ap1ount
thunderstorms developed over
received was $155,030.50 with $7,114 gotng Into .the school · ·. parts of southern Ohio overnight
employees rellr~,&gt;ment and $23,628 . In the state teac!lers ' · antHhe showers were expected to
retlrementleavlng a net payment to the dlstrlct of $124,308.50.
continue lntermlt.tently In south·
. The Meigs County Board received a total payment of $46,690.
.ern Ohio as the cold front stalls to
the south of the Ohio river.
Some showers were possible liS
far 'norlil as central OhiO, but
high pressure bullC!lng over the
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Me41cal Service
Great
Lakes was expected to be
responded to nine cails for assistance on Monday.
enoueh
to keep the northern
At 12:48 a.m. the Scipio Fire Department was called to
counties
dry.
Pagetown for a camper fire. The camper was ownoo by Mike
flowever, as the high moves
Norris.
'
east
Of the state late Tuesday
The 'Rutland unit, at 3:29 ·a.m. went to Meigs Mine No.2 for
moisture, may .move over
night,
David Hartley who was tran.s(lorted to O'Bieness Hospital.
At 8: 43 a.m. the Middleport unit responded tc&gt;a call on Pearl .
Street for Mary Ann VanCooney who was taken to Holzer
·
.·
· . ·. :' · · ·
.·
··
Medical Center;
The Rutland unit, a1 '!0:44 a .m., was called to !Jeech'GI'ove
Rmld for JunlceAdains who was transportld to'PleasantValley
Hospital, and at 3: 14 p.m. the unit went to Hysell Run Road for
Dwight Hysell Who was taken to Holzer.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The U.S.
At 6:10p.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Amerleare for
Bertha Baker who was transported to Veterans Memorial
manuf9cturtng economy showed
··
:
renewei!:strength In April, end·Hospital.
The Tuppers Plains unit, at 7: 37 p.m. responde4 to a call in
Ing an ll·month decline, the
Reedsville for Connie Swagger! who was tr~lisported to
National Association of PurchasVeterans.
_,.
Ing Management · reported
The Racine unit went to Bashan at 8: 19 p.m. for Shirley
Tuesday.
·
Friend whO was taken to Holzer. ..
Th!_! Purcb,aslng Managers·
. Finally. 'a t .8:52 p.m. the Pomeroy unit .~as called to Meigs
Index rose to 50.2 percent In
. ~lgh School for Ryan Lemley whO was t~nsporte~ to !Jolzer . .
APJ'U,. up from 48·.8 percent In
March.
·
~ reading; below 50 general·ty
Indicates the'man!dacturlng seg.
ment
of the ~norny Is· expe.
•
rleacthg a decline In growth. A
reading above 50 usually Indicates' that the manufacturing

School funds distributed ··

'

Squaps make 9 Tuesday nlns

his. plans Wedne$day
l

district's congressman and his
. MIDDLETOWN, Ohio !UPI)
- Rep. Donald Lukens, whOse ethics for registering as a lobbychances for re-election have been lst.during his years aw11y from
'
·
crippled by his coqvh;tlon fdr • politics.
having self with a teenage girl, Is
Tbe two are the leadll)g Repubexpected to make an announcE!' 'lleans In, the lour·way May 8
prlmar-yracethat also Includes a
met~i; on · his polltlca.t futUre
relative unknown; Morton'Meler.
Wooqesdar.
. · : · . ·,
Lukens has decllne4 to an·
Press secretary Ttacey St.
Pierre said ·Lukens, I!.·Ohlo, will nouuce il!s plans until ,!In appeals
announce his plans Wedn'esday,: eolirt ro~e~. on his conviction· for
but said Othlll' detatis are not lll!.t,' contributing tq the unruliness of
Lukens was to participate In a minor for biB reiatlonshlp with
his first candidate debate In the .a 16-year.olil girl.
8th Congressional District TuesLukens has sex with the glrlln ·
day night, but declde4 not. to his Columbus apartment In N&lt;r
attend.
vember · 1988. At his trial last
Bill Jarrell, Lukens' chief of year, Lukens never testified and
staff, said Lukens will fly back to his lawyer did not present any
Washington to vote on budget witnesses In his defense.
FoUowlng the conviction, ~
legislation.
·'There Is very good reason for publican Party leaders dehim not to be there," Jarrell said. manded he resign, but·Lukens
.
''Time and time again when I . refused·.
meet with my constituents, ~ ·
Polls suggest Boehner and ,
Lukens was quote4 as saying In a
Kindness are leading In th~' -th .
wrt tten release, "they tell me the .Dis trlct race. ln recent months, .
deficit Is the most pressing Issue Lukens has beep waging a quiet
confronting this country."
campaign. to retain his seat,
St. Pierre said, "In light of the returning to the southwest Ohio
every ·weekend •to meet
negative campaigns . being district
with constituents.
· ·
launched by other candidates,
his failure to vote on the budget
would have been the center of . r ___ ..l!-ml8·__ _.
their negative attacks."
'-lll!1e UJII
tM:U
I
State Rep. John Boehner, RIn the Meigs County Court of
Wes t Chester, has ·aired televl·
slon ads that attack fellow Common .Pleas, the case of ·•
Republican Tom Kindness, cit- Margaret Ellen Johnson· versus
Ing Kindness' voting record 'C hester ~ohnson has been
·
during . his 12 years as the dismissed.

_ _. Area

deaths-----~

II and a retired carpenter.
Funeral services were held
· Joseph A. '·scrappy" Cape· Monday, April 23 at the Shoppen·
hart ,.- 77, of Louisville, Ky .. dlro horst a,nd Ullderwood Funeral
Thursday, April 19, .1990 In St. Home In L~ulsvllle.
Anthony Center·in Louisville, Ky. •' ,.,llllrtal . was In Evergreen
He· was born March 2, 1913:in ~ •.Cem"t~my.
· .
· New Haven, W.Va., son of the •·m.Attendlng the service was a
tate Thomas and Ella Ord daugl;tter, Betty L. Moore of Rio ·
Capehart.
Grande.
He was a Veteran of World War

j08eph Capehart

ILGARD plans five workshops ·

Stocks
.
..
Dally stock prices
(Aa of 11:30 a.m.) ·
Bryce
Mtli'k'Smlth
of
Ellis
-. ~ewl
.,, I

m.,.-.and

Am El~trlc Power .... , ........ 29%
AT&amp;'I\ ................. : .......... .... 4011.
Ashland Oil ... : .................... 34¥.,
Bob .E .vans ............... ...... ..... 12\4
Charming ShOppes ... ,.............9
City Holding Co... ...... .........17¥.,
Federal Mogul... ........ : .... .... 18%
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................35¥.,
He~k's ......... .:............ .......... 2%
Key Centurion . ............... .... 14%
Lands' End ......................... l6%
Limited lilc. •........................ 40
Multimedia. Inc ................... 78¥.,
Rax Restaurants .................. 2¥.,
Robbins. &amp; Myers ................. 16
ShQneY,'s Inc ............. ,........ .13%
Star Bank ...... :..................... 20
Wendy's lnt'l ................. : .... .4')8
Worthington Ind .................. 21%
(Wendy's ill ex dl\'ldend today)

_,
·
Revival will he held at the
Pomeroy Nazarene Church Wed·
nesday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly ~IIi J. ~llm~r Lambert.
Sunday mor.nlng worship Is at
10:30 a.m, and evening services
are at ·6 p.m.
"'
Dr. Lambert Is the former
dlstrlc!, superintendent of the
Nazarene ch_urch for the Central
Ohio District. ·
There will be special singing
and Rev. Glenn McClung Invites
the public. · ·
·
Clu• play
The Meigs Junior High School
will present "Trial of Arilanda
Marie Locks" on May.J7 at 7p.m.
Admission Is .50 cents and the

WOOD GROUP

$]401

The Institute for Local Govern~ They will be held on the Belmont,
ment Administration and Rural Zanesville and Chillicothe caJ;n·
Development Is a non·prollt puses and. are designe4 for local
publiC service and applie4 . re- government officials.
sear~h Institute at Ohio Unlver·
The series Included computer
slty that provides local govern· applications on the Belmont
men t s and non - profIt campus. They are Introduction to
organizations with assistance In m~rocomputers, ·May ~. In trothe areas of public adrillnlstra· duclng of database systems,
tlon, community dev!!lopment Friday, May 11, and Introduction ·
and data-geographlc -~ lnforma· to spreadsheet analys.ls, Friday,
tlon systems.
·
Jul)e 25.
·
Five workshops have been
Environmental managements
scheduled by ILGARD for May workshops on managing conand June, as J1 part of a training filets over landfill siting will be
and technic'! assistance pr~ of!ere4 on Friday, May 11 at the.
· jected fu~\ by · the W. K. Zanesville branch, and on Frl·
Kellogg Fciulid11_tlon ot Battle . day 1 June 22 tit the q.mtcothe ·
Cree~.Michlgan, and the Ohio . branch.
·
Runi1 . Universities Program.

1

I'll WBI

4
.... $.9.95
9 7.

534

So•lh Central Ohio
"'The 50.2 percent slgnaloo an
Occasional·
rain and a chance
expansion In the manufacturing
economy, ending a string of 11 of thunderstorms T.uesday night
consecutive months of decline and Wednesday. Lows Tuesday
which slowed the entire econ· night will be hear 50, with highs
omy,:• $aid Robert J. Bretz, Wednesday near 60. Chance of
· chairman of the group of . pur· rain Is 90 percent Tuesday night
.
chasing executives and director. and Wednesday.
·
·
Extended
Forecast'
of materials management at
Pitney Bowes Inc.

'

"

I

Tbe Index last dropped below a
reading oi 50 In May 1989, when It ·
stood at 49.8·percent.
'
"The rebound should be suffl·
clent to sustain solid production
growth for several months and
buoy the endre economy over the
ba!llnce of the second quarter,"
Bretz adde4.

who's been paying attention
should know ~elebrezze's posllion on Is abortion. A Roman
Catholic, he switched from opposing abortion to giving women
a choiCe last December, saying
government should not prohibit
women from seeking abortions, .
Making a major contribution to although he still personally op- .
the overall Index was the New poses the procooure.
,
· Export Orders Index which' rose
Celebrezze, a graduate of the
to 60.5 percent In April, a full U.S. Navat Academy, GP9rge
point higher than In !vlarch and Washington University · and
the highest reading since Sep- Cleveland State University Law
tember 1989.
School, served four years In the
The report Is based on data Ohio Senate before being elected
compUed from purchasing exec· secretary of state In 1978. ·
u lives at more than 300
He was elected attorney gencorporations.
era lin 1982 ahd was re-elected In
1986. He claims to have used the
office to help consumers retrieve
$8.3 m!Uion In refunds and
contract cancellations and seized
more than $433 million In narcot·
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Har,ry tcs slnce19831n cooperation with
Calaway, Reoosvllle; Bertha local law enforcement agents.
Baker, Pomeroy; and Joyce
Celebrezze also negotiated settlements with the fooeralgovern·
Grady, Racine.
Monday discharges - Ger- ment for the cleanup of hazardtrude Neece, Francis Broderick, ous waste at facilities near
Edna Henry, and Cor~ Webb.
Fernald and Piketon, and forced
more than 150 companies to pay
$20 million for the cleanup of
Chem-Dyne hazardous waste site
play will be held at the school.
In southwestern Ohio..
On honor roll
Branst9QI, 53,ls a grain farmer
Three Meigs, County students from Utica, Licking County, who
were listed on the honor roll for has been In the General Assem·
the winter quarter at Ohio State bly since 1975.
.
University. They ~. were Jared
Brans tool has a populist appeal
Andrew Sheets, Pomeroy; Carol but a liberal ouilook on many
Lynn Fisher, Racine, and David social issues, particularly those
.Eugene Rice, Ree4svllle. To be relating to working ~pie and
listed on the honor roll they the less fortunate members of
achieved a 3.5 grade average and society.
were enrolled for at least 12.
He sponsoroo the state's law
cre41t hours.
providing coUectlve bargaining
_
for public employees, and has
Averlon ~raduates
Marla Cristina Averlon of taken a special interest In agrlPomeroy was one of 4,863 stu· culture legislation and environ·
dents to receive ·degrees at the . mental protection.
Ohio State University's winter
Celebrezze said Branstool will
quarter commencement exer- serve as the governor's link with
clses In St. John Arena.
the Legtslat'!fe and will advise

.•

. ..

'

..... ,,"· ...

.

'

{

Hospital ·news

-·' ·~

•
. Vol.40, No.249
Copyrighted 1990

~....toWilhWIIi"'

MA.IC CHEF:
FROST FREE
REFRIGERATOR
14

An explosion and fire In the
basement of the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Sampson Hall, Bridgeman
St., Syracuse, early 1 Tuesday
evening resulted In moderate
damage to the· sfructllre and
minor Injury to Hall.

S99
614·446-3

Mondey t1wu
latunl8y

lim 'tllpm
12tol

Su~h¥

EXPLOSION SCENE - Ther~ was moderate
damage to the h!lme of Mr. and 'Mrs. Samp8on
. Hall when an explosion and fire occurred .tn the

basement of 't heir home early Tuesday evening.
. 'Firemen from both SyracuSe and Racine were.on
the scene. ;
-Pilot~ by Katie Crow

Meigs r~sidents to vote on 1.5 mill
operating.
··Carleton School
. ]ery for
.

continued from page 1

MONDAY ·THRU FRIDAY
1:00 p.m. Until ??
SATURDAY --·24 Hours

•

,.

main floor of the home and there
was some structura l damage. Jt
was reported that there Is insu·
ranee On the hOUSI' but none On
thi' ·COntents. The origin of the
explosion has not been deter·
mined, accogdlng to the report.
Besides the 23 Syracuse firemen on the scene. Racine was
c.alled II) to assist with equipment
·
and 10 fire111en.

was seen in Rutland and had entering the Meigs County resl ·
turned onto New Lima Road.
dence. stated Sheriff Souls by.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
The report stated that due to
another call was received that , the fact the pair was appre·
the vehicle had pulled Into the · hended in a county not adjacent
alley behind the Rutland Video ' to the county of want.•..they were
Shop and had changed a flat ·tire. lodged in theJacksonCounty.Jal,l
Another call was received that. pending a hearing. T.he hearing
the vehicle wa s seen headed west was held Tuesday morning and
on Route 124 towards Langsville. the pa ir was released to Meigs
The Vinton County sheriff and County officials.
Jackson County sheriff were then
Waugh is being held in thl'
notified.
Meigs County Jail and Krus·
The report stated that later In kamp Is being held In the Athens
the evening, the Wellston Police Mental Health Ceriter . Both ·
located the vehicle parked on the subjects will face aggravated
street. Sheriff Souls by, deputies burglary charges in Meigs
rylark Boyd, John Spires, and County Court.
Charles Rife , along with Jackson
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
Cg~nt:r .~d!'l!!!!!es ,;md .)Veils ton _ .agent..lolut Perr..1 ol the Bure au
Pollee 1ocated the subjects at
ol Criminal Investigation and
their residence.
r'dentlflcilllon processed the
, Follo.wlngquestlonlng, the pair scene eatly this morning and
admitted to the burglary as well gathered evidence 10 be used In
as admitting to a burglary in
the prosecution of the case..
Vinton County shortly before

0

AWARDED TROPHY -

Proudly dlllplaylng

the trophy and plaque which the Meigs High

.School Band won In the All American Music
Festival at Orlando, Fla. Saturday are these band
students, l.ett. to right, front, Michelle Scott,

.'
l

\

'

\
J

'

MNNBRI - Raelltl
B7..u. left. ...,..... aa -Uenl, IIDd leei!J

Ae..._,
Day lleM

Wllllliunl. a111111rler, for lllelr eatrlaln &amp;he Olllo
ol 8eleace'1 4IDd ..... Slate Selence
receat)J a&amp; Obll Wealeyaa Ualvenlty.
~ project of llpell, . claagltler 4)1 Baa4y aad
Allil'rea llyilllll, Rutlaad, waa entitled "How to Do

•

Megan Bariela, Brooke Coat•, Derek MIDer, and
Beth Clark; Sj!cond row, IJnda Chapman, Sharla
Cooper, Kevin Taylor holdlnr; the plaque, Paul
ShBI'p, Nathi!D Brown, and Abby Blake, and third
row, Bobby Vance, Dean Walton, Rliety Ed·
!llOnds,, and Miranda Nlcholflon.

Democrats expectirig.spirited
contest for ·attomey general

j.

SUNDAY __;. 1:00 p.m.· Until ??
From Racine, Juat pMt louthem High School tllke Co.
Rd . 28 (8elhan Rold). Exactly .a- mllee to Twp. Rd. 1'09
(Citrmel Rold). Watch for llgn, turn left, go 1 mlle.

Thomas E . Waugh, 23, and
Larry G, Kruskamp. Jr., 24,
Wellston, were arrested Monday
evening and charged with aggra vated burglary of a residence on
Strongs Run Road near the
Vinton County line. accordil)g to
Meigs County Sheriff Jarpes M.
Soulsby.
According to the report , the
Vinton County Sheriff's Depart ·
ment notified th e Meigs County
department that they had just
received a call from Mary
Pennington. Route 1, Vinton. She
·s tated that two s'u spects were
caught breaking into her father's
house.
· Word was later received tl!at
the pair were traveling In a1tan
Chevet.te on ·Rouie 325 witb a flat ·
tire .. Following the braadcas t of
.. the ,Information on the police ,
,. . radio,' the department began
receiving calls that the vehicle

.
Whe~ Meigs County voters go
r.e medlatlng the effects of ltlrth because during the first quarter
to the polls on Tuesday one of defect~. according to Lee We4e· of a new year the MR/ DD .Board
'
'superintendent, He ex· -operates on funds carried over
. several tax. l~sues they will meyer,
- declde"o!T ts-rthe-new-three Year plal,ned that many of tlil' inter· lrom tlie': l!rev'l'o us year. Meigs
1.5 !Dill QPeratlng levy for lhe :ventlon progr.ains lnclu~e Cou!lty William Wickline advises
C·aqeton School , Meigs educating parents. langua1;e de· that settlement work must ,lie
· Industries.
•·
Velopment for chlldr,ell arid use of comple'led before money. can be
That levy, If passed. will adaptive eq\llpment . He said that
released' to schools. counly agen·
generate approximately $313,000 at Car lei on School, ·basic skills, cles, . townships, '• and ·
in additional monPy fo'r ge~teral like eating or communication as corporations.
'
operating expenses .
Another
r!'ason
for
placing
the
well as specialized therapy are
levy on the May ballot, according
In talking about the levy, Nora taught.
Rice, a member of the Meigs
He said that the use of adap; ive to Wedemeyer, is because of the
· County Mental Retardation- equipment and specialized thera·
s tate proposed tax equalization
. Developmental Dtsablllt.les pies require more. monev . "It
program . He says that all coun·
Board, said that mental retarda- would be poor management on ties will haye to operate at an
tion and (\evelopmental disabili- my part and the Board to sav we effective yield of two mills to be
ties Impact ·II! some way on the · are committed to providing the eligible to participate. The Meigs
Jives of more than IQ ~rcent of best services possible and then
MR/ DD's current levy has· an ·
the total popuiation. · .,.
not seek to access all possible effective yjeld of 1.22 mills and
''It's true, mental retardation funding sources needed to oper- continues to decline annually, the
doesn't affect everyone directly,. ate those programs. We are
superintendent · said. lJ'he 1.5
but if• you· have a child with a giving ihe v9ters the opportunity
mills would ensure that Meigs
developmental disability, the fo· to tell us 1\'hat level they want to .
;~qu~~:~st o~~~t:~! :~n~~f.~'),~e~
cus of your entire world Is on fund the county's program; "
helping your children to have the Wedemeyer said.
state tax equallzatlol) program.
same opportunities as oth~r
· Wedemeyer said that Meigs
The superintendent said' that
children," she stated.
Industries and Carleton School
currently local Income gener·
: Carll'ton SchOol provides edu· a ted through levy funds is a bou t
have not asked for money since
catio'n and training through early 25 percent of the total operating
1982, that the money has been
used efficiently. and that the
childhood programs, birth to age budget .. He contends that the
five, and sc.hool age programs, requested three year LS mill levy
agency has been aggressive In '·
six to 22 .. with Meigs Industries Is needed to maintain an 'ade·
seeking Income through grants
and other eligibility programs. ·
helping adults become contrlbut· quatennanclal base for opera!·
·
He listed programs which have
ing members of society through - lng expenses.
been exoanded and developed to
tralnlrig and job opportunities.
Wedemeyer says that paf( of
Continued on page 12
, Ea'r~y Intervention Is critical to the
result

(l'll .leave the Light On)
LARRY D. CIRCLE
47966 CARMEL ROAD. RACINE. ·OHIO
.
949-2021 .

home when the explosion OC'
curred . He was in the basement
at the time and received 'nltnor
burns. The Syracuse unit of the
Emergency Medical Service
transported him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he.was
treated and released.
Besides the explosion and fire
damage in the basement, the
windows were blown out on the

Wel·lston·pair .·ar-rested IJY ·deputies on burglary charges

BUSINESS HOURS

GINitr Chriin

lt. ,.,, 5 ....
~· 7 .. c..... '

According to Syracuse Mayor
and Fire Chief Eiier Pickens.
b.oth Mr. and Mrs. Hall were at

CIRCLE'S GREENHO.USES

SJ5 20 w":K $1295 I'EI
PORCH GLIDER
1/2
With Two Matchillg

25 C8ntt

A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

Blast damages home
·~ Syracuse Tuesday

• orraction•

cu. n.

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, May 2. 1990

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Page 3

and Friday, with fair weather on
Saturday. Highs will be In the 60s
Thursday, and ranging trom the
50s to the 60s Friday and
Saturday. Overnight lows will be
In the 40s Thursday and Friday
mornings and l~t the upper 30s .
early Saturday.

him on agri~ultural policy, rural
community Issues and methods
of cieanly burning Ohio coal.
"I believe In democracy," said
Lord. 51, a Georgia native who
grew up In sOuth Carolina. "I
think at lea~t· two candidates
should be. op the ballot· to give
voters a choice."
:l:.ord said unemployment Is
about 35 or 40 percent at 93rd
Street on the East Side of
·cleve'tand where his non·
denominational church Is
located.
.
"That Is Intolerable," he said.
"if we ~an cut unemployment In
half In Ohio, we can cut the drug
problem In,half."
Lord, w)lo began preaching at
age ~5 and who has foundro seven
churches, said as governor he
would .work with Industries to get
·them to expand and bring their
operations. to Ohlo.. He said he
would Institute a public WorkS
program where the 'unemployoo
would clean up Ohio's streams
and rehabilitate neighborhoods.
Private Industry would be
asked to provide on-the-job tralnlng In such trades as carpentry
and electrician. "I would ask
them to loosen up a little bil ," he
said.
·
Lord also said he favors
universal health care Insurance
coverage for all · Ohioans, as
Canada has for Its citizens ..
Parker, 42, emphasizes quality
·education and1avors m~re train·
lng In schools for tho~ who are
not planning to go to coUege.
Urd, whose church .Is a food
and clothing dlstrlbu Uon center
and provides shelter for about 30
homeless people each night,
. wants the ~tate government to
coordinate similar volunteer pro.
grams throlighOut the state.
"We would like to make Ohio
the first state tbat has fed all its
hungry and iound a place for all
It~ ho~!!les~," he said.

Low tonight 55. Chance of
rain 100 percenl. Thunday ,
high In mid 70s. Chance olraln
90 percent.

9105

A chllnce for rain Thursday

G~bernatorial...

I

'

Pick-4

Thursday throogh Saturday

·

· . 4 POSTER
IEDROOM SUITE

PIKE

tn a row

are

r.~~~----,
6 PC • .

Daily Number .
489

•

'

Meigs announcements._____
----•.
Re~\'al slated

third game

northern Ohio. Temperatures temperatures should stlU aver· map, · a cold front was locate4
overnight will fall Into the 40s, ,age from well lnt~ the 50s to from western Pennsylvania
southwest through Tennessee
and showers should continue around 60 degrees.
Into Texas. This front will reach
Tbe
rain
forecast
through
the
over southern Ohio.
the East Coast Tuesday night and
end
of
the
week
should
cause
The Texas low will begin
become
nearly stationary from
widespread
Interruptions
In
field
moving slowly northeast on Wedthe
Mid-At
Jande states to Texas
The
cooler
temperatures
work.
nesday, which will Induce the
by We4nesday morning.
shOuld
not
.cause
too
many
stalled front to the south to begin
A ·large area of high pressure
problems except on Saturday
moving north as a warm front .
was
located over the north
morning,
when
clearing
skies
Moisture will ~ontlnue to Incentral
portion of the country. Its
could
result
In
some
ground-level
crease over the state
center
will · move across the
frost on tender transplants In low
Woonesday.
·
Great
Lakes
Tuesday night and
or fros t-pr.one areas .
.occasional rain 1$ expected
reach
southern
New England by
The slx-toJO·day outook for
over central and southern secWednksday
night.
The front to
Sunday through the folloWing
tions of Ohio We4nesday with a
the
south
will
begin
moving
north
Thursday caiiB for ·c&lt;IOI weather
chance of rain over northern
as
a
warm
front
on
Wednesdayak
to continue, with near:normal
sections. High temperatures on
low prt!Ssure develops overrainfall.
We4nesday will be mostly In the
Texas.
..
I
On
the
early
morning
weather
50s, due to considerable cloud!·
ness and precipitation.
The threat of rain will continue
Ill ohio through Friday as the low
center moves slowly n'ortheas I
through the , Ohio Valley .,
Temi~eratures will r.e maln rela·
lively cool, In the 50s and 60s ,
through the period. Fair weather
Is eX!)eCted to return about
Saturday as . the low finally
moves east or ohio..
··
· Wind speeds well into the teens
will hamper farmers ' spraying
.\ .~
operations even In the dry north.
Conditions will remain good for
anotl;ter day of tillage and plantIng. Soil temperatures at 41nches
under bare ·.ground have been
averaging In the 60s over the past
.'
day or two.
Some cooling may occur as
cloudiness lncreasess but soli
WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will biankei.
most of the SQuthern Plains, portions of the Ohio River Valley and
the Central Appalachian region.'Snow will continue to linger over·
higher e)evallilns of th\l Colorado ancl M~tnlan!' Rockies while 11ery
dry conditions will contlnutfto plague the west coast. Gusty Winds
In ·~tore for the New England s&amp;ales, and dry !festerly winds
will likely prod•ce dust storms In West Texas and Eastern New
Mexico.
pardon of the economy Is
expanding.
------Weather----~

Purchasing ·managers
index .climbs. in April .

Lukens io announce

Ohio Lottery

Braves win

'

I

I)

political name and lacking
times the combined total of his
· opponents, and who has· the
qualifications.
The winner will face Republl· endorsement of the Ohio Demo. COLUMBUS - The Dem~ can state Sen. Paul Pfeifer ~f cratlc Party. He has emphasized
Bucyrus In the fall. Pfeifer has no · flghttnk drugs, cr.ttne and corrupcratlc contest for Ohio attorn~:;
prtmary opposition.
lion, and pr,otectln$ consumers
general Is easily the mo~t excltPhilOmena. 42, positions him·· and the ~nvlronment.
...
. lng statewide race of the primary
sell
as
·a
"law
and
order'~
.
.Br.
o
wn,
67
was
the
assl~tant
1
season. ·
Seeking the state's top legal job candidate and claims he Is the disciplinary counsellor the Oblo
only one with experience on the Supreme Court Iinder tormer
are Mahonlng County J;?rosecutor
.
firing
line of prosecu tlng Chief JusUce Frank Celebrezze.
James Phllomen
Shaker
crlmiiU!Is.
He also proposes to attac\&lt; the
Heights attorney Frederick Mid43,
a
black
man,
Is
a
drug problem, fight governmeat
Middleton,
dleton, ·s tate Sen. Lee Fisher of
former
assistant
law
director
corruption
and overhaul the
Shaker lfeighhl, and Cleveland
and
prosecutor
for
Eaat•
Clev~
patronage
system
In th'e attorney
attol'ill,r 'Charletl Brown. · •
land
wllo
prop
n
brlnlln&amp;
the
general'
s
office.
~ -~l.'l:uJe4 .nsher ()f
"I'm the only prosecutor In the
trytiwl@duy tbenom~on wtth attorney aeneral'a office Into the
war
011
drup.
race,"
said Philomena. "I'm tile
M expenttture
almo~ ·
Flsber,
38,
la:
a
10-year
state
most
conservative
one In the
SsiJII,OOO. , Mer has acculftd '
leilslator
wbo
bas
spent
six
..
continued
on
page
6
'Browl! of tr#•U,II on his common
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

aGWb

o•

"

"-~~ -· . ~......J,;...,..,_,-----"-- ---~~-~----~.:------"-

�•
.,

Pom•oy

,,

{

I

I -

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON- A few voices of reason and respanslbillt y were
heard last week when the House took up the resolution declaring
support for Jerusalem's status as capital of Isra el, but they were
overwhelmed by the majority's Inclination to act like a herd of sheep.
Never mind that they had been warned of the trouble the resolution
already was causing In ihe Middle East. The House would not be
denied Its,opportunity to meddle.
·
The Senate, withOut paying a lot of attention to what it was doing,
adopted a similar resolution. In March . Shortly afterward, Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole made a quick tour of the Middle Eas t
where he was surprised to find how angry the Arabs were aboui the
resolution.
When he returned, Dole made the remarkable admission that he
had been wrong to support the resolution and he urged the Senate to
more carefully consider Its actions in the future.
,
The House was well aware of the controversy that swirled around
the resolution and the warnings about the impact it could have on
Mideast peace efforts. The leadership could have discretely shelved
the resolution, as Is done with so many other measures , but Instead it
was brought up for a vote.
During debate on the resolution, a few members tried to make the
House face the reality of what It was doing.
·
Rep, David Obey, D-Wis., wJto personally supports Jerusalem as
the eapltal, said the House shoUld be quiet on the issue ..
''We are not always required to lnsltutionally and collectively voice ·
every opinion we have ..•especially when the voicing oft hat opinion-at
an inopportune moment can do more harm than good."
"No one's Interest IS served by unnecessarily inflaming the
dialogue at this moment, not Israel's, not America's, not anyone
else's," Obey said.
Rep. David llonloi", D-Mich., warned that the resolution was
"untimely" and "wfll upset an already precarious situation in the
Middle East."
And he noted the measure came up amid reports that the Israeli
government, contrary to Its pledges, was secretly aiding settiemen ts
In the Christian sector ol Jerusalem. ·
"Given the recent events In Jerusalem, this resolution will be seen
... as ~n affront to the Ata,b community .... It will undermine. the
' efforts of those In the A.fllb comm\llilty who are Iryirig so hard to build ·
.SI!I!PQrt Uor l.lJi, l!!.!!lce J!roposals),' ' Bon!or said.
.
' House RepubliCan leader Robert Michel of ltllnois a1so said !twa); a
mistake to bring up the resolution.'
·
' '
Unfortunately, Michel could not bring himself to vote against the
measure, but he conceded that "ff we really want to help Israel, and
help the cause of peace In the Middle East, this is not a particularly
good way to go about It."
Passage of the resolution was not In doubt, however, and it was
adopted on a vote of 378-34.
The response was Immediate in the Middle East where warnings
were Issued by Islamic leaders that the resolution could endanger the
'hoPed-for release ·0r American hostages.
At tbe White House, presidential spokesman Martin Fitzwater
warned of "unintended consequences"of such resolutions and said
· Congress "needs to consider their resolutions more seriously than In
..
·
•
the past."
House rules provide generous opportunities for members to
express their opinions- one-minute speeches at the start of the day.
hour-long speeches at theel)d, and all on television for viewers back In
the home district.
But that Is not enough and the lawmakers Insists on adopting
resoluUons telling other people and governments what to do. Such
measures rarely offer constructive proposals for solving interna:
flonal problems. More often than not they justaggravateand alienate
one or more of the parties Involved.
'

Jack AndersOn &amp; Dale VanAtta

•
Attorney General Richard Today, Aprtl 25, . the Senate
Thornburgh wants to be the only Committee on Government Af.
cop In town. .
.
fairs chaired by Sen. JohnGierm,
The consequenc(,! Is that leads D·Ohlo, Is scheduled to hold a
wfll be abandoned and lnvestlga- hearing. Expect to see a long line
tlonls wllli growh ~d~ndO::le ~f of Inspectors general seeking
neg ect. n t e a r
par · help.
.
~~nt al':;'e,d investlgat~rs ~~
Until this point, they have
ail to a an on more t an • . grumbled quietly and privately
lea s.
,
. about the Justice. Department's
't'he developments haven t es- limited vlew·ofthelrmlssion. '
the notice of

4 Door, Air. AM-FM Stereo.
Automatic transmission.

LESS THAN 9,000 ACTUAL MILES!

DOUBLE PLA-Y ATTEMPT FAIL'! - San
Francisco.Giant, Ernest 'Riles;ts
unsuccessful. in
.

PROM

,'

Following tradition, Charlene and Bob Hoeflich will
again be at the Auditorium of Pomeroy Village Hall from 4 to
9 p.m. Saturday evening to do photographs of Prpm couples
and sing les. Photos- in Full Color, of course- are done before an attractive prom type setting ..
Once again, we will offer sets of S6 each with each set to
include two 5xTs; delivered in folders, and four wallets.
No appoiQtment is necessary .. - Just drop by as always
when it's convenient for you

Automatic, V-8 engine. Locking
Differential.

LOW-MILEAGE TRUCK

SEE YOU SATURDAY - WE APPRECIATE
YOUR SUPPORT!

•

THE
PHOTO .PLACE
Pomeroy

1987 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

'

Power Locks, ~plit Seats, Tilt
Wheel, Cruise, Cassette

. A CLEAN CAR

suppo~t

v

for levy ,,
Dear Edltor:
I IJ1U1glne there are alot of
~pie out there that are like I
was, sure I knew that · band!·
C)lpped !NlOPle ex,ls~ . but I
~sonally didn't know any.
That lsuntU IgotajobatMelgs
Industries, I dldn' t know If I
could work with them but I was
willing' to try. I was surprised ai
h.ow much I enjOyed workln with
llandlcapped people, helping
them to learn a job Is rewarding
to me as well as them.
Through . Meigs Industries,
1\andlcapped people have moved
from · a sheltered workshop to
holding down jobs In the comll)unlty at such places as Big
Wheel, McDonalds, Subway,
Dan's and Rio Grande Cafeteria.
But as we al.l kiiO\f our learning
doesn't. start when we're adults,
!!.starts when we're children and
thats where Carleton School
comes In at.
We send our normal children to
school to learn all that.theycan so
why shouldn't- handicapped
children be gtved· the same ·
opportunity.
·
Their schooling Is different
from regular schools, Instead of a
music class they may have tli'ne
with a therapist that Is helping
them to learn to walk or maybe
even talk. A gym class that
teaches co-orglnatlon Instead of
who wins the game or even being
able to ride a specially made bike
so they can ride too, or even
learning to communicate their
thoug!J,ts, wants or needs with a
specially adapted computer.
Things that come natural for us,
they have 'to work to achieve.
"But if they're never given the
chance how do we know how far
they may go?
Wliy not vote for a levy that you
k)tow Is going to. help a child to
learn to do things that are ·
eireryday occurailces for us. At
least I know' that my YES vote .
Isn't going to buy a $400 hammer,
It's golilg to be spent In helping a
chlld live a more normal life and
maybe even ·hold down a job In
tbe future.
Vote yes at the May 8, election
tor tbe levy for tbe Carleton
Scbooi!Melp lnduatrlee, taJte
tblise 5 or 6 pennlel out of your
pocket everY ntpt and spend
them on a tood tblni.ll's tbe best
deal In town and you wUI feel
good about doing It!
·,
Sbaron Card
Racine, Ohio

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

' ,__

~ -··-~

,

I

'-·- - -

run.

In the fifth, Atlanta made it 4·0
when Lllllqulst stroked a :i-1 pitch
over the right-field fence for his
second homer.
The previous Braves pitcher to
slam two home runs was Tony
Cloninger who stroked two grand
slams on July 3, 1966.
In other NL gaf1leS, Philadelphia beat Cincinnati 4-2, Montreal nipped Houston 2-1, St. Louis
defeated San Diego 2-1, Los
Angeles pounded Pittsburgh 4·1.
and Chicago pummeled San
Francisco 7-4.
PhiUies 4, Reds 2
At Cincinnati, Von Hayes and
John Kruk snapped a tie wlfh
"seventh inning homers off Tim
Blrtsas to guide Philadelphia.
Hayes paced Philadelphia's 12·
hit attack wfth three hit.&amp;. Bruce
Ruffin, 2·2, gave up seven hits
and two earne!l runs In six an(~
one-third lrinlngs. Ruffin gave up
seven hits and two earned runs.
Birtsas, 1·1, took the Joss ..
Expos 2, Astros 1 (13 Innings)
At Montreal, Zane Smith deli·
vered a pincb-hlf double in the
13th Inning to lift the Expos. Otis
Nixon led off with a walk off
Larry Andersen. 2·1, and ad·
vanced when Mike Fitzgerald
groundeQ to second. Smith
doubled to right center, making a
winner of Drew Hail. 2,2.
Cardinals 2, Padres I
At San' Diego: · Bryn Smith
allowed five h1ts over ·seven and
fwo-thif(l innings and Denny ·

Walling snapped · an eighth·
Inning tie with an RBI single· to
paceS!. Louis. Smith, 3-2, walked ,
one and struck out five. Ed
Whitson, 2-1, took the loss, the
Padres · flft·h in a row.
Dodsers 4, Pirates I
At Los Angejles, Kal Daniels.
and Eddie Murray hit hQme runs
in support of , Tim Belcher;
helping the Dodger~ snap Pitts·
burgh's six ,game winriin g
streak. Belcher, 2 ·2, allowed five
hits, walked one and struck out
.nine. Walt Terrell dropped to 0-1
as the Pirates fell to 10·2 on a road
trip that ends Wednesday.
Cubs 7, Giants 4
Ryne Sandberg collected four ·
hits including his second home ,
run of the season, giving the .,
Chicago Cubs a 7-4 victory over
the San Francisco Giants.
Shawon Dunston drove in three
runs and Andre. D~wson ho·
mered, ma.king a winner of Mike
Bielecki, 1-2. Bob Knepper , 0-1,
just purchased from Phoenix .
was touched for 10 hits in four
Innings.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS

l4~9tll)

A DlvlAien ol Muttlmedl&amp;, Inc.

Published every afternoon. Monday
throogh Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·
meray. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley· PubUshtng COmpan y / Mu1timedl a, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohlo. 4~769 , Ph . 99.1·21541: Se·
cond class postage paid at ~omeroy,
Ohio.

'Member: United Pre-.s Internatlonaf.·
Inland Dally Pr~s Assoclo1lttQn And I he

Ohio Newspaper Association. Nat ional
Advertlslng Represenb&amp;tlve 1 Branham

Newspaper Sales , 733 Third Avenue.

New York. New Yo.rll: 10017.

POSnoiAST£R: Send address chan""'
to 1be Dally Selltlnel.. 1l1 COurt St. , ..

Pomeroy, Ohio «1789.

'

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!8
The source said a deal to bring.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Jerry
By Carrier or IIDCGI' . .llle
One Week ......... .... .... ..... .... ......... $1.40
wered Indiana 108-96, Portland conds left and Paul Pressey
By DEAN SCHABNER
Tarkanlan, fresh from leading Tarkantan to the professional
One Month ....... .. ........ .. .. .. .... ...... $6.10
ranks
would
be
a
lon~~:shot
and
battered
.
Dallas
106·92
and
San
added
two
free
throws
with
18
,
Nevada-Las
Vegas
td
the
NCAA
UPJ Sports Writer
One'Yeat ......... :.. ...... ............... 172.80
In Los Angeles, the Lakers Antonio knocked off Denver seconds left. keeping tl)e Bucks
basketball title last month, is that Tarkanlan would demand at
SINGLE COPY
131-120.
alive. Alvin Robertson led the
talking to the ·owner .of the Los least than $750,000 a year plus
were atile to come back from
PRICE
.
Dally ............. .... .... ... ........ ... . 25 Cents
Cavaliers 122, Slxers 95 - At
Bucks with a playoff career-high
deficits of 13 and 19 points to
Angeles Clippers about the NBA other benefits.
.UNLV remains under investiRichfield, Ohic;, Craig Ehlo 38 points, Michael Jordan scored
team's coaching vacancy, It was
overta~e the Rockets ..ln the first
Subscribers not desirlngtopay the car ~
rter may reml~ In advance d!rect to
gation by ' ·the NCAA over its
scored 16 points . in the third
a game-hlgli 48 points but only
reported Wednesday.
two games of their first -round
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
recruitment
of
former
New
York
had two points in the final 5:54.
plltyoff series, but In Houston quarter, helping ·Cleveland stave
The Los Angeles Times said a
basl.s. Credit will be gtven carrier each
week .
·
off playoff elimination. Larry
Chicago hOlds a 2-l lead In the
they found 12 points too far .to go.
source close to the talks said prep star Lloyd Daniels, but no
sanctions
have
been
imposed.
The Rockets held off two late
Nance scored 17 points, Mark series.
Tarkanlan has spoken to
No subsoriptlons by mail permitted In
Clipper spokesman Bill Krelarl!lls whl!l"e home carrll'l" service 1s
Trail Blazers 106, Maverlcks92
Los Angeles rallies in Game 3 of Price 15 and Brad Daugherty
Clippers owner Donald Sterling
avallable.
added 13 points, 10 rebounds and
- At Dallas, Clyde Drexler and
their first-round playoff series
about the coaching job and plans feldt told t)te Times no meetings
are
scheduled
between
the
team
Jerome Kersey keyed a final run . to fly to Los Angeles Thursday to
and stayed alive with a 114-108 , nine assists as Cleveland cut
Mall ~riptk»DI
I•We MJ!lp Co•llty
and Tarkanian.
Philadelphia's ll!llli to 2·1 in the In the fourth quarter, ending a
triumph over the Lakers,
continue the discussions.
13 Weeks ..... ..... ......... ,,, ............ $19.24
The Clippers. a perennial loser
series. Hersey· Hawkins led the
Dallas comeback. Portland's
Los Angeles, which lost a
2.6 Wetks ............................. .. ... $31.96
since mo,ing to Los Angeles
52 Weeks ...,...... ............... ......... $'74.34
first-round playoff game for the stxerswlth 19points. and Charles three-game sweep In series
Sports briefs
Outllde Melp County
from San Diego several years
f.lrst time slnc.e 1981, stilllelldS ' Barkley had 17 and 11 rebounds.
marked the first time . In five
Media
13 Weeks .......... , .................. .... , $20.80
ago,
fired
coach
Don
Casey
last
·the best-of-five series 2-1. Game 4 Th
26 Week~ ...... ......................... ,.. WJ.JO
· e m a· rgin of vt'ctory
. , was the years the 'Trail Blazers have
Will McDonough, a reporter
._s2_w_•_•_••_._... _..._..._..._.._..._.._... _..._..._.. _....;,s7_s._40.J :·
Is set for Thursday ·night In
largest. In Cavaliers .playoff advanced pastthe opening round
for four .years on CBS's "The month.
Houston. Before. Tuesday night 's
history.
of the playoffs. Kersey led tl!e
NFL Today", joined NBC Sports.
Trail Blazers with 29 points. . McDonough, who reported on the
game, the Lakers had won 20
PIs to nS 108• Pacers 96 - Af
straight fir~t-round games,
•,
I n d. lanapo II s. Is 1·a h Thomas while Drexler and Terrv. Porter
Inside workings of the league,
"The three games we' ve
~cored 23 points and defending
both had 20:· Rolan.do Blackman
wfll appear on NBC's "NFL
· · Detroit advanced . scored 20· points for the .Maver,
played so far have all been won.ln
NBA c hampton
Live" and on the network's
the final three minutes," said
to the second round of . the leks. Portland ptayed the last
weekend sports update shows.
Akeem Olajuwon, who had 22
playoffs. Detroit swept the ,ser·
three periods wlfhout starting
McDonough will continue his
·
w·m nt·ng t"ts fifth straight
forward Buck Wllllatns, who was
points. "They've been real
tes,
work wlfh the Boston Globe,
battles. "
where he has been for 34 years ....
playoff series, four of which It elbowed tn the eye.
Houston still faces a war. Only . won without losing a game, Bill
· ·
The Basketball Hall of F·a me will
'-~
h a d 12 pom
· t.s an d 19
Spurs 131; Nug.,ets
120 - At
two teams. the 1956 Fort Wayne
La lmurer
"'
award the nrst Curt Gowdy
Pistons and 1987 Golden State
rebounds for the Pistons: Reggie
Denver, Terry Cummings scored
Award , one to print and one to
J •' · " '
'
\ ," '·
Warriors, have battled back
Miller led Indiana with 22.
28pointsandDavldRoblnsonand
broa.d"a·st media, for outstand·
J·• - -~
"
from a 2-0 deficit to win a
,.,
Bucks 119, BII'IIs 112 - At Willie Anderson added 26 each to
ing service
to basketball and
·Ml' 1wau kee. J a ck St'kma ht"t a ' lead San Antonio to a sweep of
first-round series.
spOrts In generaL
.
three-point basket with 25 se- . their series.
"I can't guarantee anything,
but i! we play hard and under
control, anything can happen,"
Qlajuwdn said.
· · Otis Thorpe scored a playoff·
high 27 points and Vernon Maxwell added 26 for Houston. Sleepy
Floyd scored 23 points and added
a club playoff-record 18assists as
the Rockefs erupted on a 15-5 run
to open the fourth period and pull
away .
t
James ,Worthy paced the Lak· I
ers with 26 points, Orlando I
Woolridge scored ,18 and Magic 1
Johnson scored 17, but was held ·
We're Inviting you to .sttare youfspedal memoty with us. And In observance
scoreless in the final period.
I
of Mother's Day, we'll reature your responses In conjunction with our celebration of
"The big time was at the top of I
the opening of Cr~ation.s, the new family-centered maternity care unit at Pleasant
fhe fourth .quarter,''' Johnson 1·
· Valley Hospital. The mom$ whose 'happiest moments' are selected will also be our
said. "We allowed the.m to get too I
. guests lor a luncheon and ~ecelve a ,special gift. All mothers, regardless of the age
·big a lead at the beginning. We
YOU'RE INVITED .
. .
.
to come in and aee them, celebrate Sprtng, ahop, aharethe
have to come with our 48-'m i.nute 1
of your children now, are invited ~o enter by writing your response below or on a
team. We havetodo the things we I
fun, and SAVE.
separate sheet of paper and mailing It befote Mothei's Day, May 13. to:
did in the first two games."
Start your family flock nowl We'l hava ba~ains on chicks,
HAPPIEST MOMENTS, Pleasant Valley Hospital Pvbllc R.elatlo~s Department,
The Lakers trailed by as many I
Purine Chows and Health Productll. equtpment and sup;
Valley Drive; Point Pleasant; WV 25550.
as 12 points tn the rtrst hatf, but 1
pliea for atartlng chicka, and loll more.
were down oitly 92-90 entering the I
final quarter. Olajuwon·. w.ho sat
oil the b~nch most of fhe third I
My
Pfrlod after picking up his fourth' 1
2s SJ. 111awy .,_. Oticks + 5011 Purina Chick St.t• Mid......
fOul, ilpped .the ball _in, Floyd, .
.,
drove for a layup and Thorpe 1
SOSJt. Heavy lrtlll Chicks + 5011 PtniCI Chick St•t• Mid•••••••.
scored twice to spark a 8·2 run to I
give Houston a 100-92 advantage. 1
100 SJ. Heavy lr.... chicks + 5011 Pwila Chick Start• Mid.....
Worthy hit a . three-point I
jumper. then Ma)!well countered
with a three-pointer tosetoffa9-2 ·I
Terrific Deals on ... Purina Poultry Feed~ •.
run that gave Houston a 109·97 1
Chicks.
Purina Health Products. Chick RatStng
lead with 5:29left.
Equipment.
. Los . Angeles closed within I
111·108 on Byron Scott's three- I
....
,
point jumper with 46seconds·left. 1
Floyd then hit an 18-footer and
NdMI ------------~--~--------------~----~~
tl)e Lakers co~.tld not inbound the ·I
Chow Dealer ·
ball. Floyd added a ,free throw 1
"
with 19 seconds left to seal the ,I
\
PLEASE BRINQ
win.
I
· -"If was a great game for three
·1ft W. M1111 Ht-1164 p...,ey, ,Ohio YOU. R OWN BOX
periods," Lo!l Angeles CO$Ch Pat 1
The Store with "AI Kindt of Stutf"
•
Riley sal!!. "When Akeem went I
For Pita. Stabl•. Lirge • Smlll Anlm1l1
~
out, we had a chance, but Otis
La- • Gllrd1111 '
.
,
took over. At.thetopofthefourth I
.
quarter. that 6-0 run gave them a 1
FAMilY F1.0C1C HIADOUAIITERS
big push. We had a hard time I
getting back·. "
Elsewhere In the NBA Tuesday I
'· ' .
·
t
nllht, Cleveland stomped Phlla· 1
•
.
· '
.
, '•
•·
•J
delpla 122-95, Milwaukee stopped
·
AJ. Pleasant Valley Hospita~. Villey Drive, Point PieUinl, 'lfJ 25560 .130'&gt; 87l..c340 _j ,
tbe Bulls 119·112, Detroit overpo-

'90

1985 .OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

What was your happiest
tnotnent as a new Mom?

'

2 Door. V-8 motor, air
FREE TENT WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY VEHICLE IN STOCK!
NOW

•·

1986 Cht!ivette, dark pewter:, air cond itioned.

AMIFM , 28,000 miles . . . . .
1HI Niae8ft· Sentra, 2 door.

•

. ..·· ..... .

• .•• J

l

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

1988 Pontiac Grand Am, AMIFM.
air condit ioning. automatic ..
1M7 Dodge Charger, air condilioned , AM tFM
cas~ette , rear defroster .
. ..... ... .... . . . ..... ~ ... .
•

• •.1-

•

' -'

•' • I

t915 Ninon Sentre, AMIFM, rear
defroster. cloth · interior·, .

. ..... .

1"" Mpda 323, air conditioned,
AMfFM, automatiC transmission ..... ·.. .. •... \ ... .. • • . .••..

1817 Plymouth Horizon, automatic,
rear defroster. AMIFM . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . . .
t817 Ford Tempo ClL, air conditioned. AMIF M

MUST SEE THIS ONE

'3995 '75

factory AMIFM 'cassette. sport wheels ..... , .. . .. . , .... ·, .
1988 Pontiac 8000, 4 ·door, V~. AMIFM,
tilt , cruise, air con.ditioned . ...... .

PYMT.

conditioning, light blue with
dark top ·

..

cassette, rear defrosr . spOrt wheels .. , ....
....,
1987 Chevy Cavalier, 4 'door. white,
AMIFM, automatic , air .c onditioned .. . , . ..... ... . • .••.•. .. . , .. , .

t818 'Chevy Ceveflor, air conditioned , AMIFM,
rear defroster ... ............................. ... .. •

tll9 Font Escort LX, air
conditioned, AM/FM , , .. , , , , , ... . . , , , , .. , . . , , .. , . , , .
1988 Pontiac Sunblrd tlT, red. air conditioned,
AMIFM , automatic , sport package .
. ....... .
1988 Ford EXP; sliver, sport package,
AMIFM stereo, rear defroster .
• •••• ' . Jl •••• •• '• • ••••
1118 Chevy Cavollor, 4 door, pewter.
cruise. AMIFM, air conditioned .. , , ...... , . .. . , . ..... . ..... , . ,
1988 Buick Skyhowk, red, automatic, '
AM/FM. cloth interior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . •.• .... ·: • .. , •....

1985 Chevy Cevatjor Typo 10, air conditioned.
AM/FM. rear defrost~~ ....... _.. . : .. . ·: ...... ..... · .. . .. .. . . .... .

'4995 '99
56995 1149
57495 5164
54995 599
'3995 ·585
54995 . 599
54595 .. ~89
54995 599
'
54995 . 599
'
·'4995 '99
.''4995 .591
55995 '125
·;4995 599
, 1 49~5 199
54995 599
'3995 •as

Him.
SPtC••I Wukend,

W.... tr &amp; MonTh\- Rat .. !
11(1,~ ~OR O~t"\'

a~c 'i'f;
~~..J

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

C!rlr'll(Jn

11'1• "'"'

o•n1

Sl e P[R OM .
~· \o t~ • ~· 1

~- ';GrT~I111111 11.1._ ~

WAS $7,995
,,
1986 BUICK REGAL UMITED .... ftOW
WAS $4,995
1986 FOlD EIP •••• a.P.H,.§f.Qft~ttOW
WAS $5,495
·~
1916 FOlD MustANG.AJB..........ow
WAS S5,995
·
1916 POfmAC 60000 LE".U~ft...!&lt;:JI•.
WAS S4,595
.
.
. 1915 OLDSMOiftLE fliiNZA .....IIIOW
WAS S6,995-1.9ADED WlrN OP1IOIIS.
1985 OLDS. 91 REGENCY ...~ ....·NOW

DUCKS AVAILABLE ON ·ORDER •.

.

$6,9 9 5
$3 1 9 9 5 ~
.
$4,495
$4,995
.
$3,995
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1981 MERCURY ZEPHYR
4 DOOR
Lass Than 61,000 Milasll

N•••

We
Your Car Be.fore ·
You·8 , Tr••• or·Sellf . .

"Celebrate Chick Day on
May 14, 1990''

II

II

happiest moment as a new mother was: - - - - - - -

· Doa't Mill our·Bit Chlek Day.'

·

. .
. -

520
S32
SS2

PLACE OUR ORDER NOWI .

__ -

·- -

Meigs"County's Only Authorized Purina

I&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLy co•.

Creations cro

Where Generations Begin ·

L:... ______ -..,.. ___ - _.,..-,... ___ ------------- ,
'-

.r·
~-

a

his first National League home

'

..

. 109 High St.
'

By APRU:ALFARANO
UPI Sports Writer
Derek LIUlqulst turned Ills first
homers in the big leagues Into a
major event by becoming the
only pitcher In five years to
smack two home runs In a game.
Lllltqulst'added to the accomplishment by aliowl.ng only three
hits over seven Innings, guiding
the Atlanta Brave~ to a 5-2
victory over the New York Mets.
"I felt good at the plate, what
else can I say . Everything Is
going together for us right now,"
Lllllqulst said. "We're pjtchlng
good, the relievers are picking It
up good and we're hitting the
ball. That's all we can do. "
Lllltqulst, 1·3, received help
from recent trade Charley Kerfeld, who scattered two bits over
two Innings to notch ~Is first
save.
··
The experience was a sobering ·
one for Mets ·pitcher Ron Da. rUng, 1-3, who will be a .blt more
meticulous In the future.
"I shQuld have studied that
hitting chart on Lllllqulst a little
better, I guess," said Darling.
:'Everyone has told me how good
of a hitter he Is. I went out and
proved II tonight."
Darling began the night by
giving up a home run to Oddlbe
McDowell. his third of the year,
to put Atlanta up 1-0.
Lllllqulst's first major league
home run increased Atlanta's
lead to 2·0 In the third. The
Braves mp.de the score 3-0An the
fourth when Ernie Whitt'hlt 3·2
pitch vver the right field fence for

Rockets top Lakers 114-108; · Report has Tarkanian
pro
team·
talking
to
-Cavs, Pistons post victories

CHEVROLET 'l/c TON PICKUP
SHAR~,

a double play attempt, as Cu!J, Shawon Dunston Is
safe on ~cond base In the second lnnbig at
·Candlesllck ·park Tuesday , (tiP()
' ·
.

.

PHOTOGRAPHS

The Daily Sentinai-Page-3

Lilliquist's ·two homers power
Braves to 5-2 win over Mets

1989 PONTIAC LEMANS

Letters
Seeks

, Wednesday. May 2. 1990'

Middleport. Ohio ·

WASHINGTON-TheJustice ttvepowersovertotheFBI.
I&gt;epartmen1 has given crooks an
"It's a power grab," one
across-the-board reprieve and a Senate Investigator told us .
good reason to laugh.
"This Is about power."
Thousands of crlmlnal invest!·
No longer can Inspectors gengallons have been throw.n Into , eral probe allegations of fraud In
permanent Umbo · because the the food and health Industry. No
Justice Department has usurped longer can they nail construction
the authority of the Inspectors companies that endanger their
general In all federal agencies. workers by Ignoring safety laws.
Inspec.tors general are ' assigned No longer can they pursue .
as watchdogs 'to · each agency, passport and visa fraud. No
looking for fra\ld, abuse and longer can they freely probe Into
waste. Over the years, they have any area that does not have a tax
become accustomed to a wide dollar or an agency employee
range of Investigative powers.
tied up In the crline.
·
But, in a shrewdly worded
At least, not without taking a
·ruling. the Justice Department's number at the Justice DepartOffice of Legal Counsel has ment and asking for permission
handed many of those investlga·
to Investigate.
.
-· In other words,.

,.
I

'

IG und~ercut by justice department ·

House insists on __
meddling in Mideast
.

.

•
'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•
Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

'

"'•

,,

(4

�.
Wednaaday. May 2. 1990 .,

l?onwoy-Middlepon, Ohio

Hetzel sharp .iri ~ston
w~.,o.~

Majol'!l

(.. ,.lcqo ( H arlw~ 1·1) al s .. F raadM-u
t GarrrttMI-!), 3 : ~ p.m.
St. l.G ub U&gt;d.eu !·II) 11.1 Sa• Dh•Kfl
tHuN H). t: ti p.m.

By U•Mf' d Pr8• 111 tf'r..tlonal

AMERICAPII' _LE AGUE
E &amp;lit

Tu m

" ' L Pel.

Mllwau~ e .... ... ,........... Jil , '
BolltoD ..... ................. .. .lt "
TortHIIIIo ~ .• ,,,. ............... I S t

Cle\'eland ............ ......... t

GB

,,14 .iiG Jl ~
.UI ' II.!,:

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1

a.uimore ..................... t 1t .t!l

5

New York ..................... 7 II .lilt

Sl,\1

Dftrok .... ,....... ,.. , ......... ll IS .Sill

&amp;

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0Mkbutd ...... .... ,,,,, . ., .•.. 1.$

5 .750 -

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Chlcqo ..................: .... 11 i .147
Tn.a11 .................... ,.•.•. 11 It .Sst
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11~

6

Mlm~ll ola .................... /1 U .tH
S6 ai:Uf' ............... ..... ...... l'l .13 .SKI
KanilM uty .. ....,........... li is .311

Tutlld IQ' R f'!l Ill ~
To.,.n&amp;• .J, a evel,.ad 3
MhtretuU t , Detrell 5
C aiUor1~11. 7, a.ltimOft I
Oaklalld4, New Vorl :!

1
711

11 1--:

Tonnto (Cerutti 1-31 at Cl~land
(Black t-0 ), 7~:SS _p.m.
Ml•..,!lota {"'st H ) at Detrott tMor- .
rbi %-!), , : lS p.m ~
Tau (HoU!ifh 1·11 IU Chle11p (Hibblud

'l·l) , ll: DSp.m.
Milwauk ee jNawarro ... ) at Kan,.,;

Clly (Guhlcu I·S) , H:J5 p.m.

Mlhnwllee Ill KanMR Cit)', ol,._
NATIONAL LEAGUE

W L Pt1 .

•
GB

nc

21;j
2%
.f
.f %
.f !-1

PIHsbluKh ................... 14 ': .m
Moalrnl ..................... ll I .SM
Phllailelpflla ............... J I t .551
St . .Lollla , ..................... ll'l II ..

-

Chk:qo ........................ t II .-1511
NN· York ............... ...... t II .-1541
.f .7116 -

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Hou•on ........................ l 1 1 .-IN

51;:.

10

San Dlep .: ................... t II .458 Sh
1

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-'llan&amp;a .. ...... .. .. : . ........ .. . s 13 .!711

Tut'lldiQ· Reuit"
PhUadelphlil.f,CiniiCI..-il!

,\danla 5. Nrw

Ve~

Tbllb l. So\1ti Vn.. n - l 'nll&lt;' d
v~ 8-o \t f'l Vnkln, dual mrrt

a

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·

Hoekf')NHL.Pha,vofl"'
C odl~l'f'tter F1ml!i
Campb4oll Confrreric:t•

Cblcqo lit Etlmonlon
Bern, S"N~Iilnd - \\'orld
ChampkJnlhlp"

HOt·kt&gt;)'

~N: t;f'f

Ml~ Pinyon~
Eii-'ltern DiviMion Sf'mlli..al ~
H"ICb!ta II KM'I'I!IaS (it ~·. 11 :3$ p._
m,

Tennlli

' Madrid, Spain - -Mu's Ultl ,DOO Marl·
ltOro O,e.
,
~lllcla,

W..,;l

~rmany .

-

Men '~&lt;~

lto111well, G~a. - Mt&gt;n'" AT.t:T 0 i.llf'n~·
Hambul'1, ft' t'l'it Gern.an,v - S:lSD,IIIIl
Wonwn'l Grand Pti:c Toumamtml

•IPI

san rructKCo .............. 11

" 'e dnPI\da.l' $ pwt 11 ( 'a lf&gt;tMI!ir
11-aMbthaJJ
SBA Phayoff~
F1r!it Rtlund

s:rn,Ht IMW Opt&gt;n,

Th•l'!ld.,.'~t Gam..,;

. Mlnlllrllet&amp; at Detroit

i

Thunci!Q' G "~

fltttln•U at~,_. \' ork. •l l hl
HOMMonal PhUadelfH~&amp;o nlltll
· Alluta ~W Molllrul. nl~

S.Jdn.:

2oii,7 : :Sip.m.
CaiUornla lllylt\'en •11 IU laiUmort
(Bala.rd HI , i :U p.m,.

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Clnd....at....................
1M M~t:M ................. u

Alllul.la tl1.y8·1) all'lontru J tSmMh

!-1). 7:sS p.m.
·
Pltt.fttWh !Smll ry ~- '!!at Lo'i t\11 '"'I.,.
! Vale•_... 1-!eJ. IU;:I;; p.m.

EA~o~Vrn Co·nfrrt'nt·.t:talt. 11.1. Phlll! nb: . It: 3D p.m .

._

SnUie (HUI!IIID t ·fl al llo!ileft ( Harm

E...

Hou• on tChm cy 1·111 at r hlla dd ptlla .
(Cook 3-ft ), T: 3~ p.m.

E...,Wt'n ConiPrf'n'·"

Boston II, S.ellllko %

Teun

\ 'ork

8oMo• •! N.-...· \ '111'11. il p.m .

Cbll:q:o 5, Teu.5 I
Mll-uk~C. l.an!JaMCity4
WdnrM.Iy'KGa mrw
Oaklallld (SandrrAOD 2·11 at N"ew l'ork
(l#arJ 1-1), i : ll p.m.

Tens at Chlc&amp;IO•

C.1 1ki llft!U it lrownl ftll:~· l 1 at~-·

( \ 'l ola Ht . 1: 11 p .m .

llh ·

'

M:ollllreal!. Houtlton 1, 13 lnninK!I
JOII.
!, Su ~eJO I
t.11 All pi• .t. PltW.U,.-h I
C.lcap 7, SM Fraad!M.-o .f

t.o•

Tlw!idlQ' Sp.rt" Tra.n!;lld.lo·•
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AIIMta - Plaud first hMf-11\1&amp;11 Si c k

&amp;Miry OD 15-d_,., clllii!Jitcllilil.
Chic~ C~LI - ()pllo.,d plt.eherJPU
PI co 1o io•ao(Uif' 1\tnt!'k: M ib!IOCiatton

IA.AAJ.
DftNHI - (alk&gt;d •P pl1t!her Brian
Duboill lrom To teet. of lhl' l•lll"rnatto-'
I.e ape (A.A.A. l; 1'4!1 unw.d lafteldrr
.follttny Panode!l\o Mortn&gt;ltl and pltchf'r
Slevt&gt; Wap .. ck to ToNlntn: namf'd

Darrell Ev .. " mlnDf"'leapr hllllnit ln-

!OIIrud.ftt; nam~ Su!tlf' ~OIIllthiUt Staub
alknlnlli.tdl Ne &amp;.'l!cli'llant.
,

llouMon - . Tl'adrd pilc;bfr Mark
TllunnontltoSan FrantiMCo .tor.a play,.r
to ht&gt; nil.mf'd.

kan!MII CUy • Oulri\Ehled lnfl..tclfll Bill
Pet-Oia and OVdleldf'i "GaP.v·Thunna• tO.

Omah11 fll lltf' Amf'riloan

A.~J*"·iaton

(.4.AA).

I

new

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPl) The Ohio High School Athletic
Association could suspend as
many as 162 high .school basketball players for one ·game for
par!idpa tlng in an alleged illega I
"open gym" last month..
OHSAA Commissioner Clair
Muscaro said Tuesday the event,
held at the Glenwood Recreation
Center In Columbus, did not meet
the association's bylaws for open
gym participation.
·'This was called an open gym,
but It was open to a select group
of kids ," said Muscaro. 1 'They ,
en.t ered Into team comi&gt;etttlcin,
which 'is a violation. In my
opinion. this is very definitely an
abuse of our open gym policy ."
Muscaro contends players
were Invited to participate by

NEW KNOXVILLE . ' Ohio
(UP!) - The Ohio high school
baseball ra11ngs, compiled by
Chuck Braden for the Ohio .High
School Baseball' Coaches Association. and distributed by UPI
tfirst-place votes and records In
parentheses): "
CIAfS AAA
Team
Pobih
1. OaytonNorthmant t3l 117-3) ........ 260
2. Cln Moeller (16~ 11-&amp;--3) .................. 230
3. Toledo Whitmer 111 114·2 1............. 226
4. Carrolltm 0 2·11 ............ . ;............. 191
~ - Gahanna Llncdln t4 ) tlJ.4t ........... 1~9
6. CinColeraln t l ) 116-4 \ .......... ........ 138
7. Westerville North [1) !15-31 ........ .. l:ll

lJartrum injured in
Marshall serimmage
Former Meigs Marauder. star
¥ike Bart rum received a serious
injury to his left knee in the
Green and White spring football
game held Saturday night at
Marshall University.
, Bartrum a 6-4, 225 second Y!!ar
freshman was .injured on the
second play of the third quarter
and laces possible major reconstructive surgery and will perhaps miss the 1990 season.
Alter being red-shlrted his first

Junior high track
teams lose meet

'I

I

The Meigs Junior High School
track teams ·recently dropped a
meet to Vinton County. The boys
lost to the little Vikings 65-26.
whllf' the gi rls lost 66-41.
In the boys meet first place
finishes fo r the Marauders were:
Eric Wagner in the high jump
(4-10) . Heath Hudson in the
discus I 117-7) and the 400 meters
(57: 0) and Jered Hill in the 800
meters (2:34.7) .
For the girls Danielle Scott
took first place In the high jump
(4-4) and 100 meter dash (14.3).
Heather Hudson In the 100 meter
, . hurdles (18.2), Jaclyn Swart~ In
• the 800 meters (2: 56.9) and Lee
·Henderson in the 200 meters. The
MaPau~ers also won the 800
meter relay with a lime of 2: 06,
running the relay were Amber
Blackwell, Danielle Gray, Henderson, and Hudson. The 1600
meter relay also won first place
honors with a time of 5: 26.8, ·
rimnlng the relay were Danleile
Crow, Tracey Fife, Erica Roble
and Swartz.

White Sox·I, RanJel'lll
At ChiCago. Melldo Perez
flirted with a no-hitter through 5
1-3 Innings and the White Sox
rocked Nolan Ryan fora five-run
first. Perez, 2-2, had his no-hit bid
broken up by shortstop Jeff
Huson. who lined a single to left
with. one out In the sixth. Chicago
has won five straight. Ryan·. 4-1,
lost his bid for a career-~! fifth
victory to start the season. He
allowed four walks, a pair of
singles and a triple In 'the first
Inning. The 43-Yl!ar-old rightbander settled down after that,
allowing just one more hit and
striking out eight In six innings.
Brewers 8, ·Royals 4
At Kansas City, ~o. , qreg
Vaughn hit a three-run home run
and Gary Sheffield $dded a
two-run homer, powering Milwaukee. Vaughn capped ~ fourrun first Inning wllli his second
home run of the season. Sheffield
sealed the d'eclslon In the sixth ,
Inning with his first of the year,
dropping Bret Saberhagen tol-3. ,
Ted Higuera, 3-0~ allowed three
runs In the second ·Inning - the
first earned runs sc&lt;ired on the
left·hander this season. Dan
Plesac, the third Milwaukee
pitcher, got three outs for his
third save.

J acKie L. Hays, daughter of
Technic a l Sgt. Kenneth D. and
Sgt. Ma r y E. Hays , currently
stat ione d with the Unit ed s tates
Air Force In I zmir Cit y, Turkey .
re cently at tended the Gi rl Scout
Conference held in Wellegep,
Germ any on Marc h 24-30.
Hays, age 16, was selected by
the No r th Atlantic Council, Girl
Scouts of America, from all
Senior Girl Scouts from the

MEIGS WINNERS - Winners at lhe Regional
Scholars session were, front from left, Kristen
Slawter, Melp Local; Jenalfer Taylor, Meigs
Local; Aaron Wilson, Eastern; Andrea Cleland,

..

All liDDING PLANTS
3 PIS f1o0

8. Euclklllllli&gt;l),, ......................... l26
9. Wadsworth [1 l 110;11 ....·............... , 119
10. P errysburg t9--3) .. ....................... 75
SeCOIId 10 - ·1). Fairfield 5i; 12.
Lakewood 49; 13. Ham!ltoo 43: · 14.
Cinci'hnall Oak Hills IH 29; 1.'1. Toledo Sl.
Fr anCis 24; H;, El~· rta 11~ 22: 17. lti Ct
Wlntersvllle Ill. 1_\pprr Arlln~too and
Clncinnatl Glen Este. 19 (lach: 20.
·Mansfield ~ad isoo t l J 16 . .. ~
ClauAA
Team
Polnb
1. T'bull! Chamber lln !81111·11. ....... 1 ~7
2. Fairtleld Union t5l 114·3 L ............. 1R2
3. CAPE 141 116-3} .............. .. ........... 108
. 4. Ontario ti -61 ...............·............ .. ... 144
5. Hcbr m Lakewood t2) 117·31 .......... 11 3 ,

6.
7.
8.
9.

Help"'

(!H) .. ...... .. .................
18-21............
LucasvUie Vall&lt;&gt;.v t2l 1U-5) ....... ....
Olmsred Falls 16·21. ......................
(I)

Akroo St.

Vincent ~~ ~

J.l, (Jerry) BIBBEE
GDIEIAL MANAGEI

Point"
13-2 ) :.. ... .. .. .. .... .. .. 343
2. Newark CathoUc t 151 1B-5! .. ........ 332.
3. Rockford ParkWay 161 110·11 ........ 20~
4. Aycr svllle 110·2} ...... .... ... ....... .. ... ... 176
. 5. Ccdarvlll• i31 110·0) .. .. ................. m
6. Mlll~r City ~ 2\ C8·0) .. .. ... , .. ............ 142 .'
7. M:orral Rldgedal{' tHM,l .... .. ..... ..... 129
8. Fairport HarbOr t T0--3! ........... .'., .... 109
9. Mingo Junction 121 ~. 1()..2 ~ ..... .. ....... 9~
1.

Coldwat ~r t 10) ~

10. North Balllmorr t9.0 t ..... .. .... ....... . R9
Second ten~ 1l.JC1Jmour Acjidem.v 7();.
12. Mlnstt&gt;f 50: 13. Ashtabula St . John's 1l t
40: 14. Gre enwich South Central :n: 15.

South Chaf k&gt;stoo SoutheaKte rn 29; 16.
Worlhln~too Christian 25; 171 ~ ll&lt;'t GlbsCII·
burg and Cincinnati Count ry Day tl ). 2:)
each; 19. Fort F r ye th ,21 ; 20. ttlrt
S had~·sld c and Crestllnf'. 19 e ach.

suo 'flats 'NOW

IEDDING GEIAMuMs
1111. 112 NOW $950

4 IN. GERANWMS 'l~g. S

t.Oo

85c EA.- 1D FOI s7so

4 IN. HARDT NOW

.... suo

85c oa. - .· 10 FOR ?750

10 INCH HANGING IASKETS

REG. ss.so NOW $450 . ·
REG. S615 NOW $575
.
All SHRUIBEIY &amp; TREES
20% OFF
Sale ,_...., Tloroughout Tho S..011

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
'

SYIICfSI, OHIO
ftl-5776
0

n Del

9-&amp;·.Sun. 1-6

EYES
I I

I

1/ ·

NOSE.

SSH

\

i

·I

coach at Convoy Crestview High
· School. Is the president of the
Ohio. High Scl)oGl Basketball
Coaches Association. He · also
coach~s a summer AAU team In ·
Lima·.
··
"To me, this is a personal
. attack by Ray Etzler, " Watson
said.
·
Watson's attorney, Byron
Potts. said legal action is being
considered against Muscaro and
the OHSAA.

l

•GARDEN
•GRASS
WE CARRY •••• ; .

PICKENS
HARDWARE

'

..

lege; and logistics management
(marquee) .
Reynolds Is a member of the
Loyal Order of Moose at Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Fraternal
Order of Eagles , Pomeroy , VFW
In Mason. W.Va. , and American
Legion in New Haven , W.Va.
A malntainance supervisor at
Philip Sporn Power Plant lnNe)v .
Haven. Reynolds Is the son of
Frank J . Reynolds and Catherine
Mae Smith, both of Mas on, W.Va.
The VIetnam veteran Will
mark his 3ist year in the US
Army Reserve in May .

GOOD USED
- WASHEIS, DIYEIS,
IEFIIGEIATOIS, TVs,
GAS &amp; EUC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPUANCES

627 3r~ Aw~ Gallpollt
PH. 446·1699
HOUISs I Ul.-6 P..ll.

"'"ontl

· M IK-,.j Ill iiltfiK

The 5th AMuallln LEGS
CONTEn herr 1hursdar Night
liHr the Solllllh of "ltd "-•"

Mill PW rOIIU Out
IIIIIIOIUIII ~I

Ohlo-446-9261

l

Community calendar
EARS

~.

;

I

I

Look or listen for't'- ligna. Artywhere a gas line Is locatl!d· a leak may cause:

• a bJov.ting or hissing sound

COLUMBIA GAS

(Continued from page 10)
. , attending should contact Shirley
POMEROY -'The Henry '· Cogar at 992-2668.
'
... ·Miller FamUy wll,l be singing at
'
the Calvar,r Pilgrim Chapel .on ·· POMEROY -The Meigs
Route 143, Friday thro11gh Sun- County Board of Elections will be
open Saturday for absentee
day at 7:30 p.m. nightly , Rev .
voting. '
Miller will p~ach · and Rev.
VIctor Roush Invites ,the publiC.
RUTLAND -There will be a
gospel
sing Saturday at the
·POMERQY The Meigs
Christian
Fellowship Center on
County ·granges will have a bake
Salem
Street
in Rutland. Feasale on Friday and Saturdav at'
tunid
singers
Will
be the Shafer
K"roger's beginning at 9 a .m:
Family from Crown Cit y and
Chosen frofn Rutland. Pastor
POMEROY _:The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will . Robert Musser inVItes the public.
. ,·• meet F'rlday at 7:30p.m. at the
LONG BOTTOM '-The Unroe
·• grange hall In' Rock Springs.
Family wil sing at the Hazel
Columbia
Grange
will
serve
1
Community Church on Saturday
refreshments:
at 7:30p.m. Thecliurch Is located
between . Long Bottom' and
· POMEROY -The Church
Portland.
Women United will meet Friday
at noon for a sack luncheon and
MIDDLEPORT -The MiddleMay Fellowship Day.
port Youth League will hold a ·
kickoff day parade on Saturday
\
KENO -There wlu be a
beginning at 9: 30 a.m. at the T .
1-· revival at the Keno Church of
There will be various activities
Christ FrJday through Sunday.
throughout the day at Hartinger
Art Bush will· be the evangelist
Park.
and the public is invited to
attend.

r,

• dirt being bloMtn Info the air

b/otVn

'~-.J

":' ·

,',j '."

'

SATURDAY
LONG BOTI'OM -There will
be 1 ppel sing on Sunday at the
Mt. Olive Community Chu·rch In
Long Bottom with New Song
Revival from Ashland, Ky .. and
The Joy Singers at 7 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush lnvl tes the
publiC.
RACINE -A basic outdoor
skUis workshop for girl scout
leaders will be held Saturday at
the Ohio River Campgrounds In
Racine. Anyone Interested In

I

JOUI . . . . . .rnAGIIITS. SIIY.G

·•oscoum
SINCE 1161

KOUN1RY KITCHEN
DAILY IPECIAL$

I

OPIN MON. TMIIU lAT. 1:30 A.M.·I:OO P.M.: lUNDAY I AM-3. PM

•o•u
Potato Soup ..... •1. 30

.... . ___
.

-- -- ~-

.. ~ ....

--

jl

. .. .

'

'

-..

·~

---

-..,.,. ___, .~ .....

I '

..

'

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

'

•

· TUESDAY .

CARS AND .TRUCKS

1986 PLY. CARAVELLE

1985 ALLIANCE

4 DR.

DL- 4 DR.

INSURANCE
111 Slconll Sl., ,_...,,,

loalt.. icrell 1111 Stnet ,,.. Ia•• lllltlonltl ....,
1'lllnl ..t hul Street Ill lad•

I

SAVE ON THESE

.
CHILDS
MULLIN MUSSII

Baked Chicken .. •4.76
liked H•m ....... '4.88 Chef' Salad ........ •3. 7&amp;

·'

...

Air Force Senior Airman Ronald B. Denny has been awarded
the Air Force Achievement Medal for meritorious service.
The award was presented by
Col. Wilbur T. Zettler, Commander of the 1839th Engineer·
lng Installation Grout at Keesler
Air ·Force Base tn Biloxi , Miss.
- Denny resides In Biloxi with his
wife, Bonnie, and their two
children. Brittany an(! Andrew.
Denny Is_the son of Earl and
Betty .Denny, Middleport, and
the grandson of Mrs. Lillian
Demosky, Middleport .

TNt FRENCH QUAOER

RACINE -TMSouthern Boosters are sponsoring a clas s D and
E softball tournament on Satur·
day imd Sunday. Entry fee is $65
plus two balls. For furth e r
information contact Dave Grindstaff at 949-2025.

, PROMOTEtJ- Frank, Neleon Reynolds, New Haven, W.Va.,
was recently promoted from the rank ·of major'lo lieutenant
ooloaey In the U.S. Army Reserve&amp;. Shown with Reynolds, center,
are his children, Revna Jay ,left, and Monna JIU Reynolds, both of
Chester.
·
·

MASON, WY.

INSIDE
• Wlller bubbling or being
Into the
The most Obvious sign is the smell.
air at a pond, cf!l8k or river
·
Natural gas· by Itself usually is odorless, so
• brown patches in vegetation on or near
gas companies add a distinctive odor to gas.
a gas Nne rlght.fi.way
H you smell thla telltale odor In YQUr
home, don't t.tse matches, electrical switches • fire coming from the ground or bumlng
or appliances. Leave the house immediately,
abtNeit
then call the gas comparry from'a neighbor's
If you deiKt any llgn of • ._, follow
home or .pay telephone. Remain near your
these
steps quickly: 1) I - the area at once,
home untii a gas comparry representative
and warn others to stay away; and 2) find a
arrives and checks the cause of the odor.
telephone away from the area to cell the gas ·
company, and the lire and pollee depart·
OUTSIDE
You may detect a natural ~s ieak any· mente. 00 NOT try to tlldlnguish a gas fire
wHere gas lines or lacllitias are lOCated. · or operate any pipeline valveS.
Chances are you'll newr il88d to recogSometimes, the sign may be the odor. But in
rural areas, natural gas pipelines may con- nize a natural gas leak. But justlft cUe, W&amp;
tain non-odorized gas. A leak of non-ecented think It's Important lor you to bellble to d!Mct
gas means little or no odor will be p1111nt. signs of trouble. Together, we11 k8lp natural
gas service sate anc1 tllllclent.
· So count on your other senses as Mil.

.

the Army commendation medal
by Col. Victor E. Delnore at Ft.
Meade, Md., fortheperformance
of meritorious service in support
of the objectives in the effort in
the Republic of Vietnam In
March of 1967.
He also received two bronze
service stars for comba t, a .·
national defense service ribbon . ·
Vietnam service ribbon . Viet ·
nam campaign' medal. Vietnam
cross o_f gold, Army reserve
medal for 30 years. Army over seas inedal. Armyhservice ribbon, and AAM Medal.
Reynolds has completed the
quartermaster advance course,
ordinance officer advance
course, field malntalnanc ~
course, field maintalnance 9A ·
F46 Army Ordinace Center,.
Amry logistics management col-

'Softball t.ourney

•FERTILZER
•LIME

YOU'RE WELL EQUIPPED
mDEIECI AGAS LEAK.

.

:~~~~;TO!: SING - 'l'he Belli')' Miller Family will be .
singing and Rev.
will be preaching at the Calvary Pll(rlm
Chapel on Friday, Saturday, ami Sunday with ser\'lces at 7:30p.m .
nightly. The church Is located on Route 143, one half mile off Route
7. Rev. Victor Roush ln\'l.tes the public.

Re-J.nolds , 'is ,promoted- in ;trmy -

SEEDS FOR.....

tiona I p res iden t. While attending
the luncheon she performed
" gopher duti es" and assis ted the
conference representatives and
senior leaders from throughout
tile world. She tiso wa s able to
take In several sightseeing trips
in the local area of Wellegan.
Hay s Is a sophomore at the
Izmlr City High School. Her
mother Is the local . military ·
liaison In the Iamlr Community
for .Girl Scouts. She was selected
to at tend the conference also
representing the lzmir chapier.
Hays Ill the granddaughter of
J .A. and Dorothy Smith, Salser
Road, Racine. Her father Is the
son of the late F rank and Stella
Hays, Middleport .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Hay s have three
other children who activel y pa rticipate In the scouting program .
The Hay s' have been stationed in
Turkey since January 1989. They
will be return ing to the states on
their next a ssignm e nt In
J~nuary .
·

Military news

•

·LAWN AND
GARDEN .
CENTER
.

'

. &gt; •

inch box passed underne ath .
All bridges met that criteria
and soon the construction groups
challenged each other to see
whose bridge. would support the
most weight. The strongest
bridge, on which some Gallla
County students worked. supported more than 460 pounds .
The Regional Scholars Program is made possible through
an $8,000 grant from the Martha
Holden Jennings Foundation and
increasingly helpful contributions from area businesses . Participating school districts sponsor the students they send with
financial he lp from local
otganlzaf!ons.

Major Frank Nelson Reynolds
was promoted to lieu tenant colonel in a recent ceremony by his
children,' Revna Jay Reynolds
-and Menna Jill Reynolds , both of
Chester.
Reynolds grew up in the Mason
and New Haven, W.Va. area and
now · resides in New Haven.
W.Va.
. "' '
Joining the , 3~t!\·i'ordinanc~
Cqinpany ", (DS! In Pojnt Pleasant, W.Va. After he graduated
from Wahama High , School in
1959, he began his army career a s
a private. While stationed~~ Fort
Polk, La. , he recelvM a letter of
appreciation from Senator Robert C. Byrd.
Reynojds has · served manv
Army tdlirs In the past 30 years ,
and! has received 18 letters of
appreciation. He was awarded

/

Fortunately, natural gas leaks are. rare. But
if one should occur, you have everything it
lakes to spot the tell"le signs .. . the abillty
io see, hear and smell.

Eastern; Nomian Matson, Southern Local;
Jennifer Smith, Southern Local. Standing In back
are S&amp;ale Sen. Jan Michael Long and State Rep.
Mary Abel.

On , Sunday, April 22 and ment -leaders at a recognition
banquet Sunday evening.
·
Monda~ , April 23, 89 students
The
keynote
speaker,
John
representing high schools
throughout , Southeastern Ohio Gills , presented a talk aimed at
a,athered In Athens to participate · ·encouraging the students to set
In this year's ,R egional Scholars and re.a ch 'high goals as they
brtd~~;e Into lljgher education and
Program;:
.
. :
Its theme was "Bridging: You adult life. Other speakers conand the World Today, Tomorrow ducted sessions on self-esteem;
and In ' the Future." Twenty- the effects . of technological adseven school districts served by vances in Indonesia. Brazil and
Kenya; brain research and fu the Southeastern Ohio Regional
ture planning; and time manageConsortium of Coordinators for
ment
skllls. Roger Jerome, a
Gifted sent juniors who are
excelling academically to take visiting dramatist from England, directed the students In an ·
part .ln . the symposium which Is
_Implemented under the direction active session developing creativity through the fine arts.
of M. Tracy Jageman.
Students, given stacks of news· Students represente.d "the Galpapers
and masking tape, were
lla County and GaiUpolts City
·
al~o
c
hl\lll!'ngec;l
to build bridges
Schools aL this year's !JYent and
,
tjlat
·
w
oy!d
si!p!!drt
the..we ight of
tmd ·oppOrtunlt~es to speak with
several
bricks
while
an 8/ 12by h
business, education and' govern-

97
B3
B,2
50

II. Well!!loo (17·3) ............................ . ~H
year, Bartrum saw extensive
Second 10 - 11. Ule) McDermott
playing time last season as the
Northwest and Bu c k~·c V a ll~ ' 121. ~ 1
number . two tight end behind . each; 13. ClnCinna1l GrC'enhll!s 37; 14.
Norton Ill 28 : 15. lllet Shclby. Hossford
All-Southern Conference per·
!11 . l..oV('Jan(J. New Concoord John Glc&gt;nn
(ormer Eric Ihnat. Bartrum saw
aild Akm1 Hoban, 25 each; 20. (Ue )
Porumouth West and No rrh Robi nson ·
action In 10 games, staring In
Colooel Crawford tl). 24 c ~ ch .
one . On the year, Bartrum
caught seven passes good for 72
yards.
·
According to Marshall Sports
lnfortmatlon DJ'rector Gary
Richter, new Marshall Head
SPRING VALLFY CINEMA
Coach Jim Donnan said alter the
446 45 14
game Saturday night that Bartrum's injury will be a crushing
$2.'1!1
blow to the Thundering Herd
. football te.a m. Coach Donnan had
put a two tight end offense Into
the Herd game plan to give
Bartrum more playing time.
Contacted at· his Hunlngton
apartment on Monday night.
Bartrum seemed to be In pretty
gQod spirits. Bartrum went on to
say the Injury occurred when he ·
received a blow to the knee by a
helmer which caused the knee to
hyperextend. Surgery will be put
off a few days to allow an
abrasion on the knee to heal
rather than risk Infection. Before
the Injury Mike had pulled In four
passes for 34 yards.

A FRIENDLY FACE IS BACK HOME

Team

Class A
,

lEG.

couni rles of Turkey , Ita ly , Bel·
gclwn, and, Greece.
The conference enter ta ined
Mrs. Betty Pillsbu ry, the national president of the girl scouts,
and Dr. Odele Bante, international president, from Parts,
France.
Hays attended a luncheon In
whiCh she was presented the
Presidential Girl Seoul Badge,
Which Is presented
1he na-

Meigs students attend Region-al Scholars

0

Jerry ·watson, organizer of the that participating player-s were
event.
risking suspension.
Watson , who also coaches a
Watson said. however. he was
summer AAU team in Columbus. roid by OHSAA assistan.t com-'
says he did not invite players io missioner Blair Irvin in early.
participa:te but ' ''sent out ac- Marelt .tl\at everylfling wa's on·
knowledgments" to high schools · th~ up and 'up.
·
and to players who expressed
''The next think I heard was
interest In participating.
when Mr. Muscaro called me on
1 There reportedly were 175
April 16 and said we had some
players who participated ih the problems," said Watson. "He
April 7 event . 1621rom Ohio from
said he had received a phone call
81 different schools, and 13 from
from Mr. Ray Etzler and was told
surrounding states .. Aiso on hand
that what we did was against the
were a number of college
rules."
coaches.
Etzler. the head basketball ·
The players paici $20 .each to
participate and for. their money
received a T-shirJ and lunch.
HUBBARD'S GREEIIHOUSE
Muscaro sa.id Watson was
20#6 AIIIHHttg ~,,. ,,,
Informed Apri16, tile, day prior to
the event, that it was _illegal and

The Deily Sentinei- Pa9e- 5

Hays attends Girl Scout Conference

Suspension of prep cagers. possible for illegal open gym

Wellston make to.p
10 in Class AA baseball poll

FORMER Melp Marauder star
• serious InJury lo hill left knee
.
spring game at
, Marshall University. Bartrum, a
year freshman, faces
• possible reconsguclive surgery and will probably miss the entire
: 1990 season. Bartrum (number 18, dark Jersey) leaping for a pass
: In last year's sprlnr; game had caught lour paslles good forM yards
• before gelling hurl In the third quarter.

.2. 1990

Tribe loses

By llnlled Press International
menting. as.'lnjurtes continue to Parrish , fourth on the all-time
A year .after looking like just
per!Qdlcally h(lmper starters thorne run list for catchers with
another frustr ated prospect in
John Dop s on and Mike 265, homered twice in a game for
the 19th time In his career and
1989. Red Sox hurler E ric He1Ze i Boddlcker. ;
has a found a new pitch and a
" I'm not' s"urprlsed at ali at the first since July 9, 1986 while with
second life In I he big leagues .
way E r ic Ketzel, Greg Harris Detroit . Jim Abbott, l -1, scat-·
·He tzel improved to J.1 with his
and Dana Kiecker have been tered live hits over seven Innings
third s traight strong s tart Tuespltchlng, ", sa id Kutcher. "I've to pick up the win. Baltimore
day night , lea ding Boston to a n
played with tltem down at Paw- starter Jay Tibbs, 0-2, gave up
8-2 thumping of Seattle and
tucket (BO•ton' s triple-A team ) five hits and five runs in 3 2-3
sta rter Randy Johnson. 2.- 2.
and I kiiOW 'they can pitch in the innings.
. Blue Jays 4, lndl~s 3
The R ed Sox. who beat Seattle . major leagues."
At Ctevejand, Glenallen Hill ·
11-0 In the series OJll'ne r Monday:
Hetzel, whO went.2-3 With a 6.26
used two RBI .s ingles fr om' E llis 'EM In 1989, lost his shutout bid homered , doubled and scored
Bur ks and a two-run triple from
when the Mariners scored their ·two runs, hel}lin'l :Torontoextend
Ra ndy Kutcher to bring their run
firs) run In 16lnntngs in Boston in its . domination · of Cleveland.
total Iii two games a gainst the
the seventfl - on , Ken Griffey Dave Stieb, 4-1, went seven
Innings as Toronto beat the
Mariners to 19.
Jr .'~ leadoff double and Edgar
Indians for the fifth time in six
Het zel allowed fou r hit s
Martinez's two-out bloop s ingle.
games
this season. Tom Henke
through seven innings , working
AthletiC. 4, Yankees 2
his newfound fork ball to two-hit
At New . York, 'Mike Gallego went 1 2-3 innings for his second
Seat tie through six Innings and
doubled home two sixth-Inning save, allowing. a ninth-Inning
keep the Mariners scoreless Into
runs, brea~lng ·a tie and lifting homer to Brook Jacoby . Tom
the seventh.
Oakland. It was thr A's seventh Candlottl, 3-1, took the loss.
Twlllll 9, Tlaers 5
·'He had 'an outstanding breakwin in Its last eight appearances
At
Detroit,
Gene Larkin dro·.oe
ing ball tonight, particularly h.ls
at Yankee Stadium. ' New York
In
three
runs
and John Candelafork b,a ll," sai() Seattle first
has lpst three straight . Mike
baseman Pete O' Brlen, who went . Moore, 2-~. ·was ·the starter. and ria pitched 3 1-3 scoreless relief
0 for 4. '.'This is .a
pitch for winner for ·the A's, with Andy · innings · to heip Minnesota 'break
him this year. He wasn't afraid to · Hawkins, 0-3, taking the loss .. a four-game losing streak. Canuse it at any time, whether .he Dennis Eckersley notched his delaria, 2-0, relieved starter
Kevin Tapanl at the start of the ·
was ahead or behind on the eighth save.
fifth
to protect an 8-5 lead and
Angels
7, Orioles 1
count."
allowed
Detroit just two singles
At
Baltimore.
Lance
Parrish
Hetzel is one of a handful of
until
being
relieved by Juan
homered twice and drove hOme
young arms with which manager
Berenguer.
·
four runs,.. leading California.
Joe Morgan has been expert-

Belpre~

•,;

win;

-

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Auto. Trans .. Air. AM/FM.
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�I

Page-6-lhe Daily Sentinel

2, 1990

Ohio
Continued from page 1
race. I' m the only nonClevelander, and the only who's
.done what the attorney general's
office does. I do)t right now, only
on a smaller level.
" If you're going to be Ohio's
No. 1 law enforcement officer
then , by God, I thin!&lt; you oughtto
have the background," said
Philomena. "The attorney general 's office has to lead the war on
crhne and drugs, and I'm the
only candidate that has a plan on
drugs.''

••.

•

.•.
.'.-

.

~:

,

WINFIEW LOCKS &amp; DAM voundb1e~k!DK

.

ceremo~les wUI begin at 11 a.!Jl. Saturday at Red

House,

W. Va. The publiC Is Invited.

, Locks, Dam groundbreaking ·
~ ceremonies Saturday; Byrd to speak
'

RED HOUSE, W.Va. - U.S. the regional upgracle of the
Sen. Robert C. B!l,rd will deliver · Inland waterway system, the
the keynote address at ground- Corps said. It was authorized by
• breaking ceremonies here for the the Supplemental Appropriation
~ WinfieldLocks&amp;Damprojeclon
Act of 1985 . for . engineering,
~ the Kanawha River, tentatively
design ;~,nd land acquisition and
~ set ft~r Saturday at 11 a.m.
!Jy the Water Resources-Develop~· •- Considered the nation's bij sles t ' merit Aat ort986 for cons true! ion .
: lock on the inland · navigation
The new Gallipolis · Locks' 8!
system, Winfield will undergo Pam under 'construction along
\ two phases of design, land the Ohio River is the first step In
: acquisition and construction this improvement program, the
; over the next five years, accord- Corps said. Both GallipoUs and
• : tng to the U.S. Army Corps of Winfield were completed in 1937.
• Engineers' Huntington Dlstricl
At Saturday's groundbreak. ; office.
lng, remarks are expected to be
:.· Phase I, to he handled by Gust heard from Art Gleason, secre; K. Newberg Construction Co., tary of the West Virginia Depart-~ Chicago, IlL, calls Jor the con- ment of Highways; Col. Thomas
· • struction of coffer cells to hOld E. Farewell, Huntington District
· back water during co1J$tri!Cifon engineer for the · Corps; Brig.
· ~ of Phase II; construction , ·of Gen. Paul Chinen, the Corps'
:. disposal areas; and relocation of . Ohio Rivet Division ·engineer;
theDry Branch Creek area into Maj. Gen. Richard s. Kern, the
~ four .5:acre ponds. Estimated at " Corps'· deputy . chief engineer;
~ $15.6 million, this phase is to be West Virginia ·Gov. Gaston Ca' complete by 1991.
·
perton; U.S. Reps. Nick Joe
'
Rahall and Bob Wise; and B.R.
; Phase Il; scheduled to hegln In Brown, chairman of Consoli• early 1992, tnc;ludes the construe- dat_e d Coal Co.
~ tion of a 110-by-800 foot lock, with
• the capacity' to lock nine jumbo
. barges with one lockage. Con·
•· tructlon of an additional 110toot-w\de non-navigable gate bay
to improve navigation conditions
is included. Th~ Corps said it
plans to continue use of the
existing 56-by-360 foot locks as ·
auxiliaries to facilitate matnte·
nance on the new lock.
·
· Estimated at $150 million,
Phase II ~~~heduled forcompletlop in mid-to-late 1995, the Corps
said.
'winfield is the second step in

..

·

·

more closely with the Bureau of
Criminal Identification and In·

Continued from page 6
Rainy conditions to continue · DOE···------------------------------~

to ·tdentify drug

Inc., the Birmingham, Ala .By . United Preu lnterllattonal As It moves, the front to the south
based engineering arm of the
After a summery spell last Will move north -and· reach
multi-state Southern Company _
week, Ohio's weather has re- southern Ohio by Thursday even- utility system, will tes.t an
turned to spring-like conditions,
Ing, the weather service said.
advanced device that removes
With cooling temperatures and a
The advancing warm front is
nltrogen oxide _pollutants fror'n
forecast for widespread rain.
expected to continue to induce
the smoke of a power plant.
After tranquil weather during ratn· and. a few thunderltorms
Combustion Engineering Inc..
the daylight hours Wednesday
over. the state Tl\.ursday. Batl!er . Windsor. Conp., and CQ Inc..
rain was expected to develop significant rainfall totals hr the Homer City, Pa .. a subsidiary of
over much · of Ohio -during the %-inch . to l-inch · r~ge are
the Electric Power Research
night ,
expected.
Instii\J!e · Inc., Windsor. Conn.,
High pressure moving over the ·
High temperatures Thllrsday .wtll .coUaborate on a project to
· northern portion of Ohio during are expected to range from tbe · produce a computerized softthe day was expected to provide . middle 50s overnorther!i.O!lio to ware program that can aid
•partly sunny conditions. How- the middle .70s in the. eJ~:!reme lltilittes tn choosing the right
ever, partly cloudy skies were south.
. _q uality ot coal.
·
·
el'pected In southern Ohio due lo
The warm front is forecast to .... _,.-The dejiartment said the
a developing weather system to continue north ·, through ; Ohio projects bring to 19 the number
the southwest.
'
Thursday night, This j\'ift set tl!e ' of .completed agreements in the
IIi fact, some showers could stage for a . warm day Friday Clean Coal Technology Procrop up in extreme southern onto along with a ~ntlnuing threaj of · gram, the nation's largest
, hy evening.
showers or tpunder~_torms .
e!'ergy ~nd environmental
The rain will be spurred by a Coqler weather is expected for bitttattve.
,· Congress. has up to 30 days to
··.
low pressure system developing the-weekend. ''
over Texas Wednesday night that · On the Wednesday .morning f!!vlew the agreements ~fore
will produce a moist flow of air
weather map,
pressure was
originating over the Gulf . of ' centered
over
Mexico, the National Weather- 'tern sha~~d:~~~~~- ~c:roii:s\io:~tlie:rn~
Service said.
·
· ·
Ohio ,
New ·
,,, • -·· ·
the .East ' '"~••
As the air moves over a stalled evening·
f..
_ frontal boundary south of Ohio, Thursday, morning.
A stationary iront extertded
.•
· rain should develop from southw. esf to northeast ·over the state . from .Texas northeasL tlirough ''
th.e mtd·At~ntic slates into tl!e ·
· Wednesday· night.
.
Atlantic
Ocean .
Nighttime lows were expected
·.
Low
pressure
was forecast to
to range from the middle 40s in
-~ northern Ohio to the middle 50s in develop over Texas Wednesday
. and it Is expected to . track
~ the extreme south.
~...
..
.
The Texas. loW' Is forecast to northeast to Missouri hy Thurs·
• begin a northeast trek overnight. day night.

----~------==)]

I·
I
I
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Spring Into The Weekend
With The

·coLUMBUS EAST
HOTEL

,

Philomena calls for the death
penalty for .'_'drug lords" and
uniform stalewlde sentencing for
drug offenses with an additional
three years tn prison for a
drug-selling specification.
He proposes six work farms low security facilities with therapists, counselors and job training
personnel - for drug offenders,
and mandatory drug education in
the schools from grades 1-12.
One of the first 'things Philomena said he will do if elected is
. to organize a task force of
prosecutors to go into counties
· and help prose,c ute multi-county
drug cases.
·
Middleton agrees that the
·attorney general's office should
spearbead drug enforcement. ·'I
got into this (race) because of the
problems I saw with drugs," he
said.
Middleton said he would have
. the organized crime unit work

vestlgatton
shi!llllents.

,(Formerly The i',larrtoll Eastl
Relax on a Friday. Saturday. or Sunday
night and have breakfast for two the next
morning at a special spnnl( rate of:

only

$4·goo .,,

2124 S. Hamilton Rd. • Columbus. OH 43232
(814)861-7220 • Toll Free (8001387-1380

Inn::

PrrNln! thlst·m•pon alt·h&lt;'t·k· ln. Ba~on ;nnil;lhiii1\'.T~x~

_

_J~m\uuy n~l

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STEAKHOUSE

WOOD GROUP

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$14 01
PER WEEII

PER
$.1520 WEEI

S3497

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14 CU. FT.

51295 ;::.

WRH MAnRESS SET
. Starting At

Reg.

,.

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Satunlav

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9 11!1 'tit' I pm
SundiiY 12 to 6
·· ; ·
Ajlpt. from
· 8
'tM 9

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Department of Energy Tuesday
said it has added three more
projec't s to its Jist of successfully
negotiated Clean Coal 'j'echnol·
ogy projects.
.
The projects are part of a $5
billion: joint government Industry effort to showcase advanced methods for using coal
economically while improving
the quality of the nation's air.
TransAlta Resources Investment Corp. of Calgary, Alberta,
the first non-U.S. firm to be
'chosen as a prime sponsor of a
Clean Coal Technology project,
will outfit an Illinois power plant
with specially designed coal
burners that offer a relatively
inexpensive way of capturing
acid rain-causing pollutants ,
Southern Company SerVices
·
Continued on page 7

MEI·Gs COUNTY

'

furniture that you help design!

304-421-1065

Choose your favorites from more than 400·
styles ot sofas, chairs, lovestats, sleep SOfas, . •
recliners &amp; sectionols- ell with lifetime frame warranties.

Memorial Bridge
Approach .
on Garfield Ave ..

;;L
lJ •
Then pick the perfect color and pattern for yOu,. home
from IIIO(e''thlln 700 weor-tes.d fabrics. ·

home

. You set exactly what you want, deliVered to your
in
30 days. Just cut the comer below. We guerantu it's the
only corner that will be cut In putting a beautiful new
Norwalk soto or chair In your home.

R
FUR

~-

5 - 9 AM-2 PM

-,~ . T~-.oub~OUT THE STORE.

•

RUTLAND, OHIO
St. Rt. 124
,'Three Miles Off Rt. 124 .,... ~ ~o I

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OFFICIAl QUESTIONS AND
'ISSUES ·BAlLOl
PRIMARY -ELECTION
MAY-8, 1990
.

limited time.on quality

WILLPAPII AND
BLIND SHOP

...

J

coupon and save for a

PRICES .SL~~ED ON ITEMS FOUND

..

DOE adds
•
new proJects
to control
pollution

,Pick Up Friday•
nl Monda
Hp ·
Y

I

.. (Weather Permitting Each D~y)

SAVE.20f)/o TO soo/o·.:

It, 14·1, 5 Mhs Oft "
lt. 7 in cent..ary

ourcQI'Mr,
. bring in the

Pll DAY

FRIDAY, MAY 4-9 AM-4 .PM

~A~URDAY, MAY

SATURDAy'" MAY '5

. 614·446.;3151 '

·

$1 000

.
.DON~~
. MISS ·ouR BIG ·

'17th Anni~ersary' s·ale· .:
-··

·S99

$!~9 .

now. cut

WallpQper Steamtr

DAN'S . ·:&gt;, ~'SIDEWALK SALE~'

' CONTINUES THRU.

With Two MatChing
Glicltr Choirs

PRICE

"

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POKH GLIDER

Reg. S69.95

.

. '

REF.RIGERATOR

c..,.toh With hddilltl

Uke

'

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FROST FREE

e RENT e

'

MAGIC CHEF

4 POSTER
BEDROOM SUITE

approval .
Another 19 projects are In
contract' talks With the government, and . the Energy Department plans two more rounds of
private sector competition before wrapping up the project
selection phase of the Clean Coal
program in 1992.

~:t~he:!de~pa:,r:tm:en:t~c:an~g~i:ve:t~ts~f~in:a~lJb;E;~ii;;~wv;;;·

=-~~·x·t·ll~Xpln·.~· St·pi . _•·__.._:..

•

. 6 PC.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7
•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

litO li:asday, May 2, 1990

The Qhio Department of Aging
.and the Ohht Department of -Mental Health
· ~~ Salutes
k'

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&lt;1:

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PTION

PROP-OSED TAX LEVY
•

. MEIGS COUNTY
A Maiority affirmative ~ote is nec~ssary for 'passage.
'

wrTH C()UPON Ill.OW

'

'

HURRY! Coupon Expires 5111190 or--'---,
-~----------------­

An additional tax for the benefit of Meigs County for
the purpose of MAINTENANCE AND OPERATION OF
CARLETON SCHOOL AND MEIGS INDUSTRIES WORKSHOP ~OR PERSONS WITH MENTAL RETARDATION AND
DEVELOP-MENTAL DISABILITIES at a rate not exceeding
· 1.5 mills for each one dollar' of valuation,' which .
amounts to fifteen cents ($0.15) for each one' hund.red
dollars of valuation, for a period .of three (l) years.

CHARBROILED

Ribe .. .,
stearDinner

I~

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'

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.
PAID FOR BY CARLETON SCHOOLYMEIGS INDUSTRY LEVY
.

COMMITTEE. DOUG LITTLE, CHAIRMAN;- ,
1310 CARLETON STREET,
SYRACUSE,
OHIO
.
.
'

Cou on

·'

.

.

GAWPOus··,
UPPII IIYEI ID.

'

.We look forward to this new.era of assistance to the older reside_nts of
Muskingum, Perry, Hocking, Meigs, Athens, Morgan, Nobl~, Monr'oe and Washington counties
..

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Ex ires 5111190

PonMtoN.Inc.

..

on its Grand Opening Today
..

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Buckeye-Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development District

.

The Tax Levy 104

.

.

lncludits pototo and
gorli&lt;;.jpo~t plus Ponderosa's
AII•Yi:W•Can•Eat Grand Bulfet'•

'

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Ribe .
stearDinner
.

SAMPLE BALLOT
'

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···········-------··········--·--·--HURRY/
C!HARBROILED .

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•

'FOR ELDERS

&lt;

Includes potato and
garlic toast plus Ponderosa's
All•'(ou•CtwEatGrond Buffet"

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(Acren from thl Airport)

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Page 8-;:-The

D&amp;ily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:·. BIG BEND••• Your Independently Owned
· Low·Pr.ced Supermarket

Wednesday. May 2, 1990.

w.,,.
c,.,,,,,,, &gt; YEAaAnniversllry
'

We Ret- the Right to Umtt Cluentltln • Pri... Effective Through S.turdey, Mey II, 1190
USDA Food 818mpe end WIC
Ac....-cl • Not Aup -•IIIIo tar Typogrephiaoll or Pk:toriel E...,...

eau,._

Wednesday, May 2, 1990

Reports were given from the
It was announced that the Sons
state
convention which was at ·of the American Revolutlon.wlll
tended
by Mrs. Reynolds, Mrs.
have a grave marking ceremony
As
hieS',
and Nancy VanMeter,
on June 2 for Peter Grow ai the
..
·Reyn\)lds presented a
Mrs
Chester ·.C emetery at the r!lcent
program
.from the Natlonal De·
meeting of the Return Jonathan
fense
Article,
"Whatever liap·
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
pened
to
George
Wasbington?"
American Revolution, when the
In
her
program,
Mrs . Reynolds
group met at the horne of Mrs.
that
national
hollday once
noted
Margaret Weber with Donna .
dedicated
to
George
Washington
Jenkins, Pauline Arklns, Marpreeminent
figure In
as
the
garet Parson, SharonJew.ell. and
America's
herliage
has
been
~rs. Cecil B.lackwood as contrlsubmerged
··Into
an
Impersonal
butln~ host~ses.
Rae Reynolds, regent, opened . holiday called P.resldent's Day,
and that school textbooks reveal
the meeting with June Ashley,
a declining emphasis oq the
acting chaplain, a nd Mary Yost
lmpprtance and Influence of
leadiJ1g the Pledge of All~g1ance.

"FOODLAND'S · BEEN SEIVING THE TRI-STATE 32 YEARS AS
EASTMAN'S FOOILANDS HAVE SERVED YOU FOR OVER 1011
THANIS FOR
PATRONAGE. -

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DAR· meets recently

32

Mlnd1d

;

Washington.
She stated that sc hool children
were once ·taught that Washington was '"first In- war, first In
peace, and first in the hearts of
his countrymen." She went on to
say that he was a leader amony
many men of intellect, learning,
and diplomatic skills.
She noted that from his first
inaugural address he stated "of
all the dispositions and habits
which lead to political prosperIty, religion and morality are
Indispensable supports." and
from the cherry tree story he
·stated, ''I hold the maxim no less
applicallle to public than to
private affairs that honesty is
a-lways the best policy."
Mrs. Reynolds stated that one

COPYRIG HT 1990 • THE~t(ROGER CO. •
ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY.
APRIL 29, THROUGH SATURDAY,
MAY 5, 1990, IN POMEROY. OHIO
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT· TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES. NONE s'OLD TO
DEALERS.
ADVEIITISED lllM POUCY- Each of these

idve&lt;ljold hoiT!I lo requlrea to be readily
avollabte ~ ...le in each .!(roger Store,
axoopt aa *""dflcally not!ld in this ap. If wo
do run ou1 of an adveniaed item, we will
offer vou your choica of a·comparabte item,

. when available, reflecting t~ aarne savings.
or a rai(\check which will entitte you to
purchase the advertised item at the

of the few times Washington
spoke as father of the constitu·
llon;~l convention In 1787 was to
say, ·'If to please the people. we
offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterwards
defend our "'ork? Let us raise a
standard to which the wise and
honest ca.n repair; the event Is in .
the hand of God." .
She said that In his fifth annual
address to congress in 1793,
washington gave us the most
succinct two-part formula for
peace ever devised. First, be
ready for war and secondly ,let 11
be known that we are ready. She
went on to say that' the strong ·
warnings he gave then seem to be
also true in modern times.

Kindergarten registration
set for Eastern Local \
evidence that the child has had
The Eastern Local School
District's kindergarten registra- four OPT shots. four polio shots ,
tion will be held Friday from 8 · one MMR shot and a TB skin test
a.m. to 3 p.m. "at Tuppers Plains
administered within the last
Elementary, and on Monday
year. Additionally. a copy of the
from 8 a .m. to 3 p.m. at Chester- child's birth certi fica t«&gt; Is
Elementary. Parents may regis·
required.
The kindergarten teacher,
ter their children If the c)tlld will
be five years old on or before
sc hool nurse and speech ·therapis! wtli all be present to answer
Sept. 30.
questions . .
Parents are urged to call the
Children, in order to become
sc
hools, Chester at 985-3304, and'
registered. must be present.
.Plains at .ffii-3310 , to
Tuppers
Records required are, an immun- ·
make
an
appointment .
lzalion record which provides

Only At Kroger ...
.

.

L·o w.Prices.
· .And.More.
~~~~
0 /(fllllll/fl~;://.

ad-illd price within 30 days. Only one
vendor coupon will be ·accepted per item
pure hosed.

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CIIQIHTA

BANANAS
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U.S.· GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
· . GRAIN FED BEEF .·

·Boneless
~~~ Ribeye ·steak ·
Pouml

U.S. Grade A HollyFarms

Chicken
Breast

; ~arterstb.

swm

Vidalia-Oriions .

s. 9c
Ll.

j

HERITAGE HOUSE

·79-

'.

WHOLE WATERMELON EACH .

KROGER

'.:1.99 ·

~~

Grade A~~
Large Eggs
·

3

GAUON

.

CHILLED

Kroger
~~-:::::-,Orange Juice
Gallon

18-Ct

Limit 1 With
Aclclitional
Purchose. ·

.I

'

CHILLED SEAL TEST ORANGE JUICE GALLON •. ,

SUGAR FREE DELUXE
FROZEN DESSERT OR

Kroger o,luxe .
Ice Cream
. %-Gallon

' WIN A
FAMILY VACATION TO
DISNEY WORLD
'

P~US

FREE GROCERY GIVEAWU
&amp; .A FOODLAND SHOPPING SPiEl

..
s

79

PLASTIC

s

HUCK ROAST
.

WELL ··H·ouSE
COFFEE

1°/o MILK
.

~

~:·$139

BONELESS

H

Sliced Bacon

REG. • E.P. • ADC • FRENCH

A

DINNEI.LL

..•

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'•'•·..·

For
KROGER

"'

· ENTRY
BLANK
,
_______________________

City------~----\

~·----~---------~-----KROGER BuTTERMilK GA'i:t.ON . : •• 1.a

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

., ...

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Fresh Made ·
Cinnamon·Rolls

Nestle's Single
Candy Bars

~,

c

6-Ct16-oL ·

REGULARLY ... tl.a

�10-The Daily Sentinel~!!==!!!

The Daily

Wednesdey. May 2. 1990

Ohio

Community
: calendar
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - There will be a
' holiness revival at ihe Rutland
Community Church located one
. half mile out of Rutland on New
· Uma , Road beginning through
saturday. Rev. Elbert ll;lrrow
;wm be the evangel!sf and there
~wl!l be special singing by the
·Mann Family. Services start at 7
;p.m. nightly.

&lt; POMEROY -Residents of
:Amer!care·Pomeroy are having
;a flower sale through Thursday
~from 9a.m. to 3:30p.m. A variety
-;or flowers and plants will be sold
· .,and the publiC Is welcome. All ·
:PI'QCeedS will go to the residents
:Christmas fund .

Yout Feel Ate In (Jood
Hsnd1 with Ot. Comlotf/ ·

STORE HOURS

~nday thru

Sunday

8 AM-10 PM

TRUNK. SHOW FRIDAY,
MAY 4

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY
OH.
-· ' -. - ..
~-- ~ · ·~

"")

11

~

·PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., APR. 29 THRU SAT., JUNES, 1990

10 A.M. TO 5 P.M..
'

•

: ANTIQUITY -The Splrltual
Talth Church In Antiquity will
,have revival through Monday at
·7 p.m. nightly. Rev. Buddy and
'Bonnie Steele of Kentucky will
preach.

a

'

:' RACINE - A meeting to give
,parents an oportun!ty to get basic
Information concerning the reg·
:!station of freshmen for high
&gt;S(lhool classes will be held
:Wednesday · at 7 · p.m. at the
· ,Southern High School cafeteria..

.

-

MIXED

Fryer Parts •••••:!•••. 49&lt;

.

:: REEDSVILLE- The ·E astern
;Athletic Boosters will meet Wed·
111esday at 8 p.m. In the high
~hool cafeteria.'

Ch~-~k

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -Girl scout Jead:ers In the Big Bend Service l.lnlt
:wm meet Thursday, 7. p.m., at
.Syracuse Elementary.
·

.

'

POMEROY - A rummage
:;sate wlll be held 'by thr Ladles
;Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital Thursday, Friday and
Saturday at the Eagles bu!ldlllg
on EastMalnStreet. Thesalewlll
begin each morning at 8: 30 p.m.
RUTLAND .- The Rutland .
Township Trustees will meet In
regular session Thursday at 6: 30
p.m .. at the Rutland Fire Staton.
The public Is lnvi ted to attend.

.

BUCKET

Cube Steak •••.•:!..• $2

t

"&gt;·

$ _ 39
Roast ••••l:.... .1

. ~.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

; . :POME-ROY -he Pome~oy
·Lodge 164 will meet Wednesday
~~ 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Temple. Work In Master Mason
,Degree. All master masons are
urged to attend.
; POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of Ihe Nazarene will have
revival through Sunday at 7 p.m.
rilghtly with J. Wilmer Lavbert,
who Is the former dlsttlct super·
~ntendent of the Nazarene church
for Central Ohio District. There
~Ul be special singing and Rev.
(ilenn McClung Invites the
'publiC.

of competition. Band members left Melp Hlp School last ·
Thul'!lday, speilt Friday at Cocoa Beach, Saturday eveDIDI after
compkitlng competltlou at a water park, and all day Sund'a y at
Dlsuey World. They ret~_ned home early Monday evening.
.

,WINNE;RS - The M!!lgs High School Band directed by Tony
Dingus captured third place Ia the All American Music Festival
at Orlaudo, Fla. O!J Saturday. Baud members took the third place
bl. the parade competltlo11 at the .!esUvaJ held at Orange High .
SchOol. The younk musiclaDS also participated In the concert area ·

9
6

-Daughters . of Americ1~r i~tall ·new officers
d
d
were decorated with blue cloths,
O~flcers were eleele
an f
white vases with flowers mlnla·
lnstal~d at the spring m~~ 1Wa~t
ture fly swat.ers. with ~agnets,
the Dtstrlct Deputies a
and small baskets of. potpourri, ·
Councilors Club of Dlstrlc~ 13j
which was donated by JoAnn
Daughters of America, he a
Baum. .
·
the-chester lodge hall.
d
Mrs. Baum ·presided at · the
. Officers are ·Erma .Oelan · --: meeting and read six verses of
president; Alberta Hart~horn.'
Psalm 115. The Lord's .Prayer
Perry Council, vtce prestdent, · and Pled~o the American flag
Margaret Cotterill, secretary;
were given In uniSon. Members
and Thelma White, treasurer.
answered rollcall by telllngwhat
The convention comm-i!tee
they would like ·to do this
served the dinner and T b:ty
summer. ·
a es

' : ·, ~~~ ' . ; . $ 19 a·~ loon,a •••••••••••••••·s1 39
1/4 Pork Lotn •••••• ~. 1 .·_
(ORN KING 6-8 LB. AVG. . . ·. $ . ,
7
9
Boneless Hams •• -.. ·1,.
KAH~'S REGULAR
'
$1 '79
Wteners ••••••••••• ~ ••~~ ·
KAHN'S
· . ·. . · $ ]
9
7
con •••••••••••••••••• ~
ECKRICH

.

'

Margaret Cotterlll read the
minutes of the meeting arid
Thelma White gave the treasur· .
er~s report.
Esther Harden. · district deputy, and Lora Damewood are
home from the hospital and It
was rei&gt;orted that .Haye ·aasel··.
ton, Belpre, Is lll.
The club wlll have a picniC on
June. 30 at 12:30 p.m. at the park
In Logan.
Esther Smith, vice state councllor, spoke briefly about statz

•

•

.

. LB.

•

· LB.

•

•

•

•

refrigerator

•

almost
UNBELIEVABLE
DEAL
at this low -·:·..,,;
• Adjustable
cantilevered
shelves
• Twin fruit/
. v~getabie
cnspers
• Doorshelffor"
2-liter bottles

JUST $15 MONTHLY•!

.

'

He'ad Lettuce
••~-:. 2/ Sl
.
.

.

FLAVORITE

•

Potato Chips •••••••••· 99·&lt;
DOLE
·
1 9&lt;
•
I
.
.
P.1neapp e .;••••.•~. :.o:•• u
'

'

2°/o Milk ••••••• ~•••:'!-. $169
SHEDD'_S- ~.OUN!RY CROCK .·
$ 49
Marge~r1ne •••••••••••• 1
_
BANQUET 28-32 .OZ. . · · . .
$ ]t· 49
fa_~~~-Y ~ Entrees •••• .

2

•.

1
FRIDAY
; nEEDSVILLE -The Olive
• Township Trustees wlll meet .
7Frlday at 7:30 p.m. ·at the
: Reedsv!Ue Fire House.

CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PKG.

99&lt;

, Geo4 Clltly At Pewlll's Sllplr Vatu
·GeM S... Apr. 29 thru Sat. Mtt S

TIDE -DETERGENT .
.

88L~~:

$649

Geod Only At Powlli's Sllplr Valu
Gooll s... Apr. 29 ttn Sat. • .s

•

.IAN~Un IR;gu~r

OnlYI

.

·

Fr1ed C·htcken ••• !~.~.
•

'
; SUNSHINE
20 LB.
BAG

$.

9
9
1·- .

4-temperature

washer

electric dryer

has America's largest
~soble capacity; 3-temps

Auto. shut·off at preset
dryness level

Was $.139.99
(KM 28701)

. . (KM
Was $339.46
$.-99
..,.
68701)

Natural gas $339.46
Was $379.46 (KM 78701)

•~-'---- SAVE $80~-__.J

$564."

$15 Monthly'
lAP 30921 )

SAVE $68

1.3 cu. ft. KENMORE®

microwave oven

3

LAY'S· 10 OZ. REG. Sh9.9

2-speed, 9-cyde

$399."

Ll .

'

: potatoel, ereen beans, cole slaw,
~ dtDMr role. ~!e and drink.

noW ,n
'
. sears Store.

· EXTRA-CAPACITY lAUNDRY PAIR ...

: POMEROY - The SaliSbury
.To&gt;l(nshlp Trustees wlll m~
'ThllFsday at 7 p.m. at the
township hall In Rock Springs.

~::..: c::;:n ::~~: 1;:~~

0 tthe

. 'ues
mOn"'· vo•
· your

ofeW

and back row, Jason Witherell, Andrea McDo~
nald, and Tom Cremeans, pictured with RuutY
Bookman, teacher, have been eu'lered In state aud
natll!nal competltlou. Last year the sehoul place
·13th In Ohio ..,d I 21st In the nation In the physical
science -test, and in 11188 the school took flrslln the
state and ilighth In the nation.
·

I

· ; MIDDLEPORT -Evangeline
;Chapter No. 172 Order of the
·Easter Star will meet Thursday
:at 7: 30 p.m. Twenty-five year
·members will be honored at 6
·p.m. and pins wlll be presented.
Initiation wUII;Ie exemplified and
;officers are to wear ch~pter
.dresses.

:: REl:DSVILLE -The Eastern
;:Athletic Boosters wlll sponsor a .
. ~ baked steakdlnner .on Friday at 5
, p.m. at tbe Tuppers Plains Fire ·
• ~ Houae. Coal'ls " for adults and ·

ne

•

: TUPPERS PLAINS -The
:TUppers Plain VFW Post 9053
·Ladles Auxiliary will meet
'Thursday at i: 30 p.m. for Instal·
latlon of officers.

. RACINE- The Racine Amerl·
: can Legion will meet Thursday at
•7: 30 p.m. for election of officers.
: Refreshments wlll be served. ·

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

19-cu. ft.
KENMORE

w!ll be held by theTrlnltyChurch
'on Thursday and ,Friday from .
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ·All proceeds
:will go to .a spe~lal .church
;project.

.

CHAPMAN SHOES

~ re ore \ust

.·' POMEROY -A rummage sale

• POMEROY -The Pomeroy
:group of A.A. and AI Anori ·wm
: meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
·Sacred Heart 'Catholic Church.
iCall 1· 800 -333 -5051 for
Information.

· Register For FREE Pair of Soft Spot ·Sandals

...
'TUE 'TOP' TEN- Again this year the Meigs
Juulor High School students of Rusiy Bookman
aud Jesse Vall are participating In the National
Science. Olympiad: The physical science test
papers of these ten top students at Melr;s .lunior
High, left to right, front, Matt Clark, Danlelle .
Gray, and Marlo White, second row, Tracy Fife,
Aimee Elllo&amp;t, Stephen Smith, aud Lori Burnem,

· POMEROY -There will be a
rummage sale at the Grace
EpiScopal Church on Thursday
.and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

..

Refreshments Will Be Served.

LB

· POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
Bring conipleted neckla~es.

.' .

session In August at Toledo. She
also announced a· district meet lng for May 19 at 1 p.m. at the
Chester Lodge Hall. All
members going to state .session ,
are urged to attend.
Margaret Cotter111 read " Make
Amerlc;~ Beautiful," Esther ·
Smith read ".R emember When,"
and JpAnn Baum read '"Make
Your Day Bright by Thinking
Right ," ·
Door prizes were won by
Myrtle Higgins, Logan Council
and Dorothy Ritchie, Chester
Council.
Atteitdlng were Mary Moose,
Albert Hartshorn, Perry Council,
New Lexington; Mildred Low ery, Irene Phillips. Myr!!f Higgins, Logan Council; · Bette
Biggs, Janice Lawson, Eileen
Clark, Margaret Cotterill, Betty
Spencer, Guiding Star Council,
Syracuse; Elizabeth Hayes,
_Jean Frederick,_ Opal Hollon.
Betty Roush, Esther Smith,
Erma Clelan'd, Mary K. Holter,
Dorothy Ritchie, Marcia Keller,
Faye Kirkhart, Thelma White,
Doris Grueser, JoAnn Baum,
Sadie Trussell, Helen Wolf, Chester Council, and Diane Aspery,
Logan, a guest.

features stirrer fon,.plus
turntable for even cooking

FitEE .· CRUTCH 'RENTAL·":

$.272A7S10Monthly'
{KM89447)

SAVE .~~.v

WnH $20 DEPOSIT.

'

'DEPOSIT WILL BE RETURNED
. WHEN· CRUTCHES ARE
RETURNED
26 IN. ICA

CONSOLE TElE~ISION
.

DOG FOOD

$299 .

Gooll Clltly At ·Powlll's S.,. v•
. GMII S... Apr. 29 !In Sat.- S

DUNCAN liNES
· · 11-1u 01. CAKE MIX or
11.3

oz. fROSTINGS

2/Sl

Geo4 Chtly At l'owlll's S.• Vahl
Geo4 Sun.
29 thru Sat. Mtt S

Prices
Good At .
Middleport .
Store Only

786 North
Second Ave~
Middleport

$559 99 Plus T~x
SAYI '61.00

REGISTER
TO'WINA·
DIEHARD
GOLD
BATIERY

992-6421
1:3().11:00 Mon.. Tuee .. Wfll., Frt..
1:30-2:00 Thura. • Set.

992·2171

�-.
Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. May 2. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

...--Local news briefsGallia woman killed in wreck
A wreck Involving a tractor-trailer and a car Wednesday at
12:20 p.m. In Raccoon 'township on U.S. 35, four miles east of the
Gallla-Jackson County line; claimed the life of a Bidwell area
woman, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Nancy Morrison, 25, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was killed when her Dodge
Aries was involved In · a collision with a 1986 White .
tractor-trailer owned by Blue Ridge Transfer - Co.. Inc. of
Roanoke, Va., and driven by Stephen L.Underwood Sr., 43, of
Vinton, Va. Morrison was dead on arrival at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mor.rlson Is the first person to die on Gailia County highways
In 1990.
'
'
·
Hurt was admitted lor treatment of various cuts. At last
report she was Us ted in good condition. Underwood was treated .
and released for a fractured right finger and bruises.
According to the report, Morrison . was driving east, and
Underwood was heading west when one of the vehicles went lei)
of center, causing the coUislon. The diagram on the r~port
Indicates tbat the Impact oft he collision knocked Morrison scar
off the right side of the road, throwing Morrison and Hurt from

.

. ~c~

MorriSon and Hurt were not wearing their seat belts.
Underwood was wearing his seat pelt, and was not thrown from
the tractor.
·
Morrison's body was taken to McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in
Vinton.
.
The wre&lt;;k remains · under investigation by the Patrol. No·
citations were issu~d at press time.

Two injured in one-car wreck

---Meigs announcements---Le gloli dance
The Rutland American Legion
will have a round and square
dance Saturday from 9 p.m. to 1
.a .m. at the legion hall on Beech
Grove Road In Rutland.

soup, sandwiches, and pie.
Revival
The Keno C]Jurch of Christ will
have revival Thursday through '
Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly . Art
Bush will be 1hz evangelist.
Roger Spring,' minister, invites
Election day.dloner
the public to attend.
The Racine United Methodist OES meeting
Women will have an election day
The Evangeline Chapter No.
dinner on Tuesday beginning at 173 Order of the Eastern Star,
11 a.m. at the Rarine Methodist · Miildleport , will meet Thursday
Church. The menu will Include at 7: 30 p.m. Twenty-five year
members will be honqred and six
25-year pins will be presented.
Initiation will be exempliffed and
Continued tr'om page 1
officers are to wear chapter
dresses.
meet consumer needs over the
pat eight years a.s inclullfng
infant stimulation, nutritional
tr;~ining and s·peecli and language therapy .for chUdren's'
services, and janitorial services,
lawn care-, and small assembly
and packaging in the adult
programs. These IJrograms, he
Says, have Increased'. c!Jent
STOCK SHADES
wages and earnings. ·
The Adult- Services Program
and the Meigs Industries also
actlieved, CARF 'Accredltatiqn
which signifies national recognition for standards of excellence,
according to the superintendent,
who also reports that Carleton
School and Meigs ·Industries
have been praised by state and
local officials as a modeiMR/ DD
·program.

Meigs ...

Two women were injured in a one-car wreck Tuesday at 2:23
p.m. In Bedford Township on U.S. 33, 2.4 miles s~uth of the
Meigs-Athens County. line, according to theGallia-MelgsPostof
the State Highway Patrol.
Rhonda J . Elliott, 25, of Ashland,- Ky., and her passenger, Lisa
Evans, 24, of Ceredo, W.Va., were taken by ambulance to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Elliott was treated 'and released
for bruises and Evans was treated and released lor scrapes.
South Central Ohio
.Elliott, d~iving a 1984 Ford Escort, was heading east when she
Occasional rain and a chance
· of thunderstorms Wednesday
went off the right' side ofthe road, ,s truck a ditch and overturned.
No one was thrown from the car·in spite of the fact that neither • night, with' a low near 55, Chance
.. wpman was wearing a.s.e at be.lt.
.
l.
of raiv i~ near
percenL
·.- E[Uofl was cited for failure to control aricrnot wearing a seat
Occasicinal showers and thunderstorms Thursday, with highs
belt.
between 70 and 75. Chance of rain
is 90 percent.
Extended Forecast ·
~
Friday throu~~:h Sunday
Showers and thunderstorms
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
likely Friday, with a chance of
responded to s!J! calls for assistance on Tuesday. ·.
.
rain Saturday, and fair weather
At 12:59 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Butternut
on Sunday. Highs will range from
Avenue for Mary Garnes who was transpotted to Veterans
the mid 60s to the mid 70s Friday,
··
·
·
Memorial Hospital.
·from the Iipper 50s to the mid sils
The Syracuse Ftre Department went ·to Minersville at 3:55
Saturday, and in the 60s Sunday.
a.m. for a brush fire on property owned. by Charles Boggess.
Overnight lows will range from
At 10:05 a.m. the Pomeroy unit responded to a call on
the upper 40s to. the upper 50s·
· Mulberry Avenue for Harold Cundiff who was taken, to Pleasant
Friday morning, from the upper
Valley Hospital.
.
30s to the 40s early·Saturday, and
At 11 : 29 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Wolf Pen Road for
from the upper 30s to the nild 40s
Dorothy Higgins who was taken to Veterans..
.
Sunday morning. ·
·
The Pomeroy Fire Department was called to Route33at 1:31
p.m. on an auto accident in .which Rhonda Elliot was
Marriage li~nse
transported by the Pomeroy squad to Veterans, and Lisa Evans
was taken by the Syracuse unit to Veterans.
A marriage license has been
The final call for assistance on Tuesday came at 6:30p.m. ,
in Meigs County. Probate
issued
when the Syracuse and Racine Fire Depariments were called to
Court
to
Phillip Ray Laudermilt ,
. Bridgeman Street for a struct11re fir!' caused. by an explosion at
24';~Letart
, W.Va., and Cathy Ann
the Sampson Hall residence. ,Hall was taken to Veterans.
Blessing, 19, Shade.

Weather .

EMS

l

'

BRING IN YOUR
OLD SHADES

$1

-

.Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

AND WE'LL
00
GIVE YOU
ON EACH NEW SHADE
PURCHASEAND WE'LL

,MEAT
. SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••89C
VIRGINIA BRA"D HAM ••••'! S2.49
DEU MADE

SHREDDED S2.J9 u.

·

TO PLACE AN AD (All 992·21 56

, I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
~~,;,.;.,.. 1.10 diacounl tar ada ~id in adv•nce

run 3 d•• It no ch•gi.

•SentW.IIIt not rHponsibfe for errori aftir first dev . !Check
f9t .,,oraiinl d..- ad runs'" paper) . C1!1 before 2 :00 D rn
diiW'

.

CHEESE ..............\1.91,. 52.09
SHEDD'S $PlEAD

polil Daity TribUne. reaching over 18.000 homes.

. 6X6

TUMILER
MARGADIE ...t91•• 2/SI.09

TOMATOES .........:.u~.s9c

IANQUn

FRIED CHICKEN .... ~•• ~....~!.~~·. S3.8'9 .-

CHICKEN. LIVERS ••••••••••
!~.~~·~ ....
.
. 89c
-

.

DR MONTE

AT&amp;T .............. .... ....... ........ .40'!.
Ashland Oil .. ....... .. ........... .. 34 l'o
Bob Evans .. :.., ........ .'.............. 12
Charming Shoppes .............. 9¥,
City Holding Co ..................... 14
Federal Mogul... ................. 18\7
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 35%
Heck's ................................. 2:Y,
Key Centurion .... :.. ............ .14'!.
·Lands' End .............. .......... .16%
Limited Inc ... : ........ .. .. ...... 40%
.Multimedia Inc ................... 78\7
Rax Restaurant~ ........... ....... 2\',
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. 15\',
Shoney 's Inc . ...................... 13%
Star Bank ......................... 20}&lt;1
Wendy's Int'l .. ..... .:.... .... ..... .4%
Worthington Ind .... .............. 21 \1,
''&lt;Wendy's Is ex dividend today)

BAR B.Q..

'

'

. ·

,

POMEIOY, OHIO

.

45131,- IPDOinted E.o-

cutoroltlol-teofJohn E.
Houck, dl-..t. lote of

· 108

Butternut
Avenue,
Pomroy, Ohio •8789.

Robert E. Buck,
·.
· Probete J~tdoo
una K. N•oet•Oij!• .Clerk
141 211; Ill 2. B. 3tc •

.....

,,";

I

..... CANVAS CLASSICS
. NOW AT PICWAY

.'

Reg. to 6.99
Variations® Canvu Slip-On
with fashion crest. In black or
,;.hite. Women's sizes 5-11.
Reg. 6.99, Just 3.99.

Sprin~® Canval Oxford. Infants'
sizes 5 1h-8; girls'·-sizes 8'h-3,
women's sizes 5-11 in white.
Women's sizes 5-.1 1 in
black, just 3.99 •

I wish to extend my

appreciation to all
those at ._Hplzer
Medical ~nter,
ceo. Riverside
Methodist Hospital,
doctors. nurseS',

Skymed warn for
their specie! ca•e
during my illness.
Thank you for the ·
prayers, visits, food,
gifts. flowers, phone
calls and the get well
cards end for your
love and iupport.
You will never be
· forgotten.
God Bless You All.
'
SHIRLEY

3 Announcemems

'

:Pick
It Up_

Valrlalliolls® Canvas
Slip-On in white With
navy stripe, or white with
pink stripe. Girls' 'sizes 11-3.
Reg. 5.99, juat 3.99.

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS TODAY

992-2156

&amp;

;"'.,.......

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY 9:30-5:00;-SATURDAY 9:30·12:00
Southarn High School

71 - AutosforSale
· 72 - nucks for Sal•

31 -Homn for &amp;.ale
32 - Mobl!• Hom" tor Sale
33 -flrms to, Sale

Cheerleaders will sell
Hotdogs 2 for '1.00 and
FREE Drink on Saturday. All
, proceads go to ChaeriNdere. , ,

34 - Bu•in•s Buildings

e. 4 ~o ·s

H - vanf

74- Motorcvc_h• ·
715":"' 8catsS..Mo1o,• for Sale
71-Auto Pans &amp; Acc••oriM
77--Auto Rep1ir
78 - C•mping £quipmej'l1

79-Cempen &amp; Motor Homn

lil@@tll .

Servtces

· 41 - Houae1 for Rent'"

46,-- Space for Rent

47-Wtnted tO Rent
.t8- Equipment for Ael'l't
49 - For le•e

· Little things .·
Rre Worth Alot
in
.'
the CIRssified Section!

992-215.6
Real Estate General

B:J- fx.cweting
94- Eiec:trical &amp;. Aefrig.,•1iori

8!5-G•n••l Haultng
86 - Mobile Hame Rep•it

87 - Upholst.,y'

PubliC Notice

E. MAi1nW

;·

.... ·-·

·· ·~

-

---·----·--------.:..- -

NEW LISTING - RACINE
-This house needs wo1kto
make it a home but the
beautilul large lot in town
would be the reward lor
your efforts. 4 bedroom~
older HI story frame with
part basement. $12,000.00.
NEW LISTING- NiceCoun·
try Building Lots are harll io
find but we have 8 beautiful
lots just waiting lor you!'·
Smallest is .94 acre and lar·
gest is 1.54 acre. Electric on
each site ·and T.P.C. water
taps available. Secluded,
beautiful view5, 10 _trtins.
lrom Pomeroy and 15 mins.
to Athens. NO TRAILERS:
Sta~ting at $6,500.00.
NEW LISTING- BAUIIADDITION - In a Delightful
Setting - So nice to come
home to this lovely 4·5 bed·
room tri'level home. -1846
sq. tt. of living spac~. a 2 Cal
garage 24~30, plus basement. Deck, patio, ·heat
pump, lireplace wrth insert,
aer1,11tor, beautilullawn. Call
f01 Information.
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy 2
bedroom, I\tstory home wrth
carpet. lxtilt-in too~h!Ms,
patiO and rear balrony, wrth a
view ol the river. l 1h car gar·
age $27,500.00.

'

....

949-~168

.
. Z-1- 111'1mo. pd.

·

Ewlnglon Chun:h lrg, Yard

Slla. Sat:. M1y Sth, 1&amp;0 In
Ewlngton, Rain Date May 12.

Ooro;o Solo: 1.2 mlloo ..,. 2tB

CHEnn, 0110

NOTICE OF
• APPOj!\l'fMENT OF
•
FIDUCIARY
.

20, 1990, in the
COI'nty Problto
Court. Cue No. 211&amp;93.
Ms..-r,. L. Pointer, 31392
Noble Summh Rood, MldOn

Apr~

Moiga

dl...,rt, Ohio, 417110, WM
ltjlpolntod Exocutor ol the
..uoto of Francoo E. Hyoolt,
dec:-..t. lite of RR #4. Pom8foy, Moi'l" CC!Unty, Ohio.
.41769.
.

Robert E. Buck.

ta~.

EVERY THURSDAY
VFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.
OPEN 5:00 P.M.
GAMES START 7:00 P:M.
NO ONE UNDEI II YEAIIS
150.00 PEl GAME
IONUS GAME IN 411.
.AU PAPER liNGO GAMES

FREE COFFEE

HUGE YARD AND
BASEMENT SALE
MAY 3, 4, &amp; S
St. Rt. 124,

M.inersville

ROCK SPRINGS RD.- Ap·
pro•. 80 acres ol vacant
ground .' Appro•. 20 acres til·
lable, All minerals, water
and eiec. available Good
hunting land. $29,900.00.

ft.,•,

Goro~

dtlld...,..l clothing, good repair,
cu11alne. Odd• l•ven•, hocwer
-~. ch•lrw, At. 141, · Centenary• . Acrou from . Sptrkle
Supply.·

Gaiagtl S.lt: M1y 3, 4. From .
Holztr Hoapitalto Kerr turn left
to Bidwell, Aodn.y Crouraada,
tum righi.L 3 mllfs; tan garage
on ~~~L ~tgn~ "'I· lodloo, kklo

4-1-lt-U.

otothoo, oil llzoo, polio 101 wllh
umbret11, hOm• Interior, aYOn,
IIC. Hilllnd NNI.

$16' 5

4 Qt.
Till IIPAII

lhl Wind limp; tabiiNW, $225;
2!100 wilt gonorotor, $230· 1urnlt':i.,~outh of Euroko oil At. 7. .
8
Ad, fkOI hoUIO, right.
Gorogo Solo: Thursdoy II Friday,
ta.m. at IKky 1.1,...., ~g• .
Crook AIL

Max.

CHI STU
QUIIC STOP

Olgontlc 3 Flmlly Yord Soto: •
IIOy 4, I, I llh. Baby l tocldlor ,

7 &amp; IAI

otottooo, 1011 ol )owolry, women•

c•nn. OHIO

... 9tf.2~59

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

J

·~·

lhoa,

tsabr

w.lller, ·

May 1-5. Cllpptr

~Ill,

acrou

cookbookl, romance nov1tt, a
much more. Located at lnt•r...:tlon of 554 &amp; 110 In Bidwell.
Sip ~II bO pootoc!, nmo,
ll.m.•7p.m.Hugo, 5 llftltly. May·3rd, 41h, /lt.
't· Addlaon, Mxl ta Ezxon Si•·
11on.
Sloroo
b41nk
odo, •
ohtldrono otolhlng, much morot .

DAVE'S ••~u
ENGl. IEPAII ·

form Coal T. . plo.

ISIIw..tiWR,
, .....,. 011.

Perta

lily 2,3 on 188. Bolllnd FoRh
Bapliet Church. Drapee, comfor·

!:'d.o~~pe, dlahM, ~~rei ~.,,

PARTS AND' IERVICE
For Molt Z .,.d 4-cycl•

Mlchlgon

•nflln•

,....,.,,

'ciCIIhHR Hdding, drapee, h1k11,
blkH, oute 141.

WlldMt•. Teaurra.h.
Brltllll • Stratton.

Nerth of

f'll1to lalo: lily 2, 3, 4, ••• 1157
S.cond, Antiquta, Becta, Love
1111, blUe, cloll•• a mlec.

Pl.

llomo.

ER
SITEWORK - .ROADS
ClEARING

NEWLAND

'
ENTERPRISES

An1wuncerncn1 s

PlUMIING &amp; IlEATltG

Now'-"-

161 North Second
..,l.,.t, Ohio 45760

Tuelday. W•dnesdly, 3112 mllu
from Addlton Bullville Pike, AU

klndo kldo otolhoo, loono, pltlow,
quina.

3 Announcements

Yord Solo In ~~~~oi. Thuro I Fri.
l'llrd Sato' Frldoy Moy 4. Flrot
hoUM below Sandllra Drive,
,._lghborhood Rd.
Yard Soto: Moy 4, Slh. McCor-

SALES &amp; SERVICE

· ouMPTRUCK

mick

1910, I :CI0-4:00: SA 141, aortrom Graham School R011d.

Gt'•t A. Newland

7-11-'H-tfn

PAT HILL F.OID

992-2198
Middleport,

4

RQger Hysell ·
Garage
lt. U41 P-.y Ohio

AUTO &amp;r TRUCK

· REf.AIR

Al10 f r •••1••1••

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

4-25-lfn

Giveaway

Yard S1le: Thursday, May 3rd,
10i.hk3p.m. Tara bl•t11.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
l VIcinity

of ..,, V01H1 lor lhe

14 -

- ....-.nu

ldlt-!a
·

.

2 . . to
lrlondly. 1
llnpo, 1
hho. 3 a.iondly - o l d. l
4111.
lily :llnl. ll ltd; t-4. Rltn
3 whtlo cruOb to ghMwoy. 2
...... -lt4471-2t14.
4 ltfttOM llttor tr.rnod, :tOoHJ'&amp;.

N""' ....,..

A
t41 tlfYHway
... piltt. ~.

lila- rnilll dog, 2 yro old,
~11-1m.

-

April, · Ill to Moy •· Boddlna,

- . lurrlllur!o

-

OHIO RIVER
· HEllS anti
EVEILASTifiGS

10

Froo Port red pupploo, 1
-old,
4.-to, t .....to.lt424UIIII.

!lor 4 ond

I, ll.m.•?. Wrlghl
••~
owFrldlr
_ . Ito
lloy • · 133 Bunornut

Poe••

Avo...,._.,
whh mirror
bullltt, tompo, 100lo, leo
chi~

up

lEN'S APPUAfiCE
SilVIa

r:t -·

992-53U or 915-3561

8

Aaoa FNM Pest 'Offlc.

_h_M_doato
2 ,.. old. 11+ltl2·

=·

:r
SIDINO
•ALUM INUM 8 !DING

•BLOWN IN

•e:.:,:!ah,~~

t1I4UD orl1t •• tAt.
Loii:Oror Torn Cot with whho
ondllol..,._ Rowonl. 114-

tltiHm.

•••"-Wf
" f - Eatlmetft..

Pl. 949·2101
or ...... 949-2160
NO SUtiU Y (AilS
• 4.16-16-tfn

--

-nt . . .'

Hugo • fonllly
LMY O'lriln t t ld "'" lbur.,
,~.• Sot !lor S,4,1. ll.m.•7p.m. ;

-~.,[lllr of (II.., 1oto

· - -ng,
40
or cur-.

,.., - · , . . , lloollo, ian,
- , - Cttllti 18 Lotert Fotti,

II.-...

.._ ,.,.. -

Yard Sale

.

lllirn or lht..._.

lulldnl .,_. Iutton• and

~~~- Hoopllll.

Yoo_, .
~

Rullond. from Rullond' :
Ctvla Cln&amp;er. Laftl of children• ....
-ltoya-..
TIHndoy lloy S.

t-4. Wnhor,

• ...._ tWtn ..,...., etc.
~CtltiRd.

8-7

· MIDDLEPORT
VCI CUIIC

Sr.,.._..,.

IUINTINAHCI &amp; IIPA.
II.......1

1

2nd ·-

a- w- ,.,..

949-2969
1/lt/ 10/ tfl'l

Or

~

tnolil tr out. lloy J,J,4. U'"!oln
Hlllld. PaR I Of.
.
AUOMI ' I l l - Mor S,.,l. S:31)..
IID.m. lilt llltln • · Pon.ray.

Sot. 9-1; Clolod lun.

*11"

lily :s-a.

..,rllhl-lorolgno.

7

ni'Q

- · lfono jlro,

--ltlgh
......
,. -·

Sows, WHIIMt•s.

OPEN:

11'7G

IUgglgll,

popora, -

tum

INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

tongo, ._ltiolo, lwnalng olt

....,,

lrunll, . - . - - ·
Onlnt pnt ulo. til mlto poll

Loat &amp; Found

LOST 271h • - ...0, ltlaok

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

-

Annual ...... wide yard ..,••.

OPEN:
APRIL I THRU JULY 1
HOURS:
Thure. thru Sun.

~hoO; pofo
ourlllno, tolo

dr-

. . ...., lltlers. Chain

ClEAN, .... &amp; TIST

Mldd'-rt.

fooond,

ItO -

•c
.,.. ,.... _, s.mc.,

......

Tl\uroday
out Flolwooclo

IAdlnle;
-ly-Thurodly - · C.rolyn
V.Rallt! Iiiii Ri., Ricin•.

M&amp;ICIO

(614) 992-7M3

ciruto.

2211.

usa.=-

l&amp;a•fr--lltrlftltnl

-

.

'

_
PIOIIIClS
GlASS CuntlfG SIIVICI
Sonlce c..tw ~

M-F

Item•,

11111, ~12. Pia~•. tumhurt.
Yard Sale: Thursday, May 4,

(6141 667-3271

We can repair and re·
core r!ldlatlt'l and
hlatlr cor11. Wt can
also acid 'boil and rod
out radiatars. Wt also
r1p0ir Gas Tonks.

Rd. HouMhold

b111nd ' name cktlhn, teenage

SaJid-Ston~·Dirt

NO SUNDAY

HOURS:

Solo, Muot 1011 out,
ctnwtary wr•tha,

lttoller,

St"'* 1'8rt1 for HorrM~h•.

992-7479

n

a

clothn

COUNTIY
MOBILE.
HOME PARK

lt.

Frldoy,

Klrb'l Sw-r, $2!10, """d Wllh

IICMI liNT Al
(ONVININQ STOlE ITEMS

St. Its.

Th~

Gorogo Solo:

Oil CHANGE

•Mobile Home
R•n•ls
•Lot• Renl'ls

Day or Night

..,

Moy 41h,

F~doy;

Solo:

...m.:.Sp.m. M.n'e. women'a,

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Ittall4lflalll. PriCts"
Pl•. 949·2101 _
or ~ 949•2160' '

.EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE CENTEI

,

Thura, Frl, t-5; clothM, 6 miiC
rain or lhlnt.

*FIREWOOD

•Mobile Home

At Grindley r11itltnce
Clothing, lOts of Home"
Interior, furniture, olec •
_typewriter, curtains,
llshts, ·woodburner
and many misc. items.

f1na,

rock.,., other Item•.

Gorogo Solo: 1011 s-nd Avo,

*LIGHT HAULING

•GRAVEL

SER~ICE

· · .BlN.GO

Mower~,

May 111 lhN lth.

*SHRUB ·&amp; TREE
TRIM antf REMOVAL·,

'

NEW LiliA ROAD - Very
neat and very nice!! 3 bed·
room ranch, 2 baths, central
air, back deck on large lot.
$42,000.00.

A
I. !

TRUCKING

992-2259

·•• .... Lllfltle•l

~--------------------------------~~-----------------------------------·

•Front End
Allg n!Tient "
•Oil Change &amp;. lu~
•Brake Work ,
MAIN $T., lmAMD

· POMEROY, 0.

WUIItUnf*Y.

G.AJJ.QIOLI8, OHIO

742-3011

985-4422

• . Probate JudAe
Lena K. Ne01elroad, Clerk
(4) 26; (51 2, 9, 3tc

0111 SALIS YOW. HAS
. . 11001 MID WI S1ll
IIA¥1 ..JBS IDG. .I fOI

OJUO RivER PLAZA

RUTLAND TilE
SALES and
SEIYICE

I. · HOLLON

81 - -Home lmprowmen11
82- Piumbing &amp; Hut tng

,

.MUS Ctam' PIOP8h.IF

~PER RT. 1 -

Ch•tw,

. ··

t-4\.:!i

36 - Real Ettlle Wanted

YOU Willi TO llll CM1

I

4-111-1

•Tire Soles

35 - Lou &amp; Acreage

OIRCL...-

.

SPECIAL SAVINGS BONUS
Save 25"AA on aU hancl..p with
any purchase of 3.99 or mo..., I

•'

Tr Jnsportalron
21 -iutin•• OppOt"tunitv
22-Moni'f to loan
23-Prot•lional S~~tvic•

IEAII1111SS111-. 949·266G
10 1111 ,
tiS-4466
IIAE HUPP ..,...... , !M!I-2257

Varla,tio•ull CanvWI Slip-On in
navy,
black or white. Women's
aizes 5-12. Reg. 6.99,
. jut 3,99,

Travel"

Farm lqutpmen1
62 - Wanftd to Buv
63-Live•todl
64 - H-v &amp; Grtin
66-S11d &amp; Fer,tili.ter

'"·6.tt1

..

l1ve~ 1 ocK

....

tn

Conlonory T - , Frl, ltoy
!,
lfay 4, H ; - I
, oarpol, looto, TV,
- " ' ptayor, I boby otolhoo,

FREE E&amp;nMATES

JOHN TEAFORD

Bo Pold

,rldn.
a.wr.y.

Painting
46311 Scoot

&gt;

ALL Yord S.too -

e1 -

16 - .Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17 - Misc ..l•neous
18-Wanted To Oo

ANTIQUrrY - St. Rt. 331 · Houge 111d kt Small ho11511
small price. Rfler view with ~
tential ol a cabin Would make
a nice summer glbway.Needs
some wcrk $5,900.00.
·
HENlY f, QIUIID

Newly Remo.eld Stare .

...-''

1 Clrd Of Thrnks

· Her name (was)
. JULIA .ANN EDSELL.
. Born July 25, 1959.
The last time I saw her was in
1963 _in POmiroy, Ohio. I
'
would like to find Julia or the
whereabouts of JUDY SAYER.
Anyone with information
please call Collect ·.
1·614-687-3620 anytime
•
and ask for Ed.

i•

~~~.~~~

, 2 - Situacion '(W'~rued
13 - h1su,.nce

42 - Mobile Homn for Rent
43-Farms 1or R1n1

H
'
E
LP!
I AM LOOKING FOR MY SISTER.

Just

Sears Orand·
••
'
Sto• An• See Our
'. 788 NORTH SEC.OND AVE.
MIDDLEPOiT, OHIO
992 . 2 l 78

937 - Buffalo

24 ?- L!un Falls

~
• On Aprl 20, 1990, in the
Moiga County Probotl
Court, case No. 28691.
Larry C. ·Drummond. Route
!t. Box 312. O.lllpolil, Ohio

PH. 992·25S6

Cake, P.,nch &amp; Cottle
On Thursday &amp; Friday " .

742- Rutland · •

9815- Ct'l•ter
843- Portllnd

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

CHIPS-AHOY . COOKIES ....... S2 .2_
9

"At tht End of tht P-ro~· Mason llrilll'"

94g - Aaclne

458 ....,Leon
&amp;76 - Apple Gro~o~e
713 - Mason
88,2 - New Heven
895-letart

Public Notice

.

Save this week on specially .elected styles! Shown
is just a sample of the styles you'D find for women
and girls at Picway's low price o~just 3.99! Choose
from popular summer styles at super savings!

815 - Pt . Plenant

let Reculte fast

c••••
·
.
·
·
BATHROOM TISSUE ••••••!!~~ S1.79

m

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

992 - Middlepon
Pomii'OV

A
,:;:.~~.-

Conne.c tion

F.1 r 111 S1111111 t I' s

ServiCI!S

44-Apanment for Rent
46- Futnist'led Aoom1

.

WnH FRIES ................ S1.CJ9

441-0allipolis
317- Ch•htre
381-Yinton
245-Rio Grende
2BI~Gu.,.n Dis1.
143 - Aflbia Diat. ~
3'7-9-WIInLit

··6 67- Coolv iUe

POTATO SOUP-••~.~.........~•••••••• S9c.
'
. '$2 19
~--~~··········~·····················
n
01.
. JOY LIQUID •••••••••••••••
S1.89

S1.34

Aree Code 614

.

.

·,.

AreaCod161•

''Your

f111ployr11~n1

- z ,OO PM. WEDNESDAY
- z ,OO PM . THURSDAY
- l :OO ·P.M. FRIDAY

. M.• on Co .. WV
p.rea Code 304

742-2027

59-For Slle or Trade '

TH,URSDAY PAPER .
FRI.OAV PAPER

.Meigl County

(614)

58- Fruita &amp; Vettlllbl• .

9-Winttd to Buy

15 - Sc:hools &amp; lnstruc1ion

O.llil Cou_mv .

SLICED PINEAPPLE ••••••• m~~f•... 79&lt;
TAYLOI
.SWEET POTATOES ••••••••~!.~~·.....99c
UP INSTANT TEA •••••••••!.~~·.. S3.89

12 01.

5 - H•ppy 'Acts
IS- Lou 1nd Found
7 - Yf'd S.le (plid In adv1ncel
8 - Public S1le &amp; Auction

-

following telephone exchan~es ...

-

152-lponlng Goo•
ll7 Antiquet
_
54- Miac. Mercl'land•••
&amp;&amp;- Building SupPii•
56- Pets ror Sal11
$7- Mutic81 ll'lltrumenu

3- Annoucements
4- Giveaw•v

WEDNESDAY PAPER

Classified pa~es· corer the

. PURSUIT

· ' 11-HouMhold Goctch

2 - ln M-.nory

~:·
Oh.
"LOW
I

l:.."J: -mTIAVEL

Me• cham11se
1- Card of Tt-t•k•

14 - Butln•t Training

2 :00P .M. TUESDAV

.Q6 / doy

11 .30 / doy

15

-11 '00 A .M. SATURDAY
- 2 :00P .M. MONOAV

SUNOAV 'P AP£'!'

,.

Am Electric Power ............. 29%

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

.80 .

Rat•ilre
fnr ear.h

11 - Halp Wantad

COPY QEAOLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUUDAV PAPER

CAMPaU'S CIEAII OF

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK! .

Happv Ads .
·v,rd S1lei

•A clastifitd achterttHm~nt placed in Tt'laO•ily Sen1in•1 ... ·
CIIPt - cl•tified ditpiiY. Busin•• C1rd 1nd leg~ not ices/
Wtll ltlao app..,_in tt'le Pt . Pl . .aqt Register and tM Galli·

APPLE-BLACKBERRY
JELLY .... s1.49
.

Veterans Memorial
·Tuesday admissions - Ber tha
Robinson, Pomeroy; Dorothy
Higgins, Pomeroy ; and Ka theryn Metzger, Middleport.
' Tuesday discharges - Doris
Wilt, Joyce Grady, and , John
Metzger,.

Card ot Th.,~,
In Memoriam

·

GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES ........ .11.f!,.. 2/69c

KlAn SIIGLU

eft• JNIIIicMion to mike corrft'lton.

•an thllt mutt bt Ptid in •ctp'lce 1re

HEAD LETTUCE:......... S?c

MEDIUM EGGS-...2«!1. SJ.29

.

~~iee. ot eel fOt all clp"lil«tlrt it doubla.prlce of ad cost
•1 QOint line type only uMd . •
·

.42

$13 .00

18

209 Sevth 4th St.

.30

t9.00

15

edt - Giveawe't and Found •ds und" 115 words will be

•

IIAYD VAllEY

ea.oo

15

Monthly

.

44.00

. 18

'1

Ov.r t 6 Wordl
-.
.20

Rote

Words

10

Mei'ga, O.llia or Meson counti• must bt pre·

.

Days

--, •

· ,_

· DIADUNI: 2:00 p.m.
lllo cloy be..,. tho od io lo rvn.
11unc1oy odttlon - 2:00 p.m.
llondoy odltlon • 2:00
P.m.

Gutter Cleaning

992-6873

: otolhoo, top,

-trolllno.

Gutters
Downtpoutt

Refwtil-

RA
3
6

y

$

.

P.M.

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5

CORKED HAM •••••••••• ~ •••••••~ .1.99
CIISPt SIRVE
.
·
. ·. . 16 0~. $1 •39
BACON ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

IEUY.W II, OZ. ·

Hospital .news

A trial date has been set for Eddie Fitzpatrick In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas for June 25 at 9 a.m. and bond
has been set at $10,000 ·ror each count on. the indictment.
Fitzpatrick was indicted on two counts of domestic violence and
one co'unt of' Intimidation.

IIC'-ADE

-AfloriiiO'IIng -

~- .... 101 trotlor •
on loll. AI!Oo IW. 1 Ewlnglon. ,

NEW- IEPAII

27 Yro. Elp.

.

&amp; VICinity

-

ROOFING

T.L.C .

Galllpollt

ldlollon lfllll. -

iiow•• L Writllll
Oood Rot•

PAll FARMS

6 Wednesday runs

Trial date set June 25 .

Classified

HASH BROWNS............~!.~~·. $1.49

TRADE-A-SHADE

usiness ·Services

.liioiilii.ii..,._iiiii

ORE-IDA

'00

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 13

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

INSTALLATION

SEARS
7111. , ...

..-..orr
992-J

--- ~~

40a30

�Pomeroy-

Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Pt. Pleuant
&amp; VIcinity

4~

2. 1990

Ohio

Hou8U.Ior Rent

51

The Daily

1990

Moton:yciM

74

HouuhOkl
. Goode

........,
-. -.
.......--~~~~~~-::.·

'

1811 K l - 4M LTD , .

u.I,V€~1.. ...~~
I Lll't ~HAlf~... ,

'•

75

Boiltl &amp; Motol'8

'

for Sale

'

Television ·.
Viewing.

TIIAT tAlLY

L-'t,.,.

PUJUI

42 . Mobile Hom111 .. ·
· for Rent

I

I
I
.. I

I

,

J.
r·
I

N

I·

NO,

NOT CALLING

FOR

.•. I'M CALI.INQ

FOR M'f

•

Most of liS ask for advice
when we·know the answer but
.--...,----,-.....,.:--.:..., want a-----· one. .

.. I 1'1-!INK .

TllERE'S BEEN

A MISTAKE ..

· .RED .R AN

"Well, 'if someone should .
turn in a large wicker basket
with an 18-foot cobra in it,
let me know · lMMEDI~
ATELY!"

PRINT NUMBFREO 1
~ LETTERS

A

I)

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER ·

Fm
.

. "' ··7·---- - sCRAM-lETS AN$Wiits- WHITI'IIIETAL'DETECTORS
ROn Allleo!!. •1210 a-.nd A•o,

01111po111, ... .-.me.

.8

•

.: .

-

OOIIOilllon 252 lhlao, oxc
ciOnd
:IOU'IIIo-· lfhl.r
5:30 Pll• .

Brogue -:- Droop -Ideal- Potato - APPEAR ..
. Granny say~ that when ·an irresistible force meets an
:.::p~~e Object an unethical lawyer will immediate!)'~

Transportation

~ fo!OO. Comic

-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·

·-;.(

..

.

,,

'

.

·- -··-------·

m.

.J

· NORTH
.J7S2 .

71 .Autos for Salt ··

"·

'

. ·'

t

W.H ·
~

AJ32

.KJ4 2

.

WEST

.AI64
.107h3

Pete for Sale .

••oes

AKC ~ Pug; 1150. · 114•
441-1511.
Auotrollon 'lho~ Pullllloo

I, Mlf cOntained, aJ'Iower &amp;.. tUb,
$2000, 304·7n.f181.
il

\mat ft.

For S.l•~ .PitaH eaH/ 114473-

ani,. · .

1311, momlng 01111
l:lrogonwynd Coftooy ~on,

whMI

trawel _ ~rauer 'wHfl

iwnl91. -

$3800. Coli S14-1192-2ael ollor
5p.m.

e - 4 1ftor7 p.m.

of f 0 9BJ!. :.Gf!OV&gt;/!NG .

.GERONTOLOGY \
. LECTURE .
TONIQHT

lfolld.ty Rlmblv ·llh

and hRch. EXceltanl condhl_... .

SltmeH and Hlm1tayan 'kHtena.

o .t./) ~~:~A'-t.

Services

...

18 tt.. c-.per, at~
Hlf contain.,,

.yil~l f'li&lt;LEP,7

.·

do 1.1 eslablilb two more t)'lckl before West sets. up his beart suit. Qe
sltould x:~:.th.at if Eu~ wills the
'king of ·
. , be clin atlll.make his
.contract. Tbe rlgbt play ill a dlalllCIIICI

'•

Help wanted

. .' AVON • AI orooo, Coli lllorlyn
'w..v... 3!J4-882·2645. ' '
and Reh•blllt .. lon c.nter hit
lmm-..loto oponlng lor night

nu100. AN pnofwniil. WIU , _
""'• LPN. Comptollff¥o oilory,
bonolho. Pl_,t ourr.....,lngl
·~ working aondllenL IEQUII

~R:·=r-~~Rd., P-roy, Oh. e14412!;,f'
with

1n
and

chi-

toonoaon oro Joolna

-aM.

Job,,..,..

Muel &amp;e abl• to provla. • hOlM
tor Ill loool - yOUth.
lng wHI bo l¥1lloblo. EomwDI bo bo_... on o dolly role

Mu$1cal
Instruments
PIANO CARE

tun

c.n- ·

flnonc1al

Sctnlo Hille Nursing Center, 311
Buckrlo!go · Rd., 8-1; OH
45614.
. .
Holp wontod. McCIWH, FomiiJ
Rntaurent In Mldd.. PQI:I. A~
botwoon 8:30oll:300.m. lluol.t&gt;e
eblt to work dep, nlghta. .,_~c­
lnda, . hoHdaya. Starting par,
mlnlmumwa•.

1881 Cioryoler Fifth .......... 4dr,

.,

Wurtltztr

aplnllt

·

plano,

mahogany flnlah, Ivory key1,

good ....... 1700. 304-871'2088
afltr 1:00• .

'"'

81 , . Home:
. Improvements

t ...

$5,800,

flrig.

'

40 Fencing ·
1 Summon
sword
5 Tolerate 41 Corner
9Not
DOWN
present
1 Tempo
10 Presbyter 2 Prize ·
12 Solicitude 3 Military setup
13 Type
4 Scrutinize ·
of .lire ' 5 Chew out
15.Go wrong_. 8 Spread Joy ,
18 .H~athcllff, 7 Say further 19 Territory
· e.g.
a,1793-1.794 22 Endure
17 African
In France
24 Velocity
beast
11 Sppke
25 Carry
18 Expand · inees26 Rome's
20 Negative
sanlly
ancient .
21 Sapient . 14 Stringed
. port
22 Solitary
Instrument . 27 Prison
23 Wallat
18 Enclosure
release

Local reterenc• tumlahMif

Froo Hllmotoo. Coli collool 1&gt;'
614·237-0488; day ' or night~
Rogtra BaMment Wlterproo.o..
' .

,'

256..1054.

1

1i81, Chevy Serena G. T:' Blt~ck ,Hou-..hold .
' Maintenance:',
whh red cloth bucket Nlle,.Aftl.. Roofing, newfrtp.~lr, aldlnQi
FM
10, v.e, 1'8, PI, I'W, nowlroRair, coopontry, odd loto-,'
P.D.L.,
. ruloo, olr, llll wtpor. oollmotoo. 614-378-21120, ook f&lt;ll!
Extend
arranty. CruiH Milch.
·~

•

· oo:¥0~
=-m~~~~-~ylo~~~nd~
Clr Jittc..
r.1ercncndise

· INCJTlCII
VALLIY PIJILIIHING CO.
I CC:MIW. . thlf: ~ do buill-with -'",.,. ltiww1 ond
NOrlo ....... _ l = t h o
tho olllrtnj,.-.
- ..... hnlln'
"'"'
OHIO

8-

Vehk:ln. from $100. Fofde. Mer-

Business

Opponunny

,ROn'S .:rV :servlc~ ap.clallll.nngIn Z.nith lilsO servicing moat
SEIZED ottt.r· brandt.' HouM calf1, aitc.

GOVERNMENT

"'

21

ACROSS

~~ 4.
·
'0 a D company. C•m•ni work of
1887 Ford Touruo LX, $4,111. all'klnds. C~lmnoy tpocllilo. eM-:

304-175o4480.

-·

Burpt...

CoiVollo,

Guide

ll87.fOOO Ell( S.101111l

27 Acre Form: 41!11. from town,
haa Blacktop Rd., ~ehool, mall,
tolophono, oloctrle, ooptlo tonk,
rur11 water hook-up. 114-44126015 Clll ettar 5p.m.

Cho¥yo.
(1)

.

101-

1o h truo you con buv J - !Or

f44 tlt""'''lflho U.!l. _ . , .
mont?
Qot tho - _todoyl
1·'1111--114:11Ellt
, . Coli

F.&gt;1111 :Oupplll"'

&amp; Livestock

Ponlllc.FIOfO, s ~._!.cyt, 11r,
tlni llunin whllla, •~•lttlr.o
topo...~;ooa. mloo, $6,-. 304.,._,

1om1 IPPIII!nCI repilra. W'f
304-5711-2388 Ohio 814-441-2454(
Raoflng '· ohd Sldl.ng. Tro..r
roofl painted. FrH estllnltll,.
FrO&lt;! ·lll11ks, 304·773-9111 ot
Mlko S.ytt 304M2-3leB.
...
Rotooy or ca~ tool drllllngt'
M~at walla fompl11ed Mm• dlyt
Pump 111ao onc1 ..,.lao. 304-i
atW802.

'

,

~n

1
!

Septic Tonk Pullllllna S8GLOoll!'(

Co. RON EVANS lN'IERPKISEii

JoGUon; OH 1~528.

'

1WD ~ _.Iiiio ldlno com-

I*!C•

~

· 1ar1N. · Duncan

PI~ I ooromlc -lo, 11,200.

et

1111.

Real

YO'RE .ACTIN'
A LITTLE

Estate

HOUSE

Plumbing &amp;
. Heating
it87 OIIC S.11. Jimmy, 2·WD, V·

!1.
EARN MOHEY Roo~lng boollll 3 lr. ronoh, 2 lola, nlco
$30,000/yr- 111oom• potentlel. Hghborttaa:d, . Dltv Khoole
Dttallo. (1) 80HI7.f000 Erd. y. roiR!Ioblo """" 1143118 16$2
4562.
..
•
:,.;.~o.:.~.:.a3110~.-=-,....:.'=-'-3MANAGEMENT
In Roolno.·2 bOd,.....,
Fashion ·' conceloua pet'IOn 1 blth, ~t and air. 3 beCf..
1
wnnltllll•o noO&lt;IO&lt;I.- Ad~ortlool ....,.., both, 'c.ltool 1nd Clair
train, moti¥Ota oolol loom. AI ll!nlly ""'"' ond boolllllul
oxponoo trolnlng b'!lllno . - . kllohin, 4 bodo OOIWI, 2 botho,
Call Bon• Vorrllo. 1.f00.712· Clhoot ond Clol~ ordro Iota IX·
.4142.
'
. ='="'.t:.~ 114-848-;
Nood monoy? Eam 10.5010 wlih Altco, oopococl otyto hcMtto With
AvOn. Own pt'C)ducta at a ell.. lullliooomont. Nlco 2 bOd,_,,
count. FrM ; !" wHh , elgn up. ronlol lraller on propor1y. 24x32
614-1192·&lt;180. '
.g..~~~~.:.~';"'od gor.,..
.
~
EARN MONEY Ro1dlng B-1 oontor. -opportunity
laf131),000 yr. lncomo 1101ontlol. tlblllhlng , _ _, buolnooo ot
Dotollo. (1) 805-887.eoGCI Erd. Y· home. AD on 1 112 ec,., good
10158.
.l ooltlon In ~eriAaclne trta:.

r·:

.....

foiS,atJQ
2811.

.,.golloblo.
'

·-~-

'36

luto, kteciM, OM CIWMr,
lli,IOO inl., liM I'IN, I~
2108 oftor lp.m.

. Real Estete
wanted

I~

· by THOMAS' JOSEPH

B~SEMENT · .
WATERPROOFING
•·
Unconditional lllotlmo guoro,..

· ·
1881. Fllfd EOCOII. 4 cyt., 8111"'
doni ohlft. Oood -.c!Hion, owner. ~2-318 1 .
,· '
1881 P...loc e,OOO mint aond;
4\008 mil•, 1 owMr, tlr,
ctutH, 1111, ......, n• t1N8.

;sr....... 11~ 411 115'1,

'. •.~

J

c.n- ·

do dOCUrnlfltallof' In Hvatll
Southusttrn Ohio , long thu
cart facllltl•. It lnternted cen
814-441-7'150 or .-nil reeume lo

-~14-4411.,4110.

.....

- 6~7267.·

Dlototy Tochnlclo.n - d : To

BIN"'-- Coli BIH W.rd 304-11822325·0~:1•• e14-8715-5833; lllllt
St.
I S14-119USI57; FoHh

cltionlnt or
~I~
- 2814!- or IIIN177.
Coniaot .. ·ot

Wlll,do llobyo1111ng In ony homo,
noor ...._ Plloo,. Hil" ox·
=nee ·and • • • c11 . .......

F•n•tlc•.Sem'l .
. '
Dlot Toeh. Aocodlo NtnlnQ
tor II OH~Ing 1 q,.lllloil diet
Toch. lit do cllnlcol work. Thlo
polllktn can bl either full
. ptrt-tlme. For lmmMtlata coniNdiratlon melt reaume to Kevin
Ruffing II Alc.odlo Nunolng
t•, P.O. Box A, Coohtlllil, OH
45723.
'
part~lmt,

Tuning •noe 11 ""OI'IInd'" n We
con 11111&gt; off *"h 0&lt;1) J&amp;lll Plono

Wo wll dO houM

Coomotollglot Noodod. Oouron·or

------'----·~·

·

loadM, 114-31'1-21211 :

· whon 1 fl&gt;otor child lo In tho
homo: Cal111ol-&lt;4,4f.WI,
CMtlmH Around tho World lo
back and Mil•· W.'nl IDoldna
lor •h•,p homlm~lterl. Wori
trvm~our home. WookiJ
pa
bonuo t~po, lro nina, no l n - - . . Col
AlleeawtWOM• .
,.
tNCI wag.ll, pllid VICitloM,

19115 Fprd Tompo. Good cond~
tlon. Aoldng 13000. e14-11911·

esoa.

C) ........U.INIQL

CROSSWORD

Services

co~nt poro&lt;ino 1111-• .

.,..,..,_,.l'llllw_

.

,.

AVON I All A,_o I• Shl~.,
Spoon, :IOU'/IIo1421. .
wortdng

to

dummy.

Nurt;lng

Pomeroy

·

o~-~ ja~k 1!1 dummy, declarer 1oea

dwmny a·king of clubs and playw a
lo• spade. Wben ~t playw low, South
caa play either the kine or the 10. West
~y wiD tile trlclt, bat be~ p...,r.
to dummy's ace aild a lri diamond ttably attack bearll, and declarer · .
exu:~n1111
UEutgoeaupwlth ·evea baa~ to P~Y uecond llpBde, .
. the
diamond tricks are en- tf aeed be, for bla DIDth trlclt.
.
· . , , _ JIOCO/Jr) 'llcflbr,., ,....• .uo1
what _happens when East •J.&lt;.byDitC.I'tla.m.i'(wntt•..,1tl!,ltlotolhr.
correctly plays low? South wills the 1M ,.,. Orwold JIICOI&gt;TJ "" - ...a.lllii at
queen . .Since East now hu the K-10 _ _ _ _

304.e75'511S ,. ~

Amerlc.,.

they -re 4-1.
vUIDerable: North-South
.oaly elpttricks,
WeSt w~
Dealer: South
set the contract when be got in with
the ace of ajladel.
··
. Sootllo
Eul
, Altboup declllrer's play in tile dla, I 1NT
Paa
All paa
mood suit aave bim the best chance of 2 t
ta~ing all four tricill (Welt mlpHtold
OpeniDg lead: • $
K·x of diamoods), that was not Ute ob. 'jective. Because declarer's goal is
:simply to take aiDe trlcb, all be nee4s
· _
,to

tub. Air cond.

·11

iN rHe r·

MINP ....... wHY
1?6 yov TtiiN/C Ol!fl
· I~AI f'IJ ~f:f .$0 .

"' l-..........~---......:·''-...;
Employm ent

SOUTH
.K 10
.AQi
tQ7H .
.AQ7 3

1974 28 ft. 01111 Clmptr, _ . .

. TOOAY,
PAW!!

Co~or'o

Plumblnt
ond Hooting
Fourth and Pfno
'Oollpollo, Ohio

014-4411'3818

TITCHID

IN. TH' HAID,
. MAW!!

l WAStiDNI

ALL DAY .
LDNtlll .

,

()r mrs.,
for
.· . example
3Q.Pay
Increase
34 Head
38. Drink up
37llkely

~~~n-

24 Actor
Vallone ·
25 Fleming's
brainchild
27 Beyond
28 Written
leHei'
29 Shred
31lawyer
· (abbr.)
32 Wrath
33 Criminal
charge
35 Theater
area
37 DOmingo
rendition

311nlhe
least
. 39 Mall

DAILYCR\'PfOQUOTES-Hen'slln .l ewerklt:

AXVDLBAAXR
.II LONGFELLOW.

Rentals

"

One Jetter stands for a~r.ln-this sample A is Used
for the line L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale !etten,
·apoatrophes, the length arid fonnaUon of the words are all ·
·.hints. Esch day the code letters are different.

41 Hou"s for Rant
2. boilooomo, llloldo comjllot.oly.
ttmoclolad. 11111 bo-, 201
Poplar Sl, 1221. month1 .,poolt

~tqulred. For lntonneuaR 3Q4a
67!5·1371 or 675-3812.
·

·3 btciroom 2 lull batht, IOiliO
llvlngroo"'· dJnlngroom, khchin
oloo lovoly roomt!.":.:,aorogo1
ctntrllllr cond.,
80h001
dlotrlot. Relo,.,ooo Nqulrod.
Coli 014·247-42111. .

•••
YANZOK

B I I

FB~ .

ETQD

RFZOKV

. GTWOK
2-bodroom,

polio. SDI'Ina Avo. Blcuti!y
dopoolt ; rof. Coli' oftor ........
S14·192.fiiiiS.

'

.

XZRF

FDN

JDDR

BOP

BND

GTWOIC

QBPD

PDVZNDY;

RFTQ AYT 0

Yni•••-·•CafFittlll . .aASWARMOFBFFS'IN
1MAY IS WORTH A LOAD Of HAY...A SWARM OF .
BEES IN JULY IS .NOT WORTH A FLY. - UNKNOWN ·

"We'relrylng to have a barbecue... ·
~o you mind?"
\

•

..

XZ .RF

. - ~ N B 0 E ,z Y

Wnl,

•·

·'

·--···· ~~-- .......4-..~---1---',----..;-·-----·~--'---'--~-~--Ji ..f!

·: ~OURCE

.

..

CRYPTOQOOTE

l&lt;TNIP · XB- OPDNZOK

Pomoro~

1111

., C) 11110 by King , _ Syrtdlcelo. Inc. •..

'•

�-

•

•

. . .

-

• • o -· -

,

o • . , .......

,&lt;wet'-* .. ,

V I I~

I

('"'''~------~~--ST_O_P-IN_A_N_D~
. T-AK~E~A-DV_A_N-TA_G_E_O_FO~U-R-.~~

Indians
post 3-0

LOW ANNIVERSARY· SALE PRICES AND
REGISTER TO WIN 'A :VALUABLE DOOR
PRIZE. "NO PURCHASE _NECESSARY": ·

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
189
Pick-4
5081
Super Lotto
12-19-31-32-40-44
Kicker 209315

•
VICtory

.

Page 5

SALE BEGINS

•

TODAY

2, 1990

:MAY
'
.

tow toDI&amp;hl near 60. Chance
of rala 18 percent. Friday,
high In mid 70s. Chance of rain
80 percent.

: Vol.40. No.21i0
.. Copyrighted t990 .

2 Sectlona, t6 Pagea 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday. May 3, 1990

A Mult~i1 Inc. New.p1per

Closing date set for purchase of restaurant
.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel New11 Staff
Before the year Is out •. If all
goes as planned, Meigs County
should have another full service
restaurant. That Is what Jim
Hill, manager, and soon to be
··owner, of Pleaser's Restaurant
: stated at Wednesday's meeting
:: of the Meigs County
• Commissioners.
: Hill reported to the commls·
: sloners that May 14 had been set
. as a tentative closing date for the
: purchase of the restaurant, and
· that final word would come from
: the'Economlc Developm~nt Ad: mliilstraUo,n by not later tlian
•May 15. •
·
: Hill has been manager .of the

Sofas-Loveseats-Chairs
Country Styles, ·Early American.
Contemporary and Colonial Styles. _
Plai.ds, prints, vinyls, p~ecks fand spli~.s.

'.

S~YE FaOM ·2 0°/o ~0 4-0.0/~

TElEVISION

SERTA PREMIER COMFORT
mKOWI~

WALLPIPE.R
SALE
..

.1, ..,~,...::.

sa·a

'

10 Yl. wuwm

·'
·'·

.

19:'
Reniott
Color TV

1111 EA; PC.
QUliN

SIT

. 1111 Sll

I

QUliN SET

SALE

..

Metal

HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS. MOST
ARE PRE-PASTED,_WASllABLE.
•• t '

Featuring Teflon
coated wall
coverings. the ·most
exciting innovation in
all paper since
strippability: Easy
clean and durable at a
value price. The latest
in colors and designs.

' ~'

ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS!

WHIRLPOOL
SUPEI
CAPACITY

-rdrobea, chiM ""binela and
.utility 08blneta. White or elmond fiftlah. Sturdy

a.atrucdon.

s

lEG.
lEG.
lEG.
lEG.
IIG.

A
L
E

-12Ft. Wide
-13 Patterns

OCCASIONAL TABLES

llrto·IIOf

End tables, cocktail table. sofa tables. lamp tables and more.
Solid oak, maple and cherry • .

Sale $549 sa. YD.

Table,

IN STOCK
ALL WEATHER

'

'

PATIO TURF
-12Ft. Wide
-

20°/0oFF

i

1--'--

-c-------'-·--::..--.. - ... ·---

~

Patrol cites Langsville woman

YD.

A Langsville area woman was cited In a two-car crash
Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. In Salem -Township o·n C.R. 65, .6 of a
mile north of S.fl.. 325, according to the Oallla-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
: ·
' Pamela S. Napper, 32, Rt.l, Langsvifle, was cited for failure
to yield after her 1986 .Chevrolet Chevette hit a 1984 Chevette
driven by Terry M. Barrett, 39, of Langsville.
.
Barrett was driving south on C.R. 65 wHen Napper pulled out
from a private drive and headed north -Into Barrett's path.
The Impact knocked both ·c~rs off the road.

r

/.flanders

C~sual Out~oor

'F urniture
LLOYD/FLANDERS · .

AII•Weather Wicker

-Large CapcKity .

I

6 99 sa:

CASUAL OUTDOOR FUINITURE

REG. 1112.50 LO·IACI CHill .....................SAU S75.00
lEG. 1130.00 II~IACI CHAIR ..............--..5111 ,S I5.00
lEG. 1247.50 LOUIGEI ...................--SALE S165.00
REG. 1265.00 2·SIAI GUDEI •••••••••••.....:... SALE S115.00
Other Pieces In Stock _., 0.. Salel

'--, - -

•.

-

(
..,__~----&gt;-'----'-&gt;

some parts are· weakened.
Richard Stewart, assistant at·
torney general for environment
and natural resources, outlined
the proposed changes In urging
negotiations between the Justice
Department and senators to
c;raft a bill that ''Will be effective
and acceptable to all."
The change In position was
noted by Sen . .John Warner,
R-Va., who pointed to the adminIstration's apparent past reluctance to give s.tates a Digger say
In cleanup efforts at hundreds of
contaminated federal facilities.

because he needs to cut timber
that exists on his proper ty.
However, he sta red tha t it Is
more difficult to get to th e timber
of the road in
without the
question.
In final matters. the commis·
stoners accepled a reques t from
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service, to submit a proposal for the
refurbishment of a Rutland
emergency squad.
The commissioners also ac·
cepted a request from the Me igs
County Soil and Water Ccinserva:·
tion Districh for the transfer· of
funds from the counry general
·rund lilto that account.

uSe

•

Lukens will rematn tn race
been overturned on appeal by
then. It now has become obvious
an appellate decision will not
come before the election, he said.
' 'I apologize for the situation I· .
allowed to be created ... (but ) it's
not evil and it's not criminal,"
said Lukens,
Lukens' aide Jim Dornen said
the con-gressman picked
Fletcher, a town with a populalion of 515, to make his announcement because he helped the
village Iron out a problem last
year with a postmistress who
allegedly threw away thlrd·class
mail instead of delivering it . The
postmistress was removed
through. Lukens' efforls, Mayor
Rober t Wyer said.
·
'.'Heo '"liljew that we would
support him because he came to
our rescue when we needed
htm, " said Rita Hardman, 58,
who has lived In Fletcher for 34
years. "I think there's a lot. of
undercover people that'll vote for
him that Just aren't saying."
In Columbus, Republican State
Chairman Robert Bennett re·
peated his eall for Lukens io
resign.

''This is not a political matter ," said Bennett. "It's a moral
matter. Congressman Lukens .
has never denied having sex with
a chlid and on that issue alone, he
should not represent the people of
the 8th District. Lukens abused
the trust of the people of his
district and. does not deserve to
represent them as a member of
the United States Congress.
"On May 8, I am sure the
voters will do the right t!)ing and
Say goodbye to Donald 'Buz'
Lukens, " said Bennet!.
The announcemenl was the
latest twist In a roller-coaster
political career that saw him
plunged Into scandal Involving
~orean businessman Tongsim
11afx·IJt!W~te 1960s, rh~lng hlgli
In Ohio Republican poUtlcs dur·
ing the 1,70s, then seeming to
plateau In his career during the
1980s.
When he . was convicted last
May of having sex at his
Col unibus apartment with Rosie
Coffman. 16, Lukens refused to
resign from Congress and vowed
to flgl\1 the charges agalnsl him.

-Celeste ·vetoes home rule bill

By LEE LEONARD
UPI StatehoW!e Reporter
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard
Celesie vetoed a bill Wednesday
giving townships the right to
self.government, saying he ob·
jected to a provision that would
have forbidden townships to
regulate firearms .
Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D·
''That reluctance is now gone,
Cincinnati, chief sponsor of the
am I correct?" asked Warner.
bill, said he will meet Thursday
" Yes," Stewart replied.
with representatives of the Ohio
Nevertheless, several senators
Townships Assochilion to decide
opposed weakening the bill,
whether to try to override the
saying the measure would
governor 's veto.
"'
merely give states the same
An ailernatlve suggested by
powers over federal polluters
Celeste lsforLuebberstorelntrothey have over private-sector
duce and try to pass the bill
poilu ters.
wlthour the .controversial fire,
Senate Democratic leader · arms provision. Luebbers said he
George Mitchell of. Maine, a. has not made up .his mind.
prtme sponsor of the bill, accused
Brooke Cheney of the Town·
PI;esldent Bush of reneglng.on a
ships Association said his group
campaign promise to ensure that
wants to do whatever will get the
Continued on page 9

bill enacted, preferably without
the firearms provision. "Repre·
sentatlve. Luebbers Is our quar·
terback on this," he said.
As passe~ by the House overwheimlngly last January, the bill
authorized more than 40. town· ·
ships to adopt limlt~d self·
governmepl wilh voter approval,
including regulations and police
powers.
The bill gave no taxing powers
to the townships, and forbade
them to enact any regulations
conflicling with nearby munlcl·
pal ordinances or with state law.
But In late March, the Senate
passed, 21·12, an amendment
prohibiting towns_hlps from regu·
lating hunting, trapping, fishing
or. the sale, possession or use of
firearms . An attempt lo knock
out the reference to firearms
failed, 24·9. The Senat~ then
passed the bill 33-0.
In a veto message to the

Legislature. Celeste said 56 local
governments have some type of
firearms regulatio'n.
"However, If House Bill 294
were to become law, " he wrote,
"it would create an extraordi·
nary double stand;ud for certain ·
local governments . This limita. tlon is an Insult to citizens In Ohio
townships who yearn for home
rule."
Celeste said he favors the
legislation without the reference
to firearms and would·sign it "the
day It reaches my desk."
Luebbers said he will draft a
new bill but added "the governor
is going to have to deliver, too."
He pointed out that the amendment likely would be added again
in the Senate, and Celeste would
have to use his Influence to
prevent that ,
.
An override would require 60
votes In the House and 20 votes In
the Senate.

-Local news
briefs-.... Seven congressional representatives are
.

4 Colors
•

Sale $

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

$44 900

$29900

'

:. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tlie .
Bush jldminlstratlon, facing rising public anger over pollution at
military bases dnd other faciU·
ties, signaled a willingness to
accept legislation giving states
greater powers to force cleanup
by federal agencies.
: After months of arguing
ag~inst the bill as a move that
could tangle and slow cleanup
.efforts, a Justice Department
pff\clal told the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Wednesday that the adminls· .
!ration could back the measure If

VINYL CUSHION FLOOR

Tobles, chairt, hutchts, china coltlnets, pie .
"""' and more. Hwt is only a par1iallisling:

Start, arranged the visit for Tyler and Thomas
Simmons, P. J . Hensley, Jeremy Rider, Brent
Hensley, Brandon Black and Carrie Mayle,left to
rlgh*· Sgt. Bill Browning, sealed, and Chief of
Pollee Sid Little tal ked to the children and then
linger-printed and. photographed each one.

used to be· a township road.
. Boatright obtained a county
map from the Ohio Department
of Transportation In Marietta
which showed there was at one
time a road on the land in
ques Uon. A newer county map In
the commissioners office also
showed there was a road there at
one time but now It was marked
as a right·of-way only .
It Is not known whether or not
the road has ever been legally
closed but Jones stated he would
check through old records to
deter mine tha t ddlnilely.
Boat!jght ,stated he llas' offered
to bl!y the land In ques tlon and
that he wants to settle the dispute

•

• •
•
:B ush changes position
·o n Issue

CONGOLEUM

DRYER

-4 Cydes
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IN STOCK

DINING ROOM FURNitURE

ELECTRIC
-Hamper Door

.

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WASHER

-1 a lb. (apcKity
-5 Cydts
-Magic Clean Filter .

CONCERN FOR SAFETY- These MelpHead
· Start children are learning about safety and as a ·
part of their program vlsl!ed the Middleport
· Pollee Department. There they were finger·
· printed and photo.eraphed and provided with a
· : personal reco,rd· to take borne to their parents.
: Kristy Dalley, home visitor for the Meigs Head

a... Nblneta,

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something will have to be done.
The s·t orage is a problem because
the State mandates that Spencer
has to keep al(flles from the
court and cannot discard any
records. Spencer went on to say ·
that this Is a. problem everywhere, not just in Meigs County.
The commissioners stated they
would look Into the problem and
see if there was a possible
solution.
Raymond Boatright , a resident
of Chester Townsh~. attended
the meeting Wednesday to .seek
the·aid of the commissioners In a
property dispute in that town- .
- ship:' Th!! property in. question
in~olves what Boatright says

·FLETCHER, Ohio (UPI) . Rep, Donald Lukens, R-Ohio,
convicted of having sex with a
.16-year-!ild girl, Wednesday ari;
nounced he would stay In the race
to retain his 8th Congressional
District seat.
At a meeting with constituents
at the post office in the small
tciwn of Fletcher in Miami
.County ,.Lul!,ens, 59, turneq up the
. voiuJlle on the campaign he has
been quietly conducting In recent
weekf1nds during meetings with
constituents in his district. He
also the same announcement In
Van Wert, Middletown, and
Greenville.
1
;.·.r apolOgiZe, " he said. "I made
a· dumb mtstake. I'm sorry. In
spite of !he stumble, I've con·
tinued to work very hard at home
and in Washlnglon for my
constituents."
Lukens asked voters to con·
sider his "24 years of. solid
service. "
,
Lukens said he walled until
Wednesday to officially announce his plans because he
expected his conviction to have
·

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In other matters, a date of June
restaurant since 1981. The pur·
27
was set for the viewing of land
chase, which will make Hill the
to
be annexed into the Village of
owner of the establishment,
Syracuse
to make possible the
coUld create an additional 14
building
of
an elderly housing
Jobs. Presently there are 26
complex. The annexation In·
full-time Jobs at Pleaser's.
Hill's plan is to add a solarium volves one residence, that of Mrs.
dining area that c_ould provide Sidney Grueser, The property
seating for approximately 75. If will be viewed at 10:30 a.m. and a
tbe purcbase · and addition is public hearing on the matter will
profitable, and Hill feels it will be held at 1 p.m.
.
Larry Spencer, Meigs County
be, he will implement the full ·
service restaurant plan, possibly Clerk of Courts, attended Wednesday's meeting to voice his
by the end of the ye!lr·
concern
regarding storage space
HIU expressed his appreclat •
pon to the commissioners for all · for court records for which he Is ·
,
.
oHheir tieip lirgettlri!J !he project responsible.
· Spencer statea ne Has remeapproved. He went on to say ''I
think eve~ything will work out died the problfim for now, bqt
that in approximately 18 months
well now." ·.
.

1-S:ylvllnis SuperMt Rempte Control
-On·ScrMn Tunlnt
-3 c:.blnel
. Style•
.

1 Tl. WAIIANIY

'1ST ANNIVERSARY SALE

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25 INCH COlOR

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Registration dates a(mounced
" kindergarten registraThe Eastern Local School District's
tion will be held Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m: at Tuppers Plains
Elementary, and on Mpnday from 8 a .m.·to 3 p.rri. at Chester
Elementary. Parents may register their children If the child
will be -live years old on or before Sept. 30.
Children, In order to become registered, must be present.
Records required are, an tmmun~tlon record which provides
evidence that the child has had four DJ;'T shots, four polio shots,
one MMR shot and a TB skin test adMinlsteri!CI within the last
year. Additionally, a copy of the child's birth certificate Is
. required. .
,
. The kindergarten teacher, school nurse and speech therapist
will all be present to answer questions.
· Parents are urged to call the schools, Chester at ~3304. and
Tuppers Plains at ~7-3310, to secure an appointment.
Continued on page 9

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under attack within own party this year
'
By LEE LEONARD
UPI StatehliW!e Reporter
COLUMBUS- Seven congressional representatives are Iinder
attack within their own party this
year, but none more severely
than Rep. Donald "Buz" Lukens,
a Middletown Republican.
Lukens, 59, bas been convicted
of contributing to the unruliness
of a minor for having sex with a
teenage girl .and is a political
leper In his own party. He has
three primary opponents and Is
in danger of losing the seat he has
held since 1987.
Surveys show the favorite In
the 8th Dis trlct Republican prim·
ary Is former Rep. Thomas
Kindness of Hamilton, who held
the seat for 12 years heforetrylng
unsuccessfully for the"Senate In

Wert County. Also In the race Is
Mort. Meier, a bond underwriter
from Ha'mllton.
When Lukens . was first convicted a year ago of a sexual tryst
with Rosie Coffman, thim 16, in
his Columbus apartment in No·
vember 1988, outraged Republl·.
can party leaders called for his
resignation.
Lukens has stonewalled, await ing the outcome of his appeal. He ·
Is unwelcome at any Republican
meetings in the district, but has
been attending meetings of farm
and veterans' organizations.
"Buz Is working everywhere,"
said one .d istrict politico With
grudging admiration. "He has ,
110 percent name 1.0. and a lot of
IOUs."
No one knows this better than
1986.
Boehller. He strayed to.V~n Wert
Kindness has a substantial County one day, 120 mlles from
lead over state Rep. John Middletown, to speak to a church
Boehner of West Chester In the · group. A half-dozen people
district which runs up the welt showed up. One of them was .
side of Ohio from Butler County, ' Lukens.
just north of Cincinnati, to Van ..

Professional politicians expect
LllWin Ryan.
Lukens to show, but not-to'win 't he
Sawyer, 44, a congressman
race. Kindness is citing Ills since 1987·, is a traditlorlalllberai
experience in Congress and Wh!ll
with a conservative personal
he's done.for the district , while style. He chairs a subcommittee
Boehner Is proJecting his youth ·on population and the census (40) as a major asset In the lhe only two· term representative
campaign.
to chair a subcommittee.
On the olher sid~ of the state,
Ironically Ryan; 67, disapJames Traflcant , a feisty lhree- proves of the census and says it Is
term representat ive from an unnecessary expense, along
Youngstown, is involved in a with the space program. She
three-way Democratic primary wahts to try to represent the
In the 17th District.
poor, the elderly, the handiTraficant, 48, Is being chal- capped, the farmers and the
lenged by Leonard Viselll, 48, of World War II veterans. · ·
Hubbard, who manages a pizzeIn Columbus, 11-term veleran
ria In Hermitage, Pa... and Rep. Chalmers Wylie, 68, Is
pledges to work toward restora· getting an unusual challenge In
lion of the Mahoning Valley's the Republican primary from
attorney Clifford Arnebeck.
economy.
Also on the ballot is Michael
Arnebect, 45, hss been trying
Metaxas, 33, a Youngstown con· to fillsh Wylie out 'lnto a public
sultan! whOse campaign theme Is debate but has not bad suc:cl!lls,
"No Taj!es With Meta11as. "
He claims Wylie supported com·
In nearby Al!,ron, Rep. Thomas petJtlve elections In Panama 8Jid
Sawyer, also'a DeJDocrat, faces a should be willing to do so at
challenge from real estate agent home.

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