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~10-The Daily Santin(!!

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Ohio

NATIONAL

OVERBROOK CENTER

NG.

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AND

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
off ·to best ·
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start In years

1

Daily Number

036
Pick-4

. 7646

AMERICARE._...
. .Pome~oy

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1 Section,

Ohio;

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ijy CHARLENE HOELFICH
Sentinel Ne.ws Stalf
)VIeigs real estate agent Jean
Trussell was hired by Middleport
VIllage Councli Monday nig_ht to
administer the Appalachia Regional CommiSSion Housing Op·
portunitie5 Grant, of $43,888
awarded lo.lhe village in March.
Mayor Fred Hoffman recoro·
mended· -Tiu&amp;seli . for .the · job
lollowii}_g__interviews of ~eve. ral
candlda!Fs'l , ·
..
.Her job wiil be to guide
residents through the paperwork
for low Interest loans from the
Farmers llome Admlnlstal!on .. A
portion of the loan, $18,888, is

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992-6472

992-6606
333 PAGE STREET

'POMEROY, OHIO

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

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c TUMBLED DOWN - A .section of th" stone
re.talnlng wall on Legion Terrace tumbled down
.,several·
weeks.ago.
Some of the residents. .of .the
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Demjanju~ .

"THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES"
A _/ . I .
nllfl.tl",oK t .·. ·
FURNITUIE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COYEIING
992-3671
POMEIOY, OHIO

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K&amp;C Jewelers
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Baum lumber Co.
CHESTER, OHIO

985-3301

.DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN-MUSSER
INSURANCE AGENCY
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2975

Tractor

.

~THE

~~:¥~Y

SALES AND SERVICE

I

S~gar

POMEROY, OHIO.

heritag• ho

Middleport Trophies

992-5627

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6128

Middleport, Ohio

Quality Print Shop
992-3394-992-334.5

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Pat Hilt Ford

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc. ,B~ogan Warner lnsur~nce
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2174

~dolph's

Dairy Valley
.POMEROY, OHIO
..

Ingels Furniture
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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992-6687

iACINE, OHIO

992-6611

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Member

FDIC

. 992-6333

SYRACUSE, OHIO

.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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POMEROY;' OHIO

992-6669

POMEROY; OliO

992-2955
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MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
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Cro~' s Family

Restaurant
POMEROY, OHIO

. 992-5432

MilE SWIGER
STATE FARM INSURANCE

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6685

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Swisher Lohse Pharmacy

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Prescription Shop !t

·,.

HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-2210 .

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·Ewin·g Funeral Home · Valley Lunk &amp; Supply Co,
POMEROY, OliO

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

992-2196

I

992-2121

Run Mill$.

. 992-2115

992-2556 .

992-2975

992-2635

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y

POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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POMEROY, OHIO

992-2057

·appeal
·in
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second day

&amp;~~enLe*
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Pleasers

Fruth .Pharmacy
99~-649i .

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designated for site development
such as constructing roadway
alid sewers.
The goal of the new program ls
to assist in 20 Fml{A financed
home loans and 10 remodeling
projects thi.s year.
Trussell's office will be located
in the new addiliom to Middleport VIllage hall and will ser ve
not only Mi&lt;!dleport residents but
other Meigs Countians.
A single bid of $358,922 from
Stuphen ' of Columbus for ·a new
Middleport flre truck was opened
at the meeting:
· However, action on the ladder
truck bid was postponed pending

recommendations.! r om the Mid,
dleport Fire 'Department. F ire
Chief Jeff Darst mel with Council
and briefly r eviewed the bill,
The lirst reading was given -to
an ordinance providing for thesal e of a 35 by 56 foot section
located behind th e Meigs Coun ty
Department of· Human Rasour·
. ces building and considered
excess proper ty by the village:
It was indicated by Mayor
Hoffl)'lan . that t)le section · wUl
lacllitate the projlosed expansion
of the Meigs County· Depar tmeh t ·
Of Human Services building a!)d
that it would be advanta geousfor
Continued on p~ ge 10

P.u}J.Iic he~fng· on abandoned
mine :sit~s . slated w ·ednesday . .

AMERICARE-Pom~r~y
Nurs~ng ·a.nd Rehabilitation ·Center
36759 ROU SPRINGS ROAD

.2_5'Cd n'ta
.

TFussell to administer
ARC housing grant
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Low tonight In mid .60s.
of rain 60 percent;
Wednesd!'y, high In mid 80s.:
Chance of showers 70
Chane~

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Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-6454

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POIAEROY, OHIO
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JERUSALEM tUPI) ~ The
lawyer for c·onvicted waF crlmi~
nal John Demjanjuk told an
'appeals cour t Tuesday the pro· ·
cess· in which witnesses ·were
shown . photographs to identify
the former Cleveland autoworker as the Nazi (jeath camp
guard ·"Ivan the Terrible" was
flawed and unfair.
Defense atiorney Yoram Sheftel described. the photo.identtlfi,
cation process as tl)e "very crux,
very heart" of the war crimes
c·ase against the 70·year·okl
native Ukrainian and charged
that the screening sessions were
improperly held and arrange&lt;! to
·
implicate Demjanjuk.
"Each of the flaws that I have
enumerated . .'. rules Ollt a con vic·
itort based on identification," he
told the flve·judge panel of
Jsraei:s Supreme Court. On Mon·
day ,.tl)e court began hearing the
appeal of Demjanjuk's April 18,
1988, conviction and subsequent
death sentence.
·.
five witnesses identified photographs of Denjjanjuk as the
guard :'Ivan the Terrible" w)lo
l)elped kill. thousands of Jews at
tile Trebllnka death camp in
Nazl·occupled Poland during
World War II. The- witnesses' •
testlmeny and a Nazi identiflca·
lion card purportedly of Demjanjuk were' key pieces of evidence
in the prosecution's case at the
triaL
·.
Sheftel said the two photogra· '
phlc spreads used to Identify
Demjanjuk were arranged so
that the pictures of the subject
stood out from the others. Enlar·
gemenls of j he spreads were
displayed to the appeals court.
"There are severe fia ws and
. defect·s in the whole ldenilflca-.
lion process." Sheftel told the
· court. ' 'In all the ldenlification
proceedings. we find some hint at
which picture Is to be pointed to."
In . one spread of 15 photo· ·
· graphs, a I951 U.S. visa lmmlgra·
tlon picture of Demjanjuk was
larger than the rest. A .secOnd
spread of eight pictures Included
a phot011raph from a Nazi J.D.
card that the prosecution claims
· . Continued on page 10
~~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs Coynty residents ex~·
rlenclng proble!Tls associated
·with surface and undergr6un(j
mine sites abandoned prior to
Apgust, ll!77, will have an oppor·
tunlty to ,express their concerns
at a publiC hearing to be held
Wednesday iilght. _ .
1
A hearing on proposed projects
In .. the Alheils .l)istrict, siX of
..~whlcb,.are IA ..~II&amp; County.• will
·
l!e .held by the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, Division of
Recla~ation, Abandoned Mined
Lands Program, at 7 p.m at the
street attribute the wall coUapse to tl!e nilne
.Athens County 'Cooperative Ex·
dral~~&amp;ge problem: .·
tension Service, 280 West Union
Street, Athens.
·
·Joseph J .. Sommer, dire.c tor of
the ODNR, announced four such
meetings which -will take In
Ohio's coal mining regions this
. month with another public meet·
ing to. be held In Columbus in
Ju.lle. ·
As .he explained, coal mining
has long · been a source of
livelihood for many Ohioans, but
before regU)aled coal mining,

activities often occurred without · ance tax dollars used fo r recta·
regard for the long term affects !Tlatlon of the· sites that aFe
on I he land, water resources, .or · eligible to receiv&lt;;&gt; monies.
,
the safety of the public.
·
" These meetings will provide
Today throughout the east~rn
the opportunity for Ohio citi zens
and southeastern regions of the
to Inform the Division o! 'Recla State, some Ohio residents are · ·matlon of jlny problems they' are
now experiencing adverse ef·
experiencing which are a resl!ll
fects fr~ past mining activities. of mining activiti es prior to Aug .
Some of the most common 3. 1977 and also give the Division
problems include dangercjus
a chance to make the public more
mine shafts and entries, aban·
aware of what assis tance is
donecl stfll¢tllrl!!ancl~ulp~"'-'· · av"\able 0 o tllem: tlii'O\It ll· ll!e
.acid mine drainage, f\ooding , Abandoned Mi11ed Lands Prolandsl!ding, unsightly coal refuse gran!." said Sommer.
pUes a11d sedimentation, l!e said
Melgq Count y sites which a re
The meetings 'will give the lisle~ in the Athens Dis tr ict
.public the opporiutilty to discuss proposals a re Jesse Creek, a ban·
the Division of Reclamation's doned eroding s trip mine causing
Tenth Anll¥al Work Pi;m, in flooding of siate Route554; Lyon.
addition to bringing to ·the mine drainage flopding Ches tnut
Division's attention any new Street arid Seventh Ave. ; Neese.
'sites which could be eligible for landslide; Thomas Fo rk, aban·
reclamation. The ·work plan will do ned ecpding strip m ine causing
be subml1ted to I the Federa) · flooding of State Route 124 and
Office of Surface Mining Reela· 143; and Wolfe Swis her, mirte
mati&lt;in and ·Enforcement re· drainage causing . flooding .' af
questing approl(imately $5._7 mil· State Route 7 and Salt Street fn
lion to fund the AllandonedMined · Pomeroy, and Red Bird , mine
Lands Programhthis year. OS· dr ainage affecting State Rout~ 7
.MRE. collects the fed~ra.l seve r- creating a hazardous entry.
I

·. Ohib.gf?Vernf!rS

ra~e
&gt;

heating up

•

CQLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) ~ stones."
Republican gubernatorial c;~ndi·
Celebrezze has admitted · he
date George Voinovich criticized Improperly used slate vans and
his opponent, Democrat Attor· trailers to haul old cars he boug"t
ney General Anthony Cele- and planned to res tore. sho:wtng
brezze, for failing to pursue bad judgment. He repaid ·the
corruption in the 'Gov. Richa rd state $700 for use ·of the ve hicles
Celeste administration.
from the Ohio Bureau of Crimi·
Voinovich suggested this is nal Jdenti!icati.on . and
because Celebrezze has not !leen Jnves tigatiort.
.
· above criticism. himself.
Ceiebrezze is a car enthusias t
Putting a twist on an old adage, who enjoys working on ,old !'ars
Volnovich said Moriday, "People . 1as a hobbY.
who live in glass hOuses, It's · Celebrezze campaign spokes·
difficult for them to throw man Wayne Hlll cited a 1985

Cleveland Plain Dealer article
showing Cleveland was paying
$3;100 per year for a new, police
radio-equipped s ta tion wagon
.teased for Voinovich's wife.
J anet.
Voinovich campaign spokes·
man Curt Steiner coulltered that
the former Cleveland mayor had
reimbursed the city a bout $6,000
that was . judged to b~ personal
use, adding that the city·leased
car was cheaper than providing
Mrs. · Voinovlch · with Police .
·security.

24· HOURS A DAY ~ Acid water ftom the old abandoned mine
above Legion Terra'~e In Pomeroy ftows 24 hour• a day, 38$days a
year, says Bob Arms who lives there: 'l'hat Is except on "'at cold
days when It lurtlll to Ice, he contlnued.&gt;Tbe water not onr, creates a
ha2ardous condition day In and day oil&amp; hut a ceneral deterloratl9n·
of the briCk street. Defined as the Wolfe-Swlsller project b' the
. Ohio Department,of Natural Resoure ... Division of Reclamation
· It Is one of six Meigs County projects to be considered at the At be~
District hearing to I:Je held at 7 p.m. Wednesday 'nlgl!t at &amp;heAthens
EKte.nslon Service office.
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·Cold ·weather boosts
Columbia Gas · ~ings· ·
€0LUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) ~
breaking sub· zero
temperatures in December
helped boost •Columbia Gas of
Ohio's ·e arnings to $45 milUon lor
19~ but the compllny might seek
· a rate Increase.
Chainnan C. Ronald Tilley·
1!3id Monday that despite the
earnings, which were 50 percent
higher than au'thorize!l by
, the
~ecord

l\)1

state, lheutllityllkelywllla•kfor
another rate Increase this year.
II would be the "lllity'sl third
rate hike ,In the three years. ·
Tilley said that warm winter
weather and state .reluctance to
grant major rate Increases so far
make a 6 percent to 8 percent
return likely In 1990.
··
Tilley noted how Ohio's unpreContinhed on page 10
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POPPY DAYS - Mldllleport Mayor Frl!d
Hoffmaa -,IIU declared Friday u4 ~urday !II
Popp' Day• for &amp;be Amll'leu. Leste• FeeaeJ ·
Bea1111U hit 118 Ia Ml...epert ud the Lewll
Mule)' tlaM 181 of the "--eu -Lep.a. Glrlll
pllltllft!d I &amp;e r, are Cluda Clifford, Little Miss
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Poppy; Patricia Toblu,

.ru._ter

Miss Poppr.

.Jesllea Roeten a•d Heidi Gilmore, P•PP'
Prine n1

1 , . 8&amp;andln1

In back 18 Lula Hamptod;

JIIIIP' cbalrmu for tile Lewis Muley unJ&amp;, Not
plduted Ia Gall Ferry, cbatnnan for F - y
BenM&amp;&amp;.

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·c ommentary·
TO THE INTERESTS OF ,.-BE MElGS.MASON .\BEA
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubI Iaber

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CHARLENE HOEFI.ICB
'
Geaerat Maaarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslalanl Publbber/Conlroller
A MEMBER of The Unlted Press lnlernlltlonal, Inland Dally Press
AsSOCiation and the American Newspa~ Publ~~s Assoclatloo.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'They sbpuld be tess than 300
words long, All letters are subject to editing and must be s)gned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub- .
Ushed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.
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Tumtet. M-v 16, 1910

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Page-2-The D•iiY Sentin.al
Pomeroy-Middlap«t. Ohio
TIJstd.y, Mlly 16, 198();.

U p __Ja....:c_.k_._4_n_d"-er_,s='on_a_n_d_D_a
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WASHINGTON - Johnnie common grave. She-went along accounted for. The· process Is· a
PariSh.of Joshua, Texas, lost his with the gesture to honor the nightmare for those who feel
brother Frank In the VIetnam others In _her son's unit, but she their loved ones are still alive. :
It Is band enough that Vietnam
War In 1968. But the harshest believes Michael Is stlll al(ve.
These families are the war's •and Its all!es kept the remains too
legacy of the war came last year
. for Johnnie when he found out latest victims. They are a:~ the long, 'lind In some cases tried to
tllat ih~ -Army had burled the , .mercy of the Pentagori 1 w!llch pass off animal bones as soldl!;[s'
·they feeJ ·ts trying, orfce'and for ·. rl)ma!ns. But Amer!i!fs: own
wrong body In Frank: s grave.
all, to bury the past; If not the accounting process,is flawed too.
~:Du Ann .LaBohn of Washing,.
- The Pentagon sometimes' ask
ton, D&lt;C., doesn't know who Is right bot,lles. ,,
Some 2,300 AmeriCans 11re s.t!ll families to accept pieces of bone
burled beneath the tombstone
that bears the name of her offlctatly unaccounted for and or teeth and call the ca,se closed.
LaBohn's brother's purported
brother Gary, but sbe's sure It presumed dead from the VIet.nam War. The government has remains were part of a bag of17
Isn't him,
Veronica Shanley of San Diego used everything from 'hard; teeth and 145bonefragments, the
agreed only a tew weeks ago, boiled science· to gues~work to ..- ·longest of which was less than 2
against her got feelings, to letthe analyze bone and teeth returned !j!ches. Therematnscamefrom.a
government .p ut her son Ml· since the end of the w11r. ·So far, llellcop_ter cr11sll lnvolvjng nine
t know
chael's name on a tombstone 280 of the missing have been . men. The military~ doesn!,
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with three othef p!lmes over a _
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

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- Go~elnment ' fouls

The Daily Sentinel
D~VOTED

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When PACs·were
agents :o f refC;.rm

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If any of them got away auVe-:
With' or without the tam!l!~s'
consent, the government makes
Its best guess and then erases the
name of that soldier from the list
of the missing. That doesn't
erase the doubts of the tam!lles.
Military records show some
remains that defy !dent!flcatton,
yet they have been given a name
and a plot at Arlington National
Cemetery.
Dr. Michael Charney, a forensiC pathologist from Colorado,
Is a critic of the Pentagon's ID
program . He estimates that 70
percent. of the cases he has
re-examined relied ·Ol) ctrcunistantlal evidence, liot science.
And he blames that In part on the
. rush to close cases ~~ct the t\tmy's
m lab In Hawau. · · ,
The Army denies that It Is lrh oo·
big of a hurry to do tbejob right.
It d'efends the .grqup 'buttals as
the best way to alloW fa~t!les
and comrades to put their Joyed
ones to rest. The .Army's chief of
casualty affairs told us, "There
can't be anything wor!Mi than not
knowing. And when _tbey get
something, they feel better about

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
it."
.
UPI Senior Editor
But
Shanley
said
sh~wenttoan
WASHINGTON - Twenty years ago, tbe Rrinc!paa target for
·
elaborate
Army
funeral
!or her
campaign finance law reformers was "fat cats" - wealthy people
son.
only
to
pay
her
·~e:ipeets.
who contributed five, six and even seven-figure siuns to their favorite
"They ·are hoping I ·accepr some
candidates.
.
·
,
.
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o{the
remains to be my son'sand
. Because Richard Nixon got a bout $6 million of h)s $60 million )972
1
don't,
" she told our. associate
campaign budget from just 10 people- $2.1 rh!llion from W. Oement
Dan
Njegom!r.
· ·
Stone alone- the emphasis In the post-Watergate reform drive was
LaBohn
relented
and
attended
on limiting Individual contributions and "broadening the base" of
a similar funeral for her brother
poUt!cal fundra!sing.
·
Gary. "ljust got tired," she said.
Apart from estab!!sh!ng a system of pub!!cly-subs!d!zed financing
"It's been 21 years. To tel! you
for presidential campaigns and restricting Individual donations to
the truth, I don't think, I don't
federal campaigns, the law opened the doors to a new version of an
~-think any part of my brother Is In
old campsJgn device- the pouttcal action committee or PAC.
that coft!n."
Both businesses and labor unions were and are forbidden to
/k¥ •.
The Army ilkes to think It Is
contribute dlrecHy to presidential and congresl~nal campaigns, but ·
'helping fam!Ues·put their pain to
many uniops set up ''politic$! education•: committees to help favored
rest. LeBohn says·tt Isn't so. "It Is
candidates with endorsements and campaign services. Democrats
over, not becauseHeelhe'sdead,
and liberal Republicans were til~ beneffCtors.
,
but because the searofts.over." .
· The new PACs were.permitted to raise and cont~lbute money t9 all
federal candidates except pres(denual candidates who have aecepred
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public funds (or the general election campaigns. The corjunlttees
could represent just about any business; labor, poUtical,ldeologjcal
,
. '' or other Interest.
.
The reformers of the mld-1970s did not Imagine In their wildest
Although no formal announceWhat's going 'on? There' are lea losing popuhltton In the next
The biggest European·· demodreams that within 15 years there would b'e more than 4,000 PACs and
ment bas yet been made, newly solid clues. What doe( II mean? century. The difference between graphic news comes trom
that they would be the dominant factor 1}1 congressional campaign
available government ·data re- Good things for us, prOblems for the 1.8 TFR used In the recent Sweden, where the TFR went up
finance.
veals that (ertillty. rates In the our competitors.
'«&lt;
.
projections and the current 2.0 from · \,65 to 2.02 In four years.
But now, the solution has become the problem. PAC contributions
United Slates are up, and for the
The biggest reasoq for · tl\e , rate generates more than 20 That follows newly Instituted
have become so pervasive In congressional cmpalgns that many
fll'st time In nearly a generation change Is that thlrty-so~hlngs _ m!ll!on additional people by 2050. pro-nat!ll pollcle~. !ricludlqg,betcritics, In and out of Congress, see thetr 11\lpact as a kind of legalized
American women are beapng an are having ,more kt-ddY.''"';:;lJ!stead.ofadecllnlngpopulatlon ter p~ld-,leavr .for women; . ·
bribery. As a matter of course, reporters·seeltlliglnforma11on about
average
of more than !Wo child· soineth!ngs. 'IJ!e·s oundwehear,i s. of 299.mUI!on at that time, , there
members of Congress now'check thelrFt!114!ral Elecl!on Commission
Wh!l.e' the Swedish Increase
ren.
The
new trend WI!) likely the snooze ~arm ·on the blolog.l·, would be a growing .one of 321 might be a precursor.of things to
reports to · see. what . PACs have contributed .to their campaigns.
have profound· and 'poslitve ef· cal clock, a f!nal ,cltance collec· million. ,
Whether justified or not, heavy contr!budd'ns from .some spec!~!
come, birth rates are simultanefects.
The turn,a:round Is proba- tlve understanding.of a dem'o gta· ·
Interest often ar~ regarded as ~vidence ,that the congressman Is IJ;t
The potential economic effects ously dropping In Poland, Yugosbly not happening In Europe, and ph!c axiom: "fertility delayed Is are great (particularly If aug- lavia and Romania. Loqgter,m ,lt '
that group's pocket.
· •
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certainly
nofln Japan.
· fertUity dented."
So now tile reformers are out to get the PACs.
· ·
men ted by moderate immtgra- seems !IS If Europe and Japan,
1n
early
May,
the
National
' Republicans want to outlaw PAC donations· to congressional
From 1977-87 the tertUity rates tlon Increases now being cons!· both with low fertlllty and
Center ·for _Hel!olth S~tistlcs com· of women aged 30-39 roae from 40 dered.) For example, the Social resistance to !mm!gratton, wlll
campaigns outright, or at the minimum sharply limit their
puled the estimated annual U.S. to 50 i;!lrtbs per thousanil women. Security shortfall would be cut end up with non-growing or·
'CII1Jtrlbut!ons. They also would outlaw "In-kind" contributionS of
Total Fe~t!llty Rate (TFR). The new data Indicates ihat this (because of more contributors), shrinking populations· In the next
services and supplies to campaigns by unions or trade groups.
Simply put: the TFR Is the Increase among older .women· and growing American markets decades. By contrast, America
·Democrats want to ban PAC contributions to congressional
number of ~hlldren, on average, · apparently continued through would likely yield a future boost w!ll be growing demographically
campaigns and finance public subsidies with citizen contributions of
that a woman bears In a l!fetlme. 1989, more than over~omlng a for exlstipg businesses.
u~ to $3 each added to Income tax payments.
.
- and In economic and geopol!t!- ,
It Is both a bedrock demographic slight ongoing decrease , In .the
·Pile big difference, and It may be the kUling difference, Is that the
America's competitors are In cal Influence.
statistic and a pr-Imal cultural fertilitY, rate among teen-agers no such happy mode. The Japa·
Democrats want to slap total spending limits on campaigns and the
ThPre are caveats. Fert!l!ty
Indicator.
. . and twenty·somethtnp.
Republicans·do not.
.
·
.
·, ·
·
nese TFR Is fa111ng, now down to may be up only because the
:{:ampalgn finance reform Is the ,toughest. kind of action to get In • The new TFR Is remarkable.
The rise puts the United States • 1.64, an all-time low. The growth economy has been healthy. The
Consider the recent sequence:
Q&gt;ngress for the obvious reason that the people who are being asked
wlth,ln range of ~tu~ntng to .th.e .of femtnl!;m In Japan may lpwer newest number~ are only proviU.S. TOTAL FERTILITY RATE · TFR "replacement'Jevel" of2.1l. · the rate further.
tq:change the rules of the ·game are the same people wlto have
'
sional estimates, which can .be
1976-86: · 1.74-1.84 chlldl'i!n per Tt\at Is theraie r~u!red I!J k'eepa
siiCceeded In playing the game under the existing rules.
European rates are more c01ll·
revised. The trend Is of short
;It was only the trauma of the Watergate scandal that provided woman
population tust stable' over time, plex. Threeofthefourbtgnat!ons duration. America !s still below
1987: 1.87 children· per , woman not counting Immigration. But have, for the moment, stabilized the 2.11 replacement rate. ·
enough momP.ntum to force congressional action In the m!d-1970s and'
1988 (estimate): 1.93chlldren per because 'America accepts a soUd at low, or extremely low, levels.
absent anything of that magnitude now, It may be naive to expect
But there Is Intuitive sense to
woman
•
r
apyth!ng to happen this year..
·
number of Immigrants, ·we mllY England and France remain at ·what Is happening. Many' young
1989 (estimate): 2.00chlldrenper . already be at, or slightly above, 1.8 'while Italy Is holding at 1.3.
:&lt;Jne thing Is for sure, however. If a new reform law does -pass, the
adults 11re sensing th;it a life ·'
wOman
day It takes effect someone In Washington w!ll find a loophole In It to
the replacement eau!valent.
The West German TFR Is a .very without progeny can be unfultll·
The precise new number Is
••plait.
Accordingly, when the Census· low 1.42, but it Is up somewhat. At
ling. The society, partly through
2.0009. In short, the Birth Dearth Bur~au does Its, next projections, the least, the demographic free- changing day care and tax11tion ·
In America ~tlll exists, but may the 'most likely" calc~ilatlon will ·f all In Europe seems to have policies, Is beginning )o respond.
be ending.
probably no lon·g er"show Amer· ended.
An era may .be ending. ·

....
ilchool. ·P idared are team members Tim Powell,
IACKYARD vou.J:YBALL CIIAMPIONS' 'ne ae.e.e Gaapn emerptl 11M cllampiDIII of · Hatold Bird, Wayne Ly-, 1\fllu! Ward,Mark
· Kimes, Todd IUmes, B!ld .Jason PowelL
·
-tile tlftbJe ellmlulloll JlilcliJud · vole,-llall
toanuneai beN Sa&amp;unla)' a&amp; Soatllern Hlp

•·

Jones to -replQce Bickerstaff .
as SuperSonics head coach

,

,,

SEA'ITLE (UPI) - K.C. Jones
has agreed to a three-year,
$900,000 contract to become head
coach of the Seattle SuperSonics,
replacing Bernie Bickerstaff,
who w!ll become vice president

..._,. ..•

.·~f· an era·?_..______B_en_·._.~_a_t..,..te_n_b_er..::..g
Is it the end
'.

'

~

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era Wr;h QebooL Plctared 8l'e team members
Sandy's Vldeci
David Grlpdejaff, Kay qrlndlllaff,Dav.ld Deem,
team recelviDIIndlvldul piiiQuel from &amp;llelr !IWD
Sandy'• VIdeo Ia aacll!l! claimed tlllrcl plaee Jalbe 1 Todd Grladllaff, Brenda Zirkle, Mike AmOB, aad
weiJ.'reeetvetl hcllylll'tl VoDeyball till a&amp; Soalll·
DavldGI\III.

Guerrero suffers · another setback
at Indy ·d uring workouts for '500'

'

~·Berry's

World

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•
•

•
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•

Yf ()L[)f PIJI3

\

When the Ohio General Assem·
bly convenes In an electiOn year
just a~ut anything can happen.
Bills that are !ntrilduced once ·
every two years appear on tlie
Senate calendar, aQd _a lot -of
partiSan rhetoriC takes place on
both sides of the aisle as
mem hers gear up for the coming
elections.
· However, In every. s.e'sslon
there are b!lls that clearly
deserve II!ISsage, . politics not.
withstanding. This session, there
are two such bills dealing' with
rooting out wrongdoing In state
government that merit such
trealtment.
·
The first b!ll, H.B. 588, would
take the Important step of
establishing an office of lnspec-·
tor governal \n the governer' s
office to Investigate alleged
wrongdoing by state officers and
employees. Approval of this kind
of legislation Is long overdue. For
years, most federal agencies and
di!Ji4rtments havE\ been opera!·
!ng succesafully under the watch·
fu I eye of Inspectors general.
Inspectors general have one job:
to Investigate the management
and operation of agencies, . and
report Inefficiencies aad acts of
corrupt!~n to the heads of the
.government.
nie bill, as passed by the
Holise last January, would put
Into law the provisions of an
executive order lilued last year
· by Governor Celesre setting up
the Inspectors pnera1 otflee. The

S~n.

•

Jan L6ng :

bill · calls for the governor to of a special counsel to investigate
appoint to Inspector general with any criminal or Improper activthe advice and consent of the tty In the performance of public
Senate. The Inspector general duties If It became apparent that take action rather ·thlm merely
would perform invflStlgat!ons on the attorney general was tmpll- rely on political rhetoric to deal
posslble wrongdoing on the part cated or Involved In the alleged with corruption In state
of administration dfr!clals and 'wrongdoing:
government.
would Issue a public report on Its
I hope both of thes~ bills pass
We'll get a better Idea. Of the
Investigations. Perh11ps most lm- the Senate easily, without partt· fate of these two. bills after the
portant!y, the blll grants the san bickering. Too many people General Assembly reconvenes
Inspector general subpoena ate rightly .skeptical of our oh . ~tine 11. If you nave any
power t(\!)Uestion admtnts\rat.ton ability, as lawmakers, to pollee questions on these two measqres,
officials and s~affers. The 1nspec- "our:own adlvltles and the actlvl· · . or want assistance on any other
tor general would be required, . ties of state government. Pas- matter, please call me, Senator
under the bill, to ttirn over any ,, sage of these two b!lls would
Jan Michael Long, at 466-8156, or 1
evidence of wrongdoing unco- , serve as evidence that . the
write me at the Statehouse, l;
vered In an !nvestlgaqon to the General Assembly has the w!ll to
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
'
appropriate prosecuting attorney for possible legal action.'
A second bill dealing lflth
'
political corruption, S.B. 221,
'
would expa9d the Investigatory
By United Press International
powers of tlie attorney general.
Today Is Tuesday, May 15, the 135th day of 1990 with 230 to follow .
This blll woulll , require the
The moon Is waning, moving toward it last quarter. ·
attorney general to Investigate
' .
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
any criminal or clvU violation of
The
evening·
stat
Is
Jupiter:
law that Involves a criminal or
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
Improper activity occurring ,In,
author L. Frank B11um ("The W!z11rd of Oz") In 1856, French cbemtst ,
or related to, the performance of
Pierre, Curie In 1859, au thor Katherine Aim Porter In 1890, Chicago
public duties by state officers or
Mayor Richard J. Daley In 1902, actors Joseph Cotten In 190(; (age85)
employees. All that . would be
and James Maspn In 1909, COUI)try singer Eddy Arnold In 1918 (age
needed to trigger these lnvestiga72) , actress Anna Mar!aAlberghettl In 1936 (age 54), and singers
tlcms Is a wrttren request by the
Trinl Lopez In 1937 (age 53) and Laln!e Kazan In 1942 (age 48) .
governor of the General
Assembly.
On thls date In history: . ·
However, the attorney general
.. In 1918, the first regular Air Mall service was established between
wouldn't be required to walt for a
Wash[JIIton and New York City.
·
request. He or she woUld be
In 19&amp;2, Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper was launched Into space
required to !nvestliate once they .
.
became aware of any criminal or ' atop an Atlas rocket and completed 22 orbits.
Improper activity, 'l'he lllll also , In 1969, Justice Abe fortas, under fire for a money deal with jailed
i
:ould allow tor the appointment !financier Louis \l{flfson, resigned fn!m the Supreme C(Jurt. · _

... •

Publllhld every altern...,, Monday
lllr&lt;~~lb Friday, Ill Court Sl .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by IH Ohio VIlli)' Pul&gt;

lllhlar CompUJIMUitlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781, Pb. llft.21Sf. Second elau pootaro pold ot Pomeroy,

CQdo.

•..

. • Mtmber: Unlteci'l'rsalllll!l'llltlonol,
Inlucl Dall)' Pr. . Aaoielotlon alld the

Oldo !ltwopar:;.or Auoelotloa National'
AdverltolltJ
,....,tiotlvt, Branham
•·
731 Tblrd A-.ue,
Now York.""' York 111017.

··
POII'I1USTER: Seacl adchu cbm101

-.......

to ne llldiV Sttlllntl. m Court St.,
Pomeroy, ado eM.

..

ltl1I8CIUPl'ION U.'l'llll

.,~
· ODe Wotk. ..................................IUO '
ODt Month .................................suo
ODe Year ................................. $'12.10
SINOLBOOPY
PIIW&amp; .

SUIIIcrllleruotckOiflnatoPiflllt-.
, · riS'
remit Ill a4YUOI cJti'ICI to
'' 'l'lte
~tboC!I oaa I. I or·12111011111 ·
buto.Crodltwllllioll
____ .

No sulloertfiiODI by ,...,._ IB
11......_ llomt. cilrrllr - t o
.~.

.,

BALTIMORE !UPI)
· Trainer D. Wayne Lukas, one of
the best talkers In the tho·
roughbred business, had plenty
to expound .on Monday: the
workoutS of his two starters In
the Preakness Stakes.
·
Land Rllsh·, a flusfered le\'enth
after gettlni knocked around
early In the May 5 Kentucky
Derby, bounced back at Plmllco
with a crisp flve-elghtbs mile
work In : 59 4-5. .
And Kentucky Jazz, a hotblooded speedster Lukas Is try·
tng to teach to fFjaX, allowed his
rider to rein hln\ enough to clock
. a leisurely time of 1: 021·5 for the
same distance.
But Lukas, though pleased
wllb the mom, gave the two
I 'COl~. surprisingly_ihort shrift. He
, wu too bUllY' ~Jalllnl Kentucky
Derby wlnlltll" Unllrldled.
• And 10 It's beell the last few
·days. 'l'bolllh Unbridled· won't
-ewn tbip from ChurehW Downs .
to Baltimore until Wedn nday,
he's still cuUng a~ tlledow
over the PlmUco '*'Au the ftelcl
prepares for Sa~ay•s second
jewel lit the Triple Crown.
''I I1ID tldnk lle'1 the hone to,
bMt," tald · Luku, who also

=
·-··.....·= =
..
Dolly ................................... Z Cento .

....

a

SPRING

'

uw......................................
..............................
. . ....... us
stw......................................
_
..... OiolaiJ

1!
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stw......................................
:
uw.-..................................

VAllf~ CI~EMA

44o 4m
~K RUN - Veteraaa Memorial Hospital Admlnbtrator Scoll
Lucas llolds lwo trophies lo be awarded Saturday In Mlddleporl
when a 5-K Run Is staged by lhe Middleport Village Recreation·
Departmenl. Tbe hospltal . ls spo1111orlng one of the several
categories of compellllon for the run whlcb gels underway al 10
a.m. at t,he come~ of Walnut 81., and North Second A~e. These
lropb!es, provided by Veterans Memorial, are . seC!)nd place
. awara for tbe besl man and womaa runner In lhe overall
category. There will alllo be lropbles for flrsl aad second places,
both male and female, In each of six age divisions. Runners
wishing to take part may register from 8 lo 1: 45 a.m. on Salw-day
a&amp; the site or may pre-Nglsler by conlacllng Roger D. W1111ams,
Recreation Director, aiiBZ-8782.

Riley says don't count us out
.

.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) Only four NBA teams have
rallled from a 3-1 deficit to win a
playoff series. But to hear Coach
Pat Riley tell It, the.-Lakers will
make It five.
·
The Phoenix Suns have put the
Lakers on the brink of missing
only their second NBA cham pion-

snip series since 1981. But Riley ,
while falling short of making
Continued on page 4

•

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!

Workouts continue for Preakness

(UIPBI-)
AIIMo... o l l l _ o , _

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"We're not missing a beat with '
of basketball operations.
KC.
replacing Bernie," Whitsitt
Sonlcs President Bob Whitsitt
said
Monday, calling ,Jones ''a
said th' appointments will be
winner,
No. 1 on my list of
announced Tuesday or Wednes day' ending
week of coaches."
· Jones , 59, took the Seattle offer _
speculation. ·
when Bickerstaff, who suffered a
burning ulcer that caused him to
miss six games In the 1988-1989 '
season, told Jones he preferred to·
move Into the front office after ·
five years as the Sonlcs heaq .
coach: '
.
Jones rejected an invitation to
Interview for ihe Atlanta Hawks
coaching job last Friday.
· ·'
Bickerstaff's Injury-damaged ,.
team finished 41-41 last seasoq ,
and missed the playoffs for the
first time In four years.
He complied a 202-208 regular '
season record In five seasons. .
Whitsitt emphasized thl\t the .
47-year-old Bickerstaff "Is no(
being kicked upstairs" an9 '
would bring unique Insights ta ,
the newly created job title after ;
.1, yean as a National Baa!Uitball , :
Association coach.
'•·'
· , Bickerstaff Invited Jones tq , ,
join ,him as an assts_taqt coach. ;
and consultant last yeaJi.
.. .
Jones reslgped a vice pres!d-..
ency with theCeldcs to rejoin,hls '·
friend.

~

The Daily Sentinel

. Today in history

---·

'

'
good_. I stepped on It and then It pits whtte .leadtng In 1987 and lost
INDIANAPOLIS
(UPI) _- Roswitched
ends. The thing that w!ll to AI Unser Sr., now lils Alfa
' berm Guerrero and. Jim Craw- ,
take
the
longest on the back,up teammate. Four months later,
ford have extended their leg!lcy '
car
Is
getting
the wings In shape. , Guer,rero c~asned IQ practice at
of frultratloll at the Indianapolis
It's
prei
ty
major
as. far as how Indy . and suffered life·
500With craws, while lh)JIIs are
mueh
It
sets
us
back.
The backup threatening head Injuries. Last
look_tne up · at ·Indy for the
·
car
needs
all
the
time
It can get." year. Alfa was not ready for Indy
long-suffering' Beqenhausen
Alta
Romeo's
first
Indy effort and would not let Guerrero run
famUy .
In
40
years
has
struggled
because for another team.
Guerrero suffered a setback
In
"The problems of the past you
the
engine
speed
achieved
Monday when his Alfa Romeohave
testing
has
never
been
matched
to leave In the past, "
powered March los I a rear wing
In
practice.
Guerrero
said. "If I didn't, I
entering the third tw-n and
·
"I'he
whole
team
Is
puzzled,"
probably
wouldn't
be here."
crashed Into the outer wall.
Guerrero
said.
"On
the
dyno
the
Rain
Is
forecast
Tuesday
c;uerrero was unharmed bu I his
engine
develops
very
through
Thursday
with
dry congood
car was destroyed. A replacepower.
It
should
be
close
to
the
ditions
expected
for
Friday
and
ment will be ready Wednesday,
Chevrolets.
Instead,
we're
20
Saturday's
third
scheduled
day
· but It has never left the garage.
"I had no Idea I lost the wing," · mph slower. It must have some- of qualifying. The lack. of practhing to do with a!tach)JIIIt to the tice tim~ w!ll hurt Guerrero apd
,, Guerrero said.' "We ·hadn't run car.
Somethlqg Is killing 11. If we Crawford, who returned to prac·
tbat much. We made a rear wing ,
·change to get more spe.ed. It felt' find It, we have the power to lice Monday after a first-turn
crash Friday In which his Lola
make the field."
Guerrero stalled In the lndv soared 15 feet Into the !lir.

...

Senate Bill22l ~ House·Bill 588

'

THIKD PUCE NI!:1TERS -

l

cbael Russell, Michael Hill and abseot Bart
Simpson. All members of this team recleved
plaques from Gaul's Markel while first place
team members recle~ed plaques lrom Dr. Hunter :
In Racine.

SECOND PUCE - ·As. a spoof to tbe natloaal
televlsloa series, The SlmJIIIOIIII volleyball te.a m
was no 11po0f on ibe courtu they claimed second
place In lbe Southern Wr;h Backyard Volleyball
Ult. Pictured are team members Kevin Grady,
Todd Harrl&amp;on, Eric Sbouiiii,Shane Circle, Ml·

picked Unbridled to win the and runs like a mule next time
·Derby. "His (come-from· out.
Lukas subscribes to the·theory,
beb!nd) :style fits the race. He's
but. he says It doesn't apply to
good right now.
''Unbridled ls what I call the Unbridled.
'now' horse. He got good on 'the · "I don't think he'll bounce, &lt;' he
right day. Most horses have 11 said .• 'That race was too easy for
two- to four-iweek run where they him. He had the perfect trip. If
really get good. He's probably on that effort doesn't move him up, I
don't know what w!ll."
that run right now."
Butdo_n'tget the wrong impresThere Is no doubt that Un·
bridled's 3 ~-length Derby tri- sion. Lukas,whowonthe1911land :
umph was the best race of his '85 Preaknesses With Codex and
11-start career. 1n 12th place Tank's Prospect, Is not ready to ·
early In the 1 %-mne clalllc, he ·concede the 1990 Run for the
Black-Eyed SUsans.
and Crail Perret easily picked
"IItke that horse, bu the'll beln
off a few horses down the
backside to move Into sixth. The for a dog fight," he said.
colt began to accelerate around "Nobody's going to give him
the borne turn. ·He moved Into anything."
Land Rush hall the same kind
second behind Summer Squall
and then klDked Into overdrive to of runnilla style as Unbridled ana
1
move Into the lead aDd draw alao could benefit from the fast
early 11ace expected from tbe
1awa)l. He Coveted the course In
2:02 and the tina! quarter mile In ·speed horses lri the probable field
: 24 2·5 - fattest final quarter · of 11: beaten Derby favorite
since Secretlirlat's record· . Mister Frlsky. fresh Champaa·
neforashley, Kentucky Jazz and
triumph In 1973.
Some handicappers believe ·Maryland-based Fighting
·
that kind of run makes Unbridled ' Notion.
a candidate to •'bounce" In tbe
"Land Rush could have done
PrNII-i. The bounce theory · better In the Derl;ly," Lullaa said.
•holds that a hone takes 10 mlli!h "He moved with Unbridled, but
out of hlmtelf with a bli effort, _
... Condnued on paae 4 .
I

-C.t

!
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which is automatically renewable and redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary

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·
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�•

Tuesday. May 15. 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

Cincinnati off to best start
in 20 years after 5-3 victory .
.

.

CINCINNATI jUFI) - The
doing that pretty good tonight ."
leadandlblew,l~ . Weshoul!fhave
red-hot Cincinnati RedS. quick on
Pittsburgh starter Walt Ter- won the game.
. .
the base paths and "nasty" out of
rell, 1-2, lasted only 1 and 2-3
Terrell, who has never PitChed
the bullpen, are off to the fastest
Innings, surrendering six hits well In Cincinnati, was asked II
start In the modern history.of the
and five runs .
the he was having trouble adjust·
franchise.
·
"r' stunk, plain and simple." lng to the mound at Riverfront
Cincinnati, which opened the
said Terrell. "We got an early· Stadium.
season with nine straight victories, won for the ninth time In the
las 111 games Monday n!ght with
a 5-3 decision over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Cincinnati has compiled a 22·7
record, matching the 1970 Reds'
record after 29 games as the best
,Philadelphia starter ·Pat
·B y Untied Press lnlernatlonal
starr In modern team history
Andy Benes res tored a sen.s e of Combs, 2-3, gave up three. runs
(since 1900).
"l'here's probably a few teams · order Monday night to the and six hits in four innings.
Joe Carter hit a two-run homer
shellshocked. San Diego Padres
wondering when we're going to
in the third inning and Tony
• quit winning, " said Reds first · pitching staff.
After watching four of his Gwyn11 smacked a tw'o-run bo· .
baseman Todd Benzinger, who
coUeagues get ravaged for 15 mer In the·fifth .
collected two of Cincinnati's nine
It was Carter's fourth homer of
runs Sunday In a 15-0 loss to
hits. "Even If we do hit a bad
Montreal, Benes allowed two hits the season that gave h·lm 28 RBI
streak, we've got such a good
)lllond,y, helping Sal) Diego coast this year. He has hit in nine ·
lead built up 1in .the NL WesO
to a 5-1 vlctor:v ·o ver the Philadel· straight games. It was Gwypn's
that
we
probably
can
stay
In
first
o&gt;+
phia
Phillles. ·
second homer of the year. ·
place.
'
"I think I've adjusted (to NL
He
yielded
only
twoflfth·inning
'
. •'
''The
key·
characteristic
of
this
... . .
·• .
.....
. · . .A
pitching)
and I'm being a little
singles
and
the
only
Philadelphia
team is speed," llgured Benzin·
first of three runs for the Pirates. Despite their
less aggressive," said Carter,
BACKMAN SCORES
In first Inning
run.
ger. "When you have that, all you
early lead, the Reds come back to · beat them
Plttsbuflh-Reds action, Pittsburgh's Wally Back·
Benes, 3-3, the Padres' No. 1 acquired from Cleveland. "I
have to do Is make contact to
Monday. (UPI)
man slides Into home ahead of the ball to score the
draft
choice in 1988. struck out store things In the back of my
score runs. You don't have to lilt
mind so maybe later in . the
five
and
walked four.
a lot of home runs."
unlil
season I can be more
He
did
not
allow
a
hit
Jack Armstrong, 6-1, scattered
Darren
Daulton
singled
with
two
aggressive. "
seven hits over six innings to
Braves 3, Cubs 2
outs
in
the
fifth.
Charlie
Hayes
earn the victory. The right·
then
walked
and
pinch-hitter
At
Atlanta,
pinch-hitter Franbander gave up three r4ns In the
Curt
Ford
singled
to
.load
the
cisco
Cabrera
singled hOme Jim
first inning and then blanked the
Dyk·
Presley
with
one
out in the eighth
bases.
Benes
walked
Len
Pirates through the next five.
inning,
stra
to
force
home
Daulton.
capping
a two-run rally
"I told Jack after that first
that
lifted
the
Braves
to victory .
"Next
game
I'm
going
to
skip
.
Inning, 'Hold them from here on
the
fifth
Inning.
I
don't
know
.What
Henry,
1·1,.
Reliever
Dwayne
bases
on
balls,
the
errors
they
and we'll win the ball game for
anything good to hit," Palacios
By APRIL ALFARANO
pitched
the
eighth
inning
for
the
I
was
thinking
throwing
the
No.8
made.
as
lousy
as
'
"
they
played.
you,'" said Reds manager Lou .
said. "And I got myself psyched
.
UPI Sports Writer
win
and
hitter
(Hayes)
all
'
sliders
(to
Charlie
Kerfeld
col·
ad
van
!age
of
our
They
took
Plniella. "Jack showed a lot of
up to hit and said, 'I'm going to
Kansas City pinch-runner Rey
Jected his second save . Mitch
walk him). I've got to let them
Palacios could not beat Boston take a strike.' He just didn't want ballclub. That was agony at its grit. He shut them down and kept
Williams,
beat
me
with
my
best
stuff.
Other
0-4, suffered the loss. '
us in the game. Pitt~burgh is a
with his speed, so he used his bat.
to throw anything good to best."
than
that
Inning
I
was
ahead
In
Giants
4, Mets 2
Blue
Jays
8,
Tigers
3
·
·
tough team to pitch to. They
Palacios, thrown our at the Wlllie. "
At
San
Francisco.
Will Clark
the
count
most
of
the
way
.I
could
AI
Detroit,
Kelly
Gruber
hit
a
throw a lot of good hitters- at
After taking a ball and a strike.
plate In the ninth inning attempt·
the
corners."
went
3
for
4
inchlding
a two-run
afford
to
pick
at
tie-breaking
two-run
single
In
the
you."
Palacios planted his homer over
lng to score the winning run, bit a
San
Diego
Manager
Jack
and
Bob
Knepper
pitched
homer
lOth inning and Fred McGriff
grand slam in the lOth inning the ieff.lield wall.
"II' was six tense innings." said
McKeon
said:
"He's
still
learn·
five
shutout
innings
an
added
an
with·
a
three-run
homer
followed
Monday, lifting the Royals to a
Armstrong. "They had a lot of
lng
but
he's
making
a
lot
of
RBI-single
to
carry
the
Giants.
guiding Toronto. Junior Felix
9-5 victory over the Red Sox.
runners on base."
Reardon got the first two outs
walked on four pitches to start
Randy · Myers. one · of the progress. There's no teliing how Knepper, . 2·1, who went 6 2-3
"I was just thinking a bout of the lOth. but then allowed two
the lOth, and scooted to third on a
,winning the game with a base hit singles before the walk.
"nasty boys" In the Cincinnati good he can be. He can over- lnntngs, earned his second vic·
hit·and -run slng1e by Tony· Ferand end . up winning the game
"I got the bases loaded. I don't
bullpen. worked the final two power you, and his breaking ball tory . this season against New
and change-up are coming York and : Steve Bedrosian
nandez. With the infield .In,
~with a home run," Palacios said. , want to walk in the winnhig run. I
Innings for his seventh save. In
Mookie Wilson forced Fernandez
, . earned his flfih save.'Sld Fernan"~ mean, that's .e very baseball
the eighth, with two on and no a I ong. " '
really lost it the batter before, "
"He bad pretty good stuff,'' deZ, 2·4, pitched five Innings and
on a comebacker. He stole
player's dream."
Reardon said. "Pitches ·were
OI!IS, he got pinch-hitter R.t.
Phillles Manager Nick Leyva . yield~ three runs and seven hits.
second and both runners scored
'T he Royals ended a three- going everywhere. I don't know
Reynolds to hit Into a double play
on Gruber's single. making a
game losing streak and provided why. The next hitter I came back
and strucl&lt; out pinch-hitter Don said. "He · threw a lot more D001ers 3, Expos 2 ·
breaking balls than we expected.
At Los Angeles, Fernando
winner oi Duane Ward, 1·0.
reliever Mark Davis, 1-2. with his to get a strike. It just didn't work
Slaught.
and as the game went on he was Valenzuela allowed five hits
first AL victory.
.
Myers ended the game · by
Twl1111 •· Athletics .% •
out. He hit It ."
throwing more and more fast·
At Minneapolis, Allan .Ander- striking out Bobby Bonilla and
over eight-plus Innings and
After Kansas City tied the
Boston failed to bold on to an
balls. He kept us off balance ignited a three· run, third-Inning
son pitched a four-hitter and
score 5·5 with a run in the ninth, it advan·rage obtained from Kansas
Barry Bonds.
pretty well. Tonight we looked rally with a homer. helping the
Kirby Puckett went 5 for 5 to lead
lalled twice to win the game 'City's blunders. including an
"It's my job to slam the door."
tired. but we deserve to be tired.
Minnesota. Anderson, 2-4. gave
Dodgers snap a six-game losing
w!len Palacios and Terr~· Shum· error by Bo Jac;kson in the eighth
sal!! Myers. ·'I can do that by
We flew six hours to get here."
up only doubles to Rickey Hend·
streak. Valenzuela, 3-3, fanned
per\ were thrown out at home.
that led to two runs and a 5·3 Red
hitting the corners and I was
six and Don •Aase nGtched his ·
erson and Carney Lansford and
Then in the lOth, Palacios was Sox lead.
~'
.second save. Kevin Gross, 4-2.
g~ared up to hit after Jeff
·:If there ever was a game that two solo home runs to Jose
Con!lnued from page3
whO bad a four -game winning
Reardon, 1·1, walked Willie Wil·
the Boston Red Sox organtzalion Canseco. ,He walked . five and ,.
.
~··
struck out five to avenge a Joss to
streak snapped. gave up three
son to load the b~ses.
should have been a Wi!mer, that
another of his guarantees, thinks
Scott, apparently weary from
Oakland In the first game-of the
''When he 1Boston catcher was it," Boston Manager Joe
runs and eight hits In seven
season. Dave Stewart, 6-1, gave . his club will begin a rally trying to keep }IP with Kevin
innings.
'
Tony Pena) looked over at' me, I
Morgan said. "We don't take
Tuesday nlghht at. the Forum in Johnson, tiad only· 4 points
up ten hits lor his first loss.
knew he said let's not give Willie
advantage of a dead club, the
Game 5 of the Western Confer- Sunday before fouling out. And
ence semifinals.
pivot men Mychai Thompson and
"I want to tell you right now:
Vlade Divac combined for 7 ·
· We have a great opportunity to do points in Game 4.
"We have to get more people
for
Jimmy
Carson,
Martin
Geli·
BOSTON &lt;UPI) -The Edmonfour lines Edmonton will match · something really significant,"
the
NBA's
newest
Coach
of
the
involved."
said Magic Johnson,
nas.
three
first
-round
draft
choi·
ton Oilers are nearing greatness
against Boston's four.
Year
said
Monday.
"I
have
a
who
had
a
career
playoff-high 43
ces
and
cash.
Barring Injury or a change .tn
without The Cn•at One.
feeUng
we
wlll."
.
points
Sunday.
"More
than just
In
November,
the
Oilers
pack·
. They . open the Stanley . Cup
the course of the series. one
The
Lakers
in
recent
years
me
and
James.
·
aged
Carson
and
Kevin
McClelfinals Tuesday night against the
goalie will win the Cup at the
have thrlyed on challenges. They
"For three games you are
.Boston Btulns and. by taking the land to Detroit for forwards Petr expense of former teammates.
A be j• II II I UW Jllllll•
beating
longtime
succeeded
In
trying
to ride everybody a"il get
Klima.
Joe
Murphy
,and
Adam
!)est-of-seven serl~s. the Oilers
Mo9g came to the Bruins March
.... Nt ............
nemesis Boston lor the NBA' them involved 1while) trying to
would capture their fifth Cup. in Graves and defenseman Jeff 7, 1988, for Bill Ran ford and Geoff
ONE. 1 btDrd IOii&amp; 1,
championship,
and
later
won
get
yo~r
own
game
going.
(Sun·
Sharples.
Those
forwards
fill
the
s,even years.
Courtnall.
·
......
.,.., II-'
-...,
·
consecutive
league
titles.
They
day)
I
just
had
to
do
something.
I
: All the previous titles came
appeared on the way to a don't know which role I'm going
for Nllll...., uAn1
t·hrough the wonder of Wayne
'
"three-peat"
last
year
·before
to
have
Tuesday.
Hopefully
it
wlll
ahurdlllo llllroiMIIIi lnll.
Gretzky, the cornerstone dealt to
Injuries got in the way.
be different."
drug--Crl•tarr
Los Angeles In 1988. A Cup
Now,
Los
Angeles
Js
forced
to
The
Suns,
of
course.
are
not
11611 arrllllll• u•u.
withOut The Great One would
DI•KO (Rallll'l...,!ll'ft 1-IJ, If: II · ~t.m.
win three straight.
counting out the Lakers.
!)ring satisfaction, especially af·
Majors
"We got ourselves Into this
,\ lonlr('al ( fko .Mid11111'Z l-'!1 :tl Lo"
"We haven't done anything
t)!r last year's first-round loss to
8)' Unlt1•d rr~s lnt•r11111onal
,\h~lt"r' tR.Milrii1M'1. H l. 10:35 p.m.
and
we
have
to
deal
with
position
yet.
We've just narrowed this
Gretzky and the Kings.
!UtERI&lt;' AN I.E,\GUE
Ea."t
Sr'l''
\
'
ork
tD~o~I'UIIl J.J) ttl San
down
it,"
said
Riley,
who
canceled
to a three-game series.,.
: "I think we've made pretty big
l'rwn
" I. Pd . GR
Fr:.nd~·o t&amp;rlwn '!·1). 111: :13 p. m .
practice
Monday.
"To
be
very
said
Coach
Cotton Fitzsimmons.
Mlh•oaulit•t' ...... ..... .. ..... . l': 11 .61'1':
II
s·trldes this year." Edmonton
" 'todflt"'d""· G11m4'!oi
HouM 01t at )q , Louh1
Toronto
P••···•···············:!H
I
:I
.BOG
to
honest
with
you,
I
prefer
whose
team
would· be home ' If
center Mark Messier said. "We
Bnl!;ton ..................... .... l7 U .5~ II !
Nf'W \ ' 0rtt 111 SIUI Fr.ntd,.,_.o
embrace
it.
The
nature
of
compeThursday
night's
Game 6 were
(
'lt'\"t'land
.................•..
l6
13
.JIIi
21.
made some changes that helped
1
Pblladelphlu al ~un Dlt'~
214 EAST MAIN
1': .U2 41'!
llulllmor1•....................
PtU...OO I'll: hat ('l•lnn.ill, nlt~:M
Is
that
you
want
the
hottest
·
tition
necessary.
"Certainly
we'd
t!Je hockey clul). It took us 80
Nt'Yo" \'ork .... ............ .... l '! 1': .-Ill ~ 1
( ' hh·u~ at A.Uanta, nl~
POMEROY
there Is. Well, this .Is.-lt.
rather be 3-1 going to LA than 1-3.
lk'troil ....................... .il ~~ .333 11111
Monln•alal Ln" An~~. OIJCht
games to really pull It together.
\\"t'tll
112-1187
"Everybody has to put forth a
''I have a feeling with this team
· We're happy right now, but like I
Ollklllnd .. ................... :.!:! " ."71Q Transactions
Ollca&lt;o
..
...
..
...
.
....
....
..
..
17
10
.&amp;:JD
:1
great
effort.
I
do
think
we
have
a
that during these times there Is
said at the meeting at the start of
M~nllli•,.ota ................... li I~ .HII $
more of a sense of calm. To shot at winning the series. but
t~e year we said our goal for this
Mo .. ~ Splf'lll1'ran-.dlon~
TrxWi ....... ,................. .1$ 16 . ~II-&amp; T
~ball
Sf"!Uik&gt;
.........................
U
Ill
.U.'I
II
embrace the notion of do or die, to we're going to have to work very
club Is to win the Stanley Cup."
t\l.,nkl. - PurtllllW'd "'" cGnl,.d ol
C'!ililornla ...... , ... ......... .l!! M .31'3 111 ~
hard. I haven't changed my
me that's really exciting."
,.:;,) &gt;
, :Boston has gone 18 years
flr!C b...eman·c •cJ•er Fn•chw.'O Ca·
KanP. ( 'lty ............ .. .. .lt it _jll II
tftr~ fram RIC'IImDIII Gf lilt• lnetr•·
:\loiKIIO"
Rt"'IMII
opinion
any.
It
wlll
be
a
To
join
the
1968
and
1981
w;Ithout winning the Stanley Cup,
tlo ... l LfiiPI' tAAAJ: optlo.:!d fiNII
Toronrl.-. M, O.·troU :l, Ullnlllln~
Cel!lcs, 1970 Lakers (who bear longs hot."
hw.erun Mlllf IW!IIIG Gret"ll\'tUe ot lfle
lncl!Jdlng the 1988 final when
MlnnNol.la G. 011ldand 2
~udlt&gt;rn l.eiiPf' (AA ),
Kan!IL'&lt;~ flty!l. lloJ~;tuii. Ill innln~
the Suns) and 1979 Bullets as
:Edmonton won lour straight. The
C'allfon"• - Ret'alle• fiCt'her Wllllr
Tunda,y
Fra!M!I" lrem EdmontOn o1 lht' Paelftt' .
teams to overcome 3-1 defl~its,
Mlnll"!'lota (Smith HI 11.1 l'lii'W \'ork
Bruins could end that streak now,
c-11t IA&gt;JIIPI! (AAA): optlo_.d ptktlfor
(Cary (I.IJ. 7:31p.m.
Los
Angeles must get Improved
~using Andy Moog's goaltending,
Clift VGua" lo £clm&lt;Mtilea
OakiPIMI t6uukr ~ n H ) 111 (IM'f'lllad
rlnrlanidl- Pl~~etod l,.lt&gt;llkor Mariano
~~"· l•drll ;:.,,, i:31 p.m.
performances out of James
~Cam Neely's scoring and overall
Du~an oa tb• IW~q dh••ht.• lift! ~
St&gt;"'tk- !Ea\'r 141 a1 Toronto {Cum·
Worthy, Byron Scott and Its
-excellence on special teams.
f'f'rallf'd lrlleljller-P•I Soc~t from Nllllltminp Mil, 7:3$ p.m.
vllll'
ol the t\merl.:aaAt~IIOCllallon(AA.A) ;
llaltlmono !HIIrnl~~t• h HI :..1 Chlt'AJIO
centers.
: :"Two years ago, Edmonton
mow d ottlllf!tdH' Erk· Dul• from th4•
(HibbiU'd 3-tl, II: tiS p.m.
Worthy missed 16 of 21 shots In
:Was a much. different team,''
I H 10' to lftf' U ·d 1Q' diM hlrd liM.
· BoKton (DopMn ..o or Kll"'.·kw j}-0) 111
('lr.velan• Placed pltdH'r Tom
Ka•_... City !Gordon 1·1) ,II: !U. p.m .
Sunday's
114-101 loss, and the
·Boston Coach Mike Mllbury said.
fou.. IGttl on lhf'" 11-410' diMahlf'd ·tlfll,
f'ullfornta ( La•lll"'lon:!·:l) at Ml lwau lli•t•
6-foot-9
forward
- a career .558
'"Obviously, they are Without
retroaelh·•
10
MIQ'
1';
recallfd
KIM'f!
(Ro""' $.1).11 : :1.'1 p .m .
Sprtn~tr lrcrn Celon41o Spriap i"AA ),
·
percentage
shooter
in the
·Gretzky now. But they have a lot
O.twM 1PC"try :1·1) a11'1•x~ (Browa ::J.
Kan~~~~t~ City · Atlt\'alf'tl ~cond hAR1),11::13 p.m ..
playoffs
'has
made
on~y .419
man Fnulk Whl&amp;e; nlea.e• pMclterof creative players and they are
" 'f'dnt&gt;ttda.,'· Game!~!
Lari'J McWIIIItmll.
u.l NI'M" \ 'ork, AIJhl
against Phoenix.
more discipll~ed than they've
Molltrnl - O,U•,..d caicher NeiKOn
. ,.
s('"'""
1111'nronl!l. nlkht
Sant•w.~tlalo •••-paN• ef "eAmert~ver been."
Oakland"' riM"t'land. nl~hl
CIIft tb.!odal~n(AAA• ; rt'calledcllk:IH'r
Blllllmon' al ( 'hlcu~. n\,;111
• "They have a good, sound team
Jeff Go I frtm IIHhnapollll:
ratUornht.all\tllwaukr r. night
8u INep - Cal..d •P pitcher MIR
i.vlth good speed and good size. "
Bmuon at Han .'II.!! n1y. al~ltt
IN.- lrom t.a. VeJilll ol Padftc ('.out
DM rolla11't'XIL.'i, niP!
)ldded defenseman Ray Bourque.
Lto~ (A.AA}.
Continued from page 3
Sealllfo - Rtcallfd llfM;rWop Omar
NAl'IO!'IiAL LE1\GUE
when Burnt Hills bumped him
Boston mer Edmonton three
Vbq•l from itiK ,.._IIUI&amp;ation uMipEwo1
mPnland optlo••hlm IO:Cilfpi"J'Of~e
Tf'IUJI ......................... \\' L Pet . GB
Into Klller Diller, he lost his
rimes during the season, winning
Rotarians At The Middleport Pomeroy
P~tdftc Cout W..- 1~.\AJ,
Pltt,,O 1'/(h .................. .t'! Ul .61111 - ·
.
Bullett!
Ill
momentum,
and he's not e~pe­
twice and tying onct'. All three
Phlllld~lphlu ............... .li I~ . ~-Ill ~~ t
filA - Toptka fntM'IIIblt' mowtl &amp;o
Momn•al .................... .IH n .lli I' ~
Rotary Club As" You to Attend The....
rlenced enough to overcome that.
jl&amp;mes came In the first five
\'aldma, Wllllll.; named Dean Nlc1t01Rt11
"-"""'' \'ork.. .................. 18 U .516 3 ~
coach.
of
these
He's
going
to
eplode
one
weeks of the season, but Boston
Otlc ui{O ....................... J..I 11 .H:! jl.-:
·
Collep
st. louiM ...................... 13 II! .UI Klft
races. Let's hope It's tills week.
sustained that excellence long
AdelpN- auilelh~lk'IUIIjolnedNew
" 'f'!lt
foril: ColleJIIU.. Athlfltlc Celllen!IK!e.
"I thought he worked bett~r
f)nough to win the regular-season
f'lnt.·lnmt l.. ..................t '! 1 .1M Eutrra M.'Mhln«toa - Ron Ra,·.r
•
ISM Dlt,lO ................ .... l&amp; 16 .!100 1 ~
today
than all !hrough Ihe spring
title.
·
reKiped aM aiNellc dll'l'ddll' •llnd reLnMAnlltiCII .............. ... IS 1': AQ9 ll i"t
SATUIDAY, MAY 19, 1990
placed hy Dartt.. Bailey.
·
campaign. l:lls ljlood didn't boil
: "Boston is obviously going to
Houfllon .. .. . .. ................ l! 19 .3K': 11
«ffiirsl• Trtlll ..:. Bukotball plarer
Sqa FrAnci ~Jo ............. It eu .33 111.,
relaxed."
up.
He
stayed
be favored," Messier said.
Den• Seott lAW' •P h.. 11•1 ~-of
SEIVIfG 6:00 A.M.-2:00 P
Alllln&amp;a ........ ; ........ ....... ll 19 ,3-i;J I!
t!II!IIIIUIIy to nler 1... NIA draft.
Kentucky Jazz, who like ChamMoflla,v Rf'llllt!i
'·" fhey had a great year. They
•quiCoa - IMIJelllllll 1111Uer Carl
&lt;'lnclnrwU 15, PlllllhufKh 3
AT THE EGS COIIITY SENIOI CmzENS CENTEI
pagne!orashley skipped the
were first overall. From wire to
Hern!n pve vp t.a ll.a JP• el
Atlanl.u. 3, .Chlclli(O :!
.-ll .. hlllly to en&amp;er 1 • NBA draft.
San Franclaco -1, N_, t •ork;!
Derby,
scored
his
two
career
·
wire they pretty well played
.UIBY IIIGIITS- PGIIIIOY, OliO
h.-ball
Sun Dlf'~ ~ . Phlla"ilelphlu 1
victories
leading
wire
to
wire,
championship hockey , and we
Buffalo - S.p~t!d tt.,.rback Da~e
IA !!1bl,.el~ 3, Molllrt'l!i "l
OPIMII.M
SCiw!IIIUid dt!ln.tw ellll Cl7dtGio\ft,
1'ur..d,q G•anw"
but in his other six starts he has
know we have . ,.our bands full
CAll
11
&amp;
U,l
IAII6-11,
,...,. .
PIU11htur;h (Smiley J.SI at Clndftmdl
a....... - s1.-c1 leur '"'" ••••..:
burned out early and laded.
tj..,.rbMk Mit.. Pern, whle recelwr
1101ng to Boston."
(RIJo2· 1) , 7: 35p.m.
AI 0We1111. ,....I.~-· Vh:torlo-IUHI
C'ltlc~o ( Pi eo 0-8) at .&lt;\. UIUita (P.!&lt;lmkh
"I'd like to put him behind a
. Edmonton won Cups In 1984,
t'Nie......Unl Daa . . . . .
~ ·Z) , 7:.fl p.m.
horse
or two early If I could,'' he
Rockt:~
1l5, 'ffl and '88 and then traded
Houlllon (Scolt 1-31 at ~t. Loui11; (Tudor
Que-~ - 81ptd dft'eiiiii!'IIWI Mlcllel
-l·l),ll::l6p.m.
said.
"I
think If he really gets into
elretzky, Mike Krusheinyskl and
Prtl to i-)'fll' colllrat;t.
Phlldt'lphfa CMuiMiklnd 1-1) at SIUI
the
race
early he has no shot."
Marty McSorley to Los Angeles

•

CCL holds surprise shower
PLAY CAST -These Rrl! memhersofthe Meigs Junior High play
cut for "The Jrlal of Amanda Marie Locks," to be performzd
Thursday at 7 p.m. Members are, I to r, Amlee Elliott, Lorrl
Burnem, Ryan Conde, ·Amy Lemley, Joy O'r!en, and Brad
Anderson.

Palacios belts grand-slam in
•
1Oth to give Royals 9-5 WID

Mrs. D":'~ghtWaUacerevtewe~ , . of J.F. Kennedy posthumously.
the book, An American Vision
The painting now hangs In the
by James D. Huff a\ the recent
Kennedy Museum In Boston
meeting of the Middleport LiterMass. 'He also · sketched with
ary Club held at the hOme of Mrs.
pencil the Watergate trial where
,
no photographers were allowed.
George Hackett .Jr ·
In her review, Mrs. Wallace
Mrs. Wallace concluded her
stated that the book was about · review of each artist by displayWyeth family of ~merica who · tng some of their pictures.
·
were ar!lsts. They mcludcd N.C.,
Mrs. JIIackett read from a new
the grandfather; Andrew, the
book of Dr. Suess entitled "The
son; and James, the grandson.
Places You wm·Go. ''
According to Mrs. Wallace,
Plans were made fat the last
N.C. was an · lllustrator and
meeting of the club until fall. An
painted for many Important
outing and box lunch wlll beheld
magazines. l:le was killed In his
at l:locklng l:lllls. Reservations
car by a train at the age of 43.
should be made by Wednesday
Andrew was one of the most
for the trip which. wlll be held
impo~tant artists in the second
Saturday.
'l'he hostess. served a three
half of the 20th century, accord·
lng to Mrs. Wallace.
course British tea as it is served
in England.
She stated that last year a
Roll call was conducted with
group of his paintings, known as
each member and guests, Mrs.
the "Nelga" collections, sold for
Harry Chesher, Mrs. James
over 40 milllon dollars. Mrs.
Vennarl, and Mrs. W.R. Shas·
Wallace noted that James was
teen, naming a perfect pain!lng
commissldlied·fo palnt•a portrait
for their llvlng room.

Childhood grant received.

.
'
The Eastern Local, Meigs
Local, acd Southern Local SChool
Dis trlcts are presently partie!·
. patinglnanSEO-SERRCconsoll·
. dated application for early child·
hood grant funds.
The grant funds are made
available under the provisions of
.Public Law 99-457, 1986 amend·
mehts to the Education of the
Handicjlpped Act, as an .incentlve to exoand and Improve
services for preschool h'andl·
.Ci!J?ped children .

Oilers seek Cup without ·Gretzky ·
.

Graduate named

....

Scoreboard ...

Christie Sau ters, Pomeroy,
recently graduated from the
Boyd School of AirlineTravel
Careers.
She received her certificate In
Air line and Travel Career Instruction after completing a
15-lireek progr11m which prepares students for virtually all
entry-level. positions in the
travel Industry.
·The Boyd ,sc.bool ·Graduate
Services Department has announced thai Sauters Is em·
played by Business Express In
Hartford, Conn. She Is a graduate
of Meigs High School.

1~

1

-. ,·=....

Trio to sing

Gam~

Dan Hayman and the Faith
Trio wlll sing May 20 at the I
Pomeroy' Nazarene Church at 9
a.m . The church Is located on
Union Avenue and the public Is
ln,vlt~d to attend.

. ROTARY

_.&lt;:.....

PAN~AKE

· Proposed activities as a result
of the grant funding are to assist
in coordination iif early lntervenlion services and to assist In the
expansion of early Intervention
services.
Further information may be
obtained by. contacting JoyceThoren, Southern Local, at 949·
2669.
1a~ mar Wt'nn
·
J• 'J11

er

Winners of Tuesday's Ladies
Golf League at Jay Mar Golf
Course were low gross, Norma
Custer; low net, low putts, and
chip-In-hole, Elizabeth Lohse.

Kings Island trip
The Midnight Cloggers group
Is sponsoring a day trip to Kings
Island on Saturday which Is open
to the public. Contact a group
member for Information. All
proceeds will go toward the
group's tour to Florida.

Quote of. the Day
.

(

'

'

By Untied Press lnlernallonal
'New York Mayor David Din·
klns, denouncing an attack on
Koreans by a group of black men
wielding bottles, knives · and a
baseball bat:
· "A rowdy crowd of young men
may have used the atmosphere of
Intolerance created by others
over the last few days to
transform an ~!tempted ro)lbery
Into ~n expression of ethnic
hatred."
·

DAY

MAY 19~
1990

l\lln~,_nta

Workouts ...

A surprise layette shower Was
heldj. for Nancy Broderick
at the
-,
. •
April meetlng .of the Child
Con~rvation r..eague. held at the
home of Linda Broderick
A gues I speaker discussed the
levy at Carleton School and
plans were finalized for serving
the April blood bank. ,
The hostess gift was won by

.Officers were Installed at the uted.and collected by Velma Rue.
recent m!!elln!i of the Preceptor Members who received one and
Beta Beta Ch;~pter, IWta Sigma have not returned (1 should do so
P_bi Sorority· 'held · lit ' Grace to Velma Rue. ·, ·
Episcopal Church,.
··'
It was reported that a few
Ins tailed by .Norma Custer · members · of the chapter decowere Velma Rue, president;
rated tables for the SesquicentenJoan Corder; vice president;
nial Founders Day Dinner.
Jane Walton, treasurer; Rose
Refreshments were served by
Sisson, secretary; Ann Rupe, Jeanne Werry and Shirley
corresponding secretary; and Beegle.
Betty Ohlinger, city council
representative.
The social committee an·
nounced the annual picnic to be
held May 24 at the home of
Clarice Krautter.
Questlonf\alres were distrlb·

Hymn sing
Angie Willet will be among the
featured singers at the hymn sing .
to be hzld Friday at Hillside
Baptist Ch.urch at 7 p.m.
She is the daughter of Rev. and
Mrs. Mike Willett, Mason, W.Va.
· Others appearing will be the
Gabriel Quartet, Chris and Mar·
lowe White; and tlie Children of
God.
Pastor James R. Acree iiiVltes
the public. The church is located
on Route 143 off Route 7.'

$648,000 grant' awarded
Ohio Valley Libraries
Grants totaling $648,000 have
The grants Include $412.000
been awarded by the State from ttte State Aid program.
Ljbrary Board totheObloValley OVAL ls· the only state funded
A~ea Libraries, Insuring that
regldnalllbrary system and uses
agency's operation ihrough June these funds for administration
30, 1991.
, and networking programs. These
. OVAL adminlste~s through lo- programs support interlibrary
. . cal public libra~ies a variety of loan, staff development In the
programs cjesigned to Improve member Ubraries, _and the basic
and extend services to local operations of the agency.
residents. It Is made up of public
The LSCA Title I · grant of
libraries in the counties of $232,000 funds extension serviAthens, Hocking, Jackson, Law- cas. This grant, matched With an
renee, Meigs, Pickaway. Pike, equal amount of local dollars by
the OVAL member libraries,
Ross, Scioto and Vinton.
Wanda Eblin serves on the provides for the Books by Mall
OVAL board and represents and Bookmobile progravs.
. Meigs Coun1y library.
OVAL was established in 1973
as the first state-funded regional
public library system in Ohio.

Fisher inducted
into. honorary
.

Carol Lynn Fisher, daughter of
Drew and Belva Fisher of East
Letart Falls, was recently In·
dueled into Alpha Lambda Delta
and Phi Eta Sigma, two national
honor societies for college
freshmen.
Miss Fisher was a 1989 graduate of Southern· High School·
where she was salutatorian and
now attends· the Ohio State
University where she plans to
complete a double major In
• production and operations management Informat-Ion ,s ystems.
She is a memberoftheOhloState
Honors Program · and has made
the dean's list each quarter.

Bissell birth

'

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

f'

r.

S'l'UDENT
iJu: WEEK - lor O'Brlell, Ie~, wu llelee&amp;ed
IMUdeat of tile week fer pbJI?cai 10?eace and elauroom behavior.
Pr-&amp;Inl her certlflclie Is .Jealll! VIii.
·
'

,,,

ANDREW·TODD BI88ELL

STUDENT OF THE WEEK -Gary K1111, cenler, wu •ulled
student of the week at Meigs Junior Hlgb School for American
History and Behavior. Presenting his certlflcaJe Is Rick Blaetlnar,
teacher, left, and Mike Edwards, student leacher.
•

Past Councilors meet
A poem, "In Praise of Moth·
ers,' ' was read by Erma Cleland
at the recent mee!lng of the Past
Councilors' ClubO!ChesterCouncil 323, Daughters of Americaibeld at the lodge hall with Goldie
Frederick, · Virginia Lee. and
Margaret Amberger as
hostesses.
Opal Hollon presided at the
meeting and the Lord's Prayer
and American Flag were.given In
unison.
••.
Members answered roll call by
telllng how many chUdren.
grandchildren and great grandChildren they have.
Thelma White read the min·
utes of the April mee!lng."
Betty Rou~h gave the treasurer's report.

W~lling

Ethel Orr thanked members
for birthday cards and gift's she
received recently.
Mary Showalter and Fern
Morris conducted the games.
Elizabeth Hayes won the door
prize. Refreshments were served
by the hostesses. · ·
Attending were Marcia Keller;
Thelma White, Faye !&lt;irkpart,
Opal Hollon, Betty Roush, Vlrgl·
nla Lee, Mary K. Holter, Mary
Showalter, Erma Cleland, Eliza·
beth Hayes, Ethel . Orr, Inzy
Newell. Sadie Trussell, · Jean ·
Frederick, Margaret Amberger,
Fern Morris. Goldie Frederick. ·
Laura Mae Nice, and Sandra •
White, and Bonnie Landers, ·
gues~ .
-

Workers meet

"The Creation st'o ry and Moth·
er's Day" was the topic for the
program presented.at the recent
meeting of the Willlng Workers
Claus of St. Paul United Metho·
dlst Church of Tuppers Plains .
The meeting opened with
prayer by Hazel Barnhill. Evelyn
Spencer presided.at the meeting
in which reports of past activltles
were given by May V lneyard and
Mildred Brooks.,
Some of the group have been
meeting twice each wee!&lt; fllr
quil) making. There were 34 sick
calls reported and some quilts

Broderick birth
Mdrtin and Nancy Broderick
are announcing the birth of
daughter, MegaJI Beth, on May I
at Camden Clark Memorial
Hosptlal.
The infant weighed . seven
pounds and eight oun~es and was
211nches long.
The couple has two other
chpldren, Joshua and Holly.
Grandparents are Sherman
and Mae Buskirk and Emma
Broderick.
/
·
Great grandmother is Effie
Buskirk.

Input sought
for Southern
r·

A proposal for expenditures of
Title VI -B money of special
education in the Southern Local
School Dis trlct is being prepared
by Joyce Thoren, local district
coordinator. ·
. Residents may have Input Into
the proposal by contacting Mrs.
Thoren at the high school, 9 a .m.
to 3 p.m. May 21 through May·26.

and comforters were made and
sold wilh the proceeds going to '
the building fund for the new
Sunday school rooms.
Flowers were sent to Glenna
Sanders who is recuperating ·
from eye surgery, and also to
JoAnna Weaver for her wedding :
anniversary.
, .
The group voted to sponsor the
refrea~nts lor the upcoming '
daily vacation bible school. The
group will also assist with the , ·
annual family celebration to be · ·
held May 22 at 6:.30 p.m.
,
·
Reading were given by Evelyn ,
Spencer, JoAnna Weaver, l:lazel .
Barnhill, Bulah Maxey, Edna
Harmon. and Mildred Brooks .
Pat Hall and Mildred Caldwell ·
also attended.
'
The next meeting wlll be held
June 12 and plans wlll be made
for dinner reservations and an aU ·
day shopping trip.
- .
.
I

HUIIAID;S GIEEfiHOUSE

201•

A.,,,,,,,,,,, 1•1•

All BEDDING PlANTS
3 PIIS $100
RIG. suo Flatt NOW 1$10
BEDDING .GERANIUMS
IIG. 112 NOW $950
4 IN. GERANIUMS l~g. suo
85( EA.- 10 FOR S7JO
4 IN. HARDY MUMS leg. 'T.OO
NOW 85c •· - 10. FOR SJSO
10 INCH HANGING IASIETS
lEG. 15.50 NOW $450
REG. 16" NOW $5 75
All SHRUIIERf &amp; TREES
,
20% OFF
Salt Continuos Tlw ........t Tho SHion

IUIIAID'S GlllfiHOUSE
SYIACUSE, OHIO

992·5776

Open D•llv 9•6· Sun. HI

CAIUNG &amp;COMFOKr·
ARE IMPOimNT.
CAROL LYNN FISHER

.a\

i

ANGIE WILLET,

'

"ROTARY PAIIOAKE DAY" ·

...,_suo

Helen Blackston and the travelIng priZe was awarded to. 'Ann
Colbu.rn. Shower games were
won by Helen . Blackston and
Tracy O'Dell.
Attending were Helen Black·
stan, Peg Harris , Nancy Morris,
Ann Colburn, Tracey O'Dell,
Bonnie Scott, Linda Broderick,
and Holly Broderick.

Mi4rJleport Literary . group · Sororicy chapter meets
reviews 'American Vision'

--------------'-

2

Rev. James Seddon noted that
the church would be going to the
Infirmary on May 27lat 2 p.m.
Sarah Fowler was devotional
leader and read an article
entitled, ''New Every Morning."
from Amy ·Bolding devotional
book.
Rev. Seddon· cl0$ed the meet·
lng with prayer. Refreshments of
strawberry short cake and coffee
were served by Sarah Fowler,
Flora Marie Gibson, Llllie Hubbard, and Edna Wilson.

A picnic was planned for June
12 at the RaCine Locks and Dam
at 6 p.m a't. the recent meeting of
the Hearthstone Sunday School
·class of the Fltst Baptist Church
In Middleport . . :.
Meat and rolls wlll be fur•
•11ished for the picnic and
members are to bring a covered
dish.
·
·
Faye Wallace, secretary, conducted the meeting which opened
with prayer. A collection for the
flower fund was taken.

.....

R .,;ley

•

Hearthstone class ptcntc

Padres trip Phils;
Dodgers triumph

.

The Daily s·entinel

Mr. and Mrs. Todd Bissell,
Long Botton\, are announcing the
birth of a son, Andrew Todd, on
March 19 at St. Joseph's Hospital
In Parkersburg, W.Va.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds and six ounces and was 19
and one half inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Gerald and Shirley Simpson.
Racine.
Paternal grandparents are
Hayward and Kathleen Bissell,
Long Bottom.

••••

We understand your needs and
provtde'o loving atmosphere for
Intermediate and sklled core. In
addition to pleasant surroundings, you
or
family member wtll hoVe occess
'
to physical and speech therapy, plus.
numerous ~reotlonai actlvtti~s. For the
flnest core at ~e rates. call today.

vru.

446-7U2

tp.JnuAt.U, ~ ~
Gallipolls, Ohio

'

\

�•
,

~-6

.. .

'
The Daily Sentinel

Community cale~r

''

Yeary named ;
senior at~orney
: ; Jo Ellen Diehl Yeary, a Porn!!"
, , ory native has been promoted to
~ seniOr attorney In the Law
·_" Department of Columbia Natu"- ral Resources In Charles, W.Va.
..
Yeary attended"Marletta Col·
" .lege, •Marietta where she ~
·. ·celved a bachelo(s degree.
'1
She received her law degree
from Capital University Law
.... SchOOl,. Columbus, where she
.. received . a bachelor's degree.
·. '.'stie received ~er"1 1aw degree
: from Capllak Unl\'!!rslty 4w
, -,School, Bolumsu whereshewasa
· . member of the Law Review.
· Yeary Is the daugpter of Mr.
and Mrs. James A. Diehl of
Pomeroy. She resides wltb her
husband, John T. Y.eary,and.t!K\Ir

•
Tuesday. May 15; 1990

Pomeroy-Middlepor., Ohio

contest and variety show on
.Wednesday at 2:30 p .m. Reslde~tts will judge the contest.

TUESDAY
POMEROY -AmerlcarePomeroy will host the judging of
area elementary school posters
with the theme "Pride In Ca~ng'' ,
MIDDLEPORT - A bas(&lt;et
on Tuesday at 10 a.m. There will weaving class will be offered by
be an awards ceremony ,for .the the Middleport Arts Councll on
winners at 7 p.m.
W~nesday at 7 p.m : in the
council cbambers on Secpnd
C}{ESTER · - The ·Chester Street In Middleport· Instr~~Ctor
Council 323 D of A will meet Is Sue McGuire and the' fee for the
Tuesday at 8 p.m. The 56th class · Is, $12. To register call
anniversary ot the lodge will be Susan Bak,er at . 992·7733 or
celebrated and all charter Marilyn Meier at 99 2·5983.
members are urged to attend. ' '
11RJRSDAY
POMEROY -The Southeast·
POMEROY, -The Pomeroy
ern Ohio Ra bblt Breeders Associ· Group of A.A: apd AI Anon will
, alloil will meet Tuesday at 7'p,m . . meet Tbunxlay at 7 p.m. at the
. oiO
DIEHL YEARY
at the extension office In Pomi!" sacrell Heart CatholiC ChUrch.
$On, Philip, In Slluth Charleston&gt; roy. Commercial aspects of
For ibfortruitlon call 1·800-333c
W.Va.
,
.
r)lislng rabbits will be discussed. sosi ' .
.
-'

-_-Harrisonville alumni _plan
!:: banquet: ·dance {or May 26

'

.

'

Tuesday, May 15. 1990

Ag ambas:sador t,o visit , ·

' . ' .'' •' •' Q' .

.I 'h .. uay,
,;/" .

Un1tl!dMetbodistChurchand~s

r

~:::::::::::::::;r;::~~;;;;~~;flr.::::::::::::::~lr.~;;;,;;,;;;:;~;;

•

'Landers

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-

IACCIFIED ADC

.

FllTII

..

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
·CONTROL

••

s.,

l Ash birth

Classified

'-:'put

.

dO':

1:

am

°

iro'!k~r~~~l ::a~~:.,::: ·J~a~~f~~~~~~= erron~usly

Madonna~~-.

peid
•Aec..ve

'

riot.be·get• t::ee
· n moms

!

. · da}'lZed
' . ay ul1100 d van
j (}

i

l

•

1-~! *1••, f .-., '

)

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'1

, •

I

"f

I

·COMPARE OUR
QUALITY, PRICE
AND SERVICE '
WHEN BUY·ING

1-Card Ot Th.nks

2 - ln Memory

3-Annoucements

4-Givuwav
5-Happy Ads
6-Lost and Found

d., after pubhCBI•on to m•e correction
~re

tiappv Ad• .

7 - Vard Sale roa•d •n advaneel
8-Pubhc Sale &amp; Auction

V.Wd Sales

9 - Wan11d 10 Buy

clasttiled actvenrHmern placed'" The D11tv Sent•n4111•• ·
c:ept - cl•s•fied dutphry. 8ustntll Card end legal not1Cesl
will also appear tn the Pt Ple•ant Re.ster and tl'!e Gallt

• pohs Dally Tr~bon~ ruch•ng o~er 18.000 homes.

COPY DEADLINE · MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
. WEDNESDAY PAPE~
. THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
. SUNDAY PAPE~

Classified

pa~es· corer

1 2 - Srtuation W1nteo
13 - lnsurance
14-Bus•n•• Trammg
16-- Schools &amp; Instruction
16 - R1d1o, T.V &amp; CB Rep11r
1 7-MIIC::elllneous
18 -Wat;~tad To Do

the

Mt11g1 COunty ,
Area Code 614

M••an Co, WV

446- Galllpolls
387-Ch•htre

992 - Mtddtaport

675-Pt PI11Unt
458-Leon
576 - Appl• Grove

Pomeroy
sss....:: chnter
843- PortM!nO

247-letlrt F111s

949- A•cme
742 - Rutl-"d

21 - BustniiS Opponunny
22-Monw to Loan
23- Prof•a.onll Serv1c11

exchan~es ...

Galli a Coumv
AMI Code 614

256-Guvan Oist.

Good11
52-Sporting- Goods

Real Estate

Area Code 304

31 - Homes for ·Sale
32 - Mobde Homes for Sale
33-Farms for S1le

34-Busm•• Buildtngs

·U - Mob•le Homtt for Aenl

Oet R's'u t. FI t
'
A

64.-H•v II Gra•n

Services

46 - Furmshed Rooms

83-.Excwating

47- Wanted 10 Ren•
48
for Rent

8!-G•I')Ifll H•uhng

82-Piumb•ng &amp; Ht•lng
8~-EieC1ric11 &amp; R•fr•g.,.•tion

86 - Moale Home Rooooo

PubliC NOilce

Public NOIJce

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS· COUNTY,
OHIO
THE FARMERS BANK
8o SAVINGS COMPANY,
Plaintiff

ween Lots 30 ond 31, ••

VI,

MATTHEW C.
. NAN VRANKEN, ot ol
De!ondonta
No. 89-CV-277
&lt;.
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF •
REAL· ESTATE
AI Sheriff of Melgo County, Ohio. I hereby offer for
aate et 10:00 A.M. on the
4th of June. 1990. on the
front otepa of tho r,!olge
County Courthou•. Pomt·
r.,Y. Ohio, tho following doocri-reolooute:
All thot certllin troct or
parcel of lond. ohuoto. lying
ond being in tho VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, COUNTY
OF MEIGS ond STATE OF
OHIO, ond being known ond
. doolgnotod on o mop of, Un·
, QOin Holghto, flllldo II¥
• - • torpor, roglotoiocl
Clvl Engln-o, Huntington,
Woot VIrginia. doted Oct - p, 1942.~py_, of
Which mop - -.Iedin
the ollloo of tho.Rocorder of
Mol.. County, Ohio an Docorn~ 17. 1142. In !lilt
look No. 3 ot P'lll• 43 Mid
44, u Lot No. 30. tnd lr!llnll
more, polrticulllrfir doocriu lollowo: loglnnlng II •
point on the .oouth llno al
Uncoln Rood 11 car- bot·,

c-

• Public NOIJce

Public NOIIce

nur:
Uno o Llnooln

.Auditor.
S.ld ' ruJ HtltO WOI opw~h Aid
prOIIMI It 112,000.00.
Rood. N. 79 dog. 61 min. w.
Sale of aald roll ooute to
60 loot: thence whh tho line btl for not . 1001 then two·
between Loto 29 ond 30 S. thirds 12/3) of the aforoolld
10 dog. 90 min. W. 223.98 IPP!'IIHd value.
feet: th8f!co N. 69 dog. OB
Sillld·ule i1 eubject to IP·
min. E. 60.93 feet: thence provol by tho Common Plou
w~h the line b-on said
Court. Melge County, Ohio.
loti 30 and 31, N. 10 dog.
TEAMS· OF SALE: The
09 min. E. 214.211 111111 to IUCCIIIful purch•er. II
the point·of beginning; RE· lOon 01 hl1 bid II occ 0 pt~d.
SERVING, however, the lholl be roqulred to dopoa~
cool end oil othef m-811 In on the day of eel e. in c• h or
ond underlying tho above by conlftod chock. payoblo '
doocrlbtld property. to- to ' the Bhorlff of , Melgo
gother with the rjght to mine Cou!IJV, Ohio, 10% of the
the Mme wll:hout encurnbr· omount of ouch occ.Pted
•nee to the aurflce. end 1Ub~ bid. but In no ovent looo thin
jtct to on ••..,- for-·
•1.000:00. The bolonce of
age flher ditch or loochlng the
price shill btl
ditch oo set forth ond de- - ond poyobloto
the Sher-~- In thot lnatnrm.,t
of Malge Coufi!Y, Dhlo,
btlorlng dote Novem..., 211, within thirty (30).dayo from
1943. ond rwconlllll In the tho dote of conflrmetlon of
oforeoold 'Recorder' • Office . ule. tho purcihooar oholl btl
In Dead Book 151, Pogo required to poy intereot on
178. Being the same rul .. tho unpoid btlopce ot the
uto convevod to tmwy F. rwto of 10% per ennum from
Von Vrankon ond Juno Vi- the dote ofooletothedlteof
Von Vrtnkon II¥ WHilom A. peymont of t i l l - unlooo
· Cootv ond Klldll- Cooav llid bolonce ohtll be '*d In
light (8) dtva from the d...
""
look- 171..-rdllll
hi• UlIn of011111
... of Ale.
Meige Couf)ty Dted r-nll.
Jomoo M. Sauloby,
REFERENCE DEED: Yo·
Sh•lfl of
tume 293, Pogo &lt;681. Melgi •
Melge Coufi!Y, Ohio
'coufi!Y Dead R_,.,
APPROVED:
PROPI!RTY ADDREIB:
Potrlok H. O'Brien
1171 Unooln R-. Pom· Attorney for Plllntlfl
1 Ohio 41!719
...__ (II) 1, 8, 15, 3ta
Bold Nl1l 111tat1 hoo _,.,
ooalaned ...,.,.. No. 18·
018111 II¥ the Melge County
lhown on Mid

thenc;e

2

In Memory

IN MEMORY OF
PETE WHEELER
WfiO PASSED ·
AWAY 1 YEAR AGO
TODAY
MAY 15, 1989
A million times I've
' needed·you;
A million times I've
cried.
,
If love could have
eaved you
You nevor·would have
died.
In life I loved you
dearly
In death I love you still;
In my heart you hold a
place
Ncr·orie can ever f~l.
It broke my heart to
lose you;
But you . didn't g~
alone.
For part of me went
with you
The day God called
you homo..
Love you, Daddy,
Wile, Lovada WhHier
and Family

•fll'l·

~

\•

HAVE REJUENCU

· •GRA&gt;VIi!l&gt;J L,f •
•LIMES'TP'NE I
,
,
r .
· •FILL DIRT ,,,,;
~

•ANYTHING

Ami 6 P.M.

~: ·

ATALL

(614) 985-4180
lofon 6' p.m.

USED APPLIANCES
. 9G

' NEW LOCATION·

DAVE'S SMALL

$125
:~l~~~~itSIOO
up •
MI~CRO
up

ENGINE REPAIR

up

2531 West llal11,
P-roy, Oh.

PARTS AND' SERVICE
For Molt 2 ond 4-cyclo
on gin•

StOCk Porto for Homolltt,

· . Weedeater,:Ta~~cuiim~a~oh.
Briggs a.

WABAtnY

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
lcr•s Frt111t Poat Offke

PH.992

985-4422

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

USEDMOWDS
NEW UllMAN &amp; ECHO
PIODUm
GlASS CuniNG SERVICE
Strwkt Ctnttr - IDC
lton Parts and Service,
Mawtr~, l~ra. Chalrt

GREASE JOB &amp;
OIL CHANG,E :

S16 95

4 Qt. Max.
'Ill£ REPAIR
MOYlfiENfAt
CONYININa Sf~£ ITEMS

CHESlER
QUIIC STOP.
St. Itt. 7 &amp; 241

Saws, Weadeattfl,
HOURS: M·F 9-7
Sat. 9-11; Cloood Sun.

CIIISTD, OHIO

985-3350

949-2969
3121/ 101 tfn
.t

.

:i . TRA~EL

Rt.

u~

,_,., •

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

~~·

Aleo 'rri•••ieeltll
Pit 992·5682
' or 992-71 ·

'

Ntw lacatlen;
161 North .....

Mld••ert, Ol1le 45760''

SALES &amp; SERVICE
lupffll•

IEr...-niCE ,..

care radlatlrs and
Mallr ,..,. We con

. . .WIIeillllltlrotl

...

outr•~~n.w

..... S.TankL

PAT IILL POM
912·2111

..

*LIGHT HAULING
'fV'

*FIREWOOD _,,,., .

BILL SLACK"'
-992-2269•.''·

MOBILE ··:
·HOME PAIK)
1

Hom.-··
-. •Mobile
.l'tr.t•
'

o Mobile Mciii'l..
Rentol• .._;,
oLo.. Rentf!lt I""

992-7479

To All
':Yypea Of
Travel" 4-ta.t

w. can

*SHRUB-&amp;. TR&amp;.E
TRIM and REMOVAL·, ""

'

PlUMIING- I IIAliiG

. · PURSUIT

Middleport,

Garage _;:;

4-9-'90·1 mo.

Connection

Happy
Birthday,
Joe .Loftis I
How does it
feel to be half
a century old?

Roger Hys.JI

tin

"Your '

(6) 16, 1tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
NotiCe Ia hereby glvon thot
John Sklnnor Foa.., of
1130 Eut Moln Street, P.
0. 11!1• 173, PCinlaroy, Ohio
41789. h• fll"" on Appllce·
tlon In the Proliate Court of
Mllp County, Ohio, Coot
No. 2el23, req-*'tl •
chMgl of n...,• from John
Ski"'* Foltllr to Jolin lid•
nor Courtney
-hMrd
· Thla
AtiDIIcotlon
wll·be
It
' 1i3o p.m. on the 2Zncl doy
of Juno, 1990.
RObart I!. auctc,
Judge ond Ex Officio Cl•k
Melge County
Problle Court
(I) 1 e, ttc

YIIY lfASONAIII

MIIIOUIICIIII

(614)
·'
742-2027

"""'h••

'

,\

87 - UPhOIItlrY

TRU.( Kt"G'
•• • • •.u h

'FREE-'ESTIMAfES
tho ; • out ot paintlne
"' dO it for JOU.

992-6873

4-18-'80..1 mo.

Tr" nsporl al1on

79-Campers &amp; Motor Homes

CHESYII,. OHIO;

CAR

&amp;6'- Seed &amp; Fertlh.ler

78 - Camj::ung Equ1pment ·

.

llittal C'-tupa ·
&amp; Pallattng'

Reference.

2nd St.,
For Appt. Call
992·11717 Home or
992-11244 Garage

to Buv

81 · · Home lmprowm.-.11

49

.SJ816

• II'!''

R. t".7;HiUttN

Good Rotea
T.L.C.
27 Yro. Exp.

209 South 4th St.
, . MiddltpOrt, Oh.
"lOW

63 - LiVIItOck

------· ---~------·
~

-

61-Firm Equ1pment

43-Firms tor Rent
44-Aplr'tment for Rent

46 - Space tor Renr

CLEAN, LUBE &amp; TEST

&amp; Livestock

41-Houses for Rent

667- Coolvtlle

SPRIIIO SPECIAL ·

Follll Suppl1es

, I;Milll.

9,37 - Butfalo

(614) 992-7143

Soc. , _ . ,_

POMIIOY, OHIO
!'''1'1~ " ·3iff'P/Ifn

1111'11101 11111101

1361 Powell St., Midll.ort

59-For Sale or trade

for Sate
72 - Truc:ks for Sal•
73-Vent 6 4 'VY0'1
74 - MOtoreycl•
..,.
76 - 801116 Motors for :tale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc•10ri•
77 --A'uto Repa•r

217 E.

' UNDA'S· · ,.
PAINTING &amp; ·co.

IAu•t fr.m tt.in•s Thrift StGre)

57-MUIICII l"'trU:mtn11

35 - Lots II Acreage
36- Aul E.ltlte Wanted

773 - MIIOft
882 - New H1ven
895-Letart

MAINHNANCE &amp; REPAIR

58 - Fru•ts &amp; VeOMitll•

71 - ~utos

Acr•• F.- ost.JMflce

, 1J\1G.i~-i'~

VCR CLINIC

56- Pa1t for Saltt

82-W~nted

788 'ft, 2~ .

MIDDLEPO~T

!53--Antique•
54 - Mise; Merchandise
56 - Building Supph•

lih6Uiifiil .

'

643 - Arab•• Oflt
379 - WIInut

151-~ous..-.old

11 - Help Wanted

DAY BEFORE PU,LICAT.ION
- 11 00 A.M SATURDAY
- 2:00 P•M MONDAY
- 2 ·00 P.M TUESDAY
- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2·00 P.M THURSDAY
- 2 00 PM FRIDAY

foLlmrin[{ telephone

3111-Vmton
2415-Aio Grande

Merchandise

Ern11luylllent
SHrv1r.es

•A

l

s'tudy• .teen mom
. ·,s·

Annn unr.P.rlll!n ts

for •rrors first d-v ad runs in ptper) Call bftfore 2 ·00 p m

'

15 ' ·

7-.11-'n.tfn

KEN'S APPUANCE
. SERVICE .
992-5335, «!!1,!5.:,3)~ I

SEARS

992-2 !,tAri.::

tnr ear:h tillY •• Hper••• ads

•S.,.tinel is not responstble for error! aher first dav !Check

In Memor•am

16

·

Bring It In Or ~·
Pick Up•. ·lfl

MIDDlEPORT

Role
ov,r 16 Words
1400
.
.20
169.0000
·:~
$ .
.
113.00
.80
$1 .30/dov
.06/doy

(614) 667.-32fJ
Grant A. Newlllftll

AU MAKES '.''

•·•·• ..... PR OFI:S!ilONALI
INSTALLATION

HOURS:
ThuFa; ·tttru Sun.
10 a.m.-5

NE.WLAND
ENTERPii$ES

MICIOWAY .
OVEN IEPAII·.

FREE ·
ESTIMATES

APRil I THRU JULY I

Ret .. •r• ior conMCU1!Ye runt, broken updarySwill beeh•glld

•PriCII of ad for all eaprtal IMtan •• double pnce of td cost
•7 potnt 11ne type only used
•

Card ot Thenks

15
15

Monthly

t

•Adt th.r mutt be Plld in adplce

15

6
10

60 dtscount for adl Pltd 1n advtnce
•free ads - G•veaway and Found ads under 16 words ~ill be
run 3 diVI at no ch•ge
~
.

~-mi!':S,•IVIIY ~ cominf ~· for

Words

1
3 .

Gallla or Mason ~o\nt•• muit,be pre·

~~

;TliE

r:
t

Davs ·.

p~.

FENCING

OPEN:

RATES ·

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A:M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

2·1-'90'1 mo.

'

•

.

949~2168

OHIO RIVER
HERBS and
EVERLASTING.S

.
.
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

:: .. .

in the news

- .REPAIR '

. CALL
992-5

·f

l:~ Quirks

ROOFING

992-2156

'

.
R
l
.
.
:'
h
,...- eop ·e tn t e ne.ws-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES
SERVICE

nn

no~·

'l

· Business. Services

r

..

Essay foi the :grieving friCsd~ . ...

..

•

You, (3, suffered a superficial
crlbed himself as a partner of the types of weapons Involved,':
FORT WORTH, Texas (UPI)
"We sit out in tile evening when
after dark," said Fiorella Jackcafe's owner, s;~ld a pool table homicide Detective Randy Ely
wound on his head and was the sun goes down and watch ali
- Masked men brandishing
son, another resident -oi the
• .
.
frequently was piled high with said. ·
treated at the scene, police said.
high-power weapons stormed a
the people come in to get lhelr
Butler housing project. ".You
Pollee also found shell casmgs
At least one- of the dead men
cafe described as -a drug- gambling money on weekends.
rocks (crack cocaine)," Armcan't go 10 feet without bum)ling
"It's · a mountain of dirty In a 1983 brown Oldsmobile car was known by at leas I one of the strong said. " We see Jags and
trafficking center and high·
into someone selling crack.'And
robbers, whom witnesses said
cash,'' Young said. "There's believed to be the getaway
stakes dice parlor, ,killing four
Mercedes and limos - a11 kinds
it all comes out of lhal damned
vehicle. The car, stolen from a called out his niCkname during of cars that never stop at stop
probably tens of thousands,
people and wounding four others,
club. I'm sure there's a lot of
the robbery, Kratz said.
. maybe· hundreds of thousands of street 5 miles from the shooting
•
authorities said.
signs. Just last week a guy picked
money taken. It's not unusual to
site, was repo'tted missing at 6: 15
"I'm not surprised this hap- . up his rock, stopped at the park
The attack appeared to have that money fiOllling around by
have tens of thousands of•'iloipened, :· said Jacqueline Arm- 1just In front of her bOuse) and
the lime the weekend's business a.m. and found abandoned four
started as a robbery attempt,
lars" In gambling money at the
is over.'' ,
hours )ater.
strong, who lives In the Butler smoked il."
pollee said.
cafe.
·
t l
Although he was not there
housing project across the highYoung said although the cafe
"This Is the most violent
A neighbor, Robert White, 26,
The incident was the second
robbery of this type that we've advertises as a · lounge and · when the shoC&gt;ting occurred, way apd about 10.0yardsfrom the said drug dealers s~li cocaine in
time within a year that gunmen
Young said he knew the four cafe. Armstrong, 27 , a mother of
had In some time,'' Pollee Chief restaurant, It actually serves as
the evening, then use piles of
wearing ski masks had robbed
persons killed. All, he said, were three, was among 200 residents
Thomas 'Wyndham said.
, a gambling shack and a center
money accumulated from their
the cafe during a dice game. A
"good · dudes ." He identified who participated In a march sales io gamble at the cafe in the
One witness estimated there for a crack cocaine business.
63-year-old man was shot .'and
them qnly by their stre'et names, against drugs and crime in the morning.
·Acllvlthis at the cafe were the
had been $80,000 to $400,000 In the
'
kllied during the earlier incident
"Fruity, Joe Dan, Austin and area a week ago.
" We're afraid to walk outs:de
Glass Key Cafe at the time of the subject of 344 police radio callS,
on Oct . 2, pollee said.
L.C.
'
robbery, about 7 a.m. Monclay, Including 67 reported offenses,
:'Nobody wants to know too
said Fort Worth homicide Sgt. between Jap . 1 and Dec. 15,·1989,
•
much about anybody else."
Clarke said.
Paul Kratz.
,
Between four and six
Young said. "This Is no penny
One club pat ron apparently
gunmen,
,s ome wearing masks
shoot," a reference to the crap
removed a gun from the body of
one of those killed, shot at the and some in camouflage gear,
Three injured people were j 1
games.
fleeing gunmen and returned to burst Into the cafe and ye)led,
remove about $63,000 from the "Task force! " as they opened
•VINYL SIDING
iakerl to John Peter Smith
Hospital. An unldenti!led 17·
dead man's pockets, pollee said. fire on the gambling customers,
•ALUMINUM SIDING
year-old ooy was treated for
and
· Both the gun and the money were Clarke said.
•BLOWN IN
"We found a number of shell
INSULATION
given to pollee, officials said.
abrasions on his arm and
shoulder and left despite doctors'
CUSTOM IUilT
Two people were pronounced casings, and at this point In time I
advice that he stay, officials said.
742·3088
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
dead at the scene, one was dead can tell you that there appears to
The club's owner, Albert Huey
•Tire Salas
"AI Rta..-lt Prkts1'
on arrival at Harris Fort Worth be at least three or four dlfferen t
Medical Center and the fourth
Now N-ltrllt
•Front End
PH. 1149·2801
died at John Peter Smith Hospi"Free
Eatimates''
Alignment
or Res. 949•2860'
tal during surgery for a gunshot
•Oil Change III Lube
PH. 949-2801
wound to the chest.
'
•Brake Work
Day or Night
Three other people , were
or
les. 949·2860
MAIN ST., RDnAND
NO SUNDAY CAllS
wounded in the attack, au thorlNO SUNDAY
tles said.
rfhe dead were identified as
, •. Robert Satterwhite, 30, of Austin,
'
DOIER
lloward
L. Wrl.llil
, and James W. Lacey , 56, Joe
SALES
AND
SERVICE
SITEWORK • RPAIS
• Wafers, 45, and Timothy' Carter,
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
· 45, all of Fort Worth.
·
. ClEA~G
SERVICE CENTER FOR
· ' 'We feel they (robbers) made
NEW
Heating,
Coclling,
MOST MAKES &amp; MODELS
oft with some money, we don't
1:)
Gutters
Refrigeration
know how much," pollee spokes..
Fast-~~:~!..~'
Downspouts
• man Doug Clarke said. Money
. Service
was "scattered about the place"
Residential III
Gutter Cleaning
DUMP TRUCK , ·
when police arrived.
Commercial
Painting
Sand-Stone-Din
Chester Young, 37, who' des·
FREE ESTIMATES

.

mo.

••

•

Sentinei-P~l:;- 7

'

ou· kno.w .

N'

The Daily

POfTI8roy- Middleport; Ohio

Gunmen kill 4, · wound 4 in· attack on high-stakes game

Ed Johnson. considered Ohio's 'southwest Delaware County.
dy~tamlc ambassador fot a~:rl"Agrl Country" is Johnson's
culture, will be coming to Me!as weekly television program.
' . , A i:raduate of Ohio , State
County Tbursd~tY night.
He will be the guest spe~~kerfor University · College of Agrictd- ·
Rural Like Week at the Carmel ture, Johnson . majored In Acrl·
United Methodist Church at 7 cultural Economics and Agrlcul·
p.m. and the public is ln"ited to tureal Edcuatlon. He holds an
attend. .
honorary American Farmer Dl!"
Johnaon travels In and out of gree from the FFA, received the
the state about a ttundred times communicator of the ¥ear ,·.· ·•
1 As 1
each ·year on speaking engap Award from theNaliona
soc- , ·
ments 'a nd perS9nal appearan- at!On of Conservation District, '
ces. He ' Is president' and farm the Dlstrlngulshed Service
director Of ABN Radio and TV ·Award from the National ·voca·
and president of 'the·Radlo SOuth tloi)B,l A.gricu!Otqre Teachers As· : ·
Network locate4 in' Columbus.' socatlon, along with numerous
He broadcas!B dally to radio stllte honorll' including being
stations": in··Ohlo, Indiana, and named to·t!leOhiOStateFalrJJall &lt;:
West:Vqlnla. :· · ,,;
. ' of Farm. •· • ,
·
·: ·•
,
. Morning programming, w.hlch
He and bls wl(e, Marilyn. live &lt;
.. begins at 5:411 a.m., COI!)es dl-' , on a .56 ·acre ~alii and beeff&amp;mJ. ""',
ret:tlv from JoJtnson s, (arm In . Johnson' 'li a lay speaker for jhe

POMEROY -Amerlcar~- ,' '. f:!Ote . Op .t e
beeil teachlog Sunday llChool-for ;; ·
Pome(oy will !lave a ministers ,
'. • .
.
.·
27 years. In addition he haabeen
I . .
.,
..
.
breakfast lo ~onor all special
BY. United Press International
a guest '!eqturer at Ohio State
ministers who come to the.
SeJ1.. Jesse; ,H!'!ims, R·N.C.. "Unlverslt1i, and serves on ,the 1 ,
facility on Thursday at 9:30a.m.
expr~ffislng his bj:!llef In Senate
dvlsory· board ·of the ' OSU
At 10 a.rp. there will be gospel
deba~ . Monday that the way to tegartment of · Agrlcult'ural
sing with varl9us groups from
stop ,A-IDS Is•to fell h~moseJfuals F.tlucatlorir
;
·
;
; . . The annual Harrisonville- Price for the banQuet, ·dance and
the commun,lt:,:.
to· ~IOI!.bavl.ll&amp; sex: •'
···y·
-~
Scipio Alumni Association ban- dues Is $9 per person or for the
RUTLAND -The' Leading
"I've never heard once soml!"
OW
·
i quet and' dance will be held on dance only the cost Is $4. · Acy ·
Cr~k
Conservancy District will
MIDDLEPORT -"The Trial
body In this chamber, say ro the
· ··
·
~ •' ·May 26 at 6: 30 p.m. at the alumni member unable to attend
of Amanda Marie Locks'' \;\'Ill be
homosexuals, 'Stop w;hat you are
By United Press lnlernat~nal
meet Wednesday at 9 a.m .
"
1 Harrisonville sc hnol.
·, may pay thetr ·annual dues of $1
presented
at
Meigs
Junior
High
doii\g,'
,
If
'they
s(opj:led,
'
there
The world's largest peninsula
,
, Tbe officers of the association to the Harrlsonvllle·Sclplo
School
on
'rhursday
at
7
p.m.
would
not
be
one
additional
case
is
Arabia, ' with an area of about
POMEROY.
-Amer'lcare•.
met recently to complete plans. Alumni Assocaiton, ~5359 State
Is
50
cents.
·
of
AIDS
...
·
'
·
1.25
million square miles.
Admission
Pomeroy
will
have
a
pret~
baby
' '
• Band for the dance will be "The Route 143, Pomeroy.
'
~ 'Rock Run Ramblers." Classes to
Reservations are to be made
i .be honored will be
1920, by May 20 and can be made by
~ 1930, 1940.- 1950, and 1960.
calling one of Ihe officers, Harold
~ '. The diMer will Include bakes
D. ,G ral\am, president; 742-3033;
! :. steak or tur.key breast, baked Larry Clark. vice president,
•'
Dear ADD Landers: · I was Rl• he
enjoyed living:liwas friendo for no hllart in ' all,the ,wQrld
• , .potato, gref!n beans and glazed 992-3690; Helen Pickens, treas·
cendy facecl with the most difficult · very ~. Arin. Please by Ill .iS mORf grateful fOr ki~ than
ANN LANDERS
; . carrots, tossed sala.d, rolls, pie urer, 949·2670, or Joy Clark,
task
of
my
life.
I
had
to
put
ilur
dog
rm~~:
it
'anil
tun
it
again.
fiJI
'
a
we
it
')
he
loving
heart
of
me.
.
.'
.
•t989,
"""-""""''"
; ' •and Ice cream, and beverages. secretary, 992-3690.
to.sleep.
" ·
· will ~ 'my wife stop grieving. ·• Do not break my spmt wt\h a,, T~·;::;:!":;~~~:.~~
We got this 'darting pooth whl:n Tllank you, •• J.• HAWTHO}tNE. .stick, for though I might lick your'
,,
,
he W894 Weeks old. He lived 10 be NJ.
,
. ,
,
Iiane! between blo~ your patience .&amp;..;.'_ ...."· ~...;....,-..;;;..;.;:;..;.-,·
I • •
11, so yoo can imagine what he
DEAlp.S.: Ucre's lbat ttnder Iil!le and Undelstanding will more quickly · cited aninial ;., longer
meant 10 111: Up until a few wceb ~y. IIIPPeared in my coiWI!n in ttach me the things,)'QU 1 ~ have 10 bitter cl~ents. I 18: no
:
Joyce Dill and . Jamey Ash,
ago, he was m--.ellent ~th. Sud: 1986. I didn'Jknow who~ 11; so ·me learn.
lory than die privilege of
at
•o.Pomeroy, announce the birth of a
denly he developed an incurable it ran 'audlor uRkaown. • If 111yone
Speak to me oflcO, for your vo~ gour feet beSide the hearth
: .daughter, Jamie Gale, on April
; )~at O'lDeness Hospital.
b1adder ~!em. and~ ~w we ~~whole' work this .is. p~ isthe.world'ssweelellmusic.~you Y Keep m'' pan filled .,.;ith fresh
• , ... ~e Infant weighed eight
had 10 put him oot Ill biB miJCrY. · . write to me. I lilre to B!VC cltdit must know by the fien:e.waggmg of water for cannot reo yoo whCn I
1- "pi&gt;unds and one ounce and was 20
. My wife Ia llrokenllelrtle Noth~ . where it is due.
my tail when the ~-~your foot, surrer'.thinl:
!.
f Inches long.
mg I say ICCIDI ~ help. Several years
step falls upon my ~~!ling ear. .
•
·
Feed me clean food 1bat I may
~
Grandparents are Carl and
ago you printcd a column about a
A Dog's Plea
Please take me ,mside w!acn 1t ,is Slay well 10 romp and play and do
; Sjllrley Gibson, Albany; Herman '
Ill sleep when
Treat_ me kindly; mY, beloved cold and we~; for, I llfll a domesti· your b!dcfing, 10 walk by your aide
dog's w,ish 10
' and Clyda Michael, Pomeroy;
; Guy Bing, Middleport. Great
I
.
'
and stand ready. Willirig and able Ill
: · grandmothers are Florence
~t_you,Withmylife,shoWd)'OIII' .
·. .
•
~'
·,..,.life be m dan-.
·
: Baer, Pomeroy; and Bonnie
·
.,. ·
,
, o" 1
·
·
C
TROTI'
back
to
New
York
for
the
services
and
they
came..
'
And,
my
(riend,
Tihen
I
amtvery
• Conde, Middleport. .
JAMIE G. ASH , . "
·J!~~~~~rnallolial ··
to "an accomoda)lon," Vanlty·· Falr said, ~v~n , ·0 1Q and I .!10 longer enjO:r.,l9od
'f"
ItABY 'BOOM: S~eV,n Spielberg's glrlfrtend, thbugh there was stl~l a ''paiJ,l8.bi~,.St~aln." .
'. hWth, lleM,ing and sight.
not
actress •. Kate , Capjlbaw.l gave birth Monday
MICHIGAN GIRL. Is Mlchlgan .llo·hum abou)
make · her!)JC efforts Ill lteep' me ' ·O
morning, , nine days.· after ,Spielberg's exo•wlfe, native daughter Madonna? As of the weekend, ' going.'· I
not having any, fun.
••
,
d 2,000 ·of the 44,000 tickets for her May 30 and ·31
PI
,
li' ·' '
·
Amy Irving, h,add .a baby with •her boyfrten : · shows in the Detroit' suburb of Auburn Hills had
case see .~ It that m_y 1e IS r,kcn
: .. · , G111llpopplngchampcon~lcted record In Las Vegas ne?&lt;t month.
~plelberg and Capshaw, ~ho starred In hi~ . not been sold even though the $29 _50 tickets have
~ently_. I shill leave th1searth know·
~ • of dlslw1th• couriroom
· --Indiana
·
Jones
and
the
Temple
of
Doom,
·
been
on
sale
since
March
1..
While
things
were
mg wath the last breat!t I ~, that
•
3
FRESNO, Calif. (UPI) Welcome to •murder capllal of
proudly
announced
the
birth
of
a
girl,.
7-pau~d,
slow
In
Auburn
Hills
which
Is
near
Madonna's
my
fate was always· safest m -yoor
~ World bubble-blowing champion tile world'
"
1-ounce
Sasha
SplelbeiJ:
Irvl~g,
who
lives
with
hometown
·of
Rochest~r;
Mich.,
people
in'Chlcago
handS.
·- A DOG'S 'liRIEND,. JN
Jl
Mo tg m
Willi ms h
DETROIT iUPI) - A Michl·
Brazilian
filmmaker
Bruno
Bart:eto,
named
h~r
snapped
up
some
54,000't.ickets
for,
her
shows
there
JfANSAS,
qry' MO. ,
~.
1
'
usan
n
ery
a
as
•
gan
Blue
Cross-Blue
Shiel~
exec• , "RRtten herself Into a sticky
sonGabrleiDavls
.Barreto.
·
In
a
matter
of
hours
..
'Prombters·
blamed
the
,,·
DeirADALanders;Our24-~' &amp;Jtuatloti.
·
utlve caused B· stir by pulling out
0UTBREAK OF KIDOMANIA: Tbe LOndon, slower Detroit 'sales to a media mix-up that
' old college·ilraduate .9on who 'lives
~
Williams, 29. 'a mother of two, a toy gun and telling out-of·lown
: was convicted Monday on guests at a business meeting:
advertised additional
: charges of disturbing a cour· "Welcome to Detroit, murder
and fainting at the Boston pop group's Sunday oerts. . There were so many people saying t e e
Jl!s COUSUII Wedding. He 11 .bliiifing .
; troom on 'feb. 7 by popping her c~pllal of the world."
night show, which lfad, to be rescheduled from would be four shows that people were w!'itlng,fo~
ha new ~y ~has told~ (notl
• gum too loudly In a courthouse
The incident at last• week's
Friday because of a'power outage. Tlie girls were luther ..announcements before , they bough
isked) that they~ be s1)lrinj the
,I hallway.
opening of a two-day meeting of
assln outevenbeforetheKidscameonstagebut tickets,
a spokeswoman said. But · Sherr!
secondbedtoom mourap&amp;ibl"f.'
l Williams denied violating any ilnance execu lives from Blue
fhe sug rvlser of the arena said tile scene still Ande~n · of Cf]ntlnental Umouslnes, whose
My husband and I assume ll!ey ,
l law and contends the court Cross operations around the
didn't :mpare 10 Beatlemanla. "It was nowhere company sold out its limo-ticket package for the
are sleeping tpgether, but 1ll'e don't
~ llalllffs who arrested her were · country was reported Monday by
near 11 , .. he said. , 'If there wasn't any Beatles 1 show quickly but Is having a tougher time with \~s
~ it bappenia!g 11111\Cr our IIOIClS.
.
• simply Irritated by the "crac· the Detroit Free Press.
should Imagine this would have been In )he hiStory ticket -bus ,deal, says Madonn~. is over hyped. I
Ale we sqUIII'e?, Ale we unrealillie? •
,: .·• kllng" of b!)r gum.
The crack was made by Dennis
bo k ..
,
think shes , very over~llled, Anderson said,
Ale we hytiOcritical? What do 'jou
Bailiffs Richard Wilbolte and• Weiss, director of national acSET· Th making of "The Godfather: "She's just an?lher girl from Michigan."
thiilk?- RICHMOND VA . ~
o
O
·
e
·GLIMPSES: HeavywelgbtchampJames"Bus- ·
·
•
· .,,
' Dana Crittenden tes lifted last coun ling for Blue Cross, who
Part 3" has been about as peaceful as a mo)l war. 1 , Do 1 took one on ' the chin after he ·
DEAR RICH: It's )'0111' IIIJillli!l!nt,
• ; J)'lday the noise made by Willi· ·oversees a staff of 64 In Detroit.
' It began when Wynona Ryder had a nervous r~~r-end: ·' ::'car In his hometown of Columbus,
and yqu have the right tO mtiihe .r,
·.ams was comparable to a .38
Weiss's boss, Brenda Ball,
collapse
before
fllm,lng
started
In
lj.ome
and
'
Ohio.
Dougla~
was
given
a
citation
for
(Qll\)Wtng
_rules.,_~
you _doit, want your Jion
caliber piStol going off; ,a "crac- Michigan Blue Cro.ss controller
director
Francis
Ford
C!Jppola
replaced
her
wltl;l
too
closely
Sunday
arter·hts
1970
Cadillac
banged
•
and
hiS
new
steady to .share •·bed:
: kUng" sound like stall~ ~lectric- and vice president, said she and
his
daughter,
Sofia.
Many
members
of
t~e
ca~t
Into
the
1986
Oldsmobile
driven
by
Jerry
Gaines,
room
under·your
roof, that seale~' iL.
~ ·lty, or the sound of "banging on a aliout five members of her staff
and
crew
were,
greatly
upset
with
the
chplce
41
The
champ's
car
wasn't
damaged
but
Garnes's
Gem
ofth~
Day
(Credit Henr)- :B.
: · :garbage can with a metal , saw Weiss pull the stunt.
because
of
Sofia's
inexperience
and
the
way
the
·
Do
Ia
Dobson
Wdollburn
Ore.)· Don!t be
: ·h ammer."
·
"I made it clear that neither
pressureofthe job was affecting her. vanity Fair will need lots of, work.
ug s was gr~c 1ous
.:
.'
• . : .
1
·
· Tbe.judge and court reporter tn Blue Cross nor myself considers
sa s the Issue became so divisive that Paramount enough to let Gaines use his car phonetonotlfyhls
100 en~ of a mislake. I~ IS ·e.\1,1he courtroom in question testi- these ,kinds of remarks appropPI~tures went behind Coppola's back and trted .to wlf,e of the accident ...Ti)e greatestshow on-Earth dence that least somebody ~
,fllld they heard nothing untoward riate.'' Ball said. "Negative
get "Godfather" star AI Paclno to intercede, . lsn t a rock g~oup. The ban~ Kiss says It will no
to do
,.
·on the day Williams was ar- statements hurt the city and
which irked Coppola to no 'end. Further longer advertise Its tour, which started during the
rested, but Municipal Judge damage our Image as a
11 tin things was a lovers' quarrel weekend In Lubbock, Texas,.as the greatest show,
camp ca g
'
on Earth after being hit with a ceaSI!"and-deslst
, .Michael Feinberg fined her $150, COt:pOralion."
th Ringling Brothers and Barnum &amp;
, between Paclno an!} Diane Keaton, who plays 0 rd fr
:.' ·as,i-e her a 30-day suspended .. Weiss has been ordered to
PaclnOjs wife, reportedly because she wanted a
er om e
.
sentence and placed her on write to participants at the
deeper real-life commitment. When Paclno's Bailey circus.
,
_probation for iwo years.
meeting and tell them positive
grandmother died, Keaton accompanied ltlm
"I guess I just must have made things about Detroit, Ball said. ·
------ -- -- --: ~a' new law for the lawbooks,"
Free Press columnist Susan
·Williams said. "Nogumi5opplng. Watson, who reported the lncl• Don't snap, crackle or pop unless dent, wrote thatthe jok~ was not
•
•
,
~ you want to stop a cop." ' .
onlv In bad taste, but facfually _
.
,
•
· Williams said she will appeal . wrong. Washington, D.C., · last
I her conviction, and added, "I , year edged out Detro}t as the
• was willing to show them (the major U.S. city with the highest
. l.'
..
, ·'
court) the difference between murder rate.
NEW YQRK (tJPI)
The
For the study, researchers
, •crackle' and 'pop. • When 1 'pop, •
"Of course, being first runner- . daughters of teenage mothers
Interviewed the teenage mothers
1 It IS loud, but I know better than up, or even second runner-up, Is
between 1966 and 1968 as part of
to do It ln:llde."
nothing to brag about," she
apparently are not destined _to ·· an evaluation of Baltimore'.~
;
Williams Is listed in the Guin- wrote. "It's a disgrace. And In a
become teenage mothers them:
health care 'p rogram for adoles·
: ness Book of World Records for city where scores of younguers
selves, a study said.
.
cent motl\ers.
' blowing a record ·bubble of 22 are shot to death each year, you
· The study of 404 mothers and ·
Follow;up Interviews show the
• ·Inches In 1985. She said she has don't use murder Jokes to start a
their offspring found thai only 42
daughters of teenage mothers
' blown a 26-inch bubble. in prac- meeting with a bang."
-orone-third-ofthedaughters ,' whoflrstgaveblrthbeforeage19
~ lice and plans to attempt another.
born to mothers . who were
were more likely to be school
•
,
teenagers went on to become
dropputs and more dependent on
L' •
teenage mothers themselves,
wefiare.
,.
a~
researchers repOt,t ed Monday In
In the first group of young.
;
the' journal Family Pllinnlng , mothers Interviewed In th!! 1960s, ·
Pers~ctlves. ·~
60 percent married "around the
•
~ WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif.
refused to give her name.
"Although national su'rvey
time of their child's birth, ,. but
., IUPI) - The word "boycott"
"And we want.to call attention data sbow that early childbear- only 14 percent of. their teenage
~ was scrawled across a Sunset
to that and to' show Individuals lng Is more common among daughters were married · when
Strtp billboard for raunchy come·
such as himself and the people children of teenage mothers, the their babies were born, the study
; dlim Andrew Dice Clay and
whopromotehimandthatklndof ' newreportsuggeststhatitisfar said.
: spatters of red paint obliterated
violence that we're not going to from Inevitable," the report said.
Most 'of the first group of
' moat of the advertisement early
take It any more," the caller
In addltiOIJ, the daugbter.s who · teenage mbthers came from
• TUesday, autltoritles said.
said.
~
did not have babies during their
low-Income families. Half were
' · ''There was a vanadallsm of an
Clay's appearance as guest teenage years "were drama II· ·living In ·single-parent houae- •
' Andrew Dice. Clay billboard,"
hosi. of "Saturday Night Live'' cally more likely" than their
holds . On!!"quarter were on welsberlff's Lt. Ross Rudlnsald. The
last week triggered protests both mothers to have finiShed high
fare. Their parents' average
' paint attack on the billboard
Inside and outside the studio. schools, to want further educa·
educational level was lOth grade
: along Sunaet Boulevard appartlay has bi!en particularly offen· tlon and to be employed, the
and most of their· mothers had ,
j ently occurred about midnight. slvetofemlnlstsbecauseheoften study said.
been teenail! paren!B them·• A groGp Identifying Itself as
uses Brooklynese street talk '
''Most of the daughters in the
selves, the study reported.
' Actlvla!B Against SexiSt . Pigs
laced with ro111h language and study had graduated from h]ih
"In general, the fli'st group of
: ~ailed news organizations to
references to violence against school, were employed or ,In
young mothers experienced con-,
~ claim responsibility for the women .
school and had managed to avoid
slderable 'short-term setbacks
~ attack.
·
The caller said Activists
dependence on public assiStance,
because of their early chUdbear- .
' ·"He perpetuates a violent Against Sexist Pigs had also despite the disadvantages they. . · ll!i, Including b,Jvlng dropped
illllilllet !ll&amp;lllltw,el'llen In p.ardc·
repeatedly vaildallzed blllbpar4s
fa~ as children of teenage , out of school and' havlftg lil!i!n
~.;: ~~!,4 a W'tlillil!ll.,cai!Pf w~o .!~r ~eiii'Nian Sal!! ~11151111. . , , . Jil&amp;reftts," tile at~ sal4, :, ·. . . "~
. ·. -~.:~ t!lr .sf:lillv ~·~~·., ,
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -The first prac·
lice and flruil sign . up for
American Le~on Baseball. will
be held Wednesday, rain or .
shine, at 6 p.m . .at · Meigs High ·
School.

-

..

1'&amp;.

lt. 33 lkrtli .,,,,

·-~· ow.~..•

Til-COUNTY IECYCUNG -,.:,
aLOCA11011S nt san YOI- ,•q
.:~r:
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 143

OffiiS

ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 10. S.R. 14S
,, ~
HENDERSON, WV.: Rt. 3a Adj. to BldlrdquipmM~l

8 a.m.·? p.m. 7 Doya ·
ltE=~t:~~~
~J~~;.=~~NEW
HOURS:
\
o.m.·l p.m.
8
Cloud tunc!W'''
l
10o.m.-tlp.m, 5Dayf.Ciol0dlun......'
~ ~

Deyo,

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAR. 13, . . . . ,.; _,
111 Copper ai!C per lb.; .
: m,
CIHn
Aluminum Cena. 31C per lb. •
WEIUY

ITAll.,. Ill.

F!IIIIOUI ICII.V, IATTIIliU, '"'II'
ALTIIINATOIII,JTC. ·

11

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

�'·
,;• ;

3 Announcements

a=
-

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quol~y
olgnlfloont

olngiOO
lor

llpollo, OH 4...,.

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.

c=-r· .... ..,•..,,....

Dot&gt;ooitl ,.. coumy Appll.loco lne. Good
gw . "fumact, . - oppllanooo,
o11a. Ot&gt;on
OOU'*Y water, 11~41-08n.
I a.m. to 1 p~m. , Mon ...Sit.

In Caunll)', No polo

... lloddl!'ll plonto, .....
1!11 blokolo. fiWII' Hll form.

fliol- obove Roolno Locklo
..,
- ·on rtahl hind - of
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Mobllo ...,._

B~ndlo

In

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wll•. okJ.

1 "-rdlconle ~ 1
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· Otcllo
glvo1
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EarlY Anarlcan couch ol\d chill;
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31M.a75-1lll.

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oounto~op

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w~h

(!) Yoy• 01 The Mimi
Shipwrecked crew puts
survivalekllls into action . t;1
(!) Mllllt l.elmlng HOIJ'

18 ({)) Andy Grllftth
OJI[tortd today

Merchandise

lmlott

melo 111lx lnld doa to
~ old. ef4.lt2-

mf -

a

7.

OuoiMy child ..,. In· my homo.
Lolo
ofocllvllloo .ond

Wanted to Do

1911 Klrkwocd, 14Kio, 3,., 2 full
::"..:..~·· cond, $8500• .&amp;14-

;r;ou:r.,. :=:.'iM-~. :;lr:';: nco.~Now: ;3:=.CM: ~: ;:B":=2-3; n,T.I:;$~i.~o,o o: : -'.~w:-.:m

Yard Sate

18

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&amp; VIcinity
· ALL Yonl .-.- So Poid I~
Adnr-. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tiW, doy bilon! tiM c lo 10 run.
luQdiY editiOn , 2:00 p.m.
FltiiiY. -.y -""""' . a:oo
P.!"· 811111....

Pomeroy,
Mlddllpon
&amp; VIcinity

1184 Monolon. t4x70, In

Chrlollon """to toke ..,. a1 otd«&lt;y """"" or biblll ar oloan

~EAUTIFUL APARTMEHTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!J,. 538 Joeklon Plko
trom """'- Wllk to ohot&gt; &amp;
movloo. Colllf4.44I.ZS88, EOH.

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good

houilo:Non-.R- or IM'm.aooe.
· Hove own tronopollailon.
lf4.lll2·2127.
.
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UR Troo Sorvlr:O, toPping,
trlmmlna, trM ·removtl: F,.• ...

-'
utllrty

AND
ERNES'f
' '

T~ona.

Ouortor -

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~

.30, .10,

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4

Transportation

..

llMio 1111 bod lor pldl up truck

saoo.30H82-33W.

!

Top Cooh pold. Old fumMII'I
ci.tbollrde,. qulb,
orient .. ,
Cllll colrecl

I5ZI-88M.

8

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54 . Mlsi:etlaneous
. Merchandise

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

__
=
--... --- ...

304-52S.am, or J04..

..... . . . .--.e.~
I' 5 I d Ohio lnd

'For
,_-.Cillo

.....

Uf.HOIIo- Compo~ full
conlltn.d. ga~ or etectnc, elr
ocncl., oiOOpo '· St..,O. 114oae.

Will Sobnll In my homo neor
112 ocro linn, no ""lfdlngo,
or Joeklon Plko or Bullvlllo Rood. ·71
••eco blae, .orne tlmbi!lr,

your ..--.. call ue.

-

30WS7-227I

...... -lon ·Compony

m"~ ond Ro-. 114-

=--tllllllloninoo. ........, lltt'\1 Ftkloyo'304o
t1Witl.
.
Olllo, KINuclly, -

¥filii*. -m.ma.

•

Ftnanc1al

Wllntecl to Buy

- · IWOliDS WANTED.
~- · -.Tcom

Wlftloi: ~~~~··'flllokl,
.. iii~~.-:~·: . '
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Busl118118 '

" · Qpportunlty~i '

'-

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~

~

'

tm Chlv. R.V. win. iDw
mloogo, '"" lfllpe, -or end

Nlcoty fumllhld Mobllo Homo
In C~y. CA, ouHoblo, 1, 2 pooplo,
R o - ' d-H. f14.44l.
0331. .
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trlll.lrl ploiM.

tm . Tony Teuruo,

(-rioted! """"""' building

.

Point ~nt. Lincoln AVe.
l.oJgO Lot, P,500. t14-44W!138.

Route

mlloo

public

a Alhlon, 1 ocr~
-h Gllllpollo

toto 3

I NEED HELP
PT • tf700 mo. FT • $7100 mo.
IIHr f'hor!o work. · No oxp.
_ . . . , . C.II104.W 715311011

'

'

''

camping

IS 1\lRut., SWAlO(, 111AT .
YCXJ'r&lt;&amp;-· F\MJIJW6 10 RUIJ
.:--..._ FOR Rt--E.LECilC#J ,.,
45

tM. Local rer.rena• tumlahlcl
·F,.. ootlmllll.' Colt eolloet 1·
ll14-237-4488, · day • night.
Rogoro -mont ,.,._ _

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212 ...- . , . l'olniNy.
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Rentals

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pool. air. ~71-

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Wlllu 304~'!1.:!~i.!lll St-

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-

wolill ·-tRotld1rid . MAlee,

Hayden's heroism emerges ·
when Dauber endangers 1a
prize poodle. (R) r;1
10:00 ()) 700 Club With Pat •
Rotiert10n
II {2) 181 Midnight Caller ·
Jack plunges into a deeP
depression and ~its his
·
radio talk show. Q
DIJl'lhlrty--lng
During an attempte~
corporate·takeover, Elliot is
at odds with Miles. t;1
rzJ Newswateh
(f) Moyera: Tile Public Mind
(PI2 Of 4) Moyers examines .
tho power ol pollsters to
· inlluenc!.,Public opinion.
Stereo. 1;1
.
I!)) Evenliig Newa
•
10:20(1) MOVIE:'DeiUnettOn
TokyCj {2:45)
10:3() {!) Major League Besebait

=·

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'

.

01c~ Cl"'ek Ad. Plirt1, ,...,..
ptloo, plcllup, . . . dellvwy.'lf4.

lull I l l - . 2 bld......n
NNoltrolorOflpropony.24•U
ft. lnlutllld, _... _
..
.CurrenltY houolng omoH onglne

~~.:
~

\

441.0214.

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'•

~
..
' '
•

centor. Oroot-'unllY loftiatsllehlna your own bulilneee .t
homo. AD on 1· 112 ooro, ~
-ion In ~orilllclno oroa.
141,100 nogotllblo. lf4.Mto
2111.
/!.
-·

. I

~

Tuesday Night Fights

1211 Nashville Now
9:30 D a ' It()) C011eh

Soptle Tonk Pumofftg $10LGollll
'
Co. RDH EVANS lNTERPHisEs, ·
Jacuon,
OH 1-8J00.637-1528.
.. ,t
'
Davit
a.w.Vic
Stnlcl, :-.

A . . . CIIJICDd ~hoine wftlt

11J Budwaloer Pr,Mnll:

THeME~ ~;

C:'"'""·

noOd uo. Bill Vhrd -·2325.

(2:00) r;l .
I!)) Larry King Llvel

I G-el THe Mt;5"'1"&lt;5 It/

'

aa

'

YO'RE
GOODER'N
ARY ANGEL,
·

AUNT

l.OWEEZY!!

&lt;f: '

llotot Monogor Nile!
r o - - · FO&lt; moro iiilo 814-

(!)F~m

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(8 ({)) New Twllght .zone
. Ql Crook &amp; CheH

IARN IIDHEY RoedlnjJ lookol
hO.OOO yr. lncoml potllflllol.
Dotatto. (11 10t1-887.aotl0 Eld. y.

-·

1221 Newa
11:00

J ..

l

4~

..

Mobile Homes
lor f:lent

0

P11co Rlducedl For Soli, By
OWner - - Bubdtvlolon~ ""a!"~!\.',IM-44e.tlll&amp;.
112, nlcl tovll
tot, ""Y .
•
Sory and hall, 3 or 4 bldroome,

Vlrvfnll

-·nell-

11rgo living ond clnlng room.
Nair roo! end
·Stato , Farm loclllon, 304..J'II.3030 or 8711-

""*jollool-..,
....,
· · · - !'f
-1111

W\1

oCNpl

lof • dl-or.

.... - -'!lo

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,

lr. lum.'c or untum'ld.
ntobllo
hornM lor ...... · .. ~ •tt1r
2 p;m.
•'

omes

IIMIO. """':'':""':_;.;;.;_;;.;;.;,.;_.,...,..,.....
. for Sa'•
ln4o .w.!illY
Will22.lllrglnto
RL 1-- '"
.
::.;-~ -· w. Yo. ~= llrgo lot, $11,000. !.

J\ -,

.·
"'

'

;,

' yqur Astro-Graph predictionS" lor the tlve l'(le!ISUr!IS enhan- your creativity
yea; aheid by mailing $1.25 to Aatro- today. II you're toying .wllh an Idea, try
Graph;, !)lo thiS newepaper, P.O. Box all olthe approaches that come to mind
~ 1428, Cleveland, OH ..,.,10 1-3428. Be .Instead of just visualizing them
.
sure to state your zodiac olgn..
mentally.
'BERNICE
. GEMII!I 1...,.2'1........ _.,)Make an 81: IAOITTARIUS (Now, IHiec. :rt) Have
BEDE OSOL· · - fort to study I*IPfa cloaw
uou&amp;l fun and enjoy youreelltodty, but try not
,
- ' :t\'&lt;'ay, bacau~ there hi IIOII'MIIhlng you· .to gellnvd...ct In llt:IIV!tlellli81 could be
· · ,• can learn · lrdm'-:periOnt ,wllh cwhom .. deerried exj)enlllve. The WJue you'D,.
-.
you'll bi Involved regerdlea 01 their- . ceivell!r the mcinlet you'll spend might
· .
. t not milk~ happy.
·
,
, . . . . . . . . . . .• station or 118\ut. · ·
(DeO. IWM. 111 'eus~­
•
'CANCIR (oluM' 11-.luiJ Zll In 111ua- ,·cAJIRIC
!iona !hat are ~ftgful to you,. you · ·. _ .,cbndltlona could be a trlfte trlei&lt;V
,.. .
~QUid perlorm - a b l y 'MIIJ,todty. todtiji, 10 monitor yDtlf ~Wry mcive
,CilnVerally, In . develajlmlntt INI are carefiiiiY. TIMire'a a poillblllty you mtgllt
so~at 'lrtvolowa, yo!! mty not be kid yourtelllnto belleYing e deal is bel-'
-v ell~. .
\
Iter than It Ia. ,
··
~ LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) Strive to deal .AQIIARIUI (olin• ..,elt.1e) Although
,
wllh
ln their ~~!here&amp; of Inter- . you'll h&amp;veelleclive leaderalilp quaJHiet
May 18, 1 ' , eat today. II you foe~ on maner'a th~r· today, 1111-doubta could Inhibit you
.
.
.
are Of Importance pnly to you, lt•won t · 'lrDm expreMJng 111ern prOductively. ,
Your circle 011nnuence mlghl not have " encouragetne&lt;r 14lppotl.
•
Nothing
riolhlog g.alnec:t. · ·
too great a ra~lualn the year ahead, ,l!ut VIRGO lAIII· 21-lept. ~~Fulfilling am· II'IICI&amp; (Fell. :111 llarolt 2111) Do not put
th!sls apt to be '!I your own CIIICIDIIng. It bltloua object- might not come too ,youi'Mif 1n ti poeltlon todty where you
will be more l~ant to be t11e big fllh · euHy lor you today. You'll b8 able to ' · must depend upon othlp. E-. people
In the small pona In whiCh you .,vim.
ISOlate your goall, bUt you might not r. ,you prev1ou11y helped mey not be .viii•
TAURUS (April 2M111J 2111) n you dl• , work hard enough to IICideve them.
. able to INIII yiN. · ·
. cl088 aecrat desires to Intimate friends ' UIRA (llepl. :IS-OoL :D) 'Saclal actlvl- ARIEl (llllalt 11·Aprll 111 Be ·1tery
today, your true pall wll nota yDtlf · t1ee with !Tienda Ire apt to lire better 111 caraiUI today INt you do not tty to me-·
needlllld rellecl on W1IJI to help you. , they are conduclecl outolde of your 1nlputatelrlendl or oontiiCIIIn ~to '
ThiO might not be the - · ho1UIIMI1 \ home todty. C"- I 11*8 that IW1 further yDt1f pWtonalllmL Allempia to I
·- . rtvlll are concemec:t. TM1ru1, .. majority approvet.
do 10 oould prodUCII unhllpjly -.....U. ·
· •lre&amp;t,your1811toablrthdtygKt.~lor .ICORPIO(Oot.at ~v.22)Taklngac- · ,
·
· :·

''*'

-ec:t.

a

.... ··14:::-31-.:::-'-:-----......- Ai&gt;- I .
Mobile H. .

tie

.

!.

;

Why they have weight restrictions
lor firemen ...
. ~·

'

lJI ScarecroW a Mre. King

. .' e&lt;JJ.
•• eiJl 9l
• a2J 181 ..... '

(!) .lntlde ~··USSR
With Hedllcl! 11it1111t (PI 3)
EXplora the P,.olnl.- )rid
Illusion of perestroika. t;l
(8 ({)) Areenlo Hall
II) Moneyllne
II)) Mt•ml vtce Red Tape
Stereo.
Ill Church !~bet llldon
12J Comedy Tonlgllt
11:30. (J) a!1 Tonight 8lt4!W
Chiare

t:l - - · ·

.lf~~=·g
sports T~
N~hl

VInnie must raac:uli
Susan Profitt from.
kidnaPPers.
QIOnStaae

:!

.

.

11J Ctlnte lloly L11t1a Girl

- LOll Sttreo.

t2:30e&lt;Jl ·e ~Night w.
Dlvld La...-.rn
1,

••
eoLove
C.aelou
."' ... ·
~

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•.&gt;.109642

·~ BJ 73

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.

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... ... 1

·cROSSWORD

...

by THOMAS
JOSEPH ~~·
.
'
ACROSS
44 Penny
1 Munch
45 Like fat
6 Selfled up
10 Out of
DOWN
- (cross) 1 Burn
11 Fare -payer 2tminense
13 Capital
3 Nebraska
oi 'Guam
city
14 Set
4Wk.
!!lralght
day
.
15 Salt
5 Southern
mixture
sweet
16 Aglow
6 Babbie
18 Japanese 7 Trouble
· cHy
8 Dumb
19 Priest's
9 Tooth
vestment
substance
21 Sesame 12 HOuses '
22 United
and land
23 Hue
17 Bar
24 Contour
. 27 ·:Cagney .
and-"
28 Musical
sound
29 Ventilate
30 Soul (Fr.)
31 Russian
trade
guild
33 Kind of
· muf~n
34 Nt~W
Guinea
· town
35 Before tee b.+--4-38 Eat away
40 Have fun
· 42 Gourmet
43 Boxing
setting

t ':~ !

l ····: • • • - '

• ~"..... f

. " . IM!

-

""

...

'

-

· 31 On guard
23 Vetch
32 Prying
· seed
device
24 Contrived .36 Transmit
25 Epical
37 Kill, as
26 Wind·
a dragon
flower
39 Scout unit ·
27 Verbatim 41 Time

-..,.,.
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CRYPJOQUOTE .
LEAH

.

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At

. ...,.....
...
•• a ..
_

·One letter
for another. In this sample A Is used.
for the three L!s, X for the two O's, etc, Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and 'onnaUon of the words are sl~
hints; Each day the CQde Jetternre dUferent.

ZHG

GYIL.J

,(

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20 Suik

.
sta~

AG

...

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AXYPLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

BKXL

.....,

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PAILYCRYPTOQuOTES-Here'allow loworkU:

5-15

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GYEG

.•••'"""
, llll
....
-

~~~Tonight

.. Nuhvtlll Now

,•

' '·

12J HIH Street llua8

-~.P.I.
eOlllewsHigltt
Gll Att.r Houre .

_~ .

. ment tQday. can you possibly find it in
a one no-trump contract? .
, . ·.
SOUTH
+AKB
)'lorth ~nd South were playing no'17 3
trump openings of Th·11 pOin~ . So
.KQW6S
South. undeterred by tlie Jack of a
+Q 102
heart stopper, added a point for' his
two lOs and his five-card diainOild ·
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
suit. and bid one no-trump. That effec·
lively shut West out. But the bidding
Soulb
West Nort~ Eall
,..
came around to East, who did have a
!'- .. . ..
All pass
six-card suit, and he kriew his partner· 1 NT
., ... '
must have some high cards (otherwise
, Opening lead: K
the op~nts would have bid.more). .
.
In fact, East can. make 10 triclls in
'
heartsif he guesses the iocation of the
•· .. '
.
. '
heart queen. 'But cailtion overcame '
.boldness. and he passed. That brings plunked tbe heart Kt~g on tne table and-·
·
.. _.;,
us to the defense.
· ' "
· continued with the J&amp;Ck.
only
part
of.
tbe
story.
~.'.':;
That's
After West led the klng of clubs, he
had to figure out wl\ai card East rriipt ' clat:er played low froJil dummy on t6e .
hold that would give him a chance to heart jack. Now East bad to .pass IM.:!
beat the contract. The king of dill· test. He overlook the jack of hearts:•
monds or the ace of spades - ~d not ·making lbe queen In dummy a.winaer;;,;
be enough. If East he.l d eilber ·Of those · to lead a club through lbe di!clarer'll' •
cards,.il would be extremely diffi~ult queen. So declarer made a tr!rk wltli j
to come to seven tricks on defense. But the bel\rl queen. but fi~t the delena;'••
what about the ace of hea~? Yes, ets took seven tricks to
. beat- no;:l
trump.
that would do it. So West
bravely
.
..

.T

12:00 &lt;D MOVll: W.O (2:00)

.

.J64

'IKJ

If you're looking .f or bridge excite- ·

t

. ....
.·......-.·

EAST

· • 7 32

.

• a2J 'Wleeguy Cll L8te

....

NORTH

WEST

II)

-•t...

2 IR trlllor. 814o:J71.23711 bof.
woont,Sp.m.

. .

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.. . . .

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'IQ.B&gt;
• J 32
+964

By James Jacoby

.
Frontttne A1989
· inuroer in a New York
neighborhood becomes a
political lirestorm C
llll 1111 @ MOVIE: 'Tiwow
Momma From The Treln'
CBS Tuesday Movle!PG13)

.. ,

Ron-. TV Somoo, opeofol::a .
In Zlnhh 1110 IIMclng
·
aU•r bnlndl. HouM 08118. alao
•
_,. . opptlonco ropolro. . wv "
304-a71-4:118 Ohio t14-44t-24M.
Roofing · ond Siding. Trlllor ,,.
rvolo
Fr~~ ootlmollo. . · •
Frod
orllo, 304-773-81tt or
MlkoSoyro 304-182-37118.
·
ROIOIJ « coblo loot $'lllng.

Do you co~ PIIIIO tuning
neglld.-. valu.tont toee,you

Booko f - T .
Bookll14 441 4SIO.

'

.

'\~

.· ~e..:.:~~~~~~..,
....

BASEMENT

WATERPROOPINQ
•·
. Unconditional IIIIIIlM guoron- '·.

Loc~o,

wtth, ""' tronlage,
5715-2331.

'

' '

."

+Qt095

ger

DIJl Ro,eenne
Becky wages 'war by giving ·
her mom the silent treatment.

,:_

SCRM\-I.ETS ANSWERS
'1
Woodsy-Crimp- .ldeai-Atrai(J - MYWIFE
"Sir." asked ltle hostess, •are you waiting lor a tall
blond'/" "l.n the greate! ilcheme of ltllngs, I am," sighed
the man. ''but today I'm wa~ing lor MY WIFE."
.

Low-altitude

0a

••k or month.
at $120/mo. Cllllll Hotel.
114 ' 1580.
Stooping ·roorno with cooking.
Aloo troller o-. All -·upo.
.Coli oftor .2:00 p.m., 304·773aur, Mllon wv. .

..

~· ·· .

.----~--...,see . you ltley ask, ~ did

.••..

The Nlgllt Althea's lite is
shattered when st~e is raped
~ someo.ne she knows. !AI

Slo~llf

.
.....,. ,..

6

' I ~ B. E L T. E R lyouwa~sotongto ;- ·.·?
~-T,::..:;,,5,.::..,;1:....:;.1~r,---1 O .Compl~e the chuckle . q~

.

(AI t;l
9:00 a rn 181tn The·Heat 01

Furnished
Rooms

wlllr,. no rwltrlctlonll,

101M

,'oto~
....
_
wfth
..,
~···
_ , rl• 2 be4 ==n.

-Eli.:II:S.

I

aa

Shl~oy

1'1111 liN poll II,. LPN1.eontoct
Terri Hoaaw, OO:O~n or
Point Pl. . .nt,
.
.

•·

~-~~.

Roome tor rent ..

O.J. Whltl Rd. 2 piU. ICNft,

---5. '.
IARN IICNIV RoMing lookll
hO,-,r Income potentloL
Dilallo. (II 80Ua7.aolio Ell. y.
4&amp;12.
IIHr _ , Exclllont Poyl Ao-"'" Procluelo At Home. 1104-

,

...r 10r- ovoloblo

a~o,ef4.24t.aw.

-or tufi.IIN. 11411NZ33. .

'

oncf gorilen opol, hoi

lor
,..,
hcNnl
·aGMtructlon
tllyllum Rood. R,.ll Wiler,
prild rood, -noblo -lietloM. 304-1715-11253. No olngtoLo1o

Real Estate

-olglol - . , , llauro,..
-• port~llllo,
Pl!!d
. fullo.
F.....
- e-811111'
llf4.iMI.71117.

.

mill RL 2.11 Glonwocd,· $11,500.
I04-8'IWII4.
"

Help Wanted

l-11. -.,1111.

1184.

35 Lots &amp; Ac1'811gi .

-

011
_

Aple, For Rent. 11a milo Eoot of
Portlr on 154. 814--38&amp;.0913.

'

tm Teny 1111 oontotnld with
ownt~
· lloiPI IlK, U.200. tt+
'

:li bod,_. mobllo
horM, new praoe end cellar/

Employment Services

AVON • All A,..o I

bulldl!'ll, opt ond
mt ~· Moln St.

"Window
•• " unM
upright
Air- cond 1110.
ond
:zao wt1 UOO. o304-87Sl

- , romodiotid F""'lohed hlltor

i 114 -

QiUiio

.....rp. :104-811-1428.

b~k

;::,:;ri.

Alii. . or-.-~~~~-~
""'"'iil ~,...... 114-

11

Busl ness .
Buildings

Quality

Cll ..., ' Uvoty 114·,;y

located an Pal.,. Bl'lncll Rd.

off - n C!Mk. $20,000, Rrm.
Will . . . lor -rtv .In tholr . tf4.987.o881. '
.
.

_

The trouble with doclors is·

r·•

(!) NQVa Venice is
counting on high-tech
·
. floodgates to save it.lrom
drowning, Stereo. C
llll 18 a2J Reoeue: 9U A
young boy saves his sister
trom belnQ_crus~ed to death
·lly a bus._Q
I!)) f!~meNeWj ·.
,
. ..
QJJ Murder, She w~ It A
Body Mee! A Bo!Jy · ., ,
1211 Celebrltleo Ollstaae VI
Dwight Yoakam and Garth
Brooks along with Roy
Rogers •nd Dale Evans invite
host Lorianne Crook Into
lhelr homes.
8:30
D
Orowtng Pa"!!
Mike atid .Julie get the jitters
as the il;g day approaches.

·;-,

...•""..

'

,g

ALLEY OOP .

• , &lt;:'&gt;

-~·

a

.. .

'polnllngo, toyo, or onllro oojllo

I
I
•I: I I· 1 . 1~~I ::c;,~=t :.:':~tt!~

-

e

••

t

_

-· · t

Entertainment Tlllllghl
Ill)) Mama's Family .
llll 1111 a2J 18 Jeopertlyl t;t
18 ({)) .Major league
aonball
I!)) Crpoalire
.
1221 Major League lht...,.ll
7:35 CD Mojor League Beoebtll
8:00 {2) MOVIE: Waco (2:00)
&lt;D 181 Mlitloc:k Mutinous ·
prison Inmates hold a mock
triai. (R) t:;!•
D
DIJl Who's The
Booe? Tony agrees 'to coach
Angela's vOlleyball team. (FI)

Qeldlng, tar ll!lfo
Cylinder lor 2150 ... .,... .;
or ll'lldl, 1'14-241-1020.
·
dir Chovy. R-ty Neon- ~
Roglol- Ouortor - . . dftloned, $71. 304-171Ui'll7,aftar ·.;
ahnet broM, I'M IU 1111.
4:00PM.
;

1

... ,,

-~·

" "•,_.

aa

I ,.

-

•''

· - -·..1.-·_·..~._·-'.L .·. ...J
. bv filling In lhe milling WQ&lt;do
L- -·..L-·.....1.
you develop from step No: 3 below.

•

7:308{2) Fan~ily . Feud
{!) MajOr League Bll...,.ll

..

,.

-..rraa
~~.....•-:•n. '14-m:
IWgll

or 1 ytia.-

room. 814·24J..

llmot•.lncludll illdgll &amp; liiwn · 1tU Shultz, 14x10 w/expando, 3
bldroorno, 2 bitho, hoatpump,
WCfll.t1444114...
'
.-.rl•ml'!lo concrete lttpa.
Lawn CoNI Sorvloo: rnqwtng, 304-8'111-.2222:
trirnmlntt, eioon-141. - I filii.

...... t14'245o8804, -

·

.
D a Ill)) Curntnt Affair
. (!) (!) MacNeil Lehrer
Nawallour.
..
llll 8 a2J 181 Wheal Of
FonuneCJ
18 ({)) Night Court r;l
I!)) Moneyllne
11J Miami VIce Milk ·Run
1211 M,uslc Row '(Ideo ·
.122! Abbott &amp; Costello
7:Q5 (I) J~ffersona ·

oondlllon. $1,500. 014-ft2-8588

bethe,

·

irn ())'Bportoeenter
PM Milgllztna
·

3 roOrna
totO;
Mx7D ·Ntw Yorker trallw air
....... Oolld '1"k utility bldg,
170x140 I lot, good gordon,
...,... rood1, city wojor, $ mlloo

.· · ·

8 a .DIJl AIC Newa t;l
. (!) l!ody I!~ .
.
(!) 3'2·1 COJiiiCI r;1
Ill) 1D a2J CSI N.,.s r;l
18 ({)) Three's Company
1211 Top Card
122! Hangln' In .
.8:35 &lt;IJ Andy Griffith
7:00 ()) Scahlcrow &amp; Mro. King

54 Mlsc:ellaneous

Situation
Wanted

~ SponaLook

- ,u

YASEE

. .

QJHe·Man
D Charita In Cherge
8:05 (I) lleile!ty HMibllllel
8:30 II()) 181 NIC Nightly NIWI •
.

........

·M 0 D A N

{!) NBA TodaY

bor QO.
bench $500.

-·•':'0

I
I. I I I I .
TENUTAi

'

" ,A.

~ ClAY l. I'OUAit

low to form IQI!r eimplo - " '·

McCOrmrclc
• &lt;D • •r;l. ill llll

l'llco p~ gr01ip (oouo~=-nut·,
lm&gt;wn,
prlca:
•Whltoj

- Itt· 5Ut
f blldc··' ond 4 brown.
11t

•

·=·. . .

'

USED APPLIANCES
dryori, r"-"""""tcn,
rongoo. Sbggo A""'Lincoo,
GOOO

,,

.

Aoor;ango. lottert of . tho
O four
J&lt;rambled -ds t..

1.-110 &lt;D tt.rdclllllle And

Mollohlin Furniture ·I: C.f'l)lle,
S.v. 10% on all Clrptl 1: F...,l.
tuftl . ·In Stock! Cllh 1: carry,
Flnooco Pion o\loo, l14o4411•'11144.,

(

12

TUES., MAY 15

U11o4

· EVENING

uRlvor Ra. ·••lao Stc:..ot Motot. eon . _..73811. •

. 1!4'24Wf55.

~~~II~-· I

M

44e·18't. 1127 3rd. """·. C!llor """· llpollo,U11
.

Apartment
for Rent

44'.

n ooonth old ChoW,

tor oolo

Coli 114oft2·llf1l.

4
·-

T.V.

qulrecl, · M'W

r::~::' s~~.(llA:.. ~ £~s·

Television
Viewing

Almllh llllde, ook china
3 bl.._, troller· In Point Cobin«, onl. Iron! wlol)'llol, •
P l - . :104-17!5-eSIO « 175'
~
!5241.
..

" l

t.~~· lor '1043, QaJ.

1

.

The Daily

Announcements

H A L-U AM J

G Y .J Z

~

'

·•'

. ,,

,., • .-1 •

ED.J

PYI

K G G .J .D
Y

U.JELG
G Y .J Z .

EN U J

J . E•

Gl.

B IJ

lcr • . ,•• CatJt•ll•otol AN APPEAL TO THE

' REASON OF ntE PEOPlE HAS NEVER BEEN ·

!KNOWN TO FAlLIN ntE LONG RI.JN. - J. RUSSEU.
' LOWEU.

~ f'lliW~ 1&lt;-.g , _ Synclo:ato, Inc.

..

~· ·

�1

Paga

.

.

10-The Daly Sentinel

--Local news briefsEMS has five ealls Monday
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to live callS for assistance on Monday.
At 9:55a.m. the Ru Uand unit was called to Meigs Mine No. 31
for Harley Eblin who was taken to Holzer Medical Center,
AI 11:04 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Second Street for
Jenny WUiiamson who was transported to Veterans Memorial
·
Hospital.
The Middleport llDlt, at12: 17 p.m. responded to a calion Pearl
Street for Penny Rigsby who was taken to Veterans.
T)le Pomeroy unit was called to Route 681 at 4:44 p.m. for
Helen Conrad whO was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
·
AI 5:56 p.rri. the M!ddleporthunlt went to Mill Street for Betty
Stoner who was. tr,ansported to Holzer.
·

Lincoln Hill Road. to be closed:
The VIllage of Pomeroy has announced that Lincoln Hill Road
will be closed after 9 a.m. on Thursday from the bottom of the
bill to High Street for repair of the road.

Bidwell man injured in accident
A Bidwell man was injured in a motorcycle crash Monday at 6
p.m. in Green Township on Mitchell Road, .3 of a mUe south of
· the junction of U.S ..35, according to the GaiDa·Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.·
Edwin R. Hodge, 22, was taken by the Gallla County .EMS to
Holzer Medical Center, from where he was transported by
helicopter to the University of Cincinnati Bum Center, where he
was admitted for treatment of second· and third-degree bums
covering 21% of hiS upper body. At last report he was liSted In
fair condition.
Ho'dge, riding a 1980Honda 900motorcycle. was heading north
when he went·off the right side of the road, struck a culvert and
overturned. Hodge continued through two front yards until he
hit a barrel planter, at which point the motorcycle caught fire In
front of a tree. .
The Gallipolis Fire Department, which was called to the
scene, sent one truck and 17 men to put out the fire . .

Man dies following heart' atfack
.
.
.

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'

Catherine Gillespie. 67, of Crab Orchard. W.Va., was round
Monday afternoon suffering a heart attack In his CheVrOlet
pickup truck half a mile west of Able's'on u.s; 35, according to
Rio Grande Pollee Chief Ralph Steinbeck, who was among the
first to give Gillespie CPR.
Gillespie, whose truck was pulling a trailer, was traveling
west when he went Into cardiac arrest. He then pulled off the
road and stopped at the pobit where Steinbeck·and the Gallla
·
County EMS found him.
Gillespie was taken by the EMS to Holzer Medical Center,
where he died. Because Gillespie's heart attack was neither a
part of a crash nor the cause of one, HMC did not release any
information on the precipitating condltjons of G!ll~sp!e's heart
attack, claiming p~tien! coQ!kle!lliality.
,,

More rain o._ way

By BOB HOEFLICH ·
Perhaps, you remember readIng In this column recently about
VIrgil King,
Kingsbury,
well -k now
.Meigs
who suffered a
severe throat
laceration In a
tractor accident
near his b,ome.
II was thought at first that
Virgil had jumped from the
overturning tractor. However,
his wife reports that through
communication with VIrgil- it's
done by writing since Virgil is
unable to spealt - .that be stayed
on the tractor while It turned over
and was still on It when It became
upright again. ·
VIrgil was driven to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he_was
in Intensive care for several days
before being moved 1o a Columbus hospital tor specialized treat·
ment. · He Is now at Riverside
Hospital; Room 7004, 3545 Olentangy Road, Columbus: Ohio
43214, Virgil has , undergone
surgery there - his voice box is
fractured in two locations - but
IS still unable to speak. His doctor
feels that eventualll! speech will
return- the quality of his voice
will be different, according to the
doctor'.s opinion.
Incldentai~V, VIrgil will be at
the Columbus hospital for probably another week In case you
want to send along a card. Mrs.
King will be instructed In how to
provide proper ·c are for him
before he Is returned home.
Howard and Phyllis Chase
Russell, foriner Meigs residents,
will be observing their 60th
wedding anniversary on June 7.
Howard is a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Phyllis, a graduate of Pomeroy
High School and I!leY were
married just after their respective graduations 60 years ago.
Phyllls' fa'ther, John Chase, and
her brother, Glenn, Incidentally,

Continued from page 1
By United Press lnlernalloaal
slight risk of severe thunder- is of Demjanjuk.
Ohio Is In line for another round storms through Wednesday
The young man in the photo·
of significant rain Tuesday night morning.
graph has balding blond hair
and Wednesday.
Early morning temperatures while the rest of the men have full
The Nallonal Weather Service WE!re quite mild under a deek of heads of dark hair.
said ~aln would begin· to fall mld·level clouds. Readings
"When you have 'seven ,people
acr0$S Ohio Tuesday )light .as a ranged from the mid .50s to the with black .hair and one with
storm ·system frorri Texas to lower .· 60s. ·.Ut tie more than a · blond.ha!r and not much of 11. it's ·
IllinoiS brings heavy ainounfs of trace of rain fell overnight In the like putting a black am.ong seven
rain to Ohio.'
north. Some showers continued whites or a while among· seven
The weather service ~IIi .oil.\, . to linger al'ong the lakeshore blacks.'' Sheftel said·.
half to olle inch of rain would be from Cleveland east.
Sheflel also criticized the way
common statewide. bUt that
the
photo spreads were shown to
The ·storm system will be ·
under a thunderstorm or two the moving to the East Cnast Thurs- witnesses and the fact that
amounts could reach nearly two day. Strong high pressure will DemJanJuk was not informed of
inches. The northern. half of the then build Into the area on the proceedings and therefore
state will be most prone to the. Friday. The early signs of a did not h11ve hiS lawyer present.
higher amounts. ·'.
·
The defense attorney charged
pleasant weather w,eekend .is
that in violation of recognized .
In addition to the .rain, strong favorable.
practice, some of the witnesses
thunderstorms and possible tor·On the early morning weather
nadoes will encompass a farge map, low pressure was over the were told one of the pictures was
part of the Plain$ and Mississippi · Texas Panhandle with a warm of Demjanjuk.
Valley.
·
....
front reaching -Into southern
Some of these storms could Illinois, then curved back south
creep into Indiana and Ohio's to Alabama. A fast moving low
western counties Tuesday night. pressure center was over lower
Veterans Memorial
As a result of this potential, tbe Michigan with a weak front
Monday AdmiSsions- None.
westPrn · half of Ph!o is l!nder a trailing southwps I to Missouri.
Monday Discharges - Brad
Robinson, Thomas Crow, Teresa
Bartlett, Catherine Crist, and
c_o_n_tin_ue_d_f_ro_m....;p:....a.;;,ge_1_ _ __ Edgar Brewer.
dlclable weather can dramatl· nearly $7.4 million more In
To end mUJTiages
cally lll)pact the finances of a earnings.
company whose earnings are
Other non-operating items also
A petitiOn for dissolution has
extremely sensitive to the contributed $6.6 million to Coflied In Meigs County
been
weather.
.
lumbia's earnings, resulting in a . Common Pleas Court by Edward
"We base our .projections on ret.urn ·on equity of 18.6 percent. , A. Bell, Rutland, ana Dreama D.
what are . COnSidered normal. With0\11 those factors, Colum·
Bel~ Rutland.
temperatures In ' ohto,'' Tilley bla's ·r eturn on equity in 1989
Rebecca Ann Kloes, Pomeroy,
said. ''Major deviation in would ·have been 12.8 percent,
Is seeking a dlvarce from Jon
weather. both colder and Tilley said.
Walter KJ~s, Middleport.
warmer, significantly affect
The average return allowed by
earnings."
the Public Utilities Commission Judgment sought
December's temperatures, 35 of Ohio In 1989 was )4.2 P!!rcent.
percent ,lower ihan -normal, meStephen Ostrander, spokesA complaint has been filed In
ant temperatures for all of 1989 man for the Ohio Office of
the Meigs County Court of
were 3.8 percent lower than Consumers' Counsel, wb!ch bas
Common Pleas by the Leading
normal in Ohio. That meant more 1/Pposed Columbia's rate reCreek Conservancy District, Ru·
use of natural gas for healing and quests, · . disputed Tilley's
!land, against the VIllage of
assessment.
Rutland for 'faJiure to pay in ,
accordance with a water contract between the two parties.
.
'
Soulh Central Ohio ,
Leading :, Creek is seeking
Showers · and thunderstorms
Showers and thunderstorms Thursday. with fair weather $13,496.28 for delh!qlll!nt water
likely Tuesday night. with a low · Friday and Sat:urday. Highs will . blll.s, and all'" order mandating
In the mid 60s. Chance of rain 60 range from 65 to 75 Thursday, and compelling installation of
percent. Showers and thunder- from the 60s to the low 70s Friday properly approved backflow destorms likely Wednesday~ with and In the 70s Saturday. Over- vices at the ·expense of the
highs in the mid 80s. Chance of night lows will range from 55 to65 VIllage of Rutland.
rain is 70 percent.
early ThurdsaY, from the low 40s
Exlended Forecast
to the low ~ Friday and Sum sou@ht
Thutsday through Saturday
Saturday mornings. ~
Alpine Credit Union, Orem,
Utah Is seeking $3,538.60 from
Samuel E. McKinney Jr., Por·
tland, In the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
friend, Mary Lou Brown, Colum- ·
Kathleen
bus; and several nieces and , · LiM11!e&amp; iMued .·
Kathleen (Kacey) Jones, ·so, nephews.
Services willlhe held Wednesdied Monday at Mann Nursing .
Marriage licenses have been ·
day at 8:20 p.m. at Shoemaker
Home in Columbus.
Issued In Meigs County Probate
She was the daughter of Clyde Funeral Hoine, · 2830 Cleveland
Court to the folloWing couples.
V. Jones and Meld Bailey Jones. ' Ave. at Laka Street In Columbus.
Donald Reed Duval~ 21, Long
She was retired from National 1 Graveside services will be held In Bottom, and Beth Ann ~nman, 34,
Beech Grove Cemetery on Thurs·
Electric CoD In Columbus.
·
Chester: Stephen Aaron White, :
'
She Is survived' by two sisters, · day all p.m.
23, Reedsville, and Kenda K.
Friends may call'altheJuneral
Ruth Walters, Columbus; and :
Caney, 20, Middleport; and
home
on Wednesday from 2·4 Lawrence Randall Upacomb, 34, ,
Martha ~aggy, Pomeroy; .a :
brother, Durward A. Jones, ' p.m. and 7-9 p.m,
Pomeroy. and Jill Lorraine Law- ·
J"urriepa, Calif.; a very dear
renee, 37, Pomeroy.
.

Trussell...

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continued from page 1

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Ohio Lottery

Reds rally,
edge Pirates
in 11th, 5-4

~

the Middleport Housing CorporaThe vUiage entered Into a fire •
uon to own the property. The protection mutual aid agreement ~·
village In advertising the sale with tbl' village of VInton.
will reserve the right to reject
A discussion on trash handllnJ ·
any and all bids.
and the restrictions of the multi· ·
Appointed .to t~. Middleport eounty SollCI Waste District wai!
originally owned the lirst llle:a·
Racrl'~tlon Commission to !Ill held during the meeting and~:,
.Gilmore proposed.a.meetlng witli ~
Uon of WSAZ now in Huntington,
vacancies created by tHe local haulers apari~ from tb"·:
W. Va. Coincidentally, yours . the
reslgpat!on of Judy Crooks and
..,
truly lives In tha t Pom~roy
John' Hood, were Bob McClure regular council meeting to dis- :cuss the prob1ems.
,: ·
location Qn High St .
•
for the term to expire in De·
ceinber,
1991.
and
Rick
Edwards
Gilmore
suggested
the
poss
Mr. and Mrs. Russ!'ll reside at
for the term· to expire 1n ·De· blllty· of developing a com~
37 Buccaneer Drive, Lush!ng,
cember. 1993. Brian Conde Is the pile for· leaves , ·grass clippinp ~
Florida , 34788.
r
· and other nlateriafs wliich woullt:
o her me rl'l be r • 0 f 1 he disintegrate into mulch nl'ai' the·.·
·Commission . •
C. E. (Chuck) Blakeslee, who
The possibility lif installing a sewage . lagoon in lowet:·
served for many years as the
Middleport.
.
::
Meigs County Agricultural Agent
computer system was discussed.
The Middleport Recreation ne,..
and who is currently executive . It was noted hat the Manage- partmenl's .K run to take pl&amp;c(".' ·
5
ment Advisory Service of the
•
director of the Meigs County
Stale
Auditor's
Office
wilL
proIn
Middleport
on Sal\'fday wa~ .
Regional Planning CommiSsion.
vide consultation services for not noted.
·•:
wilt· be observing his 80th· birth·
more than $3,000. A representaThe mayor's report showeft •
day on Thursday, May 17. A 50
live of that office willcoineinand receipts ior April of $5,973&lt;:
year resident of Meigs County,
Attending were Mayor Hoffman; :
Blakeslee resides at -1636 Lincoln
evalu~te the needs of the village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, a"" .
·and then makff recommend a·
·~
Heights. Pomeroy. · .
lions, it w~s reported.
Council members, Dewey Hont:;
· The Meigs County Medical
Preliminary · 'plans Ior the ton. Jim Clatworthy ; Bob Gil; :
Middleport levee Improvements more, Paul Getard, Jaclt Satter~·
Society . has help an organlzatlonal session and the new
were presented by the ·ma:Yor field , and William Walters:
president is Dr. James Witherell
who noted that the proposed cost
. who ·succeeds Dr. E. s. Villani.: ' of the work excee&amp; ti:V $35,000 the
S
-~
eva. Other new officers are Dr . . $37,500· amount which Is avalla-·
.. ,.
•
Douglas Hunter, vice president . bleat this time to do the job. The
Dally stOck prices
::
and Dr. Wilma Mans!!eld is
village earlil'r this year received
(As o110: ....
... a.m.
· )
,'-•
secretary-treasurer.
a grant for the project from thl' Bryce and Mark Smith
-~
Ohio Department of Natural
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
:~
What's with the running ?
Resources, Division of
••
·,
·A
E
1
p
'
Roger Williams, Recreation. Waterways.
c
m lectr c ower ............. .. 3W'·.
11
Director for the Middleport VII·
o~nc ,voted to take an option
AT&amp;T ........... ,.... ......... ....... ,42*:
lage Recreation Department, ~~ ~ ~-property .owned by Dale Ashland Oil .. ........ ..... :........ .37~ ·
says that registration Is lagging
c o..,on adjacent to . Middle·
Bob Evans ........................ : .ll~f
0 ~lll$fe~ali. 'f\le selllng · Charming Shoppes .............. 10% ·
for Saturday's 5-K run being
staged by the departml'nt.
Pr eke s
• arid the village City Holding Co ................ ... 14.* ·
There wlll be a. number of 1oo a s1x month Sl,QOO option.
""
1...... .. .. ... ... . .. .20~)t.
· F edera· 1 .,.ogu
trophies awards in six age groups
The first rea,ding of a'\ ordl·
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ..... :...... ., ... 35~
for both men and women runners
nance regarding sick leave pol· · Heck's .. c.............................. 2*·
who are In the top two places in . Icy was given. It specifies that
Key Centurion ...... .............. 14~ ,
their respective age groups.'
·there wlil be no limitation· on'the La d • E 0 d
n s
......... .. , ............. 16
Participation medals will be number of days which· can be
accumulated
in
sick
leave
but
Limited
Inc
.................. ..... .4 5 ~
presented to all entrants in the
Multimedia Inc ................... 81'4
run which will begin at 10 a .m. at
~axbbRi
est&amp;auMrants ................ ,. 2%1
the corner of Walnut St., and ~:~~~~~c~ !~p~~~:e:no:e~~~~
o ns
yers ................ 16',!
North Second Ave.
ment can receive payment. The Shoney's Inc ........... ..... :...... 14~
If you haven't registered you · payment on retirement is limited · Star Bank ....................... .... 20%'
can do so by contacting Williavs to 50 percent of the accumulat!'d Wendy's Jntl.. .. : ....... ..... ....... 4 ~
at 992-6782 or you can even lime up to a maximum of 60days. ' Worthington Ind ................. 23')/~
I'egiSter.Salurday morning at the
site from 8 a.m. to 9: 45 a.m:
Pre- registration is $7 while r&lt;'gistration on race day is $9. :· .
There will be a speclaimeeting
Racine Legion to meet
There '?'ill be a r~gular meet· '· of theChesterTown,shipTrustee!!
Lancaster residents are suffer·
ing of the · Raclrle American on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
lng with the effects from the
Legion Posi 602 on Thursday ai Dance slaled
Tbe Bells and Beaus Western'
effects of the burning .of an
7:30 p.m. Refreshments wili be
served.
·
Square Dance Club wlll sponsor a •
estimated 1.2 million old tires
dance Friday from 8·11 p.m. at
stored In that city. Officials CCL to meet .
feared that the tires would one
The Middleport Child Conser· the senior citizens center in
day burn and as usual nobody did
vatlon League will meet Thurs- Pomeroy. Keith Rlppeto. Par·
anything !I bout II . Now Is that par day at 7,p.m. at thehomeofHelen kersburg, W.Va. wlll be the
caller. The ·dance is open to all .
for the courue or what? Do keep Blacku!OJ;l.
,
wester square dancers.
smiling.
Trustees to meet

Registration lagging
for Saturday's. 5-K run

Demjanjuk....

to Buckeye State
\

Tuesday, May 15, 1990

Pomaroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Beat of th,g Bend

-.-

Daily Number

908
Pick-4
4465

Page 3
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Pf'

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Vol.40.

2 Sections, 14 Pagn 25 Cent1
A Muhimedia lric. New111-s:-8r
'

.i;

Columbia ·denies it padded
•
pnce paid .for ·· natural gas

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·'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Columbia Gas ·of Ohio denies It
overstated IIJe price II paid for
natural gas this winter during
state hearings on Its latest rate
_increase request.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Wll·
l!a m Spratley said Wednesday an
$11.4 million rate increase Co·
lumbia was awarded last month
. should be reduced by $3.9 million
beCause of the overstatement.
· :;lpratley, who has called for a
. $17 ·million decrease In Columbia
r!ltes, said the utility's wrllten
tes tlmony !nfol'med the Public
UtUltles Commission of Ohio on
Feli.'16tbat it used a priceof$2.10
for 1,000 cubic feet of gas ,in
calculating its capital expenses.
But on Feb. 13, Columbia's
supplier, an afflllated company
. called Columbia Gas Transmls·

•.

5

-----Announcements

' ·

SIGN SIGHTING - Tom Hazlett Slg~~~~ brought In a boom
equipment Tuesday to take a .red target board marked with an
•'M" for McDonalds high In the sky. The sign was taken to different
heights with McDonald olflclaly driving both sides of the riYer to
check lor Ylsablllty.

.

•

Hospital news

Cold weather .....

,.

•

a

• \ .0•

A long-term care ombudsman
program Is being Initiated In
Meigs County as a part of the
Options for Elders rural demonstration program - recently
started h\ eight southeastern
Ohio Counties. ,
As explained by Cathy Stevens,
local program eoordlnator whose
office Is Iii Marietta. the Regional
Long-term Care Ombt~dsman
Program , will . be working to
' improve the quality of life which
older persons receive In their
homes, in community-based set·
lings like adult day care fac!ll·
ties, and In nursing homes.
"Older American's Month In
Ohio Is the best setting for
recognizing what has become a
valuable· and dynamic regional
long-term care ombudsman program." ·said Stevens. ,

By United' Press Inlernallonal
Abortion loomed as lkey issue
in the gubernatorial campaign In
Pennsylvania and the U.S. Senate race In Oregon as primary
voters in those states selected
Republican and Dempcratic can·
dldates for the November
elections.
In addition to primaries · In
Pennsylvania and Oregon Tues·
day, Nebraska Democrats chose
between two candidates they feel
can defeat vulnerable GOP Gov.
Kay Orr. who is suffering from
very low popularity ratings.
In Pennsylvania, Democratic

Throughout most of the winter
Columbja paid very close to the
projected price, he said. By
mid-February, gas was cheaper,
and twas when Columbia began
paying the lower figure, he_said.
But Spratley said the rates
should be set according to the low
figure. "Rates are set for the
future, so we feel the most.
appropriate number IS the current number."
Columbia officials said Man·
day the ut!Uty hopes to Increase
the $11.4 million hike !I was
granted in ApriL The utllily had , .

program provides ·general,
Ombudsmen follow-up on coni·
plaints registered against lpng- consumer-oriented Information
about relatell services 'available
ierm care !acll!lles, like nursing
in the community . For example,
homes or adult care homes. as
advice on how to choose a nursing
well as with community-based
care services, like home health home Is available to callers
Ombudsmen services in Ohio
care or home delivered meals,"
formerLv !ocu~d on n11rs!ng
she explained.
The. toll free telephone number 'hom" care. As part Of the
lor the program Is 1·800-833-0830. recently enacted Eldercare lnltl·
All complaints and personal alive of the 'Celeste administraInformation remains tion, the dulles of the. regional
ombudsman programs
were
confidential.
Ombudsman services are pro· expanded to cover services provided free ol charge and the goal. vided In the community and in
advised Stevens, is to resolve the homes of older persons.
Community-based care in·
complalnty alter they are flied.
She stressed that complaints eludes nursing, home delivered
may be CUed by Individuals meals, adult day care, home
receiving services, family health aide, transportation as·
slstance, therapy services, and
members. or others.
. Stevens emphasized lhl!l the respite care.

•

·cov. Robert Casey triumphed
easily and Republican hopeful
Barbara Hafer won a s\lrpr(s·
ingly close victory; setting up the
gubernatorial election ra,ce.
In Oregon, Sen. Mark Hatfield.
R-Ore., and wealthy central
Oregon businessman Harry
Lonsdale, a Democrat, won their
Senate primaries and will face
each other in November.
In Nebraska, Lincoln attorneybusinessman Blll Hoppner and
Ben Nelson wereJn a virtual dead
heat for the Democratic guberna·
torlal nominal ion with 99 percent

of the vote counted. Hoppner held
a 44,272-44,037 edge over Nelson.
with both receiving 27 percent of
the vote.
Nebraska law provides for an
automatic recount if the candl·
date totals are within 1 percen·
tage point of each other. Elec·
lions officials said additional
absentee ballots will be counted
through noon Thursday. ·
Democratic strategists said
they were confident Orr could be
be~ten in November, no matter
which candidate won the Ne·
braska race.

Prosecutor looks into ·vehicle use

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) Madison County Prosecutor
David Picken Is_ looking Into
allegations that Attorney Gen·
eral Anthony Celebrezze may
have v!ol!lted the law by misusIng slate vehicles.
·
Picken said yesterday that the
allegations . against Celebrezze,
the Democratic nominee for
governor, will have to· be
"viewed and reviewed", the
StUiwater pollee Lt. Kirk ·Mit·
Cleveland
Plain Dealer reported
telstet. Evacuees were taken by
Wednesday.
bus to a shelter the Red Cross ~t
Picken declined to speclilate
up in a downtown building where
whether
Celebrezze broke the
power had been restored, offl·
law
when
.he used state vans and
cials said.
'
trailers
to
'transport old cars he
''There are homes )hat. the roof
purchased.
Celebrezze Ia said to
Is completely gone,'' sal() Crystal
be
a
·
car
buff who enjoys
Shedrick, a Stillwater re$khint.
restoring
old
cars.
"We· have several major gas ·
Celebrezze has admitted to
.' leaks in the area. You~an'tget to .
using
poor Judgment and paid the
the south .side of town. There is
stale
$700,
the amount he deter· ·
debris everywi!Elre." ·
•
mined
to
be the commercial
Ham radio operators reported
renlal
value
of using the
seeing large lrees snapped In
equlment.
half.
Because the vehicles Celeseveral other tornadoes were
used were maintained by
brezze
reportedly sighted ellewhere \n
. northcentral, northeastern and
western Oklahoma, and some
storms accompanying them pro- at London, Picken has jurladlc·
lion for any pi'Oieclldon.
duced golfball·slze hall.

~~:n~f~:,::.r::~ ~~~;~:::~

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&lt;&gt;

HIGH IN mE SKY- The big "M" for McDonalds could be seen
tor miles ill the Bend area Tllesday Ill company olllclala came to
town for a sign sighting. t has been rumored for months thai
'McDonalds would be .~omlng to Pomeroy but yeslerday'a actlYity
was the flnt real sign of anything happening al the propoeed slle on
West Main. Ro&amp;eoe Milia who owns the restaurants In Ripley and
Spencer•.W. Va. Ia plallnlng the local operation and advised that an
anooUDCement wlll be torlbcomlngln about a week. He said that he
Is currently still In the "pennltllng phase." The old Pomeroy depot
Is on part of the land which will be .used for the proposed
COD811'\1CIIon,

By Untied Press lnlernatlonal
Torrential rain, tornadoes, hail
and floods !n!llcted damage on a
widening area of the nation's
m!dsE:Ction. while Texas. Arkan·
sas and Louisiana wearily extended their battles against roD·
!ng floodwaters.
In northcentral Oklahoma; two
tornadoes. hit Stillwater late
Tuesday, one Qf !bern bouncing
up and down across town and
injuring at .least 11 people. ·A
4-year-old was killed- during the
tornado; early reports ~uggested
he had fallen from a car speeding
away from the twister, authorities said ,Wednesday.
More than 200 people were
~tvacuated from damaged homes
)r from areas where power lines
)n the ground po~ a threat. sa.ld

Jones

.~

·'This is Important new evl·
dence and shows that Columbia's
rate hike was unjustified;" Spra·
tley said. "We are asking the
PUCO to look at this Issue
again."
Columbia spokesman Alan
Crockett accused Spratley of
trying to mislead the public. He
said Spratley is basing his
ligures on the Inexpensive gas

price Columbia paid starting in
mid -February, not on the price
Columbia paid during December
and January .
Crockett said Columbia's writ·
ten testimony was based on
.
'
projections made
In December.

asked for a $43.9 m!llion rate
hike.
Ronald Tilley , Columbia's
chairman and chief executive
officer, said the utility likely will
file a new rate increase request ,
its third in three years. later this
year .
TUley says Columbia Is
strapped financially despite 1989
earnings showing the company
made $45 mlllion - 50 percent
more than allowed by the PUCO.
Tilley said an 18.6 percent
ret urn on equity reported in 1989
was inflated liy one· third because of extreme cold In De·
cember and an accounting error.
He said the company expects to
make a 6 percent to 8 percent
return this year, and wlll cut
expenses by $10 million.

Long-term care·· ombudsman lleavy
•
prOgram to be initiated here ratns
pound
Ohio

Tornadoes, rain .i nflict more ·
damage· in Texarkana· region

--Area deaths--

l,

slon Corp., informed Its custo·,
-mers, including Columbia Gas,
that !I was charging $1.21 per
1,000 cubic feet, Spratley said.
He said the discrepancy al·
lowed Columbia to show $7.8
million more in capital expenses
than It paid. That resulted in ·a
$3.9 million windfall for Colum·
bla In terms of net· Income,
Spmtley said.

Governor, Senate contests top
.May primaries in . ihre~ s.tates

------Weather-----

•

•

a1

-~-

Stoe
: k·

·· Low ' tonlcht In mid 60s.
Chaoce of rain 100 percent.
Thurtlday's hich near 70.
Chancie of rain 80 percent.

Picken · said his .decision to
prosecute would be based on
whether the action was an
Isolated Incident or part of a
larger pattern - and whether
using the vehicles for that
purpose Is actually a crhne.
"If It Is, as he says, an Isolated
instance of poor Judgment, !I
likely will be paid for In No·
vember by the reaction of voters
at the polis," Picken said.
·'If justice Is what we are
trying to achieve, It would

appear to me that Justice is
served," Picken told the Plain
Dealer. "It's been served by It
becoming public. you folks prlntl~g it, and by his public admls·
slon that he used bad judgment.
"I think (hat has caused him
more personal 'damage than
anything else, •• Picken added.r
Picken, chall'man of the Mad!·
son County GOP. denied he had
been pressured by state Republl·
can officials to act on the
Celebrezze matter.

Local news briefs-Board ·approves three contracts
Three .employees were. given contracts and a substitute
tea~her was hired at the recent meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Education held In the board offices.
Given contracts ,were Nancy Carnahan, secretary, conl!nu·
lng; Faith Varney, multihandicapped class, twohyears
· contract; Shirley Wlllla, severely behaviorally handicapped
aide, two year contact. VIctoria Peavley was . hired as a
substitute teacher on an as needed basis.
· Textb&lt;i6ks for English, spelling and handwriting were
adopted and there were appropriation modWcatlons on the
Continued on page 7

By u.,tted Pl'l!lii!. lnlerna&amp;ioaal
Ohioans . whose only contact
with severe weather this year
was- watching television scenes
of the devastation in the Southwest were getting a flrst·hand
.taste Wednesday , with heavy
rains and a flash flood watch In
effect.
And even worse weather was
on the way: strong thunderstorms were pounding an area
from Missouri to eastern Indiana
at dawn Wednes(!ay ;with numerous reports of hall, torrential
rains and significant lightning.
The severe weather area was to
move Into the· Buckeye State
later in the day, wlthwesternand
southwestern· counties at the
highest , risk for severe
thunderstorms.
At dawn, a line of showers and
Isolated thunderstorms was moving across northwest and central
Ohio, With another line moving
over the southwest counties. The
National Weather Service said
those storms came from a
tremendous outflow of energy
from the more Intense storms
over 1ndlana.
Ear~v morning temperatures
· were In ll)e 60s. Overnight
rainfall totaled from a tenth of jln
inch to 0.53 Inches reported at
·
Dayton. ·
· Most areas of the state were
expected to pick up at least I inch
of rain, bu I the NWS Sl!id some
could get as much as 3 Inches in
severe thunderstorms.
In addition to a flood watch for
the entlre·state, there were flood
warnings lor the Tiffin and St.
Joseph rivers in northwest Ohio.
At mid-morning, the Tiffin River
was near Its flood stage of 11 f~t
at Stryker; while the St. Joseph
was expected to exceed its 12-foot
flood stage at Montpelier later In .
the day .
·
.
The showers and thunderstorms will be ending from th!'!
west Thursday and a falrbu I cool •
start to the weekend wUI beglri
Friday. Temperatures will be
mainly in the 60s on Friday and
gradually warm up into the 70s
and low80sbySunday.Overnlght
lows wUI drop into the40sand low
50s ~urlng the same period.
While the majority of OhiO Is
not in need of rainfall, moisture
reserves In east-central Ohio
sho.uld benefit, as the area WIIS
noting a mUd drought as llf
sunday.
Between showers Wednesdjly
afternoon. the high humidity and
mUd temperatures werre to push
the lives IIK:k safety Index Into the
alert category In the souih.
Whl1e some drying should
occur Friday and Saturday when
fair skies are expected. more
rain will return late Saturday
Continued on page 7

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