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                  <text>•
Pege-14-The

•
Wedoesdav. May 16. 1990

Serttillel

.

Eblin, Mark wedding .scheduled
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carr,
Ames, Iowa, are announcing the
engagement and marriage of
their dauahter, Michelle Mark,
to James ·Eblln, son of Kenneth
and Donna Eblin, Rutland.
Tbe wedding will tal!e place

Poppy Days set h)' Unit

Sunday In ,Ames, Iowa. An open
teteptlon will be held on June 2 at
6 p.m. at the senior citizens
center In Pomeroy.
The coup~ will be residing In
Lancaster where they both are
employed.

Wahama Alumni 'plan for dinner

Daily Number
538
Pick-4
5094
Super Lotto

1

P~s

Pool passes available

wlll begin at 9 p.m. with music by
The P&gt;~rty Factory.
Tickets will be sold at Fruth
Pharmacy In MIC!dleport.
Farmer's Bank In Pomeroy, and
People' s ·Bank In Point Pleasant.
Mason, and New Haven, W.Va
Reservations must be made
by Saturday.

The Wahaina Alumni banquet
and daJIQI!' Will be held May ~6 at
the M~ Lodge In Point Pleasant, w.Va
.
A dinner of prime rib,
potatoes:·:Vegetable, salad,
rolls, dessert, coffee and tea ·
· Will be served at 6 p.m.
Tile Midnight Cloggers will
perform after dinner and a dance

I

poppy queen; Jessica H'amUto!\.
The Ladles Aux!l!ary of the
junior miSs poppy; Ashley HaDrew Webster Post Unit 39
milton,
poppy princess: and
AmeriCan Legion will observe
PQwers, little miss
Brittany
Poppy Days on May 24, 25, and 26
poppy
.
In Pomeroy. •
• ··
The poppies are made by
veterans ai Sandusky Sailors and
Soldiers Home and are made by
,
hand.
Pool passes to London Pool In
The auxiliary used the money
SyracU'se
will go on saleSahirday
donated 'for Veterans · at the
at
9
a
.m
.
homes imd In the hospitals, a~
The pool will OI!E!n May 26 and
well as for the children and youth
more
!nfm;matlon may be obof the area.
.
tained
by calllng Zane Beegle at
Poppy royalty for this year
247-4455.
Includes Grace Pratt, senior

Ohio Lottery

Guinther's
•
•
Jersey
IS
retired

1-5-6-8-22-30
Kicker 568731

3-4

•

Voi.40,.No.2410

I

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IIBII'IUCY·Eodl o l - I C h w - - il ,_ired ID bo

.. AIMIIt
~ aYIIIble for ulo in-h K._ s..... '-'"' opeclfJcally notld
In thil ocl. t1 .,. do run OYt of an odlllrtiaed - · we wll- yau your
~of II tomPiflbAe Item, when •v•M.tM, ••ft;c:dltQ the 111M aavingl
'/' or a ralnchack which will onthlo Y'lU to pyr- the odllr1fn• 111m II
· ·· the ~ pric:o within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon wll bo
f_ oeeoptod per 111m .PY&lt;Chaao!l.

,,

~~ COPYRIGHT 1990 • .THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND.

C,

' ..

· PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, •MAY 13, THROUGH •
SATURDAY, MAY 19&gt;1990, IN POMEROY, OHIO

i

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

. Lawrence Couniles were adSenUnel Staff Writer
dressed . by Robert S. Baker,
·· Aspecls of six Meigs County manager of the Ohio Abandoned
and two Gallla County mine Mined Land Program, and rectar.eclamatlon projects at a pro- illation officials from the Athens
posed cost of $1,287,703 were· and Jackson offices.
·&gt;There was a slide presentation
discussed at a Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, Division of showing the various sites In the
Reclamation, public meeting .two districts which are under
held Wednesday night al the conslderatton for corrective
Athens County Extension Office. work under the current reclamaThe public meeiing dealt with tion plan.
problems crealed by surface and
Baker explained that Ohio coal
underground .mine sites a ban- operators have paid into the
doned .prlor to August 1977, a11d Federal Abandoned Mined
proposed reclamation once the.· Lands Program a total of $132
federal&gt;government makasfunds million but that Ohio has only
~,received $85 mUIIon W.ilh the reSt·
-available.
Projects In both the Athens and being held .In a "trust." &gt;He said
Jacksqn Dtstrlc~s. which Include that Ohio had gotten $15 million a
Meigs, Gallla, Washington, year up to 1986 ,but that funds
Athens, Noble, Jackson and have diminished since that time

and are now to the place where office', Division of Reclamation,
the state is looking at about $6 discussed the Athens District
million thiS year. .
projects Including the ones In
Detailing accomplishments Meigs and Gallla Counties. At·
since the program began )n 1978, tending from Meigs County to
Baker said that 97 mine shafts provide Input on projecls were
have been closed, 4,100 acres Meigs County Commissioners
reclaimed, 1200 underground David Koblentz and Manning
coal areas corrected and 5,900 Roush, Kitty Darst, Betty Gilkey
-surface acres restored with two and Charlene and Bob Hoeflich.
mUllan trees being ·planted on
Darst and Gilkey lalked about
reclaimed land. He said that one retaining wall problems created
third of all the major problem by mine water draining onto
areas have been eliminated.
their property on North Fourth In
Baker said that Congress is Middleport, wh!le the Hoefllchs'
110w in the process of allocating discussed the Wolfe-Swisher profunding ta the . states and 'that ject which relates . to . Legion
projects selected for reclamation . Terrace .and . the problems of
will be miide on t·he basis of drainage from an oldmlne!ri that
priority, with health .and saf!"IY area.
being the biggest priority.
The projects In Meigs County,
Mi.tch Farley ?f the Athens most of which are in the final

•

. Than A LOt" sips
throughout the store
, and stock up on the

_·,

•

NONRETURNABLE
CAFFEINE FREE DIET
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI, ..

I

0.6% LOWFAT

K
Skim

•KALJtA

Head Lettuce

Diet Pepsi ·
or Pepsi Cola

Gallon

Each

,, .•... ·'
.

-

'..

'
KROGER GRADE A LARGE EGGS 18-CT... 8110

B·u y ONE
FROZEN 6-0Z. FISH PORTIONS
OR 6.75-0Z.

Mrs. Paul's
Fish Sticks
GET ONE

THIS IS NOT A BuY ONE-GET ONE FREE ITEMI

· 12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... $3.48
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEMI

THIS IS NOT A BUY' ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM I

BUY ONE

BUY ONE

12-0Z. PKG.

FROZEN 1-LB. PKG.

Armour ·
Hot lq8 ,.
GET ONE

BUY ONE

house-to-house
check. of dog tags
.

14-0Z. PKG. WHITE, WHEAT OR ONION

.Buzz Brand
Beef Patties
GET ONE

Kailg•oo

'

IN THE PRODUCE DEPT.

.BUY ONE
16-0Z. JAR ALL V1\RIETIES

I

.

Marzetti's .
. -Dressing
GET ONE

BUY
ONE
20-CT. PKG.

BUY
ONE
8-0Z. BOX

Kroger
Trash Bag;s
GET ONE

Kroger
Cheese Bits
.GET ONE

~

'

BUY ONE
18-0Z. BOX

•

•

· Vaseline. . Intensive
.
Care Bath Beads
GET ONE :

FREE!
FREE!
FREE!
FREE!
..,.........
..
.BUY ONE
MCCORMICK'S IAC-N.tHIPS OR ·BITS 3.26-0Z.

KROGER LITE-N-SOUR CAI:AM 8-0Z.

-~-

ADJUSTABLE SOLID 7-0Z.

Renuzit
Air Freshener
GET ONE

BUY ONE
· FROZEN 8-0Z.

Old El Pao
Burrito
'GET ONE

.

BUY ONE

.

FROZEN 6-CT.. PKG.

.

Cole's Butter Flavored
Garlic Rolls
GET ONE

BUY ONE
FROZEN 13-0Z.

su·perPretiel
·soft Pretzels
GET ONE

FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE!

MCCORMICK'S SALAD SEASONING 2.12-3.71-0Z.
. , . . . . . .I

,.

By JULIE E. DilLON
SenUilel Ne911a Staff
· · A couhty,-wlde holiseclo-house
.check of dog tags will begin soon
In Meigs County according t.o the
Meigs · County . Board Q.f
Commissioners.
. Commissioner David Koblentz, during Wednesday's commission meeting, .reporled that
message came from Meigs
County Dog Warden Wayne Roseberry because of a number of
complaints from county resic1ents stating dogs ar~ running

Pocket Bread
GET ONE

~-

leader. Above, Bob Jleer;le fl!lr;erprlllts ,Jesalea
Da,ls. other scouts llllfler.printed were Sarah
Kloes, Becky Houser, Sarah Ho-r, Melllaa
Houser, and .JesUee Johns011, left to right.

·Meigs Cou~ty ·d~g warden plans

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE ,

J

•

SCOUTS FINGERPRINTED - Tbese Pome-

Collllty Sherlfra office We
ay afternoon to be
flllflerprlrited. Havlnr; tbat done wu a pari of a
safety procram belnc:taur;ht by Terrie Houser,

.FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE'

. '·

Barn destroyed by fire

..

.,: roy Daisy and' Brownie ":~ vlsltf;d lhe Meigs

''

Wednesday just after the storm
Ughlnlng striking the transBy OVP Staff,
hit, and troopers summoned the
formers, high winds, and dOWQe\1
· UPI reports
trees on power lines. He went Qn
· ' ' Storms Wednesday night blew GaJUa County Highway Depart·to say that the outages were
down trees ·and fences, and ment to remove the tree.
Troopers were also alerted to a · widely scattered . J!..nd thai llie
caused spol electrical ·outages
largest outage involved four hi •
across· the region. leaving the downed tree at about the same
five customers .
·
time which blocked State Route
Ohio River on a rapid climb. ·
McDade reported thai all ser:
Among the hardest hit was 7, just south of Gallipolis.
Mason County, West Virginia, Workers from the Ohio Depart · vice had be!m restored by Thurs:
where approximately 1,800custo- ment of Transportation were day morning, except two wltli
with affected transformers.
mers In Mason County · were called to renrove the tree.
lhunderWednesday
night's
McDade slated thai customers
without power Wednesday night.
An outage at the SpQrn Subs ta· storms !eft some Meigs County served by the Gallipolis office, .
including P_o,meroy and Mlddletloq left ,peoP.Ie_ tr.tfle 1\ar~ In residents without power.
·
'Acroril:J~
~o
Ron
McDade,
pqrt, were 110t affected, but that
Hartford,; 1 N~ liaven, · Letart
Columbus"
and
Southern
Ohio
twiJ
· · lril'llf!lnners . had been
and Sandnlll Rolli!.~" ·.' ' '
Elect
ric
Power,
customers
in
the
~truck
· by lfptnlng.
Several areas remain without
TUppers
Plains,
and
Cbesier,
George
CopnoUy, of the Belleelect.rlctlly ·tpday, but a spokesRacine
areas,
who
are
served
by
ville
Lock
and bam, Reedsville,
mar for Amerl.can Electric
the
Athens
office
were
hardest
' Ihere has been 82
reported
that
Power said they are working on
approxi·
hit.
McDade
stated
that
one hundredths of an Inch of rain
restoration of services.
The GalllpoUs Locks and Dam . mately 50 to 60 In those areas fall between 7 a.m. Wednesday
· ·
in Eureka said the Ohio River were ·!eft without i&gt;ower due to arid 7 a.m. Thursday.
was climbing rapidly Thursday
morning.
A dam spokesman said the 10
a.m. reading on the lower gauge
was 23.5 feet, and was running 50
feet on the lower rollers. Regular
A large barn owned by Wayne Beal, 39285 Landacre Road. in ·
pool stage at the dam Is 12 feet.
the
Kingsbury, area was completely deslroyed by fire :
During the past 24 hours, dam
·Wednesday
evening.
• •
officl'a is have ·recorded 1.11
According
to
Pomeroy
Fire
Clllef
Danny
Zirkle,
the
fire
inches of rain In the Eureka area.
star.ted when the barn was struck by lightning during a storm. .
East Galli!!oUs Station has
The
department was called to the scene at 5:56 p.m. and the·
recorded precipitation during 10
Fire Department was called to scene for
Harrisonville
' of first 17 days of May totaling
assistance
with
water.
2.71 ln!:hes, Including .64 Inch
Zirkle
stated
that
the barn was filled wilh hay and also had a
during past 24 hours. The averrorn
picker
Inside.
He
wen I on to say thai the struclure burned
age fs usually around 3 Inches
•
'right
down
to
the
ground."
during May. The city's last big
Zirkle reporled that there were two olher buildings nea~by
May rainfall total rainfall was
.which
had to be kept watered down to prevenl the f!re from
5.98 inches, recorded In 1958.
spreading
to them .
Gallipolis City pollee reported
It
was
reported
that Seal did have some Insurance on the
tree limbs were down on Old Fort
property.
.
Trail off State Route 141 as a
The Pomeroy Fire Department had 14 men on the scene 'and
result of the hurrlcane-J!ke rainHarrtsonvJIIe had seven, according to Zirkle. Also on lhe scene
storm which hit the GaiUpol!s
were three Pomeroy fire trucks, one emergency medical·
area around 5: 45 p.m. Spot
service
unit, and two Harrisonville trucks. The department was
fiOQd!ng of .basements, fences
on
the
scene
until 8: 28 p.m. ,
blown . downr and tree limbs
strewn around the city were also
reported.
GallipoUs Is In the midst of a
Three Long Bottom residents were Injured In a one-car wreck
State Route paving within the the
at 6:15 p.m. In Olive Township oil S.R. 124, .4 of
Wednesday
~:tty llmts, 'and It is being delayed
mile east of milepost 55, according to the State Highway Pat rot.
due to the ·wealher conditions.
· Rena M. Chevalier, 23, Thomas·W. Parks Jr., 3, and Heather
The State Highway Patrol
·
reported a downed tree blocking
Continued·on page 14
Clay Chapel-Yellow town Road

Local news· briefs----

2-Liter

88

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THIS IS NOT A BUY'oNE--GET ONE FREE ITEMI

damage, $54,850:
Red Bird where mine drainage : '
affects State Ro11te 7 creating a '
hazardous.entry;$20,1Ji01: ·
,
In Gallia County, lhe projects ·
under consideralion include:
:
Silver Run, a 24 acre site ln I he ·
Cheshire area, $337,880;
State Route 554 South near the
Kyger community, an area Qf 45
acres where road flooding Is the
primary problem, $301,748.
A · r~uest for funding to carry
out the Division of Reclamation's
overall work plan will be submit. ted to the Federal Office of
Surface Mining ~ec)amatlonand
Enforcement once all four public
meetings have been held, ·a aker
sal!). He indicated that work on
some of the projects could get
underway within 18 months alter
fundlnR approvaL

'

special "Save More

''Pouml

design and construction phase;·
and the anticipated costs are: '
Jesse Creek, extensive aban·
do ned ·eroding sti·Jp mine
acreage in Meigs an'd Gallla
Counties causing floOding Of
State Route 554, $525,500; '
Lyon, run off of'mlne drainage
creating flooding on €hestnut
St reel and Seventh Ave ., $12 ,200;
Neese, Bailey Run Road area
where a landslide Is with 25•feet
of the Neese residence, $35,000;
Thomas Fork, where some
reclamation has already been
done but there Is still some
flooding of State Routes 124 and
143, $31'5. design cost only;
,
Wolfe-Swisher on Legion Ter :
race and Salt Street In Pomeroy
where there Is continuous mine
drainage resulting in property

Mason area residents left .
without power following stonn

Prices" on these
items you buy the
. most. Look for the

Farms
Fryers

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpeper

reclamation projects . discu·s sed

Go Krogerlllg for
Low "Warehouse

savings.

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B;,: CHA,RJ:.ENE HOEFUCH

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2 Soctiono, 14 Pagoa 26 Conti

Pomeroy-M,iddleport. Ohio, Thursday, May 17, 1990

Mei~, . Gallia

...

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al
Ccipyrightecl 1990

Clear tonight. Low In upper
fOe. Sunny Friday. m gh In
mid 708.

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loos'e.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
~oberts ·and County Highway
Director Ted Warner reported
they had Investigated· a reque111
made ·by Bradbury resident,
Terry ·Garten, regarding re- .
placement of speed limit signs In
ljlat area and the possibility of
lowering the speed limit there.
Roberts repo~ted thai the jour··
nallzed speed for that .area,
which begins at the west corporation line In Middleport and
continues through Bradbury, is

40 mlles per hour. Roberts
·reported also that new speed
limit signs for that area have

been Ordered.

' ·-··

,

Warner reported .that approxt.
mateiy half of the du~t control in
Meigs County has been completed and that repairs to the
needed equipment had been
finished. Warner stated that ,hot
mix repairs to the .roads will
begin In mid-June.
In another matter, Koblentz
was appointed to carry out
Continued on page 14 ·

•

Thre~ injured in o'ne-car wreck

a '

•

Meigs graduation ceremontes set Sunday for 148 .sentors
Commencemeni exercises for
148 graduating seniors of Meigs
High School will take place
Sunday at 4:30p.m. In the Larry
R. Morrlson gymnasium.
Baccalaureate speaker will be
State ~nator Jan Michael Long
of the 17th District, a nallve
Melp CQuntlan. His address will
follow the processional and national an them played by the
Meigs High School Band under
the direction of Tony Dingus, the
Invocation. by Christopher MIchael Stewart, l'l!e!gs seniOr, the
welcome by Nonnan Randolph
Humphreys, III, class president,
and Introductions by Derek Alan
Cremeans, · senior class
treasurer:
Included on the' commencement program will be special
music by the Meigs High School
choi'Ull and band, salutatory
address by Walter Edward
Crooka and valedictory address
by Melanie Jane Beegle.

•

Fenton Tjiylor will present the means, Walter Edward Crooks,
Jacobs, Amy Relaine Johnson,
class with Robert E. Barton, Roxan Cundiff, Lisa J. Darsl.
Lee' a Nicole Johnson, Cecil Dale ,
president of the Meigs Local Aaron Joseph Davis, Christopher Johnston, Rebecca Jean Kauff,
Board of Education to present Alan Davis, Brandi 'DIIIon, Wil- . Melinda Marie Keesee and Dadiplomas to the graduates.
liam D. Doczi, Angela M. Do- niel S. Kennedy.
The graduallng seniors are:
nohue, Kelly LouAnn Douglas,
Kristin Marla King, Marsha
Laura Ann Aelker, Roger James William Durst, Shawn
Beth King, Kenda Ann Kines,
Christopher Alkire, John H. Alien Durst, Kimberly Kaye
Bracy . A. Kom, Eric Shawn
Anderson, Trlna LaRae Bachtel, Eblin, William J . Ellis, Amy ' Lambert, Karen DeAnn Lam·
Nancy Lynn Baker. Tract Ann LaDawn Epple, Todd Edwin
bert, Robert W. Lambert,
Barlels, John Barton, RaeLynn Evans, Cylinda L. Frederick,
Tammy Marle Lambert, Krys·
· ~aaham, Steven John · Bass,
Christopher Michael George, Da'
tina L. H. Lane; Kelly Renea Lee,
Melanie Jane Beegle, John Cary nya L. Gheen and Wendy Ann Tracy W. · Lee, Darrick E.
Betz!ng, Vlnda Jean Biggs, 'Gilkey.
McCloud, Tracy Lynn Manley,
Avanda Susan Bissell, Angela
Keith T. Hagen. Daisy Haggy,
Anthony Ryan Miller, William H.
Renee Black, Shelly Kay Black, Deanna Faye Haggy, Wlllla.m
Milliron, Timothy W. Molden,
Amy Joyce Blake, Debra Ann Dale Haggy, Lara L. Hail, Kelly
Rebecca Lynn Napper, Roberts
Blake. Bobble J. Blessing, Den- Renee' Ham!lton, Heather Ho- . Sue Napper, Shannon Marie
nl$ Dwight Boothe, Sean Braley, . ney Harless, Ryan William
Newsome, Carl R. Nicholson,
Amy Beth Brothers, David Leo- Harper, Julie Ann Hatfield, Ran- Renee' M. Norman, Scott A.
nard Buchanan, Jennifer Lynn dall Gene Hawley, Patricia MarOgdln, Luther Lee Osborne, Jr.,
Buck, Sherrl L. Carl and Heldt garet Hetzer, Shelby NapperMichael A. Parker and KimberAnn Caruthers.
Hoschar, Heather Ann Hovatter,
ley Sandrla Parsons .
. Kimberly Faye Chapman, Gerald Wayne Howard, Nonnan
Rebecca L Pearson, Theresa
Jerry Lee Cleland, Lora R. Randolph Humphreys Ill, Marty
Renee• PhUIJps, Wendy Jo Phil·
Cleland, Barbara Ann Coleman, R. Hutton, JQSeph L. Hysell,
lips, Latlsha Rose Price, Todd
Kerry Cox, Derek ·Alan Cre- Charles V. JackS, Sean Michael
Price, Richard E. RathbUrn II.
•

...

James E. Reynolds, Michael
Heath' Richmond, Robert W. .
Richmond, Joseph Allen Roush,
Aimee Cher Rupe, Angela Dawn
Russell, Terra Dawn Schoon·
over, Darlene Annette See, MIchael N. Seyler, Dee Shane,
Debbie Lanette Six, Donald Todd
Smith, Mathew Marvin Smith,
Anna Starcher, Cheryl Denise
Stev'ens, Christopher Michael
Stewart, Doug Stewarl, Ke)Jy
Irene Stewert, Jeremy Christopher Stonl).
ChriStopher A. Stptts, Jennifer
Rebekah 'l;'anner, John Willard
Tillis, Jr., Michelle TrlpleU,
Natalie A. Tromm, Stacy Dawn
TYree, Yalonda E. Van Cooney,
Danyel Pucal van GardereJI,
Eric Silane Walker, Michael
Eupne Walls, . Brian Keith
Warner, Tracie Richmond
Warner, Homer L. Welsh, Thomas Craig Werry, Sandra Gall
Whaley, Neal Andrew White,
Aaron L. W!Uiams, Ann Marie

- !\ ·- --·---

William's, Carl Anderson Cotb!n·
Williams II, James Williams, .
Roy Withrow, Tara Lynn Wolfe,
and Linda Wyant .

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The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Commentary
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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel .
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday,
May
17, .1~90. ·
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0

The ·Daily· Sentinel
111 Court Street
. Pomeroy, Olllo
·'

DEVO'l'ED TO THE INTERE8'1'8 OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~~

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~m~ ,....._,,_-r,,__c:~;""'
~v
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' ' ROBERT L. WINGETT
: ' . PuhiiiJteJ:
:. ~ '

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General.Manap!r

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aul&amp;&amp;aal Publlaber/CQnlroller

A MEMBER of The United Press lnterastloDSI,lnlaild Dally Press
· Assoelatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers AssociatiOn.
• ·
LETTERS OF OPINION are welc&lt;&gt;me. They should be less than 300
. · , words long. Allll!tters are subject to editing and must be signed with ·
, . . name, address and tell!pbOne number. No unalgned letters will be pub·
ltohed. Letters should be Ill good taste addresalDatssues not personal!·
. ties.
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- ~~----.-~.~---~.--------~.~
-~
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i Should·U.S. lift

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! -': ·~ : ~~tnam

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b

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argo.

: . . .,,,
By LEON DANIEL
.
~.
, &gt; ·' ,
UPJ Cblef Corre~pondent
: ·'· ·
(Commentary)
.
•. HO CHI MINH CITY, VIetnam -It's time for the United States to
: do, the right thing about VIetnam. ·
: ~~-· For starteu, that means lifting a trade embargo that bas
• ,QCODOmlcally hobbled VIetnam since It was unified 15 years ago by
; ·CQII!munlst f~rces In the only war Anlerlca ever lost.
: Hiinollnslsts that It has met condltlona set by Washington before
• .diplomatic or commerlclal . relations can · be establiShed. but
; ·Washington Is not yet. satisfied. StU!, considerable progt~s has been

I
'

J

made.

'

; VIetnam has withdrawn the bulk of Its forces from neighboring
: fambcidla. It has freed ,virtually all of Itspolitical prisoners from
• .re-education camps. It Is allowing Amerasian children fathered by
:· American Gls to leave Vietnam. It Is cooperating i.n resolving
; questions the United St11tes has raised about POWMIAS.
• •· After recent reports that the Soviet Union Is reducing Its forces In
: the region, Hanoi re-floated lis proposal to let the United States
• .reoccupy Its former base In Cam Ranb Bay.
.I ..' With Soviet presence fading, Hanoi believes the return of American
: ·forces could serve as a counierwelght to the Increasing Influence of
' China, Vietnam's longtime nemesis.
: · · For lis part, by returning to Cam Ranh Bay, the UnltedStates could
; 'galnlevenige ln.negollatlons with the Philippines over renewing base
. : leases there .
. .
.
, The United States slapped the em~go on Nort.h Vietnam In 1964
: .and extended It against the unified communist regime which came to
• :power when South Vietnam surrendered tn '1975. ·
·
: · · The embargo prevents American companies and citizens from
· .carrying out any commercial transactions in Vietnam. It has blocked
:; them from taking advantage of Vietnam's new eronomlc reforms
: which actively court foreign investment.
. • Ironically, tHe embargo has prevented American companies which
·: · •a1scovered offshore oil in the waning days of the Vietnam war from
•: exploiting their .find. The best exploration concessions are being
: . snapped up by othe!' countries, including Britain, Fr.wce, Canacja,
; the Netherlands, ~ll,eden, Belgium and India. ·
·
·
~·
If there are co.lling strategic and economic reasons for the
·.: : United States to lift Its embargo, strong moral arguments can he
~· made for also granting diplomatic recognition to a nation that needs
·: desperately to end the economic solation that traps It In grlm!lng
'•' poverty.
·:-;.: I) bas been a quarter of a century since U.S. Marines waded ashore
Vietnam, but many Americans stU! are uQable to come to terms
: : ;~lth. their nation's disastrous Vietnam poli~y.
, •. •~· More than 58,000 Americans died In Indochina In a losing war that
failed to defeat the success of communiSt aggression. It also was a
'.Xar that failed miSerably to Improve the lives of the VIetnamese,
lftUlions Of whom - on both sides -were maimed or kiUed .

Driver killed
in NASCAR
•
practice

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

New allegations leveled
WASHINGTON - Former
Greek Prime Minister Andreas
Papandreou, awaiting trail for a
potpourll of offenses In Greece,
now f11ces allegations, with a
decidedly American twist.
Papandreou ' s replacement,
Constantllle Mltsotakls, wants
full Investigation of the deal
Papandreou made In 198'! to buy
40 F·16 fighter jets from General
Dynamics.
Mltsotakls inherited the $900
million purchase when he took
office In April, and he doesn't like ·
the terms of the deal. If General
Dynamics does not let Greece
renegotiate the terms, Mltsota·
kls has voweQ to seek a U.S.
congressional Investigation Into
"what extent the Foreign Cor·
rupt Practices· Act was violated
and to what extent commissions
were, paid or other benefits.':
The Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act was written to 'keep Am!!rl·
can companies from bribing
foreign governfDent officials to
secure contracts.
We asked General Dynamics
for a reaction to Mltsotakls' blnt

a

that the purchase contract may
have broken the law. The spokesman told us, "We have been In
total compliance with tbe For·
elgn Corrupt Practices Act and
every other law of either the U.S.
or Greek; governments. There
were no payofta."
·
In 1986 when Papandreou was
negotiating the contract, he
opted to do It directly with
General Dynamics Instead of
going through the U.S. govern·
ment. The Pefense Depart·
ment' s Foreign Military Sales
Office Is set up to help foreign
governments negotiate the purchase of defense eq ulpment.
That agency warned Papan·
dreou that he could cut a better
deal If he worked ·through the
pentagon.
General Dynamics claims It
was Papandreou who InsiSted on
direct negotiations.
Our associate Jim Lynch has
see.n Internal Greek government
documents showing that Papandreou was warned by his military
advisers as early as 1986 that the
terms of the F ·16 contract were

not favorable.
In one memo to Papandreou, a
Greek air force general warned
tha~ General Dynamics was only
offering 10 percent of the "offset
benefits" that It originally
agreed to. Offset benefits are the
enticements a company throws
In to sweeten the deal. They may
Include maintenance contracts .
on the equipment of·even unrelated Items, like promising to
promote tourism In the country ·
that buys the merchandise.
Papandreou threw a
document·shreddlng party before he left office, but enoughofa
paper trail of, tbe F·16 deal
remains to be examined In great
.. .

On this date In history:
In 1792, 24 brokers met in New York City and formed the New York
Stock Exchange.

CONCORD, N.C. (UPI) :Sfock car driver David Gaines,
trying to break Into the hlg~ly
competitive Winston Cup circUit,
was killed Wednesday In , a
five·car pUeup ·at Charlotte Motor Speedway during practice tor
a weekend race.
,
Gaines, 27, of Goldston, N.C.,
suffered massive head Injuries
and was dead on arriVal •at
Un lverslty Memorial Hospital:In
Charlotte. The crash occurred )&gt;n
the speedway 's sharp Turn 4•of
the 1.5-mlle track.
:
A 1986 gradu~te of No(th
Carolina State University with a
degree In electrical englneerlrig,
Gaines was a driver In NJ\5·
CAR' s Sportsman Division,
created last year to give younger
driver) a chance to break l'!to
the Winston Cup and Busch
Grand National racing circuit~.

.

.··

'

·ALUMNI
SPECIAL·

.'

' · TEAM DEDICATES JEltSEY :... 1'he Racine
. Reds number I little league team chose to retire
· . the jersey of former leammate, tbe late Jeremy
' Guinther. Team members hold number 15prlorto
the dedication ceremony. Pictured are fr011i, 1-r,
Greg McKinney, John Card, Ryan Martin, B.J.

WE HAVE THE DRESS
YOU NEED FOR
YOUR ALUMNI

Today in history
By United Press International
.
Today Is Thursday, May 17, the !37th day of 1990 with 228 to follow ,
The moon Is In Its last qua~ter.
·. ·
. The morning stars are Mercury. Venus. Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus.They Include
English physician Edward -Jenner, developer of the .smallpox
vaccine, In 1749; English writer Robert Surtees In 1803; Schuyler
Wheeler, Inventor of the electric fan, In 1860; French composer Erik
Salle In 1866; actress Maureen O'Sullivan In 1911 (age 79) and
actor·dlrector Dennis Hopper In 1936 (age 54) . .

detail In Greece and· the United
States.
The House Energy and com- .
merce ·subcommittee on Over·
sight' and Invest!gatlorls has
already begun looking Into the
Issue. The House and Senate
Armed Services committees
have a~o1 been briefed on the jet
sale In the past month.
The F-16 purchase may he·
come one of the central Issues at
the Papandreou trial. Despite the
fact that Papandreou Is already
out of office, that trial is shaping
up as the equivalent of an
Impeachment hearing ·for his
leadership of the Pan,Hellenlc
Socialist Party.

The Daily

Ervin, Jeremy Smith. Row two- Shawn Dalley,
Nick Smltb, Luke Holman, Jamie Nelson, Riehle
Wamsley, and Jeremy Hill, Standing In back are
Coaches Kenny Guinther, Tim Hill, and Dick
Wamsley.

, Je~emy Guinther's jersey retired .
by Rac~e Little League, Association

20°/0oFF
992~2851

.

~~~tineJ

'
• (USPSUWII)
.. A. Dlvlaloll of Mall;im~af lae. .:-- .
¥

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Publl.shed every afterftoon, Moaday

' thrwllb Friday, Ill Court St., J'o.
merc:r(, Oblo, by tile Ohio Valley Publllb\ng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pom..-oy, Oblo 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S..
cond class po~taa:e paid at Pomeroy,

9bJ,o.

UNVE~ JERSEY- Henry Hill, cousin totheGulntherfamlly, ·

unveils the jersey .be made In honor of Jeremy Guinther, whose
number 15-jersey WIIS retired Tuesday evening.

Sports briefs

felt We should dO something after
' "15" .
By SCOTT WOLFE
Golf
the kids came fqrward. This Is
Racine
·
Little
League
Ceach
Sentinel COrrespondent
Rodney Butcher shof a 2·overwhat
little
league's
all
about
...
a
Dick
Wamsley
said,.
"Kenny
"He gave It everything he
par 74 to'help Florida Southern to
!Guinther) has helped with the part of growing up."
had," were the words of Kevin
a 12·stroke second-round lead In
v·,.,
...
and
we
The
entire
Racine
coaching
Ihle tn. describing . one his his
the NCAA Division II Champion·
of
staff
commended
tbe
attitude
former teammates, Jeremy
ship at Juniper, Fla.
their
players.
.
Guinther. who was honored TueS'
Hockey
Teammate Scott Grace said,
day evening by the Racine Little
Penguins center Marlo Le·
"Jeremy
was
a
fun
player.
He
League and Racine Baseball ·
never got mad at you, but If you mleux Is not playing hockey yet,
Association by having his jersey
gOofed up he'd he the one to but he Is playing golf. He missed
retired In a special ceremony at
eompllmentyou
and pick up your most of the last two months of the
the Racine Little League park.
He
was
a
competitor too. season with a herniated disk and
spirits.
Jeremy Guinther lost his life as.
He
was
the
pitcher
and I was the ·a secondary bone problem In his
the result of an accidental
,catcher.
One
time
when
he broke lower back.
sMotlng'earller this spring. but
Horse Racing
his
ankle
during
the
Kyger
Creek
his dedication and competl(lve
Kentu~ky Derby winner Untournament,
he
asked
the
coach
desire live on In the memories of
bridled arr.tved at Plmllco to
,f he could plav first base."
those who knew him.·
'
finish preparations for Satur·
Memories
brought
laughter
For that very reason, the
Continued on page 4
day 's Preakness Stakes, and
players on the current Racine
trainer Carl Nafzger e)! pressed
Little League team got together .
confidence his colt will make a
RETIRED
Tbe
·
JERSEY
and decided they Wanted to do
strong showing In the middle
jersey of Jeremy Guinther,
something In their teammate's
jewel of the Triple Crown.
who
lost
his
life
as
a
result
of
a
honor. ·
shqoUng
accident
earner
tbla
After approaching their
year, was ·retired by the
coaches, It was decided to retire
Racine Utile League and
; No. 15, worn by Jeremy during
Racine
Baseball Auoclatlon
I! I' his years on tbe Racine teams:
Tuesday.
This photo was
Also, team members had their
taken
of
young
Guinther at ·
jerseys made with a b(ack band ·
home
J!late
IBSt
year.
·
on the ·sleeves, Imprinted with

CORKY'S
CLASSICS
112 W. MAIN
POMEIOY

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.,3rents play role
in dropout rate
. The higher one goes In our
society, the less free one Is to
speak cil!Jlri10nplace truths. Just
ask Lauro ·Cavazos, the U.S.
education secretary. who recently remarked that Hlspaqlc
, parents hear some of the blame
~ _for the dropout rate among their
• ..children.
Most · Americans would undoubtedly agree. Parenti, wha·
tever tnelf :race or ethnic group, .
obviously hear some responslbll·
lty for how .much their race or
ethnic grpup; obvlo)lsly bear
some respo~blllty for how much
their children value edUcation.
One would think this an unremar·
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various Hispanic leaders began
to object, " Insisting that the
dropol';t : problem Is the fault,
Instead, of Inferior sehools, diJ·
crimination, poverty, language
. barriers and Insensitive teachers
: . who don't understand Hispanic
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''It Is really going to he hard to
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we'd like to," said. Antonio
Rlgual, presldentoftheHispanlc
Association of Colleges and
Universities.
•.Poverty does, of course, afOict
many Hispanic families, and·
theyoftenhavellttlecholcebutto
~nd their kids to mediocre or
Inferior schools. Further, there's
no doubt that bigots preside over
a few of thla nation's classrooms,
and that many .other teachers
know next to nothing about
1 Hispanic culture. Yet what ethnlc group attempting to make It's
way In America has not faced
SJICh conditions?
-..)
···Do most teachers know any:~lng- about Indochinese of Ko~an culture? Then wby dO the
• ~ of these natloDalltles
,~chleve at such astonl.lhlng
. ;ratet! .
.
·• ' When the Irish came to Amer·
~ l~a In the 19th century, they were
' · t\lblected to an Anglo-Pr:otestant

Vi'lncent Carr0ll

teaching corps openly contempo
tuous of their Catholicism. When
waves of Eastern Europeans
arrived around the turn of the
century, they found the schools
staffed witb descendants of earlier Irish and German lmml·
grants. And by the time blacks
trekked to the North several
decades IIIler, the schools had
been taken over by still another
ethnic mix of teachers, almost
I!Qually allen to the newcomers.
Yet consider the differing fates
ofthese groups. Although they all
suffered Indignities, you'd never
know It from the academic
record of some.
Jews embraced New World
.education with a matchless fervor. In llttte more than a
generation, they rose from the
cramped squalor of New .York's
East Side to domlllate the profes·
sions of law, medicine, teaching
and dentistry there. Chinese and
Japanese Immigrants on the
West Coast didn't quite equal
that dazzling pace, but their rise
was no less Impressive considerlng the suffocating racism they
overcame. German lmmlii'arlts
fared well fn scbciol, too, as did a
few other groups.
And then there were the Irish
and .southern Italians, amoilg
others, who tended to lag, sufferlng high dropout rates and other
signs of ac11derrilc failure. Partly
as a 'result, they rose from
poverty more slowly than many
otber European Immigrants.
Every ethnic •group likes to ·
believe that It prizes !l(lucatlon,
and each in Its own way does; but
the inescapable fact Is that some
do not prize It as much as others.
So, while It Is true that public
schools must do a better job
teaching minorities, greater
commitment Is also required of
parenll.
More power to .Cavazos for
having said so.

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·}\11··'
which honored the late

JERS~j:Y

l"RF.SENTED - Roger Graee, on
behalf of the Racine UUie League, presented
Carol aM1Kenny Guinther the number 15 jersey
worn by their son Jeremy' Guinther during

ut.''o
1 ~
.. ,.uea : ~

ceremonies In which that number was retired on
Tuesdq. With Grace are current team members
and members oi lut year's squad who were

01
lUI ,IJ 1~ ~ \19
111.G 8
1J'!I"0 1
n 1.0 Ill '1\ oa
llli.IJ 11 A IJ 'I

Third HiJl
teammates.
•
1·
Jeremy Guinther's J·ersey... continued from page·a
emona
.
r
ace
· k!ds ':1'~ knew him, on the end of the bench Alway·s· · lng ·u. He also wished to thank
M. · · • · ·' . .. from tho~
but the laughter. sometimes re·
·
·
· ·
Se;,~.l 'Frid-Ay
,: i ~i!. tl r_;_,,· , ;';!·... someber
fleeted reality '' 'linil a more give. 100 , percent all the . tim~. Henry Hill foo the time and effort
moo4,~ " ,. ..
Y.ou !l ,l)ave more fun and ~?u II In· inaklng the replica jersey.

ns.o ., "

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Unbridled
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-1.

11
1
BALTIMORE (UP!) - Ken·
(:24 2-5) like he did ,there, It's
lucky- Derby winner Unbridled · going to take a nice horse·t6 heat
'
arrivftilf,lt Pimlico Wednesday to us "
finish'·4fl1-eparatlons for • Saiur- · ~ • tlnbrldlEfd's check-in Into stall IStlfa~ Chair, Loveseat
day~ C: Pf~kness · Stakes and
40 of f.in,Wcll'S stakes barn- the
trainer-0arl "Nafzger expr~ssed· .. ' C'ltblll"l"~er\'eq each year for the ·
Reg.
.
•....
co n~anstr· ;his colt would pro·
Derby winner -capped a bus 30 $799.95 NOW
ctu.ce' &lt;I 's'!'ro'l!g' sho"'!rig'1lf'fht! ''' 'l!~ifr~: 'Tit~ Colt workel! a bJ!sk
m~?tt~~w~! .?.f th~ Tnple. £~o~~; .... n-:!':r!g~t!l!l ,mlle In 1: oo 2-5 at
~IS aar; naltn S ~?lng, Oe S . t'hurchlll Downs Tuesday morneXCl~lt fit · be here, Nafzger lng. Twenty·four hours later he
sa ld ~ 'lf(s.a happy hOrse . . '
" yanried · to . Standiford Airport
"'!!~_?$t'9.'l horse. He'~.89!!'JL . J.P&lt;?l!.:P:1P·!Jlll!~e airplane ride t~
to r u~ hts race. He may gei beat, Baltimore-Washington Internabutft i~~e a good horse IQ.l;l~At. .. Jlo.nai.Mtm.tt. then vanned 40
h~. ...
.
minute~ to ,Plmllco.
If the seams open here like
'ilu~ ~ he • colt showed no 111
they dtd at Chu rchill, tf he runs eflects from the activities.
1he last qua rter mile In 24 and two

I

446 ·4524

EACH
(SETS ONLY)

STAR'HNG

Beautiful

AT

Roiftop·oesk

On-$11e..Servlct
DePralbll&amp;nt

:======::;;;;;;
LAST DAY

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Marzettl Slaw ~resslng 11 oz. ................'2.32
Tuna Helper aoz. ......... ~ ..........:...............•1.75

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Peach Slices 21 oz. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1.38
.
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Pineapple 20 oz. ...............................~...... 1.14
Cheese Singles 3Jbl. .............................'9.60
.
Saltlr188 ·1 lb••••••••••••••••••••• ,•••••••••.••• ~ •••••••••11.29
Strawberry Preserves 18 oz. ...............~•••2.55
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TR£,8011'011 LINE 837.96

· ~THIS. IS .THE BO't'IvM i,JN£.• Y.ou ,.. ..
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Apply for A
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Reg.
$899.95

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

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49'
Saltines ·1 lb. ···············~·······················~·······

MarzetU Slaw 1N1111111g 11 oz. ••·.............'2.83
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Strawberry Preserves 32 oz. ·..................*1.49 · · Straw~r,Y Preaerves u oz. ..................*3.13
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Gravy Mix ~ ·318 oz. ......................................
eoG~avy- Mix 1318oz. ·~ ..... .................................38•·
~aravt./ 'Mix 1. Ill 01. •••• ~...................... ~......., ..75'
.
.25'.. Gelati~:· ,~ ••.·................................... ~ ••.•..•,. ••47f Gelatin a.oz. •••••••••••••••••••·•.••••••••••• ~•••••••.: ••••• .SCJf
Gelatin 3 oz. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Dill Sllcea 32 oz. ......................................'2.12
DIII . SIIces a oz. -. "...................·................•1.69
Dill Slices u oz. .........................................99'
.
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French Fried Potatoes ao oz. .................•·1.51
French Fried PotatOes 20 oz. ..........,:..... 1.79
French Fried Potatoes 20 oz. ....................49'
Devtted Ham 3·oz.- ............a •••i-.:.. ~ ~~ 45• Dltvlllld Ham sC.. ...................-:........~•••••••••6&amp;- Deviled Ham 4oZ. ••••••••;~.........................11.32
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18 oz. .............. ~ ..........~ ••'2.29
Snack Crackers,11 oz. ..........·...... ~...........81.99
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GlASS ToP
COFFEE Aim
ENDTABJ.ES

VISA. or
MASTER'CARD

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Slaw Dressing 11 oz. •••~ ...... ~ ..... 1
Tuna,Helper a oz. ........:..............................~9:'
Peach Slices 29 oz. ••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••99•
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Teammate Kevin. Ihle said get more out of your effort.
. 'The late Guy 1'Rabbltt"
The thlrd runnirig: 0 t the ~r l
Hll)'Memorial raee ~lll· be ·~eld ."He never "qult · He'd aiwl!Y;
Henry .HIIl a cousin of Carol Guinther,.Syra:cuse, grandfather
FrldayeveningaiSkylin~S~have something 'good 10 say to . Guln ther _ unv~(led a . wooden to Jeremy, was ' also an avid
way In Slell'fr.~-; Oplo, paying
you and he• could ·play every repl1ca of the number)5 jersey, baseball fan and avid supporter
$1,200 td' Wlli ~~ ;luper ' late
position. IJe"s always ·try 10 do which wlll stand In dedication at of the game. The elder Guinther
models.,."'~
•
· · · ·
stuff he p~ly could ;1 d
tl)e Racine Ball field.
through the years gave everyThere'~.it!l!J{•lsft.~ a regular none of us ~uld d!&gt;, but h~wa~~~ · Kenny Guinther gave a special thing to the game as a player,
show for eacli of the ()!her three
afraid to tty. '\vas 'a nice boy ,. tll~nkS lo MattheW Bradford for coach, and fan.
classes; Senii'lates, 'swrtsml;lll,
and a '~fg , baseball card • .b~ willingness to give up the
Sometimes, things just cannot .
and street stockS. . . - ·•·
·collector •If . _, . .
·
,nu~ber 15jersey for this season. be expressed in words and
In three· r:tlffer~n\ we,eks of
"Ever).oii
,·e .. llked · Jeremy," .Hethankedhlsplayersandthose Tuesday night was one such
racing three · different whiners said young ~ron Hoback "He f11volved with the dedlcallorl fo~ occasion, yet another example of
have emerged a:t Sl\ylme; Bo~by was always navlngfun and lllkect $~elr thoughtfulness In organlz· good people dol!\g good things .
Davidson, Bob 'A~ aw~, . Jr.. of to play every sport. He played
Racine, and natlonat star ~!- ever.ythlng hard."
·
·• mas Conley.
.
As ·'the ceremony began all,.
.. Coml!ll, IP Skyline on Friday, players and ,c~!!fli~ :: ~j~
'· May 25-for the first-Jime ever In Racine Little League lined the'
Ohio, wlll be the running of the basellfres of the Racine fi!1)d. 1
open-wheel IMCA modlfleds. The
Rev. Rogef'. Gr,cj! "Was :the' ·
•
open wheel econo Mods feature master of ceremonies 'tor 'the'
•
high ·speed open wheel action.
dedication Jn, which pap~nts
Joining the Modlfleds on the Kenny and Qlr,61 G..ll.l!ltb,i!'r \i¢re
schedule will he a super latepresented wlth ' the" Jersey fila!
model InvitatiOnal paying $1,200 their son wore. The curren't team
to win and $100 to start, plus a also presented plaque ancf~tlfli'
complete regular show in the to the Gulnthei's, who bofll' were
other three dlvlsloils.
very appreciat-ive.
This will be part of a three-day
Grace said, "J eremy was like
series wh!ch stops second at a part of our (amlly... a friend for·
Jackson County· Raceway In many of us. Me loved his sparts:
Ripley, W. Va, and then on to ·He loved baseball. He wasn't
ElkbJ';~·,Wr;.&lt;&gt;"•v-~!ln"~~ay.
ai~~J;@U; tl faslfs.l rynner~Utle_
S~)Je • ~w'!~ &lt;ra,ces are ha~h e~, bu ~ h~~lilid a iet.
held ·oJi,f'r~ ''evening~ lkillnof~rl. ·~)&amp;~:~~ per;·ent'~
nlng ~ IJ'dt,ttllf,A~~~e
of . 1/m ~~·&gt;•·'" .,...., ....111 , ij,:
trials .start.,a t 7:30 a.nd races at
race adoed as he challenged
8:30. Fo~ more lnformaf!911· fall
the .otber.pla:~~ers, ''Whether. you
614-662-41ll :.·
. are the IK!st player or the last line

He

U II .• t7 OllcA.O
lt 10 .us t
Minrte5otll
l'i I S .531 5%:
Seat lit•
17 IR .4!WI i
1'f'X:u;
13 IN .4st It
California
13 U .SAt II ~
Kunt~a.o; Cit y
II %1 .144 li lt:
" '.. ~lid~· GameH
Mlnne"otn &lt;at NewYorlr., ppd ., Nln
Oakland 7, Oetooeland 6
S£aUie ... 1'oronto t
llllcas;o ~ . Balli Ill()~ !
lklston 7, K a•~ q 1y 1
Mllwau We 13, ( 'u1Uornia 3
lkt roll 12, 1'exas 0
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1'1'1urscla,y Game~.
Seattle li•Jms..n Z-%) a1 Toronto (Key

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FURNITURE

.·

WE WELCOME

100%

·JIQNEMACK

GUARANTEE

St. Rt. 1~4~ Three Miles Off Rt. 7, Rutland, Ohio .

STO.RE HOURS: Moncay·SIIurdly, 8:30 a.m•..S:OO p.m.; Thul'ldlly. Clolt At

Noon

---......~.... ··-~-\--~-~-----'~­
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.Giants stop Mets
.

By JEFF SHAIN

· ~I Sporil Wr~U!r
With two out · and nobody on
base In the lOth lnnlilg, Alejandro
Pena had no reason to challenge
Kevin Mitchell on a 3-0 count.
Instead, Pena threw a fastball
that Mitchell read perfectly,
drilling a homerunjustlnsldethe
left·fleld foul pole and giving the
San Francisco Giants a 4·3
'l!lctory over the New York Mets.
• Left·hander Jeff Musselman
started the lOth for the Mets and
retired the first two batters M:ets
Manager Davey Johnson' then
c!&amp;lled on Pena H so a right·
bander would pitch io Mitchell.
: Pena threw three straight
·
·
·

~3;

balls, then tried his out pitch- a
fastball high and Inside. It was
just the pltcll Mitchell was
walling for.
"(Pena) l!lways gets meoutup
and in," Mitchell said. "All ef
this year and last year he got me
out up and ln. Roger (Craig, the
San Francisco · manager) gave
me the green light to hit on 3-0,
and he threw It just where I was
looking for It- up and In- and I
· hit It over the fence."
· Mitchell's elghlh homer of the.•
year gave the win to reliever Jeff
Brantley, l ·l, the fourth San
Francisco pitcher.
The Giants who came from
three runs do~ Tuesday night to

run wm·
Whl.te
streak to five in row
Sox~

'"

•

Calderon's three siolen bases
•
UPI Sports Writer ,
!led a clutl single·game record
•The Chicago White Sox taii
and ga've him 10 for the season,
· their winning streak , tQ five
matching his caree( high set In
games Wednesday night by de- .]98'(.
.
.
;1Pretty soon they 're going to
!eating a club whose 1989 success
they hope to,duplicate.
have ·to start watching me at
• The White Sox, trying to go first ; : secon~. everywhere." he
from the cellar to contenders In · said,.
•
One season. beat the Baltimore
·InotherALgamesWednesday,
Qrloles 4-2 at Comiskey Park to Oakland defeated Clevelaflll 7-6,
remain two games behind OakBoston ripped KanS&amp;s City 7-1,
land In the AL West.
Seattle beat Toronto 4·2, Detroit
• Last year, the Orioles were the s!llmmed Texas 12·0 and Mllwaumajors' most Improved team,
kee dumped California 13-5.
flnlshlngtwoga!Tiesoutofflrstln .Minnesota at' New Yotk was
.
· .
the AL East. The White Sox now rained out.
are 19·10, s~ond best In the
Athletics '7, Indians 6
!~ague. Their 19th victory of 1989
•At Cleveland, Mark MeG wire's
came June 3. The last time the second homer ot the garne. a
White Sox were nine games over two-run shot with two out In the
·.~was in .1983.
nlntli,helped the Athletics snap a
• Rookie Jerry Kutiler held f9ur-game losing strealc
I3altlmore to three hits over McGwtre homered off ·Doug
sjK·plus Innings, and Improved to Jones 1 0-1, who had co river ted all
2-0 with relief ' help from Scott 13 previous save opportunities
and last gave up a horner to a
Radlnsky and· Bobby Thlgpen.
Carkls Martinez hit a solo homer rlgbty July 24, 1987. · Dennis
• and RBI double, ·Carlton Fisk
Eckersley, 2-0, pitched. two ln&lt;!rove in the other.two runs and nlngs of rellef.
Ivan Calderon stole three bases ·
Snider honored . ·
filr Chicago.
; '"I'hey gave us two runs in the
Former 'Meigs Hlgh stando~t
first and that's all we got,"
Joey Snider finished the 1990
Or-Ioles Manager Frank Robin·
baseball season at Kentucky
sbn said. "They gave us two hits
Christian College with a .'373
in the first and I lOOked up In the
batting. average and 12 stolen
I!I!Venth and we still had two hits.
bases. KCC finished the season
We're not hitting.''
with an S.U record. Snyder was
• Kutzler likes to think heandhls
presented an award for the Best
liuUpen bad something to do with
Fielding Percentage of .943, and
tllat. After giving up two first·
inning hits, Kutzler retired 15 an award for the Most Stolen
straight before Steve Finley's Bases (.12) at the school's recent
all-sports banquet.
two-out single In the fifth.
' •'The way our buUpen Is going,
if we're ahead In the seventh.
~hth or ninth, they'll do the
job,'' said Kutzler, who recorded
CINCINNATI I UPI) - The
liJs flr$t l)eclsion ·ln. three starts game between the · Cincinnati
since his ' major ·'league debut . -Reds anl!.·Pittsburgh Pirates was
Aprll'28. • I .. '
' '
.
postponed We.bJesday night. af. .
''Thllt's all - we · ask of our ter a rain delay of two -hours,
(tarters ·- give us ., five; six three minutes.
The game had been delayed.ln
!Mings,," White Sox Manager
the top of the third Inning with the
Jeff Torborg said.
.
, Orioles starter Bob Milac kl, .Pirates leading 2·0. No makeu~
1·2. gave up four hits and four date for the game wall Immediately announced. '
·
runs over three innings.
•

By DAVE RAFFO

Cards sweep Astros; Dodgers win

planne.I

The fourth' annual Nelsonville-

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Who's Who

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Candidate for STATE REPRESENTATIVE
94th District ,
Pd.

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REMOVED. OR:

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AlL GOOD STORED
OR DISPLAYED .
Wll IE PLACED
ONTO T.. PUIUC
MABEl FOR A .
PERIOD OF~
NOT TO EXCEED
10 HOURS TIIS.
SUNDAY, . ·'
· MAY 20, 1990.

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12 HOURS ONLY

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NAME BliNDS TO IE IELElSED ..;.
• lASSEn • REISTEEl • RIYEISIDE • ·IENCHCRAFT •
. • KINCAID • IISTONK • IMPERIAL • JIMSON •
• HAIIIS • CHAniAM COUNTY • lllCKSMITH SHOP •
•
• ORT • SHEllY • mWNE •

TI-llS IS A PVBLIC $ALE AND .
S'HALL l'lE CONDUCTED .ON
THE PREMISES OF:

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luffed back recliners g~~nerouaty padded
pltlow attached beck· cushion. Ha- no· •
1189 apringa and •!!lid hardWare fr-:"1·•:
, :'

THE EMPIRE
FiJRNITUIE CO,

~69

842 2nd lYE.
GlWPOUS, OliO

"UP T0 - 6.~0fo OFF" ~·

..

Seoond event May 21 ' .

'

The second in a series of the
"Backyard VoUeyball"· tournament will be held at Southern
High School on Sunday ,'May .27.
Entry fee Is $35 per team with
lnd[vidual prizes going to . all
members of the first three
teams. Proceeds go to the South:
ern football program.

'

. FULL SIZE MAnRESS SETS

S..Utilul matt,... aets th" hilve' lnotching
mett-•• end foundations. Th.av ... qulhad.
h1va 232 coilo. medium firm lllid·•• fuly guo·
Nnteed.
.
101 S299.95 •• NOW •
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$29,81!)

$

FOI ·1o IlOUIS • • ' -

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BUNK BEDS

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and 4 bro,vn vinyl chlira will' I!.Pholatar.ed out and back.

"CCNniiNE.ilAl~'

NOT ~··H.9$

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Mut..C.rd. ViM. ond/ ~r ocCiptoblo crodk opplicotlono anlv. No
MhatlgM. no r~ndt. and 'no 1.,.~1-WIVI will be evelllble. No

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wood t1bie with Formica top. !add.- back , ·
""""'"· country blue finish with lite topa.

NOWMo

NOW... .

I!ERMS
OF SAL!!(
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AU purchM.ci item. ·mUit be pt1id fer by Cllh. p•aonal check,

7 PIECE COUNTIY ..
DINING lOOM SUITE' WiOPEN' CHINA ·
NOT 11l99.95M..

$.

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qUI"thy guarn-.te•"uept on.l ADV. unh. No
lhoppers pw·
m~ before dOO'f- ot 12:00 noon Sundoy. Eval')'thinq oold

$799

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'!.• pldt"!! '!P or dellvorad within ono -•kilt.

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Bara~il with aw!Vel uetaand blckl. Ali in cherry finish. At
leut 8 of aach style. Julltha right
for your kltchon,

Staclct13310,2t1Dar, hntwfloo1drtvt, 4 crt
ong, 5 .... - . Pl.... .wAIIIIdio,

Was
$8995

or to divide that long ·narrow room.

NOT.11799 95

LIVING ROOM SURE"

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pb,MIAhwllD; ....IIpa,tqlide- .
gaugea,lldlng ... -

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$10,995

810,111

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;,. The milt- 11 tnatudad and att

SJ79 ........... '6tt.9~~···

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"-SON" 4 PIECE •aoo• SUI'h . ,.,_~!,2,t~r.. !~~~!t~E.,!~11ioi..
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lncludM 1 doullle dr•- beae, wide '--"*ror; ful
orq-haeclboard.•ndafourd-alllltln•m•·
pteortlilllftnlah.
.

$249

. . . ,., usr
GOOD SUtDlY, FOR
10 HOURS"

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"FIIST COME-FIRST SERVED"

"COIIITEIIPOiAIY" SOFA CHill

Sofa end Chllr flnilhed in biiCI&lt; .,d grey print.
Velvet with ebony trim. Give
a unique
look in vour lilting room.

you....,

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$3 9 9.
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CASUAL SECftON W/2 INCUfiEIS

WATERB~DS

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Soli ..d ' - • with ch..., 1rln:L talltlonll
llyle with f1odl nylon velvet end batge

Ute plnellldlboenl "" Baa- with •-IIJUiar
tBbew/1 leef. 8 iaddlrbiCI&lt;chairswllil•ond
white chiCI&lt;ed - . .

NOT. $2999.95- NOW-

$12 99

BIG "BASSM" IEDIOOM sUITE

W•hed pine, door~w/wlngn*ror. door
ch"'-. i)lght •Ill• h• 1 en wlh frame. ca..

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, Quilted mett-••nd 2 fouNietil!n•. Set II covered ,
In llfl.'lnll time floral qulhed.

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ODD IAILES

NOT 11199.95 ••

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Ouutandlng wile comes with ·oofl; tove••t.
chair, 1ntron w1vet ftoNio. Sltlrted with hlrd·
woo.t fra,.... and no aag

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$ 79

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·
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COUNTIY liNING lOOM SUITE
$ 7 99
·

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"ENGLAND/COISAII" GIANT C..VE SECftONIL

IICORIJI.LI

''NO ONE PERMITTFD EfiRl \'

NOT 11699.95-. . ...,._

3 SIYUS 24" Ill STOOLS

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WHILE THEY LASI-.
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S99·

Dr•- with mirritr. he1dbo'1rd with frim4!. night table. 5
draper chaet. 01k "finish with,ebony trlm..

NOT '1499.95.:..

Huvy rulllc bunk beds. BuRt in !add.,,
wood r1H1. lullt to tllke punllhmenti.

S PIECE DINEnE .SO

. BASSm ·S.,fiECE BEDROOM SUITE

· - ..... IIIII! lilo, ~u:~r.e~-.
window deloQ. ·
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AUTHORIZED AND CERTIFIED
REDUCTIONS ON EVERYTHING UP TO

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TttiS IS AN IMPORTANT
SITUATION AND WARRANTS THE ,,
. BUYI~CJ'PUBUC'S .IMMEDIATE •
STO.RE WILL REMAIN CLOSED
· UNTIL NOON

Stock No. 449

York youth baseball tournament
will be held at the Clt.y Park! In
J)!elsonvill~ on June 16, 17, 22, 23
and 24. The tournament is open to
all regular Little League teams.
J)!o all-star or traveling teams
Wins event
are permitted.'
'
:Individual and sponsor trophies will be given to the top four ,
Joe Meadows. Beckley •WOn the
late model feature at ·Jackson
places and also Individual
awards wlll be given out.
County R,aceway while Steve
Entry' fee ls $30 with an entry Lucas captUred the semi-late
deadline of May 21. The tourney model !'lain Saturday evening:,
Will be limited to the first .16 ; , Jackson County 'has m:\de
teams that enter. '
• major lmprovemen1s on the fast
:·For further Information. call J:8 mile oval as Meadows also set
6i4-7S3-39S3. '
'
a new tra~k record. ·
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ATTENTION!!

•,

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'90 JdNCOLI TOWN i:U

. monthi
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u ofthlaSunday. May
20th,1890, betou- tlw
noon and 10 P.
M.llll!o Bu"l!av night over
·
worth cif furn·
tuN ond furnltu• i'alllled ltlinl ·will be picecl on tlw public
marllet at up to +t'li Off. D011ra will remaln open lor 10 hours
only thia lunct.r ..,d purch•il mull be removed or dativefed
within one -*· No ltemo wit be hald back regwdlaea of
.....,.. breniL 11le llore is , _ cloaecl and wilt remain clooed
uml 12:00 'o'clock noon S~. Purpoae of aatela to balance
overllockectlnwlntory end improve c11h flow.

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81320@,*
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Stock No. 509

Only

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Stock
No. 527: .

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.F·SERIES XLT
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•Delaze accpm•odatiou for twa aclulta at the ll~e. Beach Bilton • Welcome split of chablll• lrtw...
momtn• COiltl:nental bnakfut for two • Compltmeatuy greens fees dally for two adults at the Rh•e•
mu. GOlf a eodQtt:y.Cl':" (cart *tal required) • Chl1dren occuptng same room u parellts stay uee ..

FORD
.SPORT

.992-2156

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NO ITEM Will BE HELD BACI
REGARDLESS OF NAME BlAND - '
Al1 .PUICHl$ES MUST BE ·• •. • •
REMOVED 01 DEUYEIED WITHIN
ONE WEEI - INYENTOIY SOLD
lT JP TO 641Pfo OFFII
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UNPRECEDENTE.D.:
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1&lt;

JONES tor Representotiv• Committee, Georll! Collins, Treasurer, ·.
51049 RiC!! Run Road. Reedsvh Oh. 45772-

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· I.AUIID ADC

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The Mei~s Sports Banquet wlll
be held Moflllay at 6; 30 p.m. ln
the high school cafeteria .
The banquet will honor at h·
letes In baseball, girlS softball,
and boys and girls track.
·Meat and rolls will be pro- ·
vlded. Parents are to brin!} two
covered dishes including a veget·
able and dessert.

· DISPERSAL OF . so·ME '$500
ES WILL BE
"' .00 WORTH
.
..OF FURNITURE AND ACCE
OFFERED TO ANY
AND:EVERYONE FOR A·PERIOD OF· l2 HOURS THIS SUNDAY!!! '
.ALL F.URNITURE .AND RELATED:·
ITEMS INCLUDED IN THIS
.

;, RICHARD E. JONES

Meigs Sport banquet

Donohue joins an elite group of
students selected from more
than 1,400 institutions of higher
learning In all 50 states, the
District of Columbia and several
•
foreign nations.
Donohue has been selected an
her academic, achievement, ser·
vice to the community, leader·
ship in extracurricular. activities
and potential for continued
success.

Kenda Donohue has been
named to the 1989-90 edltl()n ·of
Wllo's Who Among Students In
American Universities · and
Colleges.
Donohue Is f senior Math and
English major. at Mount·Vernon
Nazarene College, She 1s the
daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Ray·
mond Donohue, Pomeroy, and a
graduate of Meigs High School.

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-7-

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Donohue

T_tiANKS.

Special thanks to the voters of Meigs
. County. Our Primary Election victory
would not have been possible
w.ithout your generous vote and ·
support together. With your
. continued support we will win in
November.

. ...

· Thursday, May j7, 1990

The outcome gave the Giants a
the eighth, It seems you are going ton 10·6 Philadelphia edged San
three-game series sweep.
to win it. For this to happen, It's Diego S-5, Atlanta blanked Chi".When ypu lose· twq, you have really tough for our ballclub."
cago 4.0 and Los Angeles clipped
to win the third to avoid a sWeep,
;Elsewhere In the National Montreal 3-2. Pittsburgh at Cln·
and when you have a 3·0 lead In League, St. Louis dropped Hous- clMatl was rained out.
,_..,
. ,;,···---------------'•--------...-.---~

beat the Mets, ra!Ued from a .3-0
deficit after seven lnnin~.
The Giants tied the gll)lle 8-3
wltll three runs In the eighth
Inning off starter Dwight
Gooden. Brett BU:tler led off with
a walk, and scored one out later
when Will Clark belted Gooden's
fltst pitch his sixth homer.
John Franco relieved and got
Mitchell to ground out, but Kevin
Bass smashed an 0.2 pitch over
the center-field fence. for his fifth
ho!?ler.
'
This Is deflntely the toughest
loss of the season for the Mets,"
said Gooden, who gave up only
four hits over 7 1-3 Innings. "In
the eighth, I Just.wasn't pitching
the way I was in the rest of the
game. I was thinking too much
about \"hat I was about to throw.
I ended up walking Butler, and I
~~~tu~~no~~rnest) Riles 2.0
·..on the pitch to Clark, I was
trying. to ·keep a fastball away,
but It stayed right. , 'over the
plate."
·
·

Reds .tiltpostponed

Toumament
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Thursday, May 17. 1990

Pomeloy-Middlaport. Ohio ·

Pllga 6-The Daily Sentinel

.

.,1101

. NOW-

_,...._ diJ-• llld ilrelill' ID 10·
·

COLONIAL LIVING ROOM SU1TE

$249

leeottlut lllfnnd oholr tn ...... or - · · lcelail for the

.,..., htntl- or aplit-e.

1101 •stt.ti-

siuuy . .,_

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'EMPIRE
COMPlNY
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141

- DOWII1'0D -

GAWIOLIS, OHIO
..........1405 .

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

·Scout supporters honored

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Paisa 8-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. May 17, 1990

Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

ROn

The Melgs-Gallia·Mason Bo:;
chairman c
Caudill) : oontlnScouts ]lonored their own reuous service (Pat Wood) and
cently, presenting certlfic~ttes
certificate of appreciation (Lee
for the many and varied services Ann Welch ).
performed for the group.
MGM DJsir!ct Execudve '),hn
Given were awards of merit to Pinkerman praised the lOcal
Clifford Gordon, Lisa Roush, and scouts and leaders for the a•rd
Brenda Neutzll.ng ; scouter work and continued growui dur(Gary Jones) ,scoutmaster (Wal- ; lng the past year. Dr. Ber•rd
ter Walker), den leader (Christy. Nelhm, MGM District C)lalrman
Ward) and cubmaster CRon was master of ceremont(oj foNhe
Caudill) of the year; largest pack event, held at · Grace' tlidted
In district (Dee Standish, Pack Methodist Church. Aioar ·11!1th
204) ; camp director (Cathy certificates, varloua
.tot lhe
Workman): popcorn sales chair- Items were
man (Ruth Lowe); bowl-a- thon honorees by

Show business mourns death of Sammy /)avis ]r.

I

~ROther one !Ike Sammy ,"
Lloyd Webber mu~ical, told the
less than 100percent when he was
on stage, and he gave even more
Olher black entertainers audience In a choked voice
to those of us lucky enough to call
praised Davis lor helping break . following the final curtain, ''One
him friend ."
down racial barrleySforminorlty of Amer.!Ca's great citizens died
Dean Martin, who along with
perfmmers whO came alter him. this morning at his home ... His
· Dancer Gregory Hines, who voice Is now still. So let's take 15
Davis, Sinatra, Joey Bishop,
Shirley MacLalne and Peter
appeared with Davis In "Taps," seconds of silence.as we dedicate
Lawford formed HPl!Ywood's
his last film, spoke In CinciMatl this show to him."
fast·llVIng "Rat Pac"k" of the
of the man Hines idolized since
Davis, whose career spanned
1960sJ called him a gre11 t' enter- his youth.
.
six decades; died about 6 a.m . at
talner and · •an even · greater
''Sometimes people say, 'Only hi~ Hollywood HillS horne. He had
frlencl. not -only to rne, but to . in America _can , .sornel:l,odY, been confined to bed as his
everyone W)IOselife he touched.' '
ach~Ve tl!ose kind of things, tfnd condlt19n worsened after h!s
Bishop sa)d, ''l guess they I think ln. Sammy Davis's In- release ' six wee~ ago from
musthaveneededagoOdshowup stance, It was lnsplte-ofA.rnedca Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
lit heaven, that's all I can say . thaf he IA(as able to achieve the said family spokeswoman Susan
God
sorry. I loved him ." ·
killd of'success IM!cause he hads·o . Reynolds.
'. ' '·
Former President Reagan said many obstarues to overcome,"
Death came five c;lays after the
Davis was a "dear friend who we Hines said. · ~·
20th anniversary of his marriage
wfll deep~y miss."
Comedian Eddie Murphy said,
to his th.lrd' wife, Altovise.
''He gave his heart and soul to ''Sammy was the ultimate perFriends said Davis, who had
eyery performance -and he was a former. He was a trailblazer for always been pencil-thin, wasted
true AmeriCan lnslltl!tlon," Rea- all of us who follow In his away to about 60 pounds in his
gan and his wife, Nancy, said In a footsteps , and the · world ts final days and spent most of h-is
statement. "There will never be certainly a better place because time sleeping.
of all thl) joy h.e spread through
Billed as "Mr. Entertainhis universal talent and rnent," Davis was 4 when he
began a vaudeville , career that
goodwill."
..
At Wednesday .night's per(or- ·. would bring him .worldwide starGary Turner: . sOuthe!n OhiQ Sunday evening services at 6 p.m mance in Los Angeles or "Phan- dom. · He never went to school,
.,
•
Music State Director, (;hui'c;h of · with specjal musk: by Sunrise. torn of the Opera," star Robert spending his chll!lhood touring a
•
PB~!II~&gt;«tVBEN - AIIIJ .Joi!Mea wu pram·queea ·for the 1990
God, 'Middletown, and his ·c holr,
The discipleship class Is lield at 7 GuUJaurne, the first .black to play segregated nation with his father
•
Melpi
.... llellool Pr• wldcla carrlied. out the theme "Forever
•
wllll ·be at the New Ute Covenant p.J'll. on WednesdltY·
the leading role in the Andrew· and uncle, Will Mat sin.
Faatur". TlleQJilliUIIId ~ 'I ,llifea&amp;uredasllverand white
Church of God, Chester, Saturcutle wltlo metallc , . . acce1t. Cro"w~ by FentQn Taylor,
day at 7 p.m. for a praise and
prlllciPIII, Mila .Jolluon wu eecorted by .Jay Humphreys . .Jennifer
worship service.
W~ waa the flower rtr1 for tile eoronatlon ceremony.
Other singers to participate In
the service will be the New Life
Coven11nt Church of God. The .
Rev. Gary Hines, pastor, and.hls
·wife, Deanna, Invites the public
.
to l,ltlend.
Sunday serVIces at the church
' are Supday schoql .1!-t 9:$0 a.m.,
worship serVIce at 10: 30 with itte ·
DoQr
prizes
were
awarded
and
: ;. . "Mother;s Wedding" was the '
pastor speaking and , special .
one
person
at
each
table
won
the
. i!;:: theme of'the program p.resented
by Louie Fredrick, and
music
center
piece.
.
.
flower
pot
v at the annual mother, daughter
·-~
banquet of the Racine United
:·"• Methodist Church.
1be fellowsblp hall was deco:•:..rated with pictures or weddings
120-Watt Remote-Control Stereo
:~of tile m£mbers. Tllere also were
Rack System With Dual Cassette
..;.:aew•aJ
gowns on dls'-;-play arOUDd the room.
System-1210 By Realist~
"'-: Tile banquet W&amp;jl It tended by
;( 112 mothers, daughters, grand~ mothers, and granddaughters.
,~
A oateri!d diMer was serveji
,,. and the welcome was. given by
·: Lois Bell, president of the United .
: MethodlstWomen at th!! church.
·, She Introduced Martha and Ruth
{ Dudding who" were the co·~ chairmen of the event.
• Flva·Band EqUIIIzar.a Huge JS" Wooten
":
Scriptures were read eoncerna-LED Sptclrum Analyzer a ytlree-Way Speaken
:: lng marriage and also some
- which are read durbig wedding
'
r
Now 25% oft I Digital AM/FM tu- whh 10 pr&amp;&amp;
ceremonies.
sets, hi-speed dubbing and Dolby• B NR.
! Don and Ruth Dudding sang a
113
-1235
,
·~, battefiH extra
~ song which was 'w ritten for their
~~
wo~
per
dllnnel,
minimum
rms
imo
8 Oll1151rom 40-20 1100
wedding. -OUvlaiCunningham
Hz'. WlftHIO lllOI1 O.S.. THO
'
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.~.• played
sang ''The Roae, ..
::: and IJpda Gl~on also sang a
:!:; solo about love and marriage.
:F. ,A 11t'ldal shO\f .was he\d with
~~ models ' shOwing the different
~ styles from weddings over the

LOS ANGELES (UP!) ·sammy Davis Jr . ~ legion of
friends, from Ronallf Reagan to
Frank Sinatra, lauded him as the
ultimate entertainer and an
American lnsdtutlon who helped
pave the way for other blacks.
The reed-thin singer-danceractor died of throat cancer
Wednesday, passing away peacefully In his sleep with hlswlfeancl
children at his bedside. He was
64,' and had been diagnosed with
the disease about eight months
,
.
·
ago.
Sinatra recalled Davis as "a
class act" who was "the best
frlend ·a man could have.'"
"It is difficult to eompress a
friendship or more than 40 years
Into a few wordS," said Sinal ra,
who posi:J!Oned a series of appearances at New York's Radio City
Music Hall to fly to California for
the funeral. '~Sam never gave

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CVBMASTER - Top Cubmuter In MGM Dllltrtct 'wu
R9n PludlU of Pac'S, Ul.
Caudill was al10 chalnnan of '
the 11110 Bowl·a·lhon.

I'm

.Director to .visit church ·
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THitEE REGISTERED PHARMACISTS
. TO SERE YOU ·, . .
AWARDS· OF MERrr
Three people were honored by
MGM Dlstrtct with Awards of
Merit In Scoullng. From left,
they are Brenda Neulzllng
MGM Cub Scoui Bound Tab!~
Chairman; ' Clifford Gordon,
Troop 259 and Usa Housh of
Troop 249.

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~ Mother, . daughter banquet

~- held

at Racine ·church

t:

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Save·•2oo

t-;

ana

COMPI/TER CLEAN-UP

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years.

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The dinner grace and closing
prayer were given by Sue Grace
who used prayers from wedding
ceremonies.
··
Favors were · sachet ·b rides.

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SAVE ON THESE ITEMS AND MANY MORE !
PC·Comll8tlble ... ndy 1000 TX.

'

.... •••
.... 49••

wol 1• •- &amp;99ID GAME BLASTEitsound Upg...a.
•C:.·1J.. .
sav. $30 ·~ get I1INo sound for
· ~r PC. *25·1038
,
.
· Entertainment Soliware .Pack. 29%
llllt,lll 1799 OD off! Features Hero's Ouest, Bubble
Bobble and Welltris. 125-13-4()

Rlf. .

Save $!00. 110286-based computer.
1!25·t800
. . • ·.

Deluxe Tonctt LeHr Primer. Now

saoo otfl With-1.5MB memory.

126-2804

"-

\,VIde-Carriage Prlni.r. Sav..$3oo.
0(1 this IBM• compatible printer. 132'
column. 126-2808
• ·.
· .

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...Wls
lit.II.
1•1111

cat.mz ·

39900

Rog.

Education Software Pack. 29% off.
Features Math and Me, Reading and
Me,and The Playroo~. N25-t341

Rq.
11.115

. 4911

LED Alerm
Cut33~
'"'_..;..;;.._

.gges_

I
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~.l3U5

'Low...;.,,.
Per Month•

•
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4 Floors &amp;More
Of Merchandise
On Sale!
.
.
.· Save
·On Every Item In Our. Store,
.
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Furalture &amp; Ap-p liances
At Tremendous Savings:

IS THE._ TII'IE TO IGYI
flURRY In · ~"LY 3 DRYS. LEFTI
· HOW

Backup b1111ry 1111ra

AM/FM. Auto-stop, lighted dial. .
#12-1927
. . .

~63-756

Cordless
Telephone

Portable .
Tonelpulee dialing

.."t- '"'·'

•

Reg4t.ls

Digital ready!
133-999

23-123
23-124
23·125
23-126

2.(8.79

218.79
'214.89
Each9.95

= over two~tuneshowenGounter
cases ot'

E,

contacted

f

~:· :Peopie· ~n . the newr-.

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::::'.
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By Unl&amp;ed Press International •
·
PENN FESTIVITIJ£8: The University 'Of Pennsylvania has
lined up a diverse group inclu~iilg RQnald Rea1an, DoUy
Partou, Nobel Peace Prize winner·Oscar Arlaa, Bill Cosby ·and
fed· Koppel for Its•250th anniversary this week. Reagan and
Arias, the former president of Costa Rica, will address major
convocations starting Thursday while Koppel, the host of ABC's
"Nightllne," will host three seminars titled "Wqrld Without
Walls." Koppel's seminars will include Keary JUalln1er, w.;ter
Tom·Wolfe, Apple Computer executive John Sculley and former
Librarian-of Congress Daniel Boonlla·and they will be aired by
PBS In the fall. Cosby and Parton, along with Kenny RQgers, get
top billing Saturday in PennULTIMATE, an entertainment
. finale.
.
•.
·
· ·•· BOOk TALK: ''The Electi1c Kool-Aid Acid Test" was Tom'
Wolfe's story of the bus trip with Ken K~ and his Mercy
Pranksters back In the flower-power '60s and now, 25 years
later, Kesey has written his version of that trip. ''The Further
Inquiry" t "Further'_' W!IS the name of the bus) comes out in the
fall and will include,l50-prevlously unpublished photographs :..
Bo_UIDg stODeS bass player Bill Wyman also will publish his
autobi911raphy In the fall. He takes -a frank a look at the wild
lives of the Stones, their management and financial dealings,
quarrels over songwrltlng credits, the ouster and death ofBrlaa ·
Jones and the effects of drugs on the Stones' music and personal

·-·

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Nallodir Cam• area
MUA.La .QUALITY I

•

IICIJI!cln
OYer 1500
lfMiap,
· · -MM1e
· llld nl
test to our IIIIC1Ing lllndlrds
llalla.., Cea; 1 H

OH '

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Landers

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·Keep .T hings
With

ANN LANDERS

"I989, ·Lo. """-'"
nm .. Syodl ......~

c...,,.. Syndlno~
·'

·.a.---~-;.;.......::;o.;:;::..;~·
be described six weeks after
the last encounttr.
There is one more ihing be can
do. Get a polymersse cliain reaction
(PCR) analysis to determine if be
has a latent infection that is not in·
ducing an.tibodies.
This is Am talking: Even though
this language may be too clinical
for you_to understand, your doctor
wiD undelstand. · ·
. Fauci further recommended that
you tell your wife of your history
and ask her to get tested. He also ·
suggested that you practice safe sex.
W/uJI's IM truth about pol, co·
caine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
doWMrs? 'The Lowdown on D~"
has up-10'-the-minute information oil

!Dms

drugs.

~nd

18,000 B.T.U .......:.S59995
. . B.T.U ......,..$69995

=
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~rttJ~~

Cool .~·
. ••
•

Frigidaire
And Kelvinator

a self-addressed. long,

business-size envelope and a check
or rt'IIJMY order for $3.65 (this in·
eludes· postage and handling) to: .
Lowdown, c/o AM Landus, P,f).

Box 11562. Chicago. Ill. 606110562. (In CIJIUlda, send $4.45.)

wmt
5,000 B.T.p...........S2999s TRADE
. "B.T. U..;........
. $39995
WITH
8,000
.
TRADE

ANNI.ANDEFI&amp;D
C 1990, Craatara Syndicate

Frigidaire Refrigerato~

THE·G
COVER-UP!-

18,ooo B.T.u......s5999s

·--~s99 9 el

.

RETURN OF THE NATIVE: Classical pianist Rudolf.
Flrkuay will end voluntary exile from Czechoslovakia by
returning to his native country May 28 to perform at the Prague
Spring Fesdval. Flrkusny, a naturalized U.S. 'ctUzen since 1951;
says it's his way of acknowledging the return of democracy to
CzechoJovakla. ae will appear as soloist with the Czech'
PhUharmonic, playing Plano Concert No. 2 by BOhuslav
:erllnu, which h~ (!femlered with the same orchestra In
nague In ' 1935. Flrkushny said he had not perfOrmed In
Czechoslovakia since 1946. because It was "my only way as a
musician to protest the totalitarian sull!ugatlonof myeountry."
Fikushny, 78, came of age while Czech democracy flourished
between the two World Wars •nd was the protege of the
country's first PteSident, Toniu Maaryk, who sponsored the
pianist's e&amp;:ly t~ps abroad to punue studies and further his
car~r.
.
·
GLDIPBES: Dlvoree lawyer Marvin Ml&amp;chelaOn turned from
· legal .matters to a medical emergency Tueiday In a courtroom .
in 'Huntington, W.Va. Mitchelson was representing Aline
Banker In her $14 mUilon ~pUt with Georp Buller, West
Vfrllbla'~ ,former •.liquor commissl!lner, · when one or his.
W)tnesle&amp; ctiDapsed a.s they, were conferring. Mltchi!IIOII gave·
the man, accountant David A&amp;ldmi; mouth-to-mouth resusclta-\
t.lon until an ambulance crew arrived Atklna was taken to a
hospllal and released later ... Ed BelleJ' .Jr. has dbne a series of ,
public-serVIce announcements to promote mass 1r1ns1t: "As a
citizen greatly eoncerned with the enVIronment, I want to
underscore mau tr1nslt's positive .contribution," BelleY said
ln.a ltatement. ''Thll,la the decade of'PiaDetar)r ealvatkln ud
:the enVIronmental community baa anbracell maa trullt as
one key solution to our air problems lor ,leneraiiDna to come."
•

....{.; I

l'om-.

PH . 9U-21BB

•'

Dear Ann Landers: As I write
some
AIDS' wem not
.....
:
..
leue.r'
1
frigh
..
__
.....
;::. uuo
, am so
........ Jc;an. ~for~ thin aix monlhs
,... barely type. What am I: Wllrl!ed after expos.e. Now 1 am scared.to
· about? A!J&gt;S·
··
.
death that I may iDdeed Jiave the
I am biSCl!ual. A ,Yertl ~o. I had : vifus, and wtw is wone,l may have
""" unpro_tc:cted IIQ ~ wtth a .man · passed it 01110 my wife:
..
~ who 11 py. He !' the only 1J1111 I
PleiSe chock with your experts,
:;; have ever been with, bul I IIIIIWIIe and tell me what they ay .OOUt this.
~ that be his had many paJ1IICrS.
• No city or state · please. Just ••
t: Six weeb after our last enc:oun- TERRIFIED AND ANXIOUS
::- tcr, I experienc:ed extnlmO flligue,
DEAR TERRIFJ;BQ: I
... flu·likc symp101111 and a IIIII '!Ill .Dr. Anthony Fauci cii.eclor of the
,.... lasled for ICvaa1 weeks.· Knowing Nationallnstilute ii Alleqy and In·
that dw:ae weruympi!IIDJ ·of AIDS. fcctious Diseases, ~of the w!JIId's'
&lt;fr- I went for a fest. It lllmed out aesa·
foremost authorities on AIDS. This
::; live. I was !Old that the ~ was 99 'is what bc said:
·
:_ pen:ent IICCtnle after tfuee months, • Your correspondent. having had
::, ~t in order 10 have folal peace of holntl.cJn•l sex, has put himse!f in,
::; • mind, I went for a IICCOIId tel( 90 the high rille catesOI'Y· But the fiCI
:: clays later. That. too, was neptive.
that be bid a neplive 111tibody ~
•·
After the aecond test. I decidecl I
for mv three momlts after the fust
;j' · .was safe and mazried a wonderful enco.u nter ·and then . again three
,. woman. We 11e extremely l!aJipy, months Ia!« puts him in a category
~ . and she.has no idea that I 1111 bilex· . of9S Pen:ent safe. lim a liale con·
:-·· ual.lrecendy leamed of studies that ccmed. however, about the SYJnP:

~-centers,
' ~ USA and fourR&amp;O
DV11B11S
manufectumg pi81tS

Fri.,cly S...klo
Op., WoN Nigltta ' tH 9

·,

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PIIGWN LUDIIMIIIP

4:00p.m.

-._,~ Reader rightly
. concerned . Ann;

3.11
1.11
2.79
5.11

. 0'1117000 USA tocat1ona. 311,000

10

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....

ll'riiiiD··-

E. Moin

.,.

39!Paus
. Reg.

Sander 10:00 • .m.
PIIESCRIPTIONS

.•.-....

.J:Jatterl-.
40~ - 0ff :

40% Off

Ronlid Hflnntno,. A.Ph .
Mon. tiWu Sat. 8:00a.m. ta 9:00p.m .

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Rechargeable

Stereo
Headphones

Ch . . . Alfft~ A. Ph.

Konn•h MoCu.... glt, R.Ph.

.....

C.esette

Cut3~

Pharmacy

-

Cut2S~

Reg. 7U5
Touch-redial.

We've
Marked ·It All Down.

l.

33~ Off

Bltterin lbtrl f

t •'

39P!•.•

Big 0.9" display.

'

- M•r 18." - 19" -.21st,-

•

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Hear ail the action-pollee, ·
fire, rail, morel #20-139

9•..~~

Stereo Car Cat1sette

SWISHER lDH5E

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Quartz

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SERVICE AT
COMPETITIVE PRICES.

'

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QUALITY PD~......

. CAMP DIRBC'l'OB - 1t80 Cub Day Camp Director Catby
·Worlanaa wu honored far her wprk by MGM Dlatrtct Executive
· .Jolm Plnkermaa.

By Kinney
Cover.SOre Spots Uke:
• Sand FlnJ¥led
•
. Textured Walls
• Cracked Walls
• Grooved Panellng
••Concrete Wallll
It's easy &amp; they'll be &lt;'mr-111
ered smoothly forever, ..
and can be painted
-papered ·any way you
want. Just size the waw•
and hq UNING CNNIJ.II
using a ready miX vi.Ilyll
adhesive.

.
NOtlC!
.

''*"=

AppiJ For A New Rutland Furnllu!W
StopiiiOrcaiToRicelveAnAppk.._...
R1quut Ckllckly ·When ApprOVed, You'l ·
• From MunciNda 01 ltema ·With " "

.:

�Ohio
Thunday, May 17, 1990

-Rutland garden group's topic wildflowers, ferns .·
Wild flowers and f·e rns were
the study topic for the Rutland
Friendly Gardners when ihat
group met recently at the home
of Lorrl Barile's, with members
brlng wildflowers for
Identification.
Carrie Morris presented the
program on wildflowers . . She
stated that spring seeding may
be done March througbJune, and
fall seeding fr()l!l ~tember
through November· Fall seeding
offers the advantage of earlier
bloom for the annuals and first
seascin bloom for the perennials.
She went on to say that wlldflow·

'

l ·. .
r1

erscom.petewellon!K!D~rsolls,

II

'

with little If tny fertiliZer.
When seeding, mix the seeds
wlthacupofflnegralnedsandor
commea} to Increase bulk. Rake

plants In man). delicate pat_terns. viewed · on herbs .'and floral .::
·
rerns are OM of the few plants design 'Mrs Wlll1ord serves a
mboolstt ut,?~IA S::~gsT:PP~!fo~: . thai do not.bl~ Ferns need at · secret~y fo~ region 11 and Mrs . .
a u '"~
· rtn . d
'Ie-.tJ~~U:ilal11had4!andhumldlty, Bolin was Introduced as past ·
blooming, water du g
ry and .can 11, trantplanted Into state president of the organlza• ·
periods throughout the growing · these conditions. Tbey need good tlon Mrs Bolin and Mrs. CarpenseasWioklnfl. owersavallableforlocal dralnaglt, so.~
. at moss can be ter 'were. recognized as flower
·
. . .used In the PU!ntlng:
show judges.
.
..
sowing . Include yarrow· com ·
Devotions were by Joan SteMargaret Edwards Is placing
flower, bachelor ~utto;::~P~:· wart entitled, ''Save Room In floral decorations In the Rutland
•
!lowers. coreops 5 •
Your Heart." Members dis- Post Off~ window during May:
sweet william, foxglove, AfrlcBII piayed wildflowers such as trll- The dub's yard sale was set for1
_ f!t~~;&gt;~'l!~k:f~ :b~?:e~r~b: Hum, bhiet, ground Ivy, and wild June 4from a.m. to p.m. at ; he
,
ket 1 .. ' n.o.· tuft , mustard.
.
.
fire house In Rutland.
. · •
dll!lle s. roc • go.,
Cll ""' .
•
Su;zyCarpentergavethesecre· Mrs Willford dlscuiW!(I pl'an~ .
• scarlet fl~. lqpln.e, ane;~~~~ . ·tary•s ·report 11 nd Maragret Ed· ,, .ft&gt;r . th~ fall nciwer show "Our
·. primrose, com poppy,
wards reported on the treasury.
Home Town." and the club votecl
. eyed susBoaplln._
· ' ded th
JoAnne . Fetty. president, to have wood niches btilltfor tl)e
Janet,
. . recommen
e , thanked all who partlelpate(l In special clas~.
:·
· Reader 5 Dlg_est Illustrated the recent Earlll-!&lt;rbor Day
The traveling prize, brought by ·
Guide to Garde91ng for lnforma- observance, Including Bank One Joan Stewah, was won,by Judith
tlononm.anytoplcs.Shesaldthat who donated the $eeds ·and the . Hill. and thedoorprlzewaswon.
wild • ferns . are shade loving Rutland ,Cub Scouts and.. the 4H. by Marie Blrehfleld. Favors or:;

9

. ood
. ga. ~den·ers"
Fernw
·ta·pt"c· plants ,••.n ·sh ade·

r

L•

I'

an.d junior g;arden .clubs headed

·

.

An examination tor rural carrier · positions has been an·
nounced by the U. S. Pos iai
Service. In Meigs County the
Pomeroy, Langsville, Middleport, Ra&lt;il~~~t. Rutland, Long
BottQm, Portland, and Reeds·
'lllle Post offices will be accept-.
lng applications for the
examination. .·
.
. •' Coll)pleted applications are to

3

· .

.·

DI'S FLEA ......n·.

· R.OTARY
.
PANCAKE
DAY
· ~AY .19,

Monthly

'A clillstluMt advt!rlisl)ttnl.-'111 plttcud 111 Thtt Oatty·S,mtu•_j,ll!:!•·
ct!pl
cl&lt;tUIIH!d d1sVIuy . Busim.!Ss Caut ilnd lucJill notices)
wtll .. tso appeilf ti"! the Pt Pleasa111 Regtstur ~nd thtt Galli
polls Douty Tnbunu, machi1~g o~ur 18 . ~00 homes.

'

I
I

1

, . SYRACUSE -There will be
spll'ghettl dinner on Frlday from
· 5·7 p.m.. ,at Carleton School In
; Syracu~ . Cost · Is $3.50 · per

: person.

·

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fWJ.W·
~ 'ml'l'r
.
.

3

.

992

4 GiVa-ay
S

246 Rio Gr•nde
256 Guyan Dist.
643 "Arabili Oisl.
379 Wal~l .

247
949
742

667

3'

6 Losl -•nd Found
1 v~~ $,11elpaiil-ln ad!fancel
8 . Public S11le • Auchon
9 ·WMtted to Buy
·

En•plnyn11·n l

..

Serv1c~o
11 . Helo w..,ttld
12 S•tuatiMI Want.t
1 l Insurance
14 Buaine,;s Tr-'imng
15 Sthouh; • lnstructton
t6 lbdlo. TV &amp;·CB R~pom

17 MiscebneoU s ·
Warned Tc;. Do

67&amp;

'985' Ch•ler -'
843 ~

~

Ad~

H_
apP'f

Portl.nd
letart hll1
Racine
RuiiMCI .
eootYilte

516

Apple GrCive

773
882
195
937

Maaon
New ~~"" .
Letart .
Buftilo

21 . UU1_1neu Opportunity

22
23

Monev t.o Lpan

Suop 1es
&amp; L1 veslocK

31 Homes tOf s ...
32 Mobile Homn·'t or S..te ·
Jl hrms for Sale
..

Pt Pleaunt
4SB leon

M•ddiiPOft
Pomeroy

,

~ofessio'h,al $enritvs

3S
36

1)1 ·· farm EqU!CJmunt
62 Wanlld to l\iy .

BustnMs Buildu:-.g.
LOts &amp; .cre~e
Real h .. ,.• W.-.ted

liYHIO~

63

64 Hay 6 Gra•n
Su~

65

li®lilfl
41 Hou•s 'tOf·Aent
42 Mobile Homes tor Rttnt
43 Farms tor Rent
44 ' Apartment. for Rttnt
45 'f urnished Rooms
46 SPace tor Rent
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equtpment tor Runt
49 For leae

.

.

Trans oo. rt alion
,·

71. • •utoa for S;lltt
72 Trucks tOt- Sale

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD ' s
74 Mo.tOfC:yctes

' 1i Boil! I II Molors lor S•le
Auto .P•\1 &amp; Acc•.sou•
11 Auto Rep•

76

78 CampeOQ EquJpntenl
79 C011m'p au &amp; MotOf Hon1t~s

Merchandise

Serv1ces

51
·&amp;2 53
54
56
56
57

Household Goodl
Sportln; Goods
Anhque1
Mile. Merchandise
Building Suppli•
PC!t1 lor '. SIIe
Music~ ln1tri.un"e nts
58 . Fruita • YeQtnable&amp;
59 ,for Sale or Trar1e

81
82
8J
. 84

Home hnprovement5
Plumbmg &amp; He11hng
E ACWIIing
Electnc .. &amp; AlldtlQIItf..-ltO.t
85 Guntll,l!ll Hauhn\J

86 Mobde !-tum8 -Ai!!pi!l"
87 Upholstery

..

IRA

·Business .Services

'

~'

. n-

21111 St•' ~lidtllllflll'll

For Appt. Call
· 992-6717 Hamc .or
992-6244

..
.

..

Appolntll'lllnt

'~A~~~~!~.

_ _ _ _ '1
Cindy Parle and

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

~
.,

'•

son, Dal'i.d , would
. like to thank the
6th Grade' Class of
'' ... Pcimll!'oy
'E lementary and
•. • T•aclier Becky

,.

.

Call Now To Make

CUSTOM IUIT
Pli. 949.-2101
or les. 949•2860
. Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

_, PubUc Nollcl

··

OPENINO SOOll

BISSELL
iUILDEIS .

''

•.•

;

FOREVD BIONZ
TANNING

Tripplett for ·

sending flowers
end card•. Thank•
for the support of
· everyone who
helped .at thii time.

'

8

NOTICE OF ' ; .
APPOINTME,OF
'·'
'. FrDUCIA . ,
On Aprt 30, ,

'30 Sessions-S30

~

WANT ADS
JW!K.

Co-AdnohlolbahWI

Vllth the Wit Annloted of the
,_ . of f i - .J. HMII·
..... dh
od •. lao of 307
Wetzu• lltNol.
Moigt County. Q!llo. 46719.

Porn-.

Robert E.

~.

co: ••• 21

Wotth for Signs

.. IACINE, OHIO ,
5·17·'90·1 ....

Rog•r Hysell
· Garage
~24,

II:

romerey Ohio

" Aleo Triae•leeloa
PH. 992·5682
;• or992-7121

.:. SMALL

'' '

.A81;·PUNCH!

'~

Travel"

SER~CE

We can. rtlllir aiM! rt·
•• radiators· tnl
heater corts. We can
alta ·acid boil anll rod
out r.ton. Wt aha

.PAT HIU FOlD

"· ·.

4-1 .. 1 .....,.

·: . COUNTRY ,.
. ·MOBILE I
HOME PA•
•Mobile Home

.. -P•r:t• .
•Mobile Hom•
Renllle

992-21911
Middleport,

'

5-11-'90-1 mo.

.,.

and

EYEILlmiGS
. OPIN:

APRft. 1 fHRU JULY 1

Public Sale ·

HOURS:

Thurs. thru Sun,

&amp;Auction

SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
· INSULATION

'.BISSElL.
SIDING CO.

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

"Free Ettlriltt•".

PH. 949·2101
or NO
le1s.s.
"::;~;!~6~
~u11

992-2156

RUTLAND CIVIC· CENTER, Rutland, OH.

..'

From Pomeroy. Ohio. taka State Route 124 ·•
WEST to. Rutland. Sale I• on Main St.

}UU
..

· ··
Signe wU! be potted.
·
~E INCLUDES SEV.ERAL PIECES FROM THE OLD
'· RATHBURN DEPT. STORE Of RUTLAND ALONG WITH .
SEVERAL PCS. FROM THE ESTATE Of THE LATE B. B.
THOMPSON OF. COLUMBUS, OHIO .
fURNITURt: . Chippendale style cherry secretary w/claw
and ·ball teet; 24 pane cherry breakfast cupboard, 6 drawer
cherry dresser w/BG mirror. 3 pc. bdrm. suite, d~opleafb~n­
quet !able w/3 leaves.
·
. · ..
POTTERY: 2 Roseville #103 6" vaes. 2 Rosevill~ H741 4''
, vases, I Weller H17 vase. .
·
· .
'ADVERnSING &amp; POUT !CAL: Clark 56 tube spool cabine!J
" Beldini26 drawer spool cabinet, Belding 3 drawer silk cabl·
net. Boye needle display case, John £ngl1sh needle drs play
case banjo and guitar string display case, P~oen1x Bulldog
box 'white House box Ohio Civil Rights Comm. Not1ce dated
1902, covdbQard toy boxes, James 0. Mills for Lt. Gov. 1~26
po~r~ Hanna Paint·pcs., some metal ahd glass srgns.
.
MISC. STOR£ ITEMS: Dr. Scholl's ~ed 0 Graph in o_ak box.
oak slat top pinned legged table, 2 oak pressed s.~ed ta-.
bles, 2 maple cabinets w/roll out shelves, oak 10 x5 glass
front' back and ends showcase w/4 don" and? dr•wP.rs
al~o a 1Qx6', 2-8' countertop showcases (oak), oak store .
. ladder on wheels, wood and meta.l hat and dress stands,
42''x35" tift· )liP table (stmds 18'1. several display stands and
racks (mostlY oak). lots ol show~ase doors w/glass, ~vera!
pes. old alass. shoe store fool re5t, fyot scale, Scholls arch
fitter · Mission Oak library table.
·
· .
:
COINS STAMPS I CURRENCY: 1851·0·2'o Gold, 1903lrberty s:oo Gold, 1899 Morg'n Dollar, 1922 Peace Dollar; .
1876 Sealed Liberty Hall (Carson ~1111. 1911 Barber Ouar·
ter )902 Barber Dime 1853 Seated liberty Hall Dime, 1907 ·
v. Nickle. 1898 V. Nickle, 1861! 3S (nickle),1853 3S (Silver),
18'&amp;42$. 1852 Larp Cant, .1863 Atabii!II·I.OO bill, Georg~a
Mtcli111ics .a.ank 5.00 bill, N.C. 30 &amp; 40 Dc!llar Notes, Ger-.
m~&amp;~ ese paper currency. Several German and U.S.
Sl(lnps; &gt;l(al other coins not listed.
ALSO tUIG: ''Cast Iron Boston Terrier, a~prox.IOOyrs.
1
: old. ' 'tills IS otm APARTIAL LISTING.
11t1o •• .. • lw.. ..,, - f!• ttl .,..~ tho ~if wjth us.
EATS .
.
CASH
POSIIJVE Ill
•

Fast Dry; Camfort..le, Long Lasting!
.
CHAISE Muhi-positlon
leg. IJJS
.Salt 0289 ·
SWIVEL CH.AIR
,
leg. •249
Sale 0 199
· ARM CHAIR loot .._., •

.'

·sale'136 '
'
&gt;

.

,,

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:Seating Groups! Gliders!
. Cafe Sets!

'

'.,

....

'~iSilliii"~ii11:

Mown L:. WrltiMI

ROOFING

NEW -- REPAIR

'

·Up td 60 of them in fact. )JQAl~ this is aDexter

j

'{

'

AU Beautyrest
Mattresns on Saltt

· handsewn shoe.l!aditionaL
ComfOrtable. Tnneles5. '

LAIGIST SIIICIION IN
: TIISAIU.
.,,

Our 1--,Mte tletentlll ••m·

pr-• afrio·you .._.. thet
-nirt .... t!Hh eoii•IIOftlll in· .
bly

tllvW.IIy . to "'"" wel1ht ond
thope. Ewry lncll of YOU! body rei:elvlii the ..lOt tuppon It ...
qulrM.
'

'

Heritage .House

S~OE

992·5.627 .

,

.

''

PLACE

MIDDLEPORT, OliO

•

•;

'

·.;;w ....,

••
c-11!W 11111 --.
'.
44.·1045
__________

.•.... .

et1111y ·' "'· ,., FrWar

"

'

'
_.

OWNER1 lEO. MOIRIS ·
AUCTIONEEII Cll. W. lllth·MeWtn

I ~

......

•
·"'

I .

614-742-2041

;;,

'\'

UIDA'S
PAINniG &amp;. CO.

OIL CHANGE

S1695 •4 Qt. Max.

IIIYIIICIIIliilhll

, TilE IEPAII
MOVIE IBITAL.
CONVIIIENa SfOIE nou

OoodRo~

T.L .C.

1111ta1. c~ea-.
&amp; Pallltlnt

FREE ESTIMATES
tho ptin •I ef flllnllnt
lot .. do it .....

CHESTD
QUII STOP

VIIY

s.,••.iltli~·~7 ~·

209 South 4th St•

Gutters
Downspouts

'

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

DUMP TRUCK
Send-Stone-Dirt ·
(614) 667-3271

FREE E$11MATES

949-2168 .

Gr..tA.

RUTlAND nRE
SALIS and
SERVICE
, . .J42-JDII
•Tire Saln
•FIOIIt End
Alignment
•Oil Change .. Lube
•Brlke Work .

MAIN ST,. llnlll

1·15-'90-1111

. KO".N11Y KLUB .

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New. Sh.tta for BroUn

.

Ciullo. Clubo. - - fof
eon or dMfghter.

Ioll.t"C,a.
,._.....

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JOHN TEAFORD

46117 Scoot c.., ....
Clt•tor. OloHo
4-S-'90'1 ilo.

USED Allfi.IANCIS •

CENTER

MOVAL

*LIGHT HAULING
.
*FIREWOOD

·.. BILL SLACK

Stop In and Ste

DALLAS SAYRE
A1

PAT HILL
CIIYSUI.f'LYIIIOU1H
..
DOIGa

3 Announcements
aroo rrlng~ ..,.o~g~C

=-~t"'an
=-~~ox-.ao~-

lAY WAIIIIIIY.

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. PIOIUCYS

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992-2269

IP

liN'S APPLIANG
992-SUS • ,15·1561
A•• , _ , _ Oftlca ,l

EVENINGS
..........

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.

FREE
ESTIMATES

INST~LLATION

SIIYICI

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SEARS

7111.1. . .

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MHIBWKI&amp;IEPAII

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•FILL DIRT .,.

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Service

992·55'89

SAUS

W. Ct!w! Fllhlng ...pjllja

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NEWLAND
'
ENTERPRISES

.CALl.

"IUhpm, Ollie 45760

992•5335 or 915·3561

DOZER
SITEWORI • RPADS
CLEAIING

Reeic:lential •
Commetci•l

Newlomtleol:
161 Nertll Sectlltl

lEN'S APPUANCE
·SDYicE

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

Heating, Coel.ln~
lefrigeratlon

PI.IMING I HEATING

AlliiADS ·
Iring It In Or We
Pick Up.

'

:
•
Probote Judge
Lena K. NftMitood, Clerk
(51 3. tO, 17. 3tc
, ,

·&amp;

. To All
Typel Of

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAII

rtpcirGas Tanks.

·~25-tfn

·

.

...

(614) .
"Your
Connection. .. · .

· REPAIR

Mlillt County ~bole Court
coeo No. 28J11, Juttth a,
Dil&lt;on. 378011 SR 124. Pam-'
- · 0'*&gt; 411769.,dJoen H.
·- - . Mlllborry A,.., Pom -; Dhlb. 46769. _...,.

. PURSUIJ .
742·20~7

. SPECI~L ·.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

• in. "'"

~)) PTR-~EL

949-2794

I

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CANEEL 8.AY SUNG COUE(TION

6 fe•t•w"

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AnnOUC:Mieht •

~Mill

Rea l Estate

1 · C~rd of "{hnks
2 In M8mory

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Mason Co . WV
Ar•• Code 304

···.,

'

..

'

,.

.

Ann :lll ncemenls

' .20
.30 .
.42
06/ d.60

. ,MAY 19, 1990-10:00A.M.

~.

• RACmE -There will be a
· chicken noodle soup dinner at the
: Bethany United Methodist
Church on Friday at 4 p.m.
sponsored by all churches on

st .30/day

Meigs Coun1v
"rea Code 614

U6 . GaHipolis
367 Ch•htre
388 Vinton

_.gg ::.·

ABLE AUCTION

MIDDLEPORT ~ Cheerleadlng tryouts lor next year's sight~
•"grade squad at Melg~ Junior
High will be belei Friday at 4 p.m.

.:

•

18

DA'i' BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY OEADUN 'E
1
' .' MONDAY PAPER
1~.
~~u~.~~~
TUESDAY PAPER
.
, W£.0Nf.SOAY PAPER '
2,00 P.M . TUESDA~. '
2 .00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
, TH.U RSO"Y P,APEA
. 2 :00 P-¥ · THURSDAY
fHIOAV .PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER
. i 1)0 PM . FRIDAY.

'

' leg.$169

POMEROY - The HillSide
; Balltlst Churchwll) have a hymn
. sing Friday . at 7 p.m. Pastor ,
: James R. Acree Sr. Invites ·the·
public.

Gallia County
.- Aur• Code 614

.

.

FRIDAY
,,
- ' ·POMEROY -' Americare·
. Pomeroy will have an employee
~ appni'clatlon cookout to honor.
·· employees, volunteers, a11d fa ell·
ily doctors on Friday at noon.
.
.
POMEROY - The BellS and
• Beaus Western . Square ·Dance
·, Club will sponsor a dance Friday
• from 8-11 p.m: at the senior
citizens center in Pomeroy.
,, Keith Rippeto wlll be the caller.

..Q~!If 1 6 Word&amp;

$4.00
,$ 6.00
$9.00
$13.00 .

16

,( .'la~sifiell

SATUIDAY, MAY 19, .1990
P.M.

'·

'

;

•

"ROTARY PAIIMCE DAY"

·• ANTIQUITY
Tlie Xi
i-·Gam111a Epsilon Chapter ,, Beta
! Sigma Phi Sorority will. meet ~
~ Thursday .for its picnic 111 tlie ' •
·. hOme Sonya· Wolfe In Antiquity:,.•
- Meet at-the London PoOl ·parking
; !ol tn. Syracuse at 6 p.m. ,Picnic
•
. starts
~. \ at
. 6: 30 p.m.

.

•

Ro'e

15 .
16
15

Hakt

fitten

• The ·Area's Number ~ · Marketplac:e .

Rates lfO tor conaeeuti¥e r~niro . bt.o kenl.lp".,.s.WtiiiNtchalged
'
lor each d-v" as .-._,arale Mls.

-.!,

•t.oo

Words ·
1'5

1
3'
6
10 .

1990

I

.

'

Days

EMORIAL ·.llO·LtDAYI

· ·=~====J~====~~

Tbe Southern High School
Several trips have been Island with extrasea.tsavall,able,
will meet
Board
planned by the Meigs County $35 Including travel and .admls- Mpndayofat Education
7 p.m.
Senior Cl tlzens Center.
sJon; June 26, Clnchinatl Re1s,
AU by motQrcoach arranged San FrancisCo Giants baseball
through Appalachian Coach game, $32, lncluj lng transporta- ·
yoll
Tours, the trips lllclude May 29, tlon and admission; aild July 17,
Oblo Amish Country, InCluding Buckeye Dinner Theater, Colum·
~a wen~
dinner at Ajplne Alpa, tour of the · bus, $45, Includes slt-do\m dinner
cheese factor}'. qUilt shop( and and the show. '"I'he Good Old
other attractions, $48; June 5, Days."
·s quare dance group trte to Kings

RATES

· LET~S HA~E . A.OREAT

·Communit11 ·ca
. lendar

I

Hospitalized

Classified

u..

l

Andrew Wll!am Rose of Racine
was· amorig the 169 undergradu·
· ales to receive .degrees at the
144th Commencement of Wll·
m!ngton College on May 5.,Juan
W!lllams, a writer for the· Wa·,
sh!ngton Post . Magazine dell·
Ruby Stewart Is confined IQ the
vered the address and Wilmingt,Jnlverslty ·Hospital, Columbus.. ton College · President Nell
Rhodes Hall, .Room 1084. Ca~ds
Thorburn presfded.
may be sent to her there.

'

homemade jrult jam were given:
·
Mrs. Barnes also displayed a ~
design of red roses on th~ dining:
table. Marjogle Davis and Marie.:
Birchfield were honored by their ~
secret pals .for birthdays.
.Tile next.· ~-ttng. will be held:
,..~~
at th~ hpml! of Marjorie Davis,':
with the theme of the progr11m on :
. trees: , Members. will name a flowering tree.; Jolin Stewart wm:
feature an UI~trated talk on:
. trees wltbMarle Birchfield show-;:
lng how to Identify dlfferent'O&lt;iks.:
Joanne Fetty will lead a wor)t· ..
shop ; on bow to glycerln.lze:
leave!!, with Mrs. Davis to show a :
design featurlngJrls;.
:
·
•

~ct

l

be returned ~tween June 4 and
June 8. Additional lnf9rmat1on
may be obtained froJO any
postmaster.

•.

Board to meet

Trips planned by senior center

Graduates

by Mrs. Boljn. The I.ocal litter ·. by the hostess, Lorrl Barnes.

controi ·offuce · supplied litter
bagS and printed materials !or
; · RODEO WINNERS - Displaying the lrophl!ls they won In the
the.program.
.
Cub Scout Rodeo beld Sunday were left lo right, front, Kevin
·
:
·
·
The club voted to plant addlKeaton, Zachary ~ohbnan, Dan c ·usler, Johna&amp;han Haggerty,
.
·
. · tlonal ¥e&lt;Js at the clylc center
Gran.tMatheny,andBrandonBinl,andback,MattKing,Matthew
·
·s
PI · " ·
using· r-uby red flowers, and the · and to· m
. ove tulips · there to
"Plants for hadY aces was 75th anniversary using glitter to
: Keaton, Phillip Burch, Tim Peavley, Adam Jenkins, lind James
the title of the program pres· . emphasize diamonds. The club another bed nearer the building.
o Clifford.
·
.. .
·
.
. .
ente,d by -Wllovene Bailey at the . will also have an educational Mrs. Bolin suggested planting
.J
recent meeting of the Fernwood · display on how to attraci butter!· ·· tall Cannas· In the center of ~the
£''11 .·. Garde!) Club held at her borne. lies and hummlngblrds.
·
bed, following clean up.
'J
.
She
liSted
good
outdoor
plants
·
Fernwood
received
Jhree
su·
·
Last year's ~all flower show
'·
·i
· Despite threatening rain more Zachary Pohlman, Pack 228,
as hosta, ferns, lily of the valley, perlor cerUflcates for their pro- scored 92 points (or a ·superior
than a hundred cub scouts and second; · Dan· Custer, Pack 246, . · hydrangea, Impatiens, bleeding gram books and· their partlclpa·
rating. the judge noted that the
their parents t.urned out Sunday third; · wolf trophies, Johnatan
hearts, columbines, caladlumm, t!on jn the , county Christmas . educational and Innovative spefor the Bike Rodeo held at the Haggerty. Pack 235, fir$1; Grant · ground covers and ageratu . ·flower show and In the county . ' clali!Jiblblts were excellent.. '
:Meigs County fait·grounds under Matheny, Pack 262, .second;
JoAnne Felty and Janet Bolin
For Indoor use she sugg~ted · fair flower show.
· sponsorship of Salisbury Troop Brandon Btn~:. Pack 203, third;
Chines evergreens, moses In the
, Suzanne Warner, Kathryn . assisted the patl~nts at Veterans
246.
bear trophy winners: Matt King;
cradle, begonl;ls, cala(!lum, san- Sohnson, Ida Murphy, . Thelma Memorial Hospital ·Extended
· Jeanie Witherell, Adell While, · Pack 235, first; Matthew Keaton;
sanerla, and ferns..
Giles and Marg
' e Purtell visited
Care Unit In a garden therapy
OPEN Fll u· T SUN
Ida Murphy presided at the
· .
'
le
Prt!l!lct making sun: · catchers
.,
.,
•
iuid'Bill Young were chalrtnen of Pack 235, second, and Phillip
tin
d the club collect was the Glass HOI!se at Coolvll and
fi'ooi furnace 'filters, •Cleat &lt;!onMAY 11th, 19th, 20tft
the rodeo which featured eleven · Burch, Pack 245, third; and
mee
. · . recently
the Companion Plantsln Athens •
paper;pressedflowers.
•..
·events where srouts competed . weblo winners twere Tin\ Peav·
repea t egdan
·
,. · ·
H andI
· · ror trophies and prizes.
'
· ley, Pack ' 246, f.lrst; Adam
Ida M~rphy Suzanne Warner "·bits oUissue p&amp;Jiel' !&lt;Jr addl ona
, . . -....., W. VA. · . , •
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Balley using scrlp(llfe from ,
.
•
· . • . ·co!Qr·. · ·: ..
.,
..
·.·
,_,.,r.._
. : Th~ scouts first took written Jenkins, paclf 2,46, second; and
Mark telling of tbe .paralyUc and and. Marge Purtell attended the . . · Members at tending thi! reglort
. lt. 31 r.t, 4·.... }INn
~ road safety tests and had. their James Clifford, Pack 235,
' hts friends who had faith as they reilonal meet!~ In Nelson~lle . 11 meeting I~ I':fe!soliV\I,le,: ,..ere
.. h•roy lrf.. l . ,
.•
·· bicycles safety checked before
The VIenna Bike Sbp provided
laid the paralyUc at Jesus' feet. on Aprli2S.
: •.
. · ·' Janet' Bolin, Jdanne Fetty; Suzy
W~ luy, Eater VIsit
...completion'' In the straight . tires or Inner tubes as prizes for
She stressed also the · need of
Some of the members plan to
Carjlenter Kimberly Willford
..._. 614-446·1:131 .
course, figure eight, obstacle the special events With the
...~
attend the
Day Out at
and Marl~ Birchfield.
'
Zo
A Gardener's
23
course, ridlpg the spiral, braking winners being Alex Shuler, Kevin ' caring forotllers.
ar on ug. ·
Educational programs were
and turtle speed eV'ents. The .Keatbn, Zachary Pol)li'nan, JobIda Murphy and Kathryn John· .
For .the roll call each member
special events were ring joust- . nahtan Haggerty, Grant Mathe~on had. attended the county
brougtit. a .plant for exchange
. lng, hoop-de-loop and clothes pin ney, Joshua Heaton, Brandon
meeting · and Fernwood will ·. which KallltYJI Johil!lon chaired.
, drop.
.. Keaton. Matt King,
Wolf, M•tt
make four arrangements for the
Plans were mde to plan.t mums
. Tlte rlger trophy winners were Josh Wliherell, Adam Jenkins
county fair flower show with thz
and •a!Vta at )Volf Pen.and Zlo11
: Kevin Heaton; Pack 235, first; • and Billy Young.
theme ·'Wedding Anniversary\. Church:.o n Monday.
Artts.t ry ." The . arrangements . , Otbers attending were Ida
will feature the 20th anniversary · . Murphy, Kathryn Jptinson,
·'
, · u~ng china l_n-8 table dl$plity, the
Evelyn Thoma, Suzanne Warner,
anniversary using silver In Thelma Giles, . Marge Purtell,
'
.
'
'
tlle40thannlverS!Il'Y·: and
Mlrlnda Davis.
' f.! ' '
,_ .
.
/
TIJURSDAV
' cl!arge. Sandwiches and pie also
-WITH PATid AND FURNITURE,fROM UFESTYLEPOMEROY -The Pomeroy
will be served.
·
SATURDAY
·
. Group of A.A. ·and AI Anon will
POMEROY _ , Amerlcare. : meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at ·the
Pomero" will have a craft shOw
EVERY PIECE NOW ON .: SALE!
· Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
&gt;
.
'
: For informwtion call 1·800·333- · and sale on Saturday from H
·p.m. Area crafts Will be dis·
:· 5051.
played • and offered 'for · sale:
· P'O ... EROY -Americar,e,·
Participants and the publiC wei,..
' come. There will aiSQ be a free
: Pomeroy wlll have a miniSter's
l!l!lod pressure screening booth
· breakfast , to honor all special
.
; ministers who. come to the lir recognition of N&lt;!tlonal BIQOd
·' facility on Thursday at 9:30a.m. • Pressure Month.·
: At 10 a.m. there Will be gospel .
: sing with various groups from · SHADE -Spring warm up and
, little league tourn&lt;~men t will be
: the community.
· held Saturday and Sunday In
,; .
.
'
Shade.
Entry
·fee
ts
$20
and
two
.
; MIDDLEPORT -"The Trial
' of Amanda Marie Locks" will be · balls. For m.ore infqrmatlon call
· Rotarians At .T he Middleport Pon:teroy
: presented at Meigs Junior High · Russ Brite at 696-1341.
. R~taey Club Ask You to Attend The....
· .School on Thursday at 7 ·p.m.
-The
kick-off
MIDDLEPORT
: Admission is 50 cents.
· ,
•.
day parade for the Middleport
RACINE -There will be· a Yol,ltlj Laague will be · held
'
•
regular meeting oft he American Sat'ur(lay at 9 a.m. In Middleport.
; Legion Post 602 in Racine on Where will be a baseball card
; Thursday at 7:30. p.m. R,efresfi: show, dlllie dunking machine,
SEIVMG 6&amp;00 Ul-2:00.
speed pitch booth, and g;~mes all
. '. ments will be served.
'•
. AT THE - S COIIITY SENIOR miZENS CENTEI
day .. The public .Is invited to
.,
attehd.
. . MIDDLEPORT ~ Tl!e Middle-·IIY
HEIGii'
r
s
PO•IOY,
OliO
1'
'
......3.10
·.
.
; port Cti!!d Conservation League
SALEM
CENTER
The
Star
; will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. af
lAp 11,I Upl
Grange,and Star Junior ·Grange
•t the. home• of Helen
Blackston. ~
.
will bold their regular ·potluck
'; CHESTER - There will· be a supperland fun night' activities
±. special meeting of the Chester on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
·
; Township Trustees on Thursday ~ grange hall.
. ·: ·at 7:30p.m.
. .

·.s. .CQut · R. .0U_
· ie.0 h.e·/d.· recent·l

.. Postal exam applications slated

the ~ Into the soil and keep

The Dally Santinei:-Page · 11

Porneroy-Midclaport. Ohio

•at. !:&lt;=~

·~

�•'I

Paaet-12-The

Sa ttiull

Pamlroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

111

KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wrlaht

Hou..hOid

Good•

-.....................
........ ___ .
1---.
.
=·
--110,-.,;w, -

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........ Cll 410Ul

wvM

17, 1990

•

. jiM 11011101

Pon•ov-MkltiiXIIt. OND
•

•

....

•

•

#

Television
Viewing

ohrDfM. 2 "-• .............. lob

_.., TK

ooncl. -

•

- - 1:00 ~~~~-

•

tilt:

Honda 71,$300j

1:10==··

~~ oflor

.

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•

10ft loll

7

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1ft bill• _..u,e.
MHIM

.

D06SAREHOT
REQUIRED TO NOTICE
. TWIN6S· LIKE TI-IAT

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PICKINII'UIIIINIII

·ldlchln, air,

droom.

....

••lii!hlntl. -

••30W11o1419.

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VItglnlo,~·8 Wanted to Buy

~7

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20--r-.,
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Grompy IIIII Nu-Nu Kendall

pay tnetr llrll VlaK to the
Huxll::o.\:1 D ,
.
OIID
CJeagoaplilc
&lt;ll (!) Homellma Thll

--· . . -r

18111 Pt.,....h Hoolzon. ~
Good
motor,

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•

sm.

lllrlo.
114-241'

program loc:uMt1 on
plumbing, helli"i and
tlectriCil work. 1;1
.
0 (I) Fdlar Dowlllll
MylletiH Falhar Dowling
lool&lt;a into the batnllrnurder

oiiidllllll .l'onl O!'lllno ond
donn't amolle.

tr.~entll~lln,

' - . run,
.,.,_

1210.

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'AirCOOIIIIIIon- p,_. porn•~· 114-

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Munier, Ilia wce, Altyrxw?

54 Miscellaneous

t8 Ricky Van lliallon From

Mln:hancllll

Grit,To Gold. 1

I Quoen . . ltooi1Drl30;-

- ""- ....
·-..,..-...::::z-:r

country musiC atar RICky van
Shellon's road to auccass, .
including concen footage.

,. .... ~- 11110.

....
~-WII~~
-..,.. ...... 'fl••pcou':.:ti
-

1:30 • (Jl
Dllfatanl Worlcl
Dwayne drivel
to her
lather'S IIIICOI1CI
ng In '
New Vorl&lt;. (R)i
&lt;lliMIIt Ptev-wa Goal

modlllocl ~ lluoillon
IIO.Id'_ ...... _

~

~~-~ .

-.- -W8ntiCI to Rent

Couplo Wll -

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" 111 1110

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04. tt2l •

~ ACROSS

&lt;ll C!l IIIJ*" rt soma
valuable palntlngl of an

erotic nature are stolen. (PI 1
012)c:J

_ _ _ _.... Fl..

"THAT~ IIi'(

=~.=~~:~::.::=

'TO A R...YINSi

• '
eu
Patcon c-t
llngeia pro¥a1 aile's baCk to

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herolelaalf....

'

Ill Latry !llnO"'I..IWI
ill MOVIE: -lolly HUt (R)

·~
r nw.
~-··

..

(2:301
8NallivlleNow

1:30 (J) To II AnilOunc•d
(Jl at Winll·Btlen
a blind ~18 lor

e

:!.' !'

10:00 (J) 700 Club Willi Pal
RDtJrtton

e (Jl at L.A. Law Backer
makes a dramatic. public

eni10Uncatnant: Mike Dltka ·

!.SHORE COULD USE

· A UTILE CUP OF

WELL WATER,

BDNI DIY

' SNUFFY

RIGHT NOW,
PARSON

--"'""
.....

UH••
OUR WELL IS

THEN I'LL
MOSEY ON OVER
TO TH' BARLOWS'
AN' SQUINCH
MY THIRST

(2:15) ' •

Jack rtturnato Plklatan to
~ ., aiel ag..-L (PI 4

SNAFU~ ~ Bnce Beattie

....
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

lf",

tVt ):uti\

.......
·lleellll

-

_ .. .,., -

c...

•alu1111.1M 441 11!14

·

"Thlt will work II mermakl8 like credit
cards aa much • my wife does."

,

j

'

,.

.

·'
- - .....,., ·--·-..c;._---1
·-------~------~--------------------------~------~~-----------~----~.

•

......,HII.,_
I Cftlok • a -

I

'I

-to

y-..,..
u-.

(-a

a)

"'10-

1 Buddy
2 lntegrily
3 Think
4 Cossel ·
5 Shade
ol gray
8 Sanskrit
achciol
7 Went off
the die't .
8 lnapec· 24 AliCe's 30 Amal- ..
lion
creator
gamala
(Fr.)
10 Decorous 25 African 31 Barter
19 Ebb
14 Lacerate
repubHc 32 Consumed
21 FH17 Poem
28 Entrance 38 Bivouac
fiddle
20 Nucleus
way
need '
22 WaRel
~3 Cater27 Kindle 38 CAro.,..
bill
·
plllar~s
28 Klckar'a
23 Praemlnenl
hair
o:~~!~~
24 Dray
i
28 Undress t;rlt;;;-t:-;-t;:~
27 Salubrloua
28 Tyke
b-~4J;,;...;;;..n,.:.
29 WOJk unll
30Tongue·
laah
33 "Bells
·-Ringing"
34 Hire
35 Hairdo
gadgat
.37 Rich cake
39Lasaen
41 British
symbol
' 42 Water·

prool

44 Departad
DAILYCR'IPIOQIJOII!8-Here'a~lowarllt:

AllYDLBAAllR
II LONGFELLOW

~if.._

~'9.·

CIBL*

111

'

•

MuiiC Shop

Cli~3S

•

fabric

(l)JttJI T01111M

11:30

'

DOWN

43 Deplane

·::HII
I

,_., you'l aoon d ' - you're truly

little tcugh,

.

IC2&gt;
•• e&lt;ll •
•tat .....

ln"laMy, '-·

equ81s.
IAGITTAIIIU8 (Now. 22-Dec 21) Hyou
t!ave a million lodl)' and "'' acc;om.
plllhmenl could yield you I'IIWII'dl, kelP
OUIIIandlng polllblllllel, eopeolelly In thla uppamto.t In your mind 10 you
alluatlona - · you ....,. a oommer· _,., all• your.,_ Hthe going gill a

.

11:00~ tn ~ow I Mra. Klnl

' ScMt-teyotl'tl,_.expeotmlghtii8W Mlllling. Tlklmlllw WID lib«-IOIIIIIIIIng profitable 10 Olllr.
len ,our lliltnciiiiiiMI.
to .....,.cl upon your YIIGO
Il-L
Y- fiCUIIy I'll CD (M. • t' 11ti II) Do 1101111
. '
In your a1toao1n tlald of... lor tt'lldng frlllldlll tciUIII Wll mille teUIIInlto _ . you:nlltodl)' II,,au
.. . _ .
~ lhould not Ill. you 111 entovabll 00111111ntan ·todl)'. • lellyouNwatutaal4proleiOIUIIII.
lgiiONCI, bleal•ihey COUld point the You'IIIMittly k,_ hOW t o - · - ·YINf lncllinlllolll Wll lie 1111 ... IIIII
PI DIP I ttly.
the •• IIIII cog In the Whell fell you'l be •lflhl ....., lllr Ill . .
"~.#:'!
.4'u
II)
lliiiiOI1*IL
.... ~ ..
·111110
lllllallwlillllapWinalll- ~(llpl.a oa,.22JYDII'IIillllclll IIIII ol J1U _, W8f 10t1W 1D IIIII·
... WI your- tlott* Ill atlrlllutll1 liCJIIIICII WI V1rY ~ lodly _... ..., Ill* lllltnf oaum I
tOdl)'. Wlilll waur _. ......
11 !fit~ rou lliOUid be ..... to ...... 1m- eo. •• a .. • 1111111 _ . 11111'
wiiiiiiD_,.youlnlhiiiGIIII Gel I 1M 1111ve Nltll!il fnllli· bolb IIIII · bUtllllsliilglit-toyoti . .IGUI~ ·,'
IUtnP dn llla'by urotleiatsntllng thelrifh!" . pmiouiiY untapped • • - ·
lbbklnp llilm aut.
''

: In )he ,..,. IIIMCI you !MY ......,IlliCit

I LIJL • l:tl .......... 2 .IQ•
................... DicpiM

rapulatlon mlglll- you

CANCP , ...... 21..Julr 22) Yjlur judg· C,..IIICORII (Deo. ........ . , Tille ..
ment II likely to be axti'8I'Miy U.. to- .good ell)' to CDIUCI 0, people wiMI
day and ~s you 1118ke eltould coulclbllrtllrumenlllln hiiPina you leihave tar r-""1a,· INnallclal lllec18. ,vance your pnnlll plana. The....,.
You'"' ai80 godd fn giving conetrucllve tiOII you'll recalvelltould be potlllve.
coullllllto others.
,
·AGUAIIIUI (-. • l'ell. 11) CondiLaO(.IIIIrD-Aue-22)UIIafl811antlvaly 'Ilona In g~M~IIIOOk good !or you 10,lo ......,_ PtiPIIIIa advanoad to you day, llul your tudlltlt- OOIIId be In
. today ~IIIIIIICIM of the - . 1 ~ 111111 Pll1lln to ~ n 1 t.1

,.

. 'I

SCORPIO (Oct. M-Mov. 22) Tod"Y you
may have to deal with a rattt. lmpreelive tndMclual. Hialhtpr tide, cklul or

Box et428. CleYIIand. OH 44101-3&lt;128.
Btaure to Slale your zodiac lign.
, 01. . . (M8J 21.;1UM 20) B1 doubly
llerlln •• of your In~-• lodl)',
you could be IUtrCIIIIIIIed by.
clllln- wlth·ot......

........ til, ....... ....,

C!l ~2.·. Den HllbiRy Jack

..
Whk:h are governing you 1n the
year ahead. Send lor your Astro-Greph
precllctlons today by lllllllng $1.25"to
Astro-Greph. c/o thla l'tft'lpeper, P.O.

l

I

10:30 (l) Maalaopleot Tttteft

·~·-·..-

en-

~

.

10:20 (J) MOVIE: Wlnt• ~ &amp;giH

Elactl'lelil·..·- '.
Retrtgeratioia ~ :

1

IDt~ewt-h ·
C!l Undtri'IN
.
111 eo Knots Landing

l!JE*"',.._.

....

Gell I ,Ohio

t "ql lt!p!J

Prlntrime Uve_

Karen and Mack are horrified
to discover a new tnreat on
Karen's llla.li;ll
etDl NIW TWIIIfllil z-

Carw'o~

114

;&amp;•e'&amp;

•

••=-••=•=- .

1 Cut
ol rmeal
. 5 Desls!
9 Looked . ~·
forward to
11 Tennis term
12 Join l~ces
13 Vigilant
15 - Dleul
18 Sleaplng
setup,
18 Street

Jlcka; Jacoby gill a can .
from Laura Pa-. Q

MORK MEEKLE 'AND WINTRHOP

101 Ill.

••••

aaa Ilona on the Pacific

Coopel vtllll One-Eyed

'

WEST

br fHOMAS JOSEPH.

1:00 G (Jl at Clieera Coria finds
oul tnat her tall husl!and
waa I biQamlll (R) Q
(I) Tap ll8nk llollllil
• • • (I)Twtn .......

llao G Modo! '-"-• Dotroll.
Power Pllnt, 114-3U-8312 1fllr

:;:

IJ109H
.. • AK3

(!) Wild A...tca

g
OMalat ........ loaaiNI

look lltltkllr wKh wt..h; Pron-

z,

..... - • .• 11 , ...

CROSSWORD

Coast.

IIIII lnt-tlonll Log Ttuck,
17110 - ; IIIII Z4G 11m-

10

I

SCIVICOS

·J:n

1l '

~~~

,•.

VIdeO

Examine
various species of ..... and·

~blayctoSQI.YioiOn

~

=

e

'

•

.....--

0 H!illln'• Henlat

GIIC holt !an tniak, I eyt,

.~

Qocuinanllry

special, leature• a took at

·-::.r=J~.
-·~

E1nploymcnt S;•.v1ces

'

C"-'

L--------- -___.J

of an exouc dancer. Rl Q

Top · c:.lt pold. 01&lt;1 IUmMift

1

-~ -

Will lllgl&amp;ld Whll8 Ttrrllr,

1114 I. lloln . - . - . . ,•
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 L11L lo 1:00
~
. . ., 1:00 lo 1:00 ......

f~ t'r! 1 ~ S L l'l

II--•

·l!fl'. old ltJtl) ~otod hnll

.....
................. -...

W.N'IBI.

Pita for Sale

.

Acceuorlea

J
F

I

••••

7:35 (I) MajOr Leegtta 111ob1H
1:00. (Jl at Colby - - '

Auto Pans&amp;

~,_,

North's double of one spade was • ·J 10 u 1
necattve, meant to tell opener South
SOVTB
that Nortb wanted to compete for the 1
IQZ
part-IICOre. South knew that bls P,Ower· ·
bouse band bad 10 play came, and be
IAKJIOU
bid It directly. As 10 tbe redouble of ·
.AKQS2
five diamonds, it did not turn out well, .1
liven declarer's line of play.
Vulnerable: North-South
South ruffed the openlnc lead and
Dealer: East
played A·K of clubs. Hili plan was to . SMIIt
W..t
Norllt
' rufl tbe third club with the queen of di·
alliODdtt, and thea pick up tbe trumps t l
,.
Obi.'
and give up a spal!e trick. Tbat would s•
Dbt.
u·
be ~ overtrick. But an accident Redbl.
All pall
bap
. East ruffed the lecOIId club
•ne,alive double
and played another beart. Now declar,
Opening lead: • K
er could ruff one club loaer with tbe
quee~ of diamonds, but be wquld !dill
be left with a club 10 lose at the finish,
as well· as the ace of spades - down
one, Was tbere a better way?
West's double of five clubs should ruffs, goes to dummy with tile apade
·nt 1
kiDC. and comes off with a low dab. u
alert dec!arer to tbe poaib1 Yo a So East ruffa, declarer playt~low. u Eat
1 club division. To protect againll "· discards, South takes altlcb eleb. nffa
South should play only one high ciJib a club with the queen of diamondl, and
and thea .play the queen of spades. H
East duclafthe ace, declarer can then makes lltrleb • ,before. Tbe 11.,- to
play a low clttb from bla band, giv\Jlg aucceu il·not 10 let Eat ruff one of
up a trick but ensurinC that be can ruff declarer's bl&amp;b club llaaon.
'
ofdi
J-..,)-·~· athirdclttbwithdwnmya~ , • ·~·LV~~-·r--»-.
amonds and dl'aw trumps 10 make bla ,., ,,. cn.~t~ ~~ _ _ · - .,
contract. H East takes the 1pade ace -~· _ _ , w, ,., _ _
an~J.'!1"" .. ~notber heart, declam:

IIIA!f.:c-rctr• Q

__ """"'_ ............

t •1
'1~,

By James Jacoby

l!llCrauiiN
0 NIQiil Court

- . - CloUdo. 1 - RiO - . 011 Coli ....

J, _:r:,

Walking
a tightrope

8lllliltlc llow VldH

e

llooldl!l -..... ...

, Pa~ l1iiO

BRIDGE

0 Altbolll CctlaiD
'i':Oii (I) olalfat- .
7:30 (Jl Plllilly Paud
(I) Ladlat Pro Bowlera Tout'
08 Elilallllnntenl Tanlghl
O&lt;llM«u'aPatNiy
. ,

.

111c11 ....,.... AUaUon cen.,.ny

-

e&lt;ll eu-rt Affair

.C!l ,..,.... Laltrar

Ill
Ytc. Golden
TrtanGte IPI 2 ~ 2)

~

lDI """""' •0U.lll
., •••- .
.,.......
....,

Mildlddlou-aiiiirt. ~,_
11M. c.ll IIMII-7Jit EOH.

&amp;Auction

I'

.

hjf:..=~ ·

......,, Mx'IO In -

..,._1tn1111Zbecl-o
, _ rpsr:-111 11 Vllaae

Public Sail

quOiod

-alii••

Grlllla•

8

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

chu&lt;••·

!l,.

(I)

::..."\f""· .-. ....

MltldllpOtt .
&amp; VIcinity

•

. ...

by lilllng in lho missing - •
you develop lrorn slop No. 3 below.

·:==Ina·
\!!

' abr, I ful
1171 Kllli:&amp; aa1:1, 14.-70.
114-

.P,omeroy,

~~ ; '.- ~p~..

-riA:....:":r.I,..:.Y....
1

8:35 lll i.nc~y CIIIIIHii "
7:00 ()) MOVIE; Ace High (2:30)
•

21 !flnll!k lloocl.

.:.:.~

. ......1.1..-...L
• .....J.
L-L..--1.-.1.

·~~~=-·~
8. TGP.~
-n
gln"ill "'.
,.,

Man:handlll

0

.....,;IJ,_;:;..1

/li lporlotLook

fOr Sale

0.,. . . . Prl • Ill II • 1t,
'llnll or
lo 4:00,

r

8:30. ~ C!9J NIC ....., Nawa

• • • (I) A8C Newt Q
&lt;lllodr EIK1riC
(!) :t-2·1 ConiKt Q

32 Mobile Hom"

&amp;.VIcinitY

~

. We

eat health food,
exarctse and lake vitamins so
. . L . .
we can live longer. Then we
.-------.....;....., spend all day living. like there's

,,ttr

Hoe - Ad.fU!t)il!llnl.
112 WV,
""·
.........
Pt. ft e M,

pt.'Pieaant

--r-W;..-;,0,...:;R:..,.R;;...;:;E-11 :,
•s I ~ I I

Ill HHIIII
1D Clwlaa In~
8:011 (J) . .
HI••••

one, but ~arage sales are up

I

P R0 T l M

I'l.llt I

Ill World Today

~

"We're not sure if it's a good
'economic indicator or a bad
17 percent over this time last
year;"

.......

BOTRI

Dlgett
(!) Club Celw1801•
(!) RNdll\g Relt.._ Q
• iiii Aildy CIIIIIHii

.,

•

.., Y.W.

;':":...~ ~ ·..:;

Mty f ·l1

.

•o•~~awa

.

~

Anti

()) lultwllllf TlloroughbrM

Fot210
MJG •wola. aNI· , .
. • .......
lui
- . .............. Col ....
..,..1131 Waun 411 p.M. 1110.

Yard Sale

I

liVENING

,., Hortoy-.- .....

IIIII -

13

• · THURS.. MAY 17 •

-~~~. al8, • ..._
m~

...

The Daily Seatinel

'.

..

.

'

'

I

· One Jetter standi for anaCher. In this sample A II uaed
for the tine L's, X f• ihe two O'a, etc. m,.le letters, : ·
~·the lelfllh and forrnaUon ol the wordian all
til. Each day the cede letters are clflerent.
•

Vlt1nle .. tn unwttMng .

~-

10 l'nlftll'l rulll*e

.

5·17

VN

R' VOR

KEBVR

RK

F K H F·

SNOU

HXTY.-S.Y.

v.... ,..,••

HXTY

RVN

RVN

HVXSA·

VXRWVWK

c:awee.:a•MJ

rr IS

WI1H

LOVE AS WITH GliOST$: EV£RYONE TALKS
BUT FEW HAVE EVER S£EN rr. - LA ROCIEK

CAULD

,,

,

•

�I

..-. ~ Local

news briefs... - - ·

Continued from page 1
M. Chevalier, 2 -all passengers o['J'homas W. Parks, 32, also of
Long Bottom - were taken by the Meigs County EMS to
Camden Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Parks Jr. was admitted, and at last report was Us ted in good
condition. Kelly and Heather Chevalier were treated and
released.
The elder Parks was heading easr durtng last night's .
thunderstorm when he slid off the right sldeofthe road, hitting a
guudrall and some trees.
Parks was not cited by the patrol.

EMS has eight Wednesday c.alls

'

Thursday. May 17. 1990-

Pomeroy-· Middleport. Ohio

'

..· Unlls of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance on Wednesday.
AI 12:02 a.m. tbe Middleport unit went to Cole Street for Lori
Frye wbo was taken to Veterans Memorlai .Hgspltal.
Tbe Rutland unit, at 4:02p.m. transported Brett Johnson
from the station house tq. Veterans, and at 5:14 p.m., the unit
was cal.led to Gibson Road for Shirley Myers who was !\!'ken to
·~
. , . O'ijlepess Hospital.
At 5:22p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Amerlcare for Audrey
Torrence who was transported to Veterans.
The Pomeroy Fire Deparll'l)ellt at 5: 52 p.m. responded to a
call on Landaker Road for al'structure fire on Wayne Beal's
property. The department was on the scene until 8:28p.m.
, JiJ&lt;1 u At 6:08p.m. the R,aclne,~re Llellartment was call~ to Vine
''''lltreet for an· el.e ctrtcal fire at the Hudson residence. The unit
•·• was it~ack In the station a! 6:27 p..m. •
.
.
,,, ,"''Ill' Racine and ll'uppenPialns.unlts were called to Route 124
J'i f&lt;llt ·:.a motor . v~hlcJe . a,ccldent •In which the Racine unit
• "'!f!l'a.D&amp;ported Haathell r Gbevalle~ •to ·camden Clark Memorial
r £11Dspltal. The Tuppers Plains unit took Kelly Chevalier to
.~ 1,Capulen Clark, and ,another Racine unit transported Thomas
" !6l@l'k to Camden ·CI~r!&lt;:&lt;The 'OIIve Township Fire Department
lated,

IJ o\ . . . .

I

Sherifrs deputies probe
Meigs County Sherifrs depu·
ties Investigated a one-car accident Wednesday evening at 7:20
p.m. at the Langsville railroad
crossing.
According to the report Charles M. Gambill. 17, New Marsh·
field, was traveling west !n a 1990
Ford Mustang.
Not being · famUiar with the
roadway, he failed to make the
curve at the railroad crossing
and when he !lPPill!d his brakes
his vehlclf! skidded off the wet
roadway and onto the tracks
causing his froni tires to blow
out, the report stated.
A wrecker was called to
remove the vehicle from the
tracks. The report stated the
driver claimed hedld not see any _

signs and being unfamUiar with
the road, skidded off when he
applied his brakes. No injuries
reported.
The department took a report
from Scott Ours, County Road 28,
that two rings had been taken
fromhhls ., dresser. The case Is
stHI under investigation.
Thomas Pierce, Antiquity, reported sometime during the
night , a toolbox with Craftsman
tools were taken froni the back of
his pickup truck parked- in his
· yard near.Route 338,
James Blaschak, The Plains,
reported that between noon and
.2:45 p.m. Wednesday, ·some
fishing gear was stplen from his
truck parked at the flshlng area
at the R'aclne Locks and Dam.

one-c~r

John Damewood, Locust report, no one would file charges.
Grove Road, Reedsville; re- No enforcement action was :
ported sometime be:ween 8 p.m . ' taken.
~
I
and 9:30p.m. Wednesday his 1985
;
Fork pickup . !fliCk had the
•
•
passenger door glass broken out
.and a radio had been taken from
South Cenlral Ohio
the dash, · along with a radar
Most)y clear Thursday night,
detector, and ;1 cassette tape with a low 'l n the upper 40s. Sunny ;
case. The !Puck was parked at the Friday, with highs between 70 park-n-ride on Route 7.
and 75.
·
:.
Robin Dugan. Pomeroy, reExtended Forecast
ported her wlndshlelcl · had been
Saturday thrQP~tli Momlay . :
broken ou·r of her ·Vehicle. It was
A chanc~ of ShO\\'ers Saturday, ,
reported lal~r that arrange- and a chance of showers and •
ments had been made and no thunderstorms ·s unday·and Mon· •
enforcement action was day . Highs will be mostly In the ,
necessary.
60s Saturday and between 65 and :
Deputies were called to Dexter 75 Sunday and Monday, Over- .
on Wednesday evening on alight night lows w!ll.be In the 40s early :
complaint. According to the Saturday

Weather

Plllll' .titoo• prices
(Auflt:ll a.,m.)

BrJee and Mark Smith
of..B!Uid, Ellis 6 Leewl

,

Aft!·Electric Power .. :.............30

Meigs.••• .Cont~ued from page 1.

necenary operations (or pest
remainder of Valley Belle Road.
control at the buildings In ChesEd Werry, house 'number coor·
terl wblch Include the former
dlnator for Meigs County, stated
coui'tbouse and academy.
the question arose because the
A pest controJ i:ompany will be post office had to re-issue a house
C&amp;Qiacted and pest control meanumber and thai the sequence of
sunis Will begtn.at the discretion numbers on Valley Belle Road
and autho~tlon by Koblentz.
were out of order. Proper seTbe 'tepatr of the form~r court- quence of the houses' numbers
hDIJSI! roof In Chester was ad- are necessary for postal Sl!rvice
drelied also aftd It was reported as well as other services. or the
that James Keesee, contractor, four houses on . the road. only
Will review the situation for thr~ are occilpied at this time.
possible repair.
The COf11missloners will meet
CommiiSion also discussed the with the residents to explain the
clarification of township road need for the change. It was
names In Lebanon Township. stressed that the only changes to
' The roads In question Include occur will be with house
McKenzie Ridge Road and Val·
numbers.
. ley ·Belle Road. It was stated that
Additional matters approved
p ~t was made In 1988 by • at the meeting Included the
.-alp, trustees t~ change a
request by Meigs County RetiDI!I ol~o McKenzle: r Ridge to ,, corder •E mmogeae H. Congo to
a ~tBeJie. This errated , a, .. attenllaconfere.nceatAvonLake
llllllp•Road 138 Valley Belle, In June; a request by Meigs
,~!f.A!WJIShlp Road.1Ql.¥alley . ', County Human Service Director
~11@.:-rii.J'fas stated thal,he:na,me Is Mike Swisher to advertise for
tf !~~to -road was chan1ed bull • · bids on·· computer equipment
ldenl&amp;tllvlag on the por. 1111n.of' ".•subject to reimbursement by the
~e · Ridge Road whlc.hi' ' state; -¥d a requeslfrom Meigs
lliJl!' ·V~Iey Belle R!!ad were County •E mergency Medical Ser·
,/DOt!fled and thew ho!lse vice · Director Bob Byers to
~ were not cbangf!ll to , advertise for bids In order to
J!ow • the sequence;c·O'I "&lt;tl;!e ,, dlsjlose of surplus equipment.

E
~

""

·

)fH,HI 11

'.....r

'II

(I

,.

,;__-Area deaths--;....
Hemian Mattox ·
•'
• •y

lola Steiner

l

f

r

,

Friends here have re,c~lvl'll ·'
word of the recent death of
Herman Mattox, 75, a native of
Middleport, at his home In South
Charleston, W.Va.
Mr. Mattox was a retired
employee of Union Carbide In the
Research and Development Department Where he had worked
for 37 years. He was an active
member of St. Paul's United
Methodist Church since 1940.
, He Is. survived by his wife,
Faye Mattox, a son. John Rl·
chard Mattox, Knoxville, Tenn.;
a dau~hter, Jean Bennett, South
Charleltoa, W. Va.; three broth·
er1, Edward Mat lOx of the
Carpenter uea In Meigs County,
Bob MahPll, Texas, and Dale
Jllattox, Philadelphia, Pa., six
lf8Ddclllldrtn, and four great·lfl'andcbQdren. He was preceded
Ia death by his parents, a
brQ!her, f. .sister, and bls first
wtte, the fo1111er Ellie Meadows.
lllternmeitf was at Graceland
Memorial Cef!letery.

STILL IN PROGRESS!

next 2() years. The winning .
numbers were 1, 5, 6, 8, 22. and 30.
The total prlz~ payout was
$11,158,625. The total sales were
$5,857,639.
There were 295tlckets wlthflve
of the six Winning Super Lotto
jackppt numbers for $1,000
apiece, and tbere were ·11,515 1
with. four of six winning numbers
for $75 apiece.
.
··
Saturday's Super Lotto jackpot .
will be $3 mUilon.
There were ·'two Winners In
Wednesday's Kicker · game for ·
'100;000 each. The winning
numbers \\'~re 568'131. Total sales
were $939,567, and the payout
was $480,910. There were five .
winners with · live consecutive
Kicker numbers for $5,000 each.

A'I'II:T .,........... :......... ;....... 43\S
Ashland Oil .;: ................... 37%
Bob Evans ........................ 12"'
Cl!~lng Shoppes .............. 10~
~lly Holding Co .................. 14"'
Federal Mpgul-.. .... :........ .... 20~
~ear T&amp;:R ...................35%
•,
Heck's .......................... ....... 2%
Key Centurion :...................14\S .Hospital News
Lands' Ead ..... ~ ................... 16%
Uf!llted Inc ................ .... :......46 Veleraas Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Mul!lmedla Inc ................. 81 \i,
Brian
Christman, Rutland; Jobn
I(p.Restauraats, ............. 2 7/16
P.
Raub,
, Pomer~; Janet JenRolllllns 1: Myers ................. 16
.
kiDs,
Pomeroy;
AI,Kirey Tor$hOney's Inc ................. ..,.. 15%
rence,J;'omeroy. ~
,
Star Blllll ................... :....... 20')(,
Wedll~ay
discharges
·?""' EH·
WIIIJ!IY• Iat1 :..... ................. .... 5 zabeth Vaughan, · WIIUam
P.
. WorthJ.aaton Ind .. : ...........24% .
Matlack. ·

Lola Marla Steiner, 94, Middleport, died this morning (Thursday) at ·Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
BOrn In Rutiand Township
Sept. 19, 1896, she was the
daughter of the late James 0. and
Stella Powell Eblui. She worked
as a portrait taker for Olin Mills
Studio.
.
She Is survived by two sons,
Earle (Gloria) Steiner, Warren;
Ray (Betty) Steiner, Chesterland; five grandchildren; three
great grandchildren, and a
sister-In·law, Geraldine Eblin,
Athens.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded In death by one
brother, Lawrence P. Eblin.
Services will be held Saturday
at 2 p.m. at th_e Raw1111111 Coats
Flsber Funeral Home. Burial
wlll be In Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home one hour prior 'to the
service.

1544

.

3

Vol.40, No.261
Copyrighted 1990

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Elaine Hair·
ston was appointed Thursday as
chancellor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, becoming the first
woman to guide the board's dally
operations to Its 27-year history.
Hairston. 46, has been acting_
chancellor since January, follow Ing the retirement or' William
Coulter. She also Is the youngest
chancellor to serve the hoard.
· which oversee~e development
of the state's higher education
"S:vstem.
·
Hairston will receive an annual

·'

WALLPAPER
SALE

Country Styles, Early American,
Contemporary and Colonial Styles.
· Plaids, prints, vinyls, checks and solids.
SAVE FROM

IN STOCK

SALE
•

ss~•Sq.Td.
IN STOCK ·
·ALL WiATHER

REG: S14.00

l(f

Oltfin

*Adionlac .
.• *12Ft. W.
,
••'0 ':tr. Umihd Wear W~rrangy

11t~:e---s ,6.~_o
·l*'t6 Colors
0 100"/o Nylon
•Anti-Static

Sq.'"·

(IMtalltd
With Pall)

..

SCULPTURED CARPET

S6 ,,Sq. Yd.

*lOO"'o lllaht_, Nylon Pile
*S&lt;otchguartl .~tain

Release

•SUPER~ PRICES

•SUPER
SELECTION
•PRICES
SLASHED

f\rtt

·~··'~'""·
S•~'•••
Coat\111

,.

OUR ANNIVERSARY SAVINGS
CONTINUE WITH THESE FINE
.QUAUTY
HOME FURNISHINGS.
•
•MnAL CABINETS •OCCASIONAL TABLES:
-•SYLVANIA tv'S AND VCI UNITS
eGUDEI IOCIEIS
'•DINING lOOM FUINITUIE •SDTA BEDDING
.WHIILPOOL APPLIANCES

STOP IN TODAY - SAVINGS
FOUND TliROUGHOUT THE
ENTIRE STORE•••

.

SAXONY .CARPET

•Dupont Stainmast• ·
•1o Colors
•12 ft. Wide

$1499
Sq.'"·

S1699·
· Sq.

(IMtallod
With Pad) ·

*12 ft. Wide

Yd •

(lnstalletl with Pad)

SALE

- ~,~e,~L~~

~

· BUNK BEDS

.

SPECIAL CER'l1FICATE PRESENTED - Bracy Kom was
presented a special Certificate of Recognition by the !Kelp County
Emergency Medical Service at Thursday's awards assembly at
· Melp High School. II was given In recognition of his extraordinary
personal action In utilizing Red CrOllll life .saving skiHs In
attempting to save lhe life of the late ·Rita Hamm, school
secretary, after she suffered a heart at tack. Her family, In
·appreciation, presented a acbolarahlp to Korn. He Is enrolled In the
paramedic and nunln1 priiiJ'am at Hocklnl Tecbalcal Colle1e.

•

Heavy Pine Constr11ction for Years of Service.

Reg. '239.00

..

$l8 900

Panel Bunk Bed

lndudes latltltr &amp; maHrm sets.

Sale

Bookcase .Bunk Bed .
· ln~udes latltler &amp; mattr.U sets.
Sale .$22900
Reg. '289.00

Matching 4-Drawor Chest O..y

. ·

$))900

·.'

· aoo
58
.SALE

· BAR STOOLS

24 or 36 inch

~ .

·~weeAeiiu

$1450·

*10 Colors

Expect• over
ram
-J;;.:"'"' n

•

REG. s18,00

SALE

~

PLUSH CARPET

P~e

REG. S16.00

XIng.
row Stevens, Chris Stewart, and
Chris AI klre, Ed Crooks; and
presenl were Ryan Harper and
story, additional photos on page 7).

(lnstalhcl
(C_,.t &amp; ........ )

•12 Ft. Witlt

-12Ft.
- 4 Colors

than
were awuded to ••seniors
a&amp; the awards assembly held Thursday at Me!gs·
, BIJII School. Receiving lhe scholarshlpe, left lo
right, front row - Amy Blake, Nancy Baker;
Tam!11Y Lambert, Heidi Caruthers, aad Kristin

S29,•tn .

S1Q49
Sq.'"·

•Autod•w• Hoatset Yarn

PATIO TURF

~

(fVEL LOOP CARPET

*16 Colors
*1 00% Aftl!lal XXV

DAYBEDS

salary · of $115,000 - the same · for academic and special proamount Coulter received at the grams. A native Ohioan , she
end of his seven-year term.
holds three academic degrees.
Including a doctorale from Ohio
Although a three-member re· State University. where stie
gents ' screening committee re- served on the administration
ceived 66 ·applications from 30 before joining the regents.
states and interviewed six peo·
pie, It was the second lime In a
Hairslon said her top prlor!lies
row the board has reached into as chancellor will be to Increase
Its own stafl for a chancellor.
the higher education opportuni"She·was bv far the .b est," said ties for all young people, esperegent Anita 'ward, who chaired cially minorities ·and the undetthe search committee.
prlvlleged. and · to get Ohio
Hairston has been on tlie universities to cooperale with ·
regents' stafl since 1979, serving Industry In research and ·jop
most recently as vice chancellor training.

Southern graduation exercises·
for 69 seniors slated Sunday ..

.

'

VIIU CUSHION FLOOil
-12Ft.
-13 PaHerns

atrlppabltlty. EMy cr... and
dul8ble at a vilue pric:e. Tho
l8telt in colors and cloeigna.
'
.

20°/o TO 40°/o

CARPET ·SALE

COlliOLEUM

Fe.iuring Teflon coattid wall
&lt;he moat 8lltllting
innovation in wellpeper aince

co-inlia.

..

•

25°/0oFF
'

2 Soctiono. 16 Pogeo 25 Conto
A Muhimedie Inc. Newtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, friday. May 18. 1990

\
'

Sofas-Loveseats-Chairs

•

Elaine .HairstOn named
·chanCellor ·of regents

'

HUNDREDS ·Of
PAnnNS. MOST
liE
'
PII-PASTED,
, . WASIABU •. ·.

. .,...

•

S1·880o·

Lotto jackpot has one winner

Stocks

·Daily Number
.707
Pick-4

•PECAN AND
OAK FINISHES ·
•MANY STYLES
AND SIZES
SALE PIICES
STAmNG AT

·,, ..,FI~call for asslstilliet: came at 9:29p.m. when the Pomeroy

' .CLEVELAND &lt;UPI) - Tl!ere
was one winner In Wednesday's
$10 million Super Lotto jackpot.
Tbat Winner will get $500,000
l)efore taxes every year for the

Preakness
Stakes slated
Saturday

CURIO
CABINETS

f·'&lt;.w' 1aken
unit ll(ent to Eben~er Street for Brenda Woodruff who was
to Veterans .. ... , •
·
~uper

--

accident .

,11,.;•

• f

',.

Ohio Lottery

'

$ 15900

White or brass finish. Sturdy construction. In;
eludes link springs.
. ONLY

a..

_..
of
meU11 ud
cerdftcatel fer acaclemlc and a&amp;flle&amp;le excellnee a&amp; Thandll)''s

.,

awarda UIM!mb)f Ill Melp lip School.

'.
. --~)

"'"

'

.'

By Uulted Press International.
Ohio's dry weather Is expected
to be brief as a weather system
developing out of the eastern
Rockies Friday was bringing
another threat of rain to the state
for late Saturday and into
Sunday.
·
The National Weather Service
said lhis will be ihe third
weekend In a row that rain has
been significant in Ohio. And the
additional rainfall from this next
weather system wlll place even
more stress on the already
swollen rivers In the state.
Most of the Buckeye state,
however, received some wei·
corned sunshine Friday.
The weather service said skies
will be mostly clear Friday night,
with a deck of high level cirrus
clouds Increasing Into the south
late.
Ear~v morning temperatures
were In the upper 40s and 50s. A
few showers were scattered In
the northeast. Both Cleveland
and Youngstown added another
0.11nch of rain overnight .
On the early morning weather
map, Intense · low pressure was
over Ontario just south of James
Bay. A cold front extended from
this low to another low well off
the eastern New England coast.
A cold front then curved along
the southeastern U.S. coast and
across northern Florida.
Low pressure was across the
Great Lakes. Weak areas of high
pressure were over Alabama and
·
the northern Plains.

Baccalaureateandcommence- Michael, Jerod Archer Moore,
ment excerclses for 69 gradual· ' Ronald Clarence Mullins, Chris·
.lng seniors of Southern High topher William Murphy. -April
School wlll be held Sunday · at 8 Jean Nazarewycz, Tracy Maria
p.m. In the high school Norris. Timothy Ray Powell,
gymnasium.
Jason Sean Quillen, Todd Joseph
The baccalaureate address, Rice, Jill Ranee Roessler, Ammy
Invocation and benediction will Lynn Roush, Sheri Lynn Roush.
be given by Rev. Roger Graca of Amanda I,.ynn Russell. Timothy
the Racine Pnlted Methodist Michael Ryan, Shelly Ann Sawy·
Church.
ers, Raqmond Everett Sayre,
The salutatorian address will
be presented
Chris Murphy,
bal! .
years. football for
one year •. was a member of the ·
choir for one year, attended the
Governor's Summer Scholars
Program afOhlo University. and
participated In the senior play. A
member of the National Honor
Society .for two years, he re·
celved academic achelvement
awards for three years, and the
county ·academic excellence
award this year.
Kathy !hie, daughter of Donna
and f:harles lhle, will give the
valedictorian address. Miss Ihle
has served as class secretary and
treasurer for fo,ur years ·and
a·t tended the Governor's
Summer Scholars Program at
Ohio University. She participated In choir for .f our years,
show choir for two years, and the
senior-play.

Miss Ihle ·is a member of the
Natlol)al Honor Society and the
Mornl11g Star United Methodist
Church. slie was the Daughters
of the American Revolution
winner for Southern High School
and the Ohio University Amerl·
can History Contest for Meigs
County. She Is the recipient of the
Holzer Science Award and Cutler
Scholarship. She participates In
WSAZ's Best of the Class, and
was honored at the Southern
Academic Banquet and the
Meigs Academic Banquet. Miss
Ihle Is employed part time at
Kroger's.
Bobby Ord, superintendent.
will present the class, and Gary
Evans, a member of the board of
education wlil present the
diplomas.
Members of the 1990 graduat·
stonns calm In Midwest
ing
class are:
Destructive wind~ that ·ham·
Shelly
Anne Arnold. Krls tine
mered the Great .Lakes began
Lee
Ash,
Boyd Eugene Bailey,
dying down earlY. Thursday as
William
Bird, Tamara
Harold
Ohio, braced for flooding, white
Renea
Boggess,
Rafael Javier
thunderstorms roaming the
Bohollo,
Christl
Marie BrumPlains avoided flood-stricken
field,
Charles
William
Buckley,
portions of Texas, Arkansas and
Kevin
Gregogy
Burgess,
Mary
Louisiana.
Teresa
Byer,
Henry
Erwin
CleViolent winds that howled
land
Ill,
Jamie
.
Michael
Cumacross the Great Lakes and
struck Buffalo al 61 mph Thurs· mins, David Ray Custer, Michael
day. downing trees and knocking William Duhl, Cindy Jane Foley,
out electricity, eased to about 20 Gary Michael Freeman, Rowena
mph early Friday, the National Gaye Garten, Joseph Wilson
' Gray, Susan Michelle Harris,
Weather ~rvlce reported.
Winds were htaher than nor- Amy Beth Harrison, Kevin Ernmal In Illinois, wliere power est Heaton, Franklin Delano
outages were reported In the Roosevelt Hendrix Jr., Aimee
subllrbl welt of Chicago .and Leann Hill, Julian Scott Hill,
trailers were binned from some Nancy Elizabeth Hunt, Kathy
major htailways. The NWS Louise Ihle, Cbaslty Lynn Jacks,
Issued a gale warning for boaters Marshall Wayne Jarrell, Jen·
oa Lake Mlcblpn, saying pats nUer Kay Johnson, Jamie Alae
reached speedli of 47 mph Jones. ·Aaron Lee LaudennUt,
Ivan Douglas Lavender, Mela11le
Thursday.
Slorms that swamped Illinois Dawn Lynna, An1ela Micbelle
and Wlseoula and spun off Manuel, Stacy Lynn Matthews,
William Bradley May11ard, John
deedly tornadoes In Arllalllllll,
Oklaholll$ and Texaa aiiO dlui- Finley · Mc:CIIntock JI, Tanya
Diane Meadows; Trlsha Anne
Coatinued on J181H! 12
_..,. .

__

'

CHRIS MURPHY

Jeffrey Allen Sharp, Steph_en
Brent • Shuler. Misty KaS'
Swisher, Chad LewlsTaylori J&lt;rri
Rictlard Van Meier, Greg&amp;.fy
Eugene Weddle, Sarah · ·tey
Wiles. Ailsa Renee Wlll(ord,
Jane Ann Williams, ·Shannon
Christopher Williams, AlmeeW·
nlse Wolfe, Trlsha Cacleen
Wolfe. Charles Warren WOod,
Janie Evelyn Wood and Breod!l •
Gaye Zirkle.
•

KATHYIHLE

Melanie Beegle and
Walter
E.
Crooks
top
'
1990·Meigs students
Melanie Jane lleegle, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jennlngs.Eleegle,
Racine, and Walter Edward
Crooks, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Crooks, Mlddleporl,
have been named valedictorian
and salutatorian, respectlvely,of
the Meigs High School 1990
2raduat lnl! class.
Miss Beegle and Crooks will
give addresses at commencement Sunday at 4:•30 p.m. In the
Larry R. Morrison gymnasium.
• Named as honorarlans of the
class were Nancy Lynn Baker.
daughter of Norma and Larry
Baker, Middleport; John Cary
Bet,zlng, son of Barbara Belzlng,
Pomeroy; Heidi Ann Caruthers,
daughter of Diane and Herman
Lynch, Pomeroy. and Robert

•

Caruthers, Middleport; Lisa J.
Darst, daughter of Sharon Darst,
Route l, Mlddleporl, and Law rence Darst, Rutland; Kelly
LouAnn Douglas, daughter of •
Richard and Joyce Douglas, :
. ~
Route 2. Coolville.
Ryan WilUam Harper, son bf
Mr. and Mts. Guy Harper,
Middleport; Kristin Marla King,
daughter of Gene and Judith Ann
King, Pomeroy; Tammy Marie
Lambert, daughter of Richard L.
Lambert and Barbara Sue Varney, L;mgsvllle; Cheryl Denise
Sieveris, daughter of Peggy A:
Stevens, Mlddlel!ort, and Cha·
rles E. Stevens; and Natalie A. ·
Tromm, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Tromm, Rutland.

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