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..

ULIIIIID
COHill liD

ROOF TRUSSES
20'.......................$22.99
24'.......~...............$24.99
28'.......................$31.99
WITH 4/12 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG

OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

set8 AL

li
'

Ohio LOttery

Henderson

Daily Number

record

148
Pie!k-4
8567

26'' X 10' ..............................................S6.60
26'' X 12~ .......:......................................*7.90
'

WORK PRODUCTS

WIRE

'M:I"'r-4 •1)'••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••· ••~•••••••'7,,90

711.

l)~"v-44' •••••••'•••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••'9,15
• .,,~"'v-4 6' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••111••••'11.35

'

llOU.

511 l1f

Vol.40, No.218
Copyrighted 1190

AI

iiOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

3/8" x20' REBAR........•2.25
1/2" x20' REBAR ••.•3.25 .

AD .

•

·~~=10 '43•

WELD WI!IE IIESH

CIM!' lonl&amp;fd. Low Ia fh.,
'l'lland117, aaaay. m..a. Ia mid

Page4

.

2 Sedlono. 14 Pogoo 26 C.nto
A Multimedia Inc. New_.,,

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, May 30. 1990

Middlewrt Council to buy new ladder truck ·.
.

~)

. 'By CIIA,RLENE HOEFLlCH

90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE

WHEILIIO CRIIIILDRAII®

ROLLED ROOFING
•Gl:een •Brown •White
o·gg
•Black -Green &amp; White

$1

levi~ In effect. now will be

It will take the fke truck out of
expiring before the truck Is
service for about three weeks .
·Seattnet News Staff
The 6Jcl of $357 ,'667 from the dellvered and those Will have to
Special recognition was given
Sutphen CorJ)Qratlon, Columbus, be pui on the ballot for renewal. to former Middleport Super In·
for a rtew· ladder truck for the Mayor Fred Hoffman noted that tendent of Schools Lee w. McCoMiddleport Fire Department a pre-application for funding Is mas who died Saturday. A
was accepted by Middleport being filed with the Farmers resolution In tribute to Mr.
VIllage Council at Tuesday Home Administration.
McComas for his · contributions '
night's meeting.
In addition •to the bid price, to the community as a neighbor,
Jeff Darst, fire chief, met with
Darst .said that other equipment friend lind educator was lntrocowicll and·made the recommen·
and radio costs on the new truck dliCed by Councilman Paul Gewill be approximately $25,1100.
rard and passed by Council. In
dation for accepttni the Sutphen
. bid. It was the,llnly one received.
According
to
the
fire
chief,
the
trjbute to him the flag will fly at .
1
He noted that It will take from 10 truck's ladder has a . 67 Copt half-staff on Thursday.
work(ng height , and a 56-foot
· &lt;;ouncll also passed a. resoluto 13 months for the company to
built the truck.
horizontal reach .. from twin tlon certifying that the vlllage
A pumper and a rescue vehicle . platforms. ·
., · will · be responsible for 'cost
be sold, Darst said. He aJso
overrun on the proposed Ohio
Indicated that no new levy wlll.be
Cou~cll alsO approved a cab River hank erosion project near
requlredtoflnancethepurchase, conversional acostof$11,500for the lagoon. The $772.000 project
although the current two fire one of the trucks. Darst said I bat cost will be funded through the u.

...

2 oz•.SEAL OF QUALITY ROOFING

wlll

S.. Corp$ of Engineers In the
amount of $500,000 and the
village has filed an application
with the OhiO Department of
Development for the remaining
$272.000. That money has not yet
been approved, the mayor
reported.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
RDn McDade of Columbus South·
ern Power had checked about the
llghtlni at the boat dock and
recommended Installation of
three floqdllghts. There will be no
Installation cost to the village.
· Atthe request of Gary Bates of.
General Telephone, Council will
view a video .;oncernlng how the
telephone company hopes to
become · tnvolved In cable
television,

. Council . decided to request
additional Information before
making a decision on a request
from Ohio Bell to lay fiber optic
cable along several streets In the
v!llage. Mayor Hoffman reported that the company would
like to c6me Into the village on
Brownell, go along Seventh, out
Grant, and over Powell to the
lower part of the villaae. It was
noted that the cable would be
burled 42 Inches In the ground by
a forced system which would
require no digging.
A second reading was given to
an ordinance authoriZing the sale
of a small parcel of land behind
the building on Race Street
occupied by the Department of
Human Resources. The sale will

facilitate a planned expansion of
.the structure.
'
Also given a second reading
was the pay ordinance which
permits employees to accumu·
late an unlimited number of days
In sick leave with 50 percent of
the accrued days up to a
maximum of 60 days payable on
retirement.
The mayor announced that an
Informal meet.l ng with Roger
Manley, Middleport trash
hau.ler, has been set for 7 p.m.
Thursday. He also noted that one
. pollee car has been replaced with
a · 1987 Chevrolet purchased for
$3,700. The 1986 Ford . ~ar will lie
advertised for sale,
· A sjleclal Issue 2 fund was set ·
Continued on page 6
•·

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Two _girls apparently drown
in swollen creek at .Chillicothe.
•.

•

SBUftERS

$4
=:w=== .
•30 YEAR WARRANTY

95

Blend, Blllll Sienna Blend

~EORGJA

,10

Tough,lighlwli~l38' panels (38' cover) .....

inalllll.
sldelapladd eJ&lt;Iraatrenglh, keep out the elements. klexcluaivool
leakproof drain chtw~nel stays snug, weathel1iljh~ assureo

draft flee inl8ri011.

Choos11 FI'OIII
White, Brown,
or Blacll Finish

g·

SQ.

•

38"x8............•.•.*12
38" ·x 10 •••.•••••••••••1-5
38" 1112..............118
38". 14...............21

REG.
14z3S•••••••.•••••• ~"23.10 ........... ~ ...............'115.40

'

38" X 16.................
,
....~4
38"118~ ........•...•'27
38" x 20•.••.••.•••.••'30
.38" • 22... _..,;....'33
38" • 24... - ..........36

SlZE

WREELIIO CHAIIELDRAII®

14z39••••••••••••••• ~.20••••••••• .'................·•'17.15

Rm • TAN • WHilE

38x8........."......s13 .20
38x10..............$16.50 38x14...............$23.10
38x12..............$19.'80 . 38x16..............$26.40

PAW'IC

SHIIDLD
20 Year Warranty

81889 ,..

-· 8' x I' Sacllans

..· ~·-.::: ·_ Shadow Box

•III.Aat .... DM •IIAUAOWN
•GaaN. W&amp;li&amp; •CHUih"'UT REND •COPPDWOOD

'

'

.. .

~

·. :~~.:' l ._ . ~

SLIDIII Dill

SYSTEMS

For All Aerfeultural
and Colnna•eqal Nuds

""""$22,60

., l

~- I
~

I

HEAVY RAINS CAUSE LANDSLIDE,.;. Heavy
ralafall $lie · past several days resulted Ia a
landslk!e oa the Sutton Towashlp Welshtown HID
ROad. WbUe cloe'ed r~ ala'na bave been (II aced at
the bottom of the hiD IUI!I on the entrance to that
.ro,ad from Minersville Bill, II 18 p!IS&amp;able.
According to Melp Hlgllway Supt. Ted Warner,
lbe slippage Involved a 2S foot stralghl drop which

Roof Coatlng ...........~.!-!~lu .....s24.95.
SGAL
Roof &amp; Foundation Coating ...•9.99
Roof Coating ........~.S!~iu ...........sg,gg

=w

I

•

Aluminum Fiberglass

QN~i • ·AH..

10'.,.,.,)28,25

s

Fence

12'...,.,..$33,90

B· &amp; E probed today
by sheriffs deputies '

WHITE • HI-PERFORMANCE GLASS
Come home to quality. 1/A;k:~r
HIGH-PERfoRMANCE

GLASS CUTs COSTS

WITH ALL ITS ENERGY.
In heating months, Andernen'
High·Perfonnancewindowsare
33'l'o more energy effiCient than any
ordinary double-pane window.
How does Andersen achieve
this kind of performance?
By filling the space between
the panes with Argon gas-a supe8be

.....

2021 0•--•'133.80
24210...,.•140.35
28210.....•150.10
30210.....•159.95

RlJBBER BACKED

CARPftiiG

-

•White Only

I

Price Includes
Screens
..............

2831 D-n,f172.40
30310.....'183.60
2432.......'147.50
2832.......•1~.30:

2842.un•'181.55
3042.......'193.80
2846.......•188.90
3046........'201.15

' Pressure ,.._led · .·

Picnic 7abla..~~.~~~...848

s&amp;•,4.1'' 11.
By Bot Stuff

Dnlvarullandla

toilet Bawl and ~,._k
WBiiZ
ONJ.Y

PRICES 1N EFFECT NOW THRU JUNE 9, 1990
e-A.. n.

~I.W

.

i

,.

By United Press International
Two teenage girls apparently
· drown Tuesday . when a swift
current swept the girls from a
rain-swollen creek near their
Chillicothe homes. A Ross
County Sheriff Departroen t s po. kesman said early Wednesday
morning that Its divers had not
yet recovered the bodies, and
woUJcl resume their oearch at
dawn.
Authorities have not released
th~ Victims' Identities·. , ,
A Chllll~~e . ~~~~IQ . stal\1111
reported thilt the l~ and 16-~lit·
old Uitloto High School ninth
·graders were riding 'a moped on
Polk Hollow Road near Paint
Creek Tuesday afternbon when
they stopped to wade through the
water. A' Ross County deputy
said the water had risen 12-feet,
covering much of the roadway
along the creek.
Gov. Richard Ce Jeste surveyed
an aerial view of the flood
damage In southern and sou·
tbeastern Ohio Tuesday, and Is
then tapers oH aacl•contlnues for llilother 40 to 50 . expected Wednesday to declare a
state of emergency for Athens,
feet down onto the property of VIc Brown. Several
Hocking, Lawrence and Perry
large tl'tles wel'tl taken down when the sUp
counties,
occurred. There IS some concern that trash
This would clear the way for
blocktd the culvert which usually carries off the
water and that was a contributing factor In the · state, and possibly fed~ral assisttandalde. The Deparlrneal of Natural Resources
ance for the flood-damaged area,
has been c&amp;lled In lo belp evaluate the situation.
said Stacie qtlg, public lnforma-

I

'

•

'

'

.
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sherlff'sDepartmentarelnvestigating a reported breaking and
eilterlng which occurred sorpetime between Monday ~at 6 p.m.
and Tuesday at 5 p.m. ·
.
According to tbe repprt the
bouselsownedbyEdAderer,Mt.
Union Road, Pomeroy. Aderer
reported to the department that
some tools were taken from the·
bouse.
On Monday the department
was notified of a missing horse.
According to the report, Jimmy
Hayes, Homer Hill, reported that
a black mare, a Tennessee
WalldngHorse,h&amp;dbeenmlsslng
from his pro(l4lrty since May 23.
Anyone spotting the horse, descrlbed as bla'Ck wltb white socks
and a white star, Is asked to
contact the sherlfrs office or
~at 742-2777.
On Saturday evening the ·departtnent received a call from
· Mrs. Unda Montgomery, Bucktown, that ber son's bicycle had
been sl(llen from near the Letart
Falls School. The report stated
tbat the bllte was found In a ftre
near an old packing house.
James G. Japes, 39, ChesterbiU, was stopped oil a routine
traffic mafter and wheri 'the
dlsjlatcher ran his driver's lnformatlon through a computer It
was learned that Janet was
wailted In Wasblnaton Colmty on
an Indictment warrant ciW'alnr
him wltb felony 'fleeiDg and
eluding 111 oftlcer.
A bearlna Wfll! held In Meigs
CQunty Court on Tuesday and
Janes was l'l!leued to Wuhtna·
till oUJity deputlea to be returned
to Martel ta to face cbargea In tbe
Wuhtngto11 'County Common

r,eueourt.

Greg Huffman, Racine, was
arrested at the Racine High
School alumni dance for dlsorderly manner. according to Sheriff James M. So\!lsby. He also
was arrested on 11n assault
warrant which had been filed
earlier. He was jailed, but later
released on hqnd pending hearlng In the Meigs County Court.
Sheriff Soillsby reported· that
Saturday moritJng the department received a call from a
MlnersYtlle resident · that the
driver of a car bad Just stopped
'a nd advised that some Juveniles
werj! . at the Mlnersvllle Ceme·
tery and that damage had been
done.
Deputies responded and 10:
cared four subJects who were
taken to the sheriff's oUJce for
questioning. The subJects were
released a·rter questioning.
· Sheriff Soulsby stated that all
. of the flags, American and also
fire department flags, had been
pulled from the graves and the
sticks broken. There were a
nuinber of flowers also removed
and thrown about. 'S hel'lff
Soulsby reports that lnvestip·
tonneedtotalktothecouplethlt
asked· the resident to phone tlie
department. The department
needs to know what was actually
Witnessed.

MeLin faees
dng charge
DAYTON, Oblo (UPI)- The
soli of the late state Rep. C.J.
McLin Jr. Is on trial ill Montgomery County Common Pleu
Court on a charge of aaravated
~alne tra(tl~ .

lion officer for the state Emer·
gency Management Agency ..
Hundreds of J)e!lple In southern
and southeastern Ohio were
forced ou! of their homes late
Monday and early Tuesday because of high water caused by as
much as 3 Inches .of rain.
Some of the worst damage
occurred In Athens County where
residents in Glouater and Trum·
ble were still been unable to get
back Into their homes by
Tuesday .evening, •GJJg sajd,
.es~UPIIlillll~ 1,000 to 2,000'
may have been displaced because of the flooding.
·
Many evacua!Ions were also
reported In the Murray City area
of Hocking County and between
Coming and Shawnee In Perry
County.
Hlgb water also was reported
In southern Ohio counties
through which the Scioto River
flows.
Rain that began early Monday
afternoon was beginning to Jet up
Tuesday morning, but a flood
watch was still in effect for much
or the central, southeast and
south central parts of the state.
Residents along Ohio 155 near
Hemlock, Perry County, were
ta1&lt;en from their homes Monday
night after floods forced the h111y
highway to close. They went to

'

shelters opened at near~
schools.
·:
"We're thankful It's not rilln·
ing now," disaster services
worker Doroihy Sidwell saijl
Tuesday morning as she prepared to check .on the evaeueois
and see how much damage w(s
done.
:•
In Hocking County, about 10
Jle!lple were ev.a cuated In t~e
Murray City area. While mQst
sought refuge with friends and
relatives on hl.her ~OWiji. about
2~1\.!', ~~ht at th~ munlcl-·
pa
lilg.
"There's a kitchen In the
municipal building and they have
facilities to cook," said Krls
Gabriel, the county's emergency
management director. "They
needed thiJigs they could warm
up, like coffee and bot dogs,
things to keep them going. "
He said that the people may get
back to their homes sometime ·
Tuesday to start the cleanup
process.
In Piketon, the Scioto River
was 2 feet above the 16-foot flood
stage Tuesday morning and was
expected to crest early Wednes·
day at 26 feet. The lvl!ler flowed
over the banks onto the low-Jylilg
fields.
.
In Enterprise, the Hocking
Continued on page 5

.Tarr named ·Kyger Cree·k plant manager
Nonllan H. Tarr has been Institute of Technology with a
promoted to manager of the Ohio bachelor's degree In electrical
Valley Electric Corp. Kyger engineering, Tarr also com- '
Creek plant, effective June 1, pleted a Management Developaccording to Ralph D. Dunlevy, ment Program sponsored by
American Electric Power Ser. OVEC president.
Tarr Is succeeding Raymond vice Corp. at the University of
·
H.· Blowers Jr., who Is retiring. Michigan . ·
Concurrent with Tarr's promo- . He and his wife, Anne, live at
tlon, Ralph E . Amburgey, main· 354 Debby Drive, Gallipolis.
. tenance superintendent, Is being They are the ·parents of one
promoted to assistant plant man- daughter, Mrs. Glenda Hatcher
ager arid Jeffrey P. Goebel, plant of Austin, Texas, lind two sons,
engineer-maintenance, Is being Karl of Brqckton, Mass., and
promoted to maintenance Stephen of Rlva, Md.
Amburgey Joined the Kyger
Superln tenden t.
Creek
· plant In l.9$i as a test
Tarr joined OVEC at Its Clifty
engineer,
arid In 1971 was proCreek plant In Madison , Ind., In
moted
to production
1966 a&amp; a test engineer. In 1970 he
superintendent-maintenance.
In.·
was promoted to staff englneer·
1
~86
he
was
promote~
to
mainte·prodllctlon and environmental.
.
He promoted to chief of produc· nance superintendent.
Amburgey
Is
a
graduate
of
tlon and envlroliJI)ental engineer·
Tennesllet!
Technological
Unilng In 1981 and In 191!6 be was
promoted to assistant plant man· versity with a bachelor's dtlfet!
In mecbanlcal englaeerlna. He
ager at Kyger Cieek.
A graduate of the ~ndlana also completed a Manaaement

Development P1 ~r.tm spon- promoted to maintenance supersored by AEP at Ohio State visor and In 1966, · to results
University.
engineer.
He and his wife, Carla, two
The following year he was
sons, Kevin and Steven, and promoted to staff engineerdaughter, Klndra, reside at 906 production at the Piketon office,
Mossman Circle, Poblt Pleasant. and In 1970 he was promoted to
Goebel joined the Kyger Creek ' assistant plant manager at
plant In 1984 as an associate Kyger Creek. In 1986, he was
engineer In the Performance promoted to plan I manager.
Department, and a year later he
A registered professional engiwas promoted to performance neer In Ohio, Blowers graduated
engineer. In 1986 he was pro- from West VIrginia University
moted to maintenance engineer with a bachelor's degree In
In the Maintenance Department mining engineering. He also
and In 1988, to senior mainte- completed an AEP-sponsored
nance engllleer.
Management DeveiQPment PrO.
He was promoted to plant gram at tlie University of Michiengineer-maintenance In 1989. A gan. He IS a native of New Boston
graduate of Ohio University with and served In the U.S. Army In
a l!achelor's qegree In mecbanl· 1943-46. He Is a member of the
cal engineering, he resides at 520 Kiwanis LOdge In Gallipolis. '
Sprlna Valley Drive, Gallipolis.
He and his wife, VIrginia, Jive
Blowers Is retiring after 35~ · at 545 Hilda Drive, Gallipolis;
years with OVEC. He bepn btl and are the parents of one son,
career at Kyger Creek In 19M as Steve of Rocky River.
a test engineer. In 1960 he was

-.

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.
·
s
ome
..
diplomats
double
as
.terrons~ ·
The Daily Sentinel .
~ ~

~

· 111 Conn street

Pomeror, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBBSTS OF THE MBJGS-MASON ADA

..

,.,.,_,"-...,... ~c::::l··~

'. ROBERT L. WINGET!'
.· Pablllller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oeaenl . . . . .

PAT WliiTEliEAD
Aae~Mut

P•blllller/Coatroller

.
A~ of'lbe Unltl!d Preosintl!rnatlonal, InlaDdDallyPreos
• Assodatkm and the Amerlcaa Newspaper Pnb!fsbeFs &gt;\saoc!atloa.

WASHINGTON- The recent
assaaslnatlon in Switzerland of a
leading opponent of the Iranian
government was carried out with
high-leVel approval In Iran and
the used Iranian diplomats as
terrorists. The government of
Iran even provided a getaway
plane for the conspirators.
That ls the conclusion of West
European and U.S. Intelligence
sources, terrorism experts and
members of the Iranian resiStance. The victim . was Kazem
Rajavl, an Iranian living In exlle
In Switzerland. He had been an
outspoken critic of the Ayatollah

- ..~

.. __ ...

-·

and bls successor.
Iranian President Haabeml
RaflanJanl
As trre reportl!d In an earlier
columD. our sources beUeve the
hit, on AprU 2,, was tlmed
between the release of ' two
American hostass. Tb~ publicIty and the praise for Iran put the
.assaaslnatlon on the back paaes.
Tlte assaaalos uled the weekly
Iran Air filght between Geneva
and Tehran as their getaway
plane. It was held up for an hour
to make sure all the conspirators
were aboard.
Swiss pollee have ' publicly

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'They shOuld be I•• tban300

...

Squeezing the
:Soft money loophole

'I

•
By ARNOLD SAWI~
.
UPI ~alor Edi!Or ' .
· WASHINGTON .- As Qmgi;ess beg!~ ye~ , another debate of
pplll!cal camJ18liJlllnance reform. a major pardon of the argument
~11;-c.ater . ~ how to deaf wtth something C!llled •'Soft money.''
.
.SOit ~' like sort Ice cream, Is the gen~~~ne· artlcle In a dlffe.r ent
~: In : lliief, It Is money ll)dlrectly . contributl!d to federal .
eampalps- for president and for Congress- that wollld be clearly
Hlegal If II had been donated directly.
Federal caadl&lt;lates and aatloDII poUticaJ parties are forbidden to
talle'~lgn contributions from businesses or labor. unions,
Mil tba(fll they may accept money from political action
lommltteesthal are asBOClaled with those special Interests.
;: Tbedltfereai:e between money that comes directly from companies
i)ld unions or from PACs orpnlzed by them ls hard to describe as
anythlniJ but leialllctloo, but that ls another story.
In addition, there are supposed to be strict llmlts on how much
parties and candidates can take from Individuals, and presidential
nominees who ~crept federal funds for their general election
campaigns are bot supposed to accept any more money from }irlvate
spurces.
: · But the federal law does not cover state candidates or political
flu'tles, which In many cases may accept funds from companies and
iiJIIOns and larae or unDmhed contrlbutloiiS from Individuals.
: , Soft money, then, Is money contrlbutl!d to state parties and
candidates that actually Is used to help federal candidates, locludlog
presidential nominees who are not S)ipposed to be getting ·assistance
from anywhere except Washington.
This assistance ususlly takes the form of activities such as
get-out-the-vote campaigns that can be billed as support for state and
local candidates, but which In reality are designed by congressional
apd presidential campaign managers to help their candidates. .
:· Soft money obviously provides a loophole In existing campaign
ODance laWs, but how big a deal Is It?
Common Calise, the citizen action group tlu!t has been lobbying for
campaign finance reform for years, says In 1988 the Bush and
DUkaltls campaigns ··reportedly raised more than S20 mUIIon each.in
P!llitlcal party soft money ."
·
. That compares with the S46 million the presidential candidates
KCepled from the federal treasury after winning the Republican and
(!eniocratlc nominations, and would exceed the supposed llrhll on
OresJdential campaign spending by nearly 50 percent.
·: As campaign finance cornes to tbe Senate floor, both Democrats
a'Jid Republteans have ~mpetlng proposals they say will eliminate
soft money abuses. Both also claim to have leglslatlon that would end
. the dominant role now played by political action commltees In
eongresslonal campaigns.
·
. These matters are somewhat complicated because any legislation
~'liS -to ~ayold trampllniJ on states' tights -r.p regulate their own .
campalps ' and on citizens' rlgbts :to, exlft:eis themselves by
support1Jii Ca'iilildates with tbetr money. "' ; ' ~.. '
:J · Tllfre,l' WliS!!Iera ble dlsaJrFement a bout the differing approaches
-to both sofl ·money and PAC:S' Imil tllete ls'iliJ'gOtjt line on what, II
, bything, will emerge from Congress.
• . .., ,.. ·
; One thing can be predicted however: If a campaign reform law
:)lctually Is enacted this year, someone Wtliflild ibopholes In It by next
.year.
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"Oh no, the president's going to Mars again. Someone bring him back."

More· action needed _o n campaign refonn
Anotber Ieitslallve proposal
emergedlastweeklaiheoverclue
push for campaign reform. The
bill, H.B. 816, by Rep. Katherine
Walab, D-Ober!In, would close
loopholes \ 1n Ohio's campaign
finance disclosure laws.
Passage or thls bill, which was
dtafted by the Secretary of
State's office cannot come too
soon. The
contains 117
. provisions, many of them technl·
cal, ·and all worthy ol serious
consideration.
Perhaps the most significant
change Included In the blllls a
provision that would prohibit
corporations tromgettlngpower
of attorney from employees so
the company can tunnel employees' campaign contributions
to specific candidates.
As'lntroducedlotheHouse, the
bill instead would allow political
contributions made through payroll deduction plans to go only to
political action commit tees ,
trade' assoctatloos and labor
· unions. Th!s change would make
It easier to ldentl1y the source of
campaign contributions.
'

bill

~ntrlbu-

It would bopefillly brlng'aa end · · committees that sollcti
totheso-calle!lbicldenplpellne.o f lions from the publlc,to Inform
contributions used by some coril· .th~· person solicited . that the
paoles. Us~ year, Qlmmon : ·•.~atribution may be used for the
Cause of Ohio flied a .complaint . ;-RIIJ'IIC)IIe of lnllu~:ncln1 elections.
wltJl the Ohio Elections Commls~' ·;'i : :~making the reporting period
slon alter Identifying $275.0\10 tn ;.. ;)o~· post-electlon repo11!131 da,ys
payroll , deduction contributions ;,::;-atter 'he election. Tb~ change
from Ohio utUity company ern·.'. 'J •buld make It Impossible for
ployees to campaign comlrilttees. / election committees to llle poSt·
operated by legislative leaders In '·, eleQIIon reports lmmedl!ltely al·
tbe stafe.
·
'
\i!r an eleQtlon and postpone
Other reforms Include:
. disclosure of contributions and
•htgber fines for candidates spending.
and groupe filing late.campalp·
•exemptlng caodld!lt~ from
finance reports.
· .
flllngltemlzedreportsw~total
•requiring lobbyists repter· · contributions and expenditures
lng with . the slate to jdentify are$500orlessforthllcampalp.
themselves' as lobbyists when ·
•requiring disclosure o~ people
they make PQUtlcal . contrlbuwho endorse loans or provide a
!Ions. Political candldales also
guarantee on loans made . to a
would have to list them as
political committee. This Is slm·
lobbyists In filling out their
llartothefederalandothermany
ca.m palgn ftna11ce rej)orts. · ·
other slates' campaign finance
, •requiring aroupi sponsoring
laws.
political · actl'l!l , committees to
This Is .J ust one of ~era!
put Its com~ or ~oCIJ!tlon
campaign re!Ol'll! plans that may
name Into theaame o'ttbe PAC.
be considered when the General
Instead of ob5FUrtng' ·!~; !!1enAssembly reconvenes ' next
tity by using generiC nsm,es:,. .
month. A Senate task force on
•requiring polltl~al\ · ~cnpn
campaign finance refof!ll Is
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·Sen. Jan Long
expected to propose Its own
package of legislative reforms.
Two other bills that I have
endorsed. H.B. 538, which would
tighten . the. current laws on
lobbyist registration, and H.B.
539, which would encourage ,
spending limits In political campalgns, also may be considered.
It's a political year, and . I
expect members from holh parties wW want to take credit for
passing campaign reform bills
like the ones I've oulllned In this
and ~lous columns. What's
· most Important, however,IJ that
something pass. We can argue '
latter who should aet the most
credit. The current system needs
reform badly, and II' s.ourduty as
lawmakers to take steps to see
that the laws get changed now,
before the fall elections, when
Interest In the electoral process .
. Is at Its blghest.
U you have questions on thls, or
any other matter, please don't
hesitate to contact me, Sen. Jan
Michael Loq, at the Statehouse,
. orbycalllngmeat (614) 466-8156.

small reforrtts
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WASHINGTON (NEA) - As
than tripled In , the last eight
IJn:le~.
··
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Congress reluctantly confronts years.~· ''
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Morever, the broadc~tlng Incampaign flilance reform,,legls-·
(In 1~ • ..,aceordlng ,to the dustry a!lounds with tales of
Iators are virtually certain to · Fede~al Election ,·com!ltlss.lon, candidates favored by station lze unsuspecting candidates. One
media buyer likened aegotlatlng
overhaul the federal law govern- winners spent an averaget.o tal of owners or managers who were
for broadcast tlme to hqgllng In
ing the cost of, buying television about . $360,000 In ea~h ·a011se . privately encouraged to ' pura Middle Eastern rug market.
lime for political commercials. . corttest and about $3.6 mllllortln chase low-cost, pre-emptlble
That situation must be remeThe proposed change · Is lm·
each Senate race.)
•&gt;. . . tlme with the understanding that
died. But tbe change inust not be
peratlve to restrain greedy teleDuring the 1980s, televts!On their ad8 would not be moved made illdeptMently. 'Instead, It
vision station owners who for
stat~ owners circumvented the
while their op.Ponents were
should remain a "sweetoer" for
many years have enriched them- requirements of the 19TI slatue .' forced to pay much more.
members of Congress coosldera·
selves at the expense of pollti·
by selling two classes of · · Indeed, political consultants
bly less enthusiastic about other,
clans. Unfortunately, It Will c!o commercials:
· teltlfylng at Senate committee
far more Important aspects of
nothlnJI to restore Integrity to the
- Pre-emptlble ads are ln¢1'· !!eatings have. described ' how
campaign finance reforms.
severely tainted process of rals~oslve but can be shlfte(l, at 'the ·television stations often vt~lm·
.lag and spending campaign
station's option, to tlme ·periods ·
·
·
funds ,
other than tilose lnltlillly agreed .
The F~eral Election Cam·
upoll by the broadcaster aad1he ·'
palgn Act of 1971 requires that In offtce-afeker.
··
the weeks Immediately before
That IS often unacceptable to
presidential and CODifellloll!ll campaign mDIIBierS who use
elections, no radio and television
pubUc opiniOn surveys to Identify
·ststlo11 can charlie more tluin the
specltlc demographic IJ'OUps,
· By Untied PrMe Inlerllllilonal
"lowest unit rate"- th.at amount then seek to reach thole voters by
Today Is Wellnesday, May :10, tbe150tbdayofl990wtth 215tofoUow.
pa,ld by Its blaat and best placing television ads adJacent to
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Us first quarter.
co'minerclal adverttaers - to an or wtthln the protll'ams they are
The morning stars are Mercury. Venus, Mars and Saturn.
legally qualified candidates
most likely to watch.
·
The evening star Is Jupiter.
seeking to alr colnmerclals:
A candidate's ad echeduled to
ThOse born on this date
under the alp nf Gemini. They Include
Station owners can hardly
be aired during a news proiJ'am,
Mel mai!C, the voice of Bugs Bunny, Elrner.Fudd, Porky Pie and
Justify enriching themselves by whose viewers are more likely ·many other cartoon characters, in 1~; baodleader Benny Goodman
charging exorbitant rates . to
than otlll!nl to participate In IIi 1909; Christine Jorgensen, who gained notoriety for undergoing a
· carry political ad8. Indeed, a
elections, might be pre-empted sex change opera!Jon, In 1926; 'actors Clint Walker In 1927 (age63) aad
stroq case ean be
to · and shoJm Instead In the middle · Keir Dullea In 1936 (age M): and NFL Hall .o f Fame running back
require them to carry low-coat, If of a Saturday morning cartoon
Gale Sayers In 1943 (age 47).
· ·'
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not free, campaliJI advertising In
show or a late-nlgbt movie.
return lor , their u11e ., of the
- Non-(lie emptfble ad8 musi
On this date In history: ,
broadcut apectrum, a valuable -be broadcut at the tlme Orlgl·
In 1431, Joan ol Arc was burned at thestakelDRouen, France, at the
nally spectfled, but they typically age of 19. Slie bad been convicted of aorcery.
public resource.
,
Nevertheless, soarlniJ teii!VI·
coat two, tbree or four times as
In 1937, a.battle between pollee and strikers at the Republic Steel
alon time chargea are a leadiDI much a a pre-em ptl b I e CorporatloiJ plan tin Chlcaao. kUied 10 people and wounded 90.
ca118e of the unrestrained upcommerclala.
In 1972, three Japanese terrorists kWed 22 people wtth automatic
ward aplral of campaign CQifl.
Corporate ad¥ertliters seldom
weapons at' the airport In Tel Aviv, Israel.
·'
·
These lea typically col!lume
purchase oon-pre-emptlble tbne,
In~. Spain became the 16th Rij!mber nation of the North Atlantic
about half the money spellt In
becalllt they can rely upon lhelr Treaty Organization.
racea for colia'r~lonal l8lltl atatus as replar Ciuatomera to
and the llenate Commerce COin·
dlacourage ltattou trom lhow·
A thoug!Jt for tile day: French phllo8opher Francois Voltaire, who
mltle!! says thay have "more 1q, thm adl at . undesirable died on this ~ll!ajn 17'18, wrote, "He who Is only wise liVes a sad llf~i'
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Geneva. He re'portedly told Ra·.
Samadl and Mohammed Rez- javl that he would be "llquJ..
vaal, as their suspects. The d•ted" II he didn't stop crltlclz-:
pollee say tbe two men stayed In lniJ Iran:
~
a Geneva hotel and hired the car · - Mohammed Hosseln Ma'
~In the.ambush.of IUJal(l.
· laek; the Iranian envoy to Swlt- '
But our sources say the pollee zerlaod. lila appointment was
have a longer llst of suspected protei ted by the. U.s. State
co-conspirators. Some are diploDeparlmeot In a l!llh!Y classltled;
mats who douple as ter~ts cable because of hls Involvement·
a Job description perfected In
In the 19'19 lakeover of !he U.S ..
Iran. The suspects Include:;
Embassy In 'rehrao. Malaek Is
- Slrooi Nassert. the !J1olao
known to have personally laterenvoy to the European headquarroeated some of the 52 American
ters of the United Nations In
hostages held by Iran for 444
days.
• . . .·. ·
- Had! Najalabadl, llle Iran·
lao env6y to the United Arab
Emirates. He Is a trUted minion:
and melsage carrler foi- RafsanJanL NaJ alabad! ai'rlvect In Geneva four days before the assassl·
nation and left on the getaway
plane.
- Katlm Abadl, the Iranian
consul general In Geneva. He
uaed to be .an lnterr01ator and
torturer In Iranian prisons and
was particularly al!noyi!d that
Raj a vi publicly ·h arped on the
despicable conditions In those
prisons. Our sources' say Abadl's.
role In the assassination was to
gef fals.e documents and shelter .
lor the hit men. In an Intercepted
telephone conversation between .
Abadl and his superiors, be
alil!led!Y reported that tbe oper·
atlon was a success and that one
of the assassins was sale In the
consulate.
Iran hasn't owned up to the
recent assassination, but leaders
In Tehran didn't shed any tears
bver Rajavl. On the day after the
murder, one parliamentary dep. uiy ranted on the radio, "The
• Islamic regime has a free hand In
suppressing these noxious &lt;resIstance leaders.) Capture and
'•
kUI.them!"

Can,paign bill tunes

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nam~ two Iranians, Yadollab

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Berry's World

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Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Kboaiemt

weirds Jona. AU letters are subJect to edltlna ud muat be alped wllb
, name, address and telephoDe number. No unslped letters wUJ be published. Letters should be In good taste, addresslna Issues, notperiQIIAIJ, ties. '
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Robert Walters

Today in ·history ·

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'REACHml. FOR GROUNDER lhlrd
baseman Chris liabo lunge&amp; for the ball hit bf lbe
Mets' Kevin . McRey•&lt;~lds In the slx.th Jn11lli1 of

Tueeda,y night's game ID ClnclMatl, but Sabo
com.. up abort. The Red8, however, wo11 Z.I;
(UPI)

are not my cup of tBB, either."
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Trail .Blazers
·
,
g
rab
lead
.
m
.
series with 120~114 triumph
By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Writer
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI)
Thanks to Clyde Drexler. the
Western Conference championship series still resembles an old
cowboy movie - the guys wear·
lng white always wln.
Drexler snapped out or scoring
slump with 32 points, Including
the g~·ahead free throws .with
34.4 seconds left Tuesday night,
as the Portland Trail Blazers
• · malntillned their precious home· ,, court advantage In the best-Of·
seven series with a · · 120-114
. · victory over the Phoenix Suns.
· Drexler entered scoring jUst
16.5 pOints a game· In the series,
almost seven polhts below his
·season average. But he exploded
:for hls.serles.hlgh by hitting 13 ol
.24 shots.
· "Rick (Portland Coach Adel·
man) just told me. to be more
aggressive," said Drexler, who
·also had 10 rebounds, "but I can't
give. fiWay any secrets. We just
· did a 1ittle thing or two.
Portland, 9-0 at home In the
playoffs, leads the series 3·2 and
· can advance to Its first NBA
, finals In 23 years with a victory

.

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The Daily .Sentinel
(USPS Hli-9•)
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week.

Thursday night at Plioenix.
The Trail Blaze·r s have
struggled recently on the road.
dropping their last five games by
an average of. 18.5 points.
"But I don'.t care 'fhat has
happened, ~e can play excenent
baH · ~n . the road," Portland's.
Buck Williams said.
.But should they fall to close out
the serJes Thursday night. the
Blazers will play . host to a
seventh game Saturday. The
home team has won every g11me.
· The Subs. who won th-e previous two games at home by a
combiQed 46 poln Is, fell for the
20th s tralihl time at Portland.
They have lost their three road
games ld the series by margins of
,1, 2 an~.~ points. ,.
.
-· "It's • !~bout tjme they quit
hldlpg ~,nder the umbre11a of
their home-court advantage,"
frustrated Phoenix Coach Fltz·
simmons·said.
Said ah'equal~V frustrated Tom
Chambers: "We've been here
before. What do you. want us to
say, we quit?"
Portland's Jerome Kersey.
who had ' 21 points and 11
rebounds, snapped a 109·109 tie
with tWo foul shots, then led
Drexler for a sensational slam In
transition for a 113·1091ead with
2: 41 to play .
But the Suns retaliated with
five s\ralght points. Mark West
hit a free throw, Dan Majerle
scored off a difficult drive and
Chambers made two free throws
toputPhoenix ahead 114·113 with
47.3 seconds left.
.
However, Drexler attacked·
Majerle on the baseline, drew a
foul and sank two free throws 13
seconds later to push Portland
ahead to stay.
"W€'ve run that play an year
long;" Drexler said. "Give It to
me. If I don't have the shot I give
. It to another guy for a Jumper."
· On the next possession. Maje·
rle n\(ssed a layup In traffic.' Jeff
Hornacek couldn't control a loose
ball' ln. the lane and fouled
Williams, who made two foul
shots for a 117·114 edge with 14.9
secoitds left.
''

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service Is
available.
•

MoiiSvbo&lt;rlplloow
llliW.e Melp CouMy
13 Weeks ............ ....... ........ .. ..... 119.24
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.

Miscellaneous
..Tnree sun-burned adventurers
In a 78-year-old car pulled Into
Bel'jlng: completing the 10,000·
mlle London· Beijing Challenge
1990. which began In England on
April 17. The challenge.. which
was originally run In 1907. was
completed by 61 vehicles lncludllrg two motorcycles and a
" motorcycle with a sidecar.

SPECIAL OF TIE
WEEKI
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Hornacek then missed a 3· .
pointer with about seven seconds
to go, Kersey rebounded and
canned a free throw with 5.2
seconds left to seal the victory :
Terry Porter added ' 19 points
and 12 assists for Portland. Kevin
·Johnson . had 28 points and 14
assists lor th~ Suns an.d
Chambers contributed 22 points.
though he made only 6 of 21 shots.
Hornacek, who had 17 points,
hit for 7 straight Phoenix points,
and when Johnson completed a
3:point play off a drive. the score
was tied 98-98 with 8: 18 to play .
· Thirty seconds later, Danny
Young {,oughed up the ball after
cobldlng with teammate Duck·
worth, and Johnson coasted
horne. ~or a l)reakaWIIY.layup that
made It 102-99 with 7: 32
remaining.
But the Blazers fougljt back. ·
Drexler hit a 3-polnter, and West
was called for a ·fmil.underneath.
Duckworth made thlsfoul shot to
. complete a 4-polnt play, .and
Portland was wtthln 106-105 \VIth
6:09 to play .
I
- "That. couldn't have come at a
better time," Drexler said. 1
Chambers missed 12 or his first
- 15 shots, but suddenly sank two
straight as the Suns opened the
third quarter with an 8-1;;purt to
tie It 65-65. However. Porter
nailed his third 3-polnter and
Kersey dunked off Drexler's
rastbreak feed to conclude a
sudden 16-6 burst, and the Blazers carried a 91·84 lead Into the
final period.
Drexler struck for 18 points
and grabbed 8 rebounds In the
·first half as the Blazers raced to a
64-57 advantage.
Johnson had 17 points lor the
Suns by halftime. bu I got little
help. Chambers missed 9 of 12
field-goal attempts and Hor·
nacek took only 4 shots .
Phoenix started hot, making 7
· of Its first 10 shots to take a 17-9
lead. But Portland went on a 16·1
burst . holdlitg the Suns without a
field goal for a 4: 22 stretch.
Porter had 8 points, Including a
pair of 3-polnters, In the run that
made It 25-18.

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ADOLPH'S DAllY y ALLEY
"At. W ef fill P1
POMIIOY, 0110

•
r•w
•nun .1..1"
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:· i-)'•IJf, 1l

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WILLIAMS .DRIVES Portland's Buck
W!lltama (52) drives to tbe hoop as Phoealx's Kart
Rambls keeps the pressure on during the first

·· Sports briefs
Equestrian
David O'Connor, Karen Lende,
J. Mlcllael Plumb, Bruce David·
son. Molly Bliss. Mike Huber and
Kare11 Reuter have been selected
by the u.s. Equestrian Team to
compete In the 1990 World
Equestrian Games, In Stock· .
holm, Sweden on July 26-29.
,,
Bone ra~Jnl ,
· Cz:ill:ti!lliJ 'Type, the;lour-year·
old colt who upset Easy Goer and
Housebuster In the Metropolitan
Mlli! at Belmont Park Monday,
received the top ranking In a poll
conducted by Thoroughbred RacIng Communications, Inc. Prized
was ranked second and Preakness winner Summer Squall
was third.

quarter . of Tliesda,y night's NBA Western
Conference final game In Portland, whleh the ho,l
Trail Blazers won. (UPI)
•

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· ·-~;· ;';'_·~"':'"
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KOUNTR.J:··.KITCH-W;~~~~~~:::.
Located

Across.. The.1tr..enroili;Hom. Narl:q.-.41!1:, .. ..
Third aftd PHiU.t rltt in laciu "

·, :·DAUr!11ECfAlS
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and I got m y man out, Then FranciSco downed Chicago 6-2; ,
By C..J. RWU
~Y came In and got the next St. Louis tripped Houston 3-2; :
UPI Sports Writer
two. That's how we sell T-shirts and San Diego at Philadelphia ;
New manager. Familiar
.•1:11d
posters.'" ·
was rained out.
.
results.
!lob
Ojeda,
1·3,
suffered
the
·
Pirates
9,.Dodsera
5
Bud Harrelson, who replaced
At Pittsburgh, R.J. Reynolds ,
· Davey Johnson as manager of i ~ allowing four hits In seven
liilllllgs:
A:ndy
VanSlyke, Don Slaugh! and
the New York Mets Tuesday.
Tim.
Teufel
had
given
the
Mets
Sid
·Bream
drove In . two runs
pledged to " fire up" the 'team,
a l-lllead In the first.lnnlng with . each, helping Pittsburgh extend
but the Metscontlnue to fizzle as
It s winn ing streak to four games .
they lost 2·1 to the Cincinnati JtlS'iecond hOmer of the season.
Davis
cl&gt;untered
with
his
se·
Bob
Patte rson, 3-1, gave up six
Reds.
hits over 6 1·3 Innings and Scott
•'Being manager Is a whole cond homer In the fourth Innin g
Ruskin went 2 1-3 Innings for his
different ballgame when y ou're to tie It 1-1.
SabO gave the Reds the lead·ln
second save. Fernando Va lenzu·
deciding who's going to go up
ela, 4-4, took the los s.
~
there and hit," Harrelson sa id. the fifth with his lOth of the
Giants 6, Cubs 2 '
But lately, It. doesn't matter season.
Mels General Manager Frank
At ChiCago, Don Robinson ,
much who goes to the plate fo r
Cashen, speaking at a Riverfront
making only his second start of·
New York.
the season, allowed five hits over
Tom Browning. 4·4. struck out Stadium news conference before
three and walked . one before the game. said blame for .the · 6 2-3 Innings and added. an RBI
single to lead San Francisco. ·
being_ replaced by Rob Dibble to club's poor start s hould also go to
Robinson, 1·0, earned the win and:
start the ninth. Dibble came on . the front offlc.e and to the
Jeff Brantley notched his fifth'
and struck out Kevin McRey- players. Nevertheless, he mat~e
nolds .before Randy Myers en- Johnson the · first major-league · save. Kevin Blankenship, 0-1:
c alled·up from Iowa for the start ,
. tered ·and struck out Darryl manager fired this season.
When asked why he dismissed
took the loss.
Strawberry and Mike Marshall
Johnson. Cashen said: " Because
· Cardinals 3, Astros 2
for his lOth save.
At Houston, John Tudor seal·
"U was nice to have a lead for a 1 felt our baseball club was
tered live hits over seven Innings
change and I really wasn't llred underachieving and we needed a
and Ozzle Smith scored an'd
after eight Innings," Browning. ·new direction."
"If I don't get a concerted
drove In a run, helping St. Louis
said. "But we had Dlbl&gt;le and
.effort
out
of
a
player,
lt
's
time
for
snap Its four-game losing stre~ .
Myers rea!lY and the 4·5·6 men In
Tudor . 5~2. went seven Innings ttl
thell- baftlng order ·were coming him to sit and watch, " said
Harrelson. "I feel In my heart
his first win since April 28
up. "
.
1·
Lee Smith note lied his fourth
"That's my
said Dibble . this ballclub w·m be ftrMi uP'."
·In other NL games, Pittsburgh • "'~buo Dan Schatzeder, 1·3, was
"I'm · th~stopper
dropped Los Angelei! ·9-5;1' San ''
'

BROGAN-WARNER
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Sports briefs

made

·~Just so, my dellrl Pro/star/an chic sitcoms

.

Davis, SabO homer to ·give
fleds 2·1 -Nictory over Mets

:.•'

l.s t PAIR •••••••••••••••••• 20°/o -OFF
2nd PAIR••••••~ ........ 25°/o OFF
.3rd PAIR ••••••••••••••• '30°/o OFF l•
BRING A FRIEND AND SPLIT •••
THE SAVINGS
!

CHA

.........

N SHOES

POMROY'S QUAun SHOE S101E

•

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,.

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Wednesday. May 30, 1990

Henderson break's AL stolen base mark..,
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By PAUL DEFEDE
VPI Sports Wrller
On a night when Rickey Henderson stole past Ty Cobb, the ·
Toronto Blue Jays swiped some
of his fun.
'
Henderson broke the American League career ste41 record,
but Toronto came up the winner
over Oakland 2-1 Tuesday 'night.
The loss was Oakland's second
·
straight.
Henderson said that the · last
few days · before he broke the
record were tough.
"The last few days; I,have been
having trouble getting on base
and the record's been on my
mind," he said. "I haven't been
doing my job - helping the team
win. So now that I have the
record, I can relax, get on base
more and do what I'm suppose to
do."
David Wells, ~-0, makinll just
his fourth C!II'eer start, allowed
only two hits in six lnninjls.
One of them was a sixth-innlrig .
double to Henderson, cwho stole
third .for his 893rd career theft.
Tom Henke. the ihlrd To.r onto·
pitcher, earned his sixth !!live.

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Scoreboard ...
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Baseball
the courtroom and was sentJose Canseco of the Oakland enced to 50 hours o( community
Athletics, who hit .542 with five ~ervlce and ordered to undergo
homers and 16 RBI, ·was named counseling.
the AL Player of the Week for
. CoBep ·
May 21-27. JeffTreaclway -of the
The Citadel defeated Miami
Atlanta Braves was named the (Fla.) , 4-l, to win the Atlantic
NL's top player. Treadway batRegional and advance to the
ted .316 for the week with nine College Baseball Worl~ Series
RBI, Including a three-home run
which beginS Friday in Omaha,
perfo'r mance against Philadel- · Neb. Earlier, Stanford, Geolitlia,
phia on May 26 .... Hail of Farner
Georgia Southern, Louls\ana
Harmon Kiilibrew, who recently
State, Mississippi State, .Gal
suffered a collapse lung, Is State-Fullerton and Oklahqma
expected to be hospitalized for at
State earned berths.... Stanford
lliast 10 days In a Scottsdale,
University was selected a's , tbe
Ariz. ho_spitaL
·
nations's top NCAA tennis teams
.Bulletball
In both men's and wom~n·s
Portland Trail Blazers rookie
diVIsions.
forward CUff Robinson pleaded
guilty: to fourth degree assault'
charges for hitting a policewoman. Robinson knQCked down
poUce officer E;laine Slone when
she was trying to stop a fight on
April 29 at a Portland bar.
Robinson apologized to Sloane In

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Clinton wins .n omination

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·zot• Aulrmt~g ,,,., l•lt
AU BEDDING PlANTS '
3 PIS S100
lEG. 16.50 flats NOW 1510

BEDDING GERANIUMS
1111. 112 NOW SfSO

"

.sister, Wlllle Maude Coates.
.
Service~~ will be held Friday at
NeW be. .
· 1 p.m. at tbe Rawllllp Coati
·New hours for the Pomeroy
Fllber Funeral Home In Middle-Teeii Center have been an·
. port .-ltb Rev. James seddon aowicedfor9p.m. toinldnighton
· offid811D1- Burial will be In
weekendl.
Rlwivlew Cemetery.
RmvaliiiMitl
, ; Frteaclsmaycallatthetuneral •
The Middleport Community
· 'hame on Thursday from 2-4 p.m.
Church, 575 Pearl Street, will
· ~ 7-9p.m.
Jiaw revival bellnnlng Mollday
.. .
wltb . different speakers and slngernljptly. Servlcee begin at
BDI Howell
7: ;!I)-p.m. Putor Sam Anderson, •
lnvtt• tbe publiC.
·'wuuam !Bill) Gay H~ll. 22.
PQrMroy, died Saturday at .rort
The Melp County Salon Jllo.
··'-~ - Army Ba.e In tbe state of
7lD,.EJflbland Forty, will have Us
-:waablllltGD. .
lna"llltlotl of otnctra and picnic
'_ Bom In GaiUpolla ot1 July 25,
ot1Jiane lht&amp;p.tn.at the home of
:ttrr ~~ewaa 111e- o1 Denollld Malpl"etty.
·~ Jeu Bolwzll Howell. He
a prlvlte Jlnt cl111s In the
· · Ualted !llataa Army.
·.' •Hi IIIUI'vlved by bll plftlltl, a
•
· •• .tauab•. JC!IIIoa Rl- H~
·': {:qluiriblls; materlllll 11'1114·
· inotber, Emma Jlolwell. Polin
',: Pleasut,
Va.: paleraal

IIG. 15.50 NOW S450
llfG. 167s NOW S$75
1

I
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AU. SHIUDEIY &amp; IIEES

20% Off

Solo Cllllioooo llor zl••• 11tt s..,..,
•

GIDIIIIOUSI
I. HUIIIID'S
SYIACISI, OHIO

.

HJ-5776
9·S Clai.t $,..

........

PIZZA &amp; SUBS
IN SYUCUSE

ANNOUNCES A NEW
SUMMER LUNCH MENU

:&lt; ~er.

Virllllla Hewell.
;_. GilJIIIOIII; atld ll\'tl'ai IUnfll,

::-:*-. ... Ml""••.
=

,ru pr::illd ID ...111-- I
' llrOIIMr. Du
DeDIIII Htlwtll.

!

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11ESDAY~AY

11&amp;00·1:30
. BG. HOUISI,•••fiiiU 4·11
Fll. &amp; SlY. 4·11J
CLOSID MONDAY
I!

s111a

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----.,.,.~~--'-'..:-:__,_

'; Jiilei 'JI a ,..lt.-.llllrllliw·
: !ill. ud !Ditawl aruA-..,

,,.. . :f' .........
; II.
.

. -llllat IGLIS

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WEATHER MAP .... A pea•te.t. wet ....... &amp;fill_,.

en~~BR . 1o prociMe lllle&amp;IIN

w...hr -

WW :

~ .

« • - will llle
oeetane,..._ll.,IMGa•c-t.Gnlltle
ral•wlll •,
tall over 1M drr . . - ef 1M Dll riM, 'Willi ll " - ralw Iii

Oldalloma anc1 M'Iualt. Slltweaa . . . II

•••11••

w-.

NebnakL fte Naalll I will.., _ , - - . wlllla ,_late .
allofti'S Ill New ............ tile
ralw wlllleaw Cal5tl I
_ . - lido tiMt Gnl&amp; ._Iii ... tiMt Pael8e Nwawul, 'Willi
JaMllillla .....................
(UPI)

Or••••

-----Weather----........ .._..
Bt Ualted Pnulwa!l 'hwal
Sou&amp;la Ce•lral Ollie
. Tonight_, clear with a low near
40. Winds betomlng light ar:td
variable.
.

Thursday, sunny wltb a high In
the mid 70s.

Frlda,J lllr I p ...._, ,
Chance II( raiD Frida)' IIIII ~
Sunday and fair Saturday. Lowa : .
In the mid 401 to 111111 501 Friday•.
and 11 the upper 501 aDd ...
Saturday and Sull_llay. Hlabl ID
· tbe mid 'lOa to mid• Friday lillt
Saturday aDd Ia tile 8011 s.r"'BY• :.
•

Lawl'l!llc:e, billing aacl coiJecti.,
council reported.
Carroll Teaford, c:ounc:ll aaeat, was ap.pro IN. Tile fl.,
member, reported that he had, nance t'lllllmlttee wiU ma. a.
sanded and painted the c~ump reco~Ddalloa lor repla~
ment at _tM next meeting, Mn,,
t~ck bed,
'.
.
David .Nellller, repre~e~~tlng Lawrence resJgnallon Ia efffe-,
. _
the Racine Fire Department. live June 15.
'
asked if the department would be
able to uSE the lower section of
the park for a carnival If
arrangements could be macle.
The mayor advised that the park
board sbould make a recommen·
dation. It was nollrd that the
reiUI&amp;rly _sebeduied meetlnp ol
the park board are the last
Mollday of tbe month at 7 p:m.
Council appro\'ed also the
purchale of a used state highway
•
'·
patrol crutaer -f or tbe Racine
'
Pollee~ It was reported that 1987
Chevrolets will be available.
The resiiJI&amp;IIon of oleaaette

The eJsbth annual Georae
Holter Jr., family reunion will be
held Sunday at the home ol Jim
and Karen Werry, Racjne, with a
basket dinner at 1 p.m. Rain will
not cancel. Bring family pictures
and table .ervlce.

Vaca&amp;IH lillie Seliul
The Zion Church of Christ

wlli

be boldlng Vacation Bible School
Mollday through 'June 15. The
program will be June 17 at \: 30
p.m. 'l'be theine Ia "llland In the
Son." All nes are Invited to
altelld. Mlalon project Is Wooster's Chlldrens Home. Director Is
Kathryn Johnson, 992·5195.
Furtber lnfonnallon Ia available
from Bob Purtell, mlnllter, 992-

2 year Certifirate ofDepoait
$5000 minimum depoait

%

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...-.
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7003.

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'200fo •a•t
o"

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Effective Annual Yield

CASUAL, SHODS, TOPS
. AIID COOIDINAIIS

w.

WATOII FOR DAILY LUlie" SPECIAU

•
,

:IOYS AND

FEATURING PIEi 19 FISH, IAI-1-QUE,
I!IAMIUIGEI, PIZZA POCIEI,
CLUB SANDWICH, SUSONID TWISn FRIES
AB IIIIICAI SALAI.

L

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INSURANCE
n
st., ,......,,

announcemen•"'

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10 INCH HANGING IAsim

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Stocks

IUIIAID'S GBNIOISI

'

·d eaths-will

1,

4 IN. GERANIUMS l~g. 11.00
, 15c u. - 1G.FOI 1710
I 4 IN. HARDY MUMS .... st,oo
: NOW ISc •- - 10 FOI $7so

-

IIATIOIIAI.-I'OMC"f10JIIMID'II4t..

•
Racine Council · approves health 1.nsurance

game .tonight. Everyone. was
talking about his jump shot but
tonight showed what an excellent
ballplay~r can do for a club. He
was unstoppable.' '
,
The Blazers were often quite
stoppable , In Game_ 5, but won
anyway. They hit only 48.4
percent of their -shots, which
remarkably was their best shootlng effort of the series. The Suns ..
meanwhile; made ·only 45.4 percent after making 57 percent
the previous t,wo games - both
victories - at home.
, Tom Chambers had 22 pOints
for Phoenix but made only 6of 21
shots. Kevin Johnson added 28
poinis and 14 assists but missed
three shots in the final minute.

STAUING 'MAY 29, 1990

DOWNING .(HILDS
MULliN MUSSER

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Sports briefs

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PORTLAND, ·ore. iUPI)
Blazers Coach Rick oAdetman·,
Hard as it . is to believe, Clyde whose team took a 3-2 lead In the
Drexler was a forgotten man bes't-of-sevel) series. ''We diil a
entering Game 5 of the western better job of giving hlm, ~oom to
Conference finals.
get in theopenandbe_aggresslve.
Usually one of the game's most He just pounded the offensive
breath-taking players, Drexler boards."
had been struggling with his · · Drexler, who also had an
jumper. The Portland guard was excellent game In transition,
averaging just 16.5 points In the finished with 10 rebounds- six
series - seven points below his on offense - and made 1~ of 24
regular-season outout - while shots from the floor. He ~cored
making -only 43.9 percent of his nine points in the final q~rter,
shots.
Including the go-ahead foul shots
So the Trail Blazers designed with 34.4 seconds left after he
plays for Drexler to shoot from in worked on Phoenix defensive
close Tuesday night, often hav- whiz Dan Majer_ie alQn!; the
ing him post-up on the smaller baseline.
.
Jeff Hornacek. Drexler took
"He was due for · a good
advantageofthestrategy,finiSh- gamee," Phoenix Coach Cottton
lth 32
int
p 1 d Fitzsimmons said. "He's an
I
ng w
'PO s victory
as ortover
an
All-Star player and you knew. be
recorded
a 120-114
was going to . have a gam(\ like
the Phoenix Suns.
this."
Added Portland's Buck Willi·
"We worked .hard on trying to
get Clyde open tonight," said ams: "Clyde really elevated his

name director of operations

-..... _____

·t

of next week.
Hlgll pressure building south
through tbe Great Lakes abould
provide fairly light Wind colldl·
tiona Weclnesd8Y and 'l'tlunday,
glvlnl orchard grower&amp; a challee

April indicators
·~all 0~2 .p ercent

Drexler cqmes to life after: _struggle

...

f

Sqf.I.Gth have two rolls Tuesday ,

·'

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River wu 1 foot under the 12-loot likely ranee from the mld,liOa to
flood staae aDd Will expected to the low 701, but 10111e warming Ia
crest 'l'llelday afternoon, 3 feet expected alter midweek.
On Wednetday, hlgbs again
Ualta of tbe Melp County Ernelgency Medical Service
above flood stap.
respoaded to two calli lor u•tanc. on Tuelday .
Plckaway Countyaherifrsdep- will be In the mld-fOI to tow 'Ilk •
At 5:02 p.m. fbe Middleport Fire Department was called to ·
utlea notified residents ellll ol Tllunday and Saturday will ':J:e
Norlli Fonrtll Street for a poulble structure !Ire at the Brenda
Circleville early Tuesday wben lair, while more rain Ia forecast
. Jeffen realdenct!. There were no Injuries and the department
the Hargus Jtlver began to flow for Friday . Hlp will be In the
retlll'lled to quarters at ~=52 p.m.
over Its banks and near the 70s each day, wblle lows will be in
The Rutland. unit, at 6:10p.m., went to New Lima Road lor .
hOllies. ·Deputies told l'fSiderits the tOs Thursday, the 50s Friday
Ullda Georae who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
they may have to leave their . and the mld·50s to low 60s
. Saturday' .
homes.
For farmers, pan evaporation
The rain began to taper oft a bit
iilould
amount to over tw~tenths
alter mldnleht, and was exof
an
iDCb
Wednesday and fields
pected ioend over all the state by
may
-become
aultable lor tillage
early afternoon. A weak cold
or
planting
operations
by the
front was dropping south out of
.
weekend
where
showers
are
Ontario and through Lake Erie
lightest.
during the predawn hours but
Proapects for making hay .are
very little moisture was as~&amp;
moderllte
to good in the northwelated with the front.
·- Manufacturers' new orders
est. Curing ntes will improve a
WASHINGTON IUPll - The
Drier air was moving south
good'deal Wednesday u relative
for consumer goods and
IDdell of Leading Economic
Immediately behind the front
humities fall to around 40 !M"r·
materials.
Iacllcaton pi!IIIP4 8.2 percent In
and ahead ol high pressure. This
-Cbanae In manufacturers' was to establish a clearing trend cent. Fair skies Thursday should
April on the tblnl stralabt
provide continued good curing
unlined Ord!!f'S .
. 1110111bly decline Ill new building
over. northwest Ohio by late
perm lis, the Commerce Depart- .. -A,verage weekly Initial morning and gradually spread weather althoueh )here II a ·
chance for a shower t:rfday .
claims for state unempk)yment
,
ment aald WedDelday.
statewide through the evening.
Where rains have been heaviInsurance.
Economist Rolleft Dlell, at
High pressure will be building
The' February, Man; h and across ihe state later Tuesday est, wet ground will keep curing .
Northent Trull In Chleqo. aald
rates dowtl .ellen as sunny skies
April declll1e In building permlt_s
heiulllnc construction "bas been
aDd Tuesday !light, with the cold
lollowll lncreues In November, trout dying out over Ohio In the develop. After that threat of
weak for a wblle and standi to be
December and Juuary and · aner110011. The drier air wUI also showers Friday, lair weather Is
weak for 1 wblle."
forecuton Saturday, but periods
April's 0.2 percellt clecrease ID ' confirms the ongoing slump In
be a little cooler. After1100n highs
tbe prvernmeat barcJmeter of coutructlon •CIIvlty In most for the next couple of days will of.ahowera will limit drying much
parts of the nation.
future ecoiiOIIlk: ICC!Ivlty was Ia
line Willi tM fliiN!Ciallona of
"
private - l a t a .
The change Ia muutacturers'
'Tile Index Is still telling us untlDed orders also scored three
victory," Cllnt.;tn aald. "I asked
BJ Ualted Pnu latera.tiDaal
what It tw been for some dme,
atralght montbly declines, tbe
him for hla support and I ask ali
Arkansas
Gov.
Bill
Clinton
that we've aot a pretty we&amp;~~ Com!JlerCe Department said.
captured
his
sixth
straight
Dehis supporters lo ·l~. us In a
ecoD(lmy," aald Cyittbla Latta,
On the potltlveslde In the April . m~ratlc IUbernatorlal nomina· campaign of propess.
· an economist at DRIMcGraw . teadlng lndlcaton:
In the Republican_prln\ary,tor
tlon; wblle in Kentucky, Sen. ·
HID; a private consulting llrm In
..,Change In ~If live material
Mitch
MCconnell,
R·Ky
..
easily
governbr,
Uttle Rock lawyer
LexiJIIton, Mass.
prices.
.
Sltellleld
Nelson
claimed victory
won
rell&lt;imlnation
and
will
meet
·
~ 'Siace tbe Index ·loolt.l ahead,
~Index · ol
consumer
over
Rep.
Tommy
Robinson,
Democratic
primary
victor
Hartbla sunesta· there Isn't going to expectations.
_
R-Ark.
Both
men
are
former
vey
Sloane
In
November.
be aay early reboUDCIID ifOWih,"
-Vendor performance, which
If
Clinton.
43,
who
bas
govDemocrats.
Latta aald.
"roduct delivery time.
erned Arkansas tor 10 ot the pastThe department's Bureau of tracks
-Money supply.
12 years, wins re:electlon and
EconomiC Analy• al10 Aid the
A single Indicator, stock pri·
completes another term, be will
Index IDCreaaecl by a reviled 1 ces, was unchanged.
have served u governor longer
perc:e11t In Man:llalter declining
For the llx-month period, the
than
anyone tn the state's 1M1 .percent in February. In its• index was up0.3 percent In April,
The Racine VIUage Couilcll
year
history.
preltmlnary estimate, the bu· aDd down 0.1 percent lor the
approved a healthlnsuranc:e plan
reau reported a 0.9 Increase In previous _six-month period, a
ettlton ~rved - as goVernor tor Glenn Rizer, street commisMarch.
sioner and water superV!uor, as
rovernment spokesman said. • from 19'19-81.
He won the Democratic nom!· presented by Lowell Anderson,
Tile Commerce Deparlll)ent For . the 12-month period, the
nation In 1980, but los !the general Caldwell, at a recent recessed
said tbe Index Itself stood at 1U.9 Index was down 0.6 percent, the
spokesman said.
.
election to Jlepubllcan. Frank session ol the council.
lnApriL ·
Council approved also the
Meanwhile, the composite in· Of the 11 llldlcators that
White. Clinton was elected in 1982
transfer
of funds in the water
and re-elected in 1984. In 1986,
contribute - to tbe government dex of coincident llldicators, a
revenue
fulld
to cover lhe Board
monthly approximation of aggrebarometer, six were negative:
Clinton became the first Arkan·
of
PubliC
Affairs'
share ol the
gate economic activity, fell 0.2 sas governor electeci to a four- _
-Building permits.
health
insurance.
year term.
·
-Contracts and orders for percent In Aprn after gainS of 0.3
It was noted that council has
percent In March and 1 percent in
Only one of Clinton's Demoplant and equipment .
received
comptalat5 repntiae
February.
cratic c:hallenprs, TOm McRae,
-Average workweek.
dC)p
running
loose. Residents
51, a former Peace Col'Jil volun-'
are
reminded
that
the clop are to
teer and former director ol the
be
conltnetl.
Winthrop Roclleleller Founda· Council held a dllculilon on Ibe
tion, Will able to garner much
•
small
shelter holllea that are to
support In Tuesday's primary.
'
Burial
be In Meigs Mebe
constructed
at Star Mlll Park
"I reci!lved a call from Mr.
Charlea Edwards
mory Gardens.
on
the
rWerballk
side of the park.
· Mc:Rae Congratulating lion this
Further arnngementa will be
The
materlala
oa
band and work
Charles Edwards, 82, Middle- anll(lllnced by Rawlings Coats
'1s
to
be
completed
next month.
port, died 1\aeeday at Holzer Fisher Funeral Home.
Medical Center following an
extended Ulness.
Heman Tribbet
Bom In Diamond, W.Va .. on
Dally alock prices
June (,1907 be was the son of the
Heman s; Trlbllet, Reedsville, · (Aaofll!lh,m.)
' late Philip Rhinehart and Ida died TuesdaY at ' tbe Arcadia
lkJee aad Mark Sml&amp;h
Montgomery Edwards. He was a
Nursing Home following an ex-- otllulll, EIIII .to Leewl
railroader -wltb tbe Maintain· tended Illness
anc. Away Department, a veteBorn In Reeclsvllle, he was the Am Electric Power .. ........... 29\1
ranofWorldWarltamemberol . aon of the late Joseph lind Etta
AT&amp;:T ............... .................. t2%
the American Legion Feeney Reed Trippel. He was a retired
Ashland 011 ............. ......... ..39!)
Bennett Poat 128, a 32acl degree · Iarmer. - '
Bob
Evaus .......................... 13%
mason -wllh tbe Mldclleport Ma·
. Mr. Trlbbet Is survived by a· Charming Sboppes .,._......... .. 10~
tonk: Lcidle 363, and a member of sister, Vlrlinla Deeter, The
the Middleport First Baptist Plains; and se.Veral nieceS and City Holding Co .................. 14\&gt;1
Federal MoguL ................ .. 21 '!I
Church.
~llewa. .
Goodyear
TltR ..... ............. .36%
• Survivon IDCiude hla wife,
'In al!dltlon to his parents be Heck's .... ........ ............ .... .... . 3%
Freda Jobnson Edwards: a 1011, wu preceded In death by two
Key CenturiOn ....................14~
Pal cDonna I Edwards, Rlcll· sisters, Della Cubbison and Lands' End ......... ....... .... /.... 16%
motld, va.: • dauehter, Brenda Stella Randolph.
Umlted Inc ......................... 50
(Curtis) Wold, New Orleans,
Graveside aervlces wlil be held Multimedia Inc ....... ....... ,.. ,81~
La.; tour IJ'andcltlldren, Grant Friday at 11 a.m. at Eden
aDd Roll Edwards, Rlc:hmoad, '• Cemetery In Reedsville with Rax Restaurants ................. 2%
Robbins It Myers .. -........ ,..... 20
· Va.; Jennl(er and Kayte Wold·, Rev. Robert Markley ofllclatlng.
Slloney's
Inc ..................... ,.14%
New OrleBDS, La.; and several
-CalUng hours at the White Star Bank ......... : .... ..... ........ 20%
nieces and nephews.
Funeral Home In CooMile will be Wetid,v's Intl ..........................6
In addition to bia parents, Mr.
Thursday from 7-9 p.,m.
Worthi~on lnd ............. ,... 23% ,
Edwards wu preceded In death ·
by three
brotbers,
Herbert,and
VIr·.
~iDa
gil,
alld Donley
Edwards,
a . ._ _ _ _
-ewe _ _ _ __

OAKLAND, Calif. -(UP!)
said. "We needed something to to a clubhouse attendant. He
Rickey Henderson of the Oak- happen. Stew (starting pitcher blew a kiss to his mother, who ;
land J\lhletics broke Ty Cobb's Dave Stewart) was pitching a
wassittingabovetheA'sdugout. ;
American League record for strong game, but we couldn't get
"I gave the first one 1!he base ;
career steals Tuesday night, and any offense ~~:oing-.
when he tied the record at 892) to
said the major-league record
"I got a double and thought It my mother," Henderson said. ,
CQuld fall by August
was a goOd situation to steal in "This one I think I'll give to Tom ·
Henderson swiped his 893rd , since .they bad been throwing Trebelborll 1the cu~nt Mllwau- ,
. base In the sixth inning Of a game Carney a iot of breaking balls.''
kee Brewe~s · manager who -;· against the Toronto Blue Jays. · Henderson ·also was worried coached Henderson in the mi- ,
Having struck down a 61-year-old about the forecast of rain for nors). He· helped me out a lot 1
· ,
standard, he now targets ·Billy Wednesday.
when I was first starting out. He
''I felt It might rain . tomor- deserves it .
Hamilton, who is second on the
all-time llst·with 937. Lou Brock row," he said. ···And I wanted to _ "He taught me how to read the
do It in front of our fans."
is the leader with 938.
catchers and what moves
Since tying Cob's mark last pitchers made from the right and
"As far as Lou Brock - It's
bard to project," Henderson Saturday, Stewart has been
left side. He would go out on the .
said. ''But if we keep playing the barraged by the inectla and by mound and show me. He would do .
way '¥e are then it's possible by fans. He said his years of the. moves over and over until I ,
the end of July."
experience, particuia~ly with the. could read them."
Despite .)1enderson's record New York Yankees, helped him
Cobb needed 24 seasons to set
steal, the A's lost to the Blue "maintain .his concentration.
his record. Henderson entered
Jays, 2-1. ·
"You have to deal with It Ithe this season with 10 years and 101
Henderson, in his third at-bat media spOtlight) when ,lt coines,'' days,of major-league. service.
of the game, doubled into the he said. "Then you have to get
Henderson tied Cobb's'mark on
·
· Saturday, but was out of the
left-field corner against starter back to yoor game."
Henderson flied out to 'center lineup Sunday and went 0-for-4 ·
David Wells. On a 2-0- pitch to.
Carney Lansford, Henderson oMhe first pifch of the.a-ame and Monday night.
'
fouled out to ·right in his secolld
stole third easily . .
Henderson bas led the majors .
"I real~v wanted to get it over trip. When he broke the 'record,
in stolen bases five times 11980, '
he picked up the bag. and' gave It '82, '83, '88 and '89) . He bas led
in the first at -bat," Henderson
the AL nine times -

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI •(UPI) - Davey
Johnson was fired-·T uesday as
manager of the ''·underachieving" New York M~ts and replaced by third Qase coach Bud
Harrelson, wbo pledged to "fire
• 11
up" the dlsappoinilng club.
"If I don't get a concerted
effort out of a player,lt's time for
him to sit and watch," said
Harrelson. "I feel in my l)eart
this ballclub will be fired up.
"When I was a player, I was
1
embarrassed
when a manager
li..-AES &amp;L RECOR~ Oakland's Rickey He~derson raises
was
fired
because
when a mantlilrdlllase afll!r stealln~~: Ills '893rd career baae In the bottom ol the
ager
is
fired
It's
usual~v
because
se:velllli ' la\tlng ol Taeeday nlgltl's' ~~:arne against the visiting
the
players
haven't
been
.doing
'J'oi'OIIto Blue Jays. HeiJIIei'!IOn mattered the 61-year-old American
the
job."
l.iearue career record ol 892 set by Ty Cobb, who retired In 1929.
Mets' Infielder Dave Magadan
(1!JPI)
._ •
'
· '
that was e,cactly the case
with the Mets.
"I'm surprised they didn't fire
all the players and bring up
Tidewater 1a Mets' minor league
team)," said Magadan. · "It's
· (Gia•I•HJ.I:.,.m.
unfortunate
Davey was fired
S.. Dlell'll (._. t-4 1 M Pltiladfj..la
(.......... ,. 7: ......
because the players had a big
st. t..• (Mapup ~·il ..a Ho•on
hand in the problem. Maybe .
(Scou t.SJ , M:as p.m.
Tltul'!llllt,\' Gam~
Buddy will shake things up."
Clncln.-.1 at Loa Anlf.'l"- nlpt
Mets General Manager Frarik
Allanla at s- Dl~. nl~
Hou.'li:l:l• at Sua Francl....o, nll{hl
C;i,s hen Isaid that's why he fired
Jo.b'nson and promoted
"fd.alda.v'i'B;~" Cfilendu
Ballket:ball
Harrelson.'
·
SBA C.rlfftDCt Fll'lloiK
Cbk~o at DHroa. I' po:rn.
"Our club was underachievC5'Cilq
ing," said Cashen. "The t!ll)e bad
Bar I, Italy -Tour of lt..l~·
Gym-.tlai
come for a new direction. Not all
llomt llaly- Gr••d Prix ol RomP
the blame was Davey's. Part of
,
'J'etal!fM
Parti-FNo.-:h .....
the blame was, mine and part of It
was the _players' .''
;
NCM Dl•a. ... I O.ldeor Cllampkut ·
IIAIJIIIIII O.rllllll'l. N.C.
Cashen
h~elf
told
the•
playBaHimor. 5. ;:J';::,:':
.
M'reMia«
Chlup S, No
-1
ers
that
were
heavily
to
.
blame
Saa}f\lo,
YUpAiavla
"omu'M
Bolton !, Tnaa I
"ortd OlampktNIJIII
for the'change in field leaershlp.
llan- Cit)' S, lkot I'IJit J
Mllwau te~ 3, SPattko 3
"I talked' to the players about
.TransactiOns
Torolio t . Oaldo.nd I
underachieving, about puNing
CaiUOri:Jia 2, O"t&gt;land I
'I'Wid_, Sports Tranllfldktr.
We~ a, GameA ·
some
fire
in
their
bellies and
B~ball
1'oronto (BialrN) at Oaklun•(~·
AIIMW~ced lnftri*r
about
refocusing
this
team to
!oClft 5-!) , 8: 15 p.m.
'.:.."'JJ!f
be ad tv».l!!-d frt'lm ·
Nf'w Vork (C».ry \!-1) at ~o
winning,"
said
Cashen.
''There
1Hitlbanl3-3), 8:0:1p.m .
/
may have been eight or 10 things
BollontHeiRI H) at Tex&amp;M (Brown 5-1 ), M:31 P.rrl·
e
Davey hadn't done, there maY
Detrutl IP~ry H) al KIWU ~
(S.Dav~;S I.S ), A; J5 p.m.
, ~.;..,.
have been eig'ht or 10 things the
Baldmore (HarlilcllH I II Mt•·IHoa
organization hadn't done -a nd
(Smldl s-.1),8:S5p.m.
NIIIMiu..-e (Fllf'l' $.3) at .......
there may have been 20 things
(\' otfl "" l -5), !0: 05p.m .
_.,
the players hadn't done."
rte\'f'lllfld {CandloUI H ) at Ca~rnhl
(Lanpt dn3..a ), l0: 35 p. m .
•'
Harrelson told his players Thursday Gamei
&lt;'1
they're going to start obeying
Mlnnc,.aw. at Chlcato. nipt
•
Oakland :u Kansas Cit\', nl,;hl I
club rules.
NATIOSI\L LE~GVE ~
"I met with the players and
E:u~t
Tu m
' "L
discussed
some rules that have
PIUllhu rwh ...... ...... .......til 11
been
in
existence
since 1984,"
Phlladelphia ......... .......!-1 II ;:~===
Moalrf'al .................... .!-1 21
said Harrelson. ''I think they
Ollca,;o
agreed they have been abusing
, .• ,.......................
......................!1
to uts
~~~~E~~~fff~~~i.m~~
·,• N""·
St. LouL~ ......................%0 21
the rules for awhile. They agreed
" 'el
• Ctr)j!lnnau .. .................
.30 11 .ill2 It's in tb:e best Interest of the club
Lo~ An.-eles ................ .:u ~: .iil!2 M4
to start following those rules.
~ton Unlw! r~c~· N~tml'd Bob
San Dlep .................... :u :n ..511(1 9~ 1
Browa mtn's hf'.tld hMkelllaJI coa~h .
AUunta ....... .. ............... l7 U .-101 II'-:!
''Those rules are no different
'- ~~ . - !llamed ''l'lmothy O'TuGJe
HouMon ................... .... lll :li .-100 14
than on any other ballclub. They
•MAiA.t huskethall coat•h.
Slln Prancl*•o ............. 111 :lll .:191 U h
Iowa - Nwntd Rlcl't \hlk~r m en'"
Tuu dM,V Rr.!i ..l t
are things that are part of the
hlNetball ~lant .
f h~ot.inMtl :!, New \"ork l
Ml nrw~ota - S amed Dan Ko~mOAid
. rutshurwh9 , l.(),. .o\n~-te~~l
professionalism of baseball playand Da"'l' Tbonon assllllanl coacJ.ell.
San Frnnd ACn I, Chkqo :!
ers. You become second class if
Sotn&gt; Dintfl- PrornottdJim Da\IH. to
Sl. Loul!i :1, Holll!ton 2
MM~tlate •por1K Information dlrulor:
~M Dlel() 111 l'hlladelphla, ppd., rain
you don't do certain things:
named Row Plt'tnak &amp;PHti•c.ant ~~CK~rb
WednHd~Q~ Gam"'
Those things have to do with
lnlormatlon dll'\"dor.
SWI Fraaci!IC'o 1BuriiHl :f.I 1 at Chk-ll«;o
Poutball
(Bo:WIIt 1· 1I, :t: :eD p.m .
getting prepared for a game."
DallaH - R•leiUit'd otfe~~Kiw lacldrLo11 Anj~ele!i IR. Mart\ntt 5-2 ) at
Harrelson, a scrappy shortstop
Karl Burnlrr arllll llnebat•ktor Grra:
PlcUbu~~:h (Terft'll I-ll, i p.m .
sc.
........
\foril'f'a.l Ulf' . Marllnf'7.~-ll id i\ta..nta
for 13 seasons for the Mets, had
been a minor-league manager,
third base coach and. dugout
to
coach for the organization.
"I've been preparing for this ·
job
ever since I retired as a
BOSTON !UP!) - Th.e Boston
the !lfst thing, and then they
Celtlcs are expected to announce
would move on to hiring a coach player," he said. "I'm happy I've
Wednesday the appointment of without a time frame," said gotten the opportunity. I knew if
Big Ea~t Commissioner Dave
assistant coach Chris Ford, in· the opportunity arose, I would
:Gavitt as d1rector of basketball
ltially named as the leading jump at It. I was offered the job
today and I promptly accepted.''
ooperations, according to pubcandidate to succeed Rodgers .
Said Magadan, •'Nobody on the
!llshed reports.
Gavitt led Providence College
team has ever said anything bad
• Gavitt, 52, accepted the offer
to the NCAA Final Four in 1973
'Tuesday and was to be formally
was coach of the 1980 Olympl~ about Buddy. He's got a good
•announced at ,a ceremony at
team when thecountryboycotted ~ relationship with the players. As
Boston Garde_n. It was reported
the games, and is considered an a coach, he's probably been able
to see some things that Davey
that Gavttt wtll be given almost
expert on the emerging internacouldn't as manager." .
' total control of the team's day- totiona! aspects of basketball.
1
,day operation.
Th c 111
, The move .comes as longtime
e e cs recent Y encoun:celtics mentor, Red Auerbach Is
ter~d the game's growing lnter'reportedly seeking a reduced
nat onalism first-hand, losing
ole in the team
_ 's administration
guard Brian Shaw to an Italian
s It attempts to rebuild after
team, then failing in an attempt
vera! disappointing seasons.
~o :!aft a Yugoslavian player
'
'
e use , o.f his contract
: Theselectlonofaheadcoachls
:Seen as Gavitt's first duty. The
commitments.
'Ceitlcs have been without a bead
Gavitt Is also regarded as an
1 s.co~~~~
'
ch since- firing Ji my · expert In negotiating television
~oa
_
m
• contracts, another area where
YOUI ..DIPEIIIIIn .
~odgers last month after the
the- Celtics might require gui&amp;Gim SEIV•G
!team's loss to the New York · dance after purchasing local
leks In the (lrst round of this
television and radio stations
MGSCoum
ar's playoffs.
d ri
'I just know that Gavitt was
u ng the last year.
1161

;Celtics

,

1

Brock's mark next Hender~on goal

Han-elson
takes over
.from Johnson

. Local news briefs

1

"If I don't get Into the record gan smashlcl two home 1'11111 and
Pena from first bale !"'th two out
book on my'own at least he gets added an RBI double to help in the eighth inning to lead 1
me in," Wells'said. "I told myself BaltlmoresnapMinnesota'sflve- Boston. Roger Clemellf pitched ;
If he rot on I wasn't roing to let game winning streak. Bob Mi- eight Innings, Improving his ;
him steal. But It's tough to bold a lacki, 2·3, did not allow a walk record to 8-2. Jeff Reardon •
guy on ~lid."
~
and tanned three over 6 1·3 pltcbed tl)e ninth to record ,his ••
On a 2-0 pltc:h to Carney innings. ·Allan Anderson. 2·6, . fifth save. Despite throwing a I
Lansford, Hellderson stole third absorbed the loSB.
•·
complete game: Charlie Houeh, J
without. a throw from catcher
Wblte SOx 5, ¥ uke• f ,
:&gt;-3 took the loss.
· _
Greg Myers.
At Chicago, Lance Johnson
AnreJ• '· iadlau t
1
The Blue Ja:ys took a 1-0 lead In scored on a wild p~tcb ,b y Lance
At Anaheim, Calif., Kirk (
the second IMlng when right· McCullers with two out In' the McCaskill and Mark 'Eichhorn :
fielder Lance mankenshlp mis- bottom of the ninth Inning, · combined on a seven-hitter liftplayed Nelson Llrlano's pop for - boosting · Chicago's winning ing CaiUotnia . over Cleveland. -~
an error, allowing Fred McGriff streak to four games·. JefJ .McCaskill, 3·2, ran his career
to score..
·
Robinson, 0-3, took the loss, the _ record to 7-1 against the Indians.
Toronto lliereased Its lead , to Yan keel fourth straight. BQbby
Eichhorn pitched. 2 1-3 innll\gs of ,
2-0 in the sixth on McGrlfl's RBI Thigpen, 2-2, earned the win.
single.
~~~el';:rr:ill~f ~~rh~~~:~sa~;J
Boy'als 5, Tlpn S
Oakland scored In the ninth
At Kansas City, Mo. , Willie loss.
when Henderson tripled and Wilson scored on a wild pltc'h to .
Brewen 5, Marlnen S
scored on Carney Lansford's. lie the score and Jim Elsenrelch
At Seattle, Plncb·hltter Darryl
single.
drove in tbe game-winner In the Hamilton and Charlie O'Brien
In other AL games, Bal tlmore eighth IMing, to lift Kansas City. each singled In a run in the ninth •
topped Minnesota 5-1, Chicago to their fourth straight win. Steve inning, to help snap Milwaukee's :
clipped New York 3-2, Boston · Farr, 4-2, e8fned the victory and stx-game losing streak. Chuck
edged Texas 2-1, Kansas City Jeff Montgomery pitched the Crlm, 2-1, 'who retired the final ~
beat Detroit 5-3, Milwaukee beat ninth for his third save·. Mike , batter in the eighth, plqkedupthe )
Seattle 5·3, California shaded Henneman, 1:4, took the los~.
victory. 'Dan Piesac pitched tile ,;
Cleveland 2-l.
Red Sox 2, Ran~~:era 1, ,
ninth for his ninth save. Mike _. .
Orioles 5, Twins 1
At Arlington, Texas, Carlos Jackson, I -3. took the loss. ,
., o.
At Minneapolis, ·Randy Mllli· Quintana doubled home Tony

''

SAMI&amp;.,

••

"
MMIONf.A,_IIAIAHII'IOI,_CAJ
.......
I'GIC

1,._

L_,....;...._______,...~--..:_~.;...--------~-.a,..---~--~r "~'•

�Cele~rezze

and campaign-staff conduct strategy

Dukallls was savaaed by
clever and potent televlslan
rneaaaes aired by the campalp
of Repllblicaa George Bush, who
eaally carried Ohla and the
aatlon.
"I think you're 11olng to see a
new Tony." · prediCted Meshel,
who last week served as a
one-man "truth squad" ron-

IJ LBE LBONAitD

VPISiahllo- ...,....,
COLUMIWS - Democratic
1\lbernatorlal nominee Antllony
Celebrezze Jr. and bls campitlp
staH met privately Tuetday wltll
Democratic State Chairman
James Ruvolo and other Inter·
ested Democrats In another
attempt to aet bls campalp
moving oft dead center. , .
Tbose who at.tellded the all-clay
meeting at. the Fawcett Cenrer
for Tomorrow on the campus of
Ohio State UniYerllty said the
emplwls wu onfuturestrategy,
whlcb they refliaed to disclose.
. Campalp officials ·down·
· PlaYed the Importance of the
:meeting, wblch they saldwufor
:routine planDIDa aDd a review of
·what has happened thua far.
What hu happened thus far Is
•that CelebreUe's ~ubllean op:ponent, Georae VolnOYich, bas
;taken . a double-dlalt lead In
·publiC opllllon polls and the
:attorney geaeral has found· him·
~ sell on ,. the deteoalve, most
~tty .a bout a ~" of news·
,paper articles lnvoMDa the
•Bu...au of Criminal Identlflca·
:tton and Inve.llptloo.
: '1t was a routine plapntng
·BeSilOD about wbere we've been,
we're aolna and how to aet
:there," said w~ HIU. rom·
?Ptmlcatlona dlrectGI' ell the campip. '1t's no bla aews, honest

demnlna VIce President Dan
Quayle's visit to YOUJIIItown to

meetlnc "didn't spend a great
deal of time" talking about
...spondlq to Republicans or to
the newapaper articles, chlefiy In
The Plain Dealer of Cleveland.
"We understand who we're
runnlna aptnst, and It Isn't the
newspapera," said Ruvolo. "I
don't senae any persecution
romplex. The parts (of the

·
promote Volnovlch.
"I told them (!be CelebreUe
campaign) not to . take any
n0111e111e from them (the Republleaasl ," said Meshel, "and to
chatlenae anythfnl that's unfair
and untrue and unreasonable."
But HIU said those at the

meeting) I was tbere It was,very
constructive."
"We focu&amp;ed much more on the
broad themes of the campalp,
the overall strategy of de'VI!loplng themes and Issues," said HIU.
· "We are trylna to look forward
and riot back."
Asked what the strategy would
be, Hill repu.id, "See ua In

November."

7

.

Hoepital news
Ve&amp;eralu!Mem.lal
'l'uel!day admlulOu - Zelia
Taylor, Middleport; Linda
Geo11re, Rutland.
Tuelday dlacbal'les - Ethel
Shasteen, Madeline Moore, and
Floyd Weber.

. About 400 alumni aad.auesta
atteDdecl the 61at aanual Ru daad
Alumni MloC!atton baaquet held
!Saturday atabt at the Rutland
Clvtc: Ceilter.
. RI~ Rupe aave the wei·
come and presided .at the bustness meetlna. Tbe Rev. Herbert
Grate bad devotion• and
·member• of tile Salem Center
4·H Club aaalsll!d In aervlng .the
d)Jmer. For the entert11l11111eni
· · tile ~- Don Meadows provided

·a· map .m.w.

BIG BEND••Your Family Owned
LOW·PRICED
SUPERMARKET

Discipleship
meeting
.

,.,.

, ·, There ·be no discipleship ser·
; vice at' th~.' New Life Covenant
~11rcli . of GQd, Chester, tbls
WedneSday eveJ~tnc. Instead ser· '
Ylces will. be held In the homes of ·
" .''V!!na Marcinko, Pomeroy, Dale ·:
and Kaeyn Davts, Middleport,
and Bryan and Char!qtte Arms,
· Route 7, at 7 p.m.
·

. Theme r this year's vacation
Bib
at the Middleport
·~ .fFirat Bapdst Church, will · be
'"'land In the Son", a place
where children can experience.
~ the warlJith of God's love.
The Vacation Bible School
bep .June 26 a11d eonltnues
thrQuib June 29, Clu~~e&amp; Will .be
held from 9 a.m to noun each day
at the cbureb located on tile ·
rom.r of Sixth and Palmer
Streets In Middleport. For more
Information or to reatster Child·
ren, residents may call 992-2755
between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m.

~ God."

.
f~iddleport ...

'

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

'

, ASST. YARimES

. Graduates
..
. hPno~d .

. ARMOUR

GLEND~LE

~tlnuecl frGsn ~ 1 .

; up and m,OOQ appropriated ,fo~
: ••• fuacl. Tills .. 'the IIIIOIIIIt
• wlllc:ll the vtllaie wiU recetve Ia
: ~aaue 2 relmbuS'MIIIIIt for street
;iron on Mill, Co«qe Drlw aac1
,,.acb. It wu IIOIN tllat the
! eqlnaerll&amp; WGI'IIta
• pl!ted aacl tile proJect• will be
: advertlaed for b i d : C4Missl:llma Bob Gtbcn ...
· ~-·
• pcll'lild tbaf'11e' lllil 1'i!CeWI!d a
I1L
: Jetter ~-tile vlllaae
' On Ill rec:...atiDDal faeUitlea and
' IJI'OIP'IIII8, aDd I 0 lill tllat
, alluffllboard c:ourta be lnltallecl
: at thepark.CouacDwlllreterthe · ,...,_..,....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;.,.._...,....._...,.
•!Ritter to the Middleport Recrea·
••
CommJulon. It wa allo ;
:a~ delay OD the ...S1roam
~-~Jon Is becauae the araat ·
'
~SOOIItY bu 11ot yet been

~·

JREET

SOFT DI.INKS

_,.,rom-

2

l

38&lt;

- ---.,
'

JUICY •

~..

I
•1

OFFER GOOD-AT

EASTMAN'S

CANTALOUPES

f~tounb of July celebration

museum.

YllaaiCI
Sausage

12 oz.
CAN

..

:uon

dlacusaed by Gilmore.
•Pialla, be said, art to make It an
:all day affair with eltber an arta
:and craftuhow or a flea IIW'Ut.
•There Will be ·• parade aac1
:mullcal entertalnmeat Ia the
•iwabti befol'l! the 8: 30 p.m.
'{lrew~b d1aplay. Ar.r aare:menu were made tor Ins lallation
~ !).lltdilorelec:trtcal Plllll before
,t1Jl! c$11rat!On. ·
: -~Ia ~ lpolut so .(I)UDCO
·abciii't·lbe lmport~~~~ce ot prmrv.tng the put by eatabll&amp;blna a
, 1llage muaeum. He talllad a boat
.alumni weelrelld and the tOrmel'l
:Middleport High School aloss8
:wfth memorabilia whlcb mflht
-be available for display In a

FoooLANDII
•.a112111

I
I
I

Cherry Pie
Fi_lling

......
.,
Beef ...

Patties••••• .•

coumr . .·

Sliced · ·
Iacon·...."······

88C

..,.

~~.~!· $1 - ~

~:-ast .........!. $2 S9

JOII 10111155 ..

. . . . $1 ! !

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•

Two fined in

Court

we,.. Ke-tll Sllldlr, .
lt.alp.uJe, 113udeo.ta,drMq .
..... Sill' I et31; aDd leoti
.,....,..., ML' murt. tG 111c1
....-. ~q~~t~Jiq tllw. ww.m
U « rua, HapkiMvtiiP, Ky. for·
~ a M boad oa a ellar~ ot

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••••••••

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SAVE ON ALL

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SALE

mencemeiiUpeakerl

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S6*a

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Sorry,

17.Z4 TO

Cy~~~

9·9&lt;

'

.

shOwn .,. r~lfSfll'll•lt~
IJO r•lm:heck~ . Umlf 5 per store
Sly•s may vary by Slott

lhOwn art ,_..,tntaUve

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14 01 hliiMII

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20 LB. BAG CHARCOAL

~

Sour. 110 tailtcti.Kifr Limit r21Jtr .rort

,. ,,.

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'
LADIES', GIRLS'
CANVAS SHOES
Lillie girls· 6-12. Girls'
12\lt-3. Ladies ' 5 \1•·9.10. ·
Assorted colors.
REG. 4 .99 &amp; 5.99

FUN FASHION
WATCHES lUI
Many colorful

wmd-up styles.

Great fash1on 1
. REG. 10.99·14.99

'33~

'

;

8. DELUXE GAS GRILL fJJ

SELECT
OUTDOOR
LIGHTING m

SALE 18.75 TO 40.18
lnclvdes low vollage ,

REG. 27 .99·59.99 solar and accessories
51)1111 IN)' v•rr by ltof't

i

PLAZA, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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Anemt~~y r~

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SI4LE 17,:114 TO 25US

"'I~~ lltrllfet t.
~7 '11
· . the Jaatof t orlllaallOclilldrei'l
Including Sullivan, Walter, Wbt·
nle, Dallas, Alma, Millard. Fan·
nle, Ora. and Herbert.

$69·~.

...

Various sizes. styles

A. 3 SHELF CART
GAS GRILL' ' '

,:1111118 RD*II ~te and frii!Sids

Hanging
·Baskets
Flowering
Geraniums

.,

SALE 1.33 TO 43.54

ALL TRIMMERS [Ill
IN STOCK

·ta Racine •t noon.
;' D•ctlld•u of Marlin V. aad

•

~

.,.,. __ .,_

The annual Sayre reunion win
be held JuaelO at ShriDer's Park

119

$298:._

full figure styles. Fabrics
.,.,.. ..., ""' -~ lfOtt

INFLATABLE POOL TOTS liiJ
REO. Uf.17.H......IALE II' TO 11.06

Sayre re!fnion

5·8&lt;
Sl 68..

·SPAGHmi ••••••••••• J.'l•••
HEIJ.MAN'S
.
MAYONNAISE ••••••• Jui.
JIIW~ TIEAY
.
....
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Includes ladles· cover-ups and

SALE 1.11 TO 127.41 Siyles . sizes .

1311 OFF AU

'•

" .was one ,of 71525 underaraduate
aad araduate students io tecelve
dearees at the MIP,Y 6 commencement pr~am on t~ BIOOSDIII(·
ton campus of Indiana
Untverslty.
Miss Weese )'ecelved the de~of doctOr of optometry. Jane
Pauley, ..-. JU al!lfllaa, former
co-hoat of~lhe NBC TodiY SlloW
8lld now layeatlaatlve repcjrtl!r
for the IN!\IIWOrk, was t.be com·
\

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SPAGHEDI .SAUCE...... ·

. . ................ .._.._.... _ltloollila ..........

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17.5 OL CAN

· MUEWRS

'girls·. boys·. inlants ·. tots ' styles

ALL CHARCOAL
GRILLS
.

ALL POOLS and
' POOL CHEMICALS IEl

.&gt; ·,. Melanie An!l Weese of R;aclne

::!ers ...

Gl-

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OFF

. SALE 1.33 TO 20.08 Men·s, lad1es .

':
~"~g

.

.

lAM'S

•

ALL F"MIL Y SHORTS,
TANKS, SWIMWEAR

"

..Weese~ graduqtes-

.

Fish 'n' su. $699 SirJoin · $399
latter........... .
·
Steak •.•••••••! ..

taU... to COIItrol.

I·

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,.....

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. ·· ·Communion will be served 11t
t!l~ Sund~y servtc~ at: the-l'ievi
. til! Covenant Church of .God,
Chester: Karen Davia will speak · ,
at the 19:~11.m. aervtce. Sunday
1
· ichool wtu be at 9:30 a.m.-wltb
the evenfnl ser,v lceto I;Jeat 6 p.m.
when youth nl&amp;ht Will ,be held
With the ~uth ronducttng the ,
services. Put9r Gary Hlnea
Invites the public to at ~nd ,

Pl(IEI'S

.

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·}'um/ay services

·

)I'Jirk.
' Meeting wttb roUIICII was Tom
Sla.
~ltey, Second Avenue, to dlacuss
the water problem near his
~~
property. He said that the storm
sewer wiD not carry off the water
JVblc:h comes rflht up to bll front
door aad that wben the water Is
IL
up, the lamlly cannot even Ousb
the rommode. He said that he has
rePHtedl)f rePorted the matter
SU SIAl. COD
~o Vllialle roiUICII &amp;ad that the
· JVork done In an etrort to rorrect
the problem has.not taken care of I
the lltuatlan. Mayor Fred Hof' ·
fnian acknowledged tile problem
110111:11 .
8lld asailred Riley that the sewer
jl&amp;!obtem there Will be ...solved
lirtu away ...
: -Attending were Dewey Horton.
"-mes Clatworthy, BobGibnore,
!taut Gerard, WIUiam Walters,
Od Jack Sltterfleld, council
IJ9!IIlbers, Mayor Hoffman, aacl
HUNT'S .
Cl_erk·Treasurer Jon Buck.

:n.-

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·

. ;Two were fined and a third
forf•lted ·a .bond In the rourt of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
'l'uelday nflht.

, ''· GradUates were honored Sunday .eventna at the New Ute
· .C Covenant ChQo:h .ot ·God, Ches: ''
ter. ·Each araduate was · pres·
\!Died a ilft fr&lt;lr!t the church. .A
feUOwahlp followed ·the reco(ltll·
tlon service. ·
In the honored aroup were
•
~· ' Chris Davis, a araduate of Ml!ip
· High School, son of Mr. and Mrs.
~Dale Davis, Mlddleporf. Attend·
lng the recopltlaa Jll'CIII'~ wu
1118 paadmolll«tMapl "'*Ill• · ~liill
.4 Also honored was Wend! Tay. ,lor who 11raduated from Word of
Fa.lth, Belpte. She Is the d&amp;UIIII' ,
Jer. of I'!fr ,. and · Mrs. Robett
Taylor, Flatwoods Rod, Pome' · ;,
toy, wlloattendlngalongwltb hi!r
·arandmother. Arlene Hufll. '
. The· third graduate honored
Was Janeene WI!SOn. daUJhlerof
Mr. and MGs. ·Randall Wilson,
SUmner Road. : Pomeroy . .She
also graduated from Word of
· Faith. AttendiDB • besides her
parents were her grandparents,
. Cur~ts Brown.
·

'I

· Several -aae and odor probl!lm• In tbe vlllaae were dls,cusaed. The ·village plans to ·
11pply for Issue 2 fundl 'next year
iOf the purpose of some extenalve

~orneroy
.

~.rollcllllo!classesbyDiane

.

~

• • But a "roncerned" Sen. wuc
• llam Bowel!. D-Cinclnnatl, who
~.l ~ndt!d the meetfna, aa14 ''I
: sold tbem to .get off the dime." ·
: "I dOn't w~t toseearepeatof
•What happened to (Muaachu·
,il!t ta Gov. Mlc:haell Dllllall:ll,"
·•IN'II Obllt Senate Mbaity
: Leetlltr ltMTy Meabel, D·
: 'ICOUDCIIOWD. wllo beaded tbe
•Democratic presileatlal -ru.
: siee'a campalp In Oblo Ia ~ .

:

.I

as:

a,nd 1960 With 15 there.
Otricers for the 1991 reunion
elected were Charles Barrett,
Jr., president; Lily Imboden
Kennedy , vice president; Barbara Grueser Van Meter, secretary; and Jim Fink, treasurer.
Muslcforthedancewasprovided
by Charles Barrett, Jr.
Out of county alumni at tending
were Martha Bolton Agler, Co·
lumbus; Geraldine Carson Red,
Clnclnn!ltl; Pauline Athey Rife,
Bidwell; ' Dwight Brown. , St.
Albans; Kenneth Brown, Fort
Myzrs. rta.; Clara Mae Hysell.
Columbus; Woodrow Wilcox,
Sandusky; Charles Bowen, Re-

" ~ll were atven by Sandy · HoUtaay Young showed ' 210
Tillis Sml~. treuurer, and Jim aiUJIIftl present. Holding reun·
'fl!omai,ICbolaflbtp committee.
!On• were the class ofl94o with 15
.Wilmer• ol the four $200 acbolar· Pfl!SeDt; ~950 .with 11 attending,
,shiP,I were'GrettaRiffle, Eastern

:where

\

. ·

High; Tammy Lambert, Mellis
Hlah; Tracey DeWeese, Wa·
hama, and Dan Kennedy, Meigs
Hlrh. A coUectton or $658.86 was
·taken to add to the scholarship
fund.
·.
Catherine Colwell Shenefield
.was accompanist for sieging or
the alma mater . Door prizes
provided by area buslne~~ses
· were awarded, and area garden
clubs provided fioi'al 11rrangemente for the dinner tables.

slngksun; Eleanor Williamson,
Henry Milan, Cheshire; Richard
Circleville; Bernice Knapp, Nelson, Delaware.
·
Springfield; Dorothy Emmons,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter had
Ronnie Rife, Albany; Dee
Brooksville; Robert and Evelyn Easter, Galena; Janet Caton
holiday guests her sisters and
Hill,. Dayton; John and Jenea Smith, Reynoldsburg; • patty
lamllles. Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Dyke, Fairborn.
Young, Gallon; Mr. and Mrs,
Clark, New Haven; Fred SteJames Haning, Fairborn; Ver- wart, Edgewater, Fla.; Judy
N.W. Kramer, Plainview, .
non AlVIs, The Woodlands, Morlnaccl, Reynoldsburg;
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence ·
Texas; Edwin and Goldie Nel- James Cheadle, Columbus; Bob · W. Nelson, Kalamazoo, Mich.;_:
son, Wooster; Claude MontgD'- Pope, Hebron; William Gates,
Mrs. Robert Wells and Lynn
mery, Jackson; Delma Nelson, San Antonio, Texas; Gerald Wells, Warsaw; Mr. and Mrs,
McConnelsville:
Harry Saxton, north Lewisburg,; Joetta
David Hollingsworth, Zane~~,:
SnoWden, Pint Pleasant; Floyd ErleWine Eskew, Newark; Sam ville; and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Hoelscher, St. Louis, Mo.
:..~
Snowden, Dayton; Betty Hill, Hicks, Jr., VInton; Mary Fallon,
West NewtoR, . Ind.; Dana Bar· Patriot; Dave Rice, WheelersThey were joined on S11nday
ton, VermWIOn; Herbert and burg; Lewis Rupe, Phoenix,
ev,!!nlng for dinner at Shoney's by . ·
Janet ,Jones, Dublin; Thomas Arizona; Gertrude Rupe, Palm
Mr . .and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz,
Brewer, Springfield; Bob and . Springs, Call{; Thelma Halley,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Robert·
Isabelle Nelson, Morris, Ill.; WllinlnBton; Stewart and Carol Barnltz, Mason, W.Va.; Mr . and •
Weyland Brown, Akron; Loretta Brewer, Phoenix, Arizona, John Mrs .. John Young, Mr. and Mrs.,:
Holtman, Charles ton; VIrginia Montgomery, Athens; Alberta Scott Santee, Lancaster; pand .
Dennison, Kettering, Pat and Montogmery, Athens, and· RoMr. and Mrs. James Carpenter
Atlanta, Gerogla,
and
Reedsville.
Hebron.

Carpenter personal ·. ·

Rutland Alumni have meeting

•
8e8810D

The Daily Sentinel Page-7·

Pomeroy-Middleport, 011io

\'Vednuday. May 30, 1990

P1lg 1 8 'The Daily Sentintl

�. ...
Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Jennifer Grate Tlitvener, who
received her jurts doctor degree
from Capital LawSchoollastfall,
recently passed her bar examination and participated In the
OhiO Bar Association swearlng-n
ceremony at the Ohio Theatre In
Columbus. She Is the daughter of
Wendall and Donna Grate of
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Tblvener Is employed
with Michael Colley and Associates of Columbus.
A graduate of Meigs High
SchoOl, she receive&lt;! a bachelor
of science degree In nursing from
Capital University In 1982. She
has slpce worked in St. Anthony's
emergen.cy room and at Ohio

Anderson personal

State University Hospitals.
She Is married to Fred Thlvener and has a son, Sean Elliott,
two.
·

Tennis clinic
Middleport Recreation Department will sponsor a free tennis
clinic on Saturday· at the tennis
courts at General Hartinger
Park. Randy Weston will be the
instructor. A clinic for beginners
will begin at 11 a.m. and a clinic
for Intermediate and advanced
plaY,ers _will begin .at noon.
In teres ted persons should return
the registration fonn to the
Mlddlpeort Recreation Department.

.JENNIFER G. TRIVENEB

.,

Erin Anderson, daughter of
Jennifer Jewell, Mason, W.Va.,
received the Pauline Wyatt Reed
Scholarship at Capital University. The scholarship was
awarded on the basis of academic attainment and potential
In elementary education.
Miss Anderson also was inducted Into Kappa Alpha PI,
honorary society at Capital University. She was· one of only 12
juniOrs to be Inducted. She bas
malntalnec\ a 4.() grade po,lnt
average during her freshman,
sophomore, and junior years at
Capital University.
·
Miss Anderson also Is cochairman of the Capital University Education Society.

MltdiUiD ITIII I'GUC'f-~ of lttmo lo rwqulrtd to be
rudly tvlllble fof . . In ooc:h K._ Stono, ucopt 11 opeclflcolly noted In
thilld. ~ we do "'" out of ., -111m. we wll offw you your choice
of 1 comporoble itom, IYIIIblt, 1tftoctlng lhl....,. uvings or a rainwlllch wll on- you Ia
lhl ochM tlwd 111m II tht odwr1looQ
price wtthln 30 dlyo. Oniy ono coupon will be accaptod per ~em
l purchaled,
.·

Ways and means committee Is
Joan Corder, chalnnan, Maida
Mora, Donna Jones, ·and Vera
Crow. Reva Vaughn was named
to scrapbook, Rose Sisson to
publicity, and Ruby· Baer to
sunshine.
A Korean Throw will be used as
a tundralslng project durtng '.
Heritage Weekend.
Lillian Moore announced the
door to' door cancer drive has
been gOing on and seems to be
successful.
. ,
A catered lasagna dinner was
served tor the lilcnlc meeting and ·
a social evening followed.

'

a ~~
alate departmeat to
study atudeat aelllevemeat. Tile Information from
tbe study will be used to lmprGve the academic
succe88 of the studeala at Ute school.

·
TEACHERS -Karea Walker,
leH, low-ill!P'ade teacher, Ed Bartels, sixth ll'&amp;de
teacb~r. and Welldy Halar, prlaelpal, all of
Salisbury Elementary School were recently

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

The Daily Sentinel-

The Zion Church of Christ held
its annual motiler-d.a\lghter banquet r~ently with 61 people
attending.
The fellowship hall was decorated following the theme "I
Remember Mama, " using old
tablecloths, oO cloths, oil lamps,
geraniums and begonias . Everyone present was given a
·begonia and there were additional door prizes given. · ,
FoUowlng the banquet meal
the program began with ' everyone stnging"Fatth or Our
'Mothers." Kathryn Johnson
gave a short talk on how parents
go about naming a baby followed
by a skit, "The Care and Feeding
of Mothl'rs." Those taking part
were Bonnie Arnold, Rebecca
Napper, Roberta Napper, Peggy
Bole, Kay McElroy, Ann Lambert, as babies, and Marge

. Salisbury Elementary re,
celved a $5,000 grant !rom the
state departtJtent to study student achievement.
·
The competitive grant was
written by the principal, Wendy
Halar. The core team of Karen
Walker and Ed Bartels successfuUy completed a study offactors
affecting studen1 achievement
and shared the results with the

..

faculty . This information wlll be
used to Improve the academic
suCcess of all the students at
Salisbury.
The grant paid for the study ,
extra meetings with the
teachers, supplies and materials, a speaker on Effective
Schools , Incentives for the students and a dinner for 1hose
students who were honor stu-

denis at · Salisbury Elementary
thiS year.
Students who were nominated
for the Meigs County Academic
Awards Banquet from Salisbury
willhavetheirnamesplacedllna
plaque which will be hung In the
building. Students who were on
the hOnor roll all year will also
have ' their names placed on a
plaque to be hung In 1he building.

Officers were elected at the
recent .meetlng of the American
Legion Feeney Bennett Unit 128.
·Elected were Gerry Hanel,
president: Gall Ferry, first vtce
president; ', Katie Gilmore, se.
cond vice president: Velsle
Roush, secretary: Gerry Parso"s. treasurer: Dorothy Long,

Sorority chapter installs officers

or

Officers were Installed at a
recent meeting of the Xl.Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi·
·
Sorority.
Offlcers are Kay Adkins, presi·
dent: Shelia Harris , vice pres!dent; Barbara Welsh, recording
secretary; Charlotte Hanning,
treasurer; and Niese! Gerard,
corresponding secretary.
A thank you was read from
Susan Wolfe, a student from
Eastern High ~chool Who is
attending the GoodwlllAmbassaljor prqgram In Europe.
.
A letier was read concerning.a
college 'scholarship fund being
fol'll\ed in memory of a member
In New York.
·
Charlotte Hanning wau voted
Girl of the Year and a motion

I

'

Members of the 196!1 graduallng class of Pomeroy Htih
School, former teachers, ' a:nd ·
guests, gathered Saturday af)ernoon and evehbig at the MultiPurpose Center on Mulberry
Heights for · a.n informal · party
precedlnl! the following the
Pomeory High School Alumni
banquet.

,.-.•.

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The free IBM PS/2 computers for students
program _will be ending on Saturday, June 9th ..
Please have all receipt tapes ·totaled and to .
. your sponsor store by that date. How ·many
.
computers has your school earned? '

--\

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,.•:

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·"

·U.S. GRADE A

;

''

'

HYGRADE'S

-.

Holly Farms Split
Chicken Breasts

Grillmaster
Chicken franks

•'

Pound

1-lb. Plcg.

'
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c

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•
'

-•
'I

-..

--''

Springdale 2%
Lowfat Milk
Gallon

..
-.

...'
..
''

,

'

Boneless Sirloin
Tip Roast

Esprit Soft
Frozen Lowfat Yogurt

Poood

%-Gallon

·'

'LIMIT 3 PACKAGES PLEASE

~.

,.

...

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

FROZEN KROGER LITE ICE MILK li-GAL•. , t1.88
IN THE PRODUCE
DEPT., REGULAR OR
HOMESTYLE 100% PURE

Trapicana
Orange Juice
*·Gallon Ctn.

FROZEN

GOLDEN RIPE

. Qole ·
Bananas

Healthy-Choice
Dinners

-

300 SHEETS PER ROLL 1·PLY

'

Cottonella
Bath
·

18.5-11.75-oz.

CARING ~TAFF

'

$

MAKESTHK

For

NESTLES OUIK CHOCOLATE MILK MIX
2-LS . .• $2.49

FROZEN TEXSUN PINK GRAPEFRUIT OR
ORANGE JUICE 12-0Z... t1.09

DIFFERENCE

12-4

.,''

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
\

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Fresh Baked · ·
Apple Pie
24-oz.

•'

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For

For

IREGULARL~ . .. U.48 EACH I

•

CHUNK LIGHT

· Harsh,;s Single
·Can y Bars

Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna
8.kz.

S8rite; Diet Coke ,
or oca Cola Classic
:. 12-PI!k 'Ita. Blltdll

*248

c·

UMIT 1-12-PU Wl1ll COUPIIIt filM

...._

AIIIIITIOIAI..PUIIIII.\IE

•

KROGER GRADE A LARGE EGOS 18-CT. , , 88C

.,.......

LIMIT ONE COUPON 1'111 FAMILY

_,.
--:=.rrDUtM':I.

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lji

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The decorations lor the 25th
reunloncelebratlonfeaturedpurpie and white streamers and
balloons, a table ox memorabilia.
Including memory posters ,
Pomeroy Panther sweat shirts,
. football jacket, purple PHS foot ball, newspaper clippings, yearOO,oks, pictures from previous
reunons and an original purple
and white school flag.
Refreshments were served
from a tablefeaturlngpurpleand
White silk flowers and purple
napkins with a silver panther
head.
Attendlitg were John and Joan
HewetsonAnderson,Robertband
Ruetta Wells Crow, Don and Kay
Cullums, Don and Linda Darnell
Mayer, Dick and Shraon Dill
FolmeF, Ed.and Ruth Durst. Bill
and Peggy ·Folmer Crane, Joe
and Joyce. Hall, George . and
Clnda Harris, Donn~ Hauck
Carr, Guy Sragent, Denpts and
Cathy Moore, Linda Starcher
Gheen, Rhea Will Deem, Joe and
Kay Wyatt Proffitt, and Charles
and Sharon Johnson, all local.
Susanna Arnold Fitzgerald,
Olathe, Kansas; James and
Madonna Bash, Zanesville; Charles Baxter, Parkersburg, W.

OUR.

\-Roll Plcg.

wws made to donate $25 to the
Kathy Wilson Scholarship Fund;
SharonPrattpresentedacultural report on "Career and Life
Planning-Managing Your Time
and Energy Wisely ."
The picnic for the group ' was
held May 22 at the home of A.R.
Kmlght .
At this meeting a thank you
was read from Barbara Welsh
for the yellow,rose anct silver bud
vase she received.
The president distributed a lls1
showing the members appointed
1o th.e various cqmmitt~es . for
1990-91. ·.
The cultur~j.l report was presen ted by Sharon Pratt and
Barbara Welsh on "Moving Out
of That. Job Rut."

.

· Pefect attendance pins were
·presented to Sharon Pratl,fhree
years: Barbara Welsh, Kay
Adkins, Jackie Hoover, two years. A ,gift was presented to
Charlotte Hanning for being
chosen Girl or' the Year. The
officers presented the president
a hand painted sweatshirt and
the president presented the offlcers and committee chairmen
with gifts for their dedication
throughout the yzar.
Best cultural report went to
Sheila Harris and Paula Haynes.
Secret sisters were revealed and
drawn for next year.
It was voted to ~em a yellow
rose and bud vase to Mrs . A.R.
Knight's ch~rch each year on
Memorial Da\•.
.

Pomeroy High graduates .gather

'

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•

,.....
,..

Johnson, Carrie Wears, Sharon :
Purtell as the nurse.
.
Another skit, · " Mo therhood, " Barr, Evelyn Thoma, Kay Am- ~
was presented highlighting the brus, BeckY Balka, Kylte Balka, .
life of a person from Infancy Bonnie Butler. Luelle Allen, ~
through marriage. Ta king part Dorothy Reeves, Linda Darnell. ·
were Julie St anley, Susi e Melissa Darnell. Mary Irene .'
Warner, 'Chelsea Warner, Marge Arnold, Summer Giles, Thelma ~
Purtell, Whitney Thomas. Kay Giles, Lena Napper, Iva John- :
McElroy. Jessica McElroy, Re- son, Mlrlnda Davis, Ida Murphy , .:
becca Napper, Rober ta Napper, Beverly Napper, Ahslle Davis,
Bonnie Arnold, and Peggy Bole. Barbara Davis, Charldene AI- ~
Ann Lambert was at the plano klre, Rosalie King, Anna Shuler, .
providing background music. Gladys TUckerman, Elsie Brat- ,
''(a!Ttm y Dummit t was the ton, Viola Haning, Rhonda
Frank; Sarah Frank, Cindy Lam- :
narrator.
·Hazel Stanley closed the pro- · bert, Carrie Lambert, Krlstl ;
gram by reading a poem, " What Lambert, Bertha Bing, Cheryl :;
HoOey and Justin, Lots ThompIs a Grandmother?"
There was a display of mothers son, Gina Thomas, Kim Det pictures along with mementos of twlller, Betsy Warner, Patty
them and those attending were Young, Teresa Whit tington,
Freda Elam. Carolyn Elam,
asked to guess who they were.
Others attending with those Linda Bates, a,nd Lee Hysell.
already merttloned were Glori a

.Grant: receivec{ by :Salisbury ~l~entary Feeney Bennett Unit elects officers

Attention

,.,.,.

.-

•

Church mother, daughter -banquet

COPYRIGHT 111811 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, MAY 'll, THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 2,
t910, IN POIEROY, OHIO.

pu-

."

Ohio

Sorority appoints committees

Committees were appointed at
the recent meeting of Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority held at the home of
Clarice Krau tter. ·"
Named to the program committee were Ann Rupe, chairman: Elea~or Thomas, Nell1e
Brown, . and Mary Mqrrls.
Swmce CO!Mllttee · ts Betty
Oblinger, Norma Custer, R\lbY
Baer, and Ltutan Moore. ,
Social committee members
were, Jane Walton, chairman,
Clarice Krautter, Charlotte Elberfeld, Rose Sisson, Sbtrley
Beegle, and ,Roberta O'Brien .

..

.

Wedneeday, May 30, 1990 '

Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio

Thivener passes bar examination

•'":"

Va · Barry and Susan Boyer
Class members and former
M~ita; Brbce and Gloria Buck 'teachers wore badges wlth their
Wallace,~-rcanal Wlncliester:
yearbook pictures on them and
Mike Capehart, :Siler City, N.C.; , enjoyed music from the fifties
Louise Diehl, North Ridgeville:
and the sixties throughout the
Tom Ebersbach, Grovep; ort, day. Favors were address booDavl!l Eskew, Newark; 'Joe kle~s with a pic1ure of Pomeroy
Gilmore, Walworth, Wise. Mary . High School on the front c?ver, .a
Sue Handley Michael, Mlnim1a: . · conlmencement program from
Harley Hendricks, Plont Plea- 1965. a 1965 trlyta questionnatre,
sant; Dauny and Phyllis Kasper
Smith, sOuth P.olnt.
Tom McGowan, Houston,
Texas; Mlck Menchlnl, Trenton,
Mich.; Katy Morarlty Davis,
Marathon, ·Fla.; Pam 0' Brien,
Centerville: bEar I and Jean
P: helps Cleland, Chrisney, Ind.:
Ken . and Brenda Potts Hopfer,
Spring Valley; Clifford and Florence Schnrtmsher Jernigan, Hllliard; · Bonnie Smttli, Little Hocklng: Bryce and Nancy Smlth.
Gallipolis; · Bob ~ Smith, San ·
Ramon, Califronta; Gary and
Linda Moore Madara, Erie, Pa.;
Pat and Jonnie ·sue Thompson
Kinney , Richmond, Va.: Janice
Wehrung Kilker, Mentor on the
Lake; and Mike and Carla Will
Werry, Belpre.
Former teachers and their
spouses a11endtng were Charles
and Mary Chancey, James Diehl,
Cecelia Hart, Dana and Bernice
Hoffman , Russ ;ind Hope Moore,
Frances Roberts and Helen .
Sml1h, all local; John and Martha busted Greenaway, Palm
Beach Gardens, Fla.; Pat Ingels
and granddaughter, Carrie, Galllpolts; Eliane Rouse, Cheshire;
and LuciUe Swackhamer, New
Haven, W. Va .

-:~ Woodmen member places first
SHANE H •.LEEP

·Birth· announced
Patricia Lochary Leep and
Kevin Leep announced the birth
of their first child, a son, Shane
Henry Leep, born on April 24.
The lnfan1 weighed nine ·
pounds, seven ounces and was 21
Inches long. Maternal grandparents ara·JIT(l and Ruth Locharyof
Centerville, and the paternal
grandparents are Albert and

VICTORY BAPTIST
-CHURCH MISSIONARY
CONFERENCE/
SPECIAL SINGING EACH NIGHT
PASTOR: REV. JAMES E. KEESEE
EVERYONE WELOME

High School. His name will be
entered. in the regional contest.
The winning entry at that level
will become the national winner.
Entrants were judged on participation in club activities such
as community service projects.
helping with local matching fund
projects, and 1he number of
friendly service hours earned.
Also rated were cooperation,
character, service to others and
attitude. ·

HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••~~.... 89&lt;
DEU MADE
SHREDDED '2.19 LB.
COOKED HAM •••••••••••• !~.!~~!! S1.99
'·

CRISPY SEIYE

·'

VICTORY
BAPTIST CHURCH
' MIDDLEPOII, OHIO

LARGE EGGS _.....\lPJ, S1.09
COLBY LONGHORN
HEESE ..................~1••• 12.39
SHEDD'S SPREAD

616
.
TOMATOES .......l;!.....49c
CARROTS ..........~t .... 39c
LEMONS """"" 3 FOI nc
.

525 NOOH SECOND

RISII Ull

BABY LIMAS •••••••••••••••~.~~.~••• Sl :89·

COMING SOON
MAJOR APPUANCE
IQ-t &amp; ELECTRONIC SAU
•J.--·-·

Register

toP youP t:h1nca io

lUll lmEIED

BEEF. PATTIES ••••••••••••••~~~.z•.. S3.29
MT. ·TOP PIES .............~~~.~••• S3.29
OLILPASO

dedication of every
single member of

Your DREAM APPLIANCE
or ELECTRONICS PACKAGE

our staff.

them and our
residents, and
discover for
yoimelfthe
very best in
nursing
home care.

Robert O'Brien has been se·
lected as first place winner in the ·
· Burlingham Camp 7230 Modern
Woodmen of America National
Youth Leadership Award
Contest.
His trophy will be presented at
the next club meeting.
The contest was open to the
children whO are members of
Modern Woodmen of America's
Junior and Teen Service Clubs.
O'Brien Is a freshman at Meigs

·MAY 30 THIU JUNE 3, 1990

. is the caring and

questions of

and communit y s,ervices. Etta
Will received the unit member of
the year plaque.
It was noted that flower s have
been planted around the war
memorial at the annex.
Reported sick were Zelia Taylor, Lee Reed , Charles Edwards,
Ernie Wells, Har ry Surface,
Helen Kennedy, and Tom
Turner .
MemberShip cards are in and
members were urged to pa y dues
soon as they may go up after
convention In July.
,
Summer .convention was announced·for Unit 39 In Pomeroy
on June 7. Deparhnent convention wtU be held In Columbus on
July 13. 14 .. and 15. Delegates arf
Pauline Greathouse, Velsle
Roush, Dorothy Long. and Carol
Baker.
·
Dinner was held with post
members prior to the meeting.

~c~om~bs:!;;:a:!n~d~a~
· ~no~t~e~p!a:!;d•.•C•l•a-ss-•P•e~g=gy~-•L•e•ep~o-f.A.th•e•n·s·-~~
were taken .

'What sets us apart

1You're invited to stop
in anytime to observe
these exceptional
people at work, ask

historian; Kathryn Metzger, cha- ·
plain: Carol Baker, sergeant at
arms; and Becky Tyree and Lisa
Roush, color guards. Maxine
Barnes , eighth district president ,
from unit 11 in Lancaster will
Install the officers at June the
meeting.
Pauline Greathouse presided
at the meting ln which Ka1hryn
Metzger gave the prayer and the
group repeated the Pledge of
Allegiance.
Gall Ferry r~ported on the
poppy sales and slated th~r .:
J~sstca Hooten, junior meinbeJ,
sold the most poppies in that ·
group, and Grace Welch sold the
most In the adult group.
Executive board recommenda·
lions were approved . and Grace
Welch was presented a plaque for
outstanding work with the. veterahs programs, several hundred
"1r$ of work In nursing homes,

HELP US CELEBRATE
. 4MANA·MAGIC CHEF
WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE-ZENITH
........
....,-------____
....
--..·---·--·:.__ ... ___ .........
_
·--·-·--..... .
-·--·. ........
·-··_
..._______
. -__
--··--·-·
_... _,, __
... ___
'"'"~'All

___

__
-·---·-"-

~- · --·

·_____
-__--·-·-..._
.....
..
--·--·-,

.

•

SEE THUISDAY'S PAPEI FOR DRAIU

INGELS Furniture &amp; Jawalrv
,.... ,....

MIDDLIPOII

9ti·I6JS

VII• • ••

.

.

.

.

TACO SHELLS ..............~!.~!:., S1.39
OL EL PASO

TACO SEASONING ••••• ,1.!M!••••• 59&lt;
OL IL PASO

JALAPENO RELISH •••••• !.!.~!•••..•89C

POST CERUL

SUPER GOLDEN
CRISP.]!.~!. S2.39
.
.
STOIELY
APPLESAUCE .,•••••••••••••2.~~.~.~ ••• ~. 79&lt;
Ill MDIIII

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .....~~~.~••• S1.59
AJAX CLEANSER .........~~~.z. ...... 49c

••••••••••••~. Sl

•

�10-The

Sentinel

Wednesday, May 30, 1990

·.•
·..'
•.

•

·:

8 AM-10 PM

f.j

298 SECOND·ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFFECTIVE SUN., MAY 27 THRU SAT., JUNE 2 .

'I

.~'

•[

•••

1

THURSDAY

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and AlAnon will
meet Thur$day at 7 p.m. at the
· Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For Information c.a ll 1·800-333·

5051.
·PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Township Trustees • wlll meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
township garage.
FRIDAY

Chicken ••••••••••••••••• 59&lt;
LB.

$

Ham .....~-......... ~~.L:..

Ribeye Steak .-••. ~.

•

•

The vltaga '"arv" the

right to reject any or oil bido
.,d to waive any informalltin in bidding.
·
Fred Hoffman, Mayor

159.

Village of Middleport
(5) 22, 29, (I) 6. 12. 19.
26

Public Notice
PUBLIC BID
ADVERTISEMENT
Pursuant to the ProVisions
of .Section
163.06 and
163.07 of the Ohio R.Viaed

7 ,~

1

Code, public notice ia given

lhoJ'ieoled pr.opollla will be

,-.,ed by tho Deportment

I

I

of Administrative -Se'rvlces.
Divloion of 'Public Worka.
Office at Stoia Architect
onitEngin..,, 30 Eoot Brood
Stroei. 35th floor, Colum·
bus. Ohio 4S266· 0403 untH
Thurldoy, Juno14, 1980. 11
2:00p.m. DoyHght Stwlnga

$· 59
Round Steak........ 2 ·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS BOT:~.M

Time. and opened Immediately thereafter, for furnleh·

to,...,..

. lng the motorlel ' '"d pet·
lllol '-"'&gt;• tor the ••·
ocutlon olt'lt~onitnlctiOn of:
Project No. 770·BB·019
Stet-Ide Health and
. Safety Program ·
Phi.ell "'"" Diatrict ·No. 10
·Ohio Deportment of
Trantportation
Athens, Goilio. Meigs,

FLAVORITE

Wieners ..............L:••• .19 &lt;
HOM~MAD~ • .. . .

.

Sandw1ch Spread •••• 99
LB.

Mqnroe, Morgan, Npble

(

'-,

POMEROY -The Sacred
Heart Catholic Church will have
a· basement sale on Friday and
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Available will be clothing, linens,
household Items, small appllan·
ces, bikes , miscellaneous Items.
Refreshments will be sold.

..

Bananas ••••••••••••~••• 39.c

SATURDAY

RAVENSWOOD, W.VA.- The
Reorganized Latter Day Saints
Church wlll have a yard sale
Saturday, weather permitting,
on the Ohio side of the Ravens·
wood·Bridge. All proceeds wliigo
to the.church.

$1
6
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

.FlAVORITE
'

PLASTIC

SALEM CENTER -The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet Saturday at 8 p.m. at
the grange hall on CountY Road 1
near Salem Center. Membership
certificates wlll be presented and
degree work wlll be performe on
candidates. All members are
urged to at(erid. A potluck supper
wlll follow.

LONG BOTTOM - There will
be a hymn sing at ·the Hazel
Community Church on Saturday
at 7: 30 p.m. with Debbla Powell
singing.

tral Ohio

Columbus, Ohio 43216

..

JUMBO ·

$119
...
,
Parkay..Spread
3LB.

'

I

GALLIPOLIS - Dan Hayman
and the Country HymnTimers
will have their fourth annual
reunion picnic at the Gallia
County Fair Grounds on Satur·
day with a gathering at noon and
a covered dish dinner at 1 p.m.
The public Is Invited to attend.

GALL~N

.'

RUFFlES -

REG~

Sl. 99

Potato Chips •••••••• 99&lt;
10

oz.

SWANSON

$l99

\

Fried Chicken ••••~~. · .

Ketchup ••••••••••••

9
Sherbet ••••••••.•::= $-1°

!2.~~.

DOG FOOD
20 LB.
BAG

$299

Good Only At Powell's Supar Y~lu
Goo4 Sun. May 27 l lwu Sat. lunt 2

STARKIST OIL

ilf. :WATER

CHUNK TUNA
6.5

oz.

2/Sl

Good Only At hwtll't Sup• Valu
Good Sun. May 27 thru Sat. lunt 2
.

-·t

PURE swEn
4LB.

'.

BAG

CHARMIN

SUGAR

$119

Gootl Only At Powell's Supar. Vatu
Geed Sun., May 27 thru Sat., June 2

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
•

PIC G.

99C·

Gootl Only At hi!•'• $uptl Valu
Good Sun. May 27 tin Sit • ._ 2

Pub!lc Notice

. PUbliC ,Nollce

' NOTICE OF SALE
A complete 'copy of tho olnv~ .
siollobury Townahlp will ronmental ass•ument Is
offer for ule ot Public Auc· available from the Ohio Delion (1)' one 1973 Cht111. ~rtment of Natural r•·
F'-tolde Plclcup T(Uck. · · ~aurcn. Dlvi•ion of Ract•
l'loe nle to be held at Sol· metion, 1856
Fountain
isbUry TowMhlp Buldlng. Square Court, BuHdlng H-2,
Rocksprln91. on the 2nd day Cohtmbua, Ohio 43224. · of June1890 ot 10:00A.M .
Included in this action i1
Soro Gibbo, Cl.,k tho· ocqulsillon at reooillng
34046 Boll Run Rd. materiel from a borrow.,..
Pomeroy, Ohio 417119 for the Roach-Thompson
Ph. 992· 7098 Projec1. the borrow . . . Is 1
t5) 1 6, 23. 30. 3tc
10-acre aita in -Sectiona 27
•
and 2B. Salisbury township,
Maiga County. The reaoil ing

~'

Dodge Reports/ SCAN
Cleltelond, Oh. 44115
-orButidera bch.,ge.lnc.
Cl-.,d. •Ohlo 441 31
F · W· Dod,-orgo
Columbuo, Ohio 43215
Coplol ·of the Notice to
Bl-1; ,Form of Propoeol,
Form of land. Form of Cont,.ot, EEO Bid Conditions,
ln11n1Ctionlto
Gen·
erol Concltlona, Plano. Sp•
clficotions lnd other Contreat Doctm'"'''" to;othor
wkh furlhor lnformlllon
doelred, may be obtained by
PmM Controctoro trDfli the
Olflae
of M·E BUILD·
lNG CONSULTANTS, INC.,
101~ EMOIBrcedStreot. Co~
umbuo. hlo 43205, Til•
· (114·I 211·4803. All
P-•
bidding .
wll
be , !ann- SHIPPING
CHARGES COLLECT upon
I'IClilpt of • clepooM In the
amount of 121.00 per Htln
!oofor of M·E BUILDING
CONSULTANTS. The • "'
·
...,..,.
sotwllbaroflondldtobl.ddoro
return ' tho plena ond
•
flcetlons In good'con.
tlon within ten 1101 deyo
ttlttar ,_PI ot bido. The
qoot of
ot ony
m1toln1 or darMged daou·
mllllllwlt.badoductedfrom
thejlepooit. Th.elow bidder
m~fl~lonn the plond1 ~~
•...- - · •
en
"~
depoett wll be refunded. .
lubaanboaterund-e·

'.

.
'

''

I
t

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Purauant to Titkt IV of the
Surface Mining Control and

Office of State Arnhitact
ond EnginHr, 30 East Brood
Street, 35th Floor. Colum·
bus. Oh. 43286·0403.
Tho Minimum Wogo Rote
Requirements of Revised
Code Chapter 41 16 ond the
Equal Employment Oppor. io
fR
tuni~
Bid Cond 01 no 0 avised Code Sections 163.68
and 153.691 ondtheGover-

.30

Dlvloipn of redo·

tw=~ ~~

cable to this bid invitation.
The Minority 881 Aside
requirements of Amended

ment. United Stat8l Departt f th8 1 1 · ..
men
n er•or.
ap-

tracts, oro oppllcebleto lhlo
invitation to bid.
·
• ' No bidder moy withdroltv
his bid wkhin sixty (601 doh
·•her the actual data of 1tt.e
~Qpening thereof. The 08puty Director, Division ~of
Public Work•. reserves · the
right to waive any lnfomuilities or to reject any orJtall
bids.
~
Tha Department of

Administrative Serviceo
Oivision of Public Works
Carole J. Olohev""'.
Dopu~ DiroCtor
(5116. 23. 30; (6) 6. 4tc

PubliC Notice
.,
SHERIFF'S SALE Of
REAL ESTATE ~
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY f
THE CENTRAL TRU$T
CO,..PANY OF
&amp;OUTHEAiti!IN ot(lo.

'1,A.

v• c. ,,

,

MATTHEW
VAN
VRANKEN , ET AC.
C ASE NO . 89 CL 2~ 4
In purouance to on prder
of latidl,roctod to main the
onf~lod oction.jl will
off• for ula II public OUC·
lion. 1 t the fro'nt door of the
Courthoueo
in , Pomeroy.
Ohio In the above namod
county, on Tundey. , June
19. 1990 at 10:00e.m.,tha
!allowing dncribad real""
tete, situated In the Coun~
'

•bt!!l•

of Meig1 and the State of

Ohio, 10 ;.,it;
Situated In Burnop'sAddi·
tlon to tho Village of Po· .
merov or 1ubdiviaion of Lot ·
Number One Hundred and
Elghly-ninol189) on~ being
all of Loti Number Nineteen
(19) ond Twen~ (20) ttonl·
.,
ing on Hill Tttp Street or the
Old Rutland Rood o•or Lin·
coin Hill. extending in depth
tDWIIrd High Street within
ono Hundrod 1100) feat of
sold High Street and both

Hundrod 1100)· loot ·on Ho 11
Top Street.
1.
for reloronce 1 ae Volume
1 57, pago56, MeigsCoun~
Dead Record;.
Deed Referonco : yotuma
306,
pogo 129. Meigs
· County Deed Recorda.
Thlo proporty I• located at
129 Lincoln Hl!l, Pomeioy,
Ohio.
ProplfiV
opproisod ot
.
•
.
1 ~ 4 .000.00 and cannot be
IDid lor lola thon .two-lhirdo
ofTIEhaRMepprliOIFedSvAeiLuEa: The
tolohovingafrqntegool0~o

S

· '"

".ooo.oo.

rep!--

;;.':":

81C

°

SHERIFF'S SALE OF.
REAL ESTATE
The Stole of Ohio,
Meiga County
B9·CV·296
CHEMICAL MORTGAGE
COMPANY. Plaintiff
-VSCHERYl LYNN POWELL,
et al. Defendants
of an Order
above entitled

,.u

offer for Ale at
proved the environman•l
IIMIIf'TIInt for thie projec1
at the door ot
which was submitted by the
In Po·
State in appUcath)n for title
in the abovl named
IV llnanclli uolstenceln r•
Friday. the 2nd
c1 · • • d
d
1990 ol 10:00
lfmong en m 1or1ng 1on
and water reaources adver- l' ~;~;;~:~~~j the following
se1y affected by put mining. 1 ~
estate, altuate
•
in the County of Meigs tnd
State Of Ohio, and in the VII-

Real

E .oate General
_.

I
f M'1ddl
rt I
II
ago 0
epo • o w ;
Tho following root eototo
lituatad in the County of
Molt~~. Stato of Ohio, ond in
the Village of Midcleport,
tkaunded and described •
follow•: 33 feet fronting ~:m

S
dS
f the v·n
aeon
treat o
I age
of Midcleport, being one·
fourth of Lot No. 80 pur-·

E·

chued by L.

,.~litol.oiA

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
2531 West Main,
P-roy, Oh.

·PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond .4 ·cyclo
'"glneo
Stocfl Parts for Homlihe.
Tecums•h.

Stratton.

27 Yro. Exp.
ReferenC81
209

South 4th St.

Mi*:!7c:~.
~Oh.
"LOW
I
SITEWORK • R~ADS
CLEARING

NEWLAND
'
ENTERPRISES
DUMPTRUCK ·

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(.6 14) 667-3271

Grant A. No,rll

ROTUND TIRE
SALES and
. SERVICE
742-3088
•Tirl! Sales
•Fron* End

. Alignment
•Oil

Change 8t Lube

•Brake Work

MAIN

c. oav• from

n., IUILANO

FLATWOODS ROAD_ Nice
3 bedroom, I bath modular
home .sitting on 1.11 acres.
Carpet and vinyl flooring
with heat pump and central
air. $39,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT_ A home to
d ''Th'
3b d
be prou 0" · IS neat e ·
room ' ranch w~h modern
kitchen, large family room
and en dosed rear porch on a
large lot would be you r pride
and joy because , ot all
the
comfort rt offers!!
$36.900.00. OWNER WANTS
TO SEL 11

in back and a part base·

men!. $25,000.00.
RT
197R M
MIODLEPO ·
O·
dular Home sitting on 21ots
NGFA
in tow.n. 2 car ga rag~
heat, garden area. Also has
self contain ed A/ C unit
Many other nice features. All
appliances go w~h house.
$39,500.00.
· •
CIAL BUILDING- Pos~ble '
office spa ce or apartment on
2nd lloor. CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION.
LEADING CREEK - Nice 2
. bedroom trailer ready lo
move into. Furnished, new
carpetin&amp; has 30 ft. en·
cloSed porch. S41UIIed on
approx.
i 'A acre 1~1.

$14,000.00.

•-•-· Val umo Has
. 0 ur ....,..
' Bttn Good and Wo Still

Ha" luy•s looking .
Far Moigs County

Propll'ty.

SEU,
IEAlTY

Buy- Sell

Trade

367·0588
5-!J-'9().1

IOO . pd.

HUCK'S CAl WASH
2nd

st.

·

Far Appt. Coli
992-6717 Hamt Ill'
992-~244 ~arar.
.

ROWE
POWEIWASH
SERVICE

511 S. Feurtll Avo•

Mltldle~Mrt, Ohio
RESIDENTIAL end
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou- • Mobile Hom•
· Trenof'llrl VehlciOI •
Form Equipment •
Hewy Equlpmont. Etc.
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . SERVICE

992·6191
Je1n Trussell ... 949-2660
1111 Hupp ........ 949-2257
Jo Hill ... ......... 985-4466
Office..........: ...992·2259

l

.....

S1695 4 Qt. Mo~

MOVIIIMAl
CONY!IIINCI STOll mMS

CHISftl
QUil STOP

St.

OFFERS 2 LOCAnONS TO SEIVE YOU.".

POMEROY, OHIO: At. 7 &amp; S . R . 143
ALBANY. OHIO; At. 60 &amp; S.R. 143
. NEWHOURS;
POMEROY: 9 a.m.·7 p .m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m .- 6 p. m . 6 Days. Closed Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990

#1 Copper 90C per lb.;
Aluminum
35¢

'11141
OliO

lb .

Stop In and See

CUSTOM lUll

AI

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
Reasonable Pri&lt;es"
PH. 949-2101
ar Res •.949•2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

PAT HILL

..
. ..
- -· .
*SHRUB - &amp; TREE
TRIM anti RE·
MOVAL ·
*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269

.,

DALLAS SAYRE
CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH
DODGE

3'1'1 S. Third, Middleport

\

9

USD APPLIAIKES

. '·1 "'''
mo1

1

,,

Announce1r-~~:~!s

Giveaway~~

4

iliCiiOovEIS:::in up
lEN'S APPLIANCE

· SERVICE
992·5335 or 915-3561
Acr11s From POll Offlco

i'

,.
montha
old
OQbW.;.
manJGerman Shepherd n~
s~OK. ~londty, - 4 0 t t ott.r

-

2 full bloodld whit• German
Sh1ph1rd to glve1way. 1 mall 1 1
female. 614-3SS.J7'62,

~,

2 Puppln

ALL MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or 985-3561
Am1ss From Post Office
217 E. Sec. Pomeroy
~OMIROY,

OliO

Mak11

Modtls

F

lfn

FOREVER BIONZ
. TANNING

..,

4 kHt•nt to good holM, 304-

S"/5-5488.

'J

Call Now To Make
Appointment

4 kltt1n1, approx I wU... to
good honoH. 2 yellow, 2 l'"f·
614....W1-o905 or oM&amp;-3121.

4ployful kilt-, 304-t71-112e.

:

. 949-2794

6 kltt1na to giveaway. 114--448-

OPEtlltl8 SOON
SPEeiAL

Fow 6 wMk okl wtitl klnMI,

;~==~~~~~=~~·---.---~~

30 Sessions-'30
Co. Rd. 21

frM ~... ..~.... •"'- . ~­

wide -etlan, 814-311J.lln.

Wohll For Signs
RACII~E. OHIO

P-oroy,

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIIl
Aleo Trl•••llllo•
PH. 992-5682
• or 992·7121

.l
~

1 H.r s.... ..
6 Hro..... .
12 Hro .. ..

,..
L......!..

•Club RepMr,
•New Grips
lntWII.t ..... t4,

New lhlftt tor Brokln
Clubl, Clubl ~OI'NII'I.-1 for

•a. or d .. ghl•

. 1•Engrevlng. TfoPhi•.

Pl-·llld••
JOHN Ulf'ORD

46317 Scout

Ch. . .,

Heating, Cooling,
Refrigeration

Sen lee

Ra1idantiel 8t

Commercial

CALL
992

~ )1:

?TRAVEL
- PURSUIT
(6t4)
742-2027

"Your
Connection To All

Types

Of

SER~ICE

W1 can repair aild rocaro radlaton · and
heater car•. Wo ca11
also ocid boH and rad
out rlllliators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanlcs.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Ml(ldleport,

'

.·,

Found

u.-

245-1515 evenlnfll.

·vard Sale ..

7

Galllpollti

j
~

:...

,.

~
c

.'

&amp; VICinitY "

Cl£AN, LUIE &amp; TEST

3 familY Ooroge Sole: Hal tub,
tv'o, elathM: olllld- men
and ledlee, blcyet11, toyo lnd
much more. CNehlra YkJto 1nd
Tonnlng. A - 7 In Choahlta.

$18"

:;

'•

Frldoy and SoturdeJ,

AlL Yonl 881H So Pliolln
AdVInce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dey boron tho 1c1 11 to '""'
Sunday tdhlon .. 2:00 p.m.

•VINYL S !DING
•ALUM INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Frldoy. Uondey -ion • 2;00

Bock porch 1111: 4th filii
HlrieJ Do.- BldG., on 38.
Elec. 11.... Fridlp. t-1:
Bam I Ylnt .... , flllrVIhlno.
Jun11 1-2. 2 mi. 514.

••• "-lull!
"Free Eatlmateo"

or 1IG on

Commuoollr Yonl Solo: tlodney
Vlllogo U. Ju,. 2ntl, t-4, II ar
IliON llnol- ... lin . . . . ..
FumM-:d~:-e·
booka,
a..._Nlltg., top

PH. 949·2101
or Res.

' ·'

.••

...

p.m. Saturdly.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
949~2860

NO SUNDAY

lnOide Yonl Sole: lilac.. lion - . Vinton, OH. • womone, boVI (11-11) otat-,
looulolootol,
11- -IIIII Nil(niCe),
cotleot-.
- -

bod, Alorl

R. L HOLLON.
TRUCKING

~1

,lata

.,~oo,,

t t-4.

Thur&amp;, ""· ..., -

J

' t..

"

'

"

..,

CIIEnD, OliO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT .

• .June1•, 2nd. 1lomllr.CNM lid.,' Don ll U: lnfitit-,

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422
• 1·11·80,tfn

APft I MU JULY 1

.,.....

MIWOI1118101

FREE EITIM.('rES

, .. , . ""of jllitltllltl
Ltt • • ·It

....

VEIY IUSONAIII
HAVE llftiENQS

APTU 6 P.M.

.......

1614)

·,·

ehldNn, ...,. olotlolftt, ......

QPEN MON.·SAT. 10 to 5
StiAWROMIS: Dw•f
&amp; T..; PAMPAS GIASSt

4~742-2772

N-

A.wird. l.Ht: Male lladl aM ••
White Otcl Englilh ohoop ofoa.
Rio o.- Thu- · 111i. ,
Woutd lib men who lound 1
female tlhui:Mioa to Call U.· i.
AIJ"In. 114-2- .ye, Of ' •

SPRIIII SPECIAL

...... c.....

HEllS and

chlldron.

Lost &amp;

16141 992-7843

EYEBAmNGS

IMSIIETS,
MOlE.

!'"th

Loot; 2 Old puppy. -k.
Mole. Ol'llhem School tltl.
vicinity. &amp;14-44..7114.
La: Blue IMIII F1M leckie
box. 8111__, Lanaevilll lnd
Rutland. 114·1'1:1-:12'/7,

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR
1361 Powoll Sl. MiM...,t
(Au• tr...,. """"' Ttwift St.,.l

Paulin's HIH letwMn
Rutland and lt. '554
.... I Whitt; MOIIA.

,.

6

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC'

OHIO IIVU

HOURS:
Thure. thru Sun.

To aood homo. lleek L.lonodor
Aotilo-. FltMie. 2-112 yn. Old.
~

of

GREENHOUSE

OPEN:

,..

wtth whno opoto

UIIDA'S
PAIII'IIIIG &amp;. CO.

•••sane~

Small hou.abrak1n ~. I moa.
old. Uothot· Ooctolilund. 8142511·1513.

·place to: rwt. 114--la..tiZ a"-r
4:30p.m.

4-25-tfn

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMAtE
CONTROL

..

Puppln holt Sprloogor Spooolol, .. '
304~7!H71Ziftor 8;00.
-1

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
~'!i:!~
.
•Mobile Homtt
It. 33 Jlorth

' -.

3637.

992·7479

Rt. •24, Pomarey. Ollio

hi

pin. &amp;14-388-17112.

Renlllo
•Lot,.RentJia

Roger Hy.sell
. Garage

....

&amp; 3 kh11n1 to , ~\'

SJhfhWII)'. 614-256-6122.

3 8 wk. old collll/ohophonl pup-

EVENINGS
MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

..

90 DAY WADAIIJY

010.

OIL CHANGE .

•'
..·•.,
..

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

4·11·'90- mo.

1-21·'10-1

CAU CLELAND
TODAYHI
. ..
,
.
HENRY E. CLELAND

992-6810

949-2168
..
2·1-'90-1 ..o. pd.

factory Autlloriud
!trYico Cent• For Most

614-992·6242

IF YOU WAHl TO

A

SIDEUNES
SPORT CARDS

510'11

COIIIIER

fl••• Ll1t1111

Business Services

....· .
....

FRE.E E$TIMATES

SALES AND SERVICE

A 2 slory

home with a large· lot. big
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, built·
in china cabinet, nice deck

We

Gutters
Downspouts
, GUtter Cleaning
. Painting

-VCR-STEREOS

being the southweol
quarter of nid Lot No. 80.
Said on•fourth beginning 11
the nort-1 corner of the
cranz lot · nonning porollli
witlltheumoobout8B-;
1 - E011 33 _ , thence
Weot about 98 feat to s.
cond Street; thence liont
Second Street in I IOUthweiwtydlrei:tlon.tongS.C·
ond 81.-t 33 feat to Crena
lot, the piece of beginning. .
Pioperty Addron: 570
South Second Street, Mid·
dloport. Ohio 46780.
"Slid premiOH opprolaod
1118,000.00 and cannot be
oold for leu than two·thlrdo
of that omount.
Jom11 Souloby, Shorllf.
. Mei111 Cbun\Y, Ohio
LERNER, SAMPSON 11o
ROTHFUSS. Attorneys
Dick 0. DoBielil.
Attorney ot Law
(5) 30; (81 8, 13. 3tc

U.

POMEROY

NEw- REPAIR

••
.'

,.
•
•
&gt;

WE GO THE EXIRA MILE"'"

3/6/'90/tln

ger and EUa Gaiger, the

..

'

· ROOFING.

.

3 Puppl11 eall114-251-1081

18 mo

RACINE - Vine Street- I
Floor lrame house. Needs
some work but has a nice
50' xi90' level lot w~h all
utilities on s~e. $12,500.
MAKE OFFER.

POM ERO" _

Jlowanl L. Writesol

Jarlnia Hay11, ChariH Gei -

·POMEROY, 0.
.992·22S9 . .

•
•
•
•

A Great Combinqtion" Quolity and Reas\lf1o~le Prices"

"At

992-6173

'

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Public Notice

I ~Oh:io=D~ep:llrlmont of Nllu,.l

I!

nor's Executive Order
January 27. 1972 are appli-

" " ' Ent•prise subcort
tracts and ,m.,erial purchse
and HrYICI supply con-

mat•lel will be ulild 11 1
growing medium for vegetl·
tion. , · Thie project ia 100%
fodarolly funped.
(51 30•. 1\c

u.s.c. 1201 et 11e9 .. the

OF NO SIGNIFICANT
IMPACT for on onvlfonmon·
tal •-ament which con-cerno on abandoned mined
land reclomollon fl:OI'OCI in
the State of Ohio. eState
of Ohio hu preporod ondlhe
Office . of Surface N!ining
Redemation and Enforce-

euccHaful
~MWCh•er.
••
lOOn
•• his bid
lo occeptad
Olhol be oequkod to deposM •
h
on the dey oflole. ln ceo Df
by certified chlcllc. poyoble
to the Sheriff, of ; Mol111
Coun~. Ohio, 10% of the
•mount of suo~ accepted
bid, but In no event lolothon
Tho btll~nce or
· ·
1
••II be
the IIU!'flll!lf~ pr co •clue and fiiY*Ioleto the,Shor·
Iff at Moilll County, Ohio.
within thirty (30) de'(a from
the ~ate of confirmation "'
llle. The punlh•er ohlil ba
•-lrld 10 poy lntereot on
the unpold bll.,ce 11 the
rate at l~pora.,.umfrom
thedeteofllletothedotoof
ot •••
t
~'T"..::'!.ce
p':'d"r."
~r-ppl..=:::-:.:
eight (B)....,.- .... d •
oflheNie.
ap.i,lfiOIIIono ar· portio no
Jomeo M. louloby
thiNCif II¥ peylllg tor the
lherllf of Metto.County
coo( at roproduotion ond Dougt01 M. Cowltlt!
hond~
• Attorney tor Pillfttlfl
. Co
ore ""ulrlna ... II) 1. 18, 23, 30; Ill 8. 13

'?

PubliC Notice ·

fledamatjnn Act of 1$77.

Subatitute Hou• Biiii5B 4 OJ
the .1131h Regular S.aion
of the General Allembly.
end tpecific.IIU the require~
'T
menta of Revised Code Seen
't i• 123.1 51 lei (21 .end 1311·
''
relating
to Mlnorrty Buai-

i•·

Public Notice

Oiviaion of Public Works.

·docu-•

' ..

. SUNSHINE

-or-

81-.,

'

HEINZ

ond Washington Countloo
Separate bidl ~~~ be re'" ceivad for :
'
EST. of
CONTRACT
COST
Fire .
Protection .... 123,500.00
HVAC ........... *368,000.00
Electrical~: .....• 133.000. 00
A PRE·bid"C;Onferencowil
bo held 11 10:00 o.m. on
June 1. 1990. Ohio Deport·.
mont of Tr0rioportltion Dis·
trlct ~o . .10 Heodqulrtllfl,
Muokongum Drive, Mariti~.
Ohio.
·,
Copiel of the Notice to '
Blddero, Fotm of Propoll!.
F9rm oflond; For.m•ofCon·
trect, EEO Bod Condrtoons.
lnofructiona .t~ }Bidders.
Gener~l Condotoona, Pions.
Speclficationo. and other .
Coojtrect Oocumentnro on
file and m~ be e~omonod ot
the1ollowong offiwa ;
DeGertment of Adminiatro·
ilve Sarvlceo
Divioion of · Public Worka
Office ~f . state Architect
. and Eng~n.,,
30 East Brood Street- 35th ·
f.loor
"
Columb~o. · ·Ohio . 43266·
0403 ·
1
\o.
·
E
horBu 1[-•• xc , an go o f Can·

placed .... The Daiioy Sentm ..

cep1 ~ d•IH•td . . . .. lu•in• Card lftd leg• nottcesl
wilt atao app. . tn the 111 . Pl...,n " • • r enctlht.GIIIi·
polis Da;ty Tribune, ,.Hhtng owr _,..;;·.:.:.;ooo_..,.;.,;"',:•:_____

n.

Chuck Ro·ast •••••L:.. 14·9··
U.S.D.A•.CHOICE BONElESS BEEF
$ -

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

Nollce

act~ten~Nment

•A

sistance in •curing bids
PUBLIC NOTICE
81~1 will be foceivod at ·from Cortlflod MB.E ~ubcon·
Middleport Village Hall. 237 tractors and suppliers may
Roce St., Middleport. Ohio ·COntact the Stat8.EquaJ Em4117110. untN 3 P . ~ . July 9, ployment Coordin,tor by
1 980 tor tho following do· calli.n g (., 141 466·8380· or
the · Minorfty Businets Deecribe~ real elteta:
.
The north 36 teat, mora or velopment Oiv'i •ion by calling 16141 488·11702 or Toll
111~ of t h e - half of Lot
No. 1 34 In Phillips Jonao Free on 1·800.282· 1086,
. Each bid mult be eccornThird Addition to tho Villoga
of Midcleport. Meigo County. ponled by 1 BID GUAOhio, baing 38 teat. more or RANTY ..-inglherequii-•
mHII of Section 163.64 at
len, o" Third Street. ond ex·
tMclng at thll wi&lt;fl11••tertv . tho Ohio Reviled Code.
THE BID GUARANTY and
66 feat ond 8 incloel to the
centor ine ofleid Lot No. 134 CONTRACT BOND muot be
in aid v~·- Beingthoume inuod by • Surety Compoiny
pr-'Y d11tiribod in Volume meeting the requirement• of ,
132, P Meigo County Article 2 of the Instruction
to Bidders.
Doed R-dto.
Bido shall be sealed and
Deed Reference: Volume
203. Pogo . 478. . Molgs addreued to: Department
of Administrative Servic&amp;s.
County Deod Recorda .

lEG QUARTERS

$

992-2178
4·19·1 mo.
IIEW LOCATION

m••

PubliC

WilSON'S CORN KING

MIDDLEPOIT

:to•;;,;.•• 1 .10 Clilooumlor ada peid '" advane•

t1 no1 rtiPGftlilMt for ttrcwsatter firl1 dfll . IChtdl
tot etron " ' " d~ ad runs in DaDer l. C.ll betora 2 :00p.m .
dW aft• ~caktn 10
CCMr.ctkU'I

•

RUTLAND - The· Rutland
Church of God will celebrale its
45th anniversary on Friday and
Sat.urday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev.
James Satterfield and Rev. John
s. Evans, former pastors, wlll be
the guest speakers.

REEDSVILLE -Allen Os·
borne, ·Columbus, will be In
concert at the Fellowship Church
of the Nazarene in Reedsville on
Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at
10: 30 a .m. John Douglas. pastor,
invites the public.

Me•oa. o.tlie or Muon count1.i. mul1 be prlt-

only veed

•

Rump Roast ••••••~..

711 N. 2nd

, br,Unupd-vswiltDtch•tect

- Givtewav and Found ads unci., 16words will be·
no cit\.,..
•
all capirlal l.t ... , tt double Drice of act cost.

·''.
'

U.S.D.A. CHOI.CE BONElESS BEEF

Ov,r 16 Wordo
14.00
.
.20
111.00
. 30
ee.oo
.42
113.00
.10
11 .30/ dov
.05 / doy

1

••
:.

Willbarger
birthday

MIDDLEPORT- The VIctory
Baptist Church . will have a
mission conference Wednesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly .
There will be several mlssionar·
les and special singing. Rev.
James E. Keesee Invites the
public.

I.

SEARS

lit"

I&amp;
1&amp;
1s
. 1&amp;
15

f

PATRICK T. WILLBARGER

CHESHIRE -The Gallia
Meigs Community Act ion
Agency will have a free clothing
day on Wednesday from _9 a.m. to
·non at the old high school
·
building in C)leshlre.

Wor~

•

GUG BAILEY

:::::::.".::IPROF.ESSIONA!LI
INSTALLATION

RATES ..

TO JtLACE AN AD CAU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M..
, 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

l

WEDNESDAY

FREE
ESTIMATES

'

•

K and J CONSTRUCTION

fENCING

• .The Area's Number .1 Marketplace-

STORE HOURS
Monday 'thr~ Sunday

Calendar

·B usiness Services

ClassifUtd

:.:

Patrick Tyler,}V!Ubarger, son
of Jerry and ,Dianne Bu tier,
Ravenswood, W.Va., recently
celebrated his first birthday at
the home of his maternal grand·
parents, Allee Wlllbarger and
Hank Lemley, Portland.
·
A Mickey Mouse cake and Ice
cream with lunch were served to
Jim, Maxine, and Brian Spires,
Plains City; Jennifer Lunce and
Atnber, Pomeroy; Kirk, Becky,
and George Weese. West Vlrgi·
nla; Patsy Spires, April Hughes,
Columbus; Altheia and Juanita
Riggs, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Also sending gifts but unable to
attend were Charles and Juanita
Harris, Portland.

The Daily Sentinel- Page. 11

10

-"-

~~--OIIIoe.
...........

Good
loya, auto ·porto,

t._,

-.J-111,~

-

011-

'MIIclhlil-, ...... 1 I 2nd. lo7
CMdiOII

cklthlng,

.......,

..

�'

Pomeroy-

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

...

...

•

. 30, 1990 •.·.·

OhiQ

•
•••

72 TrUcka for . .

LAFF·A·DAY

Pt. Plealant
&amp; VIcinity
t:OO lilt 4:00.

•

. . Largo , .... llala, ' - · I
milO out ....,.. Run, Grove:, lilY 30 tltru Jww 2. New

WOlD
lAM I

Raor!'Qnge ~!otters of ~
four IC!'Qmblacl words be.
low to form four simple words.

•

W!!D .. MAY= •
IV!NINQ

lnd UMd .......

..

I:GO ~'-:;•"' alai~

Yard Salo. 2711 Unc:otn Ava.
1:00 til 4:00 - Y and woe~, ~.May 2t and !0.
'

·~-~-~..........
COflllnUM.

Wa.L, IF NAPOLEON I-lAP
SEEN T~E MISSISSIPPI, t1LL
BET l-IE WOULD I-lAVE
. CROSSED IT ! .

I DON1T THINK TI-l AT'S
NICE, MA'AM ..

•.MARCIE SAVS
~E fi.UNKS VOU LAU61-1 AT
MV ANSWERS ON TI-lE
TESTS VOU 61VE US ...

a

The owner posted a sign on
the broken soda machine...
L.--J."-..1.._,__--1.--lt. · "So(!a two dollars." He says it
AVNA
~~ people from losing their
0

l

1:05 (J) lilolllly ......
1:30 (J) Punetnwn 8plclll Reoord

li

f--rl
.~.•,r.!ilr• · =.,__jr-.-11G byComplole inlhothechuckle
quoted
I • :..!1-:lsr
•
missing ·words

'--'--'---L--''--"--' you de,olop from step No.

111e ......., .,...

.

lllscldc
ttl s-2-1 ConiHI Q

•

8Topc.td
ID HMgln' Ill

lea-.
e

1:36 m Andy

PM Magazine

(!)~

e.
-~ c - t Altair .
(!) (!) M8cllel Lehrer

":.iiid
11»11-rflne

IIJ Miami VIet CrOQ...tt and
TubbS mull deJI wltll a drug •
deallog religious cuM. Stereo. '

ERNEST

1D

Muak: If- YldH
Abbott And ColleiiO

7:os m JelleriOne
. 7:30 G &lt;Jl Femily Ftucl

, (I) ~ RUII Dlrby

e • Entef!Jinment ronlghi

4 Aamlngto!l M lnoll - · rt. .,

wire -

Include!!,_..., - · . ,

f150. -

71112:
ludglt ,.,.,..., Ill' ;na. .30, 10,
ar 1 y.ar ww~~ Natlonwkle,

IYPM. eM-a
2283.·

-~Mama'IFimf!Y

I l'~".f.:-rdyl Q

••

1:00 PM, 301-1'111-

ti»CIOIIIIN
ID Night eoun
7:35 (D Sanford And Son

1 77, . IM-37t-

'

campers &amp;

1:00 (J) Tlte Flahtert
G (J) II! UniOIVetl

My..,.o A physician claims
he was wron_aly jailed for
murder. (R) 1;1

~~M:::ol:.::or~H;.;,o~m~e;,;•~:::- • .

NO!II' on nlo at PAINT PLUS,
Huoqunrna · Trim..- Save
$20. to 110. PAINT PW8, Jaok·
aon Ave, Poln1 Ploualll, 304175-4084.

11 n Taruo Mil con11- AIC, :
Cltl frMIWni.,., DC • • ~ ~
675-1111,
•
~ I

w Major Leaaue BaHbiiH

11711 3111,, Nomad, ·.llh whoel . :
.

••

e~mper~~~~lly red1a1ra1MI "on

1,..._,1

M ,I Ol:. ,

Maaa•t...

Free eriterpriH, In 1he form
of Mlka'i paper route, runs
amok. (R) Sl8reo. Q
(!) llg 111111 In ,Jipetl Big ·
Bil'd and Berkley learn about
Japanaaa food, customs .and
languaga when t11ey vlart
Japan. More imponan~y.
thaY make -wherever
lhay go. (1 :00) Cl ··
&lt;!l H011JW0oc1 Liglnclt
.. Gregory Pilei&lt; narrates a .
revealing portrait of himaaH.

.,

1183

-r--

Picnic 1ablo and kMir _ , Naw · -nd raka and

-

chal ... b12 ...-

247~1111.

lor--

rug,
114-

•nw.

...... hay llll)d, IJ04.I1I.,'IIM.

-~71Ha,___

-_
1
nl__
_a
J grlndwmlur,AI
no~

304-2'1H211.

t Livestock
q-. g.,.,.,.,

Aly ...... lniiOr. 33. ft •. : :
--AI 1101 .., on rlvw !&gt;Ink Jol. ·
wH~ pol!&gt;h and ·dock.1181 ' •
Pill- fold down comolna :

1rallor• . Coli

henlnil·

~

,

low-·..
.,

&lt;

1111 Toyola lloi!IHfl homO. IEaly on !Mil.
. =~=~~ fl1,100. fi!; :

63

11711
-living
nack' 1icaUarry
. .honM 2trail!!._
p,aGO. -1111-6332.
Holstein Cow,

55

. Building

.

SNvices
'

hlltw,

...... ~11314.

Suppllea

·

•~ G-'na Paine

.

iCntllllil
e 1121

II]) T1te Rolltng S-1:
SIMI WIIMit From the
Convantto~ Center In Adantic
City, New JerHy, The Rollr)Q
Stontt wrap up the firet 1aa
of lheir· SIHI Wheel ro~r.
•

~'5 &lt;1-\MlC:,i~Cl.

.
ll/1 '"""'

,Home. .

Billy CJ,iaham

10 'WEA CULPA'

Improvement• .

(2:00)
. IIJ) PrlmeNawo

.

11J .. treler, lhl Wrote Night

Of The Htadleaa Horeeman
18 c-raatlon Wllh 'Dinah
1D MOYIE: Qoctor Oalnllt (R)
(2:00)

8

8:05 (D MOVIE: Tha Allmo (2:41) ·
1:30 (I) Major LucdlliHbaH

Public Sale

• • • (()

· &amp;·Auction
SwYioo,
lolo, WV, ~ Olllo
Will Virginia. 3G ' yoanl

(:.allo'a Auction
~·

lu~

and
II·

BY THE TIM6 SHE; GOT' .

For your Ule NH U8.

.llftjpar Catfo 304-1117-21•.

Public Auo11on: Vinton Cjlunly,
nNI' WllkiiVflle, OH, S.t. June
tth at 1:OOp.m., 15 aciW, m9re

labyrabblla,114 . . . . ..

· Or '--• 2 ltory, 3br. 10 ll. S.tel-

llle ayattm,

atokenud~

lltCI'¥'1,
tll'l'l'll: 10% day of tuctkln, for

11t Ul 3114 .a ft• 7 p.M.

Rick Pearaon Auction Company
auctlona,

m so t-\9N'-E.

rr msportat 1on

•M.Da• .Vinnie
• ~hU
Doogle HowNt,
a blind date

C.11wy ·
Dnlgonwynd
8
1 - and Hl•Japn
11111-.

lntormatlon,ll3-424-1121.

noW booking

IT W.A&amp; "TIME'

IXNE WRITING; HER N.AME.
ON TI-1E;: 6QAi:2D !"'R l-IS ...

. Goklm Caoto 304-1137-22711 "'

7t Autoa tor Sale ·

with Wande'a CMirwelght
cousin. (R) 1:1 . ,
(!) ..,.,... ·llrlh EXplore the
roll of Jvlr)Q llltnge In
shaping our ~anet'aluture.
Slereo;a
(!) Amarfilan PlayltiUII
Mennoni• mlnlo18r Ia given
alieni trea1mtn1 tor op!X&gt;'Ing
tHchlnge.. (1:30) Q ·
lllll • 1121 Jlkt Alitl T1te
F - May Be Preempted ·
~ NBA Playoff Q '

•

U·

pi.rtence m.kle thl dittlftnc1.
Llcented Oh.!!t_ Kt~nlucky, Wnl
Vlrglnlli; 304-Tn-578!1.

9

Wanted to Buy

Buslne•
BuRdi riga

-----

11

WM1'a ao dl,_nl about .tha
lluiiJ Jaok 3-X ,._ Collar? k
..-.foillll Now avallliblo lor -1

Help wanted
·~JRUNE

JOBS•

$11,500 to $70,000 .per r-r. Clll
IM-441.01CJ2 Ellt.A,-1
·

11J1 Larry King Llvel
· 0 Monte Carlo (PI 2 01 2]

PlUmbing&amp;,
Heating

Employment Services
Plano tunlngL :10 ,..,., II•
ca1r 1:.1nw GIINi', IM-

RAQFOidi.,_,IIIIW.

MerchandJ•;e

AVON • All ai'NI, Cal Marilyn
Waavar 304-112-2141.

Houaehold
Goocll .

Main II., ~.Oh: ·

'

(2:00)
18Ha...... Naw

-...,..,,...,..,,....::;~- "

C.rlwr'o Piumblna

andHoatlna.

-anCIPina
Oalllpola, Ofllo . '

1:30

.

/' '

' ..

Wl!ata io d l - ....
lluiiJ Jaok 3-X ,._ Cak7 ,k
.......1111 _ _ .., -1
llchooll Caoh ....... olD Pra 1 tM.

(J)

.. GIIlrtllll_

1ee1.

. .• • (() . . . . .lultloe

Brlalla mull COUIIIICI with I

COIWiot acting u hla own

tl) Today .

attomay. Bllrlo. Q
· .
CANCEfl. (,June 21-.ltily aa) Today you you might haw.., opportunity to teach
(!)
N&amp;:
uauatala
·
might
h~ye
lnvolvemen1s
with
persons
someone
yciu
like
how
to
handle
a
teety
BERNICE
al • • c.ncld e-re:
will .come up with ratlier bright tltuatlon Similar to one you IUCCIIIIully
BEDEOSOL who
F-r 110t..v Allan Funt
ideas. H\)W8Ver, they will need yciur dell! wi1h In lite put
·
holts tltil speCial Whlc:h
mental. adroHn1188 10 develop them to , AQUAIII\II (olin. lll-ftll. 11) Y- bell
lUes 1 hlllrlouiiOok II the
their fullnt potential.
·
chanoea for lddiog 10 your ,.CUI'Cell j
.averaae cidzen'a reaellen to
LEO (Juty 23-Aug, 22) You're sllll under ~· ·today aren't Uk.ly to come lllrough your
lnfluenr;ef Where monay might come to 'customary c:hMnela, but you CCIUfd
Twllgl!l zyou mor~, readly 1han usual. Be. doller IICOre through a new one you just
ot,.,..~~ewe
minded ll!ld also look for ways to make opened.
· . •
Gllewl
goOd thiiiQS better.
·
· IIISCI!I (Fell. a IIINII •~])::::=:~
YIIIQO (Aug. 23-. .pt. aa) Don'1 IHi , :who . . been WilY c
10:30(7) ,_
Dem0C111CY
Ell,lmlniCounlrtn
whole .
afraid ta take on more 11881glunents with you could do .., 1110u1 , _ 111 thlt
Clet'I1CIClrldl dlpend 011
· than uau81 tOday. You are likely to per· . llrile and tum Into .., Illy upott Wllom
~-of a mii!Wy. Q
form bel1er If you feel ·cJrCIIm81ances . you can truly dei*Hi: You'll be brough1
(J) tlllltll And ..Wlllri.A
MIJ
:it,
1110
'
are
prOdcllng
you
a
bit
.
tOIIII*In.,
.
1
Will'·
•
young 111111 a n d LIBRA (lepl. 23-0at. 23] Several gooc. ARIII (.._,.I1•Apr111t) Take a IItie.
~ to •brelk the betrlera
· Many lnteretllng changes could be in things miGht be dewlloplng for you at .X1ra time today to organa your proOf lilenollhlt have kepi
.store for you In the year ahead. Mean- this time that you'll be eager lo dlecuu ·cadures In aa.,anc. before 111GkMng
them dlltUIIrom ll1eir
lil9ful·transformations may occur where with O'l*S- Howevw, It might be best laekl. When your toola ....... OUIInd
fatherl.
··both your aoclal IHe and career are• to keep what'• occurring 10 youi'Hif a ' ' your pi- made, yOu'H be vary
con-ned
.
eollnnJ~.,_
bit longer.
· ·
' producttw.
18CnMitiCI-.
GllliiN (li.J 21-J.,. :10] Play a lone ICORIIIO (DeL 24 Nov. 22] Conditions ' To\UIIUI (Apttl8 ..., . , Your grwt• '
h~ In your eommercllll endeavore to-1 In genelal are very hopeful for you I~
· IIIIBSetloday le Jflt8t to be yourClay; becaul8 partners mlgh11ack your · !hie cyole, but you are likely lobe luCid- al aalllty. 11111 attribute will be lfleodedication a mOIIvatlon. Their lndll- "' jn P'_tu_!IIIOIII thll hiVI lmll'MIM · livelY ullllzed . In Y!JUt 1C1C11t1
. fri11 attitude !XlUkl offl8l yout "''lhu· potentll!l. Bla II beller.
·
lnvolwmen18. Hwtn.m- yoUr popllum. Trying 1o p111ch up a broken ro- · &amp;o\QIT'I'AIIIIII (...,. 23 Dec. 21) 'l'ou ularlty and win ldlnll'lrl. ·
"'
It Hal
fl
.
•ll1lllclf!' The Altro-Oraph Mll1chrnaker could be quh MICCIIIful today, eepe. ·
. ..

~

Fmancial

I

..
~....

-----·

.

• &lt;Jl e Oulnlum Laap
Sam leltpe Into the llftt of a
~W"' aacretary In

can help you to' u.nderstand wha1 to do . cjally " you 'ire at&gt;le to collee1lveiY link
to make the relallonship work: Mall $2 togel"-' -~~ related objectives.

:~n~~~~~:~or1.;4~8~o.ot42a.c~eve- . ~=~&lt;=.~-

will coMidw y-., .oatl atlar
&amp;p.m. IW446-111H.

ellll&lt;ad toII!leave
Ollt John John 11 .
t11e group. (Rl

turns out10 be a Jegandary
bluM linger. Q
10:00 (J) 7GO Cl!lll With ,... .

..

"He Wtlttllto borrow the truck. The giraffe
at the zoo hjl' a toothacha."
. .• .

' "

11;0Diii:....

.

;

\

,

_

•

.I
•

I I I . 1·. I
··-·

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

BRIDGE
..

. NORTH

i-lO·M

+A7652
• J 63

Seeing it
all coming

.• 8

.

+A 7 6 2

•

By James Jacoby

WEST
+K I043

.JB

.Q6•54 ·

.IOH
.KJI073
+10 54

EAST

•as

North and South had bid their .+ KJ9
thands to the hilt, South was ,on the
SOUTH 1rtl&amp;Dt track to making six hearts. He
+Q9
,won the opening diamond lead, ruffed
.AKQ92
,a diamond and thet~ played a low
.• A92
spade from dummy. When East played
+Q 8 3 •
'tbe eigbt-spot, South reasoned . that ·
Vulnerable: N~rth-South
East did not hold tbe king. So declarer
Dealer: North
put in the nine, West winning the 10.
U West now tamely r.eturos a
Wes1
Eall
trump, declarer will win in his hand Soolll
Pass
and lead the qu~n of spades. It does
Pass
Pass
West no good to ~over (all the spades 2 NT
Pass
Pw
in dummy will then become gond), and . 3 N:r
PaJs .
Pass
declarer
let the queen ride. A dia-Pass
~II pus
mond ruff will now be followed l:&gt;y the
Opening lead: t 4
ruff of a low spade. Declarer can tl!en
. pick up trumps, get to dummy with the
·ace of clubs, and play the ace of '-------------J
spades and the good seven of spades,
discarding losing clubs.
this coming, so be ted the king of clubs
u West plays another diamond after alter winning his spade 10, sacrificing
wioniD&amp; the 10 ol spades, declarer can a trick. But after taking the ·are of
, draw trumps by overtaking dum- clubs, declarer could not work out a
my's jack of bearts, and then pass the . way 1o make a later trick with the ace
queen of spades as before. (Remem- of spades and still ruff his other diaber, If W!!St covers, dummy's· 7-6-5 of mond loSer, and the enterprising slam
spades will all be good.) After the blid to fail.
·
. queen of spades holds, declarer plays
J•,.., JI&lt;OIIy's OO«s 'Jar:oby"" llridp' '""
ciut all Ilia trurnp1 .. Eventually West "Jaco#Jyflft Cud Gamet"' (trr;ttea '"'*lUI fat/Mr,
must uncu.n:t either tbe spade king or tile MU QnraJd Jacoby) i re DOW ~~ ••
- - BoUJ •repub/J.rlletlbyPiuff»tbe club k!Di. and the slam makes.
. @1111.MEWIPAPD&amp;IZUI*AIIIL
Brian Glubok, who sat West, saw all

,.
s•

will

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
"
40Gsrman
ACROSS
rlv~;~r
1 Football's
41 Watched
Sayers
5TyP&amp;
of tax
DOWN
9 "Prince .
1 Chevalier
•
film
10 Stay
2 Plato:s
clear of
· · assembly
12 Ausplclous
place
13 Yeast"
~ . 3 Antlcip!lte
15 Exasperate 4 Shrew- 14 Have
27 BehaviOr
18 Disfeature
mouse
' to have
29 Arthur's
17 Night
5 N.Y.C.
18 Arizona
TV r~
!)afore
theater
city
30 Make
· 181nlluence
6 Open
19 Ethane, e.g. amends
20 F:Qr sflamel 7 Mauna - 22 Outdo
· 34 Dry · . ,
21 English
8 See
. 24 Fimctlon 36 Red-eyed
. river
3 Qown 25 - to pick
carp
22 Audacious 11 Lucifer
28 Peerless 37 Pay dirt
23 Curry
lngredler\t
24 Through
25Weep
27 Nautical

pole
28 Palm leal
21 Von Flotow ·

opera

· Tha
i~ eCil.,_,_,,...
dlahwalhtr at LaSclllla

114118 - ·

AS'l'RO-GRAPH
labphtlf Wlnled: Dlya., Mon•
Frl, cia. to Holzer, rrtt holMI,

.Of T1te

Cllll Arvid and Dennie take
their pr0jec110 the ~ca
Center al:~:tereo. Q
llDOn
.
1:00 (J) INIIy Grlltlm Speclll
From SyracuM
e&lt;Jl ·8 Night Court Harry
Mac dlelde 10 mar1&lt;e1
taste treate called Mac
Snackl (R) I;!

f!elow.

. . SCIMHETS ANSWERS
S"'-2')
Nodule _:: Dough - ·Jabot- Oeadly- BELONG
There wer11 no partci~ spaces out$ide the.court~se so my son parked 1n the lot of a nearby funeral
home. •Just s~ here and cry," he directed, •and people
will thiok you BELONG here.·

Mrt. King

NeWIHOur
u~eWIIHiqt
ei!D
eoun Q .

I

~~~~~~~£ UTTERS

.. ·-·

- -·- ~.,

Griltlth

7:0ollt

(J)

•

.

•

~

r 1• r 1•

1~ . . _

PRINT N\MERED lfTTfRS IN
' . THESE SQUARES
. ·

·

laf,L~=:.g

•

fillir~g

·

•li'i:AICNMQ
(!)

.

o

OWOIItlt....r
OHI!s 1
ID CMrlea Ill~

eCil e

l

~' I I I I .
...;·'· To.,·_,oro,R:-TE-~j
~ I&gt;1 ·1' 1 ..

(!) RllilftS"'Ill•el~llllbo-w «;1
• .IIJ) AndY Olllll1lt .

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r-=-1~I1~

WYLOLE

h-~.....
,

.· ...;,·~"..;I..;,.;R-TM;...T:..-·-~I ·

.

lnllde Tlte PGA Toilr
(%) DIF all High Lucy finally
. . . . to lhoollhe Zlta
video; ha.. campaign
(I)

'r'E5,

.

The Daily Sentinel-P!lge-13

Television
, Viewinl

·G - and Cr!oft Sail, hllf mill
out Sand HIM Rood, F~ and Sal,

'

'

Ohio

1990

31 Also not
32 Carpenter,
e.g.
33Greek
letter
35 Play lor
1Across
37 Fragrance -

38 Musical
composition
39Queen
. In India

DAILY CRYPI:OQUO'I Eti- Here'1 luJw lo worlllt:

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One Jetter stands for another. In thi!l sample Ais used •.
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Siqle letters,
aiJ(lllroriheS, the length and formation of the word&lt;l are all
blnlt. Each day the code !etten are dlff~t. .
CRYPTOQtJOTE

· 5-31
F

I

10

WIDDAU

OUODUW
FG

TZZJ

-HUMLDWZZV .

Z E

LKU

MLIGJFG:r.

NUTAUW

i . YMt81diiJ'• Cr,ptoqaote1 THE PEOPLE ARE THE
ONLY SURE RELIANCE FOR THE PRESERVATION
'oF OuR UB~.- THOMAS JEFFERSQ,N
~ 1110 tw Ktng F - Syudlclle, Inc.

_

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedn-.ctay, May 30, 199Q
'

.

Ohio Lottery

Health

Daily NtJmher

focus

473

•
magazme

A

V.OBTALS

Pick-4
4675
~uper Lotto

24-28-29-34-40-41
Kicker 196413

. Insert

•

Western Union lets you send
money to any of our ·
U. S. an~ Puerto Rico locations.

WI
•

Low tonight In mid 50s •
Friday. cloudy .
In mid

lit I
Vol.40, No.268
Copyrighted 1990

2 Sectiont. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. May 31, 1990

25 Cents

A Multimedia lne. Newipaper

Commissioners:.table
•
bids, pending review
FRYER LEG
QUARTERS

CRISPY

· CRISPY SERVE
.ACON

BACON

~:-':=::-1

-

SERV~

49(LB.

S LB. OR MORE

$199

101 EVANS

Smoked Sausage ••~. .

I

SUPERIORS

CHUCK COMBO PACK
•STEAKS

•ROAST

•GROUND
CHUCK

l

$

. GORBACHEV ARRlVES FOR SUMMIT
Secretary of S&amp;ate James Baker, right. shakes
haildll wllh Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbac(lev

HOT DOGS

:· .
149

Cel~ste

69tz.PIG.

LB.

GROUND BEEF .............t~~;.!!!.~!L .... $13 9 LB.
,

I·

BULK SAUSAGE .................t~.!'!~;...~..

OSCAR MAYER HOT
,.

.

Y PACK

~~~~K

,

BULK SLICED BACON ....U~;.~~.~~!...... $129 LB.

HALF PORK LOIN ..............~!;.............. $1

I.

I

S4 99

DOGS!;~;~m9;...... $169

$

shrUgs· off results ·of
polls, says he is doing' well
,,

) ·49 11

S6
99
LINK SAUSAGE ...........~~.!!;.~!~~..
BREAKFAST COMBO ••• $969 WHOlE
S.TICII
.
·
(
3 LB. BACON, 3 LB. SAUSAGE, 23/4 LB. POTATOES REDSKIN BOLOGNA ................'!·.. 89
BALLARD'S

CALIFORNIA
RED RIPE

RUSSETT

POTATOES

99(

15 LB. BAG

.

1

'

SNOWWHITE

CAULIFLOWER

STRAWBERRIES

$388

&gt;

88~

LB.

HEAD

\

CAUFORNIA ICEBERG

CAUFORNIA 15 CT.

ALOUPES

·APPLES . PEACHES

99(..,. $499·~ 59(

Ia

All PURPOSE

HEAD

49&lt;

. CQLlJMBUS, Ohio IUPI) ~nc-lt'lle'!J · flankerll!giOJ:J~e
/.{QIIadrennial· shot ' ·of· 'a'ilrena·
:line" he ·normally gets in . an
;ll~t)qf\ . year,, ,Gov. Richard
Celeste shrugged off Wednesday
the results of surveys showing he
h~ a low popularity rating.
AI a news conference called to
discus,s his recent visit to the Far
East, Celeste appeared Irritated
and cut off questions about a pair
of polls showing him with appro·
val ratings of just 37 and 42
percent, respectively.
He said he decides himself if
he's doing a good job and right
now, he's satisfied. .
At the same tlme ,'the governor
had a pointed warning for the
Democrat. who hopes to succeed
him: "I think Tony Celebrezze' s
campalgnn is at a point right now
where It's show lime. Either you
got 'It or you don't. "
Celeste was asked by reporters
about recent polls In the Colum·
bus Dispatch and the Akron
. Beacon Journal showing poor
approval ratings.
''I don't worry about thai ," he
replied. "I'm not running any

more."

YELLOW

The reporters persisted.
''You can show mean the polls
you,want," he said. "I'm like the
president of the United States. I
don't worry about them."
He, said that historically , he
has spent $5 million to $6 million
in an election year to "tell a
positive story." This year. he is
not doing that because hj! Is
ineligible for another term.
The reporters continued.

OTATOE

LETTUCE

upon his arrival at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.,
Wednesday lor the Bush-Gorbachev summit. See
story on page 7 today. (UPI) .

$699

HEAD

· ','YIIu.do.,w)la,tyou've got to dQ
in this ~uslness." reto ~te~ ·~.tpe·
governor, saying people "could .
care less" about his personal
popularity. "What people are .
Interested In Is what affects the
health and welfare of the state of
·Ohio," he said.
"I'm proud of what I have been
doing for Ohio," he said. "I'm
pleased .. as punch with being
governor. I ·ha\•e a little callbra·
tor inside me, right, that works
pretty well. It says, 'Celeste,
you're doing O.K. People really
respond positively to you.' That
calibrator is pretty encouraging.
That 's the only thing I listen, to."

(::eleste said Anthon)! Cele·
l!rez:te, the I\119I.JieY. ieneral and
Deinoeratlc nominff for gover·
nor, shOuld not worry about polis
shoWing him 12 to 14 percentage
po,ints behind Republican rival
George Voinovlch.
"He's got to worry about
selling people that Tony Cele·
brezze · will be the strongest
governor for Ohio In the 1990s, "
said Celeste. "The candidate
understands that. His campaign
understands that. They have five
months in which to take the
message to the people of Ohio. I
think he's enthusiastic about thai
challenge."

J

Rebuttal begins today
in Demjanjuk appeal
JERUSALEM tUP!) - The
prosecution began Its rebuttal of
convicted war criminal John
Demjanjuk's appeal Thursday,
Insisting less physical evidence
Is required to convict Nazi war
criminals than other defendants.
In opening statements filled
with emotional references to the
Holoca\ISI, prosecutor Michael
Shaked also asked the five-judge
Supreme Court hearing the ap·
peal to "suspend logic in a case
that defies logic ."
"The events of the Holocaust
are beyond human comprehen·
slon." he said in the 11th dav of
the appeal. "And seeking logic in
madness Is an Impossible task.

The court must attempt to see
tpl ngs from that perspective where there is no logic."
In April 1988, a District Court
convicted Demjanjuk for war
crimes and sente nced him to
death, largely on the strength of
Trebllnka death camp survivors
who identified th e retired U.S.
auto worker as the brutal guard
''Ivan the Terrible."
Shaked sa id Israel's 1950 Nazi
and Nazi Collaborators law on
which the Demjanjuk verdict
rests was broad enough to
convict war criminals with less
physical evidence and witness
tes tlmony than needed in ordi·
Continued on page 6

Democrats narrow 1992 convention
.site· to New ·York and .New Orleans
•

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STORE BAKED DELl HAM .....\!.... $249

CHOPPED HAM .................!P........

NORTHWESTERN

3 DOZ. CARTON

(

99
IROUGHTON ASSORTED FLAVORS
(
FRUIT DRINK..............~.}..q~H!!~..... 89
TWIN POPS POPSICLES ..l,tf!••!9.t.

$1 59

GRADE' ASMALL EGGS .............. $149
HART 15 OZ. CANS

.

MIXED VEGETABLES ......~......

'

' ,

.

3I 89(

a Pc.auc•n DARK MEAT .
-·
,IROASTED CHICKEN .................. 539
·
.
~

14.1h OZ. CANS

HART TOMATOES ....................
HAlT 15 OZ. CAN CUT BEETS or

WHOLE or SLICED

3 I$')

3 8

POTATOES..... /

WASHINGTQN tUPI) - A
national Democratic committee
decided Wednesday that either
New York or New Orleans should
hold the party's 1992 convention.
eliminating Cleveland and Hous·
ton from consideration.
The site selection panel made
the recommendation to Ron
Brown, chairman of the party,
who aides said would visit the
cities In the coming weeks before
making a final determination In
June.
"On balance, the committee
strongly feels that two of Amerl·
ca's · most exciting and
convention-experienced cities New Orleans and New York made exceptlonal~y strong pres·
entations and (will) be able to
meet alloftherequtrementsfora
successful 1992 Democratl~ ~a ·
Ilona! Convention." said a resolu·
lion adopted by the committee.
:,·

But the panel also had praise four Democratic ' conventions.
for lh~ lo!l)ng cities, and said but no Republican gatherings.
Cleveland, because of Its "spirit The most recent two were in 1976
and dynamic growth," would be and 1980 at Madison Square
a "serious ccmtender " for the Garden. ·
1996 convention.
New Orleans has held one
A party aide said a reason both national party convention - at
New York and New Orleans were the Superdome in 1988.
chosen was because of their
In New York City, Mayor
facilities, including space for the David Dinkins. a family friend of
actual gathering and the large Brown, promised the city would
number of hotel rooms available redouble Its efforts to host the
for .the thousands oi delegates, convention "because no one can
other offlcll!ls ,and joum11llsts do it better than New York City."
who will attend.
'
·" May I add that It is not true
Cleveland Mayor Michael that I have started the rumor that
White said he was told the city's the (Super)dome leaks , that
only drawback was hotel rooms. esj&gt;ecially In July. they have
"They 1\ave indicated their hurricanes and tornadoes and an
only concern was the absolute ~arthquake expected 'in '92," he
number of hotel rooms and the quipped.
·
proximity of hotel rooms- to the
Brown has long said that he
'(Intl!rnallonal Exposition) Cen· , wants the party to select a
ter, " he said.
convention site early and then
New York has been the site of
Continued on page 6

-- -...

'

••-:1

···- -··

By JULIE E. DILLON
ment had no type of funding to
Sentinel News Staff
repair the slip.
Bids by the Shelly Company for
Warner suggested that the
the resurfacing of various county road might possibly be repaired
· roads were tabled, pending re- with concrete pilasters such as
view by Meigs County Engineer the ones in place on Union
Phil Roberts and County High· Avenue. Warner went on to say
way Director Ted Warner at
that he felt regular steel pUing
Wednesday's regular meeting of would not adequately repair the
the Mei11s County Board of sljp due to the height of the road
Commissioners.
· on the hilL
The six State Issue II approved
The commissioners ap"proved
projects inclUde ;Locust Grove· a. request from Salisbury Town·
Road (County Road 28); School ship Trustees to turn over the
Lot Road !County Road 1); State portion of County Road 22 from
Farm Road fCounty Road 10) to Fisher's Big Wheel to the Rock
t·he Athens County line; Union Springs Cemetery. That portion
Avenue from Route 7 to Pomeroy of the road, foOr tenths of a mile.
corporation limits; Cotterill which now. belongs to the county
Road !County Road 17) Route 143 will be relinquished to the townto County Road 10; Children's ship for upkeep a nd
Hill Road tCounty Road 761 from
maintenance.
County Road 22 to the Pomeroy
A bid from McClean Company;
corporation limits. '
Columbus, in the amount of
The recent slip of Welsh Town
$8!,641 wa g.. accepted by the
Hill Road was discussed ·with
board for a mixing traile r for the
Roberts (ocheck Into the posslbll· county highway departme nt.
lty of obtaining emergency as·
Two bids for the refurbishment
sistance . from State Issue II of an emergency medica l sen1ce
funds. Commissioner Rich Jones
unit were tabled pending review
s tated that he had checked with
by the Board of Trustees for the
the Ohpo Department of Nat ural
Emergency Medical Service.
Resources but ·that that depart· The bids were made by Southern

Ambulance Builders. Inc .. La .
Grange, Ga .. represented by Jim:
Deardorff. and from Horton·
Emergency Vehicles, Columbus,
represented by C-arl Stewart.
A request from Jay Mar Coal .
Company to apply brine to its
haul roads in Salisbury Township.
was read and a hearing on thematter was set for Wednesday at:
I p.m.
A perm it request was ·ap· '
proved from J.D . Drilling to
apply brine to the compa ny's ·
property since no one atte nded
the hearing held during meeting
to conies t the brine a pplication.
The board noted that the -permit
request by the company will be:
forwarded to the stale.
David Crow. a representative
with AT&amp;T who works through a
company· •called Connect Amer·
ica , made a presentation to the.
board· regarding a savings plan:
on long distance t!'lephone ser·
vice. Jones staled tha t the board.
is presently under contraCt witli
another company, bu I It \\'OUld
entertain bids !rom Connect
America when the .present con·
tract was up durlng the first:
quarter of 1991.

Four .SEO counties declared
dis~.{er area; . gi·rl's ·body is
recovered from ·Paint Creek ,
By United Pre.s s International
Gov. Richard Celeste declared
a state of emergency · in four
southeast Ohio counties Wednesday and was preparing to ask
Washington for a federal disaster
declaration because of extensive
flooding.
Late Wednesday afternoon,
meanwhile, authorltltes In Ross
County recovered Ihe body of one
of two teenage girls believed to
have drowned in the raging Paint
Creek near Chillicothe Tuesday
afternoon.
,
Celeste's declaration covered
Perry, Hocking, Athens and
Lawrence counties, where flood·
irig has sent more 1han 1.000
people from their homes.
Tpe Ohio Emergency Management Agency was doing a dam· .
age assessment, which should be

•

There was no Immediate wor&lt;l
finished by the end of the week,
for the purpose of applying for on which of the bodies was found
federal assistance. The agency Wednesday afternoon .
In Hocking County. where high
had no immediate financial est!·
water rushed through Rockmatee on the damage.
Celeste, who viewed the area brl~ge and Murray City, the
Tuesday from the air, offered flooding was the worst In more
state assistance, including per· than two decades.
"TM water was the highest
sonnet and equipment from the
Ohio National Guard . None of the
since 1968, " said Hocking County
Commissioner Bob Daube n·
counties immediately asked for
meier. "The flash flooding In
guard assistance.
Murray City, sent six and seven
Authorities said Felicia Smith,
feet of water through the hOu,ses .
16, and ·Karen McFadden, 15,
were trying to push their mopeds
• 'Ther e's a tremendous
through the water near Chilli· amount of damage in Murray
co the Tuesday afternoon but City, but people are working
were swept away by the raging ' their way back In to their
waters of Paint Creek.
homes ."
A farmer heard the girls cry
He said th e damage assess·
out and tried to save them, but men t had not been completed,
pollee said he was unable to "but it's very devastating.1 hope
reach them.
Continued on page 6

New
office opened in Middleport to
.
assist low, medium income families
.

A new office to assist low and
medium income families in sec·
uring low Interest Farmers
Home Adminstratlon loans has
been opened at Middleport Vii·
!age Hall.
Jean Trussell has been hired
by Middleport Village Council as
the housing specialist, and her
goal is to stimulate the use of
FmHA loan DrOI!r!lmS .
\.
Opening 9f the office in MladJe.
port was made possible by a
$43,868 Appalachia Regional
Commission Housing Opportuni·
ties Grant made to Middleport In
March.·
Mrs. Trussell explained that
one of the major community ·
Issues affecting the village of
Middleport IJS well as the other
areas of Meigs County is secor·
lng new housing financing.
Plans are for the housing
specialist to assist with loan
application preparation and
packaaina. anti to facilitate ap·
proved ·loans and serve as a
• liason between low and moderate
income resldenla and FmHA
officials. This means. she ex·
plalned, that ellllble residents
county-wide will ltave the oppor·
tunty to obtain FmHA loans to
purchase or rehlllllltate housing
and Improve their quality of life.
Residents who wish to purchase or rehabiUtate housing are
Invited to contract Mrs. Trussell
at her office, 237 Race St.,
Middleport, Phone 992-6782.

...--

BOUIIING SP~IALJST- !lfra. .Jeaa ~llllu b - bind u
a llolllfa&amp; speclallat aad hu aa ollkle In Middleport Vlllaae BalL

'

llf!r Job Is to usllt low and modeme Income f1111Diesln tleCUrlnl
Farmers Home Admlnllltratlo• loans.
•,
~-

_..

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