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,.
Pega '2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Low temperatures recorded in Midwes.t ·

Papent filed

Mlzway,Jnc. of Pomeroy. Incor..
porporators are George H. Ingles
and Blllv J. Hatfield with Ingles
of 32984 Sid"e Hlll Roar! of Ru Uand
as the incorporator.

Secretarv of State Sherrod
Brqwn has' repor ted that artlcle•
By Ualted Press International
levels .In the 30s and low 40s theast South Oakota: ileavy rain except "for, south Georgia and · of Incorporation have been flled
· Icy winds blowing over the overnight in Cleveland, Dayton fell from central South Dakota south Flor\da which had dimln· with his office In Columbus by
·Ohio Valley· early 'Fuesday and Columbus, Ohio, and · in through lowa, Into Minnesota
lshlng scattered thundershow·
toppled cold-temperature re- Albany, N.Y., and Pittsburgh.
and Nebraska. ·
ers. JacksPnvllle, Fla. was 74
cords In three states, while
The most unsettl~ conditlons
Ahead of the storm, skies were early Tuesday; Charleston, S.C.
thunderstorms blasted the upper Tuesday were reported In the clear to partly cloudy In IlUnols
was 75. Atlanta was 68.
Midwest with driving rains and upper Mldw;est, where an intense and Wisconsin, with tempera·
Most of the Southern Plains
JIIISty winds, and clear skies band of thunderstorms brought lures In the upper 40s and low 50s. · states had fair weather over·
covered the South.
h!"'VY rain and high winds from
night, with some middle and high
Pennsylvanians awoke to frost
The Nal!onal Weather Service South Dakota Into southwestern early Tuesday as a cold front
clouds drifting over northern
said temperatures In Akron, Iowa, the weather service said.
Colorado, south Texas and north·
chUied much of the mid-Atlantic
Ohio, slipped to a record-co k! 36
ern Oklahoma ..
Wind gusts to 59 mph were · region. Temperatures ranged
degrees overnight, breaking the reported at Sioux City, Iowa, and from . the upper . 30s In the
Temperatures were hot Mon·
11ld mark of 38 set in 19:45. The wind damage was reported in . mountains of West VIrginia to the day In Southern Cal!fomia, and
mercury also dropped to record southern Unto~ County In 'sou· . 50s in southern Maryland.
nearly cloudless skies . covered
.
A cold front accompanied ·by
the northern and central portions
NADO~AL WEATHER FORECAST TO 1 AM EDTI-HO.
scattered showers and thunder· ·of the state. Some cloudiness was
. storms brought unseasonably expeoftid al,ong the coast near the
CLASSES FOR AGES
chilly weather to New England. Oregon border.
.
Temperatures early Tuesday
A weather disturbance
were in the 40s as sunshine and
reached northwest Oregon late
cool weather pushed back Into Monday and rain continued Tuesthe region.
·
day as cooler air pushed Into
The South was generally clear,
Washington state.

Pistons ,.
·take lead
in play~ffs

•

BIBLE SCHOOL

9hio Lottery
Didly Number
650
Piek-4

8625

Page 5

AT THE

RACINE
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
JUNE

11·15~6

2 THRU 18
1890

:. . - - - - -...... Weather-----Sou&amp;h Central Oblo
· Tonight, part~v cloudy. Low
near 55. Winds south 5 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain Is 20 percent. ·
Wednesday, showers or thun·
derstorms likely. High In the
)ower 80s. Chance of rain 60
percent.

Exteqded forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday, chance of
showers or thunderstorms Frl·
day and Satu,rday. Highs mid 70s
to mid !Kls Thursday and Friday
and In the 80s Saturday. Lows
mid 50s to mid 60s.
·

Pom1troy-Middleport, Ohio,

~·

- -

A weekly drawing ,course will
be offered beginning Wednesday
and cont.inuing June 27 by the ·
Middleport Arts Councll. The
instructor will be P.J. Harris.
The class. is intended for the
adult novice. ages 13 and up. The
class will focus on the fundamentals of drawing and an exhibition
of the students' work will be held
aththe end of the session.
Harris is a former graphic
design major at Ohio University
and is current~v majoring In
communications and publr relat!ons with a minor .tn art at the
University of Rio Grande. ·
The cost of the "Class is $25 and
materials will be provided for the
llrst class only.
To regl3ter contact Mary Wise
at 992·2675, Susan Baker at
992·7733, or P .J. Harris at
992-2451.

Roberf Lee·Barber, 59, of 53090
State Route 681, Reedsville, died
Sunday at Grant Medical Center,
Columbus.
Born in Reedsville Jan . 25,
1931, he was the son of the late
Leonard amt Blanche Pullins
Barber. He Is a veteran of the
Korean War, U. S. Army, and
worked as a millwright for
Ellrem Medal Co. at Marietta for
28 years.
He was a meml)er of the Oll,
Chemical and Atoinlc Workers of
Marietta, and the Labors International Union. Local 1085, Par·
kersburg, W. Va., and attended
the Freedom Gospel Mission
Church at Portland.
Mr. Barber is survived by his
wife, Carole Connolly Barber;
three sons, Robert Dale Barber
of Athens; Steven Gale Barber of
Reedsville, and Kevin Lee
Barber, at home; five grand·
children, a step-mother. Paullne
Barber, Reedsvllle; three broth·
.ers, Leonard Barber, Jr. and
Howard Barber, Reedsville, and
Danny · Barber of San · Mateo,
F) a .. and one sister, Ruby Drake. .
'of Long Bottom.
Besides his parents he was
preceded In deal h by a brother.
Carl.
·
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
White-Blower Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Robert
Smith officiating. Burial wlll be
in Sand Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fUneral home
anytime Wednesday . The famlly
will receive friends at the funeral
horne 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Donafd W. Usle
· Funeral services for Donald W.
Lisle who died May 26 ·at his
Syracuse home were held at the
Ewing Funeral home with burial
In the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Mr. Lisle retired from Conrail
In 1980. He was a veteran of
World War II having served with
the 729th Rallway Operating
. Btn., and was a membzr of the
Syracuse Asbury United Methodist Church. the Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen. ' the United
Transportation Union, . and the
DAV.
He was bOrn at SpDler (Old
Town) on June 19, 1919 to the late
Ked and Norma Mlller tlsle, and
was a graduate of Pomeroy High
SchOOl.
Hbaorary pallbearers were
railroading friends, Charles Es·
kew, Paul"Scott, Denver Nelson,
Wtuiam Morris, James Cl!fford,
Sr. and Charles Searles. Pal·
!bearers were John Todd, and
Scott Lisle, Keith and Jason
Lisle, Roy Jenkins. Donald
Jfarden and Lawrence (Butch)
Lisle.
Bealcles the. survivors listed in
bll obituary in The Sunday
Tlmei·Seatlnel on May.27, he has
.even ll'andchlldren, Kimberly
oawa aac1 Mary Rochelle Jenldnl, and five 8fandsons, Jason
Nick, Travis, Todd and . Scott
~le.

slty and Ohio State University.
He was a member of Faith
Rollir\ o. Dill, 80, Kerr ·Street, United Methodist Church. Potl!!r
Pomeroy, died sunday at Vete· Lodge No. 540 F &amp; AM, Canal
rans Memorial Hospital follow . Winchester Lions Club,· Amerl·
lng an extended Illness.
can Legion Post 220 and VFW
Born Nov. 17,1909lnPomeroy; Post 10523 ·
·
he-was thesonofthelateEdward ' .Mr. Will was a past member
Dlll and Anna Olmber Dill. He and president of Canal Winches·
was a truck driver and a World ter Village Council and a Navy
war II Veteran .
Veteran. He was a former Canal
Mr. Dlll is survived by a Winchester Post Master.
brother Allen Dill p
· .·
He Is survived by his wife of 60
•
• omeroy'
years Nola Kn lght Will a
and several nieces and nephews. ·
•
·
tn addition 10 his parents he daughter, Vicki ~o tJohn) Nl·
was preceded in death by his cholson, Marlett~, a grandson,
wife Harrietta Ables Dill! · 1969
Jeffrey Nicholson, two brothers.
a b;other Homer DlJJ . n d ' Mont~;omery and Wi.lliam Will;
sister, Gla'dys Smith. ' an a three sisters. Mary Kilpatrick,
be held Wed . Florence Ferrell, . and Betty
. Services
day ·at 1 p.m. at Ewing Fun=~=l Loucks; and several nieces and
.
Horne with Rev . Kennv Baker nephews.
and Rev. WIIUam Wllll~ms off!·
Services will be held Thursday .
elating. Burial will be In Gilmore at 11 a .m. at the Dwayne R.
Cemetery.
Spence Funeral Home in Canal
Friends may call at the funeral Wlnch~ter with Rev. John Ben·
-home on Tuesday from 2.4 p.m. son officiating.
and 7-9 p.m. and on Wednesday
Burial wUI be In Chester
until the time of the fun" 1
Cemetery on Friday at 11: 30!1.m.
Friends may call at the funeral
.,..ra ·
home on Wednesday from 2-4 and
Natielie Si@ler
7-9 p.m.
Contrlblitions may be made to
Natielie Sigler, 63. Of Beech · Potter Legge·· or Faith . United
Grove, Road, l_'tu tland, died ruesday at Veterans Memorial Hospl· MethodisT Chu r ch in his
tal following an extended lliness. memory.
Masonic services will be held
1i. homemaker, she was born on
at 8:45 p.m. at the
Wednesday
Sept. 23, 1926 at Pompton Lake,
funeral
home.'Iuesday
copy
N. J. to the late Harry Van
Inwagen and Mae Jacobs Van
Inwagen.
She is survived by two daugh·
ters, Linda Sommers of Ru tlarid
and Laura Mae Sigler, Pomeroy;
four daughters and sons-in-law, Dally stock prices
Donna and Don Laudermllt. (As of 10:30 a.m. )
Mary a~d Dennis McKenney, . Bryce and Mark Smltb
Rutland, Judy and James Sea· of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl ,
.
rJes, Colurnbu$, and Cathy and
Am
Electric
Power
...
.. ........ 301,1
Larry Van Cooney, Rutland; and
AT&amp;T
................................
.43Y,
three sons, Edward E . Sigler,
Ashland
Oil
...
..
..................
36'!.
Salem Center, Larry Leroy
Bob
Evans
...........................
13
Sigler, Rutland; and Michael
Charming
Shoppes
..
.........
...
lO'A,
Sigler, Rutland, and four grand·
children. Also surviving are City Holding Co ... ....... ........ 141;.
three brothers and sisters-in· Federal Mogul... .... .. ........... 22%
law, Ernest and Freda Van Goodyear T&amp;R ........... .... ....36'!.
Inwagen, Middleport; Therom Heck 's ........ ... .... .................. 3%
and Bessie Van Inwagen, Colum- Key Centurion .......... ... ........ 14
bus; and Sam and Mill!e Van Lands' End .. ....... .. ..............16%
Inwagen, Keen, N. H.; and two Limited Inc ......... .. .... .. .... ....50'A
sisters, Mrs. Paul 1Sue) Marr, Multimedia Inc .... ..... ...... ....81\7
Rax Restaurants .... :............. 2%
Po~eroy, and Mrs. Carroll (Bar·
bara) Smith, Middleport, along Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ...... ...... 20
with several nieces and nephews. Shoney's Inc ................... .... 14\7
Besides her parents she was Star Bank ........... .. ... ... .... .... 2017
preceded In death by her bus· Wendy 's Inti ....................... . 5%
band, Lloyd Sigler In 1971, one Worthington Ind ...... ............. 24
sister and four brothers. She was
a member of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church.
Funeral servcies will be held To meet Thursday
Thursday at 1 p.m at the Ewing
The Meigs County Public Em·
Funeral Home. The· Rev . Paul
ployee
Ret!rees, Inc. will meet
Taylor will officiate and burial
Thursday
at 1 p.m. at the Senior
will be in Mlles Cemetery .
Citizens
Building.
Guest speaker .
Friends may call at the funeral
wlll
be
Frank
Porier,
Pometoy·
home from 2: 30 to~: 30 p.m and 7
attorney,
who
will
talk
on wills
to 9 Wednesday at the funeral
and
liow
they
affect
retirees
and
· , ··
home.
their families . All government
retirees are Invited to attend.
Victor Will

State funding for a multicounty conalructlng a 125 bed regional provide funding for 20 JaUs.
.
corrections center in Southeast· . jail facility as the moat effective
At a meeting of COIIIItyofflc'-ls
ern Ohio ·was announced ·lhls way of relieving jail problems In in McArthur in early April,
morning at a meeting in Vinton
the area .
.
Candace Peters of the GoYer·
County.
The fu"dlng was provided nor's Office of Criminal Justice
A tptal Qf "',150,000 for the jail thrllugb fbe Correctional Reno- told officials tbat the pr~
V(hlch will serve Meigs, Hocking,
vatlon and Coqstructlon Pro- multicounty jail Is expected to
gram, enacted by the Ohio cost abOut $4 mUIIon. Peters said
Jackson and VInton Couiltles has
been awarded"In state funds from
General Assembly in 1982 and that the construction coat Is
the Governor's Office of Crimi· administered by the Governor's about $60,000 per bed or jail cell.
nal Justice Services.
Office of Criminal Justice She said that slmUsr projects
Announcement of the funding
Services.
elsewhere have used sales ttllles
came from State Senator Jan
In March of this year the or bonds to provide the local
Michael Long, t D-Circlevllle)
Leg!Jiature authorized an addl· share of the cost.
· ·
who stated that the ."funds
lional $44 miiUon for the program
Operating costs were dis·
represent a commitment on the
through tbe Capital Approprla· cuued at that time and It was
part of the state of Ohio to assist
tiona Bill. This makes a total of proposed by one of the officials.
our local communities in their
$114 mUI!on which has been ~ that legislators add on to court
efforts to fight crime."
authorized for the program over cost fees earmarked for operaMeigs County Sheriff James
eight years, accordlngto Senator lion of tbe proposed multicounty
Soulsby was among county offl·
Long.
.
jail.
•
clals in Vinton County this
The money Is· to be used to
· Both Sen. Long-arid Rep. Mary
morning for the meeting.
.
assist lOCal jails lit complying Abel t D-Atbens) attended the
Officials from thefourcountles
with the state's minimum Jail meeting ,In Vinton CouniY thiS
are In the planning stag115 of
standards. The new I'I)Oney Will
(Continued on Pa&amp;e 6)
' .

Slate will hear arguments to·.
reinstate W amer's convicti~n

...,.

.ttl. .

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPI) The 'o hio Supreme Court Will
hear oral arguments Wednesday
on the staie m OhiO's •aj)peal. to
reinstate tbe convictions of
former Home State Savings
Bank owner Marvin Warner on
charges ot upauthorlzed securl·
.lies dealing · which led to the
thrift's collapse In 1985.
The high court also will hear
the state's appeal in ·the match·
ing cue againat fonner Home
State pmitlent David Schiebel.
Oral arguments are expected to
begin about 11 a.m. Each side Is
alk&gt;wed 25 minutes in eacb of the
two cases.

$859500 .

ONLY
SAVE THOUSANDS-SHOP AND COMPARE
•AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
•AIR
CONDITIONING
•T~LT

WHEEL

.•REAR DEFROSTER
•AM/FM RADIO
. •REMAINING 12,000 MILES OR
1 YEAR WARRANTY PLUS 7
YEAR/70,000 MILES DRIVE
TRAIN WARRANTY INCLUDED

1990

Stocks
.

Victor L. Will, 82, Canal
Winchester, formerly of Meigs
County, died Saturday after he
was struck by a truck In Chester.
Mr. Will was a retired llchool
teacher and administrator. He
was a graduate of Ohio Univer·

2 Seiotlono. 11 " - 21 Canto
A Muttimtdlt Inc. New....,.

'

Rollin Dill

will

June e. 1990

Four SEO counties
•
receive grant to bulld
$4 nilllion regional jail

-----Area deaths----Robert Barber

•

at

.i

No.:Z73

Drawing class offered
by arts council

WEATHER MAP - Hot aild steamy condldons will prevail
, throu1hout the Gulf Coast States, while 1eaerally bot and dry
. weatber peridats over the Southwest. Thunderstorms wiU spread
northeast out of Texas Into the Ohio River Valley ahead of a cold
frODI that will move onto the East Coast by Friday. Gusty
northwest wladl will move Into the Northern Plains beblnd this
ayalem as cooler Canadian air SIIJ'IES Into the Plains Stales.

•

e

PM-8 PM

CLOSING PROGRAM
SUNDAY, JUNE 17~7:00 P.M.

Low *ICM 111'0111111 11.
Cllaaee fll l'l!la II pereea&amp;.
ftandar, nrlallle cloudl- . Blp Ia i o - ....
Chuee of raJ• 4t perceat.

IR·IWIIIE
'

4-REDS TICKETS PLUS S200 CASH ...ILE
SHOPPING AT PAT HILL CHRYSLER OR PAT
HILL FORD. ASK OUR SALESPEOPLE TO
REGISTER YOU FOR OUR DRAWING
JUNE .l9th.

',.

,.

.'..·

.....,movich:pled_ges,: to upgrade
'ftl~tding fo~ - ,O h.io ·edu~atio_n
·Vo~ovtch,

COLUMBUS, · Ohio t UP() ..:_ . .
"at .. a Stateillouse
PledgiDg to "squeeze every dime press conference • .also sal.d thP
. possible out of the budget for our governor and Legislature s bould
, schOols," Republican guberna·
lulve more authority over e·duca·
torlal nominee George Volltovlch ~.tion,_ adding that. he wants t,o be
said Tuesday If elected, be can' able to . blre and fire the state
. acld "huntlfeds of milliOns of v 81lperlntenlJent · of public
dOllars" to education spending · lnstFuctloa.
··
·
wltbout ralalni taxes ·
But he aiald any basic ctjanges

'·

'

· ·

'

1

.~Heritage Days schedule
"
Frld~J
6-7 p.m.- Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
· 7-8 p.m.- Sweet Mountain Sounds.
1
·'tl-9 p.m.- Midnight Cloggers.
·
~8
p.m.- Tbe opening or the exhibit. "Ornate a!ld Simple
· • Forms: PomiK'Oy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at tt he
·r Melp Cqunty Public Library.
· .
~·
1

•. " ·
.,... ;.ll::t·

.
....

.

"··urday
.,..

.

..·

· ·

.:; ](). ·a·. m. ,;- Heritage Paraile, sponsored · by lh,e Pome . , •
; J4erchants Aasoclatlon. · ·
. 11 a.m. to noon- Civil War Ma'rchlilg DrUb.
. I
Noon to 12:tli p.m. -ShadY. River Slnlfflera.
. J.l:~i!.m: - Special ReqUKI Barbershop Bl!ld.
1. . p.m.- Restoration Jazz Band.
l: 30 p.m. - MeiP County Fair Queen anDOUnced.
3 p.m. - Costume Judging on the parking lot stage.
.I'
4·5 p;m. -Outhouse races.
··
~p . m . - Pl~r costume review and "wlnners announced.
.. 6 p.m. - Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
.
· 6:30p.m. - Brbthers of the Bnreh contest. ·
. 7•8 p.m. - Bob.and Kendra Ward-Bence.
·.
,
MO p.m. - Peter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Sq, re
dancing In the streel.
.
!
. ·(lit Saturday following the parade there will be carrif~P.!t ride .
· t~hout the day beginning at Cour.t and Second St~.
. . Tbere alao
tie t:;lvll War Musket ~gacles d._YUII day

r

L

will

·

'!JatardAY.

'

.

'

011 SUnday riclea will be81J1 at the museum lite at l .p.rrl.

'Food and craft conceulons will be available all day Jl'tlday
111111 Sanirday.
Adlvlll• at tb• mu.um will be held Saturday aJiO

.-1·

5 p.m.

.

,..,.Y
'

.
'tM ellllllllt, •'Onate and llmDit J'OI'D'II: ~
f'llniJture

· 'l id ,_,...., ~1110" 8t ~library WID l'1lil tllnu$ll J - 22
· , ..,... tbt 11our1 o1 U a.m. to • p,m. """'l'Y 1111 c p F1.111ay,
W .l.. p.m. oa Saturday alld larlay.

~anagement struct~e

Report is
received on
mans death

Ww.AAr 'io, a former Cinelli:
natl' ' fliiancler and promlneiit
Democratic fund-raiser, was
convicted In 1987 of sLx counts of
unau tllorlzed acts and three
counts of securities viola! Ions in
connect.ion with transactlou he
made with a Florida .securities
firm, Schiebel, 60, was convicted
of three counts of &amp;ec~oritles

violations.
.• .. ' '""•
When ESM GovernmentSecur·
Ities ~- , Fort Lauderdale, went
bankrupt Ia March 1985, it
plunged . Home State Into $144
mWion wortb of debt and trig·
gered a run on other· statechartered, privately Insurance
saviiiiiS and loans.

Meigs hoard accepts
Horky's resignation
The reslpallon of Betsy Horky
wlro Is retlrlngwuacceptedwith
regret at Tuesday night's meet·
lng of the Meigs Local Boarct of
Education.
The boaf'd agreed to Join the
Educational Media Resource
center for the 1990-91 school
year at a cost of $4,737.89, and to
participate in the SEQ.EERRC
at 80 cents per pupil for a total
cost of $1,992.80 for the 1990-91
school year.
...
A resolution to participate In
the Ohio High Sch'lOI Athletic
Association at the high school
and junior high school-next year
was passed. ·
,..
Also passed was a resolution to
request Dec. 8, 15, 18, an~ 22 as
calamity days for all schOOls and
Dec. 19 as a calamity day for
Bradbury, Harrisonville,• Ru·
tland and Salem center.

The treasurer was au thorlzed
to advertise tor bids for ~
llllurance, gaaoline and oD products, tires and tubes, ftre
extinguisher repair, and boiler
Insurance.
Discussed at tbe meetlngwa$ a
propo681 by Board Member Jeff
Werry that the athletic director's
duties be expanded to Include the
junior blgh school in addition to
the blgh .school. No actpon was
taken on tbe matter, ho-ver.
Next meeting was set for June
21.
.
o!.An hour'• executive session
wu held to discues personnel.
Altelidllllf were Board Pres!·
deal Bob Barton, members, Jeff
Werry, Robert Snowden, Rl·
chard Vaughan , and Larry Rupe,
Supt. James Carpenter, and
Treasurer Jane Fry.

Victor L. Will," 82, of Canal
in the
or
Winchester, died instantly or
funding of educailoll will have to
within a few minutes of multiple
wail for public con~sus and a
trauma to the head, chest,
possible ballot issue late next
abdomen and legs u the result of
year or early in 199'2.
being struck by a truck Saturday
· Voinovich said that early In his
night In front of tbe Chester
administration, hewlllappolnta
Elementary Scl;IQol.
broa~·bued Governor's EducaThat was the, report giVen
tlon , Managem~nt Council,
verbally to Dr. Dougl!ls Hunter,
headed by himself, to thorough~v
Meigs County corO'ner, by the
review' the management struc·
Franklin
CO\IDty Coroner's office
ture of education at the state and
Tuesctay'afternoon,
according to
locallevels.
.
l'(lelgs
County
PrOsecutor
Steven
He said he wants at least 30
Story.
percent of the stat~ budget to go
Story . sal~ that the report
to education in ihe third b\ldget
Indicated
that WIU would have
year of bls administration. Edubee!!
"rendered
unconclous upon ··
cation received more than 34
Impact."
·
·
_percenLof, the budget lnUscal
Both Ja1on RIUi. 18. charged
liNN, he said. Now it · iell 28·
with
aggravated vehicular hom!·
WINFIELD, W.Va. 'tUPI) .,.. pany invett~Jator and had staked
percent.
·
clde,
,
abUse
ot
a
·Corpse,
and
Jury
selection has begun In the out Huck's residence wben lie
· An addition 'of 2 percent of t~
tan\pe~ni
With
·
ev14ence,
aDd
trial
of
a Galllpolill, Obio, man . surprised, Gray, Who allegedly
bUdll"' for ec!Ucatlo.n would be at
·
Douglas
HarriS,
26,
ebarpd
With
charged
with murdering a Put· was &amp;eiUIIII ready to set fire to
least $534 mi!Uon.
·
tampering wltb evidence, renam County, W.Va., sheriffs the dwelling. Gny attempted to
VolaoYich said. an Ojlerltiona
main In the Melli Cowlty JaiL · · deilllly.
.
flee and sbot Janey In the chest
Improvement 1'ask Force will be · Tlie two had appeared In the
Lawvers were expected to and bead. pollee contend.
appointed fa recom!IM!nd way• to
Meigs County Court for lalllal
present opening arguments WedJoe Thomas, o• of two court·
eliminate. waste ln.government,
hearllliS to set bonds Monday
Delday or Thursday In tbe trial of appointed lawyera, told proaJ*and that money will be shifted IO
mornlai. Bond for Rlqs on the
Robert Gray, charged in the tlve jurors Tuesday that Jlltllj
'
education.
three counts was set at $70,000
llboo~ last Aug. 17 of Putnam
flrat shot at Gr11 and later beCt
. ".We're going to have to u.s e a
with Harrls t bond belni set at
County deputy sheriff John bim With I flllhllgbt, and that
very sharp scalpel ·or laser m,ooo.
.
Janey.
Gray shot Janey Ia self-deten~~e.
surgery," .-ld theGOPguber~­
Preliminary heerings will be
The trial of an allepd accom·
The defendant had ao way of
torlal candidate. "We may have . · beld Frlday.momlnut 9a.m . for
pllce, RObert Bates, has been knowing' that Janey, Ia ciYIIIaD
to ma!le some very tough (..-nd· both Riggs and Harris In County continued. No new trial date was
clothes, was a pollee oftlcer, the
In&amp;) declsll)DS."
." .
Court.
set.
·.
·
.
lawyer declared, acldl.. that
. Volnovltb said' his' E~ucatlon
As explained by the prosecu- . Gray was Charged with killing Griy lho\11111 1111 life wu 'In
M_augemetit Council woultS be tor, at that time it will be
the off-duty deputy while a!·
danger.
almillr to Gov. Richard C.lnW1 determined whether or not there
le&amp;edJy trylna to aet fire to the
The deputy wu allot alrolit 1
"Education 2000 ComDIIuloll" Is probable ca1111 to believe tbat
Hurrtc- relldl!lle. o1 RaY· a.m. Aug. 17 and CrQ
which made ~meat!IIIOIIIIa afelonyorfelonleswel'l!commll- .moat! Huck. The OWIWr of the arrested a few houra latet IIIII'
late 1988, maay of wblch ' - . ted and that the deflmdantt may ·house allegedly hired Gray and
Hurricane. Gray oepcaiNJy .U
enacted Jut )'tar.
have committed the felcray or ·Bates to lei fire to tile baule 10 found wltllba a
· That COIIIJI\IIIIoa ~ felonies.
·Huck could 'eollct 1n1uraace aatlcarrrlilla plltllland J~'l
educatcn at tbe 1tate IIIII leal
If Ia tile preliminary beuiDp benefits on lt. Ruck pleaded l'ft'Olver.
.""'
~~. - · labor alld . . . . . It Ia IIIOWII tllat IIIII probelrlt. pllty MlreiiB loiN Mlkl..,_
Qmdt ....... a.n.c. W.tt
me~~t ,......~.~ rrcm 111e pmate
cause dDa l'ldlt, t ... lafarma.
mwctwlnaplta'J WJ•alwllh
l'lllltl 1MI Ire .......... :u
.. .ector. Volllovlch uld Ire -.11 lioD wiD be pnlftted f'o tile PJ-101'1.
e l 1 ' J e a u ' ' '1lli ally
to blllld 011 tile rii!GIIIIII hltaM Cnad Jury wllldl hal 111111
·Janey nJepca-•te,.dlylv was ...niDI
tbe1
1
called for Ju• Ulh.
part·tlme u aa luuruce eomI8IUI!d by Edacalloa • ·
tlwllsl tltor
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Jury .selection begins

for trial of GaUia

man

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy,· Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
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S;!miii!

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PubliC ~lc.e

Pt.mllc Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

of Section
153.08 end
163.07 of the Ohio R""ioed

Mulklngum Drive, Morletl8.
Ohio.
Copiel of tho Notlco to
liddon. Form of Propo...

Public Notice
orot Condtlono. Plono,

s,..

clltcotiDno .,d other COtt-

CDde, publi.c notk:e 11 given
h - Documonto togotlw
th .. ooelod propo101o will be
with ony fu- InlormaiiDn
received by tho Deportment Form ot Bond. Form of Con- deond, ....., be ......,.., by
of Admlnlotretlvo Sorvic•. tract. EEO lid Concltlono, Primo c-roctor• frotri the
Dlvlolon of Public Worko Instruction• to ~~. .Offlco of M-E BUILO·
Olllae of Sllto Architoci General Condition•. Plena, lNG CONSULTANTS, INC ..
ond Engineer, 30 Eeot Brood Specifie~~Uona 1nd other 101 e &amp;ot 11oooc1 Stroot. CoJ.
Stroet. 36th Floor, Colum- Contract Document I •r• on umbuo, Ohio 432011. T...
buo. Ohio 432811-0403 untl file ond moy be ..omlnod .. Pho... 11141 218-4103. AH
Thurodey,Juno14.1980,et t~o following off!-:
.,._. docu"**to wll
2:00p.m. OoyUght Sovln111 Oaponmant of Admlnlotro· 'be torw.nlod SHIPPING
Jlme, ond oponod immodi•
thle S.rvk:n
•CHARGES COLLECT lily thereoflor, for fumlohOlviolon of Public Worb .ncolpl of • dot&gt;oolt In the
,·- · 01
lng the motorial ond por- Olfi.. of IIIIo Archltoct ·.,.. 111 In
;!Jt twt Md 1 I n - to the forming
the lobor lor tho oxand Engineer
·f - ofof •21.00
M·E IUILOINQ
·-lneof-Lo1No.134 ' ocutlonondconotructlon of: 30 Eoot Br011d Street - 3Sth ,CONSULTANTS. The do!»
Floor
BoinglheProject No. 770-88·019
Ill wll be refu.- to bfdcl.o
:,Ooporly diiCiibod In Volume
Stetowlcle Heolth ond
Columbuo, Ohio. 432811- ·wflo return the plano lind
•132, Poge77, MolgoC-..y
Soloty
0403
.oHCIIIC811Dno In good con':J;Ieed lle=clo.
Phooo II - Dloll' No. 10
-Of·dition within ten 110) dayo
•• Deed Aefeooncol: Volume
Ohio Doportmont of
Bulldoro Exchange of Con· 1ottor r-pt of bldl. The
·~3•. P1111 478,
Moitll
· Tranoportallon
trel Ohio
·coot of ropt-lnent of any
~ l:ounty D.- Rooo...
Atliono. O.lllo. Molt~~.
Columbuo. Ohio 43215 ·
tmloolng or domogecl doou·
• lho vii- r • - tl&gt;o
Monroe, Maroon. Noble
,
-orim•towll be dlduotM from
""" to r.ject ony or oil bldl ond Woohlngton Countlel
Dodge Reporto/SCAN
the depoolt. Tho taw blddor
Soporote bldl will be ro- Cievot.,d. Oh. 44118
'ond to woivo ony lnlormoNmay rllaln the pt- ond
;.... In bldclng.
oelved for:
opoalft..,IDn• ond the
~or•
Fred Hoffm... Mloyor .
dopollt will be
EST. of Bulldero Exch.,go, Inc.
•
· Vllogo of Mldcloport CONTRACT
COST
CI--.
Ohio
44131
:.-1 Z2. 28. II) I, 12, 19,
' flrw
- -lor
·
Iriotiluboo-oro
oupplloro may -utre
-or:11
li!"rootteocctctlbn ..... 23.1100.00 F. W. Doctgo
their corwenlonco. Pl.,e.,d
HVAC ......... .. UI8,000.00 Columbuo, Dhlo 4321 8
,Spooifle811oooa or por1ioM
•.
•
:
Public
Notice
I Elaotrlcll ....... t133,000.00
.
Coploo of tho Nota to th-f · by paying for the
.;;.._ _....;_....;;.;..._
A PRE-bid_,.,_ wll
Blddoro. Form of Pr.._t, ;coot, of repr-Ion PUBLIC liD
be held ot 10:00 a.m. on Form of lionel. Form of COOt- honcltng.
AOVEIITIBEMENT . ' June 1. 1810. Ohla DWtlrt· tract. EEO lid Condltlono,
Cont,.ctoro rwqulrlng •·
'
Pu
mMt of Tranii)Ortation Dli- tniiiUCiiono to Blddero, Genr-ntto the prov~lono trlct No. 10 Hlodquorl*l,
(Continued on Pogo 13)
:• : Bids will be roceived 1t

:Miadteport Vlllogo Hall, 237
, llo.. St.. Middleport. Ohio
4&amp;7110, untM 3 P.M. July 9,
, 1980 lor the following do·tcrlbtd roo! oellte:
•, lho north 3&amp; - . more or
;Iou, of the holt of Lqt
. No. 1.34 In Phitlipo Jon•
·ll*d Addition to tt. Vllogo
': ot Mlddllll art. Moitll County,
·Ohio, - • 311oot. more or
;&amp;ooo. on lhlrd St-. Md .,..

=m

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control. "
him for an error. One out later .:
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) Scott Garrelts, whO IIDtll TuesGarrelts said what was differ· pinch hitter Ernest Riles tripled :
day night had only one Win In 11
ent was that "I thought I could over the head of right fielder :
starta, flha!Jy found the key to throw strikes tonight. I felt like I Paul O'Neill to score Thompson. ,
silccess and It was named Nonn
did last year. I was able to move 'Norm Charlton replaced Arm- :
Sherry.
my ball In and out more and that strong and gave up an Infield •
The Giants pitching coach
helped my confidence."
single to Brett Butler, scoring:
chanres In Garrelts 1 delivery
.Cincmnatl starter Jack Ann·
Riles.
:
turned him arOUDd and helped · strong, 8-2, gave up four hits and
Brantley gave up the Reds' ·
him scat ier ·four hits over seven
three runs · In his attempt to on~v run when he surrendered ;
Innings to spark the Giants to become tht National League's three singles In the eighth. Eric ;
their fifth straight Victory, a 6-1
first nine-game winner. He Davis drlvln home Billy Hatcher. •
walked three and struck ou tflve
win over the Cincinnati Reds.
The Giants padded their lead :
Garrelts, 2-6, atruck outslxand as hiS league-leading ERA With three runs In the eighth. :
walked · only one. Jeff Brantley
jumped to 1.77.
Williams drove home the fourth •
pitched 1he final two Innings lor
San Francisco broke a score- run with an RBI double. With two :
his seventh aave, allowing Cinless tie In the sixth. Mille Kingery out, Thompson singled to score ·
cinnati's lone run.
drew a one-out walk and went to Williams and Thompson scored :
Giants manager Roger Craig third on a Will Clark single. Matt when shortstop Mariano Duncan :
said Garrelts h.S been miserable
Williams, hlttlnll In the cleanup threw Jose Uribe's $rounder :
In the last few games and
spot because of an Illness to .away for a twD-base error.
,
credited pitching coach Norm
Kevin Mitchell, lofted a fly to
Lou Plilella. the Reds' man· :
Sherry for !)lmlng him around.
right to score l&lt;lngery.
ager, said ''San Francisco Is •
''He discovered .that Scotty ' ·The Giants scored twice lfiOre playing good ." He said, "The. :
· was flying open· his lf!fl side and
In the sevel!ih to chase Arm- results of the last two games are
his left hand were out 1111d his
strong. Robby Thompson singled ·a combination of San Francisco.
right side was not catching up,"
and went to second when Eric pitching and a. lack of hitting oi;
Craig said. ''He did not have good
·
Davis let the ball bounce past our part."

r~ces

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.Robert Wagman

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manarer

The Daily Sentinai-Page-3

·Garrelts four-hits Reds 6-l
for: Giants' fifth straight win

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Ohio

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J:oday in history

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GOP lOOks strong in Senate

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Lawmakers accused
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Page-2-The Daily Se 1ti1al
POimroy-Midcleport, Ohio
Wedneeday, June 6. 1990

WASHINGTON (NEA)- Re·
pUblicans now appear likely til
pick up several currently Democratic Senate seats ht this November' s elections. In fact, the
PAT WHITEHEAD
GOP might even regain control
Allslslanl Publlsher/Co!llroller
of the upper chamber.
'
Currently, Democrats hold a
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
55-45 majority In the Senate. The
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatloll.
GOP would have to pick up five
LETI'ERSOFOPINION are welcome. They should be less thao300
Democratic seats .while holding
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
on to all oflts own lnordertogaln
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub·
de facto control. VIce President
·llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personaiiQuayle ~an vote to break, ties.
· Ues,
A new gain of tlve seats would
be difficult. but not Impossible.
The Democrats received a
bitter blow·with the recent death
of Hawaii's Spark Matsunaga.
Suddenly, a very ¢e DemDcratic seat has become a toss-up
between two ·v ery popular congressmen, Republican Patricia
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UP I) -A mini-crisis may be brewing In the House
Saiki and Democrat Daniel
gver the Issue of whether SQme members are sincere wheQ they claim
Akaka. Early polls show Saiki
. lo support a l!ew constitutional amendment requiring t)le federal
with a slight lead .
budget to be balanced. ·
Thirty-five Senate seats are at
Conservative Rep. ·Chuck Douglas, R-N.H. , says. some of his
stake In November. Sixteen
colleagues are gullty.of hypocrisy on the Issue and he Is threatening to
Democrats and tllteen Republiexpose them. In the process, no.ugl;ls may have head-on collision.with
cans are rupnlng for re-election.
House rules and the Democratic leadership.
Fl)ur races are open: Hawaii and
• Most members of Congress believe the balanced budget
three now held by retiring
amendment Is Immensely popular with the voters. Consequently,
Republicans - Colorado, New
nearly 250 House members signed on as co-sponsors of the measure
Hampshire and Idaho.
when II was Introduced for the new Congress·.
Republicans are now expected
But many members also worry about the consequences of a
to hold 14 seats: Stevens
mandatory balanced budget and privately hope 1t never becomes
(Alaska); Coats (Indiana); Kaslaw.
sebaum (Kansas); Cohen
As In past years, the amendment Is bottled up in the House
(Maine); Boschwltz (Minne.Judiciary Committee, but Douglas and others want to force a vote by
sota); Cochran (Mississippi);
the full House. To do that, they must get a majority .of members- 218
Domenlcl (New Mexico); Helms
- to ~lgn a discharge petition, but not all the original sponsors are (North Carolina); Hatfield
willing to sign. Thus, there Is a credlblllty gap that Douglas threatens (Oregon); Thurmond (South Cato expose.
rolina); · Pressler (South Da- .
. ·Under House rules, the names of those members who do or do not kota); Gramm (.Texas); Warner
sign discharge petitiOn$ ate supposed to be secret, but Douglas says · (VIrginia) and Slmpspn (Wyomhe will make those names public SOifle time this month.
·
. lng) . In open races, ine seats now
• It Is not clear what Will happen If Douglas follows through with his
held by McClure In Idaho and
threat. House rules do not spell out any penalty for such action, but
· Humphrey In New Hampshlr are
Speaker Thomas FoJe!,', D-Wash. ; could not very well Ignore such a
expected to stay In the GOP
violation. And other Democrats mostly likely would demand thatt
column.
Douglas be punished.
Among the current Republican
Opponents of the balanced budget amendment , including most
seats, . the only real question
Democrats, do not want the measure to get to the House floor for a
marks appear to be the seat In
"ote. They are.· concerned that If a vote Is forced. many members - ·
Colorado now held by the retiring
even those who oppose It - would be afraid of the political
Blll Armstrong, and the reconsequences of voting against the amendment, and as a result It
election
bid of Mitch McConnell
would pass.
In Kentucky.
The budget amendment Is tailor-made to be a weailon In
Rep. Hank Brown Is the GOP
congressional election races, where Issues are reduced' to their
candidate In Colorado. He would
slmplesi form to fit 30-second television ads. A vote against the
normally be expected to win
amendment (or even a refusal to sign a discharge petition) ifould
were It not for the presence of a
almost certainly be used as ammunition against Incumbents.
relative newcomer In the ~mo­
Members who do refuse t.o sign Douglas' discharge petition may be
cratlc field - Boulder County
able 't.o defend themselves by arguing for the sanctity of House
Commissioner Josle Heath.
procedures. The normal procedure Is for committees to make the
Heath has em~ged as the
Initial judgment on the merits of any bill. They decide whether to
favorite
In tile primary.
amend a bill, send It to the full House, or bury II.
McConnell Is considered the
• Most House members support the committee system and do not
want to tamper with It, except on those occasions when they are · most vulllerable of the GOP
Incumbents. But
Is being
seduced by the prospect of scoring pOlitical points.
helped
by
the
fact
that the
: Douglas's move Is bound to' Ignite sparks In the House, but whether
Democrats
are
Involved
.Jn a
It accomplishes anything remains to be see.n. And whether anybody
primary
brawl.
This.
seat
could
outside the House cares a whit. also Is an open question.
move Into the safe column for the
GOP If Democrats emerge !tom
the primary badly spilt
Among the 16 · Democratic
Incumbents In the Senate, 10
· By United Press International
seem like sure winners: Heflin
. Today Is Wednesday, June 6, the 157th day of1990 with 208 to follow .
(Alabama); Pryor (Arkansas);
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
Blden (Delaware); Nunn (Geor·
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
gla);
Johnston (Louisiana);
The evening stars are Jupiter and Pluto.
Baucus
(Montana); Bradley
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini: They Include
(New
Jersey);
· Boren (OklaSpanish painter Diego Velasquez In 1599; American patriot Nathan
homa);
Gore
(Tennessee)
and
Hale In 1755; Russian poet Alexander Pushkln In 1799; British
Rockefeller
(West
VIrginia).
Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott In 1868; German novelist
The remaining six are In
~omas Mann In 1875.: vaudeville bandleader Ted Lewis; known for
varying degrees of difficulty.
I!Sklng h~ audiences "Is ev!"rybody happy? ", In 1891; Indonesian
The two key Senate races this
dictator Ahmed Sukarno In 1901; California Gov . George Deukmejan
fall are mirror Images: up and
In 1928 Iage 62); the dalallama, exiled leader of Tibet's Buddhists, in
coming Republican women chal1~35 (age 55) and tennis player Bjorn Borg In 1956 (age 34).-lenging members of the Demo--~
cratic
old ~ard.
On this date In history:
In Rhode ISland, Rep. Claudine
In 1933, the first drive-In movie theater ·opened In Camden, N.J.
Schneider Is facing off against
ln 1944, hundreds of thousands of Allied troops began crossing the
Sen. Claiborne Pel!; and In
English Channel In the "D-Day" Invasion of Nazi-occupied EuropeIllinois, Rep. Lynn Martin Is
·{he largest Invasion In history.
ROBERT L. WINGE1T .
Publ18ber

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The Daily Sentinel

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problems of retiring Gov. MIsquaring off ag~nst Sen. Paul
facing a stlfl test from Rep. Tom
chael
Dukakls, who was the
Simon. Both Democratic lncum- ' Tauke.
·
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Democratic
presidential candibents are popular; Both probably
At present, all three Demodate
In
1988,
has
been strong and
would win. re-election easily
cratlc Incumbents are out In
emotional.
The
GOP
could swt!ep
against ordinary GOP oppo·
front. But all three contests are
the
governor's
chair, and
Into
nentS. But nelt)ler Is facing -an
expected to narrow significantly
this
could
affect
the
Senate
race.
ordinary opponent. Add both 1 by the falL It would not be a
One
footnote
to
this
year's
races are likely to be very close.
major upset II any, or ·an, the
contests: Never has , the U.S.
In three other contests, DemDRepublican congressmen
Senate had three women sitting
cratlc Incumbents will probably \ emerged victorious:
at the same time. With Barbara
face popular congressmen (or
Finally, Massachusetts DemDMikulski, D·Md., not , up for
ex -congressmen) who are · ·li cratlc Sen. John Kerry normally
re-election, and. Nancy . Kasseproven vote:getters.
·would be an easy winner . over
baum an odds-on favorite to win,
' almost any. opponent the usually
In Nebraska, former Rep. Hall
only one of four other women
Daub Is challenging Sen. Jim
lifeless state Republican Party
running this fall In tight contests
Exon; In Michigan, the probable
could find: But this Is far from a _would have to win for there to be
winner of the late August GOP
normal year In Massachusetts
three next year.
primary, Rep. Bill Schuette,
'politics.
The statewide reaction to the
would then face Sen. Carl Levin;
and In Iowa, Sen. Tom Harkin Is

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;~,..~ Mets edge EXpos; Braves

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.: rally to down ·Dodgers, 6-4

i%lt'triVt·''

By PAUL DEFEDE
UPI Sports Writer ·
1
Just call Tom O'Malley the
bearer ol gifts.
O'Malley's lead-o!f borne run
In the 11th Inning, his flnt homer
In three years, gave the New
;;rf!'! ~, ,.,... •.• .,, ·•· ··
. .
__ York Mets a 6-5 victory over the
fourth Innlllr at San Francisco Tuelday. Giants
Montreal Expos as well as an
won IH. (UPI)
early birthday present for new
Mana1er Buddy Harrelson.
· Harre bon, wbo turns 42 years-

baaemaa, Marlaao Dttncan tap oul Glaola' first
baseman, WW OarII: at11ee0nd Ill &amp;lie bottom of the
·

M
.· . ei~ Lem
.•on splits
ee~

. ~:go~~ :.e::~YE~:::: ~~

tw
.' inbills

The MeigS American Legion
choice and scored on a perfect
· Jason Wright pitched .a five
baseball team opened the season
squeeze bunt by Wes Young.
hitter in the so:~ond game as the
over the weekend by splitting
Meigs scored the last three runs
locals won 1-0m another pitching
double headers with :ParkersIn the fifth, Hager, McDonald
dueL
Young led o!f the
burg and Lancaster before dropand Young had three straight
scoring fourth for Meigs with a
ping 8 5-1 decision to Athens on
singles to start the Inning and
single, Young was advanced to
Tuesday evening.
make It 3-0. Joe McElroy reached
second on a sacrifice and to third
In the first game saturday, s.
on a fielders chOice to score
on a fielders choice where he
Cox pounded out 4 hits lneludlng 3
another run and Matt Flnlaw
scored the games only run on a
doubles to le'ad Parkersburg to a
drove In Meigs last run with a
Kevin .T aylor sacrifice !ly.
9-0 victory over Meigs. Parkerssacrifice fly.
Jeremy Phalln had the only
burg scored single runs In the
Parkersburg scored a run In
other hit for Meigs a single In the
first , third and fourth Innings to
thesevent~ ·lnnlngtoendtheshut
third Inning. Wright gave up 5
hold a 3-0 lead heading Into the ·out bid by Phalln. J.P. gave upS
hits, struckout4 and walked only
fifth when they erupted for 5 runs
hits, while striking out 8 and
two to pick up the win. Spires was
to coast to the victory.
walking 1. Parson wa5 tl)e loser
the loser, striking out 4 while
Me~ .was able io load the
forParkerburg.
walking nobod~ . ,
bases With only one out In the .
Hager had two hits for Meigs,
On Tuesday 0\enlng Cory
third. butwlnnlngpltcherNelson
Andy Baer, Jeremy Rupe,
Corrigan and Izzy Olvera comstruck out the third and fourth
Phalln. and Young chipped In
blned to pitch a 4 hitter as Athens .
pllet hitters In the Meigs lineup
with slcglcs.
defeated Meigs 6-1. Athens broke
tci put out the fire.
In Sundays first game against · open a 1 run game with three In
Nelson !!tattered 8 hits IO pick
always tough Lancaster, Bush
the fourth. Tyler Woodell led the
up the win, sirlklng out 6, while outdueled Andy Baer to pick up
Athens hit parade with two
walking three. Kevin Taylor was
the win as Bush pitched a one
dpubles and a single. Shane
the·' starter and loser for Meigs
hitter.
•. Orcutt added a double and a
pltchlni 5 23 giving up 8 runs on
Meigs took a 1-0 lead In the first
single and BrockToadvlneadded
10 hits whlle,strlklng out two and
without the benefit of a base hit.
two singles. Meigs twice had the
walklsig two. Wes Young pitched Tim Bissell led thelnnlngoffwlth
bases loaded In the first with only
theflnllll31orMelgs,glvlngup a walk, Bissell stole second one out but failed to dent the

w..,.

"I know
it sounds crazy, but I love shopping here."
.
.

- a 1'Ja1!9,11
1!11,·011 Wright,
a·hll. while
Timwalking
Bissell, tWO.
and
Jasoij;;•Hager had two singles
each ·for Meigs while Terry
McGuire and Eric Heck had
single each for Meigs.
.
In tile second game Meigs rode
the righi arm of JerejTIY 1J. P.l
Pballll to gain the spilt With a 5-1
vlt:torv·.
.
' 'rhehost took a 1-0 lead In the
first when Jason Wright singled
and- evetilualtv scored when
~cDonald reached on an error.
:Wright made It 2-0 In th~ third
~hen he reached on a flelderu

a

advanced
on a wild
wildpitch.
pitch
and
scoredtoonthird
another
Lancaster tied It up In the fourth
when Schlnder scored on a single
by Payne. Lancaster scored
what proved to be the winning
runs In the fifth when Henwood
and Schlnder each singled and
after a passed ball scored on a
base hit by Payne.
.
Bush limited M_elgs to only a
second Inning double by Andy .
Baer, he struck out7 and wwlked
4. Baer pitched an outstanding
game In a losing effort. The
lefthander gave up 5 hits, struck
out 6 and walked 9.

plate, and
again
In theout
seventh
Inning
With
nobody
but
Olvera came back to get two
strike outs to end the threat.
Corrigan and Olvera combined
tostrl,k eout10andwalkonly4for
the Winners. Wright, Young,
Taylor, and McGuire had the
only Meigs hits, all singles.
Jeremy Phalln and Tim Bissell
combined to strike out 5, walk 5
and give up 10 hits tothewlnners.
Meigs will travel to ParkersbUrg Wednesday night to play a
doubleheader and on Saturaay
travel to Wellston to play two.

the decisive Inning began and
said, "The best present I could
get Is lor this guy tohll a homer.''
O'Malley belted a delivery
from Dale Moborclc, Il-l, to dead
center field that eluded the leap
ofOtlsNixonandjustclearedthe
wall at the 410·foot mark .
"Everybody on the team was
blowing to get the ball out of the
park," O'Malley said.
His last major·league homer
came In 1987 when O'Malley was
amemberoftheTexasRangers.
His laat National League home
run came In 1983, while playing
for the San Francisco Giants.
O'Malley,enteredthegameas
a ·defensive replaceml!ilt In the
lOth Inning, and l!ad.just two hits
In 22 at -bats tbls season.
"He worked hard for that

CLEVELAND 1UPII - Over

feet, then smashed Into a utility

members gathered at tb'e si.
Joseph High School gym· Tuesday to pay final tribute to three
students who died In a fiery car
crash hours after receiving their
· diplomas .
Killed ear~v Sunday morning
were Steven Clark. 19, Thomas
Clark, 17, and Fred Blaine, 18.
Thonias park was Studen1 Council president. All were football
players who helped the VIkings
win last season's Division II state
footbilll champiOnship.
At Tuesday's prayer service
the tone was somber. olten
marked by tears. A locw sobbed
openly, the Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported.
. Junior Tony Miller gave a
stirring eulogy:
'They Will always be with us, "
· lllld MUter. "And they will
aiWilYS be In my heart. Fred,
Tom· and Steve, I love you and
always.ll'lll." .
' lnJurecl \ Ill the crash were
j,raduallitg seniOr Eric Ervin, 17,
ad hll aoiiala lArry Greenwood,
16, 1, nllltll grader at W111Te111vlliB Helllitt Junior Hllh School.
They were lilted In fair c:oadltloD
at St. Vlncellt Clwlty Halpltal

'tuelda,y.
Police

.

Aid Tbomu Clark

ar- the car thai hit a Olllb on
Euclid Avetlue l!boUI 2: 30 a.,n.

.lulldaY, siratlclled II for a11Dutt3
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The Daily Sentinel ·

At Pittsburgh. Wally Backman

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scored on a groundout by R ,J ,
Reynolds In the ninth Inning to
make a winner of Stan Belinda,
1-1, who pltcbed two lnnlnga of
scoreless relief for his flnt
major-league win. Mitch WIJJI,
ams, 11-5, allowed one hit over 1
1-3 Innings and took the lou.
PhWies I, Cardlllillll I
.,
At St. Louis, Von Hayes delivered a two-run single In tbe
eighth Inning and Len Dykstra
added two hits and two RBI:·
Tra!Ung · 5-3 In the eighth, thf
Phlllles scored four l'UIIS to :
recapture the lead after.St. Louis
scored five runs In the seventh.
Scott Terry, ~. took the lOSS ·
whUe Don Carman earned the
win by pitching a scoreless
eighth Inning.
Padrelll, HoUlton !

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1homer)," said Harrelson, who
won his second game In six
outings since replacing Davey
Johnson. "I couldn't think of a
better guy to win 11. He's
struggling."
John Franco. 2-0. who pitched
the 11th Inning, picked up the
win.
"I played with O'Malley . He's
a pretty · good hitter." said
Mohorclc, who was O'Malley's
teammate with Texas In 1987. "I
was trying to work him away to·
make him go the other way. I
didn't have good control .of
anything tonight." •
Kevin McReynolds, . shackled
·In a 1-for-23 slump, also caught a
break by smashing a two-run
homer In the elihth offDrew Hall
to tie the game 5-5.
Gregg Jefferies reached flnt
on a wild pitch after he swung
and miSsed a third strike. and
one out later McReynolds followed with his seventh homer.
Elsewhere In the National
League,,.PittsburgiJ clipped Chi·
cago 6-5, Philadelphia downed St.
Louis . 9-6; San Diego blasted
Houston 11-2; · Sal! Francisco
clobbered Cincinnati 6-1 and
Atlanta trlpPfltLos Angeles 6-4 .

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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S :·

Detroit slaps 6-l ·defeat ~n
Indians; Petry regains ·font1 ·
.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Dan
Petry had hiS worst start of the
year and Sparky Anderson
couldn't have been happier.
After Petry lasted just five
Innings Tuesday night In Detroll's 6-2 Win over the Cleveland
Indians, Anderson said he was
sure that the pitcher who had six
straight winning seasons for the
Tigers In the 1980s had regained
his form.
"That's his first bad game,"
Anderson said. "He finallY had a
bad one but we won, so that 's
good. All . of a sudden, he got
wilder than .hell. But I'm glad.
He's been like that bls wb(lle
career. so .It's nice to know I've
got the same guy."
.Petry, 5·2, allowed two une!IJ'ned.runs, but walked four and
strook out four and left after
walking the first two batters In .
tlie sixth Inning. Edwin Nunez
relieved and pitched the final
four Innings for his first save.
:Alan Trammell drove home
t.,Uo runs $11d Cecil FleldeF
krlocked In his 48th run of the
year to lead the Tigers at the
Plate.
•Cleveland starter Tom Candloftl, 5-3, lasted just 3 2-3 Innings,
~ shortest outlna of the year,
aHowing eight hits and six runs . .
; ~ 'I had trouble throwing my

.
'

knuckleball for strikes, " Candl·
ottl said. "That's one of the
things about belna a knuckleball
pitcher. When yougetltover, you
can bavean easy day. When I get
behind In the count a lot, I'm
going to get hurt."
The Tigers took a 1.0 lead in the
first when Fielder scored on
Dave Bergman's sa~rlflce fly .
They added two runs ru the third
when Fielder singled home Lou
·Whitaker and Trammell scored
on Uoyd Moseby's single.
Detroit added three runs In the
fourth. Bergman and Chet
Lemon opened the Inning With
walks and Mike Heath's attempt
at a sacrifice bunt went for a
single to load the bases. Berg·
man scored on Whitaker's sacrifice fly, and Trammell's two-out
single drove home two more.
Cleveland scored two un·
earned rul!ll In the fourth on a
blurre play. With Jerry Browile
on first, Cory Snyder sent a hard
shot towards the left side of the
Infield. Third baseman Tony
PhUUps made a diving stop, then
threw wildly from his knees In an
attempt to force Browne at
second.
The ball bounced lntQ rigbt
field, allowing Browne to score.
Lemon's throw to third the ball
went up the llpe, bounced off the

tarp and was ·il'lbbed by a fan,
allowlq Snyder to icore.
Petry, 31, wbo now bas a 2.51.
earned-run average, had made
seven PFevJous starts and the
Tigers had never scored more
than three runs for him. A spring
training Invitee· after spending
two years Jn ·Callfornla, Petry Is
now ihe ace of the Detroit staff.
"The offense got runs early
and I was abletoescapedamage
- Jusi luckY .'' Petry said. "I'd
rather have a game like tonight
and win than have games when I
go eight Innings and we lose, like
I did In the last start (a 4·3loss at
Kansas City) ."
. Meanwhile, Indians Manager '
John McNamara's starters are
falling apart. Tuesday marked
the thjrd straight game a Cleveland starter has had hiS shOrtest
outing of the year, with Sud
Black and John Farrell precedIng Candiottl with that unglamorous dlstlnctl(ln. Cleveland star·
ters have won jlistonceln the last .
OUT AT ROllE - Qevelud c*ller, 8uMI7
15 games.
A
I - . (rill ball Ia atove), walls fer llldJnc
"It's a good thing we had
Mlu
llt!Mh of Detroit. Actloa took place Ia llle
1Monday) off, ' ' McNamara Slid.
"We've got to get some Innings
out of our starters. That's three
In a row. When you have a good
staff, someone will come In and
BOSTON (UPI) -The Amerl· . manage the team In Morgan's ,' negative - and still w.. unable
shut the other team down. That's
to swing a bat Tuesday. •
cari
League suspended Boitoa
absence.
what has to happen."
Red Sox Manager Joe Morgan
Afler Pena ""as kDCICked to the
for three games Tuesday after
groilnd by Jones OD Slturday
. the frank-speaking skipper said
night, he vowed that "50111~
bls team agreed to "get even" for
body'saoiDgdoWII'' t~.nextday .
a close pitch against the Cleve- ·
Clemens made &amp;COd oa the
•
\,
'
land Iudlans.
threat the next day. caualne both
On Sunday, the two teams
benches to empty and III'Yel'al
engaged · In a bench-clearing
scuffles to break out. Pena, whO
brawl after Boston starter Roger
had not started, and Cleveland's
Clemens hit Stan Jefferson with
Chris James were ejected.
fifth to extend their lead to 5-l as
Elsewhere In tbe American
the second pitch of the bottom of
Jefferson had to leave the
Fernandez lashed a trlpll! dow1l League, Boston nipPed New York the first Inning.
game for X· rays - whiCh were
the first-base line to score two 9-8, Detroit clipped Cleveland 6-'2,
After the melee, Morgan made
'
'
J
runners and
Kelly Gruber Seattle dumped Chicago 10-6,
no attempt to diSguiSe his team's .
slneled to score Fernandez.
Milwaukee topped Baltimore 6-4, Intentions to retaliate for a pitch
California
downed Kansas City Cleveland reliever Doug Jones
MlnnesQta closed the gap to ~3
GOOD Usa
6-4
and
Oakland
tripped Texas
•
tbrew near the headofTonyPena
In the. seventh on a two-run
WASIIIIS,
DRYaS,
7-4.
thf night before.
hOmer by Shane Mack, his
IUIIGEIATORS, TVs,
Red Sox t, Yaakeee.8
"We got even, dldn:t we?"
second home run of the year.
At
Boston,
Wade
Boggs
tripled
·
Morgan said after the game. "We
Toronto added two runs In the
&amp;
UIIGES
voted 34-0 that It would be such. I
seventh on a wild pitch and a and scored on Jody Reed's
suicide squeeze bunt In theelgbth
loved it."
George Bell RBI ~Ingle.
However, Ametlcan League
Mlnuesota took a 1·0 lead In the Inning to lift Boston after New
second Inning on Gary Gaet II' s York rallied from a fiVI'-run
President Dr. Bobby Brown
·
solo homer, his seventh of the deficit. Jeff Reardon. 3-1, got his didn't.
second·
win'
In
as
many
nights.
"Major League Baseball does
617lnl Awe., G lllptlt
year. Toronto evened the score In
the third on Fernandez' first Eric Plunk took the loss. falling · not take place In the drawing
PIL 446·16ft
to 2·2.
room," Brown said upon handing
RBI· triple.
110115: ............ .
Marlaen 11, Willie Sox I
\
down the suspension. "The fact
At
Chicago. Jay Buhuer hit a
that pitchers tbrow close to
--Sports briefs-- tlu'ee-run
double and · Henry
hitters and soml'llines dellber·
Cotto went 2-for-2 with three RBI
ately hit them Is a known fact.
a-Racine
.
Nevertheless, It behooves the
A wide-open field for the In a seven-run fifth Inning. Brian
210-year-old DerbY at Espcll1'l Holman, 7-3, won his fourth
American Leagueofflceloellml·
Downs wu expected to draw a straight game While ChiCago . nate premeditated and anrecord 1"1 mllllollln wagers. The starter Greg Hibbard. H. took
nounced vloleDce.
:J.year-old eolta and fllllel will the loss. He worked just four·plus
"This cannot be condoned and
race WeiJI nday ·aC... 1 ~ Innings, bls shortest outing of the
lncreaslug suspensions and fines
miles Of tile roWDa £PI&lt;Iftl season.
will be Imposed If the practice
· Brewers I, Orioles ~
Downs for a 11 mWion purse. .. .
continues."
At Milwaukee, Jamie Navarro,
The 1250,000 Statue -of Liberty
Morgan said that while be did
2·1,
allowed oue run, struck out
International Trot at the Mea-·
not believe the punishment was
dowlands has been rescheduled three and walked live to lead
justified, be would not appeal the
Milwaukee. Chuck Crlm hurled ·ruling.
to July 21 In an ·effort to lure a
~RIFI&amp;S .....$1.64
the final 1 2·3 Innings lor his I
more select group of· trotters.
"Appeal? For What? liou lose
fourth Mve. Mickey Tet tieton hit
appeals," Morgan said after
'•
a three-FUn homer for Baltimore.
Tuesday night's 9-8 victory over
Olympics
aptai.JtOJaia4
the Yankees. •·w~tthe hell am I
International Olympic ComAI Kansas City, Mo., Cblll . going to appeal for?"
mittee President Juan Antonio Davis hit a two-run homer and
"At file ... ef ... P I Wj '
D •1 \1"
"It's a lousy decision; I'll say
samaranch said be wants fewer Luis Poloala stroked three hils
no more," MQrgan said.
PL9ti·ISS6
POPPY, OliO
athletes at the 19§2 ·Barcelona and drove home two runs. Mark
The
suspeDSion
was
to
begin
Olympics. He has beeu told by Laugston. t-5, scattered 11 bits
with Wednellday night's game
the Barcelona Organizing Com· over six Innings for hiS first win
aplnst
the Yankees. Tblrd base
mlttee that'll cannot accommo- since May 15. Bryan Harvey
coach
Rae
Slider was expected to
date more than 15,000 athletes gained his sixth save of the
and officials.
season. Loser Rich Dotson, 0-4,
Soccer
has not won a game since last
Self-styled king of the English Sept. 25.
soccer hooligans Paul Scarrot ·
A's7, Rupnt
has been deported after convicAt ArUngton , Texas, Mark
tion on charges of Pnter'!ng Italy McGwlre hit his 14th and 15th
on a false passport. Scarrot, with
homers of the year and equalled
..Cll SPICIAL Of ._ IIOimi
a long arrest record for soccera career high with five RBI to
MOUNTING
A.
related violence. was on a list of power Oakland to victory. Bob
RBSIOIIE PI 410
100 Brl tons whose passports bad Welcb, 8-2, g11\'e up seven hits for
!IS 70 114
been confiscated by Scotland ·the win and Dennis Eckersley
. . . . . . . . . 10111
Yard In an effort to prevent earned his 17th save wblle
1IICI SPICIAL Of M - I I
troublemakers from traveling to dropping his ERA to 0.75. Brian
PUKHASE~
Italy for the World Cup.
U1810llL LABDO liS
Bohanon, 0-3, tooll: the loss.

•

•

: By DAVE ENGEWRVM
•
UPI Spa lswrlter
~veryone knows Tony Fernan·
dtz can play shortstop, but yes,
h~ can hit too.
.
, Fernandez drove home three
rvns on successive triples and
Mored twice Tuesday night,
p6werlng Toronto to a 7-3 victory
oyer the Minnesota Twills.
·The soft-spoken Dominican Is
has gone 9-for-U since Saturday,
raising his average to .278 since
being moved down from leadoff
to second spot In the order.
:"A lot of people slopped
ballevlng In me as a hitter, "
Fernandez said. "I got200hitsln
1986. 11
I
~ernandez displayed his fleldlr(k pr!IWess whl'l( he made a key
grab of a bases· loaded line drive
In the fourth Inning to squelch a
Minnesota threat.
: ..w~ had onegoodchanceloget
V'lells out of the game. but
Ffrnandez made the big play."
Minnesota Manager Tom Kelly
said. "He Is an outstanding
player and had a fabulous
game."
.Kelly was speaking of David
Wells, whom Toronto Manager
d1o Gaston moved lnlo the
starting rota11on on May 24.
Wells, · 3-1. scattered four hils
over seVI'n Innings lor tiM! win.
striking out a career-high nine
batters.
·
·'I couldn' t get a feel of the ball
w!latsoever out there," Wells,
who walked five, said. "I'm not
making any excuses for that,
because 11 didn't effect my
las !ball."
Wells had high praise for
Fernandez too.
"I want to thank Tony for a
gt.eat play at shortstop," said
Wells. '1'hat's something that
Tony will do-be's an unbelleva• bit! Infielder."
:roronto co~ted 14 hits off of
three Mlnesota pitchers. Starter
R~ Smith, 4-5, gave up !l\'1' runs
over 4 2·3 Innings.
.
The Blue Jays brokE' a 1-llle on
Fr.ed McGrlfrs ninth homer, a
solo shot In the fourth.
Toronto added three runs In the

••

• . BAT'11.E FOR ~ BALL .,. Ueha1&amp;
=~· BIIILalmbeer (L) lryaforal-ballaa
-:. Pordaad Trail Blazers' Buck Wllllama -.el '
••

Morgan suspended after cormJle~~

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made his pitcher dizzy
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:Victor Unbridled and the rest of
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~k~. zoomed through a
half·mile Work faster lh~ Thirty
Six Red, w119 won the Gotham
tnd Wood Memorial on the front
but burned but early With other
apeedatera at Ch1,1rehlll Downs.
Land Jtush was cloclted 1'Uee4ay
!,11, :47 2•5, Thirty ~lx Red.)n : 48.
. Later, Un!lt'ldled, whO Chilled
1al-.trcm Ulh plate In t!HiPerby,
eoa.ted through · a llrORi flvee!plha JIIUe In 1:00 1-5 with ao
eJ~eouragement from . jOCkey
Craie Perret.
·
"He'a u fat u you Willi blm·
to lit," Penet aid of uDIIrldled.
''Thirty Sax fled II nOt IOilllo
ttt far Ill froat of thiS hot'le
Sltll'day."
Pts"" of...-ed m4ellte thli
Qo AIId Go, till! . Irlah bol'lll
l!llpptq .a~ tile At.laaUc for

'

1.......... .,.,

1...

pitch Itself wasn,'t a real good
one," Reid said. "But that was
pretty much the case all day . It
seemed like In big situations,
rhey hit the ball right at people. "
Stanford Coach Mark Marquess said Rl'ld "pitched an
exceptional game and threw
strlkeswhenhehadtoandplayed
great delense. The other night,
they hit ground balls not at
people and tonight we had them
hit at people and we turned three
double plays."
Stanford leadoff bitter Jeff
Hammond• had three . runs
scored and an f{BI to go with his
three hits. No. 2 batter Troy
Paulson had three hits and drove
home three runs.

._,,,7......

DMrol:t ,(llttrill S.i) .t O~PWla...
(Swllllkllt--11, 1:U 'p.n~~.
'
le.ult ('I'._. 1·1) .. Chk&gt;.,o CPffta

Pll&amp;ladelpiiAa ................17
Mo•real ............ ..........
N8i l "ortt ............ ,.......tt
Sl. Loub ......................IJ

Qlup ............... ........u
·

Wet

ctn:ln.ll.. ..... ............ .u

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AUBURN HILLS, Mich. 1UPil
- Gritty defense on one end and
lslah Thomas on theotber proved
once again to be an unbeatable
combination for the Detroit
Pistons.
'J'homas scored 33 .points Including two backbreaking 3polnters In the flnal3: 39 Tuesday
night - to rally the Pistons to a
100-99 victory over the Portland
Trail Blazers In the opener of the
NBA Finals.
Thomas rattled off 16 points In
the fourth quarter as the defendIng league champions returned
from a 10-polnt deficit with seven
minutes lett to Improve to 10.0 at
home In this year's playOffs and
18-1 at their Palace over the last
two postseasons .
The All·Star guard 's jumper
with 2: 25 remaining gave the
Pistons their first lead at 96-94.
Detroit held Portland scoreless
for a stretch of almost 4 1-2
minutes late In the fourth quarter
and outrebounded the league's
leading rebounding team 54-46.
"In these situations, It's never
a bat II~ of skills; It's a bat tie of
wills," said Thomas, Who made
13 of 27 shots for a team that sank
just 3'7 percent of Its attempts.
"You sit on the bench wl.th six or
elghtmlnutes left and ask yourself, 'How badly do you want
Jt?""

'

Badly enough, apparently. The
Pistons outscored the Trail Blazers 25-9 to close the game and will
play host to Game 2 of the
best-of-seven series Thursday
night with their home court
advantage Intact.
With Detroit trailing 94-89 and
4: 53 remaining, Thomas hit two
free throws, then nailed his first
3-polnter of the game, to tie the
score with 3: 39 remaining. ·
On Portland's next two possessions, Clyde Drexler was .called
for an offensive foul and missed a
Jumper. Thomas then connected
again from the outside with 2:25
to play to give Detroit the lead to
stay at '96·94.
·
Tbe 6-foot-1 guard then struck
for another 3-polnter 35 seconds
later for a 99-94 lead.
· "It's just a great player
making great shots from long
range, that 's ·what It amounted
to," Detroit Coach Chuck Daly

....i .

said. :'Jslah played one of those
magic· 10 minutes . He was on
fire."
Portland's Buck Wllllams then
mls$ed two free throws, Mark
Aguirre madetwoforDetrolt and
Jerome Kersey missed two more
for Portland with 46 seconds left.
Thomas tben sealed the victory
With two free throws with 32.8
seconds to go.
Joe Dumars added 20 points
and Aguirre 18 off the bene h for
Detroit, whlcb received 15 · rebounds from Bill Lalmbeer.
Drexler paced Portland with 21
points and Williams contributed
20 points and 12 rebounds.
The Pistons, who entered al·
lowing 85.6 points at home in the

·

-

THUISDAY, FIIDAY &amp; SATUIDAY

LA GEAR FOR WOMEN
lEG. SS9.99

.
~'
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•

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~···-........
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~...;

LOW FLAME

STARDUST

...
BODY TONER

~ LA

GEAR FOR MEN
lEG. S64.99
SAVE •20.00

.NOW $44 99

FIRE
ALL LADIES

..J$1 II

DRESS SHOES

II~

25 .~/o

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Plalla:lflpldal. . . . . . .
S..Dler.n,Btll&amp;lte•l
Alii•• ,Lo. . . . . . . .

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OFF

saa Fruclaeo .. Q.cl.-tlt

we-...,

OamN
CI•I-U (olacbell I· I) at Saa Fnil·
tilre CWO.. MI. J :JI p.m.
..., . . cP.rtiCIII 1·1) .111 s .. Dll'l'

ROYAL

(h-...•tl . .. :llp.m.
a&amp;.lire.t (Or- 'HU al Ntw Vtl'tl

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AI Other LA Gear for Men &amp; Women

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SAVE •20.00

-..,,·/

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. Yoltll,,_...,.Ra••
Mo•real
IMinp
•

A.Uailta ........... ............ .tt

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SuDiqo ....... .............n u .a• A
I.Gii
.ZI f7 ,411 II
San FrandiiCO .............U

playoffs, are 12·0 when !heir
opponents score fewer than 100
points. The Trail Blazers,
though, managed more than any ·
other Detroit playoff opponent at
the Palace.
Portland, making Its fjrst
league championship appearance since 1977, pulled out four
victories In the Western Conference championship series by a
total of 12 points. This time, they
folded down the stretch.
"They turned their defense up,
and that's a lesson we should
learn, " Trail Blazers Coach Rick
Adelman said. •'They're going to
tum It up at this level, and we ·
should respond. "

HERITAGE DAYS

20°/o Off

..t~ 11~

N•twalhen

(Viok a.!) 1:Sl p.m.
aM:ap tllaMri• HI al Pl~ ....... ll
(Drab81·tl o:•p.m.
l'll...dell .... iC..- ..ll M St. Leilia
(DILH•WJ.II:Jip.M •
~..... fBmolla J-1~ II Le1 AIIIPie.
!MatNuf.ft, lt:Sip.m.

LADIES
PURSES

20°/o
OFF

LY SHOES
POMEIOl

TltlnluGamt~~

81. Leilia al .................
Pl .... llllal S• Yortl, aiPJ

991·6254

Pllill,delplllaalfhk· ap.al~

0.-II.-IMRe..to.,alpt

W),l:.p....

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NATIOSA.L LB'lGl!E

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....... ~ .................... II At! -

1Belinqnt ·Stakes is Saturday

I~--------------------~
,I
1
COUPON
.
II

FAU.S

••.a•

~ocldent

$5 500

PUS 75. IS IWl

•

.r~~~~ch. Skip ae~.•~an sald·the '

Rutland Tire Sales and Serviee
l• AHerdallle Prb"

•

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..-

....... ,..,___ ,,

'

....

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

BALANCING FlEE
' .WITH NEW na

LSJJ&lt;pQst college ·wins

Scoreboard ...

PIC lENS
HARDWARE

APPLIANCES

owr Lalmbeer'a back In the third qarter or lhelr
NB&amp; 11nal TuMd&amp;J. Helping Lalmbeer are lbe
handll of teammale lalab Thomas. (Ul'l)

• OMAHA,. Neb. (UPJ) - 'One
against The Cltad~l.
:Pilcher knocked blmself 'o ut and · ' "We mtiit. be pltc)llng him all
)mother pitched well only w~,n 1n· , wrong," Clta&lt;jelCoach Chal Port
'!rouble, but tile . top two seeds · said. ''J!e h!t•:tower!~ shots off
-survived ellmln•tlon T.u esday at
us ."
·• ' 1 ..
,
the College War~ Series.
. Clark Is !!-f&lt;ir·7 with flye runs
• T~p-seeded Stauford and No. 2
SC!!lred and!Q~r RBI agai:J!st The
Louisiana State each posted 6-1
'CIII!deJ.
.,
victories to remain ulve In the
Sianfcird ···pitcher John Reid
'tournament. Stanford illled sbarp seattered oiile hits over eight
'delen$1! to stop Mlsslaslppi·State,
IJiJIIngs au~ walked two, but
,and LSU turned to QPpof1unlstic
1!111de the ~~ pitches when
,hitting and ~trong , !iltCIIJ'n~ by ·: necessary.
John O'Do-ue ,tC! ~.~ln~te ' 'He safd his effort cilul&lt;f best be
:Jbe Citadel. ·
, ., . . '
. . sbbwn .&amp;y tbe seventh Inning,
; Stanford, 58-11, ear~ · a sewhen he gave up two hils and a
;cond chance Wednesday ·night at
walk to load the bases, but iOta
·Georgia, which Improved to50-18
double play to stop the threat.
~ n beating the Cardinal 16·2 on
·'I was fortunate .to get the
"Sunday. A Georgia victory would
double-play ball because , the
'send the Bulldogs Into the cham·
plonslllp game-SaturilaY, wblle a
'Stailford ~n would fo~eanother
:elimination game Friday.
: LSU, 54-_18, also will be looking .
'for revenge, as lh!! Tigers man·
Majon
·aged ,just twQ hits Monday
IIJVdd..._. ....,_..__,
against Oklahoma State, 55·16.
AMDICAN LEA01JE
;I'he Tigers and · Cowboys will
..Ill'
TMm
W L Pd. Gil
;play..T-bui'Sday..nlff~,.wlth Okla·
~ ..........................1"1' u ... 1t)lma State one victory away
. . . .kH •••,',,,, .......... .JI II .Ill
~
....,........:................., n .1• lot
·from the Iitle game and LSU
Clewl ......................l, • .••
1\1,
:needing to will Thursday jlnd
.....,.tre
....................
t-1 u ... ..
Del
..........
,..,,;,.,
.......
.13
•
•
CM
I~
'llgaln Friday to get to· the final.
NeW Y9Jk....................11 II .H'T R!lt
O'Donoghue, 12·3: faced the
O...... ................. ....J-1 II ... rlllnimum number of batter'
Qk... .......................M II .ta S
tbrougb 4 2·3 Innings 11nd did not
- - ..................Jt tt ... $\1
eat ........ ....................tt n .ltl ·~
a!low a run untll .th~re were two
...............................11 • ·' " ....,
,out In the seventh."Jie pulled tile ,
ku- a, ~ ...............u • ·•• It
'1'~ ..........................11 Sl .Itt 1.&amp;
of'at despite knocking himself out
t'HIIil. te~•·
.....••I.NNYert.l
)ly hlttlug .his head In the dugout
'h . . . . ,.
J
:ilurlng the top of .the first. '
DIINiri.Oiftl.... t
-lt.llllriPI
: ") took, step. lilt my head on a
..._Ut L a.lll,. atft -1
)ow steel. beam $lid woke up, on
Cat-L&amp;~CltJI
the floor," lie ~14 ~ •~It wasn t a
.........o....
~actor.. 1il'eamlhatj!l Cha'd. 0~ .
• ...... (0.6rlt Ml • TeiWII
, ......l),lt:hll·•·
S.ld he'.-going· .rp -'-'\' me'"' tile
N. . ' YIHl ~ Lal'o&amp;.t -1--1) ' lit " " ' "
llead bi!fore ;every' !llu,ill ~ pitch
IW. ._. Nl ~ i:D p.m.

The Perfect
Gift For .D ad
·On Hi.s Qiy••t·

fllue Jays rip· Twins 7-3; .A's
~mpover Texas nine, .74
'·

.

·Pistons finish strong to ·top
Blazers 105·99· in first game
.

'

the Belmont, also has the ability
to challe!lge Thirty Six Red for
the early lead.
·
"I · rode him' In the Laurel
Futurity last fall, and let me tell
you that hOrse has speed, " said
Perret; • ~~ rode In the Breeders'
Cup and he had speed that day·,

too."
{

Nick Zlto, trainer of Thirty Six
Red, laughed off the threats that
other horses will try to run with
his coil.
"What do you want me to do,
jump off the top of the building?''
Zlto said.
"He h•d an excuse In the
Derby. He won't have an excuse
Iii the Belmont. He'll put on a
good show."
After analyzing Thirty Six
Red's ninth-place Derby finish,
zito coricluded the colt wu
simplY too tired to survive the
earlf fractions set by the many
ape-ten In !be 15-horse field.
The Detby was Thirty Six Rect:s
third race In four weeks. For thai
reuon, Zlto rsted Thirty Slli
Red while Unbridled' and ·Land
Rullb reapectlvely fiDialled secoM aDd llxtb to summer Squall·

......

ear~v

pacE', they lose their finish.
It's a disadvantage. They use up
their energy staying close and·
have nothing left at the end."
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
It depends· on the talent and
versatility of the closer.
In the 198t Belmont, speedy
Swale tOOk the earlv lead, set a
slow ~ce and easily held off a big
laie close by runner-up Pine
Circle for a 4-length triumph.
Three years later, Gone West
set almost Identical Parly frac'tlons but 'finished the Belmont In
fifth place, beaten more than 24
lengths by Bet Twice, who
abandoned his usual way -back
style to stay close early under
Perret.
"When you're In a race like
tbls, a good borse Is capable of
dolag a lot of different things,"
'conceded Mllie Smith, Thirty Six
Red's

·

REMEMBER FATH~R'S DAY IS
SUNDAY, JUNE 17,'1990!

WE HAVE A NICE SELECTION OF GIFT
ITEMS SURE TO PLEASE ANY DAD.
'

•FATHER'S DAY
CARDS
•COLOGNES
eARl SHAVE

Timex
Watches
Now ...

•CRYSTAL
COLECnBLE CARS

:•PLUS MUCH
MOlE

~.

DlriiY II ·a mOe aDd a·
quarter, a apriDI race. a-ra
llld every advaatap." ltll'llld.
'"1'1111 eould be a wiiDIII dlffaent
''Tile

baltanJe.
.
'
"If c:l01er1 lay ciCIIe It the

..,.....

•
•

·..•

�·-

··Pomeroy- Midchport. Ohio

Units of the Melgll County
: Emergency Medical Service re.: sponded to six c~ll tor aslill·
::· ance on TueSday.
At 7: 14 a.m. the Middleport
; unit was called to Overbrook for
; Guy Priddy who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
' · At 7:44 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
..: wentto Welsh ToW!! Hill for Anna
:: May Partlow who was trans·
; ported to Holzer Medical Center.
• The unit went to Court Street at

&lt;

Thunderstonns strike in
Midwest; weather wanns up .

Four SEO "'

'

f·

:!

~
••

~=
,:

&lt;:
'
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••·

~

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:
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.;:

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.

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department were
called to Big Wheel on Tuesday
afternoon for a report of
shoplHter.
.
According to the report, a loss
prevention officer. from Big
Wheel apprehended a 17-year
Athens County juvenUe for tak·
lng a fishing reel. The juVenile
was released to the custody of his
grandmother and a hearing will
be helclln juvenile court.
·
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reports that deputies transported

morning.
~"11hls multk:ounty taclllty will .
9: 21 for Haddie F1sher wbo
work ·effectively 111 SoulbeasJ
refused treatment, and at 9:27
a.m. another UD!t wen't to VIUage
OIUo
and greatly ~It tile four
BJ Valled Preta lalenlldell&amp;l
About 90,000 metropolitan and· COIIIItllll
ln~ved; said Abel.
Manor tor Ralph
who was
Tbullderstonna with heavy suburban homes were affected
after
the
fllndiJIIaliaouncement
.
taken to Veterans.
rain, small hall and llahtnlng by the power outages cauled by
When comPleted. the correc:
The Middleport, unit at 4: 50 whipped across the Central
the wlllds, whiCh also tore Ilona!
facility will provide JObs
p.m. was called to Overbrook for Plalas early Wednesday. while
through the town of Hanna In
far the .rea - not only jobs tor
Ona Arlx who was transported to much of the West sweltered
nel«hborlng Indiana.
Veterans, alld at 10:46 p.m. the ullder clear skies and New
Hanna officials said 60 mpb qll&amp;llfled local Jaw enforcement
unit respoiK!!I to a call on South England shivered because of a
winds toppled a 150-foot radio oftk:lala but lobs In areas such as
Fourth Street for Kevin Manley frolty cold front.
tower. Sheriffs OffiCer Robert fOod .-vice, attmillatlng general
who was taken to Veterans:
The National Weather Service
Blake said the tower fell pntci ecoaomlc growth In the area"
·
said turbulent weather devepower and telephol)e lines and abe continued.
MelgsCounty'ajaU was builtin
loped .rapidly overnight near the . left parts of the community
11116
alld bad minor renovations ,
Kansas-Nebraska border, cover·
without telephone or electrical
In 1981. Generally It Is felt that
1111r a 20-mue band from Alma to service.
'
tbe cost of renovating the 19th
Tr41cy E. Kllnkow, 23, Cocoa, Red Cloud, Neb, Showers and
century
jail would exceed the
Early Wednesday, ChiCago cost of building a ni!IY facility.
Fla., to the Orient Reception thunderstorms developed over
stood at 60 degrees under partly The local jail Is considered to
Center to beeln serving his northeast Kansas, from near
sentence recently Imposed for Topeka to Manhattan, while cloudy skies. Clouds also doml· have an Inmate capacity of nine,
nated skies elsewhere around the although technically It
receiving stolen property, Kiln· cloud-busters headed east 1&lt;&gt;acMidwest.
kow was arrested In Syracuse for ward Indiana.
commodate
u.
.
·
Meanwhile In northern Illinois,
Clear skies and high tempera·
driving ullder the Influence. It
The
Jackson
County
j'all
was
·
high winds that raked the region
tures reigned over the Southern built In 1871 and because of fire
was determined t.bat the the
Plains, the South and the West for alld safety problems 'only the"
vehicle was stolen from Florida. Tuesday afternoon died down
early Wednesday.
a second day Wednesday.
It was reported that .Florida
first floor can now be used. The
The willds, sa'netlmes gusting
Wink and Presidio In .Texas Hocking County jali was built In
officials declined to come to Ohio
to more than 60 mph, tore
and Carlsbad, JII.M... Tuesday 1927 and had renovatlons.ln 1976,
to tel Kllnkow, so he was through the Chjcago area, dOW!!·
recorded highs of 107, with five
charged was receiving stolen
Ina power lines, uprooting trees
other towns just degree llils.
property.
lind dl!lrupting irafflc at O'Hare .· Low humidity ~nd southerly
International Airport. One man
winds kept the region unseasona·
who was boating on Lake Mlcltlbly warm overnight as tempera·
gan at the time of the windstorm
tures headed back toward . the
fell overboard alld died, author!·
century mark.
ties said.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
Sheriff's deputies said Jetfl'ey
were Brill E. King, Pomeroy, Alcorn, 30, of Lake VIlla, ''Was
Temperature records were
. $52, speeding; Donald Walker. apparently attempting to reach
brok~n Tuesday In Arizona.
Henderson, W.Va. , $66, PUCO ·sbore when tbe boat got away
Tucson'sl08brotearecordoftbe
safety violation; Donna Shato, . from him."
previous record of 1115 for tbat·
Gallipolis, $63, expired tags;
day, while P~nix's 112 tied a
Sheila M. Powell, Langsville,
record set In 1938.
· ,
$47, speeding; Regina Walls, .
e8 ·
On theEastCoast,acoldfront .
Langsville, $63, expired reglstra· ·
. brought chilly weather to the
lion; Gale Uttle. Pomeroy, $51,
So•lb Cenlnd Oblo
northern reaches of New Eq·
speeding; James Johnson, .
Tonight, showers lind thunder-. lane!, with Portland, Maine, and
Grandville, W.Va., S56. PUCO storms likely. Low around · 65 . . Concord, N.H. .. Ciropplng ·to 38.
violation, lacking medical cerllf· South winds less than 10 mpb.
CJoudllless and a clutnce of
lcate; Chlorus Gaul, Pomeroy· Chant-e of rain II eo percent.
showers were expected later
$51, speeding; and Harvey CoJe.
Thursday, variable cloudiness
Wednesday.
grove, McArthur. $41, PUCO with a chance ol showers and
The South was dominated by a
Violation, no vehicle stamp.
.thunderstorms. High In the lower
high-pressure system tlult kept
80s. Chance of rain Is 40 percent. weather pleasant and sprtngHke
Extended F o - t
overnight, wlthmorntngtemper·
Friday tllrouall 8111111.,a lures ranging from M lnChatta·
A chance of showers and
nooga.-Tenn., to 8lln Miami.'·
.
•
thunderstorms
Friday
andSatur·
In the mid· Atlantic , slates,
across Missouri to west Texas.
day. fair Sunday. Highs mainly
scattered light rain fell Wednes·
The front will move Into northern
lnthelowertomld80sFrldayand
day
over parts of southwestern
Ohio Wednesday evening and
Saturday
and
the
70s
Sunday.
Pennsvlvanla
and West VIrginia.
will he approaching the Ohio
Lows
55
to60
In
northern
Ohio
and
Other·
Isolated
Jtg'bt rain was
River by sunrise Thursday.
60 to 65 In southern Ohio.
reported from Westtled. N.Y., to
just west of Columbus,&lt;bhio,Jhe
NWS said.

rr:v.

can

a

Keith Musser, Portland, was
~ fined on three charges when he
;: appeared In thecourtofPomeroy
': :'Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesda.v
, ; night.
• · He was fined $64 and costs for
; dlsorder~v conduct, $313 and
: costsfordestructlonofproperty,
~- and $313 and costs for rests tlng
· • ' arrest.
Others fined In the eourt were
···Donald Pierce. Pomeroy, $213
: : and costs, trespassing on private
: · property; Terry Rhoades. Rose.; ville, $72 and costs; speeding;
: ·Michael Hlndy, Middleport. $59
: •and costs for abandoning a car
: :and $25 for failure to appear.

2:

wu

The State School FoundatiOn
subsidy payments lor May to
Meigs County Schools totaled
$788,890.41, according to a report
from the office of State Auditor
.Thomas E. Ferguson.
The total amount of basic and
• transportation allowance to the
Eastern Local Schoo Dlstlct was
$152,637.19, less deductions from the total of $5,488 for school
em; .toyees 'retlremen t and ·
$17,080 for state teachers retire- · ·
ment leaving a net 'payment to
'
the school district of $130,069.19.
In the Meigs Local School
District the total was $433,545.07
with $14,887 of the amount going
to the school employees retire·
ment fund, and $53,687 to the
state teachers retirement leav.
lng a net payment to the district
of $364,971.07.
In the Southern Local Schoo
Dis ti-lct, the total was $156,018.06
with $7,114 tp school employees
retirement and $23,628 to tl)e
·~ ,s't ate teachers retirement leav· ing $125,276.06 net to the scJjool
t lltstrtci. ·
;:~ The direct allptment to ·the
"""'county board was $46,690,09,
:
From the total of $788,890.4lln
; state foundation funds which
: Meigs County schools received
:: during May, a total of $27,489
: ' went to .pay school employees
.: r1tlrement ·and $94,395 was put
: Into ·the State Teachers Retire·
~ ment Fund.

Patrol cites woman

·
'
:
A Reedsvllle·area woman was
cl~ In a tw&lt;&gt;-ear crll$h Tue~ay
at 5: 2lln Olive Township on s.R,
681, at the ju~tton of.T.R. 265;
according to the Gallla· Metas
PostoftheStateHie~ayPatrol,

Evelyn L. Barringer, 54, of
S.R. 681, Reedsville, was cited
tor failure to yield after her 1978
Lincoln Continental !Ill a 1987
Cadillac Sedan ~VIlli! dflvefnS byR'
Barbara S. Heasley. 41. o · ;
681, TUppers Plains. · ··
Hensley was headl!'fl . easl
when Barringer , who ·was driV·
tnc west, turned left to T.R. 2651l'
front of Hensley's car~ causl"1
the collision.
.
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1&gt;,

.

r

the widow of Rev. Johnny E.
Riddle who died May 25. The
public Is Invited to attend.

Twenty Meigs County students
; at the University of Rio Grande
~ were listed on the 1990dean's list
, for the spring quarter. to
•· achieve honor roU status, stu·
: dents must earn a 3.75 grade
:. point average on a 4. scale during
: the quarter. ,
On the . list were Nancy J .
•
:. Aldridge, Pomeroy; Shannon J .
:: Coates, Middleport; . Jennifer L. ·
: Couch, Porneroy; Michael D.
:: Edwards , Rutiand; Jeffrey S.
•· Frank Racine; Cheryl D. Hal,
. •. ley, Middleport; Phillip J. Har·
: tis, Middleport; Lisa M. Hender·
: son, . Guysville; Matthew J .
• Lyons , Racine; Judith C.
• McCarthy, Middleport, Kellee J .
' Nease, Donlta A. Pooler, Pome·
: roy; Kelly D. Rizer, Racine;
;· Sheryl L.. Roush, Syracuse;
' Roger E. Swartz .. Pomeroy;
: Carin S. Taylor, Middleport
: Robyn L. Wayland,. Pomer.oy;
• Ralph H. Werry, Pomeroy; Ju.
: dlth A. Williams, Syracuse, and
• Darla K. Wllllamson,;Pomeroy.

•

J;

Lodp meetlna
A marriage license has been
The Pomeroy Lodge 164 wiU Issued In Melgll County Probate
have a regular meeting Wednes· court to Dennis Lee Hart, 38,
day. at 7: 30 p.m. at the Middle- · Pomeroy, and VIcki Lou Phillips,
port Temple. All master masoos 32. Pomeroy.
are ur:ged to attend.

'

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I

CINCINN'ATI I UP!) - The
Ohio Emergency Management
Agency base set up an 800
telephone number for persons
needing assistance In the wake of
!. Saturday's tornado damage In
: Butler and HamUton counties,
. ;
Stacie Glig, a spoke.sman for
" the OEMA, says 1,600 homes and
: businesses In the two counties
: suffered damage.
!' ·The 800 number 11·80().332·
•· 5288) answers ques lion for those
: needing Information on such
: things as Insurance and disaster
: rellef,lnformlngcallerson which
• slate agency might help them.
; · The number, Gllg said, Is not
% for financial ald.
:·
;·
:
:
•

VAUGIAI'S BASSET

NIGHTSTAND
Regular $69.95

HORME-L

Queen • Innerspring

Mattreu

HEAT &amp;
MASSAGE

$

RECLINERS ~.

All WOOD

DINETTE SET. BUNK BEDS
With 3 Chairs and Bench

$'3.49 S269 .S24·9

Cantaloupes.......... 9.9

steernwheeler

FLAVORITE

2°/o .Milk ... ~ ••••••• ::~

Fathers Rec:eive 10°/o Off
Recliner In The·

t
f'
r

....

·

...• .

·•

614·446-Jf'J I ·

V eteraaa Melliorlal

lt. 141, 5 ...... lt.

: Tuesday adm'lsslou - 'fllo.
mas Frye, Middleport; Edward
: &lt;:apebah, Pomeroy; and Ona
~ Arix, Middleport.
: Tuesday dllc:barges- Howard
:Ervin, Mary M. Eblin.

'

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7.. i ,,
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t

LOTS OF UNADVIRTISED SPEClALSI!
'

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,

;._,' CLEVEL,AND i.UPI) - Tues-

,.

. . ...
'

1;11

,,

VAN CAMP

f day's winning Ohio Lottery

= numbers:

Uppar llnr ltL · ·
(Auou fr• tM Alrpert)

'

.

.

~ '

•

GAWPOUS

:

"

650.

• fiCK·S

/

,

·

.

al . I

: . PICK-3, ticket sales tot ed i
' : $1~289,953.00, with a payoff due of ·
• $991,390.00.
•

".. .
' 8625.

PJCK-4
.

PlCK·4 ·ticket·

.'. '

AD(, EP

34.5 OZ.

•

. ~ Lottery numbers
,

•IEN110 OWl
•FINANCING. IVAUIIE
·
'
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;ales totaled

$255,338.00, with a J&gt;4Yoff due of.
S13.900.00.' . . ...
•
.

i

(

Sl 69

$1-19
Parkay Spread .;~:· ·
LlnLE DEBBIE
,. .
· $
KEMP PAIL
..
·, ·
$299
Ind.·Snacks •••••••• 6/ 1 Ice Cream .•••• :.a:!~::~
MAXWELL HOUSE MASTER BLEND . $ 99
BANQUO
$199
Fried Chicken ••• ~!~!·
Coffee •••••••••••••••••• 3
Ju•o

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IEDDING &amp; CHEst EmA

..

,WESTE~N-LARGE 1S CT. SIZE .

•. from ihe Blennerhase.t tour area
:·. at Parkersburg, W.Va.
:• The New Life Covenant Church
.., of God at Chester Is sponsoring
; " the cruise and those planning to
:;;;; kgo are asked to take their
;.. money Into the church office by
f' Wednesday. Pastor Gary Hines
:;- may be contacted for more
• . lnforamtlon at 985-4157.
~ The three hour cruise will
:.O.teature Christian musical enter·
.,...talnmetn and fellowshp. The boat
:;!'will leave the dock at 6: 30 p.m.
;.. and those attending are asked to
dress casually and wear comfor-'
.,.: table shoes since the steel decks
• are not the place fpr high heels or
:;! plastic shoes.
,::; The cost If $17.50 per adult, and
$10 kper child, six to 12, with
those under five enjoying the
,.. outing free.

CAPTAIN'S QUARTERS
l-SHAPED

COUNTIY PINE

•

·Wieners •••••••••• !·!~!~~. 69(

-~ ~~:~~Ya~~~~~~= :~:a~: ie~~=

$

.

FLAVORITE

:. Plan cn,lise
A Christian

ll

.
·Ham Patt1es .. ~!:!·.. 5149
.
FLAVORITE
,
.$
.
·
PICK 0! THE CHICK •
..
$
29.
09
··
Lun·
c
h
Meats
••
·
~
~l:·::~·
1
Fry1ng Chicken •• ~ 1
CUBED
.
$
Pork Steak ••••••••~. 269

.t••

•:;!'

..

99
Colby Cheese •••••:. 1

•

•'

.

Chuck Roast ••••.•••

LONGHORN

: emergency line

·:Hospiial news

.i ' •'

S2
39'
Round Steak •••••• ~.
Sl 49.

BEEF BOTTOM

USDA (HOI~E BONELESS BEEF .

; OEMA sets up

::Dally stoek prices
:"(As of 10: 3e Lm. )
: Bryce aud Mark Smith ·
:.of Blunt, Ellis lo Loewi
·: Am Electric Power ........ ..... 30~
; AT&amp;T ............. ....... : ............ 43~
· Ashland 011 ...... ;................ .. 36
•: Bob Evans ............ .......... .... 12%
:: Channing Shoppes ......... ..... 10%
: Ctly Holding Co .: .......... ... ... 14%
· ·Federal Mogul. ....... .. ... ...... .22%
:. Goodyear T&amp;R .. ... ... ...........35%
·: Heck's ............................... .. 3~
; Key Centurion .... ............... .13%
: Lands' End .................. .. ..... 16~
· Limited' Inc ................ ........ 49%
·' MultlmE:dla Inc , .................. 80~
: Rax Restaurants ...... .......... .. 2%
: Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 19%
·: Shoney's Inc .. ...... ....... ........14%
· Star Bank ..................... .. .... 21%
: wendy's lntl ..........................6
: worthington Ind ................. 24%
:: (Ke;y Ceaturloo ill ex dividend
: ,today.)
·

r.:

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., JUNE 3 THRU SAT., JUNE 9

"·
••
•·

•"•

~Stocks

,.

298 SECOND Sl
POMEROY, OH,

'"

Ueense iMued

SLEEPER SOFA

STORE HOURS
Monday 'thr~,J S"nday ·
8 AM-10 PM

:.., Named to dean's
.:. list at RiQ ·Grande

----Meigs announcements--lleaeflt st..,
There wiU be a benefit sing on
Saturday at 7 p.m . at the Word of
Ufe Church In Burlingham.
Singers will be Chosea Heirs,
Full Gospel Travelers;"Hlghway
Gospel Slncers, Sea walkers, and
more. A love offering will be
taken during the evening to help

l

•.•

er

..:~ Aronoff seeks relief fund

: · By United .Press JaterutioDal
Ohio Senate President Stanley
: . Aronoff, R·Cinclnnall,ls !eeking
:: a $1mUilon relief fund for repairs
:to schools and other publiC
. ;facilities damaged by tornadoes
; · In southwestern Ohio.
•: Aronoff asked Gov. Richard
: Celeste to recommelld the State
~ Controlling Board approve a
• tornado fund at Its meeting next
:: Monday.
:: Meanwhile, a weak front ap.
·: proaching Ohio early Wednesday
• could bring rain showers alld
: thunderstorms to !lie Buckeye
::state Wednesday night, espe::c'tally In the southern haH of the
· :,state.
·• The National Weather Service
::said the front will linger near
:southern Ohio Thursday alld
: continue to cause a threat of
~showers, while the rest of the
~: state will· have partly sunny
:.skies.
,
:: The chance of showers and
:.rhunderstorms Is also In the
: rorecast for Friday and Saturday
.: as another cold front will be In the
:~area. However,Sundaysho!lldbe
· dry as high pressure moves ln.
: The weather service reported
;. temperatures much warmer In
·(Ohio Wednesday morning com·
·· pared with Tuesday.
;: Overnight temperatures
c:ranged from the mid 50s to lower
"60s, which Is about normal for '
' this time ot year. ThOse reldiJIIII
::were about 20 degrees warmer
: 'than -Tuesday. due .to a southerly
:. flow of air and mostly cloudy
:skies.
• Highs Thursday will be around
:ao and may be a little warmer
: Frlday and Saturday, and. In the
::70s Sunday.
:, On the morning weather map,
· high pressure was just off the
:~East Coast and a weak cold front
;:extended from upper Michigan
•

Ohio

State foundation
funds distributed

whUe the. VIiitOrt Coull!)' l a'll
whli:h
liull! In ~ llu ~
clORd , ellice the , eiirl)i ' lJIIO 1
llee.U..If C!Ould nOt be~. . . .llt
up to curl'llll standardi dlle I!'
fire hazards. That . faciHty IJ
located on. tAe top floor of the
courthOUie ll!ld the only acce11 fS
by alab·s.
(. "
·. &lt;. · •

STE.IKBOUSE

W th

Wednelday, June 8, 1990

PONDEROSI

~-• Pomeroy Mayor's Court
:.

•

~&lt;C:o:::nt:ln:u:ed:.f:.rom=.:P.:ag::e.:l;_)_ _.;__ _ _'"'i;':"
.

~- Deputies probe complaint
'

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)1'1tdn
· '"-I 1810
..
53 Ja ..........

PORK &amp; BEANS ·.·.....

3/Sl

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Page~B-The Dally Sentinel

IJ\\~511

Pomeloy-;-Midtlaport. Ohio

{ • •

6. 1U0

Feinstein, ,Gantt score historic primary victories tumdily
By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
UPI Political Writer
Former mayors Dianne Felp·
stein and Harvey Gantt scored a
pair of historic llrsts for women
and blacks by easily wlnnln&amp;.Jhe
Democratic nominations for gov·
ernor In California and senator In
North Carolina, but both face
tougher odds In the general
election.
Highlighting the busiest prim·
ary day of the year thus far, .
Feinstein, who made l)er gender .
a campaign Issue, Tuesday became the first woman to capture.
a major party gubernatorial
nomination In the Gold~ State.
Gantt became the first black to.
win nomination to any major
office In the Tarheel State.
However, both Feinstein, a
former mayor of San Francisco,
and Gantt, a former chief execu·
live of Charlotte, N.C ., now must
contend with a pair of Republl·
, can opponents who have well·
·' es Ia bUshed political bases ·. and
have proven they can will
statewide.
In California, ,GOP Sen. Pete
Wilson, 56, a popular two-term ·
federal lawmaker and fanner
San . Diego mayor, easily de-

.

feated token opposition ~ay
versus coast people, 'but that
to capture the Rejlubllcan il!ber· . we'.re one state - CaUfomlans
natorlal nomination. If· not a
and proud of It."
favorite to replace retiring Re"The times have re~lly
publican Gov. George Deukmechanged, yes they have," Gantt.
" Jlan, Wilson must at least be
47, told happy supporters In
vlj!Wed by Feinstein as an
Ralelah, N.C., after hls Demoextremely tough oppanent.
cratlc runoff win over attorney
And .ln. North Caroline, Gantt
Michael Easley.
· will contend with three-term
"North Carolina needs a new
Republican Sen. Jesse Helms,
kind of senator, someone with the
who Is one of the most outspoken
very best hope~ and aspirations
con·s ervatlves In the country and
of all the people of North
.
·Carolina," he added. ''Folks, I
popular at home. .
Nonetheless, both Feinstein
want to tell you, God Is good, yes
and Gantt were ecstatic Tuesday
he ' Is. The wonderful people of
. night. and looking forward to
this state showed their confl·
doing battle with their Republl·
dencelnme. There'sanewdayln
can rivals.
North Carolina."
With 93 percent of the vote
.· "Well, we did It!;' Feinstein
told cheering supporters In San
counted, Feinstein had 1,222,071
Frauclsco after declaring vic·
votes, or 52.3 percent, while Van
tory over state Attorney General
de Kamp had 956,845 votes, or 41
Jolul Van de Kamp. "One mls·
percent. Minor candidates splif
. sian Completed -one to go."
the remainder.
lmmecllately moving to por·
·In North Carolina, with 97
tray ' a uulty Image aDd dlswl
percent of precincts ·reporting,
some of the nasdness of thlf . Gantt had 264,378 votes, or 57.8
oftl!n·bltter. primary campaign, ·• percent. Easley had 192,8'77
Feinstein added: "I ·think we
votes, or 42.2 percent. The two
have .shown tonight that we are
men had finished first and second
one state. That we\e not .Nor· . In a May primary.
therners versus Southerners,
that we are not mountain people

I

MANSFIELD, Ohio tUPil
de.! ense hac! failed to provide any
Three newspapers have chal· "rationale for the extraordinary
lenged a Richland County premise that the mere pJ;esence ·
:. judge's order barring the press of the press ,.. will deprive
: . and public from jury sel~tlon In 1Boyle) of hls right to a fair
the murder trial of Mansfield trial. "
· physician, Dr. John Boyle.
Henson said he barred the
Lawyers representing the ·media from the proceedings
Mansfield News Journal and the because prospective jurors
Columbus Dispatch filed a mer . might be "Intimidated" If reportlon early Tuesday morning ters were present during
asking Richland County Com· questioning.
man Pleas Judge James Henson , JuJ:Y selection continued Tues.to rescind the order. He refused day behind closed doors, with
and proceeded with jury Henson · conducting Individual
selection.
Interviews with prospective ju·
• , The Clev~land Plain Dealer. rors while a crowd of spectatots
joined the other two newspapers · in the hallway tried to watch
In appealing. to the Ohio Court of pr!lceedlngs on .a television
- Afipeals In Canton. In represent· monitor.
.
.
: lng the three neWspapers, Lora hi . But the television camera was
• lawyer Richard Panza asked the turned off.
• court to hold a hearing that jury
Jury selection continued be• selection be open:
hind closed doors until 4 p.m.
Panza said the burden Is on the Tuesday. Henson said 19 of the 36
· defensetoprovetbatclosedjury pro·s pl!ctlve jurors were
· selection Is needed to guarantee questioned.
· a fair trial. The Plain Deale~ ,__...._ _ _ _ _ _ _- t
: reported.
; Panza and Lorain lawyer Wil· '
: liam Kalis, Jr: argued that the
•

-Mississippi: Republic'(•
easier general election race If
le-. "Tuesday. lneuinbent goverVan de Kamp had won tht Sen. Thad Cochran had no
nors and senators sei!klng reopposition. There Is no Demo- ·
Democratic aomlnation.
eleetion generally faced little
•
At least one recent poll gave cratlc candidate.
opposition and had an easy day .
-New Jersey; Democratic
Wilson a slight edge over Fein·
Early In the California camstein and some exit polling done Sen. Bill Bradley easily defeated
paign. Van de Kamp, 54, was ·Tuesday showed a Wilson·
token opposition and won noml·
considered a heavy favorite, bu 1 Feinstein match to be a dead nation to a third term. His
a media push by Feinstein
Republican opponent, Christine'
heat .
propelled her to the lead.
Highlights of other Tuesday Whitman, had no oppanent.
The closing days of the race
-New Mexico: Republican,
races Included:
were.also marked by an Increase
-Alabama: Republican Gov. Sen. Pete DOmenicl and his.
In negative commer~ials. from
Guy Hunt easily defeated token Democratic challenger, TQm
both camps, leading to some
opposition, but Democrats Paul Benavides, hlld no opposition. In
speculation that Democrats
Hubber.t and Don Siegelman the ra~e to replace ,Republlc!lJI.
might hurt · themselves far ln.· appeared h.e aded to a runoff for Gov. Garrey Carf!itliers, former j
advance of the fall campaign
two-term Gov. Bruce King won
the rlg)ll to challenge him. Sen.
against the GOP.
Howell HeDin, D-Ala., breezed to the Democratic nomination and·
Despite that, Van. de Kamp a nomination for a third term. Frank Bond, sante Fe attorney ,:
Tuesday night pledged his sup..
·
His R$ilbllcan oppone~t. Bill won the GOP nod. .
port to Feinstein's general elec·
-South Dakota : There was no
Cablnlss, was unopposed.
lion effort.
-Iowa: Republican Gov . opposition for any of the major
But Wilson refused to believe it Terry Branstad was unopposed candidates: :Republican Sen.
and reveled In the Democratic and will face Democratic winner Larry Pressler, his Democratic
discord. gleefully telling fellow
Don Avenson, an abortion· rights challenger, Ted Mqenster, Re·
Republicans: "Germany will be candidate. Abordon was a key publican Gov. George MICkelson:
reunified before the Democratic Issue In the Democratic primary. or Democrat Bob Samuelson.
Party."
-Montana: Sen. Max Baucus,
.In the ·state's hot Senate race,
But while Feinstein might have neither Incumbent Democrat a Democrat, had . llttle trouble
a tough time against Wilson, It Is Tom Harkin nor GOP challenger ' beating rrilnor opposition. Four
generally belleved.·that the Re- Tom Tauke had any primary Republicans foughf for thE! right
publican would have had an opposition.
to challenge him.
·

~es

. up, but 80 is
: production costs

: COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) leg. S19.95 Dbi~Roll
·sates increased, but the cost of ··
' hogs for Bob Evans Farms_Inc.
Dbl. Roll
operations cut Into· the finn's
profit for the past fiscal year.
: The company said Tuesda)' it
: had sales of $454.3 million, up
•from the $419.5 million from the
year before.
But hog prices rose more than ·
50 pereen t. during the year, said ·
HUGf SEllmON
· .. Keith Bradbury: treasurer and ·'
:chief finanel~jl offlcer for the
' Rtttil J9.95
·sausage making and restaurant
company.
,
SAlE
Net income 'fell from $30.7
million to. $27.7 million while
earnings pl!r share fell from 95 .
cents to i7 cents.
"A year ago at this time we
,were paying about $36 per live .
~hundredweight, compared with
$55 per live hundredweight to•day," Bradbury said of hog
••iiiAl lllfiiOICH
, -GIIIRILD IYL, .
prices.
•1
The company's restaurant dlv·
Pa.EISMG, W, Yl.
Is ion provided abOut SO percent of
9-11:30
the net Income, generating sales· .Mon.·Fri. 9-8; 8111.
'
. -of $322.3 million. Net income
.from the restaurant division was
;$21.7 million while the sausage
;:segment produced $6 million. ·

:-~ $5 99

. •'

..........
you
f'-lp
Air

16-tA.

c-. •

Split

!I

AM/I'Mat.MRacllo

Honors roils for the elemen·
tary schools In the Meigs Local
School District for the last six
weeks' grading period have been
announced.
,
In or_der to make the honor roll
students must make a grade of
"B" or ;!bove In all their
subjects. Listed on the ron for
this grading period were the
following students:
Rutland
Grade One: Jennifer 'Allen,
Christl Bareswllt, Derrick BOlin,
Zachary Bolin, Jessica Chap·
man, Matthew Cotterill, Skip
... Dodson, Justin Gilmore, Alison
Hays, Jordan Hill, Billy
Keni:edy, Bethany McMillin.
Paul Michael, Tiffany Priddy,
Nancy Rife, El~beth Smith;
Matthew Stewart, Susan Tobin,
Missy Walker. Nancy Wingo.
Grade Two: Jake Birchfield,
Levi Burns, Pam Cade, Heather
Ferrell, tiffany Halfhill, Josh
Hlll; Atny Hysell. Mandy Miller,
Mathew Peckham, Michael
Ramsburg, Shawn Workman.
Grade Three: Robert Diddle,
Ben Fowler, Amanda Hays,
Justin Jeffers, Matthew Justice,
Amos Mills, Alyson Patterson.
Clayton Tromm.
Grade Four: Emily Fowler,
Jill Lemley, Sean O'Brien, Da·
nlelle . Pec)tl:am,. Missy Titus,
A.J. Vaugh11n. Melissa Williams.
sandra Young.
Grade Five: Chad Bartrum.
Casey· Booth, Elizabeth Ellis,
Michelle Miller, Beverly Stewart, Jamie Williamson.
Grade Six: Phyllis Clark, John
cieland, Jeremy Coleman,
Jeremy Honaker. Angle Powell,
Lori Russell, Clndl Stewart, Matt
Titus, Roxanne Williams:
DH: None.
~
LD: James Chapman.
· SBH: Chris Jones, Sam Kerns.

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Scarlet Red Cloth/VInyl B~~9k•a
Specill Value Package 32Q ·
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•Power ,St-Ing • Re• Window Dafrc:eter
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•Ught/Co~lenca Group •1.9l SEFT 4 cyl. engin~
•Front U«*!H Plete Br8cket • II·Spd Manuel Treneaxle
•P176170RX12 SSW Tlr• • Manuel Air Conditioner
•AM/FM Stereo/C...- Re41fo o Cl-coat Paint
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1990 LTD CROWN VIC LX 4-Door
Deep Titanium Cle•coet Met.
· Titanium Cloth Split Bench Seeta
Preferred Equipment Pkg. 113
•Sptllld Control o Front!Ra• Bumper Guards
•Rear Window Defrc:eter
a Stereo Radio w I Casaetta !"'aver • Power lock· ~roup
•Seat 8 Way Pnwer Driver'• • Cornering Lamps
.·
oLaether Wr8pped Steering Wheel
·
oCalt Aluminum Whaela • llluminltlld Entry Svatam
Ught Tltllnlum Re• half Vinyl Roof
&amp;.Ol EFI va engine

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WALLPAPER and

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Totll Price Iefort Discount ................................ 120,491.00
Special Added Discount ............................_...... . 150.00
Pat Hills Discount ........................~····~:-!................ 2,22i.OO
Cash Bac:k ..~:.·~·····...•.. ~~·······-·...........~................... 11ooo.oo

BLIND SHOP

Front/Re• Cerpetlng Floor Meta
Front UC81188 Plata lln:cket
Auto. Overdrive Tr8nan:iulon
P2111170RX115 WSW Tltea
oCiearcolt Pelnt

· IN· STOCK FOR
IMEDIATE DELIVE.Y

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·Total Selling Price ........................~.:.:_~ ·14;420o00.
·
· Tax &amp;"fitle ,.at lncluCIICI
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304428-1065

REJOICING · LIFE
·CHRISTIAN ·scHOOL

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GAME 32.
p.CINCINNATI REDS
~,..vo
vs.
~\C~'! UGELES DODGERS ,
RIVERFRONT STADIUM

GRADES ICINDDGAmN &amp; 1 THIU I
•
Meets All State Requirements
Minimum Standards
IEGISTRAnON NOW OPEN FOR
1990-1991 SCHOOL YEll
For Information a~ . Manual
Write or Call
614-992~6249
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SCHOOL
333 NOt lh Second Awe.
Mlddlep11 I, Ohio 45760

fRI.JUNE

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2i',J.'I~D

7:35

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107

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.WIN/ 4 REDS TICKETS PLUS S200 (ASH
WHILE SHOPPING. AT ·PAT HILL CHRYSLER
. OR PAT HILL FORD. ASK OUR SALESPEOPLE
TO REGISTER YOU FOR OUR DRAWING
•
ON JUNE -19th.

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SEE 11(1 TOLLIVER, .JAY HILL or PAT HILL
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REJOICING LIFE

The fourth annual Cou.n try
· Hymntlmers ·reunion was held
recently at . the Gallla County
Fair Gr?unds.
.
. Blessing for the 1 p.m. dl011er
was given by Rev. Darrell
Dodrill. After dinner the group
enjoyed playing music and sing·
lng. Next years reunion Is set for
.June 1.
Attending were Dan, Faith,
and Tamara Hayman, Cheryle
Knight, Jerry, Diana, Melissa
and Brian Frederick, Marvin
and Debbie Dodrill, Sid, Carol,

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PAT HILL FORD IN(.
461 S. 31D

614-992-2196

MIDDLEPORT

· Salem Center
Grade One: Eric Montgomery,
Jason Tackett, Matt Lewis,
Brian Searles, Kendra Cleland.
Dustin Erlewlne.
Grade Two: Orlan Barrett,
Scott Colwell, Stephanie Kopec,
Brandy LaudermUt, Erik Metheney, Laura Payne.
Grade ' Three : Bridget
Vaughan, Andrea Dunfee, Lori
Kinnison, Jessica Priddy.
Grade Four: Leigh-Ann Can·
terbury, J.R. Kl11illson, Latlc~
Metheney, Amanda · Napper,
Larry Ogdln. Rebecca Russell,
Raymond CotterUI, Todd Mar·
cum, Sheila Neace.
Grade Five : Adam Barrett,
Jennifer Ervin, Amy Cleland,
Timothy Lewis, Cynthia Sandy,
Carrie Harmon.
Grade ~lx: Angie Hale, Jake
Hannaway, Michael Jarvis,
Bryan .Colwell.
, Salllbury
Grade One: April Blankenship,
sarah , Clifford, anny Custer,
Amy F~cker,Sandl Gilkey,
Bobby Johnson, Grace Kltcbeo.
Carson Midkiff, Billy Soulsby,
Heather Whaley.
Grade Two: Beverly Burdette,
Kim Conde, Marjorie Hallir.
Tiffany Harder, Morgan Ma·
thews, Kim Peavley, Anna Story,
Marissa· Whaley., Ryan
Ronquillo.
Grade : Three: Lacy Banlla,
Trlcla Dllvls, Becky Johnson,
tamra O'Dell, Daniel McDonald.
\~ I

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register call Quickel at 99l:-7756 or Mary Wise at
89Z-~71 by June 15. Plctureldare SOOie,hercurre:il
daoce students. They are, :rronl, Am&amp;l!d&amp; Mu88er
and Lori Ruuell. Baek, ll.atle Sanders, Jenny ·
Carpenter, and Beeky Mel~er.
\.

Honor rolls announced

. w/C..-...., Clock
• o.twia Two-Tone Paint
• ctu·-• Reor Shp
BumP« • Tachomtllor

1990 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
LX
.

$199

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Hymntimers reunion held recently

111111cll .... • Eteotronlc •

• PoW.r Steering brek•
" • Anti-.Lock Aeor Brof&lt;•
,'
• And More.

Yeauger gave prayer, The song,
"How Great ThoU Art. "
The guest speaker was district
officer Betty Fultz. She used a
playlet "Exercise In Futility"
pertaining to the baby boomer
age group and how to get that
group to gohto churches more.
The meeting cloeed with the
group forming a big circle sang
"Blest Be the Tie That Binds."

The Forest Run United
Methodist Women met recently
for a ·patlucil dinner.
Guests were the Asbury and
Minersville UMW groups, along
with Betty Fultz, Mary Wise, and
Janet Meadows.
After ihe dinner, Edith Slssiln,
president, read a meditation
pertaining to mother, and an
article about retirement . . Hilda

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DANCE CLASSES - A series of dance classes,
Including ballet, lap and jaz2, for ages three.and
up will be offered by the Middleport Arts Couocll.
The Instructor will be Sblrley Quickel. The cluses
wpll be a-vailable In the afternoon aDd evening. To

1991 ·FORD ESCORT

:!:!.::"""'
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PRE-PASTED VINYL
" . SCRUIIAILE

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Forest Run UMW meets recently

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BORDERS

Paga 9

Ryan and Robert Hayman.
Harry and Vera Hayman, Rita .
and Breanna Hayman, Betty and
Eddie Willis, Darrell and Dorothy Doilrtit; chester, Geraldine
and Yvonne Sexton, Go Kite Fred·
erick, .. Bonnie Landers, Danny
Folmer, J'etod Vanlnwagen,
Scott Oliver, Julie Hill, Jim and .
Boots Patteraon, Gleoiiud Peggy
McQuaid Jr., Gene and Jeanie
Vaughn and Loren G. Vaughn,
Jerry, Louise, anci Jerry ~
Unroe.

Honor rolls announced

·. WALLPAPER

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Wednesday, June 6, 1990

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1990 FORD lANGER XLT 412

.8,000 .ROllS
BRAND NAME

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The Daily Sentinel

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·ARRIVED

Bob Evans

By The Bend

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In all, nllle stales held primar·

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PAT HLL FORD'S
Sllllltner S.ales Specta~ular

:_ Three newspapers· challenge
judge's order barring press

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Tiemeyer birth
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Grade One: Atjam Bullington, ·
Joshua &lt;::lark. Christopher Dod·
. son, Tosha Green, Michael Lam·
bert, John · .Mace. Jonathan
·. Maue. Dustin Smyers, Fawn'
Stivers, Patricia Walker, Dawn
Yost.
Grade TwO: Raina Bennett,
Denise Cotterlil, Amanda
Hamon, Crystal . King, Jason
Miller, Krlsty Slx,l&lt;yleSmlddle,
James Stanley, Adam Walker, .
Hollie Welch, Gillian Wilt, Stacy
Gilmore, Tiffany Richmond.
Grade Three: Erin Dillon,
. Waylon McKinney, Jason
Preast, Shannan Stevers.
· Grade Four: Michelle Bissell,
Kelly · Dalton, Scott Dodson,
Robin Donohue, Cortney Haley,
Rusty. Haning. George Mlller.
Kevin Neel, · Melissa Reeves,
David Staats. Jessica Wheeler.
Grade Five: Laura Arlx.
Grade Six: Amber Bennett,
Gary Stanley , Donald Yost.

{· INGEL$
FURNITUR~ . &amp; .JEWELRY ·

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( Middi.Port • 992-2635

during what may be our
MOST EXCITING EVENT
I

PLUS

l
I

· Railst'ar ror jour ·chance to··

Your DREAM APPLIANCE
ar ELECTRONICS PACKAGE

31" DIAGONAl .

DIIECT VIEW

Middleport
Grade One: Marjorie Brat ton,
· Jason Chaney, Tara Flic hpa·
trick, Abby Harris, Derek John·
, son, Jason Knight, C!lrrle Light·
foot, Amanda· Neece, ChriS
Parker, Lee Reynolds, Brandl
. Smilh, Kathy t:aylor, Cassie
Vaughan, Brltnl aevan, Tern
Brewer, Jessica Cundiff, Ml·
chael Hawkins, Caleb Jones,
Jeremy Jones, Leah Morrow,
Matthew Nelgler, Amy Sarver,
Brooke Smith, Ian Story, Rachel
Taylor, Amber VlnJnt.
Grade ·Two: John Ambrose,
Seth Baker, Belhany Boyles,
Charla Burge, J.P. BoUng, Missy
Cremeans, Michelle Cundiff,
Brant Dixon, Jennifer Eakins,
. Mindy Halley, Scott Johnson,
Jennifer Nease, Zach Meadows,
Nicholas Michael, Ryan Pierce,
Da.vey Reynolds, Chuckle
Shamblin, Brandy Stevens, Renee Stewart, Melanie Blevins,
Max Bratton, Stacey Brewer,
Ashley Burton, Janie Ofmpton,
Kathy DileS. Chris Gilkey, Joshua Hayman, Bridget Johnson,
Joshua Jones. Seth Rawson.
Tommy Roush, Joshua Sorden,
Brandy .Tobin, Ashlee Vaughan.
Grade Three: no...._v Carns·
han, Jason Harris, Vlralnia How·
erllln, Sarah Larklna, Joshua
Price, William Scanlon, Mellaha
Swisher; Shawn T)bbetta, Sara
·Williams, Phillp Burch, AUJdn
carr. Jessica Evans, Jessica
JohJISOII, T.J. Kina, Patrick
Marda, Rusty Stewart.
Grade Four: Racl1el Aahley,
·oarrte Hartson, Jenny Hayman,
TOry Swartz, Jennifer Vllllna,
Matt
Mellllt Copplck.
Glnaer Darat, Natalie Graadal,
Chad Hanson. J811111 Hudson,
Collin RoUJh, Nancy Wbaley.

h·

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No P1.1rchase Necessary

-... .......
·-... .•
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., ..... ,_.._,

-----..___

SAMSUNG TV's

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_::.

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VCR
•"'--III:O(Itol •• OIIMt "

19" DIAGONAl

wuuama.

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Mr. and Mrs. David Tiemeyer
of Newport, Ky. are announcing
the birth of twin 'sons, Jeremy
Uoyd a~td Joshua Lloyd, born·on
March 7 at St. Luke Hospital,
Fort Thomas, Ky,1
Mr. and Mrs. Tiemeyer have.a
daughter ,17 months, Lisa Marie.
Paternal grandmother Is MrS.
Loretta Tiemeyer, Middleport,
who now has 19 grandchildren
and eight great· grandchlldreh.

I

Grade Four: Mick Barr, BUll
Bentley, VIncent Broderick, Ja·
son Frecker, · Myc11 Haynes.
Heidi Legar, Michael Leifheit,
Mell,ssa Ramsburg, Andy Tl·
,
rado, Jared Warner.
Grade Five: Chelsle Dodson,
Jared King Tim Peavley, Chris
Roush, Melissa Whaley.
.
Grade Six: Nikki Bentley,
Autumn Conde, . Dorothy Lelf·
hell, Mindy Patterson, ·Tracy ·
.Shaffer.
. Tommy
. Tirado.
'
., 'Harrlaonvllle

ach, April Halley, Nicky Mills,
Tanya Phalln, Kenda Reynolds .
DH: Scott Autherson, Crystal
Conkey, Vickie Dolby, Jason
Klein, Charlie Miller, Lester
Bush, Shawnlta Johnson, Rlcky
Watson.
LD: Clint Stewart, Joey
Roberts .

Bradbury
Grade Five: Libby King, Amy
Clonch, Chad Dodson, Anna
Fink, Krlstlan Grate, John Kelly,
Amber Slaven, DarrlckSt.Clair,
Chrissy Wllllams,
Grade Six: Chris Chapman.
Jeremy Hartson, Stacy Staats,
Dodger Vaughan. Jill Bqrch.
Mike Franckowiak, Alison Gerl·

nmEMY LLOYD TIEMEYER
IOSHUA, UOYD 11EMEYER

s222 ·

S$33

-;.

15" DIAGOfiM...

MIHI'fll0~399

lilly IWnef

$248 .

.

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' •Lor.. Batectton

._

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'299

W••W1tilo;glo....

'dsc'llumlf bow~~
• Paalliri ....... IMn trWrior

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"alp··us celebrate. Ya.u mlgllllt be 1 bll winner•
No 'plirchlll naCIIIIPJ. ••IIItllll In IIIPI.

. - · · INGELS

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IE1 Ill&amp;ttl-5511
JEWELRY
ttt-tUS
SAU DillS:., 31·.._ 10, ' 1990

IWUHuiiiD IIULD
NO II()IICI...!f: Nlct:SSM'f. fo etftf. ~ 11'1

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10-The Daily Sentinel
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -Bible school will
be held at the Zion Church of
ChriSt through June15 with the
closing program on June 17, 7: 30
p.m.

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Community

calendar ·

Pomeroy-Mickleport, Ohio

POMEROY - The Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
have Bible school through Friday
with classes from 9 to 11:30 a.m.

port Community Church, 575
Pearl St., 7:30 each evening.
There will be dlffferent speakers
and singers each night.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT-The Evange·
line Chapter No. 172 Order of the
Eastern Star will meet Thursday
at 7: 30 p.m. Members are to
bring a sack lunch. Officers are
to wear street dresses.

BRADFORD - Bible school
POMEROY - The annual Ice
will be held at the Br11dford
Church of C]lrlst through Friday · cream "social for the Trinity
with classes 9 to 1:30 a.m. All Church of Pomeroy will be held
children of the community are Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
at thechurchfr.o ml0:30a.m. to6
Invited.
p.m . Flavors available are choc·
MIDLEPORT- Revival servt· olate, vanOia, peach, lemon,
ces are underway at the Middle· plne;1pple, strawberry, banana,

,.

Wednesday. Juna 8, 1990

The Daily Santinai-Paga-1 1-

-.

COPYRIGHT 1990 . THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY. JUNE 3, THROUGH SATURDAY. JUNE 9.
!990, IN POIEROY, OHIO.

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

Attention

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

and butterscotch. ~so available Big Bend Girt Scout Service Unit and table service will be fur·
will be sloppy joes 1 hot dogs, ham . meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m. at n!shed by the hostesses.
and ham sandw ches, potato · Syracuse.Elementary School. All
salad, cole slaw, baked beans, leaders should attend to discuss
P~MEROY -The Pomeroy
Chicken and noodlzs with roll , summer day camp to be held In Senior Citizens Dance Club Is
pie. cake, and beV()rages. Carry July at Forked Run State Park.
having a dance Friday from
out ord&lt;;&gt;rs will be alvalla ble.
8-11 p.m. Music wlll "be by the
POMEROY -The Pomeroy Happy Hollow Boys, Athens.
ROCK SPRINGS' -The SaliS· Group of AA and AI Anon will Those attending should bring
bury Township Trustees will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at snacks for the snack table.
meet Thursday at '1 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Public ts Invited.
township building. .
For Information call
SATURDAY
1-800--333-5051.
BURLINGHAM -The Modern
RACINE - The~wlll be a
regular meeting o( the Racine
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
FRIDAY
American Legion b t 602 on
LONG. BOTTOM -The annual will haye a cookout Saturday at
Thursday at 7:30 p lm. Refresh· flag d.a y picnic of the Return 6:30p.m. at the south bound park·
men1s Will be senl~d following Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR on Goute 33 near Darwin. Each . ,
1.
the meeting.
will he held Friday at 6 p.rri. at · familY Is to bring a covered dish.
the Hackett Cottage In Long Hot dogs and pam burgers will be
SYRACUSE ~ There will be a Bottom. The meat, beverage,
provided.

AIMRliiED 11111 PGUCY-Each of that advertised items it required t&lt;&gt; be
reodiy availoble Ia&lt; ..to in each Kroge&lt; Store, e•cep) 15 spedicany noted jn
this ad. If we do run out of an edveniled irem. we will offer you vour choice
of a comparable Item, when ovaillble. reflecting the some 11vingo or a 1rain·
check which will entitle you 10 purchaH the advertised item at the advert~
price within 30 days. Onty one vendor coupon will be. accepted pet hem
purchased .
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Wednesday, June 6, 1990

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Partic~pants ·u
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The free IBM PS/2 computers for students
program will be ending on Saturday, June 9th.
Please nave all receipt tapef:l totaled and to
your sponsor store by that · d.ate. How many
computers 'has yo~r sohqol earned?
AVG.l

Frozen oung
Turkey Breast
Pound

Tropicana
Orange Juice

RED, RIPE

Whole
Watermelon

%-Gal. Glass Ctnr.

Each

~·

~---------...- -. .

- - - - - - - - - - - . , . ; : I N THE PRODUCE
DEPT ., 100.% PURE

U.S. GRADE A

••

U.S. GR.I\OE A

AN EWII.E .IAVIII

.

Holly Farms
Pick Of The Chix

6'xJ5• POOL

Doritos Brand
Tortilla Chips
.

Pound

REGULAR PRICE ...................... 12.99
1/3 OFF SAVINGS...................-4.33

SALE PIICE ........................... I.66.

11-!JZ.

.

50¢
LIMIT 2 WITH ADDITIONAL .PURCHASES

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
CHUCK ROAST OR

Boneless
Chuck Steak
Pound

CUT HALVES OR QUARTERS LB . .. IIIC

60-CT. MAXIMUM STRENGTH CAPLETS
100-CT. BAYER ASPIRIN CAPLETS OR '

KROGER REAL SOUR CREAM DIPS 16·0Z ... 9,9¢

IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE
. SWEET OR CREAMY COILE SLAW OR
AMERICAN 0R

COUPON
VALUE

soc

Potato

GRANULATED

Domino
Sugar

lad

.5-lb. Bag

1IJO.Ct Tablets

•
LIMIT 1 BAG WITH COUPON AND $1 D.M
'ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

OF

"HAND DIPPIN KIND" FROZEN:
•

Old Fashioned ,
Ice Cream
5-Quart Pail

Kroger ·1%
Lowfat Milk
·Gallon

Kroger
Orange ·
Gallon

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LADIES' DENIM JEANS

REGULAR PRICE ..............- .....19.99
1/3 OFF SAVINGS........- ........6.66

••'

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

·Diet Coke or
Coca Cola Classic

12-PAK t2-0Z.

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PIICI-.............._,_,13.31

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2·Ltr.
I&lt;.ROGER BUTTERMILK OR CHOCOLATE MILK
GALLON • . tt.81

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c
SEALTEST CHILLED ORANGE n!UICE
,01\LLON ... t3.09 I

REGUI.AA PRICE...................... 14.99
1/3 OFF SAVINGS...........- .....4.99

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LAotEs· LEATHER HUARACHES

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COWII--. ,_ J ._lAT. . l • l l •
IUIJKT TD U'tiUCAIUIT.ll • U1CAL IAXII

78.

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Mustar~ ·

Bayer
Aspirin

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GALtiPO[IS

Silyer ·B~id.ge Plaza

�June 6. 1990

Ohio

bo-ma~s.""":C~hrl

·. Meigs County ' honor rolls

SCHOOL ROUSE QVILT - ODe of tile Melp
· County quills to be ex!llll!led at the Dal17 ~n,
June 9.July ·f , Is lhla colorful red ud p&lt;eeucbool

';,·,

·

-A-shl-ey-T...
...
:to-:'ph-er
Yeau,er.
The honor roll for tlie sixth Ball, Jeremy Fisher, Tammy
Grade Two: Todd Daniels,
six-weeks Kt'adlng periOd In Fryar, Brandon Hill, Chad Hub- Melissa Davis, Wesley Thoene,
elementary schools of the South- bard, Erin Struble, Jason Cun· Adam thomas , Whitney Thomas,
ern Local School Dlsbict have dlff, Matthew Warner.
Rayn Well, Michael Williamson,
been announced.
Grade Two: AdamhCumlngs, Amber Balckston, Jackie Buck,
Making a Kt'ade of "B" or Joshua Davis, Sara Fife, Tiffany P.J . Erwin, Andrea Nelltztlna.
above In 1111 their subjects to be Hickel, Donnie Proffitt, Jon Amber Perklne, Ry8Jl Pratt,
listed on the hOnor i'Oll were the Snillh, AuiJIIDD Thomas.
Jennifer Shrimp lin, J11lle Spaun,
following Studeilts:
Grade 'l'bree: Bridget Cross, Christian W!!lker.
Rad11e
Ashll Davis, Tua Knigbtlng, 1 Grade Three: Jennifer LamGrade One: Mlch11el · tlall, ~lm Sayre. ·
bert, Stefani Pickens, Bonne
Angel Bird, Clay Enslen, MacyD
Grade Four: Cynthia Clllclwell, Smith, Kasey Williams, Cbrlssa
Ervin, Jonathan :Evans, Court- Shllllft Harris, EvaJi Struble, Branham, John Davidson, Jenney Hill, Jeremy Hill, Shauna Bllly ,Young. · ,
nifer Heck, Ainy Johnson, Krls· .
Manuel. Erin Roach, Joey Sands,
Grade Five: Brian Allen, Chris Una kennedy, Sean Powell, Cort·
. Jamie Stemple. ·
' Ball, Kevla Fields, Shaun File, ney Scarberry, Brandy Suldet. ,
Grade TWo: Jam~ Boso, Juon Lawrence, Travis Usle,
Grade Four: David Anderson,
sarah Brauer, Willie : Collins, Amber Thomas.
Wendt Daniels, J\(_lle Hunnell,
Stacey Ervin, Kim Ihle; ·1'asl!.a , Grade Six: Robby Crow, Ryan Steven Mc.Cullqugh, Scott
Johnson, Arilber' Maynaf4, Kyle HIU, Rochelle· .{enklns, Jennifer Sellers, Wendy Sbrllnplln, Amy
Norris, Chris Randolph, Tara Lawrence, . iay McKelvey, Smith, Michael Brown, Sara
Rose, Dena S&amp;yre, Bobble Scar· Mandy Mills, Samml Sisson, Craig, Danle!Je Grueser, Ronald
berry, Jared Smith, Brandon Rayan Young~ Kevin Deemer.
Hirth, Lisa Russell, Amy See,
Wolfe, Lena Yoacham, · Jamie
Adam Thomas, Jessica Wright.
Baker.
.
Melp Locai
Grade Five: Taryn · Doidge,
Grade , Three: Steve Boso,
,Pomeroy
Jodie Sisson, Erin Drawsczyn,
Jenny · Cfl.rletim, ;, Josh Ervin,
Grade Onel Benjamin Can, 'Joe Hill, Kim 'fetrle, Tara ''
S\l~nne Ev~s. JOdy HupP.
Alidy Davls.~l~holas Dettwlller. Grueaer, Jessica McElroy, Whit·
Josle Ja;reH~~ Johnson, Kara
Alihley , J:lannalis, Curtis Han- ney 'Haptonstal!, - ·S!acy ~ce,
King; Jesse·Lit lle, BenjfManuel,
stlne, Julia Kennedy, Andrea Stacie Reed.
,
·
Crlssy Snide~. Jessica Theiss,
Krawsczyn, Aja McGlothin, AuGrade
Six:
Cynthia
CotterUI,
Josh Whitley.
tumn Phillips,. Christopher Israel Grllnm, Suzanna HenderGrade Four: Chad Clark, Matt
Pickens, Justin Robson, Brenna son, Heather Knight, Jessica
Dill, Tyson Evans, Ryan Grace,
Sisson, Emily Stivers, Chris· Stobart, James White, Travis
Matt Hill, Nicole H111, John
topher Ward, Terra Barton, Abbott, Anne Brown, Corey
Matson. Alicia Mulford, Nikki
Thaddeus Bumgardner, HoWe Darst, LaDeana. Grover.
Robinson, Je5slca Roush, Danny
Griffith, Breyden Haptonstall,
DH I: None
.
S&amp;yre, Derek Smith, Stephanie
Jennifer Fife, Apill Large, Shan·
DH II: Lisa Taylpr, Michelle.
Stemple, Amanda Theiss, Anna
non Price, Jonathan Runyon, Hart, Carllsa Barton.
Thompson.
Alex Shuler, Brandy Smith,
LD: None.
Grade Five: Bobby Wrltesel. ·
Grade Six: John Card, Paul
lhle,.Cralg Knight, Chanda Mul·
ford. Nick Smith.
· LetArt Falls '
Grade One: Kat! CummJns,
Holly Hannon, Garret Kiser,
Fallon Roush.
Grade Two: Jessica Alley,
Brawn ijerman, Autumn Hill.
Grade Three: Michael Ables,
anlel Hann11n, Jane H111, Mike
Johnson. Mike Manley, Jennifer
Morrls,·Rebei:C• Wolfe.
'
SW.i KRICII Yl.IIAND
Gr•~· Four: Wesley •Hall,
, Dean Hjll 1 Je1Jn!fer Roush,
\ary 'Nrley, 'R4netta Wheele~
,.
prade ,Five:' Eva Craptree,
.
· \' ..
Trudy Jusus, , Jeremy Lyons •.
Ad am Roush, Jessica Sayre;
Lora Sayre, Varlessa Shuler. '
'Grade Six: Jason Barnett,
Bobbl King, Jason Shuler.
.- 1 • •.
Syi'IICU&amp;e
Grade One: Cua Ash. Sarah

b - pA&amp;IIened quilt OWIIed by M1117 Wile. B bad
belented to her II'IUI!Imcllher, Minnie ScoiC, ud
waa quilled by tbe 'Momlng !ltllr Ladles Aide
sornettme . dl!rln~r tile lt88'11.

Quilt show slated· at Dairy
Barn
.
.

Thirteen of the 85 traditional
quilts to be displayed In the fifth
annual "Patterns Worth Repeal·
lng" exhlbllion at the Dairy Barn
!loutheastern Ohio Cultural Arts
Center In Athens come from
Meigs County. ·
The exhibit will be In place
from June.9.to July 4,,
The quilts to be exhibited were
chosen from 395 entered at 13
area quilt shows. by a panel of
Jextlle art specialists Including
i~Judy Matthews, director of the
Ohio University Department of
Home Economics In the College
of Health and Human Services;
Schuyler Cone, a doctorlll cllftdl·
date In the Department of Home
Economics. and the exhibition
coordinator; Ann -'ohnson·
Cummings.
.
The quilts range from antique .
examples of the populu "Blaz·.
ing Star", "Ohio Rose", "Log
Cabin" and "Double Wedding
Ring" patterns In colors muted
with age, to brilliant contemporary Interpretations of wellknown traditional patterns.
Meigs County quilts were selected at the quilt show s laged
recently at the Meigs County

L

i

Senior Citizens Center coordl· Qutlters of Portsmouth, and on
nated by Allee Wamsley and June 30 by the Courthouse
Allee Wolfe.
Qutlters of Washington !Court
The quUts chosen Include House.
"Tumbling Blocks", "Postage
"Patterns Wprth Repeating"
Stamp", and "Lone Star" by Is presented with the generous
Gunet Ervine, Racine; "1886 support of GTE North, the Ohio
Crazy Quill" by Mary Virginia Arts Counctl, McDonald's of
Easterd.y; "Tumbling 'B locks" Athens, Nelsonville, Gallipolis,
by Allee·Wolfe, Racine; "Geese and Henderson, W. Va.; the Ohio
on tile Pond" by, Helen Fisher, Coojleratlve Extension Swrvice,
Pomeory; "Applique · ~ose" by the Ohio Department of Develop)l:mma Adams, Racine; "Streak ment, the Office of Travel and
of Lightning", "School House" Tourism, and the Dairy Barn•.
and "Stu of, Bethlehem" by
Inc.
Muy Wise, Middleport.
"Plaid Stars" by Lydia Gullkey, Middleport; "Broken Stu"
by Jean Wright, Pomeroy; and
The first grade class of Ru·
. "Dresden. · Plate" by..qiarlce
tland Elementary visited Bank
Erwtn ,of Ml,ddleport; · formerly
One In Rutland and e11ch student
\owned l5y ll D. Hartl~r.
was given pictures to be colored.
' On•Junhbt \1 a.n'l.,tbe Dairy . These pictures.were Judeed by
BilrD;wllfbost8Jlauctlonlifqullts Jolinne Fetty. Winners • were
coUeeied1romSouthernOhldand
Nancy Wingo, first; Jesslcll
ac;rilss tpe eountry : t~ provide Chapman, se(!ond; and 'Missy
area quilt lovers an opportunity Walker, third. ·
·'
to own one of the beaudful words
CerUnc·ates and cash awards
of art. Ottje Opperman will be the were presented to the Wl,ntJera..
auctioneer
The pictures are on dlsplay-aw
Qulltlila . demonstrations w111
Bank One'ln Rutland.
.: .
be offered from 11 a.m to 3 p.m.
'
on june: 23 by t~ Empire

Class tourr bank

alAI SALAD ••••••••\\•••••••••• ate

¥11·

-·IACON •• u•••·············•···• *2.49.·
HAMu••••••••••••~••••••••~'~~·•~ $2.5,9

.•

· ~ ·

..

....

·,,r

E-DAYS SALE ~-. -'
People in the news·-, -~ ·HERITAG.
THUISDAY f ..DAY &amp; ll1UIDAT
'

1 .

'l
I

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••
•

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11

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•

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'.

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..,I

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.. : ....

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j:v '

. · ~ ·~

,~

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,,

Officials said Tuesday that the
Incorrigible father r1ently .con-

-· ... -

aumal
..

I'Over 100 CLOCKS To Be Sbld At The
..

AMERICAN t.EGION BUILDING
... '
~ILL S'tflW:ET In NEW HAVEN, WV
SATURDAY, JUNE 9 at 10 A.M.

lactlliMel: JUCI PURIIN
. l)ceri$e.tf WV.'6 6

·

All Tennis Shoes
.N, WOMEN &amp; CHILDREN

,,·~·

'

OFF
'

SHOES
·nOll
. . .

.~

~ · 'c.rtlfled Cheek, ar Ctarrellt

Letter Oura.teelnl A PenoDa1 or Com·

.·PARTIAL ESTATE AUCTION

.. MOVED TO HOW~RY AU(OON TO BE SOLD
· n. SO W ATHEftS, OliO

·JUICE ••••••
n.ua. S1.19
.
SIUEIIRAUT•••••••U.~I..~. S1.29
JELLO •••••••;..........t.t~l. 2 /S1.09
• o•SIICD
DIIED BEEF •••••••••••.M.~L$ ~ •19
IUF'R'S
NOODLES ............~~}1.,&amp;. s1.:19
-SOli'S
'
.
tPLEDGE
•••••••••••~~ ••••••l.,la -S1.79
'
: PAIGI ·
9C
TISSUE
(i'
$3.19
.

'

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~·

1'

.

THURSbA~Y I JUNE 7I 1990

.. · · · at 6:30 P:M.

'

·

Very cl;ao'Ge~al Electric wMe washer and dryer. nice
small Gibson frost-free refrigerator and General Electric 30"
electric rante both in Harvest Gold color, 13 cu.tt. whole
Montgomery Ward upri.,tlr'eezer, 5 pc. dmette. set. 3 pc.
bedroom su~e w/beddtn&amp; metal bed w/beddmg, smgle
dresser living room furn~ure, Hoover portable auto. washer,
tibles and lamps, Magnus organ. vacuum cleaner, smallap·
pliance$, radio, sewing basket. dishes, pots and pans, record
player-cabinet and records, linens etc.
.FIOI THE GA~GE MD IASEIIENT: Garden tools, wheel' biiroW, law'n moiler, llbtw.' IOunp and lawn chair, new paint
' in caes (blat:k, btu~. greltJ Jl)d m01e. :tool boxes, tools, neols.
bo~S: etc., ice .cr~am ·frHZef, stone 1ars, raolroad rtems on·
· ciqding oil can, ~erosenecans, lanterns, tirechaons, some for
lawn m!JYjer. Christmas:deooration~ and boxes and boxes of
, mise. Come early and drg thru. You II enJoy the evemng sale!
' URIS: Clsh or Chct with PositiYt ID
IEFUSHIIEIITS AVAILABlE

AUCnONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
594-3780

I

POMEROY'S QUAUTY SHOE

•

,\

..
'

the deta
conilrmllllon
of
Hie.
Tho of
pu""'ohlll be
. _ ..Ill to pey . _0111 on
the
plht bel;
the
11»'
from
the-ofHietothe-of
peymont of .,..., .. unt•o
Hid bel- eMit be plldln·
II ht 8 "- fr
g I )-.a omthedllla
of tho - J-eo
.
M. souloby
Sheriff of MeigaCounty
Oougi•M.C_._
AttorMy for Plolntltf
1•1 9 1• 23 30 Ill 1 13

NOTICE OFHolM
ELECTION
The
Adminlotr8tton (FmHA) eounty
, _ , _ ll..,ton tlllo - ·
- be hold on Julr 2. 18110.
the blllol muot be
titled out. deiWiood melld Md o hid or ,.
In to FmHA,
lnoud • · ...._
- o y. Ohio 411718,
!101
. _ ttw. Jutv 2, 111110. If
youdo--ln ...-you
-.let mel yCKn bllloi~M*'
I blink - p e ......... bellot to ........ M&lt;irlll blllot.
Thla bfMk -olopo ohould·
bepl-lnoldethe""v.lope
you ••to INIII.,_ blllot.
Your_,..,doddr•omult
beiOQI\Ifeon t h o - _ .
lope. Felluoe to ........ tNo
lnfonnotlon - your
blllot - d . Only ..,e bellot
moybjovotedlnper-orby
mol by 1ny - · V - In
enveto- oentllnlnll mono
then one lbeontM blllot will
not be
a.tlotl and
onvelopeo moy otoo be ob.t elnld from your 1oc11
FmHA office.
The ollte of nomln- lor
FmHA county eommlttee
orellotedln·the blllot below.
The qlllllfjlliftlono of ·f*·
oono voting 1"' .-c.rlbed In
tho "Voter Certlllcellon &amp;te·
tement. " For further lnlor·
million reglnllng voting and ·
voiar ei\Yibillty, the
County 0 co llotod above.'
FmHA electlono 1ro open to
ell lllglble votera without . .
gard to race, color, religion,
natlonol origin, og1, polltlcol
eflltlotlon, m1rltal ltatuo.
oex and/or hMcl~-.
-

='

I*:,:,,:'

v,

•

;

•

~Notice

SHERIFF'S BALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The • - of Ohio,
Melge CoUnty
119-CV·291 •
CHEMICAL MORTGAGE
COMPANY, Plolntllf
-VSCHERYL LYNN POWELL,
It II, O.fendento
In purauonce of In Older
of Sole In the ebovo entitled
aatlon, I wit offer for oolelll
publlc,-lon,etthodoorof
the .Court H9u• ,,In Pom...,., In the!lboft'nomld
dcoeyuntyo' '•""l;·F1r ~
9 Y- t. hoiO~.o"od

01

of J
•
&lt;!'clock A. "the loll-Ing
d•crlbed reol Mtate,oltuoto
In
County
of dl
end
·the of
0 h lo • In
Dwto
n t VII •
lege of Middleport, to wit:
The following reel eotete
lltuotld In the County of
Melp, Steto of Ohio, lind In
the Vllltge of Mhloleport.
bounded3
and
•
followa:
3 -deocrlbed
tram~ on

Melt

Second Strlllll of the
tge
of Mldcloport. being onefourth of Lot N11. 10 pur·
chMid by L. C. DIVIs from
Jennie H"vee. Ch..._ Gil·
gir IRd Ella Gilger, tho
1 ..., 1 being . tho IOutiiWMt
qUI- of oold lot No. 10.
=dn:!:.'!".::t'.:~ '
clot ounr)l- farallil
·-~
...
wltto t h e - - B foet;
then,. Eat 33 foet; then,.
- t obout 98 to Seoond
"'-:· !h-.. lllong
S.COnd , _ In a oouti&gt;lr --1on _,_ ~-­

"'MNI

--~

!":,.

~#&lt;

FOR SALE
One 01

SERYICE
511. S. f-......o&amp;. '"••

····zlrt

._...
1 Ollie
II DID NTIA
L.,d
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hau-·MaloloH· ~=~.~~
_,...,_,.
Equ=-- Etc.
FR EEl
ATES .
.2 4 HR . SERVICE

·

He;I

Ht4cinc'~

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 ~r 3 bathe, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm build·
lng, pond, over 40 acrea fenced pasture

land and rented mobile home.

.....

c.u 1-114 --7104

61•· 1••~•·

E.Maio1W

_............ _. . .

cou-.

6

Found: PMII loiillior
Pomlt oy Aowlr Sbop. . _ .e
the PonwuGf Faa-- 8hop.

AGRICULTURE
FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION
BALLOT FOR COUNTY
COMMITTEE MEMBERIS)
&amp;tate: OHIO

7

Cou~'l~:~~ENS, MEIGS,

EUM HOME

C1ndl-:
ALVIN TRIPP
RON EASTMAN
Only vote tor one c""cldete

$3,500.00.

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMATE
CONTROL

992·6803

Heating, Cooling,

POMEROY, DHIO

ST. RT. 33 - Right on
Kingsbury Road. 2 acre
building s~es. Water and
electric available. MAKE Of·
FER · TERMS AVAILABlE!

8/111 mo.

lefrigeration
S.rwlca

SIDEUNES
SPOU CARDS

$6,500.00.

Residential •
Commercial

Buy· Sell

POll EROY - locus!Sireet
- Old lrame house on
, 40x120' lot $5,000.00.
POIEROY PIKE - Forty·
one acres plus a 1980 Liberty Mobile Home. Beautiful
view, 2 car garage, porch on
3 sides, 3 storage buildings
and barn. 2 good s~ed bed·
rooms.
bay window.
equipped krtchen. Real pr~
vacy. PRICE REDUCED.
$32,000.00.

POIIEROY - Everything
goeS. All stock and equipment, building and ground.
I double hump greenhouse.
Ask ior details.
ANTIQUITY - PRM;E RE·
DUCrD - One story home

w~h 3 bedrooms and coal
lurnsce. Would make a great
sumrller place, has 31ot~ in·
cludin&amp; riv;r frontage.

$9,900.00.

COURT STREET - Sutton
Tonship- We have 2one
acre lots w~h rural water
and electric available Suita·
. bie 1 'lor mObile home or
' h~m~s~e. call for del~ils..
HENRY R. CLELAND ,,
992·6111

,.

CALL

Trade

..

SER~CE

We can ~ iild 1'1•

core ratliatan and
Matlr cor... We can
aha •ill boil and rod
aut ratliaton. We also
rtpl!irGasTris.

.

1et "'" 1.21%

through 30th op. Cell
CIIIMd Reehy tod-v.
W. wtll help you Rnd.

~
!
l

I
I

•

I (

1 114 . - '"' Goa-

Rol. - . a

eo... ·

blby clot- Frl,

lat. June Ill.

••• :IS llerth ••

Paulin's Hill Between
Rutland and Rt. 554

~:n-:::.~
...._ --..
· -..orv.

BISSELL·
BUILDERS

Algnment ·

a"At I

•Oil Change • Lube
•Brllka Wartc

11....,.

Prices"

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

IWN Sl., IU'ILA•

Roger Hv1ell

me'E

•sHRUB·&amp;
TRIM antf RE·

r

Garage

MOVAL

&amp;iiuC'K

AUT~
REPAIR .
AIM Trltt•lttl"

We I••• Lletl•t•l

Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE EITIMATEI

949-2161
.. 5-'110-I•L

'lhurO, Fll.

a-r -

w Je tr' Md TIMndn. June
I. 7 .. Col: R11ld'MDT onl)kf fl.
110111--·
loll llaCarmlok Rd. John10M
Ceurt, Noll IO IMI1io • •
lhulo. II Fri. ~.

. -··--

*UGHT ~~JLING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SUCI
992-2269

I

•VINYL SIDINCJ
•ALUMINUM tiDING
•BLOWN IN
INIULATION

BISSELL ,-'
SIIING CO.

==·

.~

:a-

Pl. t4t•II01

..

Pomeroy,

FOIEVEI IIONZ
TANNING

Mlddlaport
&amp; VICinity

OPEIIIII SOON
Call Now To

M••

An rwur 1cr rrwnt s

Appointment

949-2794

SPECIAL

30 Stslions-'30
Co. Rd. 21

Watch fer

S9n

OHIO

BISSBl &amp; MilE
CONSTRUCTION

..........
•G•g•

........
..............
•C• I ht•

Step&amp; C•••••

I

Rood; 1

·- - ..,LIMo
-.t-no.lolla-.r

-Grant A.

PH. 949-2101
or Ia. 949·2160

NIWOutten
- IIPAII

tiL 211. ThUra, Frl,

(614) 667-3271

742-3088

·.

-

Two FoinHy ~~- •to, Fot Mh
lnd lot lltL 1:10 •• 4:10. :103

Sand-Stone-Dirt

CUSTOM DT
, 1 HOMES &amp; GARAGES

ROOFING

112 -

loLN.

&amp; VIcinity

DUMPTRUCK ·

614-742-2772

llew•d L WrltiMI

HoOoe 1n1.,.;

Pt.P .....nt

\

I TaU; PAMPAS GIWS:
Pink I Whitt; FUSCHIA,
IASUTS, HERIS and
MOlE• .

II YMI-.

tar, ........ loll ., H.H. - . ,

Yonl - : 1011 Second , ..,
Thin, Fot II lot.

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

OPEN MON.· SAT. 10 to 5
mAWROW!IS: Dw•f

PH. 992-5612
. . or 992·7l2l

, P-ey,OIH

SITEWORK • ltPADS
CLEARING

GREENHOUSE

•Tir•
,
....
•Front End

.

' 992-7479

oozn

IUTLAND TilE
SALES and
SEIVICE

P.•!1•

•Lo•·Rent-1•,

5-21-'10-l"o.pd.

-

•Mobile Home

f!en•l•

992·2196
Mlddlapprt,

367-0588

COUNTRY
.MOBILE
HOME PARI
•Mobii.'ltom.· ·

PAT HILL FOlD

985-4473
!VININGS
11110 Ohio Houelng 11 !:::=====~=~lll~==::::::::z=::::~
'r.;~;Afi~~~%·
li
II
!;:;;::;

-

1

'

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

DALLAS SAYRE

Senler Clfl- and

FLATWOODS, ROAD

ERT'f. IF YOU WANT TO
SELL CALL CLELAND
REALT'f TOOAYIII

1

Yard Sale

·· Stop In and See

looM &amp; a-d For

VIC'S .
IODY SHOP

'992·2259 .
NEW LiliA ROAD- Vacant
acre lot in Harr~IJiville,

'

'

Lost &amp; Found

""u-:ifDEPARTM,ENT of'"''

PQ,MEROY, 0. '

0111 SALES VOLUME HAS

'

1-5-1 mo.

Business
Services

OlfiCI, ............. 992-f259

I
I

Nicest Homes

Real Elllle·Giner&amp;l

Jo Hill ....,....... 91S.44.66

I
I
I

ROWE
POWIRWASH

111

••• Hupjl ........ 949"2257

••

200 E1111

8 10 8 8
H==~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~iiiiii.iiii;;;;i~1
~~~~~~~~

_,.,. _,...

Je1n TrmeiL .. 992-2660

I·•

"""'*"

:::;:"
~::' ':2.:'"
l'foplrty A-o: 670
Soutll 8e&lt;ioncl ltreot. Mid·
dloport, Ohio 45780.
•
Sold pnomloeo -rlllld
ott9,000.00 and cannot lie
IOfd for . .a thiMWO·t~lrde
of thot amount.
;
. Jern• Souloby, Sheriff,
Melp County, Ohio
LERNER. SAMPSON •
ROTHFUSS,AttonM¥1
Dlclo D. 0.11•11.
Attornoy et Law
(51 30: Ill I, 1 3, 3tc

riCtr.htlfcm:utioa CaD (aQ4) '173-5785

·FliED CHICKEN ••••11.t1••• S2.99 ·
·tEEMS NOODLES ••11.~1••• S1.49
COOL WHIP. ••••••• ~••t.cu•••• S1.49

U.,ftl""n: .

PubliC Notice

IE£111000 AIID IE STILL
IIAVE BUYEIS LOOIING
FOI IEIGS COUm PROP·

fessed his best of Intentions had
fallen by the wayside and three of
his Wives, were again expecting,
but additional details were not
disclosed.
Of Slrtn's four wives, on~v .one
Is legally married to htm under
Turkey's seculu murlllee laws,
but he acquired the other three
under Islamic laws that 1111ow a
man to have four spouses.
Turkey, whose burgeoning
population Is estimated at 57
million and rising at 2.8 percent
· per year, hu made vigorous
efforts to promote famlly
planning.
I

'

'CLOCK .

•,

Father of 47 says enough
)\NKARA, Turkey 1UP I) Three more babies are on the
way to Joln 44 sl bllngs In an
eastern Turkey family, but the
proud father and husband of four
says "these last three might just
be enough."
Family planning o!flcla1s are
. not so sure. Mebmet Sirln, from
the village of Kizllagac, had
previously promised Turkey's
first lady on a visit to It is vlllllge
t!lat he would stop siring
offspring.

PubliC .......
.,_
1i AuctiQn
.

UIIIIIY ·

TtwyfNI/wller .......

CHAP

'

'

·8

'

&lt;l

·•Nike
•Reibok
•Keds
•Grasshoppers

no-

,.Owalli ltiiii.II"'IIRD.

:JfFT S:f'Q;rs-L
·~.

ft'"

•
.' ·
~' ' . .

Public Notice

w• etc .

•or'•'

'·~

OFF

..,

=
n-

'
''
·'

GUPEFRIT -· 2/S1.29

- ...lURa.. s1.19

SOFT SPOTS·

Sl ooo

,

40CT.

i

, . SELECt GIO'UI!, ' ·: ; · ... : ,

, ·•

PubliC Notice

SHERIFF'i
SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY OF
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO,
N.A.
VI
MATTHEWC.VAN
VIU.NKEN, ET AL.
CASE NO. 81CL214
ln-toMOnler
of Silo dlrct... to""' In the
obove ontltted llctlon, I
offer for ••• et public IUC·
tlon, at the front door of the
Courthou•
in · Pomeroy,
Ohio, In the 1bove 1111114id
(11-iolgthe~lnm.,toof COUnty, on Tueodoy, Juno
:Ardole 2 of thetniiNctton 111, 18110tt I O:OOa.m., the
to Bidden, ,
'
loll-Ing deoorlbed r-' eo:
\ . . . ..... be alllld lftd tete, alt111111d In the County
....,__. to: Oepertmom of Molge, ond tho StMe of
of ,lWmlnlatMjhoe ltlvlc 11, Ohto,towlt:
Dlwttolon of Public WorkO.
lhiiiM!IIn Bumap'oAddi·
Olftc.. Of l\ete Arcllitllct liOn\ to the VItiligO of Po·
Ond Enam-, 30 Eat Brdld meroy or IUbdlvillon of Lot
&amp;-. 35th Floor, Colum- Number One Hundrld end
b!oo. Oh. 43281·0403.
Eighty-nine (1 88) end being
• The Minimum W,e Rete oil of Loto Number NlnetRequiNm-• of oviMot (18) ond rw.nty 1201 f•ont·
Code Chepter 411 5 Md the lng on Hill Top Stnoet or the
!qual Eillfllo.,...ont Oppor• Old Rutl8nd R~ over Un·
l\lnlty ild Condhtono of.... coin Hill, utenclng In depth '
vloldCocte&amp;ectlon~ .1il3.18 t.Word High Stnoet ~
ljo:ld 113.~11MdtheooVei'- ono Hunllied 1100) f8et of
E-.thoe Order of sold ' Hlah lti'MI ind both
~onuo'ry 27, 11721oeoppll· lolohavTncletrontegeofOne
colote to thlo bid lnvttotlon.
Hundrld f100) on Hill
- Mlnor1ty &amp;Ill AaIde Top &amp;tr.....
-··
·
·
requlrernMto of Amended
For oeltrlftce -Volume
lubetltute Hou• BNI584of 157, pege58, MllgeCounty
~ 1 13th R!IIIUier leulon Deed RecordO.
Of the Gonerll Aa11mbly,
Oeed Reference: Volume
ond apeclfiCIIIy tho _..... 305,
poge 729, Molge
onmto of Rev- Code Sec- County Doed Rocordo.
In •1231
"1'
·-•
31
Thl1 pr..,.....,
.11 ,.....,
~--1&lt;111
0 I •'2) ·
trllllll"'
· to
D
•
- I •
Minority Bull- 129 Uncoln HUt, Pomeroy,
n... . Ent_... """"""' Ohio.
~~~~~end meterlel purcltae .
Property
eppralold ot
llftd - . supply con· . U4,000.00 ond cennot be
t~e,ore 1ppllcoble to thlo IOid lor loeo then two-thirdo
iflvltatlon to bid.
·
of the oppraio_. volue.
,No bidder m1y wlthdrlw
TERMS OF SALE: The·.
bid Within olxto; (10) ~11\11 oucceialul
purch••· ..
1fter 'thelctuol dele of the ._. u hlo bid Is -..ptld
. '1J*!Int · theNof. n,, De· · lhlli be required to depollit
puty Director, Dlvlalon of on tho doy of -.In cah or
Public Wwa, ,...,_ the by certified ch...; poyoble
llgtrt to wahoe ony lnlonnatt. to the Sheriff of Molp
tiM or tO ·ralect MY or Ill County, Ohio, 10% of tho
"'•·
ernount of IIUch - o d
r
___,.,
. '1M O..rtm- of . bid. but In
loeo than
Admlnlahtlve llervlcea t ·1.000.00. The biiMce of
Oivlelon of Public Wolka tho purch•• price otoell be
'.
Ca~. O~oky. due ""~.~~~blcetotho ~~:;,
,
.._uty .....Iff of ..,.ge lounty,
•
~!1 1 I. 23, 30; 1011. 4tc . . within tlilrty (3.01 dl'(l from

I

APPlU ....~.~.J.w,. •1.09

.,

•

.,.,'

·PWic NotiCe

. ·181(Con.. ..,.
from Plgebldl
2)
In _..,.
"""'Ceo11RedMBEoubcon- - - Md ouppn.o moy
IIDfltl at die liMe Eqwt Em·
lifol'..,.ot Coonllooetor by
814) 418-8380 or
the
Buolneoa 0.·
~ lvloton by cal lintll141418-1702orToll
~ lin 1·1100-282-1011.
• ·b ah bid mull b e - tllnied by I BID QUA·
II.it.
it.NT'NTY -lng tho._lr•
menta of Section 113.54 of
~~~e. Olllo Revleed Codl.
·• ftE BID GUARANTY Md
CONTIIACTIONOmuetbe
i...,.byoSuoetyCompeny

- - - ·..·-····-·······..··~·· · ~&gt;). tl.l~'

'

By Ualted PresaiDter.Wional
. POET'S IRE: Poet Allen Glllbert Is up~t· that a minority
parents group In lndlanllpolis Is trying to ~trlct ac~.~ to Ills
works. Last fall, the Coalhlon of Concerned Minority P'all!Jils'
objected · to explicit descriptions or..hott.~x\lal \ -~,s In '}
,Ginsberg's ::collected Poems - 1947 to 1980.'' wbiCII·Is Jn the
North Central High School library. The group; which baJ'rought
unsuccessfully for a black studies curriculum, said the book's ·
presence at the school is outrageous slnce.wilrks by prominent
black authors are lacking. The Beat Generation poet responded
In May with a letter that said, "If my work were taken out of
libraries, censors would have excuse to take out many other
basic texts of black cultures." MmoJa Ajabu of the parents'
group says he will respond to Ginsberg, but won't apologize.
·, RECOVERED ACTOR: Michael Jeter, the star of "Grand
Hotel," stopped the show Sunday night at the Tony Awards with
his stirring speech as he accepted ihe . Tony for best
performan.c e .by a featured actor In· a musical, urging. people
. with drug and alcohol problems not to give up. "Alii real~v have
to say Is that I used to have a problem with su!lstances," Jeter
told The New York Times later. "I've been In recoverv for
almost nine years and things have changed. I'm not the Same
person I was then, thank God." He says sobriety Is still a battle
sometlmes. ''I know that any reprieve from that Illness- and I
~o consider it an Illness -Is contingent on dally maintenance,"
Jeter said. "I'm constantly In touch with other people who share
the same problem. When things get bad, I talk with somebody
. ·
:.else. We help each other out." .
RIZZO SETTLES: Frank Rizzo, the tough-talking former
··tnayor of Philadelphia, reached an out-or-court settlement In
:.his. libel suJI against the Philadelphls Tribune. Rizzo had '
·objected to a 1986 article that said he was trying to use his
political influence to reorganize management 111 a gas com PlinY
and undermine Mayor Wlllon Goode's authority. The Judge In
the case ordered both sides not to comment on the settlement,
but a lawyer for the Tribune, Cui Singley, seemed to be
gloating. "We feel the settlement vindicates and reaffirms the
·lmportapt prl.nciPIIIthat newspapers have a constitutional right
to report fairly the opinions of community organizations and
Individuals on matters of public concern," he said.
GLIMPSES: Sam Jijnilon was considered the most
,outrageous comedian on the scene until Andrew Dlee Clay came
•around, and they aren't friends. "I bate the guy," Klnlson said
- Tue~~day on "The .Jou Rivers Show." ''He's my nemlsls. I just
'don't think he has a lot of tact" . .. Milton Berle will receive
·lsra el' s Cultural Award for his work In show bUsiness, as well as
~Is suppOrt 'of Israel. Israeli Ambassador Moue Arad will
' presfi!nl the award at Washington, D.C., gala Sunday night and
Steve Lawrenee and Eydie Gorme Will provide the entertalnJDent. .. . Cindy Crawford, the high-profile model who Is dating
,Richard Gelie, Is helping raise money for the Brooklyn
·Academy of Music. She's co-chairwoman of a BAM auction 11nd
members of the fund-raising committee Include David Byrne of
!lalklng Beadll, designers Adolfo and Anold Scual,.and arUst
:.Julian Schnabel.

_

.COOkED HAM .~ ••• ..;._.... S1.99

'.t "·

1

==~~~J~u~ne~8.J1~9~90~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~jj~~o;rno:·~~~::~~~~~~~;;~~~~o~~~-1s~~~n~tin]a~~~~=13~
. ·•
Bu . • . e . S ervt· c e

'

�Page-14-The

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

. . --w-u.

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted to Buy

9

42 Mobile HomM

.73 Vlna&amp;4WD'a

I

Clllllt 112-liiJL

1QCWD

....... li(.3U.

lllolollo -

T.wr~:

-.

Junk ca111 wMh or wMhoul
Coli LillY Uvely 114, 31U303.

.

112-M57.

Wolllod lo buy: lloocl mobile

- - ' 1 ' 1 5.

lola lor ront, Old
104-e71-

Cal Pi ....-,

DI!J 8 -

(IIIn- TM PCU Tour

gJ ~==.::t&amp; Q

,

.

f)

44

60D DIDN'T MAKE THE
SUN F.OR
TO SIT IN
TME
MARCIE

Apartment

torRent

~

• ill) Andy Otffllllo
IIJ) WOikl today
II) He-Man

I{OU KNOW MORE A800T

I

THINKG

I

SASOI

0

(j) SportaLooli

D

_

.

UNSCRAMilE AIIOYE lUTERS
TO GET ANSWER .

•

7:00 Ill Scarecrow • Mrt. King

iill PM Mrogrozlne
. (II Sportoc.nter ' '
NewaHour

0

......;

llll DID Ill WhMI Of

:i.a'D':£ Court Q

0
0

-

·~ -~·

(2:00)

Dill Ill Unaolved

My-•
E..mlne a case of
a young woman who

ro\ool ICF roqul111- 1101 IO

g
a • Cll GroWing P~lno
Maggie has a grisly d!J!am

'

J\'110 1\ 1111111.
u,. In llolp ,., oldorly . .le

e

~ 1 -lobolh.--'

fMif ttnr...tt. NMd to run •
........ cooll dolly,

Clwtle Brown, Part 2 (0:30)
1D liD MOVIE: Cry FNICIOm
(PI 2 Of 2) (POl (2 ;00)

=-=:nc~~
30W
31

iiJl PrlmeNewa
0 Murder, Bha Wrole No

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

•S.IIIY
...,a,ooM,..,l
.... blo.
........rtal

~

-

Laughing Matter

Clpon:

a Convertllllon - Dlneh
0 -MOVIE: The Survivors iR)

....... lOCal ...... buliiMM.
...OU. aMI ullltt• puould1 d

r.:

(2:00)

oalory. '*'-1112 orll4-

1:05 Cll MOVIE: The Way Well.

l'llll.

POSTAL

..,..

121/Vr. llfrlna. Cell (1) 181-1000 Ext. 14112 l o r IIIII.

Enl=

POSTAL SEIMCE Jobo. Salary
lo IIJI(. Nollonwltlo.

pool!-. COli (1) -

oii.P.10181.

Righi - ' ........
- aoo ,..,
amoiloiloiiY,
...,,bolnt
_,
.,
rewanlid lor wn. you an
doing? II 1101, wo how o Job lhol

0-.. .

.aOns~age

CloiUDOIIo on
lhlna&amp; Ohlo'o t1 ~hbortlaad Rd. 1.rt--. 3
WoltM iloduotTcot Conlar, BR, luiiJ oorpolod, clly - .
-SIIe_
ng
loru.....
mlndocl
_,_
.._ nlhnl ga Full b FMUI.
Prlcod lo ooll. 1 . . - S.lell and or •Moe WJq~J~~Ienoe -.114-441-1411.
o pklo ....., will _,.ldor
on~ wnft o poolllvo ••· a miM .,_ CloiiiDOIIo '"' 81. Rl
tftUdi, omblllon and .1oue oym- 1111. n ...... a ' - a1111or
poilty lor CllhotL H
lolL Rood ... to •• lng lor • )colt wllft - o d on 111.
Prlcod
career edvancr•tnt, thie one Ia MIL lmmecllle p liiiiii=FLI'M-

,_-lOok·

1

mile

.,_

T--. 10 .,_-. .......

-1

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

.....

"

D. - . . .

1

101ou1n

dryo.., 10 cloy

guarantH,~.

rtd olng-

-114-441-'l'IIJ.

Coli -

.. - · A l l '-k-upo,
2:0Q p.m.. :104-773lll'l,llaeon WY.

46 Space tor Rant

Caunlry

-

-

-

"' -

~Mit·'

10U'71o4040.

, -VY
Duly low Ia, It II long 3
oalo,30441WNI.

-

.......

S.rvtce. IHI Ward 301 112
Eloclrlc

.........

"-'Y

ms.
I·

Organ.

- -lon. "'"" iioi.....
IIIIHII7I.
Ontulohot d end eut~ eiC
oond, :104-171-7112 ol• loGO

weu., ~ DON'rexP6CT"

l'tJV A WALL&amp;T

:.:PII;;;.·-------

Mf!!! 10 KeEP IT IN MY
MATTRESS/ DO 'TOW';

TO ld:EP IT IN.

Pool&lt;,

ol ,_.,.,

''· ....... -- Coli

a

~

Merchandise

Gooda

daredevil alunt man. (R)
Stereo. Q ·
"
(l) Newowelllh
llll eO .. Hourt A New .
Merlco community searches
fQr a missing &amp;-year-old boy. ~

WHY DON'T YOU
GO OUT 'AN' GIT
'TH' ·LATIST
tiDISIP?

-

Oollloa ....... M,IOO.
Hurry 1 ldt 114 au 104t.
Pt. ,..••• Llral lot, Unooln
.... S1,1110.114W 11131

1s

wanted to Do

Collega atudent ne.d1 Summer
Job. Will taU crrw of pets while
you 'rt on Y11catlon, mwo home or
yours. Will also do yard or
hOUII WOrk, 614-44f.94n Ilk

.=:--

mool FmHA
tn..IIM or

Dlolrlc1. loiUOI
114-

Rod- for quick -

1 bod-

na.:::=, 8::1o. ~,:S llr
-

-

171-7117.

North 81.
304 4111-1111 "' -

.

olory homo
A1":
lltl lllry Vlrglnll A.abll, Oftlrd
lor Nlo. lklildlng In U phrotcal conciMIOn. Conlolno
MVen IVOftll, Nth, .nlc, .._.
Very nice -

,.,.,..,

lmmedllte

:

42 Mobile Homn
torRent

-

tnlhno. Chlklnn wrlc =•· 814-

by aDDOinlmonl only.

Contact lllo uoiclorolgnod • 114torUli.
tn-2115. 1:00-4:00 "' 114-1823121 ............ appointE&amp;R T1110 Sorvlco, lopping, mont. Tho nghl lo r - • 11r
trlmmlna, lrM rernovll. FrH . . thl underalgn.d, u Euculor,
Umaloo.lncludor ltodgoo I lown lo ,.joe! ony ond o1 - .
wofiL 814 441 1411.
Rlcltaitll. J........- ••

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1211111 Mololle Home on 1101r121
lol. Como llld • .... ~
8t., MILI'IIJI art. Mp.IL Tul&amp;·
F~.

14172 Fllltt aad, tatlll ellotrio,
• .....2 loolloo, woriiHn - ·
" ' ' " ' ' - Oil
.,.- ..........
In
living.-.
.... pool

IVIIIIbii.IM 1.1 1100.

;

.

to makelhe relationship work. Mall $2
10 Matchmaker, P.O. Box 91428, Clevelend, OH 44101·3428.
CANCER (June~'~"""" 22) Try to assoclala with lrienda today whose views
BERNICE
and objeCtlvel C\OHIY parallel yoUr
B~EOSOL ·, own. Valuable lnlormatlon could be exChanOed ttwough frank dlscuaetona.
LEO (...., :11-Aua. 22) Whet you do today you .,.likely to do quite wei, eapectallylfyou'racontrontedbyac:hallenge.'
that you can*""&lt; out In front of an .appreclattv. aucllenc:e.
YIIIOO lAIII- ll-lapl. 221 11'1 lmpor·
tant you lrHI team elforta eeriOulfy to-·
day whether they be In aporta or bull·
n.a. Your .-octat• will be playing to
olillll7 1tiD
win and they'll ~ you to do the

21111-11'1'15.

14111t wMh npondo, 3 ltr. In .

arae. Stove,
.,g:.VInton
mo.• GOO O.p., R.r'L

oou~.

a bolllo; wo,.r, ,....,

• •••oo
""' -

a bod.,fumllhM, 111 10111,
-.atrlo, air cond,

non-....

.....--:wtl57.
_

_. dryor,

'

_N.., ____
c:........................
_.., ................

'

. ,A loyallrtend wlto hll·- l l n -~~~ , a..-A( ...... D-OM.II) Hyou'vebeen
a - wiN . . . a ctoW lnvot•-1. enxloualogeltheCOI-II,ofyourmata
wllh you In the y.- .,..., Tllll. COUld : about• cllllnga you'd like to make, this,
,........ In 1a1n1 -!ural In two aitCIIIna II • good day, to broiiCh the eubJect.'
:~... ·
• ant-.g~m
•·Spllll out II the details. even the unat· t
...
Q8M..ti(IMri1....,..11)Youmaybe l· traolhlaOMI.
.
:
priVy to conltdentlallnfOnnatiOn I ICOII'IO (CIIIL It Raw. 22) This ohoukl '
'. tqday t... 0811 ba tllldlO your ICIYin- : be arall)er IUCCIIIh.il ~ay for you, batage. nutlaclaOOIIId ba(mallld, '-': you'l not only ba able to con- · II you lillie 1110111 n 10 tile wrQIIII ·Oihla IIIUIIIIIdaoo, yau'l alto know how
peopfe Tryl:'t:= a biGiiell 10- to ~UplaiMoltltem lo llllpi'CMI pt II t'

2 IR rno1r1e ....... Hwy 110, h
4

"YoUI' boyfriend Isn't a juvenile
delinquent? How come my 011r alarm goee
on

m.-'1 The

when he's a block away?"

,. .

'

. -·-

1,..,.,

.

.

· -

. can !I-'ll~ to uoidoll-id Whit to~ tAGmAIIIUICIIotr'\.?J ~ 11) h'oall

l,: .
~:-·~--·-.~._._-:,,..~----:-.:..---..._--~-----.,.---......,-----;-:;!-:...__------:....JI"' ... ' . "
'

era,.....

Matal'tnllt •

.

.

'

.

.-

'

.-'

'

....·-.
~

·.
,.

.,
"
'

43 Criticize

Ill D. • (I) llll

'

.

......
...

DOWN
1 [)() WWKIOIInlgO
DAILYCRYP'I'OQU(JI'ES-Here'lllawloworllt:

=~loHall

...

AXYDL8AAXR
II LONGFELLOW

a eonv-aon

...
"·

One letter standi for anolher. In tJU sample A II used
for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slfllle letten,
..,_tro;a.., the lqth and fCII"'MttGn ol the words are all
hlilta.
. Each dly the code IItten.an dlflerent.
CIIIPIOQUOIE

i!Pc::.1' .

DL';!~
........
, ..

"

CUV

•

.............
a

Pw•-:.tr

.

. ..

41 Enkindle
42 Eucharist
plate

10:31 (I)..,VIE: AlleQioany
' Uprll!iog (1 :45)
11:110 ~ llclo- • Mrt. King

!ll Milot Laaguo aa.-n
galna have a war or aaa1ng up Into
somelhlng.oubatanllal. so don't be dis~
, couraged today H returns aren 't up to
l
!1)1 Moneytlna ..
. your expectations. Consistency wiH
II) -Mieml Vlco A double
prove to ·b e more Important.
murder puta Crocklltt and
CAPRICORN (Dec. Ill-JaiL 111 SponteTubba on trill ol Chilean
neouo lnvoiWimenlt aren't, likely to be
cop.Stereo.
' .
the on. thai WlllaHord you the greatest
-Dinah
.
. pleuure loday. You're likely to find
0 ConiadJ Tonight'
more enlown*tt from activities whlc:l1
have been wtt11 planned.
·
11:30eill 8 TonlgliiSliow
. AQUAJIUIC.IM- :a.hb. 11) Much of'.
Stereo.
value can be -ned today by obwv·
lng lioW a ou cc1 hoi friend handles retD~nMFla!IOI!Ihlpa. Your pal'l techniques can
be t11119red to you.
PtiCIII (l'eb. :10 " all Ill You'll be.
walcomect today Hyou daclda to vlell an
DO'WII
CUI.Iile
old frllnd wltholll an Invitation. This
Nlglll Wooaton Newquly
par1lcultr pal w11 be ........, oo glad to
movaa In tor 1111 kill on Diana
-you u you wtlltlrnlher.
Pllcf. 1111
A11118 (lllnllt 11•Aprll :II) 8mal1 IIIC~ ;
80111111111
tors COUld 11ave mora ~ ·th&amp;n .
illull today In
flnanallll and com-1
12:00 (J) 110'111: lullllliln COl
· merctal11111 1111make or
t2:00)
1n the pnnn,
ba com- .
(I) Call Ill ltnba' NCAA
· I)OUIIded Into doiWsln lha future.
wortc1 Slrlea. Qame 1t From
TAURUI (Aplll " • 0! J :10) Your
Onolha, NEJ!l
ti'IOUgllla and IIIIJIIIIIlone w11 t~t• a
ati'OIIQ conati'IIOihla .lmpeal on people
wltfl wtoom )11111'1 ba lnwbecl toc18y, ,
•
P.L
ttooug11 you may not be Yy _ .
auawaiiUist
tlill )IIIUI' worda carry 10 much ..-lghl. ,

vaur

.. .

7 Flat
(mua.)

aperture

DID aNawo

-1"

1tt0. R.l prq: ,.,., app I 'd 81
~y
lhouoonil
-

(140,-0G). Thlo .... ......

illll aannr HIISiiow

40SmaD

I

=

---bo
lod to Crow ond C""' Llw
Oflloa DOlor to 4:10 on Juno 11,

'

..

8 Foreshadow

30 Schedule

· Qll Crook I Cloaee

Rentals

·-·
..

....... .·-..

5 Tourist's
neckwear

28 Sustenance
29 Craving

10:30 (IIIIioeablll Tonight
(l) Slluggle For DemocriCJ

0*-

'

collection
4 Borde!'lne

need
281n the
leut

32 Arth\I''S
Excall bur
33 Summar
hat
, 38 Hebrew
measure

·jill) N.., Twlll(lht.Z !1)1 Evening Newo

3 Anecdotal

,

RObartoon

!IPP!N- 1 ..,. on Hwo. 110 - ·

ly111CUM -

O..r John Ralph .

Dill Ill Ouro- ~P
Sam leapa Into Ilia 1ne of a

Household

.. '

Implement

-- .

announces ho Is remarrying
Blomllka. (R) 1;1
• ill D ()) IKOiod Ann...
Interna-l Roell Awarda
Stereo. Q
10:00 I]) 700 Club With Pat

'""I:~~~~~~~;;~
Looking tor 3 II• d WilD .._ In

dlvltluolo
with monlal
and
111-onl
of rotaoda·
2
tlon. Home _.t be In Meip
CauitiJ. Conircl S - VanMalor ol (1114)4111-Tiele or wrilo
P.O. lor 101, Jockoon, Ohio
4!1840.
Equal
opporlun~y
omploylr.
Wonlod: Po~~· ... bootondor tor
locol prlnlo club. Exo. werklng
cond. W•kend nlgtU onlwo.
Sond 1110ume to Clo 033 Gal·
llpolla Dally Tribune, 825 Thlnl
Avenue, Gllllpoll1, OH 45&amp;3f

a

• "g s

.
12 Approach
..
13 Western, 8 Ending
e.g.
lor
11 Hair
32 Good buy
14 Gratuitous hero
coiOiing 33 VIgor
18 Splinter
I Civet
20 B;eziHan 34 Title
18 Shinto
11 Mearlder
tapir
In India
temple
15 21 Do In
35 Crlsacroes
21 - Point,
league
23 Deadlock 37 ~
••.•
N.Y.
18 Condition 27 Fed&amp;, e.g.
measure
- ...
22 Colorado .17 Mlller'a
28 Debuaay's38 ~atlon
'.
·resort
'Salesman'
'La - • 31 t&lt;Jrx~
'.
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bid a game. This conCI!JI.I'is particularDealer:
South
ly Cruc:ial after a weak two-bid, showing a six-card suit and &amp;-10 hip-card Soell
points. Despite all this, tliillly'J South 2 •
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favorable vulnerability into taking a
phantom sacrifice.
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played K·A of spades, picking up the lets North·make the nine of hearts, atl&lt;l:
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be wUl still score the heart king for·
Poor North had to bite his tongue. 1100. lnatead South wu min111 100. He
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WED., JUNE 6

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The Daily Sentinel-Page 16 :

Pomeroy-Midd'aPort
. . . .Ohio
-

Wednt1day, June 6, 1990

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1HtNGS .COME EXPLICABLE. - PA~ CLAUDEL
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�Page 16-The

BIG

Wednalday, June 6, 1990

Ohio

Salltiuel

••• YOUR FAMILY OWNED

Sail In To

LOW PRICED
SUPERMARKET

Ohio Lottery

Electric
living
edition

ummer

Daily .Number
134
Pick-4
7769
Super Lotto
1-3-17-22-31-41
Kicker 703295

Insert

Low lonlchl near 70. Chance
70 percent. Friday.
cloudy, humid. Hlp In mid
11811. Chance ol rain :iO percent.

of rain

•

•

2 Sec:tiono, 18 Page• 25 Conti
A Muttirnedil Inc. New••P•r

Vol.40, No.274
Copyrighted 1990
'

Shelly bids accepted
for 6 Meigs projects

'

'

ASST, COLORS

BOUNTY

PA ER TOWELS
• .HOMESTYLE .

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CTN.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Seallael News Staff
Bids from the Shelly Co. , of
Thornville on six resurfacing
projects at a total cost of $321,907
were accepted at a meeting of the
-Meigs County CommiSsioners
Wednesday afternoon.
Funding for the projects will
come from Issue 2 rnonl~. The
&lt;!sphalt cement resurfacing pro-jects are expected to get ui!der·
way .In July and be completed by
Oct. 31.' ·
·
The projects are:
Locust Grove Road, County ·
Road 28, 2.57 miles by 18 feet at a
cost of $62,951.10.
School Lot·ACL Road, County
Road 1 from State Route 143 to
the Athens County line, 2.73 miles
by 18 feet , at a cost of $70,n9.75.
County Road ~o. State Route
143 to the Athens County Road,
3.26 mlles by 18 feet, $83,574.15.
County Road 24 from ·State
walla had heeD · completely removed ))y the
Route 7 to the Pomer-oy corpora·
INDIANA BIT AGAIN - Indiana Governor
devaatatln1 tomado that hit Thursday. · See
tlon line, .66 miles by 18 feet,
Evan Bayh 1estu!'81 aa he stands In what had .been
weather story on page 7. (UPI)
$16,459.55.
the kllcben,.cif a home Ia Indiana. The roof and
•
County Road 17 from State
Route 143 to County Road 10,
three rnUes by 18 feet $73,603.20.
County Road 76 from County
Road 22 to the Pomeroy.&gt;Corpora·
tlon line, .59 miles by 18 feet,
$14 ,599.65.
Will · Mlmmlck of the Ohio
Department of Transportation
Colorado
De9v.er. l')'laklng it dltflcult for overturned, Including •two 18- and..._Gre.~~; .,Bailey, a ~f!ljenta· ,
w~i,Toar t\~·1 ,
. olflclals-fo'llftl!ss theollamaile.
tlve •ol . tlle,,Urm !"b)ch con·
· to
· "We've go! a lotofthings to set
Several~lt'ons ol a tavern just structed a new bulldl~ on Hiland
possibly trap~d lrt thjl
·
up, clean · up," Trahern ~ld. .outside ol tile dowl)town area Road ' to liouse '!Wo ' federal
left • by a" toi'nBdli ' that nearly "We've got dogs comlnt in frorti huddled In a walk-In cooler to agencies, met with the Commis·
·· wiped out downtown Limon.
other counties to make sure we walt ou1 toe storm, he sal!\. '
sloners to discuss the procedure
The twister, one of at least dol)'t have somebody under the · "I heard a roar," ·an unlderlti· : for the state to abandon a road
seven that crashed through east- debris. That's the first thing . fled woman told Denver televl· right-of-way directly In front of
.ern Colorado late Wednesday, we're going to do wMn daYilghf slon sta(lon KCNC. "It's just like tpe structure.
Injured at least14people, three of comes."
they always say. It sounded just
Mlrrtmlck suggested that the
them seriously, as It battered Its
Gov. Roy Romer surveyed the like a train. There was rain and county direct a letter to Joseph
. way through a 12-block section of tornado-ravaged town Thursday . · hall but the noise was just Leach, DeputY Director, Ohio
town.
"The Colorado State Patrol In amazing."
Department of Transportation,
"The center of town Is com- Limon is now back on line," he
"We were sitting in the house
asking that the right-of-way be
pletely destroyed," Pollee Chief said. "Pollee and the Fire and it started balling real bad,
abandoned. That would be fol·
Jim Trahern 113ld on NBC's Department are being coordi- pounlllng hard on the roof," said l.owed by a public hearing with
"Today" show. "We know about nated by CSP."
r:esldentDaveGrlmes. "Wewent
the whole process to take about
75 to 90 percent of the business
An unidentified firefighter said outside and t.h e trees started
three · months to complete, ac·
. area Is destroyed:"
tbe tornado serslously damaged snapping" .
cording to Mlrnmick.
Only limited communication the Fire Department, pollee
Colorado Highway Depart·
It was pc:ilnled out that no other
had ~ restored early Thurs· station, townhall,postofflce, two · ment spokesman Dan Hopkins property owners are lnyolved In
day. as telephone service was banks and a grocery.
said much of Interstate 70 the 359 foot roadway for which
knocked out In a wide area of
At least 25 trailer homes In a between Denver and the Kansas
abandonment wlll be requested
sparsely populated eastern Colo- mobile home park on the edge of · state line was closed to keep by the commiSsioners.
rado. Electricity was knocked town also were hlt, Tolar said.
traffic away from the violeAt
The Welshtown hUI sUp was
out lri Limon, a town of 2,000
Dozens of windows were blown weather.
discussed by Meigs County Engl·
about 75 miles southeast of out and numerous vehicles were
neer Phil Roberts and he notca
that the es tlmated cost of repair
has been set at $21.000. he said
that he Is In the process of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Marvin Warner was convicted of
overturn those convictions would making application for Issue II
Former Clncln.nati financier nine felonies at a fair trfal, and to
be "ludicrous," the state of Ohio
argued Wednesday.
But Warner's defense counsel
told the Ohio Supreme Court that
the trial court changed the rules
in
the middle of the game In order
HERITAGE DAYS SCHEDULE
to
. get
conviction, and that
All Heritage Days activities on Friday and Saturday will be
Warner's
rights
were violated.
held on Court Street unless otherwise noted. Those attending the
The
court
heard
an hour's
festivities should provide their own seating.
worth
of
oral
arguments
In the
,,
Friday
WASHINGTON (UPI) -VIc·
state's
appeal
of
the
ovl'rturnlng
6·7 p.m. - Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
Urns
of Ohio's recent floods and
last November of Warner's 1987
.7·8 p.m. - Sweet Mountain Sounds.
tornadoes
wlll get federal assist·
conviction on six counts of
8-9 p.m. - Midnight Cloggers.
ance
In
the
lorm of grants and
unauthorized acts and three
8 p.m. - The opening of the exhibit. "Or~te and Simple
low-cost
loans
thanks to a dlsas·
counts of securities violations.
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at the
ter
declaration
signed by Pres!·
Hamilton County Court of
Meigs County Public Library.
dent
Bush
Wednesday.
Appeals ordered that the slx
Saturday
Felkiral Emergency Managecounts
be dismissed and the
10 a.m. - Heritage Parade, $ponsored l)y' the Pomeroy
ment
Agency spokesman Car I
three counts be retried. The high
Merchants Association.
Suchocki
said officials will begin
court could reinstate the convlc·
11 a.m. to noon -Clvll War Marching Drills.
·
Thursday
to take the first steps
!Ions or affirm, In whole or In
noon to 12: 45 p.m. - Shady River Shuffiers.
toward
helping
residents from
part, the ·appellate court decl·
1-1:45 p.m.- Special Request Barbershop Band.
the
stonn-ravaged
areas, rec·
sion. A court spokesman said It
1: 4S·4 p.m. - Restoration Jazz Band.
over
their
losses.
will likely be at least two months
2:30p.m. - Melgs County Fair Queen announced.
Procedures lor requesting as·
before any decision Is rendered.
3 p.m. - Costume judging on the parking lot stage.
slstance
will be announced
Prosecutors said Warner, then
4·5 p.m. - Outhouse races, Second Street.
within
the
next few days, Su·
the owner of Home State Savings
5-6 p.m. - Pioneer costume review and winners announced.
chock!
said
.
.
Bank In Cincinnati, made 41 wire
·
6 p.m. .- Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
Many
residents
of Athens,
transfers worth $114 mUllon to a
6:30p.m. -Brothers of the Brush contest.
Hocking,
Lawrence
and Perry
Fiorlda securities firm In late
7-8 p.m. - Bob and Kendra Ward·Bence.
counties
were
torced
to leave
.1983, six ol them without appro·
8·10 p.m . - Peter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Square
v;ll of Home State's board of their homes over the Memorial
dancing In the street. ·
, Day weekend alter heavy tbun·
directors.
On Saturday following the parade there will be carriage ride
Wben.ESM goveriiiJleat Se!!llr- derstorms and flooding' des·
throughout the day beginning at Court and Second Streets.
'
troyed property and clalm4!11 at ·
' lti~Jnc., Fort Lauderdale, went
. There also will be Civil War Musket Brlgades displays all day •
leaSt
two lives.
,
bekrupt on March 4,1985, Horne
Saturday.
Thunderstorms
and
tornadoes
State lost $144 million and the
On Sunday rides will begin at the museum sl.te at 1 p.m.
collapse
led to runs on 70 In Butler and HamUton counties,
Food and craft concessions will be available all day Friday
state-chartered, privately In· June 2-3, also lett many bQIIIeless
and Saturday .
•
··
··
and In financial straits.
sured thrifts.
· Activities at the museum will be held Saturday and Sunday
Suchocki said assistance can
Warner's lawyers got the con·
from 1·5 p.m.
,
,
Include
temporary housing,
Yictlons reversed by saying that
the exhibit, •'Ornate and Simple Forms: Pomeroy Furniture
.
grants,
low-cost
loans lo cover
one of the Jurors "hated" Warner
and Fashion, 1840·1880" at the library will run through June 22
uninsured
property
losses, and
and another had money In the
during the hours olll a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through FFiday,
other
pJ'Oil'Bnis
to
help
lndlvldu ·
state thrifts when the collapae
and 1·4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
als
and
buslaes~
owners
recover
took pl$ce.
from 1he effects of the disaster.

Tornado nearly wipes out
Colorado town;, no one killed

State· says Warner· convicted fairly

eftAIII•SilfiiSitG

ASSOI1d

MAITHA WHITE

FLOU

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. $399
25 . Ll. BAG-....

son 'N' GENTLE

BATH TISSUE
410LL
PIG.

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·Heritage·Days .schedule

$., 89

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CHUCK .RO·A~'---..·
GOUIMET

69

LB.

GROUND .EEF
'

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$159~

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will get
assistance

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•

emergency funds to do the work. took place In VInton County
The Nye Ave. Intersection and Wednesday morning about the
the bottleneck It presents was regional jail and the $3,1!50,000
discussed and It was decided that grant from the Governor's Office
Commtssoner Richard Jones will of Criminal Justice Services. , .
talk with village officials and
SouiSby reported that the pro:- .
then write a letter to the posed faclllty would have conappropriate state officials pro-- structlon costs of about$7,000,000
testing delays.
with the balance over the grant
Bids on surplus equipment of money to be raised by the fo4r
the Ml'lgs County Emergency counties involved. They are
Medical Ser:.•lce were opened. Meigs, Jackson, VInton and ·
and the bids of Rex Vance for the Hocking. ·ThiS would mean, ac·
i984 truck ol .$1,020. the bid of cording to Soul~ by, that ea,ch
Raymond Wilcox for a. two county would have to come up
channel radio ·or $356, and the bid wltlr $1 million lor construction
of the Gallla County Sheriff's costs. There has been no provl:
Department for a four channel sian for the expense ol operating
radio of $355.10, WE're accepted.
and maintaining the multicounty
The cornrnlssoners also ac· facility once It is COlJ$tructed.
cepted a bid from the Southern
The location of the proposed
Ambulance Builders of La· facility and where local construeGrange, Ga . of $41,975 for refur- lion and maintenance monies
bishlng Rutland squad 44 on wlll come from were discussed ,
recommendation of the EMS with allofthecomrniSslonersand
Bo;l.rd of Trustees. The . work, ·the sheriff agreeing that the ·
according to Robert Byer, EMS Initial cost could . be minor ·
director, wlll take from 60 to 90 compared to tile malntenan~e
days.
and upkeep once the construction
The resignation of Ron Ash Is completed.
'
frotn the Private Industry Coun·
The problems of transporta·
ell was accepted and Leese tlon to a regional faclllty and the
Murphey was appointed to fill his necessity lpr stU! maintaining a
unexpired tl'rm. It was noted that local Jail were among the topic~
Ash Is relocatlngtotheColumbus discussed with everyone a~ ,
area in the near future.
ing that despite the $3,150,000
Approval to the Jay Mar Coal grant announced Wednesday a
Co. for the application of brine regional jallls "a long way off."
(llr~tc;ontall:WfiSiil.Vell bY the •
At ...w!lnl -~ CQ r'lillloJ&gt;.
commlsslbners.
·
· ~trs ~annlng Roush, president,
Meigs County Sheriff James Rlcliard ; Jo_nes, and David Ko·
Souls))y reported t.o the Comrnlll- blentz, and Clerk Mary ,
sloners oil the meeting which · Hobstetter.

Shotvers, storms
move across Ohio
I

Mt. Vernon in central Ohio had•
By United Press Inlernatlonal
The unset tied weather goes on more than 1.5 Inches.
in Ohio: ·
A large area ol showers and
What cauSI'd the thunder:
thunderstorms that moved storms was a cold front that was
across much of the state Wednes· just pushing Into northern Ohio •
day evening exited the state · Thursday morning,
,
around midnight. However,
The National Weather Service
more showers and thunder· said the front would be a focus lor
storms moved back across the more showers and thund~r~
smithern half of Ohio during the storms through Friday .
The threat of showers and
early morning hours,
Rainfall amounts between thunderstonns will continue Sat- •
Wednesday afternoon and early urd&lt;!Y as a cold front moves
Thursday morning were varia· thro111h. Sunday should be dry as
ble. ranging from zero along the high pressure pushes ·ln.
lakeshore to more than an Inch at
It Is expected to be humid
Friday and saturday with highs ;
somE' locations.
The Greater Cincinnati Airport In the 80s. Temperatures will get •
reported almost an inch, while back to normal In the 70s Sunday.

Selection of jury for
murder trial continues
WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPI) Publicity surrounding the case of
a Gallipolis man accussed in the
slaying of a deputy sheriff from
Putanrn County, W.Va. , Is caus·
lng difficulties In seating a Jury.
Opening arguments were scheduled to be heard Wednesday.
but the trial has been slowed by
many potential jurors acknowl·
edging they have read or heard
about the case In the media.
Jury selection was to resume
Thursday.
Charged In the murder or.
Putnam County deputy sheriff
John Janey Is Robert Gray. The
trial of an alleged accomplice,
Robert Bates, has been con·
tlnued. No new trial date was set~

Gray was charged with kUling
the off-duty d!'puty Aug. 17 while '
allegedly trying to set fire to the •
Hurricane residence of Raymond Huck. The owner of the
house allegedly hired Gray and
Bates to set fire to the house so •
Huck could collect the Insurance.
Huck pleaded guilty March 28
to second degree .murder In a ~
plea . agreement with '
prosecutors.
· ~
Janey reportedly was working •
part·tlme as an Insurance com- ·
· pany lnves Ugator and bad staked .
out Huck's residence when he
surprised Gray, who allegedly
was getting ready to set lire to
the dwelling. Gray tried to flee
and shot Janey In the chest and
head, pollee contend.

GOP unveils calhpaign fmance plan .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Majority Republlcani In the Ohio
Senate released their version or a
campalp flnanclll&amp;' reform bill
Wedliesday, stressing more pub.Jic dl~elosure and scrapptng
Democratic attempts to limit
political contributions and
expenditures:
The alternate plan, drafted to
tbe specifications of Sen. Robert
Cupp, R·Lirna, was presfnted to
a special Senate task Ioree on
campalp flnandJ111. It Is to be

an1elided Tbursday and possibly
reported out.
Cupp, chairman of the . task
force, said the leglslatloli would
bueady for a Door vote when the .
Senat~ reconvenes next
Tuesday.
•
Without bipartisan support, •
any campaign finance reform •
bill likely would remain atalern·
ated for the rest of the year.
Lawmakers plan to adjourn
week until after the Novembef '
election.
• ••

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1

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