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10-The Daily Sentinel

~,_.ir
.,. .

royalty•••

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.
of William R. and
~.

.,.; naugbter

:,t;arOiyn, Nicholson,

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Middleport,
~lranda beloncs to the R1.1tland
1),o-Gettera 4-H Club. At Meigs
&lt;lip ScbOOI she Is a member of
~ marcbinc band and the flag
,tilrp, the alk:ounty band and
·• pep balllt and serves on the
~t couilc:ll.
:{ first l'llllll!!r-up Tamara Bog·
:~ Is the daughter of Rita J ean
~~. Racine. She attends
':JIOiithem High Scliool where she
::Ji!, a member of the Future
:ailmemakers of America. Tam:)fa Is secretary of the Junior
·F,Ir ' Board and .at Southern
-~~~ on the school newspaper
~ Is active witll the Southern
nlval . of Careers program.
Is a &amp;ltton twirler and tap and
dancer. Last year she was
tnated for " Who Who's

Monet.,, June 11, 1990

Car...

!l,\lotorcyelist injured in wreck
~i:- ~ Rae~ man was Injured Ina

St()Cks.

'il

of~:at, Elll:rll .:m ..·

.

~::!:a:i::poc;~~:v'!~~~z

·where at last report he was listed - ·"Am Electric Power .............. 30
::mGtorcYcle wreck Sunday al2:45 In stable condition.
AT&amp;T · ......................... .......42~
:;3).m.lnChesterTown$hlponC.R.
Cline, driving a 1987 OldsmoAshland 01! .... :;: ;;~· .. ·,;:·.:.;,.. ··· 36 ~
3.4 mnes south of the junction bile coupe, was traveling east
Bob Evans .•... , J.,.,.._. .. ,.....l 2 ~
, S.R ..2•o
accord!
to
the
h.
h
I
't
trol
.
I
b
.
Charming
, .. ............
9%
~,
.
ng
wen e os con
na s arp
Cit H0 ldl Shoppes
c
·
...
'-"11
0
aiHa-Melgs Post of the State right-hand curve, .weJ!t left oi
Y
ng
........... »•.; .... . ,74
·••pwa:ir' Pal""l
• '· •
· te ·•. 'clhh th 1 htf t std
· ~ederal Mogul ........ ,, ............ 21
:::;'David ·~ , &gt;ril:se
.. 29
s tak'e' n, cefn r an1979 Ch e r glet roCun t e Goodyear T&amp;R ..:.:.. ::: .........34'ltj
"\!:.
.rn .. rw , , wa
o a
evro
s om He k's
.
.
3ll
.,vy prtvatll Nehlcle to Veterans
Deluxe pickup truck driven by
_c ........ ......................... '"
:Xemortal Hospital, where he Charles P. Bailey, 58, of SyraKey ~nturion .................... l3~
!;Jraa .treated and released for cuse. Cline went on and bit a Lands End .........................l 6%
::ptlnor lnjurt~.
!ltlllty pole, three wooden posts
Umlted Inc .........................46%
- Davld,, J!OE, rldh\g a 1978 and a tree before overturning
Multimedia Inc .,.................. SO
=:.u-liBf-Da~ason Sportster, was and coming to a rest on Its top.
Rax ftestaurants .................. 2~
.:'J!e~ north when he went off
According to the Investigating
Robbl~ &amp; Myers ............ :•·; .. 20
~gilt sld41·and bit a ditch. The trooper's report, Cline was neeShoney s Inc ..............: ........14%
cle, which was heavily lng a Patrol cruiser - a 1988
Star ~nk ................; .......... 2l~
ll1,
and towed. was .the Plymouth 'G ran Fury- driven ' Wendy 5 Intl .. .......... .... ........ 6%
.~ veiiJCie Involved In th~ by Trooper P.J. LaJoye; 22.
Worthineton l!ld ......._.. ......... 24~
::Jjli!~t
. ...
Shortly after Cline's car
:l:) He-:waa,not clteil In the wreck. wrecked, LaJoye, who wu In
"'":I ·
· _ .
In the·• ~me place approxl· pursuit and heading east, applied
~Jl·S ,:. • .
ately 10 minutes later, another his brakes, sUd left of center In a
665.
~ - milldj:cycllst - Max L.
right-band curve an'd hit Bailey's
PICK-3 ' ticket .s&amp;Jes ·totalecs
'~;~.of 28305 Tanners Run truck about .3 of a mile west of $1,465,0116, 'with a payoff due of
;Jrd. ·.::. was Involved In a crash the spot where Clbie's car rested. $343,438.
••
::e1 a : parlied 1979 Chevrolet The truck had stopped on ibe
PICK4
]lnpala owned by Sheryl L. Rose road after the wreck.
9652.
:llf Ra~. Knopp was cited for
- . maintaining assured clear
·

Jll.

Lott- num
· hers

fi1

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., -Inc.

~v:.r' ·~~~to ~~p~~run;;!
...
z: A Washington County man was
Mrlously Injured In the after·
;lth~.

:lllatb of a cu- chase Mopday at

~:5H.m.lnRllclneonS.R.l24.

of~':~=

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(304) 675-1244

:::;:

.,h.~

Daily sen.~~inil .~
Is ·1rltfoduc:ing .A.Ne•

4

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Service Starting.
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Ohio Lottery

sixth career
no-hitter

J)aily Number

952

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Page 3 ·

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Yol.40, No.277

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Steps taken to . acfP)ire Race · Street property
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.

Sentinel News Staff ,
Necessary steps to acquire
propertY on Race Street needed
for the proposed exilanslon of the
Race Street structure which
houses the Melp County Depart·
ment of Human ResoliTCes were
take!l by Middleport VIUage
Council Monday night.
Council gave I! third reading
and adopt~!(! an ordinance declar.·
lng a small section of land beblnd
the bulldlilg excess properly for
the village and au thorlzed Mayor
Fred Hoffrilan to advertise It for
sale. ·
,
PUrpose of councll'sactlon Is to
make the property available for
purchase . by the Middleport
Housing Commission wlllch han·
dies the development and leasing
of.the bulldlne to the county.

In-other action council passed.a
resolution of Intent to purchase
the Dale Nicholson properly for
$35,000. That property Is located
adjacent to village hall and
between another lot owned by the
village. Financing for the pur-,
chase will be through · Central
Trust, It was noted.
Upon completion of the purchase, the mayor was authorized
by council to advertise for bids on
the hoilse wblcll will have to be.
moved In order to make room for
·
the proposed expansion.
An ordinance was also adoptel!
during the meeting which provides for 'village employees to he
paid on retirement for halt of
their accumulated sick leave
lime up to a maximum of60days.
Dave Rcss and Eddie Ross met
with council to request that they

be i&gt;ermltted to travel ' with
empty trucks through the village
from the Hobson yards. Truckers
will be hauling sto11e from
Hobson to Foote Minerai In West
VIrginia making 16 to 25 trips a
day for a period about four
weeks. They did not request that
they be allowed to travel loaded,
only empty. Both Indicated that
they purchase gasoline from a
local service staton, and that
their cost to stay on· the state·
highway from the location where
they load to their d~sdnatiom
costs about $20 a day per truck
.more on fuel.
·
There was a lengthy discussion
on the matter with reference to
an ordinance which the village
has In effect regarding trucks.
That ordinance as·pointed out by
the mayor provides that trucks

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Tlie sta~e Controlling Board
Monday approved $1 million In
emergency financing to help
repair damage· from floods and
tornadoes that have ravaged
southern Ohio during the last two
weeks.,

An estimated $700,000 Is earmarked for the southern Ohio
area h!t by flooding following ·
§l!ltl!r~s May 29 . The,rest Is
for assistance In Hamilton and
Butler counties, .which were hit
hardest by the tornadoes of June

~.

Jl1 SS.OO PEl DAY
112 SlO.OCI Pll DAY. :
· ."113 srs~OO - PEI DIY~,~::;~ f
' •
.TJIE BULLOIN .OAWD DEADUNE IS .
·4:30P.M. THE· DAY BEFORE PUiliCATION

2.

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THE TENT HAS COME DOWN BUT THE PRICES

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YOU'U SAVE A BIG
60°/o TO 70°/o NOW!

PIICE
3 pc.
llut &amp; Whit.-........_.... 11899 $814
f pc. Sofa

I tov...t ....... ".......... tlO"
3 pc..... Plaid
w/Wing Chair --·---~1 ~99

3 pc:. Rust PlaitL-... 11499
'3 pc.
.
hwn Plaid .........._..... 1799
2 pc. lrown..- ........... 1950
2 pc......................._ •too
2 pc:. Sofa
·&amp; &amp;or. .t ............,.,.11500

Willi

S$93
$648
S$94 .
S399
S468
$499
S643

s.,.
Like
Nerer .

Bel

FOR SALE .. ,
·t983 DODGE TRUCK'
.:· WADED

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C~'~o

gambling prowsal
(jUalifie8-for Nov. 6 ballot.

FRESH PEACHES,
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
WATERMELONS

...

000-0000

........

3-fAMILY· YARD SALE
.. · ·RAIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGALE LANE
· ' -FRI., JUNE 6 &amp; ·
SAT; JUNE 7 ··

000-0000

NOTICE
There will be a meeting :
held on Thurs., ·June 12 ·
to elect officers at
John's Restaurant.

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1982 ENGlAND
MOBILE HOME

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3 BR, Kiti:hen, I)R, LR. Must
sell now. Best offer.

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000·0000

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Rain

THANK YOU
'
For AII the Flowers, Cards
and Gifts I Received While
I Was UL
. , · .SARAH
""

eo.ae Slnlao
IU1UIID, 0110 .... 1m111'

STOP .. AND SAVE
1115 WID

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STOP IN TODAY AND' HAVE YOUI ADVERTISEMENT
PLACED IN THE .ULLmN IOARD:
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COLUMBUS, Ohlp (UPI) Just when Ohl!l farmers had a
couple of good days for pland!li
and curing hay, the sl\les opened
up again and poured rain over
most of the state, ending field
activity.
The Ohio Agricultural Stattstics Service said Monday there
was an ave~age of 3.2 days
suitable for fieldwork during the
week ended Friday. Son moisture rated 28 percent adequate
and 72 percent surplus.
· , Tuesday, Wedneaclay and
'Thursday were ·,the three clays
moat areas enjoyed the chance to
work In the flelda, with lbe
warmer and sunnier weather
helping crops toward the end of
the week.
· Most areas of the state received at least linch ofrala lnihe
week ended at 8 a.m. Monday,
with some areas In .central and
east-central Oblo getting 2 ~ to 3
lnchel.

•••

~

Corn rated fair to mostly good;
much the same as a week earlier.
Most areas of. the state reported
some replanting activity because
of wet sons and erosion.
Slugs were a maJor concern,
particularly In no-till stands.
Growth was slow with some
yellowing apparent undl sun and
warmer temperatures Improved
condition&amp;. Planting reached 93
per~ent complete 'on Intended
acreage. ·
.
At this point flelda ,that were
planllld tor. .com , may be
swltcbl!ll to soybeans, Soybe~
l!lanlllll reached 66 percent
complete; 40 polnla ahead of last
year at thll time and U polnll oft
the average.
ConditiOn of beans was fair to
good, ultcbanged from a week
earlier. Some farmers rotary·
hoed In flr8k CI'USia and kUl

•eedl.

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Winter wheat. rated mostly

good. POwdery mildew was cited

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The money Is.being taken from
.th~ state's pool of emergency
money which had been reserved
for the ye;ir beginning July 1.
This year's emergt~ncy fund had
run out.
'The $300,000 set aside for

Gray hit head
~uring

arrest,
deputy.' says . .
·I

WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPI) -A
Putnam County sheriff's deputy
testified In the trial of an Ohio·
man charged In the slaying of a
colleague that Rebert Gray
slipped and hit his head wben
officers arrested him.
.
Dep1,1ty Roger Blankenship
told the circuit court Jury that
Gray's inJuries happened when
he fell while deputies arrested
him , shortly after the Aug. 17
shooting death of Deputy John
' Janey .
Gray Is charged In Janey's
death, who was ktlled while _
working as a part-time Investigator for Nationwide Insurance Co.
Prosecutors contend Gray, of
Ga!Upolls, Ohio, and another·
man were hired by Raymond
Huck to set fire to Huck's home In
an Insurance scam.
Huck has pleaded. guilty to
seconci:degree murder. 'Janey
was watching' Huck's home Aug.
17 and was. shot while allegedly
·
. ·
trying to stop the torching.
Gray's allarney, Joe Thomas,
less frequently as temperatures argued that Janey severely beat
Increased. Weather factors did his client and that Gray shot the
enter the picture where rains and oft-duty deputy In self defense.
wind caused lodging, Heading
· In tesdmoney Monday, Natlonwas observed on 96 perceJII of the ,wide Investigator O.G. Garrison
wheat aCI)!age.
said be had hired Janey and
Oat condition was moslly good, · another deputy to watch Huck's
with 14 percent of the acreage home after .a series of fires lilld
headed.
burglarfl:s at Huck's home bePastures rated mostly good,
tween Mlly 25 and Auf. 10.
hay stands rated fair to good.
Thomas, In crQI!s-examlnatlon,
Hay earned the lower rating asked Garrlaon whether Janey
because most standi ·are past was aggressive or C9nsldered
,prime for !larvest. Farmers were hlmielt macbo.
lookllli for J(ternaUv~ to make
'1'd call him a ieddy.. bear,"
use of hay that Is beyond prime Garrison said.
·
for cutting and curing. Some
Blankenablp testified Janey
farmers already made haylage If was capable of handling most
that posslblllty was available to people.
,
them.
"He wasn't (a) wimp," Bllll·
First cut alfalfa harvest keaablp told the Jury. "He was
reached 36 percent complete and pretty tough."
other bay harvest stood at 22
Blankenablp also testified that
percent complete. Both types of Gray had fallen while deputies
bay , harves 1 ran half Pl the tried to arrest him at a little-used
averace pace and about equal to roac! near Winfield less than six
a year earlier.
~ hours after Janey was sbot.

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k
wers
wee
puts ·damper on gro
tb~

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NO MAnER WHAT THE lEASON MAY BE•••
"YAID. SALE-","AUTO F01 ..$.LE", ~~PUBLIC
NOTICE", "•E'I'INGS" ·ol "JUST TO SAY
. SOMETHING SPICIIL"USE IHE DAILY
.SENTI.L BUUE'nN BOARD.

THREE MILES OFF RT. 7

ho.rse racing and · religious gambling, I know It'll pass," said
groups that tried legal chal· Spitzer.
lenges to keep the,ifsue off the
LUV Ohio earlier this year
ballot.
.
failed to submit the required
'They are not be taken 306,661 valid signatures to place
lightly," said Spitzer, who pre·
the Issue on the ballot. However,
dieted he might have to spend
under the law, the committee
more than $1 million to pass the was given an extra 10-day grace
Issue.
period wblch ended May 10.
If Ohioans approve, the voters County boards of election have
of Lorain wlll , be entitled to been ch!!Cklng the validity of lh!!
!leclde whether they want caslpo · extra signatures ever since.
cambllng within their municipal
The secretary of state's office
boundaries.
,
Currently, the only legalized
found the.group conected 318,899
. gaming In Ohio Is the state signatures and met the 5 percent
lottery, pari-mutuel wag!!rlng on
threshold In 51 counties. It ·
needed a minimum number of
horse racing, ancl, bingo and
signatures from 44 counties.
limited "Las Vegas nights" for
charitable and fraternal organl·
zatlons. The statewld!! Issue
Under the ballot proposal,
would add another exception to
Lorain voters could retract the
the constitutional · prohibition
casino license after two years If It
against gambling. ·
resulted In rundown areas, crime ·
"If )t's a referendum on
or other social blight.
same

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Secretary of State Sherrod
Brbwn certified · Monday for the
Nov. 6 ballot a pilot casino
gambling project for the city or
Lorain which could lead to
'r egional casinos near other rna· .
jor cities.
The Let Us Vote (LUV) ()hlo
Committee, which bas been
pressing for two years for the
right ~ have a l~al referendum
on tile Issue, was ruled to hav!l
collected the 'r equired number of
signatures for a statewide vote
on a constl tutlonal amendment.
"It Is gratifying," said Elyria
developer Alan Spitzer, who
wants to lnstall,a casino as part of
a huce $450 mtlllon resort com·
plex on the Blac~ River, saying It
would attract tourists and help
Lorain out of lis economic woes.
'
.
Spitzer
said be expects a tough
flgbt this !alh trom

Washed Pi.Vaughn BaatH
w/Night StancL._,SJS99 $798
Honey Pile
w/Night Stand .....- ... S999 ssa8
Pine Bedroom Suite
w/Cherry Finish ..... SJS99 $899 '
Cantempory Oak
w/Night StancL.•. s12oo $697
Ch•ry Bedroom
Suite .................,_____ *ms S1200

Ill Pomeroy. PIdared .are. left to rtcllt, Lloyd
Blackwood, Tom Jlarr. ·aack Whitney Karr and
Wesley Jlarr. (Seeaddlllonal pbololl oo pages W).

BEST CARft14GE - Uo)'ll Blaclnrood'e 1826
eo-&amp;oca WII&amp;!J!I. received the Best carrta,e
award dnrlag Sliarday's Rerttace Daye P!ll'ade
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BED109M Stii1ES .

aosa ni.SDA Y AT 12:00 fiOOI. QOSm -DAY

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BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
..
... PUBLICATION

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Rutland Furniture t.S!~.
sr.n. 11&lt;1

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BUilDI

5·BIG SHOWROOMS. ·THE FINAL WEEK IS HERE.
... Pnc. TINT SALE

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· ~~/ · ONELy- · · GET THE
SECOND ONE FREE!
..,·YOU'U FIND SAYINGS ON EVElY ITEM IN OUR
LIVING ROOM SUITES

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ARE STILL DROPPING IN.·ALL fiVE
.SHOWROOMS AT RUTLAND ·FURNITURE···
STOREWIDEIII "DON'T MISS n'~ · · ··

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$1,00() fine alid six month In jail on ·
a misdemeanor charge Involving
the operation and physical control of a motor vehicle while
under the infiuence.
Curbside Recycling
The Middleport cubslde recyl·
lng plan was discussed by Roger
Manley who operated Manley 's
Recycling Center and Manley 's
Trash service. .
• Manley talked about his plan
for a pilot project of curbside
recycllng with 20 ·volunteers on
First, Second and Third Streets
In the vlllage &gt; the area where
trash is picked up on Fridays:.
He said that currently he has
had only five residents volunteer
to participate In the project, but
others will be contacted In an
effort to come up wl th 20 who are
Interested In the environmental

problem and wlllllig to try
curbside recycling ·on a three
month basis·.
Under the plans customers will
be provided with a recycling
basket and use paper sacks
lrislde to sort paper, glass bottles
and jars, plastic containers, ahd
aluminum cans.
All members of council volun·
teered to participate In the pilot
project In the event 20 customers
In the preferred area do not
respond.
The solid wa~te problem, It was
pointed .out by Gerard, who
represents the district on the
multi-county Solid Waste Man·
agement Dis trlct, will eventually
dictate mandatory recycling.
Manley's plan Is just a step ahead
of that, Gerard said.
Continued on page 10

•

YOU CAN PLACE .YOU~. ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS LOW AS S5.00 PER INCH.

In Columbus,

c,an only travel through the
village to get to their usual place
of business or storage area.
'
. Since tjlere was some disagreement on the ordinance Interpretation as regarding the trucks
which deal at a local business, It
was decided to have the village
solicitor make a ruling. Councllmen Dewey Horton, James Clatwortl!y, Bob Gilmore, Paul Gerard ana Jack sat terfleld voted
In favor of that, while WI!Uam
Walters voted "no" contending
that other trucks are permitted
to come in and that he fel.t there
was some discrimination In .not
allowing the haulers t.o go
through the village with empty
trucks,
The village's ordinance regarding DUI was reviewed and
amended to Include a penalty of

Approve emergency aid for
• •
southern Ohio communlJles s2:s ·

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1 Section, 1 0 Pagu 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tu8$day, June 12. 1990

c-.-1899

'·'16e Bul/efint8Jttd~,_

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1108. PartlY cloudy Wednesday. IDII:h In mid 80.

18, .1·990.

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Clear tonight. Low In mid.

9526

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Ryan tosses

Piek-4

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Hospital news

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EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT,
GENERAL ·ALLERGIST· ·
,
\\fM~ /l' j Ul: II~ JRJIIIt A/0,. 11
"~
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llfl
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were transported to Veterans
111 the Melp County Common, .
Memcmal Hospital. Atl:Sa.m .•, · Pleas Court, a petition fof
Rutland squad was called lo
County Road 1 ·for :&amp;1~11 John·
diiiOIUIIGJ~ bu · been filed ~' Walllla IAu ,Wolt of Mkldlepor•,
son, who was transported. to
and Cl•-e c. Wolf, Jr. of •
Holzer Madlcal Center,
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\.Jletter
~r
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Po
At U :U a.m., the.. meroy
An entry granting default ,
unllwascalledtoPomeroyCIIffs
J~t bas been flied In the•
cue of General Motors Accep-,
Apartmellta for Shawn Carmi·
•c bael. Carmichael was taken to . lance CorPoration versus Tl·
Vetera111 Memorial Hospital.. · mothYR Prlddylntheamountor:
Syracull! IIQIIIId ~as ,oallrd at ,. $3,462 1: ,:
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11: 41 a.m. for Roaer McPbenoa, •
. •. •
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who was transported 1!&gt; Veterans
An entry granting default:
Memorial Hpapltalanjl tak~ .!JY · judgment was flied In the matter •
LUeFllght • to Grant Medical · of BaDCOhlo National Bank ver-~ .
Center. On Sunday at .6: 45 p.m.,
sus Grace E . Cheva lier and "~
P omerO)' aqua d· wa,~~ .;ca lied t0
VICtor L. Ch&lt;!Yallier 'bi the amount
Kingsbury Road for · Susie
~
Heltzer, who refused treatment.
of =~~~Common Pleas Court:
Rutland squad .was called to
news, a ' dissolution
been~
Painter Ridge for Ray Hall · at
7: 27p.m . Hall was IT~!_nsported 10 , lll'anted to Pamela A; Honaker,~
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
Long Bottom, and Dwight C. ,
Honaker of Athens.
•
8: 53p.m., Pomeroywascalledto • A divorce bas beenu.anted to ;
KlngsburyforSusleHeltzer, wbo
Billy R. Goble, Jr. from Glenda ~
was transported to Veterans
Allene Goble and a divorce has •
Memorial Hospital.
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been gran ted to Terence Lee ;

PlEASANT VAllEY
HOSPITAL
,

tharonRose'scarwasparkedat
' .scene of the previous wreck.

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M!!lflorlal Hospital. At 7:34p.m.;·
Chester fire department was
calll!d to a structure nre at the
Gacy Michael properly on Pomeroy ·P ike. At 10:25 p.m ., Pomeroy
from Bonnie Lee !
unltrwas called to Union Avenue
for ¢brls Shank. Shank was taken
Ve&amp;eraaa Ml!morial
•.
~
to ~eterans Memorial Hoipltal.
At ·l l: 18 p.m. on Sunday, POmeroy
Saturd~ admiSsions .,.. Ora' ' ' ' ' '
•·
:
sq~d and the sherlf~ depart·
Sinclair, Pomeror.
• r:BIG KIDS-BAIIESPROGRAU ~
m"'t transported Todd l{ubbard ,
Saturday discharges- None.
TUESDAY, JUNE 12
;
to -.;eterana Memorial Hospital.
6:30 P.ll.
;
At 12: 04 a.m. on Sunday, the
Sunday admissions- Mlcbael
AdministratiOR
Conference
Room
I~
Pomeroy EMS unit was called to Todd Hubbard, Syracuse. ·
PluSIIII Valley Hospital
•
the l Beacon station for Tony
Sunday discharges- Mary V.
675-4340
ext.
232
b
·
Welch and Earl McKinley, woo Kester son.

'.;11=
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~~-wasbeadlngnorthwhen

Common Pleu

Squads have busy weekend

Continued from page 1
.
CoJJtlnued tram pap l
Among Amercan High School
On Saturday at 1: 32 a.m. , the
Plymoutb GTX, while the Best
St1,1dents."
Rutland
unit was dispatched to
Underhood Chrome winner wlia a
Daughter of Ron and Mary
1957 Chevy owned by Butch Orr Cooks Gap ~Ill for Pete ~lckles
Ash, Racine, first runner-up
and Jim Hyll!ll wbo refllaed
of Walker, W.Va.
Kristine belongs to the Country
The Best Wheels category treatment. At 7:36 a .m., PomeClovers 4-H Club. Slle Is a
winner was Bill Chapman of roy squad was called to Forest
cheerleader at Southern High
Tuppers Plains for his 1~ AMC . Run Road for George Folmer.
School and her activities Include
raising sheep, horseback riding, ' Javelin and tilt lllrlllllel' tot Best Mr. Folmer: w-a ·traaaported to
Interior went to Harrle Palmer of HolZer Medical Center. At 9:01
and a variety of outdoor sports
Stockport, who brOUibt hts l.m a.m., ~rt 111d Pomeroy
Including tennis and volleyball.
squada were callN to the scene of
Chevrolet van.
In the competition, LaTisha
Randy Offenberier of Beverly an auto accident on State Route
Price, daughter of Ray Harper
won for Best Paint for his 19T1 11M for ~ Bob Payd, who was
and Emny Harper, Shade, reChevy Truck and Museum's treated but not transported.
presented the Meigs FFA. She
1\t 9: 20 a.m . on Saturday, .the
Choice was 192• Dodge owned by
has been active In FFA son and
squad
trom Tuppers Plains was
Dick McDonald.
speaking contests and attended
called
to
the Arbaugh Addldon In
i.
both the state and national FFA
Tu~a PtallllfOr,J ohDArbaugb
conventions as a representative ,
whO was taken to St. Joll!ph's
of her group. She al~ plays on
HQijpltal.
.
·
the FFA_softball team, and
~5:48p.m., Mldd)l!fl(&gt;rtsquad
works with the Meigs FFA
?~~f-:~~~~
wu
called to South Fourth In
woodcooker.
B
aad M k 8 l&amp;b

Hamilton and Butler counties
will provide much-needed assls t·
ance to clear debris and repair
public buildings, bridges and
roads In the hardest hit areas,"
said senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R·Cinclnnatl , who requested the ald.
The board also released $4
mtlllon for Honda R&amp;D North
America to use In establishing a
· new research· park at the Ohio
Transportation Research Center
·In Union County.
The $27 million project will
dou\lle H:onda's research faclll. ties near Its Marysville auto
plant.
The board releal!l!d $20 million
for continuing grants for Edison
technology centers throughout
the ·state.
Receiving grants will be Edl·
son Welding Institute, Ohio State
University, $4.5 million; Edison
Biotechnology Center In conjunc·
lion with Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland University Hospitals,and the Cleveland
Clinic, $2 mnllon; Institute of
Advanced Manuf1,1ctuilng Sclen·
'

.

ces, University of ClnciMatl,
mtlllon. ·
Also, Edison Industrial Systems Center, University of
Toledo, Owens Technical Col·
lege, Bowling Green State Unl·
verslty and the Medical College
of Toledo, $2 .9 million; Edison
Animal Biotechnology Center,
Ohio University, Case ·Western
Reserve Un iverslty and Ohio
State Unlyerslty, 11.8 ,ll)ciUIQn;
and Edison Polymer Innovatloh
Corp. , University 'of Akron and
Case Western Reserve University, $3.7 million.
Also, Edison Materials Tech·
nology . Center, Wright State
University, University of Dayton, Central State University,
Sinclair Community College,
Ohio State University, Ohio Unl·
verslty, Hocking Technical College, Cal!!! Western Reserve
University and the University of
Cincinnati, $1.8 million: and
Cleveland Advanced Manufac·
turing Program, Cleveland State
University, Case Western Reserve University and Cuyahoga
Community College, $2.8 million.

Next big celebration
event set for October
The next big event for the and Marlyn Wilcox received
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial will second.
1
be the first weekend In October.
Lloyd Blackwood ·received
The Pioneer Costume Contest , first place In the category of best
and Brothers of the Brush male costume and Robert Titus
Contest drew quite a bit of captured second place.
attention on Saturday as part of
Matt Cotterill captured the ·
the Heritage Weekend for Pome· Brothers of the Brush Contest for
roy's ·sesquicentennial.
best beard and moustache and In
ihe hat and hair category the
AWI\rds were presented In the
winners were Gina TIIUs, first, .
category of best Individual female costume to Eliza beth Dow- Rachael Downie, second, and
nie, first; Gina Tillis, second, Tawnle Johnson, third. The
wbo was sponsored by the Fabric award for best family went to
Lloyd Blackwood and Marlyn
Shop and whose outfit was made
Wilcox, first, who also were
by Tammy Dummitt; and Cathy
awarded the dtle of Mama and
Edwards, third, who wore her
Papa Pomeroy; the Haynes
great grandmother 's wedding
family,
second; and the Titus
dress. Best female teen outfit
.
flun
lly
'
third.
was awarded to Lisa Poulin, and
Entertainment on Saturday·
best child's costume went to
concluded
with performances by·
Myca Haynes, first; and Meghan
the
Kyger
Valley
Gospel Quartet,
Haynes, second. Rachael Downie
Bob
and
Kendra
Ward Bence;'
received first place In the senior
and
square
dancing
In the streets
ajult female costume category
with music by Peter Shaw and
for her side-saddle riding outfit,
the Hotpolnt String Band.

Meigs deputies probe theft
Meigs County Sberlfrs deputies continue to Investigate the
attempted theft of an air condl·
tloner at the Bill PuWns Family
Homes model home at' Rock
Springs Friday night.
According to a .news release,
the department was notified
early ·saturday that the coolant
lines and electrical wire to ·the
outside air condiUoner had been
cut.
It was also reported on Satur·
day that the Tim Woodyard borne
on Ball Run Road, Pomeroy, had
been entered and that a color
televlalon and several articles of
clothlilg were mtulng.
ThOmas Parkl of Belpre told
deputies that early Sunday mom'~
.... .
.

lng, a mirror, ta!Utghts and the
driver's door glass were brokep
out of his 1988 Mazda truck,
which. was parked along State
Route 7.
A report was received from the
Racine Fire Department that It's'
Guit Shoot Building oil Long Run
Road had been entered. The front
door had been kicked In and a
trash bag full of aluminUm cans
had been stolen.
The department alsO reported
deputies are Investigating the
theft of two small evercreena
from the Star Mill Park In
Racine, which were reported
missing on Monday . The depart·
men I news release states that tbe
shrub&amp; were s)olen sometime
Saturday night.
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In Rangers' 5.()

i Commentary
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court S&amp;reet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE liiEJGS-MAsON AR!!;A

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ROBERT L. WINGB'rl'
Pabllsber
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CJIARLENE HOEFLICH
GeDeral Mallapr

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publla!!er/ConlroUer

1

A MEMBER of The Ulllted ~s International,
Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

buaDd

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be lesil thaD 300
words long. ,Ul let_ters are subject to editing and must be sflned with
name, ad&lt;ll'ess and telephone number. No UI!Sflned letters will be pub, lis.hed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!: ties..'

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Letters to the editor
Appreciates support
Dear Edit or:
· I would like to thank everyone
lit our community and surround·
l)!g communities that gave to our
baseball players durblg their
recent ta·g days. It's your

tooughtflll donations that make It
possible for our kim to have a
successful baseball season.
Pres. of the Racine Association
Joe Kirby Sr.

Concerned about amendments to bill
0e·a r Editor:
.
• We have major concerns about ·
the amendment to the Comprellenslve Drug BIU proposing to
· turn parts of Apple Creek Devel·
opmental Center Into a mbllmum
security prison and a home for
crack-addicted mothers and
tl)eir babies.
: We do not feel that our
mentally retarded children
should be co-mingled with the
criminal or drU¥ element• The
. mentally retarded citizens living
at ACDC are not being punished
and they do not need to be cured
of soctal problems. They should
bJ! able to live In a safe and
healthy environment with dignity of life.
The residents at ACDC are our
chUdren and wards. We ask you,
the reader, to think about what
y:our feelings would be If your

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A

a,

mas

a

win~

cbUd were forced to live with the
crlmh!al and ·drug element. If
this could happen In Apple Creek,
It could happen In your communIty! If you agree with us, please
call or write your Oblo Representative and Senator. And please
burry, this amendment was
proposed on Wednesday, June
6th and will be voted on prior to.
Cam palgn and ethics reform
Wednesday, Juae 13th.
'
and the state's drug war are
From parent to parent, we
likely to top the Ohio General
thank you.
Assembly's legislative agenda
Sincerely, . when we meet for a three-day
Charles Conley, Chairperson
sessiOn.
ACDC Parent Advisory lloard
I have been arguing for many
Norm Dunzwell~r, Chairperson
months that action. not talk, Is
ACDC Citizens Advisory Board
needed on both campaign reform
AI Leist, President
alld drugs. Now It appears that
Ohio League tor the Mentally
both houses of the General
Retarded
Assembly are prepared to act.
2532 s. Apple Creek F{oad
We need to be sure, however,'that
Apple Creek, OH 44606
wh&amp;t Is approved Is more than an
election year gesture.
One key reform bill that
deserves passage Is H.B. 538,
grandfather of Emily ·which would tighten current laws
on lobbyist registration. Current
Bumgardner.
Third. of the past Pomeroy law requires lobbyists and their
anployers to .register with the
High School Alumni Preslde!lts.
Joint Committee on Agency
eight were from Minersville.
Review
(JCARR) within 10 days
1-Dr. H.D .. Brown Sr., 2-Etbel
of
being
engaged by their em·
Garland. long time PomerOyoployers
tor
lobbying activities.
High teacher, 3-Jobn (Jack)
Lobbylits
and
employers every
'lbomas (great uncle of Kristen
s~
months
must
report · tqtal
King), 4-Kenlietb Harris, !\-Nora
spending
uaed
to
Influence
legis·
Harris Rice, (brother and sislatlon.
Flnandal
transactions
ter), 6-Mary Jane Scott Wise,
7-Kennetb Wiggins, 8-Earlene Involving lobbyists and public
otflcials must be reported as
Renshaw Bumgardner (mother
well.
of EmUy Bumgardne-) .
One qf the biggest problems
Fourth, my wife Allee Morris
with
present law, however, Is
Brown and I, of Minersville,
that
there
Is no provision tor what
attended this our 60th class
contltutes a late-filing. lllld there
reunion. being graduates of1930.
Our class was the first to bqld 1s no penalty. H.B. 538wauldbelp
their graduation ceranonles In ranedy this by, among other
the, then, new Junior HighSchool thlnp, requiring lobbyists to ftle
buUdlng. Even toough the date an annual statement with
1929 Is on the buUdlng, In the' JCARR listing all contributions
Spring of 1900 only the audito- made by the lobbyist, a list of
rium part was completed enough
to be used. None of the class
rooms were completed. Kristen
King's grandmother, Letta Tho• •
mas Spencer, was In the first
Freshman class to begbl school
Dear Editor:
In this new buUdblg.
The Chester Vol. Fire Dejlt. ·
Just toought you might be
would
like to thank all thOse
Interested In all the above. I have
people
who helped wltb or
· sometimes statedlnpastardcles
donated
pies to our Memorial
MblersviUe (that was) has con·Day
BBQ.
We also would like to
tributed many winners. .
thank
the
public for soowtng
&lt;nNGRATULATIONS Emily
their
great
support
of our Dept.
and Kristen. Knowing my frl!!~!d
by
!Javblgto
put
up
with
tl!eralny
Bob as I did, he too would be
weather.
·
proud of you.
Thank
you
Victor L'Berger Brown
Chester
Vol.
Fire
Dept.
42960 State Rt. 124
Bruce D. Myers
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Campaign .ethics, reforllt
gifts of more than $2!1 and all · thatexceedone-thlrdotthegross
honoraria and honoraria and proceeds from the fund-raising
activity.
transportation and lodging exCandidates tor governor wouldpenses paid to publlc officials.
Lobbyists also would be required · be limited to spendlng$600,0001n
the prtmap- and $1 mUUon In the
to state their position on Issues
before the General Assan bly or general 'election. Candidates for
all other statewide offices would
the State Controlling Board, a
be limited to $000;000 In the
bipartisan legislative panel that
primary, and $500,000 In the
awarltl state contracts.
BUis limiting Cl!fllpalgn contrl· general election.
State Senate candidates would
butlons and spending also are
be limited to spendblg $50.000 In
likely to be consider eel. H .B. 539,
which already. has passed the the primary, an'd $90,000 In the
House, would limit contributions general election, and state representatlve candidates would be
to $2,~ for each campaign tor
statewide office, and $1,500 tor limited to $lll.OOO In the primary
and $35,000 In the general elec·
state legislative candidates, In·
lion .. Passage of this bill would
cludlng state senate cancldates.
llavetheposltlveeffect ofdlscouA separate bill. H .B 861,
Introduced In the House ot raging candidates from relying
Representatives by Rep. Barney on · radio and television for
campaigning, and would encour.
Quilter, D-Toledo, would set up a
system of voluntary spending ag~ more qualified people to run
ltmlts on certain campaign ex- for public otnce. It's a refonn
penditures by statewide candi- that's overdue.
I'm also hopeful that we can
dates, as well as candidates tor
work
out a coinprcmlse on two
state representative and state
senator. The ty.pes of spending Senate-passed antl.drugbllls and
affected 6y the limits would a House antt-drug bill. Last
Include spending tor political Septem her, at hearings I chaired
advertising, spending to main· In Chillicothe and Ironton, local
taln a constituent office ·d uring officials told me they strongly
an election ~ar, spending for support more state funding for
pofltlcal consultlmta and spend- anti-drug proposals and more
Ing for · fund-raising activities . emphasis on drug education.

Expresses
apprecratwn

LIEF
UPISporta Wrl&amp;er
Nolan Ryan's mental approach
to pitching ·under pressure has
made the legendary right-hander

Jack Anderson

and Dale Van Atta

Ute master of the no-hit game.
With five previous no-hitters·to
his credit, the 43-year-old Ryan
worked through the final Innings
of his record sixth no-hitter, a 5-0

victory Monday over the b akland Athletics, with an understal!dlng tor the moment and the
ability to commal!d his emotions.
" I've been through this a few

Sen. Jan Long
One of the Senate bills would
set up grant progrlllils for local
anti-drug las k forces, while
another would toughen penalties ,
for drug offenders. One of the
highlights of the week likely will.
be the appearance, before a joint
session on WednESday, of federal
drug czar William J. Bennett.
Bennett's speech hopefUlly will
help us come up with state
. progrl!flls that mesh with steps
the federal government II taking
to fight drug use.
Finding solutions to the drug
problem won't be easy. Illegal
drug use Is so common In our
·culture today that there are no
quick.11xes. Hawever; I .s troagly&lt;.
believe tbat early educatlon ·ts
one constructive · approach that
needs to be explored. Unless we
send a stronger message to our
young people early In lite that
drug use Is unacceptablj!, they
won't be able to resist the peer
pressure that comes· about durlng the teenage years.
Please feel tree to call or write
me, StateSen.JanMicbae!Long,
· If you have. any comments or
questions ·abQut -these, or any
other proposals,; My number Is
(614) 466-8156, and my address Is
. the Stateholllll!, ColUmbus, 4321!1.

Scramble
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mrace

Scoreboard ...

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Majors

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Cblequ 8, New. Vttrll. S
HoWIII~n S, Lo• Anples !I
PllhiMUIIIR, 8l. lAW. 1

Brllaled Pres11 bi\er •tleral,

SONOMA, Calif. CUP!) Three weeks ago, Dale Earnhardt had won back-to·b.ack.
races and was zeroing In on the$1
mUIIon Winston Cup points title.
Then the bottom fell out.
In the Coca Colli 600, Earnhardt crashed and was forced to
. pit. In the Budweiser 500 at
Dover, DeL, he had camshaft
problems. On·Sunday, transmls- ··
slon trouble ended any chance he
had to win the Banquet Frozen
Fotxls 300 at Sears Point.
Now, with 17 races ·left, Earn-hardt ~ who once led his nearest
competitor by • more than 200
points - traits leader Mark
Martin by 136 points. '
"We've bad. our share of
troubles, but there's nothing we .
can do aboutltbut keep plugging
away," .Earnharllt· said. "We've
had the same· thing&gt; go wrong
(long reptlrs lll' the pits) the last
three weeks, Maybe we'll finish
one soon without having to take
time out."
·
Earnhardt was running at the
end Sunday's 74-lap race, b~t
made It around just 61 ttmes and
fbllshed a distant 34th.
Morgan Shephard,. who replaced Earnhardt at the top of
the standings last week, was
bat tllng for the lead but dropped
out with five laps to go because of
engine trouble. He finished 29th.
"That's racing," .he said.
Morgan dropped to second In
the standings. He trails Martin,
who finished a close second
SUnday .
While Martin became the third
leader In as many weeks, he may
prove the hardest to replace:

Robert Walters-

PHOENIX (NEA) - "We're theSanFranclscoBayGuardtan,
another way of understanding Seattle Weel'ly, Boston Phoenix,
alternative weeklies filled
the comm~Jnlty," says New Chicago Reader and Phoenix another void by provldblg comTimes Executive Edftor Michael New Times. They mid more than prehensive entertainment guides
Lacey. "We teD our readers 50 other papers are members of - and acquired large amounts of
things about how the city oper- the Association of Alternative movie, night club and related
ates that they can't get In the Newsweeklies, formed In 1978.
advertising.
·
dallY newspapers."
The saga of the Phoenix paper
Those baby boomers are now
That's more than an Idle boast. Ulustrates the growth and evolu- having families - and before the
Aitbough Phoenix has two good lion of alternative weeklies. It Phoenix econcmy went Into a
dallies, Lacey's pape-- averag- was launched bl 1970, notes slump, a typical Issue of New
lng a hefty 140 to 160 pages per Lacey, •1as a reaction to Kent nmes carried more than dozen
Issue- bas become an Important Stale," the college where several pages of new home adverilllng. ·
source of Information tor the ·students protesting the war In
But, as Lacey notes, "we're
reader.s of tbe 140,000 copieS It Southeast Asia were killed or about the lot more than entertainprints every week.
wounded by manbers of the Ohio !ment and advertising." Indeed,
Embracing a more skeptical National Gu~~rd.
'his paper regularly carries tough
and Irreverent view of the news · The founders, Lacey and New Iinvestigative stories on subj eels ·
than the daUies, New nmes nmes President Jtm Larkin. ' ranging from school board ta·
typlftes the alternative weeklies were "a couple of lace-curtain keovers by rtghl-wlngfundamenIn major metropolitan areas lrlslnten," says Lacey In des·
tallsts to the excesses of Phothroughoutthecountry.Spawned crlblng their mlddle·class enix's professional sports
by the anti-war and countercul· upbringing.
franchise owners.
·
ture ·movements of the 1960s and
Perhaps more Important, they
Other notable accounts have ,
197011, these pape- have matured were members of the baby boom focused on, abuses by law en- .
Into sophisticated publications.
generation- a population cooort torcerilent agencies; the C.toollc
In thOse earlier decades PsY· of unprecedented size born be- church's role In protecting childchedelic art and angry 'prose tween 1946 and 19&amp;4 that has been molesting priests; and the need :
, -were staples of the financially a major source of readers tor for an enlightened policy govern· unstable antl-establls hment a Iter nat 1v e week II e s
Ing the use of the state's scarce
weeklies. Today, the most suc- everywhere.
•water supplies.
cessful survivors are profttable
While dally papEts generally
Two years ago, the New Times
papers with crlp graphics and Ignored that generation's music,
owners purchased alternative
professionally edited atorles.
the alternative weeklies se- weeklies In Denver and Miami,
Tbe patriarch of the country's . rlously reviewed It- and picked where they also offer an eclectic
alternative weekly family Is New up substantial amounts of re- mix of entertainment news and
York's VIllage Voice, a nation- cording Industry advertising.
'11ggresslve public affairs reportally distributed paper that
When members ott hat genera· Ing. "We assume," says Lacey,
differs trcm most of Its counter- tloll were single or newly. mill" · "that our readers... can be
parts because It relies upon paid rted and without children the .sttmula_ted."
·rather than tree circulation/
·
·
'·
· But the owners of weeklies In ·
:other cities have discovered that
:they can boost circulation and
:.make a proftt by relying exciu:stvely upon advertlllng
By U•W rr- ..ter.Wional
.
'
.rt!Venues.
~ay Is Tuesday' June 12, the 163rd day of 1990 wltb 202 to follow. r
As the . number of cities In
The moon Is wani1Ji, moving toward Its last quarter.
which two or more dally new•
The mornblg stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
i
paperi compete has declined
The evening star Is Jupiter.
·from a peak of 500 to only about
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemtnl. They Include '
25, the weekly bas berome an
John Augustus Roebling, deslper of the BrootlyD Brldp, In 11106;
:Important supplanental source· · President George Buah In 192&amp; (age 68); aqer VIc Damone In U.
(age-62); Anne Frank, whose diary told of bkltna from tbe Null In
:of news. In other cities, weeklies
';thrive aiOJIIIIde a pair ofdallll!ll.
occupied H~;~lland, In 1929; . author Rona Jaffe In 1932 (age 58) And
v
V Amoag the most succeutul are comic actor JID9 Nabora In 1933 (aae 57).

become the lournainent champs and will defend
their title . In the upcoming edition of the
louroament. Entries can be picked up at Gaul's
Market, Sandy's VIdeo, Five Points Express, and
-D&amp;M Pizza. Trophies were awarded by D&amp;M
Plua, Gau.l'• Market, and Sany's VIdeo. Team
Captain was Tyler Raberts, not pictured.

DEFENDING CRAM.PIONS- Tb!lcurrenland
defendinl' champlo• of tbe Second. Backyard
VoDeyball tournament was Five Polata Express
Harris Fanns. Team members, l·r, are Brad
Maynanl, Tyrone Briaa1er, Billy Harrill. Back·
Mike Roberts, Carl lolmaton, and Darla Roush .
Tbe "Express" defeated a lar1e field of teams to

Reaching the middle class

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able to receive ' more occupaPratt developed a blood clot
which caused . pressure on the tional therapy ,at Dodd Hall. At
tlie present time, Tbey must rely
spinal cord. Surgery was performed but paralysis hail oc- upon someone else for transporcurred. He received physical tatlon for doctor and ·other
therapy at Dodd Hall In Colum- appointments. The approxb:nste
'.
bus. He still has paralysis of the cost to repair and equip this van
lower extremities and Is confined would be •
to $1,000.
to a wheelchair. He bas been
The Pratts have very limited
receiving physical therapy treat· . resources and cannot afford todo
ments at borne ope day a week.
this themselves, as their only
Even too Mr. Pratt uses a
tncome Is trcrn Social Security
wheelchair and Is paralyzed In · DlsabUity benefits. It wUI tnke a
the lower extremantles, he bas
great deal of help from the
not given up. He has a worksoop public. as weD as civic groups to
at home and can stU! work In It,
~praln.
get Ibis project off the ground, It
··While In the eme-gency room, making small crafts. Thl,s family
you feel your organ~atlon or Y~
Mr. Pratt developed a feeJing of Is In a unique situation as Mrs. as an Individual Would like to
· numbness and "heaviness" In his Pratt Is blind.
.lend a helping hand tor the
arms and legs .and was then
As I am presently the physical Pratts, monetary donations can
traniferred to St. Anthony's therapist seeing Mr. Pratt In bls be made to Herman L. DU!on,
Hoepttalln Columbus for consul- home, I would like to make an LPT, at The Medical Sboppe,
tation. He was examined by an · appehl to the area civic organ lza. lnc., 565 Jackson Pike, Galllpo,orthopedic surgeon wbo deter- lions, as well as the general Ill, Ohio 45631 or call us at
mined that he had. sustained a public tor assistance In helping 1-lll0-445-2206. All those woo
(• '-fractured vertebrae. Surgery this tamUy ..The Pratts do own a dolllte wU1 be furnished with a
,could not be pertlrmed at that van which needs repair work. flllldlsclosureofthetotalcostsolf
'tb:nedueto the fact theneurosur- Mr. Pratt would like to take this this proje111 upon completion.
pon was out of town tor the , van to Dodd Hall tor the lnstalla· Any donation that can be made
lweek-end. He wu placed In 'tlon of hand controls and drivers wlU be greatly appreciated.
i traction untD such time that 1 fralnlng so be can operate the
·
Sln~ely,
IUJ'&amp;II!I"Y could be per1Dnned.
van
hlm8elf.
~e
also
hoJII!II
to
be
Herman
L.
Dillon.
MS •. PT
1
"'' 2. Diirlng this_perlod.pf.tb:ne, Mr.
--· . ..
I .
Dear Editor:
I am writing concerning Mr;
Dl!vld Pratt,
Meigs County
good samaritan, woo was Injured
whUe helping a neighbor. He was
~ttlng brush when hewas struck
"' a ltmb which fell from a tree.
Atthetlme, hetboughthewas au
rlgbt but later In this same AM,
he complained of a headache and
his family became quite concerned. He was taken to the
.,-nergency roan at O'Blennts
Hospital, where It was Initially
thought he bad s•stalned a neck

By ERIK K.

WASHINGI'ON- Step out o~ commerce.
brought their own culture, lnheld their li-eaih.
the Hong Kong airport Into a city
The Arne-lean nxation In Hong
The United States Is the biggest . eluding a Harley Davld'lon club
w)lose population Is 98 percent Kong Isn't the product of a
supplier of frozen poultry .and that gathers for· monthly road
Chinese and you are greeted by' a brilliant U.S, government stra- fresh fruit to Hong Kong: The rallies.
.
masslve, block·long billboard tegy. The people of Hong Kong terl'ltory even buys Oriental
Cable News Network runs on .
screaming "Marlboro."
stmply love American merchan- producta trcm America, Includ- Hong Kong televisions, beamed
There m&amp;y not be a cowlioy dlse, right down to burgers and Ing ginseng tr~ Wisconsin.
from a nation that Is nine time
hat, much Jess a horse, within pizza.
.
;
With a land mass just half the zones away. During a news
The fast-food cowboys beat the · size of Rhode Island and 5.5 break. actress-JaclynSmlthsells
roping distance, liut the rugged
Marlboro man IS' there with his odds. Popular wisdom when fast · mUllon people, Hong Kong has her perfUme In a voice dubbed.In
lasso In one band and an unlit food chains first set their sites on become the 14th biggest market seductive Chinese.
cigarette jutting from his Ups.
Hong Kong was that the people tor American goods. The averThe pervasive U.S. presence
Philip Morris Co. has con- there would not eat burg1!1's,
age Hong Kong resident spends does not, however, . mean that
verted Hong Kong Into Oriental cheese or chicken that had been more than three times what Hong Kong I;Juys everything
Marlboro Country. The Marlboro frozen . But today , Plz~ Hut Is Japanese or European citizens American . Donald Trump
man Is ever present In Hong the rage In Hong Kong and spend on U.s.- me-chandlse.
pirked his yacht, the 282-foot
Kong like scrne Wesfern big , McDonald's Is approaching
But lOOse ties could have Trump Prblcess berean_d~rled to
brother. He blankets thnldes of shrine status.
snapped with a single decision to , seD It, but there were no nibbles.
1!1-slory buildings, graces the
Our associate Jim Lynch was remove China from the list of
"We all knew he was trying to
walls of subways and squeezes on hand tor the opening, recently, favored trading partners. In sell It tor six-timE!!! what he paid
lntothedowntownmosalcofneon of the biggest McDonald's In Hong Kong, theY must temper tor It," one .resident told us. So
Chinese signs and bustling Hong Kong. ROnald McDbnald their outrage QVer hum·a n rights the Princess sat In the harbor like
markets.
rapped wltb the crowd In Clil· abuses In China with their fUture some overpriced ell amond u ntU
Marlboro has the lion's share nese. Angela Bassage, director economic survival.
Trump went looking tor a buyer
oftbe Hong Kong market. selling of McDonald's marketing In
The tariffs Imposed on non- In Japan, where no price Is too
more than 6 billion cigarettes In Hong Kong. talked about the favored trading partners would high.
the Britts h territory last year. territory's 48 restaurants as strangle many of the 900 AmeriHong Kong has not escaped the
That's about :10 packs each for though they were her gifted can business operating In Hong footprints of America's valnglnrevery man, wcrnan and cbUd.
children. The busiest McDo- Kong. Even the most liberal lous entrepreneur. Construction
Hong China basbers In Hong Kong has begun on a 78- story Trump
Hong Kong, moving reluc- nald's In the world Is
tanlly toward a Chinese takeover Kong. "We want McDonald's to hoped the United States ex- TOwer In Hong Kong. Trump's
In 1997, has latched onto U.S. become a staple diet of Hong presses Its displeasure with presence, like that of Ronald
products like a lifeline to the Kong people," Bassage said. Her China In s&lt;me other way.
McDonald, assures the people cif
West. The United States sold wish has already come true.
Hong
Kong . that people, with
The bond between the United
more to Hong Kong than It bought
Small wonder that When Pres I· States and Hong Kong -Is more J)lOney are confident that capital·
there In February . - the first dent Bush and C::ongress debated . than just materialism. The Ism and Americanism will surtime In marty years that America iruist favored nation status tor number of American clitzens . vlve wl)en Britain hands Hong
has had a trade surplus with any China, the people of Hong Kong llvblg there was just past the Kong back to China In 1997.
of the Asian ·wunderldnd'l of
British -18,000 people woo have

Appeal made to assist family

•

.

.

.

Ryan hul"ls sixth career no-hitter ·against A's

Page 2-llw .Dely Sa llkhll
, Pomeloy-Midillport. Ohio ·
.Tualtlay, June 12. 1880

for U.S. goods

. Fascinating information
Dear Editor:
As I read the Dally Sentinel
repOfl of the 72nd annual reu nlon
of IIIIi Pomeroy Alumni Assocla·
tlon I perceived scme Interesting
Information that fascinated me,
110d prcmpted my to write the
lillowlng to share these thoughts
with others. ·
First, there were graduates
representblg eighteen states.
Pennsylvania 1, Arizona 1, Texas
Mary land 1, Kansas 2, New
·York l, VIrginia 2, California 2,
(,ieorgla 1, Michigan 4, Indiana 2,
.KI!ntucky 1, Wisconsin 2, Loulsl·
aJia 1, South Carolina 2, Oregonl,
Florida 5, w. VIrginia 10, and
It\any scattered from all parts of
Ohio.
·- Second, tor a bell rlrtger- the
mothers of the two students each
i'i!CeiVtng the $600 scholarship
swarm grew up In MlnersviUe:
;iOO}' Spencer King, mother ot
l(rlsten King and Earlene Ren·
illaw Bumgardner, mot her of
Emily Bumgardner. (Judy
c)E!'ks In the Meigs County
Recorders Office). Both of these
sludenta, one from Meigs and the
other from Wabama descended
fiom the same great' greatJrandfather, the late David Thoof Minersville. He settled
hereafter migrating from Wales.
Qavld . a widower married the
second time and bad three sons
Daniel, Benjamin and Seth. AU
flew up and lived their entire
Jives bl Mlne-svUJe. Seth was the
great grand-father of Kristen
King and Benjamin was the great

\

'

Ponwoy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuuday. June 12. 1990

•

.... -...,

Tuelcl.;y Games

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Team

W L Pd.

Gil

Boston .. .......................S I !II .Ill Tttrollfo ...................... .32 1'1 .IR
aatt~ore......; .......... ...!ll

II .411
2K .nl

New Y~~rrk (Gooden S.l ) 11.t Chka«tt
(Bielecki Sol), I: It p.m.
Atlanta (Gia~lne H and Gteelll"O.O) at
Cl ~~~:lanall (.Jackson H and R1Jo4· 1), t ,

%:

S: SS p.m.

1%

.....

oilland ..................... Js •• .111 (]lle. . ....... .. .............. .ll
10.-.oaa .. ~ ......... ..... .Jt

It .141

(DtLeo•H J, 8: 31p.m.
IAI Mitl es (Maddux ... ) al Houl!t on
IG•IIlekao• J-4) , II: SS p.m .
8 M Frmcl.co (llvhlmon 1·1) al San

2

Diep iR•m-n ~t ) , 10:81 p.m .

I t .SM R
tallfenl&amp; .. ............ ..... .st " ·*
' "'
lklllk ................... ..... .!ll 3! .• .,. 12
Tn• ..................... !... .%1 S3 .In 1U

.

Tnu I, Qaldl.n~ 8
Otlcqo s, seaUe I •
Callfonl6a I, ILUIU Cl\)'2
TueldayGam"
Te:.aa (Wilt J·1) at OaJdancl (Moore "'
I), S: II
a.Ma (HUIIII 1-1) at N ew VOrl

Moilday 8pOriA'l'MUI•dlollli
Buet.ll
'
CMIUornla - Aetlvatecl tnlt.~cler Kl! nl
AaderAOn from dlabled Jist: opllond
lnftelder GIU'J IMaardna to Eclmollli.onol
the Padll\' Cc!a1t lA! .ape ~.U. A) .
Detroit - Slpd autllflcler Dan

·

M• trupletro and aMiped him Ia Nl al•rr. F~tlls ol New Vork·Penn Leaaw

Jlllllwullee(Rel!l_a .... ) at Baltimore

(JiaUII'd 1..) , 1: II p.m.

(A) •

hi'Hf•tltoUim1Jre W l at Min~s ota
8:11p.m.
·
Clewelud (lllacl 4·1) at Ddrvlt
(Ode .. I-S), II: Sl p.m.
Cblup (Pdenon H) al Su&amp;Ut
(lot..oa 54) , 11:11 p.m.
Ku... CIIJ (Sa berllq:H 1-41 at
Callfonla (FI*Y 8-31, lt:31 p.m .
Wednesda.v Gamet
Toronto Ill Oaklaad
Chlup .t Seattt.
Boa&amp;oli at Nrw York, nlpi
Mlhnullleeat llaltlmere, nllbl
Clewelaacl at Detroit, nllh&amp;
TD,_.o a1 MIIIIIHCU, nllh&amp;

TeD

· AI&amp;OCIIU ion ( A~A 1.
New Vork (AL) -

.

W L Pt't.

rucach ....... ...... ......Js

~!

.....

•

tY.
• y.

2A .Mt
!A JIMI

11/a

Jt ....

·~

Sl .UI II '!.

Clnd-a.I.. .............. ...JI 18
SaDlNep ................... .SI II
Loa MG*B ....... .......... %8 a
Su Fr.U.d1e0 ... ..........18 It
Hoallen ................... ....lt It
~lla8ia ........................:t .· IS
'
Mollll_, Rea ... •
Su Francltco 1, Atlanta S
Mo•rell 1, PhDadel.... a 0,

M0111real 3, Phlladel)lllla

The Daily Sentinel

Gillilan and •hort&amp;tep Ctr• AmllrltfiiO.

GB

.114 - ·

Molllreal .... ...... .....,.... JS U .MI
Pdt.delpllla ............... .2tl
Nw Y•rt; ....................21
Cllkap .......................!t
Sl. IAWs ................. ..... 'U

.IM .U i ~~

.tU

Acq .. rt-d mlnn,.

leape re!tr'Yer Oaven Btnl r,.m ••~•
ton to comPielt' March II trad e.
Torunt.o - 81JIIl'd •aru~kh"'
GN
., prJ ,e.er, ll,lphael G
a. Dal~
KktailiA, a-ta..-1 Alymer
101111

Clly at CaiW..-.t"' niP&amp;

.,...

.

MII•Jiltllf, e - Called up pllcber Bob
Se ln fnm Denver of t be American
AIMciMlon (AM): opllttlltd p l«lher
.lam"' Navarro to Denver.
Mo•rell - Al:lh'lled pllcber Jtt ...
eo.&amp;ello fum • e dleahlecl nat; P~~~'"
chueel the coMract of pitc her Chrh
NabltOb from Jackflt.Wlle of Ute So uth·
ern Leape ( AA); C)ptloned pltclter Doh
Malloy to Indlanapall8 of the American

jT~I._.),

NATION.U. LBA.GllE

..... '

,

,.m.

.... _

·we-...,- Gam es

New Y•rk at Chlcaa:o.:
Malllli'f:._ ~Phllallel ~ a. allfJ&amp;
' Plttti-llh•l st . I.Oii!i, n iJhl
Atlanta ai CI.:ID!atl, llllbt
Lo!~«\n Jtltw a1 HoUSien. nlrbt
s ian Frandseo at San Dl e 10o nla;hl .

Ku . . Clty ................. U Sl .911 16
'
Mo.. q RnuM•
Clrvelan44, ~•tonl,l2 1n ..np
MIIWIIUIIee 4, TorOMol
'

tW• .. H), 1:M p.m.

.

Mo.areal (SmMIII s-31 AI. Phlladelphha ,
(Howell1·1 ) , 1:11 p.m .
MllafJuflb {HUtt • 8- 11 at St. LoW

Mllwauke e................. .n
3%:
Detroit ....................... .17 12 .418 5%:
Oewluci ................... JI IG .U I 5%:
New Voril ....................lt II .111 tl

limes," said Ryan, the oniy
pitcher record a no-hitter In three
different decades . "I know how
Important It Is to keep a calm,
emotional level."
,
It Is In the late Innings when the
special teat becomes' partlcu·
lar ly elusive, and whe n the
psychological element of the
game lakes hold. But It Is also
during this crucial time that
Ryan, holder of 12 career onehitters, shines . .
4
•
Tve never seen a look In a
guy's eyes like his, " said
Rangers catcher John Russell,
who was playing In his lOth game
with the team and was catching
Ryan tor the first time. " It was
just a lot of. determination and
fire, all wrapped up In all those
years (of his career). It was all
right there. It was the greatest
thing I've ever seen."
Cool and dellbertate, Ryan ,
now the oldest pitcher ever to
throw a no'hlt game, cleclded on
the strategy he would use.
"Going Into the ninth Inning,
my idea was I was just going to
make good·pltches and It I gave
up a hit, it was going to be on a
good pitch," Ryan said .
As thE' no-hitter moved Into the
late Innings, Ryan 's teammates
began to avoid blm, leaving the
22-year veteran to his own
thoughts.
"They didn' t bother me during
the game. The longer It goes like·
this, the further they stay away
from you," Ryan said.
Ryan opened the ninth by
striking out pinch hitter Ken
Phelps on a 1·2 pitch and retiring
Rickey Henderson on a grounder
to shortstop. He capped the
performance by Inducing Willie
Randolph to foul out to right
fielder Ruben Sierra.
It was Ryan's 294thcareerwln,
59th career shutout and 20lst
gilme In which he has recorded at
least 10 strikeouts.
As Sierra caught the ball, Ryan
p1Jmped his right fist in the air
· and turned to accept a congratu. latory l)ug from Russell . as his
teammates raced from · the
dugout.
"This has a special place right
ne'x t to No. 5, " said the righthander, whose last no-hitter
came nine years ago. " It's great,
espec ially so late In my career.
My teammates were so emotionally Involved, It was a nice

I

.413 I
.414 13
.HI 14

ht same

t. 'l.. Jldr

Bulldball
LM VepA (W8L) Allen mac h.

BoD

Nameel SoiiiQ'

a•

lnter•IO•I Boxln« FfuleraUon Re-de c:ltd Pres lcletlt Rob ert Le• to a

!-year &amp;erm .
.
Collep
MariM -Named Tom btehl u MAWit
to athl eti c director lor h clllty
mua1eme11L
,
·
Ml chlpa Stde- N ameciTom AntM•
a nd Tom Newton au ll&amp;aal hoclley
~c ltM.

Mo1Jan State - Namr d Michael
l.l!l:roll Holmes men'M buketha.ll eoaciL

'
Hockey
o.troi - Slped ,aaJiender
Ga pltn to a -f. year eon&amp;ra~ .

Da~e

LAWN-BOY.

(U81'8 145-. . )
A DIYIIIoa of Mollbnodlo, hi&lt;.'

America's kntl(·nmmiiK tradition

Published every afternoon. Monday
thr..,gh Friday, Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley l'llblllhlng Company / Multbnedla, Inc.,
Pom..-oy, Ohio 1578!1, Pb. 99!1-215&amp; Second class po&amp;tale paid at Pomeroy,
Ohto.
.
:

Member: United Prer.i International,

Inland DaUyPreuAaootatlonan.d the

Ohto l"fews~per Auoetatlon. NatloMI

Advertisllla Representative, Branham
Newopaper Saleo, 733 Third Avenue,
N.,. York,-New York 10011.

POS'IMAS"mR: Send address chaalll"

to The Doily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
·Pomeroy, Clllo4117119.
.

Wl
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release tor all of us."
Ryan, basebal l's all-time strl·.
keout leader with 5,152, struck
out 14 as he Improved his record
to 5·3.
Texas manager Bobby Va len·
ti ne called Ryan's performance
"absolutely marvelous. I've
never been happier tn my professional career for a player than I
am tonight. He deserves every
bi t of lt."' .
Julio Franco belted two tworun· homers. and Russe ll added a
solo shot to lead the Texas at tack
against Oakla nd starter Scott
Sanderson, 7-3.
Elsewhere in the American
League, Cleveland edged Boston
4-3 In 12 Innings, Milwaukee
downed Toror.ro 4-1, Chicago
nipped Seattle 3-1 and California
dumped Kansas City 3-2 .
Red Sox 4, Indians 3 (12 lnn.)At Bos ton , Tom Brookens singled
oft Dennis La mp, 0'2, driving
home Jerry Browne with two out
in the 12th Inning to lift Cleveland . Rudy Sea nez, 1-0, wor ked
one inning to g ain his first major
league victory a nd Doug Jones
picked up his 20th save. Boston
stranded 14 run ners, Including
three in the ninth after loading

·..'.•
'

the bases with nobody out .
Brewers 4, Blue Jays I - At
Milwaukee, Bili Krueger tossed a
two-hitter over eight Innings In
his first start in almost a year,
helping the Brewers snap a
five -game losing streak.
Krueger, 3;3. who allowed slligles
to Mookle Wilson and To ny
Fernandez in the sixth. got his
first start since last June 24 after
30 relief appe.arances . Dan
Plesac earned his 11th save.
Willie Blair, 0-3. took the loss.
While Sox 3, Mariners 1 - At
Seattle, Ca rlton Fisk homered
a nd Melido Perez allowed tour
hits over seven innin'gs, pacing
Chicago. Perez, 6-4, walked three
a nd struck ou t four a nd Ken
Patterson reti red the final two
for his first save.

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�Pornerov-Midcleport, Ohio

Tunttay, June 12, 1990

'1

Candaele's seventh-inning homer gives · Astros 5-3 victory
.·
•

two-run homer~ h~16th homerun
of the season and Brett Butler·

banged out three hits to lead San
Francisco. Scott . Garrelts, 3-6,
surrendered five hits over six
and one-third Innings for the win.
John Smoltz, 3-5, took the Joss
despite strikingllut a career-high

----Sports briefs-.- - - -

. ,
•
\ :; ·
'·

\

By PAUL DEFEDE
of them," Candaele said.
"He's really given us a big tUft.
lJPI Sporu Writer
"I was just looking lor someIn other NL games, San Fran·
For the past two .days, Casey
thing to get the run home. I had cisco pummeled Allan ta 8-3,
Candaele has been an unexno Idea where It was going. I got Chicago beat New York 8-5,
pected sparkplug that has rethe head of the bat on It and Montreal swept Philadelphia , 5-0
charged the Houston Astros.
things went my way again," and 3-2, and PittsbUrgh nipped
Candaele, not known for his Candaele said.
St. Lou~ 8-7.
power, hit a two-run homer
Morgan offered his own
Gl1111la 8,. Bravee 3 - . At
Monday night, to break a seventh explanation.
·
Atlanta. Kevin Mitchell belted a
Inning tie and lin Houston to its
''I tried to cut the ball in on his
fourth straight win, a 5-3 decision hands," Morgan said. "I was
over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
looking to get the two outs and
Candaele has hit a total of three save the run. But give him credit.
Boxln1
home ru!ls In three years In the Anyone with a bat In his hands Is
Olympic sl)ver medalist MImajor leagiles.
·
capable of doing lt."
chael Carbajal will challange for
With the score tied 3-3, Rafael
Dodger catcher Mike Scioscla, the IBF light flyweight chamRamirez opened the seventh with who hit a 400-loot drive to the piOnship on July 29 when be faces
a single off Mike Morgan, 6-5, and centerfield wall that turned Into a
title-holder Muangchal Klttlkamoved to second on a Rich double play to end the sixth sem of Tballlind In Phoenix.
Gedman sacrifice.
Inning, said the Dodgers weren't Carbajal, a native of Phoenix,
Candaell), who tripled home . expecting the long ball · from
has a 13·0 record with 1 knockthe winning run In Houston's Candaele.
outs, while Klttikasem holds a
victory Sunday over Cincinnati,
"Mike just got a breaking ball 10-0 record with 6 KOs . .. : The
ripped Morgan's first pitch over up a little and Casey got the head
International Boxing Federation
the right-field fence for his of the bat around quick and hit It
re-elected Bob Lee a5 Its presisecond homer of the season.
hard, " Scloscla said. "He has a
dent. Lee has been president of
Larry Andersen, 3·1, pitched little pop but It's just noi
the IBF and tlie United States
two innings for the wln and Dave
something .you expect In that Boxing Assoclailon, Its parent
Smith worked the ninth to record situation!'
body, since the Inception of the
hisl~th save.
Houston manager Art Howe IBF·In 1983.
Twci of Candaele's major- referred to Candaele as his
Chess
league homers have come trump card.
The Philippines will host the
"I like keeping him as my ace World Championship Interzonal,
against the Dodgers.
"You can tell by my weak In the hole and bring him out . the second stage of a three-year
home run trt1t that I don't hit a lot when I need him," Howe said.

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event that will select a cbal.tenger to face world. champion
Garry Kasparov. A totla of 64
players will participate In the
toul-narnent, to begin June 28 In
ManDa.
·
CoDe&amp;e
Morgan , State hired Michael
Lebron Holmes as Its basketball
coach. Holmes, one of 75 candl·
dates for the poslilon, bas been
an assistant coach . at Florida
A&amp;M since since 1987, and
former)y was bead coach at
~nedlct CoUege In Columbia,
S.C.
. GoU
Wayne Levi, winner of the last
weekend's Western Open, will
play In the Buick Classic on June
18-24 at the Westchester Oluntry
Club In upstate New York. With
last week's victory, Levi joined
Greg Nonnan, Payne Stewart
and Robert Gamez as the only
two-time winners on the PGA
Tour tb~ season.

loss In relief.
11 batters.
ExPN $-8, PiaU. 1-1 - At
Cu.. 8, Meta I - At Chicago,
Ryne Sandberg triggered a l~·hlt PhUadelpllla, Otis Nixon scored ·
attack with lour hits, and Mark on a wild pltcb In the elgbth •
Grace and Lu~ Salazar added Inning to help Montreal ' sweep .::
three' hits and two RBI apiece, to. their doubleheader and send the ;:
help Chlcaao stretch their win- PhUIIes to their fifth straight :
ning streak to four games. defeat. Jeff Parrett, 2-5. took the •
Reliever Mitch Wllltama, 1-5, loss In the IM!COnd ganie. Drew '!.
pitched two-thirds scoreleu In· Hall, 4-6, piCked up tbe victory. :
nlngs for the victory. Reliever Dave Schmidt notched b~ flftb
Alejandro Pena, l-2, absorbed save. In IJ!e first (&amp;me, Kevin ;
Grou. 8-4, pitched a four-"ltter .:
the loss.
Plratee 8, Cardinals 7 - At St. and Mike Fitzgerald homered to, ,
Louis, Jeff King scored three lead Montreal to a :1-0 triumph. :
times and ·singled home the Den~ Cook, 5-2, absorbed the :
winning run In the eighth Inning loss. PhDadelphla's Lenny Dyk- •
to guide Pittsburgh, which bad stra went O-for-31n the flrltgame ·
allOwed St. Lou~ to come DacK with a walk to snap a 23-iame
from a six . run deft cit. Stan hitting streak, the longest In th.f ;
Belinda, 2-1, pitched two-thirds majors this season, an.d w"- ;
of an Inning for the win and Bill hitless In five at ·bats In the w
Landrum notched his ninth save. second to drop his batting aver- :
;·
Tom Nledentuer, 0·1, took the age to .392.
•,,

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20°/o OFF STOREWIDE
NOW INIU JULY 4, 1990.

-

WI MUST MAKE ROOM .FOR NEW
FALL MERCHANDISE ARRMNG.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
~• ~~~~
t49-JIOO . · ua•. 0110
MASTERCARD -VISA ....: GOLDEN lUCK EYE

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THIRD PLACE - Tbtrd place wtnnera Ia tbe
::
Backyard Volleyballloumament was the "Rude
~ ' : . Boys". Pictured are front, l·r, John Epple,Joe

~~ :. Strange to

;-:::arrive today
~• for U. S.
~ Open meet

WoUe, caplaln; and Wade Connolly. Back
row-!lhannoa Riffle, David Ebenbaclt, and Joe
"Spike" R01111h.

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TO THE BEST!
.

-WITH PATIO AND FURNITURE FROM UFESTYLE-

MEDINAH, Ill. (UPI) - The
Club opened Its
fairways,. greens and Sherwood
Forest-like woods Monday to the
~ · best golfers In the world and the
c, man who will come under the
~
closest scrutiny this week stuck
•
to his word.
~
He stayed away .
With Greg Norman, Tom Wat·
:
! son, ~ve BaJlesteros and doze.ns ,
'"
more getting In their first prac- .
•:
t!ce round of U.S. Open week,
::
defending champion Curtis
'•
Strange did no.t deviate from his
:~
pre-arrang~ schedule.
~
Having already seen Medinah
:
a number of tlmes-o In recent
~
· months, he does not plan to
·:
appear on the course until
•
Tuesday. Strange wants to avoid
,;
the huge- crowds and the over:;
whelming attention he will re·
~
celve leading up to the 90th
:
playing of the nation's oldest
• . professional golf tournament.
: : · : Strange will be the focal point
: · this week since he Is trying to
•
become only the second player
" · ever to win this tourna:mentthree
"
straight Urnes.
• •
"I know this," Strange said
: · late last week during the Western
· •
Open. "I will take even par at
•• • · Medinah and let the others shoot
..
at it."
· ~ , . Players who began get Ung
• , • acquainted with the course Mon~
day found out what he meant.
Medinah's No. 3 course, host: · • lng the Open 'tor the third time,
:
will play at 7,185 yards - the
•
longest layout In the tourna"'•
ment's history. Many ofthe holes
•.
will play even longer than the
•
posted yardage because of the
h!lls which must be factored Into
club selection.
: ·
Trees encroacn to the edge of
:
. many of the fairways and the
:
putting surfaces are also typl..,
cally quick as well as belilg !!lied
;;
with undulations both severe and
•
subtle which the players will
• have a hard time learning In such
: • a short period of time.
•
Watson, for Instance, hit a chip ·
shot at the opening hole Monday
:
:
and watched as It got within 10
::
feel of the pin before making a
'
left hand turn and running off the
~ -• ~ , Jl'een.

EVERY PIECE NOW ON SALE!

Medina~ Country

.

·aoa
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
RAIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGALE lANE

FRI., JUNE 6 &amp;
SAT, JUNE 7

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RUNNERS lJP - A team of ·Baak One
employees won second place In Saturday's
oulho011e race for Heritage Days. The group,
consisting ol Des Jelfers, Joan Wolfe, Doris

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•

OUTHOUsE RACE WINNERS - A team from
Rutlud; CODIIBt!•l of Brian Cleland, Shane
Hysell, Baddy Roash, Timmy Roush, and Rachel
Hysell captured flrllt place I• !!aturday's outhouse

••

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A. High- Swint •••· ...
S. '178
l . l'h" Dio. 11n11or•o. •• •u•---S•Ie.i141
t U..lor•• Toltlr, ... '219 ,_,,_,Sale '229

CASt:AI. ' fURNITIINf

.
Clllllo1:

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I 1 1111

['i,•·r

dl

J

11f!

3 BR, Kitchen, DR, LR. Must
sell now. Best offer.

CANCR BAY SUNG COllECnON

000-0000

f..t Dry, Camfort.ll, l.q LIBtingl
.

SWI.Va CHAIR .
R~g.1249

.... 1169 '

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Seating Groups! Gliders! Cafe Sets!
•VIla

··-··

eMasf•CIIr•

.,Micln,p
lwaiWIIt

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SUPER HILLBILLY '"":The Super Hillbilly w,.sjust one of many
entries In the Heritage Days parade held Saturd!IY In Pomeroy as a
part ol the sesquicentennial celebration.

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Community
calendar

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·EBER'S ... THE PLACE KIDS
CAN SHOP FOR DAD!

.,.~

NO MAnER WHAT THE REASON MAY IE •••
"YARD SALE", "AUTO FOR SALE",· "PUBLIC
NOftCE"
TO SAY·
. , "MEETINGS" OR "JUST
.
SOMETHING SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
SENTINEL IULLmN BOARD.
STOP IN TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
PLACED IN THE BULLmN BOARD.

Salt sus

675-4340 ut. 232
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ARM CHAIR lnot nwni

6:30 P.l.

Administration Confll'lllct loom
Plnsant Valley Hosplt-'

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We SJ69

Sale S199

BIG KIDS-BABIES PIOGIAI
TUESDAY. JUNE 12

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CHAISE Muhi-position
hg. 1335

from 1 p.m. uhtll5: 30 p.m. Blood
Is urgently needed and anyone
aged 17 through 701s eligible to be
a donor. The women of the
Trt•,ttv Church will furnish and
the canteen at this visit.

••
•

THANK YOU
For All the Flowers, Card.s
and Gifts I Received While
I Was .111.
SARAH

MOBILE HOME

1 I 1! 1 i 11 111!11. 11 -, ".

The Red Cross Blondmoblle
will be In Meigs County on
Wednesday, Jun~ 20 at the Meigs
SeniOr Citizens Center

••.

NOTICE
There will be a meeting
held on Thurs.• June 12
to elect officers at
John's Restaurant.

1982 ENGLAND

•

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Snowden, Dlanaa Lawson, and MarOyn Robl-, :
also won Best Costume lor the outboaae ncee.:
They received roDs of toilet paper for comlq In •
second.
:

Bloodmobile Visit

race for Pom~roy's . sequlcentennlal. They
received roDs of toDet paper and certiflcatea for
seaqulcentennal t-sblrla.
·

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FRESH PEACHES,
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
WATERMELONS
000-0000

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FO'R SALE
1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED
000-0000

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3-FAMILY YARD SALE

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. THE BULLETIN BOARD .DEADLINE IS
4:30P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

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combo known as C.J. and The Country Geade- '
men, delllhted museum and car show pat..,u
with lively vocal and lastrumenlal selectlou
Sunday afternoon.
· ·

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112 S1 0.00·PER DAY
113 S15.00 PER DAY

TREAT DAD

ENTERTAINING - Dou1 Circle on the fiddle,
Howard Wrltzel on lhe lead guitar, AI Windon on
the drums, and.C. J. Cr01111 on the uprl1bt basa, the

everlastings as well as sachets and books on
. growing the plants. Here Cat by Stacy and her son,
Michael, Pomeroy. enjoy a sample of mint bread
from Eva Robson, a member of 'the Jlerballst

~

'EXAMPLE: 11·1 SS.OO PER DAY

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

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YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT ·
FOR AS LOW AS 55.00 PER INCH.

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TASTE TIME - Mint tea, mint bread, butter
with chives, and herbal oyster crackers were
llll!Ong. the things to taste In the River Valle~
Herballsla dlaplay room at the Meigs Museum .
Tile club bad a wide exhibit of herbs and

•

"The Bulletin Bostd''

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The. Daily Sentinel
Is Introducing-A New
Servic:e Starting
MOnday, June 18, 1990.

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TlJESDAV
RUTLAND -The Ru Uand
Freewill Baptist Church will
have vacation Bible School
through Friday from 6-8 p.m .
Classes for pre-school to
teens.hThe public Is Invited to
atiend.
RACINE - The. Racine First
Baptist Church will l!ave bible
school through Friday from 6-8
p.m. The theme Is ·'Friend
Dimension." There will be
classes for all ages and thz pubic
Is Invited to attend.

.

.

POMEROY -Hershel A. Facemyer will be the guest speaker at
Tuesday's meeting of the Pomeroy Flame Fellowship at the
seniOr citizens center In Pomeroy at 1 p.m .

)

HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club
will bold a blood pressure cllillc
on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to noon
at the townhouse .
· CijESTER - '!'he Chester ·
Township Trustees will meet ·
Tuesday at7: 30 p.m , at the town
hall.
·
MIDDLF;POR'l' -The Meigs
Cgullty Chamber of COI!\!Derce
will hOld Its regular monthly
meeting on Tllesday at noon at
Overbrook Center. Guest
speaker will be Gary Bates,
G:d:. All members are urged to

SPIFFY - II tliere was ever a spiffY ear, It wu lhlll "Dra&amp;OD
Masler' ',a '69 maroon metal He corvette witlllmpresslve froatend
art work whleh was entered by Us Athena County owner In the car
show Sunday sta&amp;ed across from the Meigs Museum In conjunell01i
wllh Heritage Weekend.

CHAMPION

TAlUS'

. TARGET

PLEASE JOIN US
for ·the

Modet73

7th ANNUAL

Oronge Dome tergtta
Full c... ol 135

HEALTH 'INFORMATION FAIR

~
t--,_""""'".....rReg.

SALE

PRICE

$7.89

at the

Tergot Thrower
r

Top ot the Lin• Modi I
~

~~_4999]

SALE~~ -.,.eg .

PRICE'

•PLANO #1126

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

TACKlE BOX

·FREE SCREENINGS: ·

eROD &amp; REEL
33 ZEBCO

Blood typing
Blood pressure
Cholesterol
B~y Composition
WHEN: Thursday
June 14, 1990
10:00 a.m.·
4:00 p~.

•NOR RAPALA

$67.119

51169
51877
CftCIO

6" PEN ICNfE ~ • •
SPORTVIEW 3.X-9X 32llfllf
RIFLESCOPE

WHERE: Th• French 500
Room and
adioining patios
•
J .I
..-:,
·FIEE·PUIUC INYITED-BFIESHMENTS
.

Wtlghl; 10oz., l.lngth; 11.75", Field; 38' ri!&gt; 3x; 12' fli

h.Eyw....-.3.5".

SALE$

9ll

ORD&amp;R 1'10. 952878-t
MOD&amp;L 74·1393

;

.

.Holzer Medical Center

atllelld thlllllllcbeon meeting.
1.1

I

ER'S
GULF

949-9200

RACINE, OHIO

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~:;:;~~~~~~CM~~jo2._.__.______._________._______!The~~~!S~an:u~·~~!·:!p~~!9!B;!7 ;,

Business Services :=~:-:=~=
. ~::...:ra..:=:~L

Classifie

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

1t • .....,.,,.. . •
Jrdlwe..oMJ IJ
: '

. Davs

words

3

1&amp;

,

, 8 A.M. until NOON SAT!laDAY .·

a·

OUTHOUSE RACE- Thllla asce11e frGmW.rrdav'o o.~boase
race on Second street wld$1l attracted a good btl of atlellllon. The
wlaablg team Willi a Ballaad Gl Club COMiadq of~am members
Brlaa Clelaad, Shaae Hysell, Bnddf Rouab, '11mmy Roush, and
Rachel HyseU. Their oppGIIellt was a team from Baak One whot~e
members Included Des Jellen, Joan Wolfe, Dorta Snowdea,
Dianna Lawsoa, aad Marflya Robllwoa. The wlaners were
presented a role of toilet paper and a cerilflcl!&amp;e · for a
sesquicentennial t·shlrt. The l'11111H!rs up received packages of ,

WALTZING ALONG - These Court &amp;reel speetatora felt
compelled to waltz during Peter Shaw .a ad the Hotpolnt Strtng..
Band' a perfonnanee at Pomeroy's Heritage Weekend. The band
was one of several which provided music on Saturday. ·

toUet paper. .

1 ·

f '

•free eds - ONeaway .nd Pound tdl undw 1 a words wiH b•
tun 3 d•• 11 no ch8'gl.
•
•Pri• oi H for ell CIPhll 1111er1 ts dOubte price of H co••·
•7 point line tv,. onlv ~;
·
·
'leftdntl ill not reaponeibl.-tor errouefttr fiflt d.,. !Check

tor.,,., fkl1 dev' ad

PABADE MARSHAL :... Th'- horse dra~ carrta-, oned by . .
"'
.. ...
· Roy McNutt, Chillicothe, fe.ured Sulurday's Heritage Days .·::
parade grand marshal, l,.ennle Eliason, OW!Ier ef WMPO ~adlo, · ..,

Community calendar

•••

,

picnic.

ANTIQUITY -The Antiquity
Baptist Church will have revival
through Wednesday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Guest ·speaker will be
Pas tor Robert Shaw from Glenford. ·

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAlNS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Amateur Garden ClUb wlll
meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
·home of Clara Coru;oy for a

POMEROY - There will be a
chicken dinner ,on Thurday from
5-6:30p.m. at tliesenlorcltlzens
center. The cost of the meal Is
$2.50 for oven baked chicken,

~

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...

mashed potatoes and gravy, :;;
green beans, cole slaw, biscuit, · - .
. and beverage, with dessert at an
extra cost. A gospel program '!;
featuring Jan . and 'Cathy will i. '
begin at 7 p.m. and the pl}bllc Is ~:
Invited to attend.
. • ;;;:

'f

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ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange wlit meet Thurs- ~
day at 7 p.m. with a potluck. Star
Grange wlll vis! t. ,
·

i

.~

Jl1ST

3..,

ARRIVED

$...

8,000 ROUS
BRAND NAME

-·-.

WALLPAPER

. t-.

leg. SJ9.95 Dbl• .Roll
SPECTATORS WAIT- Spectators lined East
Second Street and the sa,ps &amp;nd balconies of the
Melp County Courthouse while wallln~r for the

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&lt;"
' &lt;

...••..

HUGE SEL((OON

..

Retail S9,9 5 .

..

EASTEBN STAR - Members of the Easternn
star parllcl~d I• Saturday's Herttap Da.vs

parade. The groUp Is pictured here ill their fomiaJ
IOWD8.

Meghan, five, and Myca, 10,
daughten of Soaoy and Jaa Bayaes; Bearwallow Road, Pomeroy,
were rflht Ia •lyle for the 81'8qulcentennlal times Ia their pioneer
coatumiDc. Not oaJy were they In perfod atllre, but the baby doD
whteh Myca holds was dressed In an anllque chrllltenlng cown.

At~

M•iga county

Mason Co ., WV '

ANI Code I 14

Area Code 304

Pom•ov

317-&lt;;h•hirl
311-VIntan '
z•a-Rio o -rande

211-Guven Oist.
14~-Arsbi• Dist.
379-W..n'!t.

__

843.-Ponllnd
247-Litlr1 filii
141- R•cina
7•2-Rutlan~

. 992-212'4

""""'
II am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
II am to J am Fri .·&amp;r Sat.

•AnER SHAVE
•CRYStAL
COLLECnBLE CARS
•PLUS MUCH
MORE

Ice Cream Social,
The Bastian Ladles Auxiliary
Is spomsorlng an Ice cream
social on Friday beginning at 5
p.m. at the Firehouse In Bas han.
Ten different flavors of Ice
cream will be served. Sandwiches, pies and drinks wlll also
be available. Live entertainment
will 8110 ~ featured.
T,

•COLOGNES

•••'"'"'*' '' --

•11to0olftino'• Jl$ua. llu: Our'""'" c.,. .... t ' - 120.00 ~
ut1 ""'""• \lahd 11 -""•"'•lo.too .. er!IW · .......................... pliioutlll .. Afll
TIMf AND CAIIIff" O"'.. TUNrtiU NOW AVAILAILII
'

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NOW

30°/o
OFF

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
SICO.
-DLIPOIT, OHIO

271 IIOitll

992-6669

992·5335 or 915-3561

i~· - ... Oflka
POMIIOY, OliO •

. 10/Wittfft

lkiiiil

19&amp; -Letart
937-Buft•o

41 - Houlll for Rent
42-Mobile HomM.tor Atnt
&amp;3-F.rms tor Rant
U-Apertmtnt tor Rent
45-.fumieh.d Rooms ,
,._.p.ce ;for Rant

47-Wenttdto~ent

41-lo•ID"'"'" tor ~on1

.......

~

.DDLEPOIT
· VCI CUNIC

Ser Vll.t~s
·,
It - -Home lmprowm.nta
12-Pklmbint • He•ing
I~EICirttftll
·

IWNTEIWKIIIIPAII

14-Eieetricaf Jllefr. . .tion
81-Qeft . .IHeuling
M-Mollllt Homo A_..

17-u•tto•jaccl•v·· •••

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. SPRIIIUPHIAL .

CLEAN, LUIE &amp; TEST

.

7.

O...IS 2 .LOCAnOIS TO SRYE YOU.".

$1816

POMEROY, OHIO; At.
I .A. 143
ALBANY. OHIO; At. 10. S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p .m . 7 Daya
ALBANY; 10 a.m.·&amp; p.m. I Daya. CIOMCI Sunday
PAYING AS
TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1
90C per lb.;

CINn
CINn

Pt.P.....nt
&amp; VIcinity

=.::c..-

'

y........... ~- .
Camp .

Pomeroy,

C.na, 3&amp;C

llddltport
&amp;

WE BUY

I!ITAR~RB.

PubliC Notice ·
'

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21. II felll In dlomc•. ·.,d

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32.0 t..lln holglrl.
c-.,eo.1

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w.. liar+ Tenk """•
. . . .M..,.twwlhthlne-

\"~

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- . y ·.,4 IIII... WORK.
The eetlrule cioMmlctlon
COlt Is .43.1100.00 • of

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ofcldelrr.to ......... ...
bldll for 1he ..........IF

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2. Oeeollne end 011 Pro-

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.
3. nrO. ..,·d Tubeo

· 4. Fire hdnlll!ilhlr • In- ,

lp41Ctlon • Repalra
,'In order 10 be coneldered.
Ill ....... bldll ..... be ••
..... In thl Tr_,..,. Oflie. 320 Eelt Main Btr-. P.
0. Box 272. Pom•O¥· Ohio,
on or before tz;OO o'dodl
noon on Tu•dly. J•._ 24,

1890.

-·

lhe B-d Ill EduCMion
,...,.. .t he rlghl to eeaopt
or rtlect eny end 11 bids.
Jane Fry, T,_u,.
Melge Local Bchool Dlltrlol
320 Eeot Main BtNel

P.O. 1011 272

. ·:.,

' "tnllll

•Lolr"tntf11•·

Ill -

Pom•O¥. Ohio ~7111
(I) 12, 18, 21: f7)3 4ta

.•

RACIIIE - Ranch home
wth 3 bedrooms, Ill illths,
c•pEting and 2 car praee
silt1ng on 3.2+ acres. Woodburner to suPPlement. hell
and -~pring
available.
$28,900.00.

132. Poge77, MllgoCouMy

'

Deed Aaaa:cll.

··

203, ,... 471.

.....•

i Deed ~~et-c»; Volu-

County Deed R - .
The villi• ,.._.. lhe
•\llht to reject eny or all bldo
end t o - eny lnformelllnbl-g.
Fred Hoffman. Meyor
··
Vl1111e of Mlddlepon

RACINE- LEBNION
22. 28. (1)11. 12, 11,
SHIP - ·4 acres of vac•lt I (Ill
26 .
liljd $2.001.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Nice star·
ter home for • youngmu pie.

Som·e remodeling mmpleted. 3 bedrooms and I
bath. Finish R the way you
· _,t $20, Ofl!l.OO. ·

Busbiess
Services

SYIIACUSE- Nice motkll•

on corner lot. 3 bedrooms, I
bath, laundry room, c•pel
Patio and close to school
Clean and ready to move
into. $21,900.00.
WIGSYILLE- In etcellent

'VIC'S
BODY SHOP
992-6803

.

FLAtwOODS, ROAD

POMEROY, OHIO

Hu11NGI
••..............
i...,.. .. ,.. ' ,............
..U.NG I

ANGIE'S
. · GREENHOUSE

p 1. , H'l 11
au 1n I I
lwtsn
Rutlantl allll Rt. 554

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10 to 5
mAWFLOWDS: Dwarf
I TaH; PAII'AS GlASS:
l'inll I Wlllt11 FUSCHIA,
IASIETS, HIUS and
MOlE.

614-742-2772

Nlw t..lltio

;

. . . . . . . . . . . . C8ll

alto acklllail Gll1ll nMI
outretlat.-s.Wtaho
repairGasT....
.:

WI A1111r1, Ollie 45760

SALES I SERVICE

WI Cllry l'lo..............

992-21'98
Middleport, Ohio
.·
1·13-tlc

R. L
TRUCKING
Cilbld, OliO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT., ..
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422
1

·DOZEI
SllEWORI • ~ADS
CLEARING

BISSELL.
BUILDEIS

·

-. - u...,__.,...
=-=· ..._,
. . . . . . . . . .h .. Cell urrr

.,,

.

.

'

,., fill,_..

Employment Serv•ce s

SIDIUIES
SPOn CAIDS

CUSTOM IUlT

.~,c:':!..~:=~·
"· 949-2101
....... 949•2160
Dey or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

"'

Buy· Sell
T111de

367-0588

..

5-11-111-l•o.pd.

A-•M--.
............
.... _.,...... __
11

Help W.ntld

Cell ....,..

-.... In 1Y

....... NO
-'11G1

CSLSUL&amp; ' '

..

w-.

18m

-CIII ~o-

......

A 111101111( eIll PillS

MICIOWAVE
OV,IN IIPAII
ALL 'UDS
Iring It In Or We
Pick Up.

Sind-Stone-Dirt

992-5335 ., 915-3561

(614) 667•3271
Gtw~t A.

Service
R•aldenti•I •
Comm•rclal

~--··

lEI'S APPUAICI

DUMPTRUCK ·

lefrlger.atioll

CAU

NEWUND
.
ENIEIPIISES
\

HUMPHUY'S
CUIIATE
. CONnOL
H•flnt, C...htg,

YourPhoM
BIHa H 1'110111

·PAT HIU FOlD

!:==;;;::;';/;1/:'::::

mndnion, you can move 1
into
this 2 bedroom home 11
riaht away. F.A.F.O., beaul~
' lul modern k~chen with
built·in ranee. oven andrelrigerator. Also a sateltRe
disll for .a wide range ollV
receplion. SRuated on two
lots w~h storage buildin~
$25,000.00.
RIJTLAII D_ 1 ai:re shady 1
lot to build your dream
home on. Electric avaiable.
PRICE REDUCED $2,000.00.

WI consiililfllind.aintid

. 1-U-'11-tfl

wldlh _..., 1,r .,d • lnchel ,. ~

lnlllldVIII-IIelnglhl-•
poopeoty delor1bed In Volume

. .

,_,.,,.,...

at-

- ..,~l · l-lneotlllldl.o1No.134
m·

992-7479

lt. Ulllertfl of

. SEIVICE

••
•

'

p,_ ,_.,Office
217L s.. ,.,_,.
PO"DlY,

A~

HENlY E. 'cLELAIID .

•••
,.'

992·6191 .

Hew•dLWrltllll

Jtan Trussell ... 992-26&amp;C
l«t Hupp..,:.... 949-2257

"

l
I
'
~'
!

Oqod Ret•
T.L.C.
27 Yre. Ellll.

R -..oi.

~

NEW-IIPAII
Guttera

Gutter Clelnlng
- P•lntlng

949·2161 ..

.

'

. ..

Downapouts

FREI! Efl'IMATES

~

'

ROOFING

Jo Hill ............ 985-4466
Office.............. 992,2259

l

i

,...n;:;;wta::.~~

992·'2156 .

}

\

' NOTICETO IIOOERS.

USE THE CLASSIFIED&amp; TODAY

''

II

'

·Pick .
It Up .

!

-~!Sa .

•Mollfle Hliiiw'

, . . . .Udl:

north 38 '"" .........
hell of Lot
flkt. . 134 kl .,...... . . _ '
"iiifrd· Addition to 1111 Vllage
Of Mlcldl-'- Melgo Courlly,
9hlo, bolng 38 ,- . ,_.or
flu.· on Third Bt-. .,d •·

1---....;._ _ __
eooa.= ~;.:.=.. 1_ ......P.;.ub.;.llc..;._Not..;.;..lce;...._

c-

•Molrle Nome ·

ol ,... -

Ill' thl

II ....... Ilona
ClwiY A,._ wlh lhe Vi=
~age of Pom11011. 0111o.
ltrUoted kl 1174,"1ht tmk II
Ill wlldld 1te11 - e d .
10.0 ·t.t ·k!- . . _•• .,d
34.Q fNI .. hilght
H•plftll T•k - 110, ooO
Delton groundwlll• . . _ .
II IDCIII/Id behind lhe
hooplallaalll8cl 011 Mulblrry
A-•
,Within
theConmucVlllege of
...,.,__
Ohio.
ted In 1174 tlio , ..... Of
wold/ld
COnotructlon.

PUBUC NOTICEt .

41710, unll· 3 P.M. July I.
11,iri80
.....1or the fo11-lng de-

~

••

COUNTRY
.MOBILE
HO. PAll(

Bldl Will be 1. . . .-.t It
Mlcldllf)Ori'VI1111• Hell. 237
Rece 81 .. Mlcldllf)Orl, Ohio

rapilkWg.,d ......

l

There wm be a work session at
Riverview Elementary School to
paint the playground equipment
on Saturday beglnnl,ng at 9 a.m.
Paint and some brushes will be
supplied. If you have brushes of
your own, please bring them. In
case of rain, the work session will
be held on June 23.

ON'S APPUANCI
SIIVICE

- ---=

l~geofPom5Ethlolllae
llll.....e a
Llmlftld,
4424E"*'on Willie. Par·
klllllure.
Weot 'VIrainla
2110 .. undl 12:00 o'clodl
n - flocel tm.t, June 27•
1110, •dthM lllllidolllae
of Iurie~• • fllfti.llrdlted
poetfctt op.. jil ..d .....

-}

Work session

a.

-It-

PllmtfG\1, Ohio 411789
a , . _ . _ Nipl~t, Limited

·Timex
Watches

IP

74-Auto

320 Meln ltreot
Pllm•O¥. Ohio 48711
.. . ..,........ IIDSfor
lhl rehllblllllllon Ill two
•ound
tMkl
wll
be ,.....,Ill lor lhe Vll-

320~nltreot

Pomrro\'

DAY WAIUim

Pubic Notice

Public Notice

Vlbge

•FAtHER'S .DAY
CARDS

USID APPUAI!IIaS

31- Rul htltl Wanted

882- NIW Haven

'

be ' Mlmlnlld

who entertelned for Heritage Days activities on
Saturday lor Pomeroy's sesqulceutennlal.
.
'

lODGE

. ,., __

73-VIftl. 4 ~D ' o
74-Mo1orcycl•
' 7B f laats &amp; Mo•Dr• tor S•le
Peru • Ac:cM.WI•
77-Auto Aepeir
78 T Cemp_lng Equipment
79-Ctmp•• Motor Homn ·

······•IIII!•IIJ!•••···~·~·-.·~~·.·I.o·•~•
..

.,,MENTS -of ...,.,_

and d!U'ce. The group Willi one of several hands

773- Malon

'
,..• If
:. 8If R
,.....
. • Rt

lhe CONTRACT OOCU-

ENTERTAINMENT - Peter Shaw and Hot
Point String Band performed on Saturday
evening lor those who wanted to take to the streets

·

571 - Apple Greiwe

117-Coolvllt

June.1111.

.

CHIYSLII-PLYIIOU1H

r•rt

667~6179

71-Autos for Selt
72-Truckt for lelt

· 31-Homll for Ill e .
32-Mobile Hom" for Stl•
33- Ferm• torltle
,
34-Busin•• Building~
3&amp; - Lots,&amp;. Aoruoi
'.

klgiii-JII'OU~..., • ...,
egetenb
bllciwl.

... "'.

'

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

458-Lepn

saa~Ch•tiar

PAT HILL

Tr &lt;IllS fill! IJiron
21- lutin•• 'Opportunity
22-Monev to Lotn
23-Prot•tion•l Service~

992-Middlaport , &amp;75-Pt . Ple..•nt

441-Gallipolis

AT

ff'lll lltiNates
915-4473

11 -Farm E9u1pm~t
12-Wtnted to Buy
13-livHtock
14-H.., a Grain
16-Seed' F1rtililer

17 -'""iiCIUMIOUI
18 -Wenad To Do

Classified pa~es' cot·er the
tolJ[t)u;,im! telephone exchanges...

-g.

304- ·
428-1065
.-------------"""--------~.;;...;·~-. ;...;._·.;;.;,·~

REMEMBER FATHER'S DAY IS
SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 1990!

2 :00 II' .M . TUESDAY

Step &amp; C11

frlllll Sil fll'lll".
II l 11Jf::,lllr :k

c-~Niudlo

MIMOIIALIIIHI APPROACH
GIIPIELD AVL;
PAIIEIS-G, W. VA.
Mon.-Fri. 8 ·8: Set. 9·5:30

•

FRIDAY PAPER·
lUNDAY PAPER

aloud• . ·
Thl worll _ . , .

WALLPAPER and
BLIND SHOP .
IN PERIOD COSTUMING -

-

DALUS SAYRE

e(DC piJte

11-For Stle ~Trade

11-Help W1ntld
12-lftu.tioh w.. t•d
13-lnaurence
1
14-lutin~s Trtining
15 - lcho'ols a. Instruction
11 ~ R1dio, TV. Cl Repair

- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M .. THURSDAY .
- 2 :00PM . FRIDAY

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

II- Building luppli•
I&amp;-Pet1 tor Sale
17-Mulic• lnst""".,..ts
11-Pruitt li v.._.,.,..

f lllplllj/111'111
S 1'1 VI I"

DAY 8EFO~E PUILICATION
- 11:00li.M . SATURDAY .
- 2:00P.M . MONDAY

lMURIOAV PAPER

13-Antiq&lt;lll
54-Mite. M•chlftdile

I - Public l .. e&amp; Auction
9-WetniCI to IUy

,

wtH IIIG a,par In the Pt . Pta•ant A.Pter and thtf' GIIIipoltl Dlily Tribune. Nachlnt over, 11,000 hOmts.
.
·

WEDNESDAY PAPER

IZ-t....... -

::r::t--;n:c-,·o\,nd
7- v.,d Slle IPiid in adVance)

•enilemern: .eaced in The DeilY Senttn• .,...
CIJII "7 cl•litled dilpl.., , euaiftMI Card and legal noticll)

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

3-Annouc:amantl

. 4-Giveawtv

•A,. clnsHied

C;OP"'" ~EADLINE --:-

11- Hou-ld Oaodo!

' Stop In and See

liDS

BORDERS

\

s.a•

1-Card of Th~nks

BISSELl &amp; UIE
CONSTRUCTION

VHI~geofPom-

PRE-PASTED VINYL
SCRUBBABLE

Available

Y1rd

.42
.10
.08/ diV

e1 .30/doy

16

.20

.30

ADVERTISEIIIENT FOR

SALE $5 9 9 .Dbt Roll

sl!aft of the outhouae races, one of the acttvUies of
Pomeroy's Heritage Weekend over the weekend .•

"itttrv ,Ad•

'" M,morilm

•e.oo

113.00 .

2-ln Memory

.,, .

.Card of Thenb -

·

ee.oo

~--~======;;;;.~-----..;.;J1 fll!llt. ri u•rnr' rrt '~

in p....,) . c.a1 betore 2 :00p .m .
m•e corr-.:Horl~
edllene~~

o.,., 1e Worcls

e4.00

Alit• are fCH' oon•outtwe run .. broMn.updl¥'1 wiiiMch•ted
far a.,..h Ita' at ~e~t•••• ada .
·

tYtts

d., eft• pybliuhon to
'A• th• m.-f!l M peid in

- - - - - -·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _a_n_d_ll_ls_f_a_m_n.;.y_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

,~

·

Rate

. 18
1s
·.

Monlhly

I'OUCIES
"
•._, outlida Meiga. G.. lie or Meton COW'1ti.it must ba pr•·

achan~.

•

1&amp;

'10

e.10 chcount for • • P!lld In

..

Yard Sale ·

7

RA

·TO PLACE AN AD CALl. 992·1156 •
MoNDAY thru fRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

'd.

-·
~

I

• The Arec{s Number 1 Marketplace

.r._.,.

I'M............,Jeh ........::

:.':f.iw~~:;:ov:- :

'

'

'

'•"
....
..

.

' "'
,,

..

'

�The

-11

LAFF·A·DAY

Helpwantld

HoullhOid

Apertmlnt
for Rent

Television
Viewing

73 Vllna &amp; • WD'a

---··:;:=~
.........
-.

Goode

lhe'De!IY ~Pagl

&lt;hr . ":·.

June 12, 1890

Ohio

Seuti1.al

'Iii · IIJIDrcyciM

8

•

I

8

TUES., JUNE 12
EVPIINQ

8

••

I

RAQKUE

--a?.:=!! lilt ANI

•

.
'

ea&gt; :•l;le(l) •
ea .....
III MIA T:c&amp;'

~=...::.:'SQ

WAKE ME UP WilEN
YOII COME 8V HERE

"" ..... -Ioiii
...........

1117

-

-

-

- - - - - - - -- ---

. .. -

-=

a

~OMe ..

(I) lpar'l'

'I

i

-lo!l.
114 241 tl47,
.

supor oiki,
:rn:o.~mr-· 114,75 Boat• &amp; Motons '
for8ale

-

l

IIDomotor .....

-·-1!.

.... ·~--.

IU t•IRD

-···
se

(l) (!) MecNel

tlawlllow

lip----·--

llo=~l;l

II ton loW

-•-.. -·

•MullcRowVIdooo

'OAbboitWCo Ialo
7:30eat ,...,.. Feud
(I) MIIDr
~ kutal
lnt
T!llllgltt

tl,oao.~

e.
ew ............,..

1117 ~ ·--·with 110
llonlutv Xll2. ilolar'1lioldo ,,.._
Ina ~... Lo!!dod.
I'M 418121Diama1pm. ·'

!!rll-

.-.linn.

cu.

.,.. undw . ,. . . 1m
410-rond _ _ _

~~=··-.

Chevr cu
•a ton tm.
~oo~r'
14t. _ _ _ _ fll0. '

.....

s..o.

11111111, Cudvn Cobin, 228 hp,
IIIII· ._..,. ~. Aoldng

mo!Coi. End~M1111o;i

'
- ,_.,
...... -.
t110.'t14
... 0413

78

~711Q. '

..
• llliitlqr.
~

.

GfT fliP Of IT·
'
GIVE 1,. TO MY
'·$"f'OCferfiOtcf~ ·"'

.Auto Pans.~
Acceaeorlea

f

=

-~

0

Night Court Q

p driQ

I:GO()) MOVIE: Tho Conlcan
. . . . . (2:00)
e ()) a Meilock Matlocl&lt;
deltnda a lloi)'WOod,.,.,....,
director fr......, for murdoor.
(R) Stereo. Q

eIIIOu?
• eTony
W Wilo'e Tho
enllata his pal

ltl f'JO TIMf I
•

l

ea aJo

II]) llrA'I"H
. Q Ctotaltre

FIGUfll OUT f'IOW,TO

Hf'I..L 1-0JI, IT

.r:,~.,. •CQ.!'

Bobby to teach Jonathan to
play accordion. (RJ Q
(l) (!) Nova Nov• exlimlnta
the -world of

. .., • ,.,.., ....... t~v.r~ '·11

~ir2-e11An
fldorly couple •

marooned

without food or water.

at -

~.!':VI~ lack To h
g; (PQ) (2:00) ' .
D PwllswUawa
o Mt tier, 111e w- When

.ThiiMi1 Fd Out
• ttollday Oottm'lt
1D MOVIE: Tho
DIIIJIIII- 01 Fllgltl412

I

•

(1:30)

·
=-· . . . . .

_,Duly

.....

1..-..,

1:11 (I) WrestllltQ'I 0reatHt 111111
1:30 e 8 e (J) Tho Wondoor
Yean On vacation, Ktvln
a captivating oldoor girt
(R) Sttreo. Q
.1:35(1) MajOr I Ill . . . . ., ••
1:00 a&gt; a In Tho HMt 01
Tho Nlgllt Bullb1 kill I
fOrmer Sparta lOcal during a
hOlduP attempt. (R) Sterao.

Mil .... s

. . . . . , _ - - IIIII
iihiii.''1· 112 II _ . . , -

..__

Serv1ces

bod, _.,..

'

'

DIIIECTOIIIQIIAP
-ng a
JnalwldUII to prOwkle
and adu•oliotllllt..
to' I 10 bad ICFJIIA

dwnu•la
...,
TNI p

C't

-

I
I

l

---moto:
a--Group Home. P.O.
lozM, Ch• p=ta, OH 411ft.
So-~: 'looinaOi-.
1!'11 Onl. II In noad vf Pfiot~Mlanal. If you IN 1 llreet
Sllll profllllDNII . lnd can
hoVI!)g IInngroup
HalldoiY
410
o.ttlpall•
tar

· - altho
IN
moollna

Pia srr..,

a-..

Mr. War,.... room • 1t00p.m.
- , , ,._ 11, 1110.

,_""'· ...........
,

-011·· -.. -·
:.=:.;:::;:-- .... ---·
_............. .
••a:~~n.

AOid.I14MI•W
.....lnftDrltl ............ In

.,,

... -

-------.-.., __ _
.......

hnmldlale

ooaUllenoY.

'"" to CnM IIIII CnM LAiw
OftU Drlarto 4:311 on Aona 11.

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

........

Sc:hOoll .. .

•• rotoo!! .., and
-~-

Instruction
loakko:J'Int/Aaaountln,,

_,,....,-All, orHotl&amp;lloe

....,..

... ,

- """"·-tor

tno!!!lng,

llool-

If -~nw. P'

m.m

-

na,....,

.. -

-----wv·
.
=
.
.
.
.............
-.
=
- - -.! - -.
..... --.-.--

ONawa

In .... - ·~ ll!lllil
ollllr-.-

10:00 ()) 7DD Club With Pal
Ralurlnr
·
ta Mlclnlglli Cller
KIUian liiH to flnd a
kidnapped dllbllle baby. (RJ

e ())

3CM-IlWMIOhloi14-44W414.

· Mobile Homn
F :r tll ~)u: 'plr~ ,
\ll.•·n·k

for Rent

""'"" ., ...... tC!!'I drlltf!ltl.

-

...... ,,
CauN.

Ill 2

*·

v.a, - ·

~4tll0u.

~ 2120 ~21111 ..
-thonl-ald.-

0101.

--....

TOIII Shop. l .ln 1 wacdWcAJ..
~
With MD
1M,
llllanda Cortrtcltoa. ·- -

T_..,._...._. .._
-

.

•• ..., SIJW7S.121t.

1111"!. ...

=~~~·

--~-ro,4dr,

........... 14,1100.-7:121.

!.'!..
Cloptar Ltt FMI Cotopo,
........... aand,..., ~.

·"=

... - . . co•-

::£1.11•
,. . . . _ Couto• '"""""'~ ,_..;.m. ·

..........
lchaallloo
Cll otnce 2301
mdlln Av•,
Parlwi L irg. W'f 1-100 441 1411.

--~~--..wlao, ......
304-

~,IOO:tlllll'
CtooMio,
• 11l - - .

-.-.·--

CIOVIIINIIIHT .IZIO oollolao
frDrrl $100. ,...... ..... ~ ••••

ovar 25 yrw. OIIJIIri-. Frao
.......... IM2111Mt, Jl4..

- · · Chovya. llurpl...
- - - ( 1 ) - Eat.

1p

· -·

12 Truck• ror

--7111.

sa"

t1a .... IMcd'!!s._ T....,

-·- • -

i•

time 10 draw up a wll. (R) Q
(l)Newaw8tch
(!) lacll One, Teach One
eo New Twlllgltt

Co. EVAIIIINTIRI'Iti8E81
....
-.; 011~
,·

-""" Pllta. ....

01a~ Creek

Rd.

OiveninONewa

pi~- and . . .Ill' 1114-

•

. ,."' ,_.., -··
....
••perlanca.

...

•
~··•lnf:

Mobil

Home .

NOT
WDifTH A .
HDDT It

eo ~ Hlll a• CftiCik • a-.

l WI$H HI WDUI.DII

l SHORE HOJje
HE DON'T UP
AN' ClftMIC It

THEN I'D KNOW HE WAS

DIN!otl•••••......
11:GO lfl·Sca- I MIL

FEE LIN' BETTER!!

King

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

. ~··e(J)a
· 1D To •

Cortor'oH~tllf.

D .flonefiiMt

0 ....... Vicl Arrogant

l i~·~~~~~·~·~··~··~ONo~~===

Frank l,toeea'a back;
Crockell walta for l*n 10
·maJce a mlllallo. se.,o.

l1l Ul , . ,

83

•

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--mas•.
"*· ,,.. ....- .

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'

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lo

yourllllf to a birthday gift. Sind for your due your lnftptndent lncllr1allono toAatro-Graph prodletiOnt for tho year day H your common talll you
aho8d by moiHng 11 .25 to Altro-Grapll, IOmtlhlng Cll1 be~
clo lhlo -papir, P.O. Box 81428, with a -.nate. P8rtner~.arelualtyfor
Clevtllond, OH 101~28 . Be ..,. to · you know.
state yaw zodiac llgn. ·
CAPIIICORN (DIQ. a-.lan. ·111 Tille.
c~a ,.....,. 11-.luiJ 22) JOint ...,_ prldt! In '/OIK lllkt and Mllgn-. toBERNICE
tureo could h - more prOntlae thin · day, beeaiiN you will be .....,clad In
BEDEOSOL U1Uel for you loday, MPICIIIt one proportion to the-"- you expend. H
- - another .... alraady ·laid ·the you lruly do • good jOb, your Clllllp!lllfoundatlon and rou're t*YII1!I a · Mllon will refleGi h .
. role.
·
.'
. AQUAIIIUI (olin. • M. 11) You will
. . . . . . . . . . . LIO (oltllr :IJ.Aul, 22) Something ben- ,:. ha.. a commanding pronnce about
•
e11c1a1 could happen for you today from ycju today that ·wiM be ,_.,.ad by
·your effort1 to help a friend JGU edmlre othert 11 a plul, not a liability. Whon
acllexpectatlona. Frlelldi!IIP you like~ It wll not rulfle lllfr/"

· ..,710; ...

_..,.,..!/lily

-«

. OM'I fMtllerl. · .

worl&lt;l.

.

~ PIICII (M. aD ?!r:
· • ) YOII'l be
your ob'"tl".. praptr1v-. your w ·.-ry oomforlaW OlllfiiiiiO 11 1M pow, _ 1e coo-ned could be the blgglll er behind 1 M - today. You
part of your jOb today. 0noe your tar• ' be ralegated to IIIII pOIIIIOr', yau'l
gete are dooflned, the- wll be tllller. ~ It yGUrlllf n 7 "11 you - be
1J111A (lepl. II 0aL D) e- tiiCIUgh mor8
you won't doollberately attret attenilon · AMI (lllniii1-Aprll 11) Your Influtoday, tho fOOUe will be on you NQIItdo evlr your . . . - flllndl OOWd
1e11 of JIM!'
Yaw IIIIPIII . lle-if'lttcllwallianUIIIIItOCiay.U.
1ng bellaVIOr w11 othert to II In _,. 11181 ~ the 01 I I I II good
notiCe.
for.,.
ICQIIIIIO(OaL ........ II)You're.-ry TMII.
• ?' Zilt II yotiW
lldaPtUie today, aape III'Y .fo onangas Pi
41J
Ill . _ . . ., IIIII
,lnlllatod by othen. In fact. the grt£11 OOUicllla 11-tllgtd to JIIU ITW Ill[),
odWtntegee fr«n what tr•lllllt .. wll ....... yourt'llllltMMUIIDrttDIIOCIIr.
benefit you more_, them.
Your p
for • a mT ,10011
IAG11TAIIIUI
II DIQ.I1) Sub- good.
.)
. I

Y1100 lAIII· 11-lepl. 22)

...... 1......
'Knowledge you'.. acquired ICE"eml·
cally, u well u from ~ experl-

ence, will ..... real value In the year
. lhoed. You are now raacly 10 put to
' profitable , _ that whiCh you " -

learned.

Ql. . . (llaJ 11....... 111) Today you

.

mar ftnd youreoll In the pnn- of •
,profound fhlnlcer. Be I good llr.•.
beiw• this perwon mightilYthing you could .,.. to your ~
In furthering your alml. Gemini. '

. . . "' " " '· N..

II

-·~--~-"- ·---:~---· - ·:--:-;:--_:_

_ _:,__ __:__:___ _ _ _-"--~-!;

AnnounciCI

eo ArMnkl 111111

1 1111

-and p . .

M · Electrical &amp; ··
Refrigeration ·

z-

10:30 III MaJor L.Hgtte • ...,..
IDI'or\111

' . Nell. pll aiWng
lllhr• Ill ....,..,._ CIIMM
.JI ;11 d.IM Ill 181\

82

ew ~-.......•

Michael and Hope doodde ft'l

loplll Tonk Pll!lllllna lt!!~Golllo

Por-: tiM Luw XL 12.100;

18 Wanlecllo Do
IMI&amp;Mnm

the art world. (R) Q

....... lV ....... _.......

Contact tho llliclo~ .. hi-

15

•n••••

1'.30 e 8 · e (J) Coallh Christine
re11nta Haydon's dlldlln for

, . .. . . . ~ JJ .......
I
nil
(1-td,OGO.OG). Thlo .... -

1121~ ~ ·tor 8ft rr '"'
...... Tho rtglll .. · - - ..,
the~ u EK1a...,,

l

.

lollY.

-~- 1~:00 or I~

......

TUII I J Night l'lglllll

v.y · .... - . . . . , -

PoftwuOf, Ohio. 0Wn.a lty the
lolollory ~~~~ I , lorIn-phyolool •
Conllllw
MVIn NOIIII1 Nth, lftla, b-.

m:bOI•

lnvlln
over for
Frontline

ilac=.,'LA~
Q
L1nY King u..r
0
Pn11nta:

~ :.:.::·:~.~

DoiJ!pt. -

11ep

mlsalng -d•
No. 3 botqw.

,

• ~

-·t

eflecl....

lnvoh_..

·

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*,_

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'

.

1111~1.

N011TR
.AJI

Got ntet

11:20 (J) MOYII: Tho ........
. Caa I10UOft II {II) (2:25)
a Tonight IIIOW

..•

*'-

·
.,
'

'

.AXQJ 11114

WEST

"

BASI'

•xu•
••us

+Q

•Jn

• X 10 IS
· • AJ t I 5 3 2
·• 2

+XII

...

.' ''

SOUTH
.ID71U
.AQIU

•

~

.7

-I••.

Vultl«able: Neither
Dealer: North

I' cllliD a&lt;:e and culted the ace Of ........,'1 Saotll

U Welt bad ltlrted with bonar-IIIIIll
In lntm(lll, tbla 'IIOti)d ltave a poaltlve
result. (Declarer would play eta...
Welt rafflq with tile bonar . . . diamond .... dllcarded; • - - ella·
monel by tbe
.-Jd be ruffed;
declarer would play ace and ruff a
heart, aad lben play 011 clulll, dllcariIDC hearts. Eut, with tiD&amp; aad 11111111
llllllde. would ltave no COWI!er to tbla
plan.)
.·
.
In tbe real world, It worked betler. With tbe loae queea of IIPides
out of tbe actiOII, declarer wu 1ble to
throw botlt dlamoDdl away 011 clubl

•

._,._.

.7tQ7

I

Weal led bla.siapeton club. Declarer · ·
read the lead correctly and hardly ex- ·
peeled West to bave a sialietaa trump
u well; but be really bad 1111 cllolce acepl to play for 10111e favorable dl¥1of trumps. So lie WOD dummy'• ,

Willi

u

I•
3•

Opeulttc lead: • 2

•

and coatlmle ctm.. Eut did ruff Ia 1111
lite fifth clllb with tbe el&amp;bt of ~
but declarer limply dllcardood abaiJit.

Eut~~betlal~ya 10
sp=ade;:!::aeclarer.........
remalniDI clubl. U Eut
a
heart, declarer woald play ace *lid
ruff a heart, aad play clabl. ova t ~­
lq Eaat'a IIiDe of rpadea If •ry
to raff bla last heart . . ..
~.~

u

..

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 "Be88, You 1 Pottery
Is My
2 European
-Now"
river

i.
e IIIIWIMiy
lkt "'""•
R-ne

,...... "" hopes and
fnlaballatll ol·publlc school

1UU4RSH
BPtU.s .

n.

IIIOilds. be hOped Sou~ eouJd bid three
no-trump. Wben- doubled three dlamoadr aad South freely bid three
hearts, North felt jaltHied ia jumpiac
to four IJIIdes. ·
There WOUld be IIOTtory If Welt bad
followed bla partner'• Indication aad
led ace aad a di•IIIOIIII. (Eut'a K-1-1-4
1pades would eveatually produce
two more tridl for tile def-.) But

13 Slart

dinner. RJ
1D (!)

~

_..,..'1111!

.

8 Obstacle 3 French
10 Apothegm painter
11 Celestial • Iron

Dln'a

C'Ho(0(41£"~

APARTMENT.91."

e

(I)

~A"

::.':..North .......
........., !!,="'"'·-

3 b 1-IIlier
111 ...... llrllll, MldfiJ

Ohio.

f'FIIt

IUIHt ltiuol.- ectlve
olotf .............. and ..........
lion Df hobi!Kollon - -·
Quollllld . ..............
ololl and -..1 OIIRP , .
f!~r:""'"
lolctudo
tar'o dOgno In any
humana
Mid I lleld Mel 1 ~of ex.....,_ In ~ ..... tho
_ . . , !olo!dod .... - llllllonlandlng "' hoblllllllon.
· Tho poalllon . llollble
hcMn anct a con ~ 'dltvl ..aary.

//

Home ··'

VOCA Oonl. II

•

&lt;huckl• qvotod

SCIAMLITS
Impact - Tepid- Bsgot-Shrank-APJ4RTMENT .
The little old ladY Who entenld the . elevator was
lrl~ and chatty. ·r·m 91,·she tnlormed me. 'You look
great, I 188P0flded. Coolly the woman said, "I'm
Wben North cue-bid three dia-

0 Mlallll VICe Crockatt fall
lor a ·woman, not knOwing
lhe'a a double agent (R)

~'Ti.":;.,,;o"p.":_"' .

While---.

'7t
210
-

Letnr

~0 aWIIMIOf

1112 17 II. ........ Tli:Hull
..... Gl HP, E.t~~· .

Mlecellai'WOUI
MercliandiM

,

• • e(l) ~ Atlalr

lion. IIM-1U4lllll; '

polnllnao.
- 171, .....
.
. . . . . . . .or
..

I I I' I · I e Comple"' thotho

by fU iing in
L --1-.1.-.L.--1.1--..&amp;.--1 you develop
lrom

I(J)PMMeg··Jne
(J) llf ~ 11Can•

1'7·112 1. gl..eport ba -rtdlfu
bollt. full OIRW. .Ible tap. 170

pold. Olcl - -

s

• ......... In
7:G01JliCII-OW I Mn. King

· Hootoor - -

!..-c.:: ....... -.
t;J:•

eDCIIIIMiaQ

II]) ,._,, CDIIIJIInr

r

Sep:lnd comic: "I

_,:.:A..:.R;-0=-r.L.;.;;Ur-.
· C"-r--11 know! The .. - prtzel•

·

s-2-1 cauaat Q

•'

One comic to another:

• TOll &lt;:ani

KJI... -

IJJD, Clll·
0124IUU.

ale

AL

~:::::::::::_J.._-J_•..,knocker?"

!u=--Q

p!llb,

12.300.114 1411722.

Kl

8E

Otto-Man
Cllllfft 111 etwge
,,,. • a&gt; a NBC Nlgltly .....

AGAIN ON '!'OUR

wA.Y

.I. 1. I'cr I I~ ~c:.m~u:~:

""'*

eo
Cltltftlll
Q WOIItl fotMr

or Bronze

5 Bob of
TV sllcom
8 Shade
of gray
20 - avla 31 Unyielding

afresh
1• Point
of view
15 Before
18 Succ:e88
11 Saint

7 Slater

23 Albacore, 32 Sluggish ·

I VIrtuous
e.g.
8 llaian ' 2• One

In acting

18 Track

31 "Gloomy
Dean"

ollhe
37 Buddy
down
kingdoms or Max
21 Thralih
(1737-88) 25 Good
of
22 - you 12 Extracted
person
boxing
kidding?
juice lrom;-21 Type of 38 Durocher
23 Prong
as an
dye
Is one

physlologlat

2• Olsc:on-

orange
17 Rink
covering

nected
27 Eaally

...,
·-

....

'•·

' "•

27 Anceslry 41 King
21 German
At1h""'s
·article
lance

underelood .,...,..,.......,......,.......__
21 Zola
heroine
2t Cacophony b-+-+-+-J--

'

..

,

·-

30 Bela's son
31 Mldeasl

peninsula
33 Wrong
(prefix)
3• Duffer's

•

,...

need

...

35 Pen polnl
31 Nimble

.

.

.,

DAILYCaYPIOQUOI 18 ~Here'• ... to worllt: e111
AXYDLBUXR
. IILONOFBLLOW
One letter ltlndllor ...alber. In this sample A is Uled
for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Slnale letters,
allllllr'oPia, the~ and fonnaUon of the words are all
· t*Jta. Eidldlly the code letten are different.
.. cnPIOQU011!

BZAGQTI

CE

ECMS

·-

•

..

-..
-··

B Z '

KQICE ,G MIE
NCM

.

'•

.OSports
aettlng
42 Sollary
fellow
43 OverfiH
.. Inert gas
45 Welcoming
word .

0 U IS

NDM

.R 0 0 8 D Z

-·

8

DZQS

CMI

0 U I

DN

EKBZDF .

Can•••••••

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KMIEIM

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.Y •t•f•'•
YOU CAN'T 8E ·- ·
A81 -IN -IESI- AT 11tE ENDS OF THE · .::~
.AIU. OF MORFIEUI ARE THE HANDS OF THE
RECEI\IER. -FRANK ROMER

•

•

�....
•
. Pia• 10-The Dilly Sentinel
•

-· -Local news briefs___,
·Agricultural forum June 18
An agrlcult1lral forum will be held at Meigs High School on
June 18 fl'om 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., according to State
Repreaentative Mary Abel
Participants will Include State Representative Dwight Wise,
Chair of · the House Agrlcull1lral and Natural Resources
Committee and other members of that committee. In addition,
repre~e~~tallves of the Department of Agriculture and local
cooperative extension agencies will be present to answer
Ql!e5110JI,'.
Abel explained that this forum resulted from discussions with
area agricultural Interest groups and small farmers and will
provide a convenient opporl1lnlty for farmers 'a nd other ·
Interested parties In Meigs, Gallla and Athens co·u nues to ask
. questions about agricultural Issues.
"Agrlcull1lre Is Ohio's n~ber one Industry and our three
counties play a vital role In research, growth In horticulture,
and II(!W technology as well."
Abel says tliat she expects Issues such as groundwater
protection, effects of recent flooding, and tobacco leasing .
regulatlos to be among the primary topics discussed at the
forum, as well as problems and concerns of small family farm
owners.
Lunch will be available at $4.00 per person, and reservations
must be made by calling 1-46~2575 by Friday.

Three ciUJrges filed against Taylor
"

l

1

Tu•dey. June 12, 1990

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Mary A.. Taylor, Pomeroy, Is In the Meigs County Jail
following an accident on South Second Avenue In Middleport
Monday evening.
According to pollee, Taylor was northbound 011 Sout)l Second
In a 1975 Ford Maverick when she struck a 1982 Oldsmobile
CUtlass, owned by Dale Taylor of Middleport, her estranged
'husband.
Taylor struck the car several times, according to the report.
The Cutlass, In tum, struck a parked 1983 Pontl.a c owned by
Sandy Cllappell. Both vehicles sustained extensive damage.
'l:ll)llorts charged with DWI, no operator's license and hlt·sklp.

'

Squads
have five Mon.dny calls
.
.

Meigs Councy' Emergency Medical Service units made five
ealls on Monday. At 2:01p.m. • the Middleport unJt.was cal!ed to
Cheshire for Carol Coleman, who was transported to PleaSa.nt
Valley Hospllal. At 5:00 p.m., the Tuppers Plains squad was
dispatched to JteedSville for William Woodrow. Woodrow was
liken to Camden Clark Hospital.
'nle Pomeroy Squad was called to Naylor's Run for Martha
Burns, who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
8:05p.m., Rutland squad went to State Route 143 for Joan King.
King was taken to Holzer ~edtcal Center. At 11:31 .p.m,,
Pomeroy squad went to Welchtown Road for Lawgence Klein,
who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Steps ... Continued from page 1

'

A resolution· commending
Manley reported that since his Mill Street. ~lngers will Include :·putln a bid " for use of that site
Pomeroy
on Its sesquicentennial '
move to the new recycling center R11ss and the Southern Hills because of the economic Impa ct
was
passed
by Council
on MUI Street the business has · Singer, · The ReOectlons, The such a facility wouldhave on the
Improved 25 percent. His opera· Taylors, The Edens Family, coudty.
~tlon Is now located In the old Children of God, Jan and Kathy ,
The publiC perception of better
Royal Crown building.
Heaven Bound Four, and The safety since walking poUcemen DallY atoek prices
The positive Impact on stu· Narrow Way.
are on th~ streets was noted by (As or 10: 30 Lm.)
dents taken through the .new
There Is no charge for ' the . Horton. Clatworthy reported on a Bryce and Mark Smllh
facility was noted by Horton who h,ymn sing but a love offering will talk with Kim Shields, develop- or Blunt, Elllll II Leewl
emphasized the Importance of be taken at the door. Food will be men! director, regarding Indus·
education In getting the coopera· sold at the annex by the Ladles trial potential of the Hobson Am Electric Power ......-....... 29~
tlon of residents In recycling.
Auxiliary.
,
,
area.
AT&amp;T ...................... :..........42'h
.Jaly 4 Celebmlon
Middleport firemen wjll have a
The fate cit the bell taken from Ashland 011 ,; ......................36%
P!al)s for the July4 celebration fish fry during the day. A parade · the tower on Middleport VIllage Bob EvanS.. ... ..... ................12%
to Include a nea market, gospel will be l!eld In the evening with Hall during the renovation prO:
Charming Shoppes ............... 10
sing, fish fry, parade, entertain- Carol Baker and Leesa Murphy ject was discussed with Mayor City Holdllll! Co ................ :.14'h
ment and fireworks were out· as co·chalrmen. Evening .enter· Hoffman reporting that the Mid·
Federal Mogul . .. .. ............... 22% •
lined by Councilman Gilmore, talnmertt will Include Country dleport Fire Department plans Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34\4
chairman.
Roads Band from 5 to 7 p.m . . a . some sort of display structure for Heck's ...... ........... ...... ,..... .... 3'h
It was decided that a section of performance by the Shady River
lt.
Key Centurion ....................13'h ·
Race Street would be blocked off Shuffleu, and· there will another
Again the problem of a place Lands' End ...................... ... 16%
for the flea market beginning at band performance before the for kids to skateboard was
Limited Inc ..................... ... 47~
noon. There will be a nominal fireworks which will take place discussed by Wallers, who deMultimedia Inc .................... 81 ·
charge for setting up and anyone at 9: 30 p.m.
tailed the other sports which
Rax Restaurants .. ................ 2\4 •
Other Bwdness .
have village'' recreational supInterested In participating Is
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... ....... 20'h:
asked to contact Glllnore.
The possibility of proposing the port. The llablllty of such a
Shoney's Inc ................. ·.... :.14% ~
An aU-day hymn sing begin· Hobson site as a location tor the ·skateb()ard . facility was ·again
Star Bank ....... .......... .... ...... 21~
nlng at 11 a.m . will take place at regional , jail was dlSCi~_SSed by noted and no action was taken by . Wendy's Intl ..... : .................. &amp;\4
the American Legion Annex on .cou!'cll. ?erard was as~ to ' coun~ll.
Worthington Ind ................. 24\4 '

Stocks

deaths~
'· .

Area

Ruby Stew811 ·

Stewart was preceded In death
by an Infant brother and one
'
niece.
1
Services will be held Thursday
at 1 p.m. at the Bradford Church
of Christ with Derek Stump
officiating. Burial will be In the
Bradford Cemetery .
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home on Wednesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Ruby Marlene Hysell Mossman Stewart, 48, Union Terrace,
Pomeroy, died Monday•at Ohio
State University Hospital In
Columbus following an exteied
Illness with cancer.
Born June 29, 1941ln Salls ury
Township, she was the daughter
of tbe ,l ate Denver Hysell and
Frances Swick Hysell.

PONDERO

!'!----Mei8f1 annoua,eement;s - - - - :o-t
t~reacller

I

. Jeff Rans'Om, St. N bans,
~W.Va., a former member of the
;operation Evangeline Team of
:chesapeake, will be preaching
:tor tile .next two, weeks at .the
;nomtne and evenlnJ services of
1he Pomeroy Church at Christ•
:Joi~W•Ia•
.• · : Tile desCendants of the late
~.bert and Eliza Hill will hold
-:tJielr annual reunion June 24 at
·the Star Mill Park In Racine. ·A
b&amp;lket dinner will be held at noon
)1111·!111 relatives and friends are

, nvlled.
.·
.,.itllen 4a,y bomeeomlag

·
; Tile MI. Union Baptlat Church,
located on County Road 14, two
')DUes south of carpenter, will
-have a Fathers Day Homecom·
:0., on Sunday with a dinner at
~oon. Singers will Include tbe
:Gabriel Quartet, and the New
;Generation Singers. Pastor Joe
oN. Sayre Invites the public.

•
:Wm renew
: Mr. and Mrs. Sob Gilmore,
:Middleport. will renew their
:Wedding vows In observance of
1helr 40th anniversary om Sun·
~ay at 2: 30 p.m. at the Old
:American Legpon Hall on Fourth
~treet In Middleport.
• The event will be hosted by the
~uple's children and refresh·
ments will be served.
: The couple requests that gifts
~ommllted .

.Papeatoalng
: ThePayneFamlly,Elyria, will
~form· Saturday evening at
,:30 p.m. at the Fellowship
&lt;:burch of the Nazarene, two
:mnes south of Reedsville on
• .l loute 124 11cross from Forked
:Run State Park. The public Is

~:e:e~~tend.
: Tbe Asbury United Methodls t
:church, Syracuse, will have
vacation bible school Monday
through June 22 from 9 a.m. to
"noon dally. Classes ·wm be
:available for ages 2 through

l

•

•

'

junior high. The public Is Invited
to participate.
·
Pleatc
The Me~ County Salon No.
710 Eight and Forty will have Its
picnic and meeting for tnstalla·
tlon of officers on Thursday at '6
p.m. at the home of Marge Fetty.
Danceclueetl
A series of ballet, tap, and jazz
dance classes for ages three and
up will be offered by the Middle·
port Arts Council.
Shirley Quickel will be the
Instructor and classes can be
scheduled for afternoon or
evening.
F\)r further Information call
Shirley Quickel at 992-7756 or
Mary Wise at 992-2675 by Friday.
Bible ICbool
The Pomeroy Church or Christ
will have Vacation ·Bible School
June 24-29 from 6: 30-8: 30 p.m.
nightly. There will be bible
lessons, games, skits, and refreshmen ts. Barbara Fields and
Pat Thoma are co-directors. The
public ls ·lnvited to attend.
See reuniOn
·
··
The See famlly wUI have Its
reunion on June 30 at Route 2,
Greer Road, W.Va., .at the home
of the late Earl See. Those
attending should contact Bonnie
Pickens by June 20.
Group to sing
The New Generation Singers,
Evans, W.Va .. will be singing at
the Mt. Olive Community Church
In Long Bottom on Sat11rday at 7
p.m.
Pastor Lawren'c e Bush Invites
the public.
Square dance
The Gallla Twlrters Square
Dance Club will hold a dance
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at the
Henderson Community Building
In Henderson, W.Va. The caller
will be Bill Roush and the dance
Is open to all square dancers.

~on

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Middleport

992-3007

Our Gigantic Store-wide

:Hospital News
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Raymond Hall, VInton, Carrie
Roush, Racine, John J. Keck,
Pomeroy, and Martha Burns of
Middleport.
Monday discharges - Bernlce
Bailey, Helen Harris, and MIchael T. Hubbard.

Seeks divorce
I

I.

In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, a divorce complaint
liu been flied by Lisa S. Hawley,
Rutland, against Johnny O'Brien
ffawley of P~meroy.
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Four injured ~n
one-car accident

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~--- l.'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
90 balance $36,514 carry over,
Approved was given for memanticipated reVenue $154,146;
Sentinel Newt S&amp;alf
bership In the Ohio High School
Chapter 2. 1990-91, 18,000; drug Athletic Association.
A bud&amp;et of $1,695,250 which
Includes full 1990-91 operating abuse program, $8,515.
Bids were opened and the
During the meeting the board purchase of a new school bus
expenses In all funds with the
approved AAA of South Central approved. The bid of Gibson. Inc.
exception or the general fund
Ohio for the 1990-911Chool year at tor a 71 passenger school bus
where the amount covers only
a cost or $100 a student . •The chassis of $21,276,84 was ac-three months, has been adopted
student will pay $50 with tbeState cepted wltb the body to come
by the Southern Local School
Department of Education to from Edwin H . Dwvis and Son at
Board.
AcCOrding to Dennie Hill, dis- reimburse the district for the a cost of $13,309 for a total cost of
'
.
. $42,585.84.
.
trict · treasurer, the board ap- other $50.
proved·a temporary budget gen· · Five students were appr()ved
Linda Fisher was ~Ired on a
eral fund of $871.667 . for one for next year. They are Jenl Lynn ' half-time basis as a Chapter 1
quarter's operation. Budge! fig· Stewart; Jessica and Paul Chap- teacher for the next schoci! year.
ures for the remainder of the man, and Rayann and William The board agreed to enter Into a
contract with the Waahlngote
1990-91 year will be determined Young.
The board approved a contract County Board of Education. for
at a later date, Hill reported.
PermaDent budget funds for between the Southern Local services from the Southeastern
FAIR ROYALTY
Announcement of the
with the queen and king Ia Tamara Benea
the full 12 months approved by Board of Education and the Ohio Special Edudatlon Regional
'' · eelecttaD of Mlraada Parker as queen uc1
Bogg-, rlahl, who lied for flnti'IIUer·up wllb
the board at a meeting this week Trl-county Vocational Board of Resource Center. That agency
Michael Parker as king of lbe 11110 Melp County
Krlallne Aab, wbo was out of town.
Included bond retirement Education for the services of the provides Special education servioJUior Fall' was made over lbe weekend. Pictured
Educational ·Media Resourc~ . ces at a cost of S801.60.
$31,050; food service, $243,375;
Center. This service provides
uniform supply (workbooks.
Heed Co. of Independence was
materials) $20,000; principal's films. cassettes, books, maga· given the contract for student
fund, $63,633; student activity, zlnes, and other ina terlals used
Insurance.
$46,226; district activities, by all of the schools In the district
The board approved the place$75,.90; Disadvantaged Pupil at a cost of $1,903.!Kl for the ment of the Meigs County class
Fund,. $36,000 plus the carry over 1990-91 sc boo! year.
. Continued on page 6
·
balance of $814; lottery proceeds
$24,166 carry over from 1989-90,
By BRit\N .J. REED
interactiye video .servloe,
attitude and persistence to the and $26,000 1990-91 estimated
•
Sentlael News staff
.
Bates explained. would be a
completion of the center, and proceeds.
•
compared the Importance of the
Dwight B. Eisenhower math
Action needed to repeal a cooperative effort between tele, current FCC law regulating phone companies, like GTE. and
same qualities to chamber
and science program, carryover
, Interactive video cable was the C!lble television operators. Bates . activities.
balance, $2,0l0; Title 6B, 1989·90
tTuesdoplcp~nted b Y Ga ry Bates at urged chamber of commerce
The chamber continues Its carry over, $11,282; Title 68,
ay s meet1ng o1 the Meigs members to write elected offl· search for an executive dl.-ector.
1990·91, $36,352; Chapter 1, 1989·
Four people were Injured In a reported to Grant's apokesperCounty Chamber of Commerce clals J n •n attempt to lntorm At Tuesday's meeting, Le"ny ri '_. __..JI
one-car
wreck TueSday at 6: 18 son. Barnette, who was admitted
held at Overbrook Center.
leglslatorsan'd to l"a.kftp~ess . E)Ja~on•.of.)V.¥ 1'0 ..R.!idlo, who Is • ·DOaro to
p.m.
In
,l,.ebanon·•Townshlp on for l~tment .of, a head InjurY
A,t life meeting, Bates,thelacal, In the repeal of cu~nt regula· the chalmian Of .the • l'lel!i!iltlve
' T " '·· IT,-':' &lt; · , · .
S.R.
124,
.4 of a mile east of and a fractured vertebra, was
manager of GTE, presented a
nons restricting such a service.
director search · committee, remilepost
46,
according to the listed In satisfactory condltlpn.
r:. .proJI"!I,!ll co.nce~n~ l~teracllve
Bates said that Interactive · ported that his committee was In
·
POst
of the State Michael James, who wu adn!ll· .
Gallla-Melgs
· videO, whiCh could proVIde servi·
cable woun! require IDBtallatlort the proeess !Jf researching sJmThe Meigs Local School Disteet for treatment of a head
Highway
Patrol.
;, ces su~h as medical consultation,
9! fiber optiC cab~ to each user's liar chambers for guidelines trlct Is maklna application to the
Injury; was listed In satisfactory
'The
driver,
Timothy
S.
college attendance, and local . home, and estimated at least a pertalnlngtotheexecudvedlrec· Slate Department of Education.
condition.
Merritt. who was
Barnette,
23,
of
Ripley,
W.Va.,
shopping, all fro.m the comfort of 10·year period · between any tor position.
Division of Educational Servtadmitted
for
treatment of a
of
his
passengers
and
two
the user's home.
change in the FCC law and actual
Eliason reporled that news· ces, for federal funds available
fractured
wrist
and facial
Sa tell' program explained that placement of service Into homes. paper advertisements will run In through Chapter 2 of the Federal. Berry Merritt, 25, and Michael
scrapes
.
•
at one !line, telephone companies
Mark Murphy,,the admlnlstra· various major cities across the state and Local Partnership for James, 33, of Raleigh. N.C. None
of
the
four
was
wearing
a
were taken by the Meigs County
tor of Overbrook Center. who state to flll the position. Tbe Educational Improvement.
provided the forerunner to cable
seat
belt
at
the
time
ofthe
wreck.
lelevtslon services, but were
hosted Tuesday's meeting, pres· committee has set January 1, · The application and all related EMS to Jackson General Hospl·
Barnette, driving a 1990 Chevordered to sell the same In the
ented a short prOgram about the 1991 as~ goal for having such an documents are available for tal In Ripley, W.Va., while
rolet
Cavalier, was traveling
1970's In an attempt to protect the
facility, which Is now Its second offlclalln place and the projected
Inspection and comments to Barnette's other pas~nger west
when
the car went airborne
growing ' cable television
year of operation. 'Murphy re- budget for~lheotflce. lsestlmated parents and the general public. Beverly James of Ripley, W.Va.
after
driving
over a bump on the
lated ·t he importance ota positive to be $50,000.00.
Persons Interested In viewing or - was fiOWI! by SkyMed to Grant
Industry.
road.
He
sUd
off the right side of
Medical Center In Columbus.
the road after the car returned to
discussing the application may
contact Wendy Halar, Federal
Beverly .James was admitted earth, · went lntci a ditch and
Pr911fams Coordinator, Meigs
to Grant's Intensive c~re unit, overturned.
Local SchoolDlstrlct , 320 East where she wu listed In serious
No one has been cUed by the
BJ llnlted Preu International
with overnight lows In the mid· Sunday, wlth.a chance of showers Main St., Pomeroy.
condition. Her Injuries were not patrol.
The first real heat wave ori990 60s to about 70 and Thursday's and thunderstorms each day.
. reached Ohto Wednesday, with
highs In the middle to upper 80s. Highs will be In the !Kls and 90s
- widespread readings near or
During the night , Ohio's and lows In the 60s and low 70s.
above 90 expected for the first
weather was dry and cloud cover
The high temperatures and
time this year. .
gradually decreased from west moderate .humidity Wednesday
Thanks toasoutherJYwlnd that
to east. Clouds should start to was expected to create very good
began overnight, early morning return Wednesday night, possl· drying conditions over most or
temperatures were from the bly bringing showers and thun· the state . .However, humidity In
upper 50s to the low 60s, about5to derstorms toward morning In the the southwest In the afternoon
10 degrees higher than readings northwest counties .
was to be high enough to push the
'111 the same Tuesday.
Fcir 'I'hursday, sl\owers and llvest!!Ck safety Index Into the
Air from the Deep South was to thunderstorms are llkely across danger category. The same slcontinue ·to move across Ohio the northern counties, while tuatloll will exl~t over the entire
lhrough the day. glvlng .Ohlo Its southern counties have a chance south Thursday and possibly
highest temperatures of the of showers and thunderstorms.
extend Into some northern sec·
year.
Looking ahead through the tlons In the afternoon.
The heat wave wlll continue weekend. It w'll be warm and
Moderate de~ should form In
Wednesday night and Thursday, muggy Frld~y. Satur~ay and
the remainder of Ohio Thu.rsday
f
where partly cloudy skies are
expected, while little to no dew Is
likely In the· northwest.
•
Rainfall will spread gradually
through the state Thursday, with
as much as a half-Inch In some
areas of norlllern Ohio. As much
WINFIELD, W.Va. (UP)) Gray Is charged In Janey ·s as 1 Inch could fall In scattered
·
An Ohio man charg~ In the
slaying. The off-du IY deputy was areas Thursday nlgbt.
On
the
early
morning
weather
shooting death of an otl·duty
working as an ln.v e5tlgator for
Putnam County deputy was
Nationwide Insurance and was map, a high pressure region was
, arrested wearing a bloody shirt
given the asJignment of watch- over the Appalachians and the
ahd tests later revealed he had
Ing the . residence of Raymoiul East Coast. By late Thursday,
this system should be over the
MEIGS SPECIAL OLYMPJC8 TEAM- '1'llele
gunpowder on his left . hand,
County poup. They are from the left, u.a'
Huck.
Southeast
states . Another
JOWII athlete. wllb &amp;llelr coaeb, Ra,y Tope, will be
witnesses testified In the man's
Molltpmery, Sarah Hannoa, M1114J .Jeaen1
Huck already has pleaded
Ia Calamia-. .June D-14, to parilelpllte lathe Olllo
Tara . . . .., Tope, lbe coaell, ud Mike Smllb. .
trial.
gunty to second-degree murder. weather map feature llnportant
8Ptelal OlympiCI as rep-nlallv• Dl tile Melp
Putaam Deputy Robert Blan·
Proseeutora contend ~uck hired to Ohio was a cold front f~rmlng
, kenshlp told the Putnam County
Gray and another man to set fire · over the Plains. By Tbursday
circuit court jury that Robert
to l!ls borne In an luurance evening the front will be from
Gray of GaiUpoUs, Ohio, was
scam. Janey was shot In the Lake Huron to northern IIUnols.
a~rested near Winfield. less than
chest, left aide and left ear on
••
six hours after Deputy John
Aug. 17 while he was staking out
· · Janey died from lhree gunshot
H11ck's home.
wouJ\ds;
e Gray's defense lawyer, Joe
llfttll Central Olllo
Thomu, hu argued that· the
Partly clouc!y Wednesday '
deputi!!S made up the uory of nla,bt, with a low In lbe mid
Blankenship ·s aid he and Dep. These athletes will compete In
The program will Include com.
The Melp County Special
Grax's falling. Thelma• contends Partly cloudy Thunday, wtth ,a
:10th
Antlual
Ol!lo
Special
the
petition
In 11. sportl, DIOvle(,
' uty Steve Farley found Gray
Olymplcl has aelec:ted flw alh·
his client was beat up by Janey, chalice.of showers and thiiJidei". · letea to upesenttllequtzatlon O!ymplca State Summer Games,
: m!eplaa aloq a ~tream buk on
recreational cllnlcl. and the
who stopped bJm from torchln&amp; alonna, and hlpa betwwn•lllld •• tbell900hloSpeclai()Jymplcs u atilletlc tralnln&amp; ucl eompetl·
~ Stave Branch Road. Bianllenahlp
colorful openln&amp; ceremonla. '
the home. or the IJ'relllng 90.
repeated earlier testimony that
tlon prqrram for tbe 11MDtal)31
Obo Special Olymp6ca l8nef
State. llllniiMr Gall*.
of ntn II 30 percent.
deputies.
·
.
; Gra)''s llljurlft at the time of the
balldlcapJII!d. 'nle aamec to be more tban 1,,000 menta1131 haadJ.
••l•f•lhlle I
State Tr!Joper Robert Smltb. a
...,..., ...,..... h ,.,.
- hllll'relt were autfered when he
Capped clllleu wttb a )'UI' I'CIIIIIIi
In tile paup are .Tara Bolton. beld JIIM 22-H at tile Ohio State
cbl!mllt for tile .,_,.., crime
fell.
lllrlllllanDoa. ............. Ualvwllty Ia Columllaa wtll ol atliletle traildnlr ud ~
A CIIUee cl ,. Gil 11114
tbat tlnuldentorma taeb day. HIIM . and .... Smith Ia ..... meter r•tve competllloa for more tloll. Tbe-tealtlallarlael
"He fell down, then l fell laboratory, allo
iUIIJIO'IIdei
residue
was
fol!nd
OD wiD ...... from die 1011 • die daD ud IUftllallCU'oa, 8IICI Lila lhaa •
. down," Blanbnllllp told the ,
competlton 1rom
MVtD atate-II'Ytl
Gray'l len bud aac1 llolll ft
. hry. "II waa almott
u d - tban125 ...... Hia
IOwW
901.
wltb Ml'llllbt lowlln Monfi&amp;IMJ Ia lilt .. meter and llei'OCI the ......
Janey's hanct.. .
·
• almullalleoul."
. . .pel. . kiiiiii!IIP.
tilt 22 Specll1 OlymPiel Sporla. '
tbe D or lvwer '1111.
•

.. on' 8 f•"0
'1"19Qt heat . ave h J•ts Oh
: J•o
S.. eas

your Hornts3ver Ace~ arw;t-

. . . . .. ._.
. __. .._ . ,_.___ . . . ft--'-'·-c-T_. . .
• . , _ _ _ .. J1111

~ -·-

211 Cei&gt;to

A Multlmidia Inc. - -

annJy
for .federal fUnds

So •r ~ou te ore:tm~nc or nwntnif "'bOIIII

8eR rX all. wheft you·re re:tu~ to fluy. .iru.l

2 liectiono. 11 ''""

Southem board adop~
budget ·for .I
·91

Our bOnul•~ UCS•~ncd to ~·vc: ~ou lhlt
extn ancentavc you m:~y nttd IG bq&amp;DJ&amp;Yoo
ill I r'or YOW' home. II C:ln be used tO llelp
w•th all thOSe ntncr c:osrs :woe.~ wMb
buy•nc .2. nome.

l'ar s dDwftpayment 111 :m~
dnll. You II cam .2. Cr.Tlpdlttve_r.ue on :• oor
ll'rilp UlG bctore lat:~J JOU II h:~.ve the

Pomerov-:-Middleport, Ohio. WtKJnesday, June 13, 1990

CaPfriphtlod 1110

RUBY STEWART

S.VW. money tor ll ~~men1 oil a home

Partly cloudy lanlght. Low
Ia mid 681. Partl)' cloudy
Thunday. Hlp In mid BOa.
Chance of rain 30 pereeat.

..

Interactive video-cable topic
: of Meigs Chamber Tuesday

.ill 411flk:VIt chOre. Thill'S ··h~ we dn•~n~

:'ou .;;ul $.l\IC
:unoun1. n ln~

Piek-4
2485

Vol.40, No.278

You Can Build Your Down~ent i=asta'
Widl II tfomeuver ..l,etOURI.

078

•

.Introducing
The Homesaver Account'
tram Central Trust

d'lt Ccncn.i.Trust Homeu. ...er .\ccouJu.
-

i

. Daily Number

.Page 4

.

Mrs. Stewart was a home·
maker· and she attended the
Bradford Church of Christ.
She Is survived by her husband. Rollle.Stewart, Pomeroy;
two daughters, Tamara (Mark)
Ruof, Worthington; and ConnJe
(David) Thornton, Worthington;
a son, VIncent Mossman, Pomeroy; two step children, Lori
Kimes and Doug Stewart, both of
Syracuse; two sisters, Madeline
Painter, Middleport; and Evelyn
Wood, Chester; three brothers,
Guy, Roger, and Gary Hysell, all ·
of Pomerey; six grandchildren,
Sarah, Luke, and Stephanie
Ruof, Daniel and Joshua Thorn·
ton, and Ashlelgh Kimes; three
aunts and uncles, and several
nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents Mrs.

Ohio Lottery

Braves
•
•
Wll) pa:ar
from .Reds

CHARBROILED

Chopped Steak
Dinn•&amp;Suntlae
Includes potato, garlic toast,
Porideroso 's AII·You·Con•Eot
Grand Buffet; plus
. ·
AII·You·Con·E&lt;it Sun~oe Bar.

Five Meigs athletes selected to
Meigs at summer games .

. Weather

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eoa.

•••••••••••••••••••

• tiiO POI!dliew, toe.

a..-

• A marriage license has been
luued In Meigs Probate Court to ·
. Doaald Howard Maxson, 22,
A! bally, and Serena Andrea
,.-yatt,18, Albany.

GALUPOLIS
UPPER liVER RD.

•IUied

(Across from the Airport)
,,

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.. --· ---· ..,.-- - -..;__-.--t;

«

c:Nma::;.":

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