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•
. 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

loon onttftlltlon lee 1po•naJ on ~Oial' loil
·Nntehtver ~oun1
1.11 .less.
'

dcAi;&amp;)iii'ICftl you need.

•

ST £ A K R 0 U S £

}'Oil

ftlance your convenu o n:~t

dmMIIft C~l TNSI. ·-~tt ·.vtil

mon p~e ~O.:u'l

;1ve :mu ::n

an bonus• ~u:.~IIO cnc •ntcre:scyou vc

1omcd.\y, . : orne to C.:nnt Trust • blpl
to m:!ke 1h111 drnm :.a rt21ilv. illc Ccnnl
Trust Hcmenver .-\CC:OUIIl· tne best WIY 10
:,auld your aownp::tvment ... :"uter.

i'fll_ ..... boi!Aoll ........ . . , , _

r-·'"" ·-~ ;...,,,,..

~·

97 North S.and ~;...
·- '"' '
992-6641 -

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.
•

.

···-~·-·············
HURRY/ Coupon Expires 6124190
CHARBROILED

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Dinner&amp;Sundae

•

Additional witneSses
testify in Gray trial

Includes potato, garlic toast,
Ponderosa's AII·You·Con·Eot
Grand Buffet; plus
AII·You·Con·Eot Sundae Bar.

PONDEROSA®

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·•

I

WITH COUPON BELOW

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CENTRAL TRUST

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6124190

Only 3 Days left To.Save!
SA tB ENDS PRJDAYJ.mNE l5rs

Four injured ~n
one-car accident

w'

,.~

~--- 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
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: 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

PONDEROSA®

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)
,,

I

.. --· ---· ..,.-- - -..;__-.--t;

«

c:Nma::;.":

�Wed! IIIIey, June 13. 1990
',

.

~ .

'

By PETER olliJNs

Wedl'!nt:lay, June 13, 1990

ll1 Court street
Pomero:y, Ohio
D~OTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~

l!!i!m!\1 """'"' ......"'"T"I ,..,.._c::::~,""'
~v
..
•
-

ROBERT L . wiNGETT
Pablllber

CHARI,ENE HOEFLICH .
General Manapr

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstallt Publlsher/Coall'Oller
A MEMBER of 1be United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the ArnE!'lcan Newspaper PulilsiB's Association.

•

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
. • words Joq. All letters are subject to editing and must be slgDed wltll
: · name, address and telephone number. No unstped letters wUJ be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

• ties.

. • "' ...

* . • .

~ Senate's snail
~ ~pace

irks Mitchell

:•
By STEVE GERSTEL
·: WASHINGTON (UPI) - Democratic leader George Mitchell, a
• former federal judge, sometimes wlstlully recalls the benign
: autocracy of the colil'troom as he plays ringmaster for the circus in
• ·the U.S. Senate.
Dally, II seems, Mitchell's efforts to get legislation through the
: Senate Is thwarted no matter In which direction he seeks to lead his
· lndependent-nilnded charges.
: For the most part, Mitchell accepts the frustration as the price of
:; the post tie wanted, sought and won and boul)ces back thenextday full
: of optimism and good cheer. Professional fighters .wlio get lilt too
• often react the same way.
·
: But there are days, more and more this year, when Mitchell's
·: judicial mien Is pierced and he lashes out, constrained only by the
: Inordinate civility of the Senate.
· · One of those days occurred last week and Mite hell had every reason
:. to abandon his even-tempered ways.
·• · The Senate refused - for a second time - to impose
; debate·ltmltlng cloture after Mitchell said he was told the night
: before and that morning that there were enough votes for approval.
. • Who told him? He won't say.But it does raise the question of who Is
·· or is not counting heads for Mitchell and the Democratic leadership.
: : An attempt to start action on theTongass Forest blllcl{ew the threat
· of a flllbus ter.
,: Mttohell also wanted to quickly pass a blll that forbids '
· discrimination against blind persons in airline ileatlng asstgnmenjs.
: Unfortunately, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., chose this blll as
· an ideal vehicle for her amendment, which would reduce the liability
. I&gt;f private plane manufacturers.
'
· • No one can blame Mrs. Kassebaum. The U.S. general aviation
· Industry Is in decline and Cessna Is in her back yard. But product
·- llablllty, In any form ; is a touchy subject and lends itself to perpetual
; debate.
·
• The final blow came when Senate Republicans just refused to allow
vote on overriding President Bush's veto of the $1.4 blllton Amtrak
· blll because they were missing four or five of their senators.
''They wlll not be here today. They will not be here tomorrow,''
. Senate GOP leader Robert Dole said. "So we are not going to vote
· today ot tomorrow."
• It was at this point that Mitchell's patience, already stretched thin,
- left him and he lectured his colleagues. Few lleard him, of course,
; because few were in -the chamber.
: Not so gently, Mitchell noted the Senate takes off one week out of
·every four and votes ·a re rarely scheduled on Monday or Friday, a
work schedule that must be the envy of every American - except
inembers of the House who toll even leSs.
• Mitchell said It was "intolerable' ' that the Senate cannot operate if
~one or a few" senators are absent on one of the three days of the
· three weeks.
: "We are in a situation where everything we attemptto bring up we
: are unable to prOceed with,'' Mitchell said, "and I must say It Is
·extremely difficult and discouraging under the circumstances."
· - By the last day of the week, Mitchell had returned to his judicial
demeanor but ready to crack the whip.
; Mitchell said "some dramatic changes" must be made In the
Senate's operation and informed his coUeagues he was considering
·curtatung the August recess, delaying this year's adjournment,
:holding "bed check'' votes Monday and Friday and holding more late
:sessions.
Dole, who had the same problems when Republlcans controlled the
Senate, told Mitchell, In effect, forget it.
"I tried them all and none of them worlted," Dole said.

llong ·K ong residents fear 1997
WASHINGTON - After the
masSjlcre in Tlananmen Square
one year ago, It's no wonder that
residents of Hong Kong pondered
an escape route to the tropical
Federal Republic of Corterra.
For just $16,000, Hong Kong
C!Uzens were offered a deal to
buy a Corterra passport and
access to the 12 Islands of that
nation midway between Hawaii
and Tahiti.
There was only one hitch.
There is no Corterra. It was the
figment of a con man's tmagtnatlon, created to prey on the fears
of Hong Kong residents. On July
1,1997, Brltlanwlll tum control of
freewheeling Hong Kong over io
the repressive Chinese government that would just as soon mow
people over with tank,\1 as. let
them live freely.
So today, . instead of ·buying
passports to imaginary havens,
thousand~ of Hong Kong rest·
dents stand In line for hours at
forlegn consulates every day,
rain or shine, to apply for
passports, The Itnes often wind
around blocks, butthepeoplestill ·
walt. Theyhaveonlysevenyears
to get out and it's not too early to
start.
The hll!h-rise cttv teemtnl!with

•••

:a

:Today in history
•
By United Press International
• Today Is Wednesday, June 13, the !64th day of 1990 with 201 to
tallow. ·
·
The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
: The evening star is Jupller.
· Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
U.S. Army Gen. Winfield Scott In 1786, Irish poet and dramatist
Wttllam Butler Yeats tYaytsl In 1865, actor Bastt Rathbone In 1892.
Mexican composer Carlos Cbavez In 1899, football player Harold
"Red" Grange in 1903 tage 87), TV host Ralph Edwards in 1913 tage
_77), Bulgartan-born artist Christo in 1935 tage 551 and actor Richard
·ThOmas in 1951 tage 39).

.

'

• On this date in hlstorv:
· In 323 B.C., Alexander the Great died of fever in Babylon at age 33.
In 1944, the first German V-1 "buzz bomb" hit London.
; In 1977, James Earl Ray, assassin of Martin Luther King Jr., was
c'aptured In a Tennessee wilderness area after escaping from prison.
• In 1983, the robot spacecraft Ploneer·10became theflrstma11-made ·
pbject to leave the solar system. It did so 11 years after lt was

~aunched.

A thought for the day: Irish poet Wllllam Buller Yeats wrote:
"Too long a sacrifice
Can make a stone of the heart."

RoUs-Royces, . Mercedes and
BMWs is looking over its
shoulder tot the first time this
century.
The message of Tlananmen In
Hong Kong was that Cbina's
promises that it would not
interfere with the Hong Kong
economy wete probably hOllow.
If students in Beijing can be
crushed because they asked for
freedom , what will happen to the
peopleofHongKongwhoalready
have it.
More than a mUlton Hong Kong
Cblnese protested In the streets
In the month following the
massacre. Passport lines
stretched for miles. One woman
called the U.S. coosulate on the
brtnk of hysteria. "Are you going
to protect 11s?'' · she begged.
China boosted the hysteria by
announcing that 50,000 ·Brltlsb
passports issued to "key" Hong
Kong residents as a safety valve
for 1997 would not be honored.
In this atmosphere, tbe fear
vultures emerged. Residents
havebeenteasednotonlybyfake
countries bl!t by bogus visas to
real countries. Panama's former
consulate general In Hong Kong
was accused of running an lllegal
,.

'·

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
passPOrts to Panama.
noting that Hong Kooa can be
About 65,000 people are ex- China's cub cow. He sees Hong
peeled to stream out of Hong Kong as a little Manhattan,
Kong this year. Mostaretlie best functioning as the corporate
and the brightest who won't centerwherethedealsarestruck
tolerate suppression.
'
while the manUfacturing goes on
Spokesmen for the British in China. '1 think Cbtna will
government In Hong Kong have eventually come around to our
tried to quell the panic by touting way of thinking."
the deal they struck with China.
Many ofHongKong'sresldents
Beijing has promised not to would argue that Wu Is 64 floors
oppressthepeopleofHongKong above reality. A glass elevator
and not to tamper with the descends from his oflce like a
capitaliSt economy for at least 50 vertical limousine ride Into the
years.
city of 6 mUitoo. On the street
But a growing number of level are the people without a
tnfiuentlal people in Hong Kong suitcase under the lled'ready for
think the only way to protect a getaway. They ~on't have
themselves ts to put a strong British VIP passpllrta, nor the
democratic system in pla,ce wherewithal! to buy pa1tports to
before the city changes hands.
Imaginary countries; nor a ghost
· There .are eternal optomists. · of a chance to get a legitimate
Wealthy Hong Kong developer ticket out of town.
.
Gordon Wu runs his buslneas
KEEPING THE FArrH
from the 64th floor of an office Mikhail Gorbachev is focusing
building with a postcard view of his attention on the defecttoll of
the world's business harbor. the Baltic states, but out of the
"Theshowwlllgoon,''hetoldour comer of his eye, be 1.1 keeping
associate Jim Lynch, with a nervouswatcbo11 theUllralne.A
confident grin.
nationalist movement Is spread·
Wu lsaPrlnceton-eduatedman log there, sparked by CathOlics
who exudes confidence. ''They whose church has been banned
have tci leave us alone," he said, since 1946. Most Ukrlinlaos are
apparentiy stili devout Catholics
after 44 ·y ears of suppression. An
anti-communist coalltloa · has
won 80 percent of seat• on the
•
regional· council a1,1d .!bose
winners Immediately hauled
down the Soviet flap to the
regional capital of Lvov and
replaced them with Ukrulan
flap. Hardllne communists still
control the eastern Ukraine.
MINI-EDITORIAL -Theflrst
son, Nell Bush, bas enlightened
the rest of us about bow high
finance works. Friends loan you
lots o1 money without expecting
to be repaid if yo\1 squander it.
Whtte explaining· the downfall -of
the Silverado savings and loan to
Congress, the young Bush, a
former board member of the
thrift, . talked matter-of·factly
about just such a transaction- a
$100,000 loan from· a real estate
developer who didn't expect
repayment. Even the members
of Congress, who are accustomed
to generous friends, seemed
surprised. Profe,slonal jealousy,
no doubt.

•.

j

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

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FOOTL·ONO HOT DOCS

'

·Flood disaster declaration-.;_·--=co:=..::n=-g. ....:::..:cla..::.:..re.::......:.hce_M_.iu_er;
As anticipated, President es tabllsh one or more Dlsas ter ance: The Temporary Housing restoration of publlc~wned factiBush, following the request of Application Centers where repre· Assistance Program assures
Illes and other facllltles cons!·
Ohio's governor and the recom- sentatives of fetteral agencies, that people whose homes are dered necessary to re-establish
mendation of Federal Emer· local and state governments, and damaged by disasters have a the Integrity of the disaster
gency Management Agency voluntary relief agencies can safe place to live untll repairs area's infrastructure. FEMA
(FEMA) officials, last week coUectlvely counsel and accept can be CQmpleted. There are also can provide assistance for
declared four Southeastern Ohio applications for aid from Individ- thre!! basic forms of temporary emergency public transporta·
counties (Athens, Hocking, uals, famllles and business housing: rental assistance, es·
lion. This Is a state-administered
Perry, and Lawrence) disaster firms. Two such tempora,ry cen- sentlal home repair, and mohlle program, and applicants should
areas. Thts'Presldential declara- ters have been set up In Sou· home assistance. This asslst;mce consult the Governor's authotion gives FEMA the latitude to theastern Ohio to assist area' Is provided if the applicant's own riZed representative to apply for
add counties to the list if further flood· victims: one In Athens Insurance wlll not provide for- as siB lance.
·
survey findings so warrant and County at Trimble High School, temporary housing assistance.
Community Disaster Loans:
as of the writing of this column it which will be open for four days
Disasters Loans: The Small FEMA may make limited loans
ts anticipated that four add!· (June 9·12); and one in Lawrence Business Administration (SBA)
to local governments which have
tlonal southern counties (Vinton, . County in the local Cbamber of can make federally-subsidized suffered a substantial loss from
Ross, Jackson and Pike) will be Commerce office at South Point, loans to repair or replace homes,
their tax rolls and other revenues
which wlll be open for one day personal property or businesses
so designated
as a result of the disaster.
In last week's column, I spoke (June 14) . It Is anticipated such which sustained damages not
Federal Aid for Highways:
of the process Involved In getting state and federal offices as the covered by Insurance.
The U.S. Deparll)'lent of Transsuch a disaster declaration ap- Ohio Bureau of Employment
Individual and Family Grants:
portation's Federal Highway Ad·
proved and spoke in general of Services, the Sniall Business This program, administered by
ministration can provide finanwhat assistance would be avalla· Administration, and the the state but underwritten with 75 cial and technical assistance for
ble If sue h a federal determlna · Farmers Home Administration percent FEMA funding, can
repair or reconstruction of hightlon were forthcoming. This wlll be represented at theiie provide grants to ·meet dlsas terways on the federal aid system,
week, I would like to discuss in centers.
related serious needs and neces·
forest highways, park roads and
Vletlms of recent flooding are sary expense~ not provided for
detail the types of federal assist·
other slmttar projects damaged
encouraged
to visit o'r call these by other programs, Insurance or
ance that disaster victims are
by the disaster.
eligible for by way of this centers in an effort to determine other means. One test for grant
Restoration of Public Schools:
their eliglblllty for dl~ster as- eliglbtuty requires, among other
Presidential declaration.
The Office of Elementary and
When a Presidential declara- sistance. Following an initial things, a decision by the SBA that
Secondary Education, U.S. Detion of a "major disaster" is Interview, each applicant wlll be the applicant Is ineligible for a
partment of Education, can
established, a Federal Coordi- directed to those public and government-sponsored disaster
provide grants to restore public
nating Officer (FCOI Is ap· private assistance programs . loan. Among needs that can he
schools damaged or deatrOuyed
pointed to represent the Presi- most likely to meet his or her met with grant funds are housing ' by disasters which are declared
dent. This designee, along with needs. Let me qualify that repairs, home cleaning and saniby the President. The agency
FEMA (the agency which serves federal disaster aid does not tation, necessary household
also may provide grants to
as the central point of contact guarantee total recovery from
Items, replacement of tools of the
construct minimum public
within the federal government all disaster losses but is essen- applicant's . trade, clothing,
school facilities to take the place
for a wfde range of emeraeacy tially limited to retul'l!..ing damtransportation, and medical and
of a destroyed non-public shcool
response activities), then moves aged or lost property to pre- .dental expenses. Application ·which will not be replaced .
In to direct and coordinate the dlsastercondltlon. Also, it should deadline Is 60 days from the
Hazard Mitigation: FEMA can
overall disaster rellef effort. be understood tliat iederal and disaster declaration date.
provide matching funds on a
Presidential approval of a re- slate assistance is long-range tn
Grants: FEMA can provide 50-50 baSis to slate or local
quest for federal supplemental nature, and therefore, recovery · funding and techniCal assistance
governments to lllltlale projects
disaster assistance activates a will not occur overnight.
to state and local governments
In the disaster area ·whlcb will
The following is a brief expla· and certain private, non-profit
wide range of recovery promitigate future . tones. The
grams from a wide variety of nation of the major ·tndlvldual institutions for the repal~ ·or
amount of money available to
and public disaster recovery replacement of public properties
federal agencies.
FEMA for this purpo1e will vary
To make It easier for disaster programs:
damaged or destroyed by the . In relation to theamountofpubllc
Temporary Housing Assjst· disaster. Among these can be a
victims to obtain individual asassistance restoration projecta.
sistance, the FCO and FEMA
grant for 75 percent of the cost of

*1

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USDA CHOICE

BEEF CHUCK ROAST

69
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$5000 minimum
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GROUND CHUCK

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~in~ Percy, Hocking arxl
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CORNER OF GENERAL
HAR11NGER
PARKWAY &amp; PEARL STREB

'

.DDLEPORT
992-3471

A CIIDINAL AmU&amp;ftD UaMAim

the unUmlted space' an OpeD rejected federal aallstance of.
finance a $3 billion mass transit
They forced recall elections last ' deaert setting afforded.
fered under the lnter1tate blirh·
system, Its centerpiece was to year of the public officials Who
Althouah tbat worked until way Pf08l'am, contendlq !hat
have been a 93-mUe-long rapid
approved the modified plaoi. recently, traffic 1.1 routinely such aid waa an unwarranted
rail netWork.
After hard·fouaht campaigns, clotted In both cltlea. Moreo•e~, aovernment handout. Thai proAs traffic llecame congealed · mass tranalt advocates beat In Lu Vegas, aambllnJ Industry gram would have provided 90
on both interstate btghways aod
back the opposition In four of the executives oppose propoeall to percent of the required flmda but
city streets, Dallas transportafive communlttea .
buDd a rapid rail line to carry It now hu lapaed.
tion planners scaled back. Their
Las Vegas, like Phoenix, Is a vlaltors aloq ''The Strip" •·
AI a result, Maricopa County
plans now call for a 1maller rail relatively new but rut growtna famed sectton of Laa Veraa -whlchlncludeaPboelxandltl
system and sreater rellaDce , city whole plaonerl lnttally Boulevard ltned by caalaot.
auburba - hu far fewer btp. •
upon an expanded bu1 network.
believed they could cope with
Phoelllx llln even worae shape ·speed llmlted-acceaa tl'eewtty1
Even that didn't satisfy 10111e p-owiDg traffic by eatablllhlq a beca1181! the conaerv'ative polltt· ·than mott other rnetropOUtan residents of five Dallas subuJtll. broad grid of wide city streets In clans who controlled Arizona areu of comparable llze.
'•

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POTATOES

Pomeroy, Oblo ~.Ph. 992-21M. SocoliC! ctuo pootaile pold at Pomeroy,
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thrwsh Friday, 1U Court St., POmeroy, Oblo, by the Oblo VaUoy Pub-

AtUlai,Q.:I-III.IIIJame
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The Daily Sentinel

Clllcqo .... ....... ;.......... JI 3J .Ut II%
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SAVOR MOim•••WITH OUR

Even though no team has ever
come back from a three-game
deficit to wtn the NBA finals,
Drexler said, "We aren't conceding anything."
''This teanicanmakehlstory,''
he said.

Pet. GB
.111 ••• IV.
1.Mt

•

away ."

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Majol'!l

SAVE MOM...

Johnaon and the Detroit defense.
But he said be lhouabt the Trail
Blazers could have won the aame
if ihey bad performed better In
the second and third periods.
"We 1101 ounelvea In a tremendoua bole. You cao't &amp;et
down aaalnlt a tremendoua team
like the. Detroit Plstioos,'' he
said. "You can't come back ·and
make mtstakea."
Ad Ieman pralaecl Drexler, who
had a game·hl&amp;h 34 pollita. But he
said he needed more out of the
other atar~rs. He complained
that the offense wasn't workloa
tbe .ball hack to Terry Porter
often enough. Porter flnllhed the
game with 17, wbichls3belowhts
playoff averaae.
•'There was a 21-mlnute period
when he only had three shots,''
Adleman said.
Drexler said he wu disappointed the team had beenableto
fight back from a 16-polnt deficit
to take the lead at the end of the
game, "and then we let It slip

'--

Scoreboard ...

~Auto · gridlock reaches the desert _ _ _ _ _ _~,_ .R_ob_er_tWl_a_lter_s
TEMPE, Ariz. - It's 5:30p.m. · it gets better because Its reston a typical weekdax and the
dents refuse to pay for Improved
traffic llltuat!On Is normal at the
mass transit.
lntersectloo of the Superstition
That situation ts hardly unique.
:li'reew&amp;Y and Interstate 10:
Cincinnati, Columbus, and Mil·
Cars, trucks and aaiiOrted other waukee are among the other
'veblclea are backed up for !JIIIes . cltiea that In recent years bave
: In every direction.
backed away from plans to
: In the Phoenix metropolitan tnttate rapid rail systems. In
·.area- one of the fasteatgrowlng Dallas, volen! In 1988 rejected a
1ll'ball centers In the country referendum that would have
·trifflc congeatlon almoat eer- authorized the luiiance of Sl
talnly will become worse before billion worth of bonds to help

tell you If it was good or not. I
think they have to make that call
rtaht away. lt was dlsappolatloa
Jhe way they took so much lime to
make It 1the cam."

PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) The vote wu 12,642 to three but
• the NBA Finals · are n~t a
.
democracy.
They are ruled by officials who
said Danny Yoq wu a fraction
Pistons Coach Chuck Daly
of a second tate releaalng a didn't like the delay In the call
JS.foot shot that swished through either, but he liked the outcome.
··the basket and would have given
, ~'It was a tough game for the
the Blazers the 3 points they officials, aod both sides got a
needed to send Game 4- of the little upset at the end," he said.
flllals Into overllrne.
''From what I saw of the replay,
The hometown crowd ex- the shot at the buzzer wu no
Ploded, bel~ng the Blazers had good."
pulled off another last-second.
Piston center Bill Lalmbeer
save. But the offlc.lals scratched ·also liked the call. · .
their heads ·and after a confer"l don't care how wlerd a
ence, · ruled the basket dldn' t victory It ·was; but we won !land
count ;~.nd the Detroit Pistons had that Is the bottom line, " he said.
won the game 112-109.
Young said later he thought the
''The 3·polnt shot was good," sbot was good but knew It was
Clyde Drexler said later. "I was close. ,
"I'm disappointed, " he said. "I
looking at it all the time, I say it
was goOd."
just tried to get as close a~ I could
'.'One of the officials called It to the basket."
good. I was watching Danny and
The defeat was especially
also the clock,'.' Drexler said.
hitter after the Trial Blazers lost
Coach Rick Adleman c hal- thefr first home game of the
lenged the offlctali along with series Sunday. It left them lli a
every Blazer fan in Memorial do-or·dle situation Thursday
Coliseum, but the officials won night. ,
and the televised replay backed
Adleman praised the bot shoot·
th!!m up.
lng of Piston guards Islah ThoLater Adleman said, "I can't mas, Joe Dumars and Vinnie

Pomai()J'-Middl~ Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Officials deny game-winning shot

.
Page-2-The Daily Sa1tlrMII
.

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Pomerov-Mi~dhport

' .. MoORS
1

.Daily 6 AM-12 Midnight '
Sunday ~ AM-1 0 PM

:,,

MIWt OHE,.AI'HfN$. NAIA I'MrOnNICAJU iS rrAif
AI,..., Olllo
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·WadnndiiY. June 13. 1990

Pomllov-MiddhPGI't Ohio

Paga 4 lhe Daily Suti•el

.

I

•.•

e

Braves take two from Reds; Giants wm; fadres, LA· lose·

.

'

Pli..._

high Bile I'1IM wttb a hOmer, pme wlnnl•r ~treak.
San Diego 7·2.
By ~ailed Pta&amp; lllteraaalo..t
7, Ex.- t
triple, single and sacrifiCe ny
In
the
AL
It
was:
Texas
6,
The law of averages finally
At
Phlladelpbla,
Dave Hollins,
Oakland5: NewY!Irk5,Bostont; and Kevin McReynolds hit a pair
caught up with the Cincinnati
and
Tom Herr
Sll
Campusallo
Reds.
.
Baltimore 4, Mllwaukee 3; To- . ~home I'1IM to pace Nl!'!¥ York' I
homered
to
help
.
the
Phtlllel
ronto 5, Minnesota 4; Cleveland aeason·hllb 2l·bltattack. Dwllht
After posting a 33·10 record,
7, Detroit 3; Seattle 5, ChiCago 2; Gooden, 4-5, ra~ his career break a flve-llame toslnc streak.
Cincinnati baa lostelghtofltslut
record against the Cubs to 20-3, H?lltns hit a three-run home run
and California 3, Kansas City 0.
nine and five In a row Including a
aDd Campu11a110 and Herr each
scat~lng 11 bits over seven
Mets1t.Cabt 8
double-header to Atlanta Tues·
At Chicago, Dave Malladan Innings. Mike Bielecki, 3-5, took added two-run shots. Ken How·
day, 11'3 aDd 3-2.
•
ell, 8-3, woa hla fifth straight
went 4-for-4, driving In a career· the loss, eaillng
"You can't stay hot like they
. the Cubs' fourI. .
decllloil, allowing seven bits
were all season, "· Braves Man·
.
over eight !Jmlnp. HoUins'
ager Russ Nixon said. ''They
aecond·lnnlng homer off . Zane
were getting all · the breaks
Smltb, 3-4, JIVe the PbiWes a 3·1
earlier, now they're not."
lead.
Cincinnati's troubles Tuesday
Plrate. .. Carfl..a.S
started In thesecondlnnlngorthe
At St. Louts, Bobby a«&lt;nllla
opener. Starter Danny Jackson,
smacked three hill, drove In two
Arkansas athletic director
MARCO ISLAND, Fla. (UPI)
1-2, was hammered for five runs
runs and scored twice and Neal
Frank
Broyles
alto
confirmed
Including a Greg Olson grand - The Soulheulern Conference
Heaton collected bll ninth vicMonday
the
Razorback&amp;
had
has
asked
the
University
of
slam that put Atlanta up 5·3. The
tory of tbe seuon, leadtnc
Reds never were able to recover Miami and Florida State Unlver· been asked to consider switching
Pittsburgh.
HeatOn, 9-1, became
from
the
Southweslern
Conferas Tom Glavlne, 3-4, took charge slty to consider Joining the SEC,
the
second
nfne-llame,..taner
In
with his first complete game of athhletlc directors of both ence to the SEC.
the
N
atlonal
Leap€.
Heaton
South Caronna had been
schools bave confirmed.
the season.
·
worked seven lnnllip, allowing
thOU&amp;ht
to be In the group also,
The overture was not a bid to
Despite the losing streak, the
three
runs and seven hits. St.
but
said
It
had
not
been
contacted
.
Reds, who · led the Western join, but rather an Inquiry aa to
Louts starter Jose DeLeon, 5-5,
by
SEC
offlclala.
Other
schoola
whether
they
wQUld
consider
Dlvlslo.n by 10 1ames nine days
took the loss.
ago, but were.flve games In fl'Qnl . accepting. an Invitation If one believed -to be under consideration
are
Texas
and
Texas
A&amp;M
of
Altroa .. Dodcen •
·
were
exlended.
.
·
of San Dlt10 after the two losses,
At H011ston, FrankUn Stubbs
Soutliwestern
CoDterence.
·
the
Athletic
directors
·from
both
·
are not panicking.
and Glenn WUson each cracked
Jankovich said he accepted the
"We played well against the scllools, who are attending the
·
two-run bomers· to bllhllllbt a
.
Invitation
conditionally
more
Braves," Cincinnati Manager Natlolllll Asaoclatlon of ColleLou Plnlella said. "But we Just · pte Directors of Athletics Con· than a week ago. at the ~ollege five-run first lnnlnll that lifted
the Altros. Bill Gullickson, 4-4,
didn' t get the bits when we ventlon thla week, seemed cau· Football AuoclaUon convention
In
Dallas.
and
that
Miami
presl·
allowed
four runs and six hits
needed them. We'll be all right UOUI but receptive.
over
7
1·3
IM!np for the Astros,
dent
Edward
T.
Foote
II
called
"We are Interested In looking
when we put soine runs on the
SEC
commissioner
Roy
Kramer
wbo
won
their fifth strqbt
board and break out of this Into It," said Sam Jankovich,
IllS
t
week
and
agreed
io
be
1ame.
Dodrers
starter Mille
athletic dlrect!lf at MlamL
slump." .
Maddux,
0.1,
wanbelled
for five
considered.
"We have the responsibility to
"You can't get any worse
~"There
are
very
few
schools
runs
on
five
bits
In
1·3
of an
breaks ihan we've been getting," weigh all options. We're not
Inning.
that.
can
make
It
as
an
lndepend·
reliever Norm Charlton said. going to overreact or rush Into
Glula 7, P._._ I
" But we' re stlll.ln first place and anything and neither Is any ent," JankOvich said. "We can
At
San
Diego, Rick Parker and
make
It
as
an
Independent,
but
conference." he added.
we' ll be okay."
Gary
Carter
each homered to
~ou
bave
to
look
at
what
Is
down
"We're going to be reviewing
In the nightcap, Tommy
the
road
10
years
from
noW.
It
leal!
San
Francisco
to Its lOth
Greene, two days out of the our position," said Florida
victory
In
Its
last
11
games.
The
1
Joining
a
conference
)Is
a
viable
·
minors, hurled nve two-run State's Bob Goln.
option."
.
Gluts
!lave
gained
6
%
gamee
on
"Florida
State
.
Is
going
Into
three-hit Innings for a win and
Kramer
said
Ills
against
SEC
NL
West·leadlll(l
Cincinnati
In
· loser Jose RIJO, 4·2, gave up three formal review to see the advan·
the
tast
nine
days,
but
still
trail
to
dllcuss
whatschoola
the
poUcy
tages ot Joining a conference
runs on $IX hits In seven lanlngs.
versus the advantages of being conference Ia considering. He · the Reds by 1 % ll&amp;mel· Don
In other NL action, New York
an
Independent. We weren't said the procea of lcldlnl new 'Roblnaon, 2.0, scattl'red ttve bits
slaughtered Chicago lt8; Pblla·
planning for that klod of review, schools II In the prellmtnsry over .six lnnlnp. Padres atartl'r
delpllta pounded Montrul 1·2,
but we have to be In line wltb stages, and there Ia no timetable. Dennis Rasmussen, 6-3, brt*e a
Pittsburgh beat St. Louis 6-3,
The SEC presidents voted two persolial three--game wlnnlnl
what Ia happening around the
Houston nipped Loa Angeles ~.
weeks
ago to consider expansion. streak.
and San Franctaco pummeled country." he said.
.

SEC extends offer to Miami,
Florida State to join ·league

.M~lligan·'s cl«:~~h homer gives
.

GOOD USED

WA-IS, DIYDS,
IE~IGIUIOIS, TVs,
GAS &amp; EUC. URGES

.

Os

4-3 win over Brewers

Br DAVE ENGBWRtJM ·

. lJPISp_..lfr...
Altholllb bls teammatN were
pulling for Randy Mllllpn, he
wasn't about to puU uytlllng.
MIWgan .drilled a lOlb-lnnlng
home run over the feDCe In right
center field off Dan Plesac to
boost Baltimore to a 4-3 victory
over the Mllwa\lkee Brewers. tile
Orlolel' fifth win In their last six
games.
"I can hit the ball out ln. this
ballpark anywhere. as long as I
don't try to puU the ball." said
Mllllpn, who had 12 home runs
In 124 games last year.
The OriDiel first baseman has
reuoo to be coafldent. MIWgsn
has seven home I'UIIIand 16ofhls
33 RBI In his tast 12 llame&amp;.
"It looks like my rllht field
stroke Is startll!l to come
around," said Milligan. whose
last three homen were to right
field.
·'They had pitched me Inside
the previous two at·bats j both
doubles) , so I was looking for
something down and on the
outside part ol the plate.
"We're starting to 11et key
hits." he added. "Mickey tTet·
tletonl came through In the ninth·
Inning. We were down 3-0 but
never gave 11p.''
Home runs by Rob Deer and
B.J. SUrtloff j)roduced a lead the
Brewer buUpen couldn't hold.
. "Our relief pitching was poor,"
Brewers manager Tom Trebel·
hOrn said. "Piesac bad trouble
with hIs breaking ball. He was
either out of the zone or threw
pitches good to hack at. He had no
tough strikes. Both home runs
were fastballs down."
Pleaac. 0.3, gave up a gametying home run to Tettleton on a
full-count pitch with two outs In
the ninth. But be disagreed with
his manager's assessment of his
performance. He believe!! he was
a victim of bad luck.
"When· you are In a rut, It
seems . that things .i o wrong,"
Plesac said. ''The pitch to
Te\tletonwudownandaway.He
went and got lt. Both (home run)
pitches were not a by-product o1
fighting control."
·
Gregll Olson, 3.0, threw only 10
pitches to two batten but goi the
'
win.
" We didn't hold them out of
the bullpen," Trebelhom said.
"But relief pitchers llel too
much credit and two much
blame. It was a team loll. It
Isn't fair to single out the guy
who threw the last pitch."
Etaewhere In the American
League: Texas edged Oakland
6-5. Cleveland clobbered Detroit
7-3, Toronto nipped Ml-ta
H, NewYorkdOWisedBoi!DIIH,
california blanked Ka- aty
J.O, and Seattle clubbed Chicago

5·2.
WI
'· .,..... ' - At
Detroit, Cbrll J . - e81111ed a
tour-nUl tlllrd . . . . wltb. •
three-run borne run, llelplna

Cleveland to. tllelr third straight
c:ODected hll 12th save of the
win. Bud Black. 5-3. fired an
season and 200tb of bls career.
elgbt·bltter for his second com·
Allpll I. Bepla I - AI
plete pme of lbe year: Brlali Ana.belm, C•llf., Chuck Finley
DuBois, 3-4, took the loss. Sandy and Bryan Harvey combined on a
Alomar baneed three hits for the elgbt ·bit shutout, handing Kan·
Indians.
sas City . lis eighth straight
Jtupn .. Alllletlcs I - At . defeat. n~. 9-3, went eight
Oakland , Calif., Ruben Sierra
lnnlnllB, allOwing seven hits In
doubled home two runs with two · beating Bret Saberbapn, 5-5, for
a11ts In the ninth IMing, C!lpplnlla the second Ume In ·a week.
four-run rally that lifted Texas.
Harvey recorded bls seventh
TraiUng, 5:2 entering the ninth, save.
the Rangers scored four liD·
Mlll'lnen 5, Willie Sox t - At
earned runs oft Dennis Eckers- Seattle, Jay B11bner scored three
ley. 2·1. Brad Arnsberg, 1·0, runs and Randy Johnson scat·
earned the win and KeMy tered three bits over six and
Rogers gained his third save.
two-third Innings to help the
!he Ja,ra I, Twlu f - At Mariners end Chicago's four·
Minneapolis, · Fred Manrique' s game·wln•tnc streak. MlkeJaek·
three-base error allowed the son pltche!l one and two-tbln:l
'tytl'l tun to sc;ore and set 11p Tony Innings, yielding one hit, and
Fernandez's winning sacrifice Mike Schooler pitched the final
fly In the IM!Yentli IMing. J11ntor Inning for his 15th save In the
Felix had two hits and scored combined four·hltter.Scott Bradtwice for Toronto. The win ley had two RBI for Seattle.
catapulted the ·Blue Ja)'s Into
'
first ptace In the AL East. Todd
Stottlemyre, 6·6, pitched six
I·
lnnlnp for the wln. Duane Ward
gained his flftb save.
Vukees5, KedSoxf...,.AtNew
York. Steve Balboni drove home
Roberto Kelly with an eighth·
'
Inning single that snapped a tie, ·
lifting the Yankees to only their
second victory In 10 games.
Reliever Rob Murphy,
took
the loss. Lee Guetterman, 3·2,
gained the win and Dave Righetti

COUNTY
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• MABAUDEu:t"tB TRINCIAD8 - Membertr
· ,•UIIe ltiiO Melp Marauder Girls traek team that
··receatly completed the 1tiG seasoa. Pictured 11r
~t row, left t. rlpt are Amy Rouae, Mlu;y
}~:etson, Amy Wagner, Katl'lna Tamer, K;yla
· cSellen and Mary Stein. Second row,left lo right1'1Jfaay Bennett, Elizabeth Downlne, Jodi lm·.

LATEX .
CAUUC

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. . . . with ..., .....

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DOWNING .CIQI,DS
MULLEI MUSSEl

INSURANCE

s.c•
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YOUIIIIIf.IIIT

· 1981-Lallra Smith ........ ... ............................. ,...... Discus 119'6"
: :. 1980-Georgla Johnson ......................................... ..... Shot 34'2"
, .) !181-Andrea Riggs ........................ ....................... H.Jump 5'4''
l986-Jeliny Miller ............. ....... .. .............. .. ...... .... H.Jump 5'4"
• 1982-Krlstln i\nderson .. ...... ........... .. , ........ .... ....... L.Jump 16'6"
: :•.1 989-.Jennlfer Taylor ..................... .................. 100 Hurdles 16.8
. J 982-Laura Smith ............... ......... ... c.......... :. 3200 Relay 10:07.8
• . 1982- Krlstln Anderson .... .. ................::.......... 3200 Relay 10:07.8
' -1982-Krlstln Bailey ............ . :.. .......... ..... ....... 3200 Relay 10:07.8
• ··· 1982-Amy Ervin ................ .. .. ...................... 3200 Relay 10:07.8
,.,1986-Stephanle English .................................... .100 Meters 12.7
· , · 1984-Ann Trainer .................................. ... .... ......... ~ .. 1600 5: 45.5
· ~1985-Dreama Engllsh ........................ ....... .... .... . 400 Relay 50.97.
' ' 1985-Stephanle English .. :................... ............... 400 Relay 50.97
; . 1985-Tammy Cremeans .................................... 400 Relay 50.97
·1985-Charmele Turner ................................. , .... 400 Relay 50.97
, ·• 1982-Krlstln Anderson ............................. .. ........ 400 Meters 61.9
' ' 1985-Stephanle English ................................... 800 Relay 1: 49.3
, ',1985-Linda Stewart ..................... ..... .'.............. 800 Relay 1: 49.3
1985-Tam.my Cremeans ................... ..... :....... :. 800 Relay 1: 49;3
' • 1985-Charmele Turner ................................. ... 800 Relay 1: 49.3 ·
. 1981-Krlstln Anderson .. .................................. 800 Meters 2.25.3 ·
. , ,lji!I6--,Stephante English ....................... :.............. 200 Meters 26.7
' · . l~Jerinlfer Taylor ..................... ... :.............. 300 Hurdles 48.7
"' 1984-Ann Trainer ........ :............................ :.. 3200 Meters 12.04. 7
~ t982-Laura Smith ...... .......... ........... .:...... ..... .. 1600 Relay 4: 12.7
'· 1982-Amy Erwln ................ .............. .. .. , ... ...... 1600 Rebiy 4:12.7
1982-Krlstln Anderson ....... ...................... .... ... l600 Relay 4:12.7
_ - !982-Renee Wlllls ........................................... 1600 R!!lay 4:12.7

~

•....,...

REDWOOD
STAit

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$1•09
Willi FliES ........._ ... 11.74
'•

ADOLPH'S DAllY VlWY .
''At ... W ef ..........,...

PO "DY, OliO

II •• ,

H

M. ttt·!IS6

The Meigs Marauder girls and
MEDINAH. Ill. !UPI) - The
·boys track team recently fin·
wind
made Its official entrance at
!shed successful seasons.
The girls, under the direction the U.S. Open Tuesday and
of Coach Gordon Fisher, placed turned Medinah Country Club's
fourth at Federal Hocking, se· No. 3 course Into what many
players felt was an unslayable
cond In the Meigs Invitational,
dragon.
third In the TVC and fOIIJ'th In the
" It's the hardest course I've
district.
ever
seen, absolutely," said
TVC champions on tl\ls year's
Steve ~lklngton, who
Australian
team lnchided:
'has
played
golf
around the world.
Katrina Turner, Mary Cre·
"It
we
had
to
play this coucse
means, Missy Nelson, and Amy
every
week,"
said defending
.Wagner in the 1600 meter relay; ·
Open
champion
Mark
British
Ronnea Davis, .Jennifer Taylor,
Calcavecchta,
"there
wouldn't
Holly Williams and Amy Wagner
be any.body . left because they
In the 400 meter relay; Jennifer
would
have all quit the game."
Taylor In the 300 meter hurdles;
Conditions
were so difficult two
Ronnea Davis In the long Jump,
days
before
the
start of the 90th
100 meter dash and 200 meter
U.S.
Open
that
that former
dash.
champions
Fuzzy
Zoeller and
Davis was selected the TVC's
.
Hubert
Green
played
one hOle of
Most Valuable performer.
.a
practice
rotind
and
quit.
Girls advancing to the region·
"Fuzzy said he got to the
· als Included Davis In the 100
meters and long Jump; Jennifer
Taylor In tile 300 meters and 100
meter hurdles; ·Amy Wagner In
the 800 meters and 1600 meter
relay; Missy Nelson and Mary
Cremeans In the 1600 mfler
relay; Holly Williams lri thel800
meter relay and Katrina Turner
In the 800 meter dash, 800 meter
~l'~·~f VAlli V ,;INfP.IJ.
Ul
relay and the 1600 meter relay.
Jennifer Taylor set a new
school record In the 300 meter
hurdles this year with a time of
48.7, breaking the record of
,
SPRING VAll fY CINfMA
Jennifer Swartz who liad a time
446 4514
of 48.8 set In 1987.
$2.75
Coach Cliff Kennedy and the
boys finished second out of 12
teams Iii the Meigs Invlta.ttonal
and fifth out Cif ntne teams In the ·
TVC.
•
Kurtis English was the ·
TVCchamplon In the 400 meters
while English q11allfled for the
reglonals In the long Jump and
the 400 meter dash.
Kurtis jumped a school record
20' ·31!!" In the district to finish In
second place.. The jump bested
tile record of Mike Cremeans
who jumped 19'·11" In the Meigs
Invatltlonal this year. Cremeans
defeated the record of fQrmer
Marauder star Terry Whitlatch
set In 1974. P .J. Chadwell also
qualified for reglonals after
finishing fourth In the districts
with a time of 11:181n the 3200
meter run.

.

second tee and there were three Greg Norman and Seve Balleste·
"
groups stacked up,'' Calcavec· ros playing with Curtis Strange,
chta said. "It was going to take who this week will try to become
them forever to play so they the second man ever to win the
came back.
U.S. Open three straight years.
"I'm not going to try to play
J ack Nicklaus, fresh from an
today. It 's not worth 11.1 guess I'll bnpresslve victory In hls third
play a round tomorrow because senior tournament. also arrived
there Is nothing else to do. But I to beg i n·· hl s pre -O pen .. .
hale practice rounds anyway."
preparation.
.
Despite ihe blustery conditions
And even thOugh the players
with wjnds gusting between 20 found one of the ·most difficUlt
and 30 miles an hour. most ofthe · tes IS of golf they will ever face. · ·
game's blg names dld get In a the Importance of the event more
practice rourid over the 7 ,185· than outweighed the chore that
yard, par-72 Medinah course.
awaited them.
'• "
The day's
group saw

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SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 1990!
WE HAVE A NICE SELECTION OF GIFT
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r---------------iiiiiiliiiliiiil,;;..__. ,

IWAJ&lt;IJFI€MD1COOION , _ _ ,

.

TRACK RECORDS

BaloJ, Ton;y Six, S~ Pblllps, Malt Haynes,
aad Frank Blake. Foul1h row, left to l'lgbt, Shawn
Hawley, Mike Cremeant1, Aaron Sheet~, Steve
Martla, Robby Wyatt, Larry Faw, and $teve
Caruthenr. Fifth rew left to right, Paul Sharp,
Mike Vaa Meter, Stacey Shank, and Coach Cliff
Kennedy.

~Announce racing pact.------

r---'

TRINCIADS - Members of the 1MO
Marauder boJIItr&amp;ek team were, frDDt row, leftlo
rl1ht, David Buellanaa, AariiD W!Uiama, Dan
Kennedy, Derek Cremeanti, Jim Durst, Tony
M!Uer, and Tocld Smltb. Seeolid row,left tel rtrbt.
J'.J. Chadwell, Nathan Brown, and Micah Buneb.
Third row, lett to right, PbU Smtth, Cbrla Sloan,
John Hagg;y, Ry~a Lemley, Mike Hall, Nathan

• " M Do ld' R t
ts
d
Decker, General Manager of
cothe· Tyler County Speedway·
McDonald's, and Mr. Pat
,
c na s es auran an
: Wolfe Racing have announced a West 'vtrglnla Motor Speedway', Sauber, owner of the five McDo·
~~!'Dnsorshlp pact for thel990auto and Musklngum County Speed· nald's Restaurants In our area
: racing season that enables the way among others.
for their help. II was badly
• WQite Racing team to car ry the
Bryan Wolfe said "We are needed and Is greatly
:·¥aDonald' s logo on the familiar very happy to have McDonald's appreciated.' •
·
: number 5R Late Model.
as a sponsor and are working
Other sponsors .on the Wolfe
; The sponsorship program was hard to support them as they car are longtime sponsor Eber
: a . joint venture of the Gallipolis, have supported us. We feel Pickens of Eber's Gulf, Adams
• j\thens, and Nelsonville. Ohio sponsorship Is a two-way street Farms, O'Brien Produce, Max
:..!11.~ Henderson. W. Va., restau· and urge everyone to support HID, Traction VIdeos. Gheen's
rants through the effort of those who support racing. I Painting, D&amp;R Bait and Tackle,
General Manager Brian Decker. wollid like to thank Mr. Brian and Wolfe's Body Shop.
McDonald'-s has two locations In
Athens and will soon open Its
doors In Nelsonville.
This season brothers and Scott
and Bryan Wolfe will take turns
behind the wheel of the Bryan
' Wolfe owned Bulllt Chassis late
.• model, rather \han field two cars
as .In the past. The two brothers
from Racine
use Scott's
e.nglne, a 406 methanol burning
hevrolet ,whlch was recently
tebullt by Fl(l' Dave Shain.
ALl MEN'S
• 'BecauSe of the tremendous
costs · of racing, the Wolfe"s
eiplalned the logical choice to
Utld just one.car this season, but
ll,llded that the McDonald's spon·
:sorshtpwlll be a big boost to their
racing program.
; :.An Integral part of gaining the
~nsorshlp came from Ray
1HUISDA1 Y, FII.DAY I .eAIUIDA
• 't audermllt a member of the pit
•
Y
«.tw for the wolfe's, who ts also
DRESS SHOES
DEXTER
an' emptoyee ot McDonald's In
CASUALS
HUSH PUPPIES
, ti!\IUpolts. JotntngLaudermllton
WORK SHOES
CHEROKEE
ttte crew are brothers, Herb
HOUSE SUPPERS
E•udermlll, Jeff and Mitch Ba·
CHIPPEWA
ble; and Jtm O'Brien, Max Hill,
TENNIS SHOES
REDWING
uc1 Jett Newell.
.
GYM BAGS
NIKE
•"TTie wolfe Racing team will
GOLF SHOES
. REEBOK
iiarttctpate at Skyline Speedway
KEDS
In Stewart, Ohio (Joeated betw~ Coolyllle and Athens ott
Route 50), Jackson County
Speedway In Fatrplalne, WV; KC
POMEROY'S QUAUTY SHOE STORE
lr'Jomlc) Raceway In ChilD· I!J,

I·

CHICKEN ..GGETS

MRS

1',,~

1983-Shawn Eads .................................. , .... ......... . H.J11mp 6'1"
:'' l!I!IO=Kurtts English .... .................... ;;; ... .. ;........ L.Jump ·20' 3~"
."1980--Todd Snowden ...................................... .... ... Discus 143'1"
i982-Bob Ashley .................................... .... .... , .......... Shot 47'7" ·
.1987.:..Gj!rald Moore ....................................... ... Poll! Vault 12'9"
·197.6-BobWIIII{lmson ............... ...... .... .......... , ..... 100 Meters 11.0
;: 1976-Bob .Willlams .................................. ;......... 200 Meters 22.0 ·
, 1983-Shawn Eads .............................................. 400 Meters 51.3
·· •• i973-Tom Lowery .......... .. ...... .. ......... ............. 800 Meters 2:05.3
· · 1970-Aian Cunningham .. ......................... .... . 1600 Meters 4:30.4
; i969-Jim Warner ............. ............ ,..... .......... 3200 Meters 9:56.1
, ., 1982-Bob Ashley ...... ... ..... .......................... . 110 H. Hurdles 15.7
' 1986-Wess Howal'd ............. ................... 300 Meter Hurdles 42.8
• "·1986-Mike Chancey ........... .... ........ .................. ... 400 Relay 45.6
.' , .1986-Ed Kitchen ... ... .......................................... 400 Relay 45.6
'~.' 1986-Wess Howard .. ................ ..... .... .. ......... .... ... 400 Relay 45.6
.- 1986-Brad Robinson ......... ................ .................. 400 Relay 45.6
. .'" 1974-Tom Lowery ....................... ,, ......... , ....... 1600 Relay 3:35.4
l974-Terry Qualls ....................... ..... ...... ......... 1600 Relay 3:35.4
" ," 1974-Bob.Williamson ............................. .. ....... 1600 Relay .3: 35.4
' i974-Pbll Ohlinger ... .. ....... ... ........ ... ..... .,........ 1600 Relay 3:35.4
• '' l984-Mike Wlllford ...................... ..... .,.. .......... 3200 Relay 8:51.9
1984-Jon Perrin ............................... .... ... ..... ... 3200 Relay 8:51.9
·' 1984-&lt;;ralg Sinclair ..... .. ......... .............. .......... 3200 Relay 8:51.9
1984-MikeKennedy .. .. ..... ..... .. .. ................ ...... 3200Relay 8:51.9

'

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

· Boys track records

.,

~

PICKENS
HARDWARE

AGIITS SIIV-ISCOIMII

· Girls track records

·~

•

T ' ''

' I•

111

'

TRACK RECORDS

•WEED EAIEIS
•D.IEI BUCKETS
•OLD TIMER.
KNIVES
PLUS MANY
OTHEI PLEASING
Gin •us.

0-4:

bodea, ao._ Davis, JennUer Taylor, Kelly
Daldp, aad Heather Pauley. Plctlll'l!d In the third
row II Coach Gerdoa Flslu!r, Mary Cremeaas,
Deanna Ha111• Belly WID!ams, Maey Grueser,
Und;y WWian!a, aad Nwnc;y, Baker. Absent was
. MIMy Neulzlbl(.

~eigs thinclads ·. enjoy good year
·- "

Take home rich, delicious Valley Bell · the one with the great, fresh flavot And ~·home a
few more coins by dipping out the coupon.

Father's Dav
Oilt t•eas!

•

•

�Dreams;
1990
Co
F
h

'T~ay's

•
Me1D'Ji
-e~

tlfity air t em.e
,

: "Today's Dreams - Tomorrow's Realities" has been seIected at the theme for the 1990
Meigs County -Junior Fair.
Meeting recently at Meigs
High School the junior fair board
suggested that aU participating
_groups be asked to Incorporate
the theme or Its Idea Into their
llooUls, parade and float entries.
: Fund raising pr:ojects were
discussed during the meeting. It
was decided ihat shirts will be
purchased for the junior fair
board members and logos are to
b.e presented aththe · next
~eetfng.

The board dlscu!ISed changing
the number ot animals each
person can en ter bu t a vote to
make the change failed. Therefore , the reo
ul
f oneenryper
I
exhibitor will remain. Plans
were also completed for the king
and queen contest.
As for special events during
fair weelc, It wa.s announced that
a talent show will be held on
Tuesday, a parade, bike show
and car show with trophies, and
leader recognition and. gltts on
Wednesday • and the pet show on
Thursday.
.

Meigs. ·'".....::C:::on::;tl::n:.:U:;ed:.;f::.rom:::::..!:P~·~~~e:,::l:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _

EMS has· six calls Tuesday

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-MiddiMJOf't, Ohio

'?
,.

Memorial Hospital. At 12: 5o
p.m., Pomeroy Squad was called
toG1111!1erHollowRoadtorMary
Showalter, "bo wu tall:litl to St.
Joseph' I Hoapltal.
At 6: :U p.m., the Buhan Fire
De
Ra 1 ,.._ n..
partment,
c ne &amp; . . . ~
partment and squad IUid the
syracuae
·
squad were dlapat cbed
to State ROute 124 to aa IIUIOmGbile accident. Beverly Jame1
was treated by Racine EMS and
rted by Lite Fl"'"t t
transpo
. ... o
Grant Medical Center lrGm the
scene. Ml~ James wu tru·
ported by Racine EMS to Jack· ..
son General Hospital. Ttm Bar·
nett and Barry Mertltt ~re
transportiil to JackSOII General
by the Syracuse squad. ·

Meigs . County Emergency
Medical Services units answered
six calls across the county on
Tuesday ·
At 6:06 a.m.' the Pomeroy
squad was called to Ebenewr
St
f H 1
0
reel or e ena antels, who
was transported to Veterans
M
riiH p1
·
emo a os tal. At 8:31a.m.,
Racine Squad was dispatched to
Letart Falls for Elmer Pickens.
Pickens was taken to Veterans
M
1H
Th
emor1a osppta 1. e Middleport squad was called to South
Second Street at 10:47 a.m. for
Edward Templeton, who was
. taken to Vetera11s Memorial
Hospltl!l. At 11:23 a.m., Racine
, Squad was called to OQrcas
Street tor Wesley Clark. Clark
was trans~rted to Veterans

Wedn&amp;lday, June13, 1990

for studetttl CODIIdered severe . meeting at tended by boatd 1
behavior han4teapprd at the members, Denny Evans, Sue .;
IAtart El-tary Scbool for lbe GrueHr, ' Gary , Wilford, • Scott
Wolte, Supt. Bobby Ord, and Hill.
19110-ll~ebool year.
Ch11rle1 Norrll presided at the

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Stooks
makes r:.:~,-:~~:.i

Residential Treatment Center
career infortnation available now

Bryce and Hark SmMII
of Blunt, Ellla 6 Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ................................. 43~
Ashland Oil ................. ,......
. Bob Evans, ........ .'................. 13
Charming Shoppes ........ ...... 10~
. City Holding Co,, ............... .14%

: For anyone wishing to begin a
stamps, as well as some rnzdlcal and the position Is to ~e filled by
In the field of drl,li and
benefits.
.
July 1. Anyone Interesting In
· &amp;lcohol counseling, Athens ReslHe went on to point out that !lpplylng for the position should
d'entlal Treatment Program VISTA volunteer work c-" be contact Faske sometime this
(RTP)· an an opportunity applied to paying off any (orm of week at 1-800-645·8287.
available.
outstanding student loan. Benet•
The director stressed that the
: In 1989 RTP was chosen as one Its received through VISTA will position provides im excellent
of 13 recipients statewide ot
not, however, disqualify recfp- opportunity to enter a growing
§rant money from · the Ohio Ients trom any other government profession. He said that after
Oepartment of Health. . The benefits such as Social Security, going through the year's proagency iu currently looking for·a according to Faske.
gram a person would be very
person to train as a specialiSt In
The program operates out of 28 marketable for positions around
drug and alcohol education, North College Street In Athens the state.
p~ventlon and Intervention. The
person hired will work as a
announcements~--'\[ISTA (Volunteers In Service to
•
Dance ciiiiiSeS oUered
AA to meet
hmerica) vol1,mteer under RTP
A series of ballet, tap, and jazz
The PomerQy .group of AA and
supervision during his or her
dance
Clas~ for ages three ana
AI· Anon will m~t Thtirsday at 7
)'J!ar's training program. Alter
up
Is
being offered by the
p.m. at theSacredHeartCathollc
that time, according to KRTP's
Middleport'
Art Council. .
Church. For more Information
Ivan Fakse, the trainee could be
Shirley
Quickel
Is the lnstruc·
call1·800-333-5051.
certified as a prevention specialtor
and
classes
may
be scheduled
Ist and work toward certification
for
the
afternoon
or
evening.
a:; a drug and alcohOl counselor. Lodptomeet
For
further
Information
con·
:This Is the second year of thiS
The Shade ~lver Lodge will tact Shirley Quickel at 992-7756or
pllrtlcular VISTA position which
hold ItS regular meeting Thurs· Mary Wise at 992-2675 by Friday.
IS being offered for three years.
day at 8 p.m. at the Lodge Hall.
As explained by Flska, qualltlca·
lions Include only that the appUPoUuck aad fun a lib&amp;
cimt be someone with a desire to
The Star Grange No. 778 w111
w,ork In the field, someone
hold Its regular potluck supper .
assertive, and have a high school
and tun night on Saturday at 6: 30
diploma. He explained thath·
p.m. at the grange hall located on
though the state mozny would
.County Goad 1 · near Salem
probably not bli enough by Itself
Center. All members and friends
to Jive on, the trainee would . are Invited to at lend.
"most likely" be eligible .for
g~neral relief In the form of. food
c;~reer

---Meigs

36"'

Federal Mogul ....................22% . .
Goodyear. T &amp;R ...................34%
Heck's ....... ~ ..••.-:•.••••.•.••••.. .•.. 3%
Key Centurion ....................13%
Lands' End ....•.,. ....•.•••..•....•. l6%
Limited Inc ........................

48,.

Multimeclla Inc ..................... so
Rax Restaurants .. ; ............... 2\4
Robbins It Myers ......... ,...... 20%
Shoney's Inc ....................... 14"
Sta.t:' Ba.nk ..... ..• ;..................21
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
Worthington Ind ................. 24'*

*

Hospital new&amp;
Vetei"!IDS Memerlal
Admissions - Beatrice Lisle,
Syracuse; Simanla Ross, Pomeo
roy; Russell Btown, Pomerey;
He lena Daniels, Pomeroy; and
James Anderson, Raclile.
Dbcharges - Clarence Colwell, Raymond Hall, and Helen
Augustine.

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The neon golf hat is free and so is playing in
entiy form for the 'lbumament are inside the special
the 1990 Vantage Ult:raLightsNightPar-3GoH
~ci\'antaae UltraLildii:s.
·
Tournament on July 7.
So pick up'acarton ci\'antage illtra Lights. And
· Just look for the display in your participating
talreashotintbedarkatthe \1ntage UltraLightsN"tght
supennarket Yourfree hat and official rules plus the
Par-3 Golf 'Ibumament
Participating Courses:
.
·
Lake Gloria Golf and FIShing Center
Golden 'lee Golf Course
10511 PipJJinRd. • Cincinnati, OH · 2241 Sharon Rd. • ~ OH
Don't miss the KROGER SENIOR CLASSIC. pmsenltd bj Fifth Thini.Bank, July 1J.15.
5mg. "tar·, 0.4 nig. nicotine av. per cioarette by Fit: method.

·

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MDDUPOII'

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REGULAR PRICL......... 19.99
1/3 OFF SAVING$..........6.66
SALE PRICE.;;...............13.33

I

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA
...

- SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
N~ Great~ Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

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:INGELS Furniture

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
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�-Peg a 8-The Deily Sentlntll

Pornerov-Middapart Ohio

Area deaths---~----' Edward Templeton
,

Edward M. Templeton, 69,
Middleport, died Tuesday at his
residence after a brief Illness.
Born Jan. 29, 1921, In Leslie
County Kentucky he was the son
ot the late Lawton Templeton and
Bettie Ann Pennington Tern·
pleton. He was a painter·
• contractor and law enforcement
otttcer who worked as a deputy
. for the Meigs County Sherlfrs
Department al!d the Pomeroy
Pollee Department. Mr. Tern·
pleton attended the Laurel Cliff
. Freewill MethOdist Church, and
• he was a member of the Amerl·
: can Legion Ell Dennison Post In
: Rutland. He also was a member
· of the Buckeye State Sherlfrs
Association.
&lt; Mr. Templeton Is sUI"((ved by
his wife, Bett)C Johnson Tern·
pleton, one step-daughter, Mrs.
• Gary (Dorothy) Lee, Amherst;
one step-son, Roy Lee Howell,
: Comfort, W.Va.; seven step
· grandchildren, tour step great
· grandchildren: four sisters, Mrs.
Deizle Batey, Jackson; Mrs.
John ·Omalee Wolfe, PaJyrnara,
. Pa: Mrs. VIctor (Lelia) Marchi·
: onna, Reynoklsburg; IIIII Mrs.
• Sarah Conway, CollUllbus and
: several nieces and nephews.
In addition to hiS wents 1 Mr.

'

Templeton was Preceded Iii
death by one brother, Lawton
,
Templeton Jr.
Services will be Friday at 1
p.m. at the Rawllng&amp;·Coals·
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with Rev. Wlllfim Williams
, offlclatln&amp;. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne on Thursday trorn 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. ,

Anna Burnprner · ..
Anna Mae Bullllarner, 91, of

Applications for grants being accepted

.
In a report to Mayor Fred
Hottman, the Mldcileport Fire
Departmeat recently reporlled
that the department anawe~ ._
al
c Ia durlaa the month of M.Y.
lncludlna three fire and rescue
calls and 43 Emerce
Medl
Service ~alii
ncy
cal
Jett Dars~ Middleport Fl .
Chief
re
• reported tbat all depart· ·

TheOhloDepariJ!IentofTrans·
portstlon is now a&lt;:ceptlng appll·
cations tor grants under its Ohio
Po • •sJ
Pr
rt""' sllnce oaram. Funds
are i.valla ~ for planning and
capital projects which will beneflt commercial water trans·
portatlon. In the movement of
freight or passengers. Port Au·
lhorlties, COUDties and munlcl·
palities bonlerlng Lake· Erie or
theOhloRJverareellgible
Plannlna projeCt. that"q~Ufy

access to ports.
.
.
Acco;dlng to ODOT, all appli·
cations must be received by July
31.
' '

Letart, W.Va., died Wednesday
June 13, 1990 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
She was bOrn Nov. 3, 1898 In
Letart, daughter of the late
Willard and Effie (Nease)
Roush.
She was a member ot the
Graham United Metbodlst
Churcb.
mentvehlclesweredrlvenatotal
She Is SurviVed by her bUS· of
1,140.1 milei. •
band, Ottie T. Bumgarner.
~ ~~t
lnelude developing or updating a
Also surviving Is a daupter
made 11 arrests durin a\ t port masrer plan, ground access
· Mrs. Harry cvera) Pickens
g I e · studies, land use studies, or
th ot
M .
New Haven, W.Va.; tour sons
IIIQJI
. . IY ·Twelve accidents . economic feasablllty studies. .
'E dward and Thomas
, were IDVI!liUpted and the mer·
Eligible capitai proJects Ingarner, bOth ot Letart, W.Va. ·m.
chantP.arklng
pollee COllection
totalled
meter collections
elude ·rehabilitation of dock or
Paul Bumgarner of New Haven: for May were $~ :so llld' W
carao handling tacllltpes, prp.
W.Va. and Gerald B111n11r11er of
J)ll'ldaa tickets w~ written by
jects which .Improve the lnfras·
Pearcy, Ark.; one sllrer, Mrs. tbe department accord!
t
tructure of a port faclllty and
Minnie King of New Haven,
Middleport PoHce Chle;" Sl~ maintain or Increase commOdity
and 19 Little
W.Va.; 12
movemeat capabilities, or pro.
Jecta to advance raul or blghway

of

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m, REG. FIT, FUll FIT ••••J1679

WRANGLER.·.....................................$) 759 .
LEVI••••·•••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••• ·SJ
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CARHARn.............................·~......~•••••SJ43'
BELTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~ •••••~~ 2oo/o OfF
KN!VES~...........- ....................... 20°/o OFF

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AFtER SHAVE

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WITH THE PURCHASE ,OF

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The Daily Sentinel
·Is Introducing A.New
Service Starting
Monday, June 18, 1990.

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••IIIII!!!!!!~-.,

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1990

"The Bulletin Bo11d''

$4992~1

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• WCihll AI I ltd
with repla ge(Jbte

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DISPLAY

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112 SlO.OO PEl DIY
113 -S15.00 PEl PlY
THE BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE IS
4:30P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

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THURSDAY
· ·-FRIDAY.
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SATURDAY
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JUNE 14th,.15th, 16th

TflaOL CHR.CAP8

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u.:;.664s.I.OGAN, OHIO 385·2434
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BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
FOR SALE
1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

HAMILY YARD SALE

FRESH PEACHES,
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
WATERMELONS

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

1982 ENGLAND

. THANK YOU
For All the Flowers, Cards
and Gifts I Received While
1·Was Ill.
SARAH

000-0000 '

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8 oz.

992-6491

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BULLEJI

RAIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGALE LANE

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

HAWAIIAN

DEXAT.RDI

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with. [!,!-/.!

Get MORE for your Trade-In
We're Dealing
So Bring Yo1,1r Title

.

FAN

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BANK MANAGERS .O N DUTY

,,

and Sandy Hysell.
The group conducted. Mothers
Day olympiC gaines recently at
Stat Mill Park In Racine In whichmembers competed In variouS:
events. Winners were Brenda
Faulli:, Diane Herdman, Nancy
Manley, Mary Tomblin. Krist!
Warner and Shirley Wolte.
Following the games, a poem,• ·
"Mothers" was read by Lennie:
Aleshire, leader.
Other prizes were awarded to
Brenda Faulk, youngest mother;
Charlotte Smith, oldest mother;
Diane Herdman, mother with
most children; and a special
award was given to Suzie Drehel,
secretary.
Diet retreshrnents were served
and roses were presented to the
leader and co-leader.

RECUNEI

PEPSI

SUNGLASSES

.4 46-7112

· GaUipolll, Oblo

Venoy birth

OFF

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next

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eenw, .

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Janet Conroy lost the mC&amp;t
weight and Mary Tomblin was
runner up at the recent meeting
of Ohio TOPS 570 held at the
Lucille Allen had the Pl'OIP'Bm Carpenters Hallin Pomeroy.
and she and others •urprlled
·The meeting opened with
Marge Purtell on hel' birthday prayer and pledge by Peggt
with games, poems, cards and VIning, us'-tant leader, who
gift~ boatels served retrelh· collducted the meeting In the
· absence o! the leader.
ments of birthday cake and
Diane Herdman won the fruit
puncbtoGraceWarner,Suzanne b k
d
Warner, Ida Murphy, Lucuie
as et an Trlna Faulk won 1hz
surpriSe gift.
Allen, Carrie Wean, Evelyn
It was noted that the Cheshire
Thoma; !Catbryn Johnson, Peggy cliapter ot TOPS has challenged
Bale, Marll'e Purtell, Hazel Stan·
the Melp chapter to summer
ley and Mabel Oliver.
1
·
The
meeting will be July 5 o ymplcs games In July , .
·Janice Conroy won tfte the quiz
. with Evelyn Thoma as hostess.
conducted by Peggt Vinbrg.
At another meeting of the
group the best losers were Trlna
Faulk and Ola Sinclair and the
Mark and Melinda Venoy are runners up were Phylll Drehet
annoUIICintr the birth of a daugh·
lei', Alexa Breanne, on May 4,
1990 at Holzer Medical Center.
VAUGHAti.USSIT
• The Infant wel&amp;hed seven pounds
and 11 ounces and was ~ Inches
long.
The coup.le have another
daugh~r, Brooke Suzarine, 3..
tO'Ito ow ••
Maternal grandparents are
, ........ $f79
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Demosky
of. Middleport and maternal
. areat·&amp;randparent Is Lillian
Demoskey of Middleport.
FUINI1UIE
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
lt. 1.1, s .... eff lt. 7 .. .
and Mrs. Robert Venoy of Pomec••, ••• , - 61 ........., •
roy. Paternal great-grandparent
Is Myrtle Grover of Pomeroy .

30°/o·o,

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Canaata.

TIMEX
WATCHES

Mal'S

.
*llaurSiillf&amp;I•K 1' C..
....... dPli • 11111111

......... .

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The voted 10 send $50. 10
Grundy Mountalh Mission tor
scboolaupplles.

VIlA

BILLFOI.PS
. ly Amity ....

·.' · Heme-Like Atllospbere
A

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li'D''tH BEAR - Mike .Johaen of Pomeroy Ia pictured wltb 1111
flftll bear, which he took wllh a bow and arrow from Onlarlo,

Debbie Kay Fife, Middleport,
graduated Friday from t11t Ohio
Scbool for the Deaf located In
Columbus.
State Superintendent of PubliC
llistructlon Franklin B. Walter
was the featured speaker.

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··cw ·' 40~ /o
'IIIUISDAY, F. .AY, SAIUIDAY

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Fife graduates

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lEE TRN

Pleading not gull ty Tuesday
night were Lance T. Herman,
Middleport. on c barges of OWl
and no operator's license and
Sonia Clonch, Middleport, for a
charge of unauthorized · uae of
motor vehicle. Both cases have
been transferred to Meigs
CoUDty Cou~t.

MiddlepOrt fire,

. police reports

Circle of Helping Hands'of Zion
Ghurch Qf Chrllt met receatly at
the home of Virginia Wyatt.
Lucille Allen, president, called
the meeting to order and all
respollded with a Bible verse
usln&amp; tbe word ''needlework,
embroidery and sewing'·
Ida Murpby had devotions
using an article called Someth
Old".
-oo
For the Fourth of July holiday,
the aroup will provide a water·
melon for the County I!Jflrmary.
They will also provide dessert.for
the evening meal at the church
. camp on July 31.

container, Teresa A. Moore,
Langsville, court costs and confiscation of license plates, no
Insurance, and $10 and costs,
failure to control.

aev:

TOPS meeting held recently

·Helping Hartds meet

Middleport mayor's court _ _ _ _ _.;__,;,:_,:;;,;

Seven defeadants appeared In , Appearing In court were DerrY
Funeral lel'Vtces will be con·
thecourtotMayorFredHoffman
Dale Bryan. Ch!Shtre. who was
dueled 1: 30 p.m. Friday at
Tuesday
evening,
while
two
fined
$425 and COStll and sent·
FoglesOIJ&amp; Funeral Home Pt
othen
forfeited
oolld.
·
enced
to three days in jail for a
Pleaaant, W.VL, with
~
Forfeltln&amp; bOnds were John A. charae of DWl; Michael Fisher
Young offtetatlng. Burial will be
BrownofPomeroylntheamount
ot Povlce, Neb., $425 and costs,
In the Union Cemetery, Letart.
Frlenda may call the funeral of $60 lor DWI aDd $60 for left of DWI; Brad D. Smith, Ports·
borne TbW'Iday from j; to 9 p.m . . cenll!l'andTimolhYR.Robertso! mouth, $10 and costs, running a
Silver Rock, Pa. In the amo11nt of rtd llabt, Terrence L. Johnson,
1411 for nmnlng a ~tQp sign.
Middleport, $25 and costs, open

The Daily Sentinel Paga . 9 •

Ohio

Wednllday, June 13, 1990

MOBILE HOME

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

000·0000

NO MAnER WHAT THE REASON MlY BE•••
"YARQ SALE", •'AUTO FOR SALE", '"PUBLIC
NonCE", "MEmNGS" oR "JUST TO SAY
SOMOHING SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
'SENnNEL luu.Enl
IOAID.
.
STOP IN TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADYERnSEMENT
PLACED IN THE IULLmN IOAID•

�'

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Wed.-tntlay, June 13. 1990

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

I.

Long Bottom news notes

Sharon Gilbert and Bernice
Deem of Vienna visited Ruby
:Brewer and Janie Fitch and
families.
Birthdays were celebrated by
-Mary Andrew on May 25, Mildred
Hauber on May 29 and Betty
Young on May 30.
Garnet Hensley, Mae McPeek,
Mary . Andrew · and Ada Bissell
traweled with the Se11lor Citizens
at Pomeroy to Sugar Creek to
visit the Amish Country, where
they toured a cheese factory, ·a
winery, several gift shops and a
wood crafting shop, They ate at

the Dler Dutchman Restaurant,
Mr, and Mrs. Mark (Marilyn
Bissell) Miller of Wes lervllle,
Mike and Terry Shlpkowskl of
Powell, Mr. . and Mrs. Terry
Huber, Tara and Terry, Galloway , recently enjoyed a camping
trip at Forked Run State Park.
.Mr. and Mrs. Hwrold Miller
spent the weekend at their
summer home In Long Bottom.
Otis Frederick of Westerville
Spent the weekend With Mr. and
Mrs.' Harlan Ballard.
Mrs. Wilma Wamsley of Cheshire and Whitney Larkins · of

I

Racine reunion held.

~~.June13.1990

Pomeroy-Middlapoft. Ohio

The Rac!De Wah School class
of 1955 held Ita flnt reuakln with a
potluck dillllel' recently,. RecalUna events of school daya and
graduation wu a larae table of
memorabtlla. Claa members
alao visited their old'cluaroomJ.
Members attendlna .froin
Metaa Co1111ty wwre Pbyllts
Adams O'Brien, veraal . and
Betty Bryaon Blackwood, Grace
Cline Hol.slnaer, James and
Wilma Cozart Smith, MII!'Karet
Chapman West, Gerald and
Shirley GllU.11. Slm~n. Paul
and Marilyn Harris, Deloria
Kraeuter Wolfe, Ulllan Powell

RSVP Y~steryear essay·· winners named

Libby King, da.ughter of Tim
and Edle Kl11g, Bradbury, Is the
Ga!Upolls recently spent several
days with Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Meigs County winner of the
Yesteryear contest.
Larkins.
·
Filth grade students who parThe Long Bottom Senior Cltl·
Uclpated
In the Meigs County
zens recently travelled to Ma·
Retlred Senior Volunteer Yesterietta and toured the Rossi Pasta
ryear Program held at the
House before having dinner at
museum submitted essays about
Bonanza. Attending were Mae
their projects and experiences.
McPeek, Ada Bissell, Mr. and
First and second place essa¥
1\:frs. John Brewer, Dora Crispin,
Diane Jones, Judy Holter, Edith . winners were selected from each
of 12 · twelve schools which
Rieser, Mary Andrew, Garnet
participated. Pi ~eception will be
Hensley, Mr. !Pld Mrs, Foster
hzld for the winning contestants
Niday, Gladys Dillon, Flogence
and their parents In the tall. .
Wyers, and Mary Frances
Winners. from Bradbury InBumgardner.
elude Libby King, first; and

Nakuma Tyree, second.
Jenny Ervine, second.
From Portland the winners are
Winners from Racine were Joe
Josh Roush , first; Hillary Har- Kirby, first; and Debbie Ash,
ris, second .
second.
Chester winners were MereSalisbury wlnr~ers were Tim
dlth Crow, first; and .Marla
Peavley,flrst; andBetsyHoudaFrecker, second
shelt, second.
At Harrisonville the winners
Tuppers Plains winners inwere Timothy Stearns, first; and
eluded Sean Maxey, first; and
Megan Swearingen, second.
BIUy Francis, second. .
From Syracuse the winners
W,lnnlng from Rutlapd were
were Travis Lisle, first; and,l:J~if!~m. Wl~ller, first; and Jamie
Wlles,,second.
·
Williamson, second.
At Riverview, the wlpners
,Winning fr\)11\ Rejolclrig IJfe
were Angle Bissell, first; and
Christian School were David
Rebecca Richards, second.
HeigHton, first; and David .VaThe winners.from Salem Cen· nlnwagen. second .
ter were Timmy Lewis, first; and

The Wahama Hlgb School Walden Thompson, Norma SteClua of 1955aatbered recently at wart, Crockett Perry, Lewis
the borne of Wayne and Janice Blessing and Kenneth Coleman.
Nicholson Bergdoll, Gallipolis, A poem, "Time" was shared by
for a famlly picnic.
Marjorie Clarke Walburn.
A '55 yearbook trivia compiled
Red and white balloons and a
class of '55 WelcoJ:De poster by Naomi Cobb Hauser was
greeted the.guesls.
conducted with prizes gQing to
A picnic potluck as held f;o!l'l a . Opal · Ke)ly Bostic and Caral
table centered wltha watermelon Roush Proffitt ·
fruit bowl created by Carol
A short business meeting 'was ·
Rol,lsh Proffttt.
held and the group donated
Mary ·Roush and Wanda money to delray ,reunion exRoush, sisters of Mrs. Bergdoll, · penses. It was decided to have a
· and Nick Nicholson, brother, picnic on Saturday at 1 p.m. at
uslated with the picnic.
the home of Wayne and Janice
Chaplain Bernard Llevl11g, NicholSon Bergdoll. It also was
U.S. Armygavedlnnergraceand decided to send ·each class
later In the day a "Remem- JTiember an updated roster of
brance Memorial" was con- addresses of class members.
Attending were Luther and
dueled for deceased members
Shirley Qllver Tucker, Mason,
W.Va.; CartqllKnlght,Hartford,
W.Va.; Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Hauser (Nao.ml Cobb), Charles.·. ton, w.v:a.; Herbert and Patricia
The1955clasaofWahamaHigh' . Roush Noel, Pomeroy; Earl
School gathered at the alumni · Robinson and friend, Jean Somebanquet held af the Moose Hallin
rville, Gallipolis; VJrill Weaver,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
New Haven, W.Va.; .John and
The group gathered at 5 p.m.
CheChe Marks, Morella; Opal
for· a social bour. Members and
Kelly BosUc and· son, Mile!,
guest were greeted by Marjorie
Dunbar, W.Va.; James and
Clarke . Walburn, coordinator,
Carol Roush Proffitt and grand·
and Ad\1 Boat!!!J Hart.
son, Heath, Mason, W.Va.; Susie
Durtl1g the busmess meeting a
Cartwright Hall, Pomeroy' and
mother, Dorothy Cartwright,
letter was read (rom Lola Roush
MIUer, elass of 19511 president.
and aunt Edith Ingles, Mason,
Attendiii,IJ were·Bernard LlevW.!/a.; D.a le and Marjorie
lng, chaplain, and wlfe;Dorothy,
Clarke Walburn, arid the hosts.
Fort Braag. N.c., Opal l&lt;elly
Bostic, Dunbar, W.Va.; Herbert
and Patrtcill Roush Noel, Pomeroy; Jack and Shirley Roush,
Ru tha ·Glen, Va.; Jack and Mary
Ann Wlnebrenlll!r, Sunbury; Dr.
and Mrs; Charles (N~ml Cobb)
Hauser, Charlesto11, W.Va.: Cha' rles and O.J. Bond, Spicewood,
Texas: Don.and Janice Flowers
Sima, ·SI. AJbans, W.Va.; Gary
and Qqe Mll!Pr, New Haven.
W.Va.; Charles and Geraldine
Maetox Roush. New Have11 1
W.Va.; Earl Robinson and Jean
Somerville, Gwlllpolls; Daleand
Marjorie Clarke Walburn, Mid.
dleport: Luth11r and Shirley ,
Oliver Tucker, Mason, W.Va.;
Wayne and Janice Nicholson
Bergdoll, · Gallipolis; Susie
Gartwrlght Hall, Pomeroy; and
James and Carol Roush Proffit ,
Mason, W.Va.

• •

.W ahama 195
·. 5 ,
grads gather

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Chicken Breasts
Quarters
'

Pound

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet Pepsi or
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.

12·PAK t2.0Z. CANS ... t3.49
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE·-GET ONE FREE ITEM

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE··G.ET ONE FREE ITEM

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

BUY ONE

Cubed
Steak

•

13-0Z. PKG .

Suzanna's
Corn Dogs
GET ONE

Plllind

•

•
•

•

•. THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM

..
•
•

...

Bailey, Oorotha Riebel, Diana,
Michelle, and ldiranda Bucl!ley ,.
Sandra Massar, Jutla Wtll, Marilyn Coulson, Vtv! an Humphrey,
Nina Sanders·, Juanita Spencer,
Jean Sexton, Clara and Sue
Ughtfoot, Patty and Paula Ufe,
Delores Holter, Marcella WiU.
Jan Woolard, Maxine Tucker,
Leota Roush, Louise Morton,
Robbin Alton, · Jean Thomas,
Margaret and Missy Mcl:Jtresh,
Coke Ambrose, Charlotte Hannmg, Betty Toney, Mary Myers,
Lori LollkS, 5\lsle Karr •. and
Juan!!;! Will
·

Class -picnic held

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

BUY ONE
8-0Z. "100 CALORIES"
Light n' Lively
Yogurt
GET ONE

BUY ONE
12-0Z. PI&lt;G.
Hormel
Little Sizzlers
GET ONE

18-Ct

I,IMIT OlE IUT. CARTM wmt CCJIIIOI t
PUIICHAIE
PERFAMILY •

.....-

BUY ONE
1-LB. PKG .
Kahn's
Meat ·Wieners
GET ONE

'

sP.."~ BUY ONE
$l·~

FROZEN 8-INCH 26·0Z.

Mountain Top
Crumb Apple Pie
GET ONE

FACII AIIOtJT DJWG8- Du Olllam, ~eeead fnm rflld,
pa ••W a PIOII'AJII • llae preblelil ol draap Ia the Melp Loeal
Sclaool Dlltrld. Pld..._ frem Middleport ElemeaatarJ are
Nllialle Graaadal, loalalaBa--, Marlene Moodtapaugh and Chad

•..._

Drug program presented
Dan Gilliam performed for the
Meigs LOcal School Dlatrtct at
Middleport, Salem Center, Harrisonville, and Rutland. ·
Stuclents'wwre presented wltb
facts about the probiellln uatna
drugs and were eacouraaed to
find another way 10 have lun and
enjoy their life. GIIUam preaented a program called. "PreY-

Twelve members of the Chester Garden Club and one guest,
Carolyn Barton. toured the Ohio
River Herb Farm at the home of
Connie Hill.
Mrs. Hill had guided tours of
her gardens and Illy pond. The
group also vlsltled the green
house and shop.
Alter the tour, the group drove
to the Ravenswood Pizza Hut
where they joined friends for
refreshments.

BUY ONE
FROZEN 14-0Z.
Rich's Glazed
Doughnuts
GET ONE

entlon Rock" which · wali a
musical production paid for a by
a clrua-free grant in Meigs Local.
'Earlier In the year, Gilliam
visited Salisbury, Melp High,
Melga Junior High, and
Bradbury .
AI Pomeroy, Btu Gang presented a program on self esteem.

Star Grange m
· eets

John· Colwell was prelellted a
51J.,year golden sheaf cerdkicate
at the recent meeting of Star
Granae 7'{8.
Thla cettlflcate Ia tor 50 yeara
of continuous membershtp tn the
grange.
Also presented a certificate
wu Unda Montaomery, 25-year
silver star certificate. Ray and
Bernice Mldldff were presented
25-year silver slarcerUflcate for
thelrson,Danny,whowuunable
to .attend as wu Dorothy Bolin
forson,Kenneth,whowasunable
to attend.
Ins~lon . W,as anJIOI!nced for
July 7, 1990 at 8 p.m. and three
candidates· were taken Into
membership.
·
Catherine Colwell, women's
activities cbalrman, reporl!ed
that July 7 will be the Judatnafor
the national needlework, stuffed
toy, pbotography, banJ!er, pol·
ter, and Ill other contests not
already JUdged. Her safety Up
wu on swtnntng safety. ·
It waa announced that Patty
Dyer received first place at state
for yer youth bald11g entry.
Plans were made to vtslt Rock
. Sprinas Grange on Thunday at 7
p.m.

Friendly·Circle
The Friendly Circle of the
Trinity Church will serve the
canteen at the Red Cross Blood·
mobile on June 20 .

TURKEY BREAST••••••••••••••t!. S3.59
. . IIQI
SIIIEDDED ll. l2,19
.
BOILED HAM.·••••••••••••~-~.1!. S1.99

.......

MEAT SALAD••••••••••••••••••!!..... 89.(

•

GasPY SIIVE

20°/o OFF ALL

•••.••••••.••.•••.••.••••••~•. S1.39

MEN'S SHOES

eu GEAI,.

•.U P..PIES

•C...,..
•FLOISHIIM

HEAD

LETTUa ................:.~R·.. 59C

•COIVBSE
•BOSSINI

11 CT.

CANT AI.OUPE _.JA'i~. s1.09

0

Sl 00 Off ALL
RED WING SHOES

SPANISH
ONIONS ..................~9... 39&lt;

TV
DINNERS ••••••••••••Ef.~~•••••• S1.69
TASII-O..SU .
OCEAN PERCH •••••••••l~.~!•.... S3.29
11111111GRAPEFRIIT JUICE ••••••~.~~t S1. 99

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
...

210 USl MAIN

992-6254

_.....,.

. • 1101111

GRAPEFRUIT ·JUICE ••••••~~.~~. s1. S9
•IOGG'S
CORN POPS •••••••••••••••••1•5.~l. S3.19

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

•'

..

lilY tiiWET GIE fll&amp;l

..
•

•
•

•

MCCORMICK TACO SEASONING MIX

•

flEE I

MCCORMICK BAC·N·CHFS, BAC-N·BITS OR SALAD
TOPPINGS 3.2&amp;--3.75-0Z. 1fT 1WO Gf
V.W Fill 'Ill 1'111:1 Gf-

--------·
--····-~;

•

BlJY ONE
PACKAGE
No Nonsense
Pantyhose
GET ONE

BUY ONE
Oral B Travel
Toothbrush
GET .ONE
Toothbrush

_..,

I
I
I
I
II

r.-:.•.::~
••~~.:..:::··.......
-...."'"!'!'!!!:..
...-K.'I--.....
----·•·c•·==·~""·,.. --.,.. ......

I

GIT Fflll CJI , . PRODUCTS

...........................
.....,.
.................... _
,....,_ • .....,.,_... IIIIIIIIIAIU.P.C.

. ., ... II.ADO . . _,..-:::-•

.

~-~--~--~.--BBc-.,...---........ _

FREE! FREE!
FREE! FREE!
1'1111.25--1.&amp;-0Z. IUY t11WET -

•

BUB-OZ. CTNR.
ONE
Onion Patch
Dip
GET ONE

-1101111

PEACHES ••••••••••••••••••••••~~~~!•.... 98&lt;
STOIILY

COUNTRY OVEN ICE CREAM CUPS 12-CT.

BUY
ONE
4-LB. BAG FIELD TRAIL
Puppy Power
Dog Food
GET ONE

It was announed that the
annual Inspection will be held
July 7 at 8 p.m. at the recent
meeUng Star Junior Grange.
Chip Macomber, master, pre-.
sided at the meet111g · ln which
members decided to participate
In the Rutland Fourth of July
Parade and to bave a roller
skating party Ol) June 30.
It also wu · annouaiced that
Beyan Colwell placed second In
the state baking contestln his age
category.
After the meeting, the
members made stuffed toys for
the national stuffed toy contest
and enjoyed a potluck dinner and
social hour with Star Grange.

''

.Qiiil

I

--

:.....:...-~

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

-

IN SPECIAL MARKED 2,PAK

---~---

- -....··-

....

-·..... J

•

A dinner party was held
recently at the Asbury United
Methodist Church In himog of
Rev. Steve Nelson and family. ·
Attending were Dennis Moore';
Cathy Moore, Ainy Moore, An'
drea Moore, Amy· Mills , Kenny
Wiggins, DOris Grueser, Mary K. ·
Roush, Hilda Yeauger, Alfred
Yeauger, Helen Teaford, VIrgil
Teaford, Martha Moore, Mary
Cundiff, Irene Parker, VIcki
Morrow, Mark Morrow, Matt
Morrow, Bill Winebrenner, Dorothy WlnebreQner, Bill Cralle,
Peggy Cra.ne, Billy and Ben
Crane, Harriette. Sinclair, Beu· ·
lah Ward, Donia Crane, Lindsey
Crawford, Shauna Crawford,
Betty Ash, Richard Ash, Demaris Crawford, Randy Crawford,
Addle Norris. and Carroll Norris.

Grange meets

OFFERS GOOD FOR

FREE·!
FREE! FREE!
FREE!

•

Church dinner party,

Star Junior

~ay Mldklft gave the leglsla·
tlve report.
. ·
·
·"Eating, America's Favorite
Pasttlme" was the theme for ihe
literary pro~~~;am conducted by
lecturer Katherine Rtley. ReadIng Included ''Introduction and
History of Eattng lc Early·
America" by Katbern Riley;
"Bad .Times for the Bul'lfer," by
Larry Montaomery; "Hot Dogs"
by Kevin Napier; "Crispy Potato
Chips" by Wald Nicholson; "Soft
Drinks" by Opal Dyer; •'Twlst~rs Weren't Always. Dancers"
by JoAnne Conkle: ''I'he Legend·
ary Hole" by Christine Napier;
'!Graham Crackers" by Catbetlne Colwell; "A Substitute for
Rubber" by Patty Dyer; "Day
Llllles" by Pauline Rife; and
"Farm Kitchen" by Viratnla
Carson.
The meeting was attended by
36 members, visitors, al)d junior
members.

•

Vlrglilla tee, Ethel Orr, Esther:
Smith, Everett Grant, BettY:
Roush, Elizabeth Hayes, Doris·
Grueser, Beulah Maxey, Erma
Cleland, Faye Kirkhart, Lora
Damewood, Opal Hollon, Thelma
White, Charlotte Grant, Sandra
White, Kathryn Bauni, Betty
Young, Mazy K. Holter, Doris
Koenig, Alta Ballard, and Ada
·
Bissell.

KIIIOI

Club tours farm

FREE! FREE! FREE!
®
BUY .ONE
.,_oz. PKG.
Keebler ~~ vE
Pretzels ·'s
'GET ONE

A district meetlna and pr,actlce
for preaeniiJII colora at state
-.ton In AUJUit on Saturday at
1 p.m. at the Syracuse Grade
School was announced at the
recent meeting of the Chester
Council 323 Dauahters of
America.
Beulab Maxey, councilor, prelllded at the meeting with 22
members present. ·
It was noted that Marcia Keller
and Ruth Stetb81'11 were home
from the ~pltal and that Ada
Morris Is sick. Also 11oted was the
birth of .Ethel. Orr's great
granddaughter. .
·
Color bearers escorted Everett
Grant to the altar, with Emia
Cleland, chalnnan of the Good of
Order Committee, reading ·a
poem, "What Is a Father?" In
observance of Father's Day. He
wu presented a gift.
The next lodge meeting will be
Tuesday and the charter will be
draped In memory of Henrietta
Boothe. Memb!!rs are to wear
white. Quarterly birthdays will
be observed and there will be
potluck refreshments. Thoae on
the ·kitchen committee are Eva
Robson; IVa · Powell, and Dcta
Ward.
Kathryn Baum was pianist for
the meeting. After meeting Mrs.
Cleland had.all members to sit In
a clr.cle and she passed out
comical poems for each member
to read.
AttendiM were Mae McPeek.

'

A layette shower wi,S beld
recently at Mount· Herman United 'Brethren Church for Pam ,
Reibel Buckley. The shower wu
hosted by Diana Buckley, Julia
Wtll, and Jocelyn Bailey.
The fellowship ball was dear
rated with pastel colored streamers and balloo,ns. Cake, nuts,
mints, and puncb were served
after games were pl8yed with
prizes golna to Sue Uptfoot and
J11n Wool&amp;rd. The doat jlr~ was
woll by Sandra Massar.
Attending were Darlene Bailey, Glenna Riebel, Henrlet Ia

•

.. '

Weese, Dennis and Gertrude
Rowe Manuel and Harold and
Rebecca Shockey Circle.
. Out or County guestJ were Joe .
S. and Kathlyn Cozart of Ptclt•
rtngton, Evely11 Cummlna Stewart of Muon, W.Va., tom and
Phyllis Ebersbach of Orcbard
Lake, Mich.. Betty Epperly
Miller and Robert Taylor or
Galtlpoill, Paul and JUDe Harris
Waaner, Green Hill, Oblo, Barbara Sayre Wlllll, Albany, Bar·
bara W~d Miller, Oranae, Fla.,
and Morris and Carol Wolfe of
Bidwell.

Layette .shower held

..

•
•

D of A meeting held

•

151/4 oz.
59&lt;
CORN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CAIIIA11011
COFFEE-MATE •••••••••••••}.~.~~. S3.19
UDR&amp;-SI
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••~~~·~. S4.S9
KLEENEX nSSUE ••••••••••~~!.~~ S1.29
CHOPPED HAM ............~~-~l. S2 .19

••••

We Htwe 81lk O•r••• S•••
,,

�Page

Barbeque planned

STORE HOURS
Monday~fhqr Sunday .

.
...

all c_.l t.ner1 il double pri.,_ of •d ca11.

•
•
•

..
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•..
.'
'

.:~

...:

-

U.S.D~A.

$

CHOICE BEEF

Steaks or COU~TRY ~TYLE

. ll

Pork R1bs .............
.
.
.

FLAVORITE

.

.

49

FRIDAY
BASHAN - The Basban Ladles Auxiliary Is aponaorlq an
Ice cream ~oetalat the flreboule
In Baa han on Friday lJelllmlnlat
5 p.m. Tell flavors will be
available a10111 wttb SBIIdwlcllla,
pie 8lld driDIII. Tllere also wUl be
Uw entertainment.

'A

.;

,'·""'

~

••

'.,••.,
•
'

oM6-Qellipolis

3417-Ch•hW•

181-Vknon

241-"'o Gr~"••
216-Guwan Oiot

. .3-AMbi• D•n

371-WIInat

171- ttt.' Pt. . .nt

112-Middlooon

••

FLAVORITE ASSORTED . .

$

Sl 29
. ,.
.'

...
'

)

.-

•.

'.

..
...
.

,· ·.

LEnUCE •••••••••••~2 f$1
FLAVORITE
PLAsnc
$1 69
2'1o-. Milk ••••••••••••••

'

BANQUET

-vs-

~crlbed

71 - Autot forfl-',
72-:Trucks lor Se,le

74- Moocwcvci•

31 - Hom• for Sale
32-Mobile Wom• for Site
33- lil""l tor Ill•

I IS- Lou a. Acre.,•

7&amp;-lo••• &amp; Motors tor Sele
71-Auto Pant. Ac. . eoriel
77- Auto Aep8ir

NEWLAND
'
. ENTERPRISES

71 - C.mptng Equipm.nt

78 - Cemp•• • Mator Ham•

Saltines .~••••••••~a:.~o:•• ·79C TV Dinner ••••••. !~ !. :~. 99&lt;
LU~KY LEAF CIDER or WHm .. $
KEMP PAIL
Y1negar ..........~:::•• 199 Ice Cream ••••tt•••••••
~ SQUAITPAI$299
.

·.

8ou1h laoond
Mid·
~ ...... Ohio 467eo.
laid premllll appraloed
at et.ooo.oo and cannot 111
oold for leoa lhMI two-thirda
of that amount.
.
~"J-• Souloby. Sheriff,
•
Melgo County, Ohio
L!ftNER. SAM PION •
ROTHFUSS. Attorneyo
q!lll\ D. DelilaII.
AIIOrnly at Llw

l'n,?'; 181

Public NOIIce
ing on HIH Top Street or the.
Old Rutland Rotoel Un·
coin Hil, -ncllng In depth
toward Hlsh Str- within
one Hundrld (1001 Net of
uld High Str- and both
loto having a frontage o' One
Hundred (100) feet on Hill
Top Street.

POMEROY,O.
..".2-2259 .
RACINE - This house
needs some work to make~
home but the beautiful
lot in town would be

llt."""'"rdforyoureffort14
berll·oo..ls. older

I~

storv

POMEROY -

$119
.... .., .......... ,.

....S..,.IIatllln11L..IIatl6

~

:%a"
I

2~9

..

. . . . ..., . . . . . . . . . . , . '

.... S.., ,_1111n r., ,_16 ..

~IW9·7

Sat.

Busines
Services
VIC'S
BODY SHOP
992-6603

FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO

LMGSVlLLE - 6 3S Acre
Counlry Estate - Barn.
shells. two p011ds. anila nicP
II-~ story hOillP in ROod repair. Electric hP.At phi~ a

SHill &amp; TIEE

MIDDlEPORT-

Picture your

famitf il ttis beilltitll home.
2 story. 3 bedroom. carp&amp;. al

1/1/t mo.

liiMGnd

REMOVAL
·uGHT HAiJLING

t92-7479

lt. u lhrth ef
P1M1ray, Ohia
1·12-' ... tln

SAUS AND SIIVKE

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

OPENMON.-SAT.IOtoS

Appointment

niAWFlOWEIS: Dw.-f
&amp; Tall; P_.AS GlASS:
PW! &amp; White; FUSCHIA,
usms. HEns anti
MORE.

949-2794
30 Susions-130
Co. Rd. 21

614-742-2772

IACIIU, OliO

SPEeiAL

Watch F• Slpt

I"

I. L
TRUCKING

581 S. Fourth Awe.

...... art, OW.

•GRAVEL.
•L.IMESTONE
•FILL DIRT.• . .
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

RESIDENTIAL 1nd
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou- • Mobile Hom~~
- Tranoi'O't Vtlllcl• •
Farm Equipment .
Heavy Equipment. Etc.
FREE EStiMATES
24 HR. SERVICE

6

•-&amp; ...dfor
Sanlor Cltl•9.91-5041

lllnyou.Joehle.llallow.

G~

1 tran bull304-411-1101.
1n bath tuli.
GoodcerMIItlon.

I•

\

room ranch. 2 baths. central

{

ana

'PP~

80 acres of vacanl

. ble. All minerals. water and

'

""***

t'*.._
to:

.......
..... OM 4IUI. D 'IM: Jurw

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

"'"·

p.lll.

R....,

....... 11. 14, 11, ......, Uttla
bit of -nithln&amp;
1111-

-llol.lnlttloill.

14, 11. Itt .., Dr. Loll of
cleln
Fri. ..,

olot-. -

992·6191
Jean Trusseii ... 992·266C
Mat Hupp........ 949·2257
Jo Hill ............ 985-446&amp;
Office.............. 992·2259
OUR SALES VOLUIIE HAS
BEEN GOOO AND IE STILL
HAVE BUYEIS LOOKIIG
fORIIEIGS COUIJY PlOP·

Em. If YOU

WAIT TO

SELL. CALL CLELAIIb
REALTY TODAYIII

1etyr.. 8.21" '

thraugll 30111 yr. C.ll
today.
We wHI halp Cnflnd
• qtstlltled
•
fram aur uletlng

Cltl~d Raalty

USED APPUAIICIS
" DAY ·w •un

'WAiH81-$100 ap
OIYEtl-$61 IP
,
IEFIIIIWTOIII-$100 tp •
tWIID ... Eltc.-$125 ., .
ftEIZE.,_$1Z5 tp
IICIO OWI5-$7t IP

ati'S APPLIANCE
SIIYICE
H2-5JJ5 • 915-3561
acr- ,,.. Pllf Ofllst

•.

PGIB'IY~!IIIO

·
lwJOI'It1fl

.'

-..

..-

..
- --'- -·::. ·.!J..w-~. · ~"·"~~,~·, .

.

WI GO THE IITIA MIU....:
992·6110
OHIO

BISSBl &amp; 8URICE
CONSTRUCTION

............
. ..,•..

........

•Cat

plata

Step &amp;(a•p•a

..... lstltallttl
915-4473
667-6179

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING

OFfEIS t LOCAftOIIS 10 Sml YOU.-• .

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 14·3
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 110 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY; 8 e .m.-7 p.m. 7 D1y1
ALBANY; 10 l .m.·l p.m. I Daya, Clollld lundiiY

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 28. 1980
1#1 CCJPIHI( 90C per lb.;
Aluminum Cane. 3&amp;C per lb.

~

1-31·1-.

t)l-r TRAVEL

PUISUIT
Airline
R•.wtloniTlall...
for !Ctncla

"*

(614t 742-2027

''Yoonnaatlona
To
...

AI

•

'

.

...... tletl•t•l

-'

1-1·1 mo.

A Greot Combinotion"Quolity ond 11111011-.e Prices"

HENRY E. CLEIAIID

~ory .

.
"

$)81~
OPEN: MON.-FRI.
10 A.M.·8 P.M.
Or By Appointment

houSP. small price. river
view with pOtential of a
cabin. $5.900.00.

Issue Now Avalllble.

.

CLEAN, LUIE &amp; TEST

- lfouse and lot. Small

1810 Ohla Houalnfl

.'

I

SPRIII SPEeiAL

St. Rt. :138

~

'

(614) 992-7143

land. PRICE REOOCEO

$27.000.00.

coumy, on T"'•day. June

JUNE 11.18
8·1,

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL. CONTRACTING

Typee af
Trav.l"

._tt-t•

lneludll 4 bldrooma, big kitchen, huge
.fan~lly room, 2 g.,.a, 3 blthl, rented
•rcHMn lf)lrbllef1t, 40' x 120' farm buildIng. pond, over 40 ICI'tS fenced pasture
!Mel lind rented mobile hOme•

M . . . . . . .7114
I

...

Nlttlone. .......... OegiM ..
- . end
In
doiiNd; ....., ~

GIEG IIlLEY

lAir• fr•-TJoriiUt ..l

elec. ava~able. Good hunl·

ANTIOUITY -

1361 Powtll St. 11... .-rt

MAIIIT£HANCE &amp; HPAII

wound Approx. 31 acres tla-

• n~

K and J CONSTRUCTION

to-.--·
--=·~

• :z:ao

MIDDUPOIT
VCR CLINIC

aldlfe II tlw Adult 1&lt;11 01tloi1

--e· :--::....:
t- =· ....
--·--·-

DALUS SAYRE

5·16·'90·1 mo.

niuall ' """ ....... ........,

""" ..... 1..-.-....

"':~~""::'In
p.m.

992-6421

Shlrltr

·-'"'-"'_..__
AVON I All Artie I
........ -....1CII.

trallilng
• - · Clr)laniry
"-"
tint and ,-. _.......
IIIII ..,...
~
2 adult docile-_..., --upllwltrgoll-p
- . To
8penlel
I - -Cell- al building IlL~~_..., ond ..,_ ......... · - llealnnlna
oltr.
~ 2l
·
- 8YIIIIIIII
Yllfli4r toof ..,
lundlng
tcii'
Clllll pupplll e - . ...._
2
•~-- t ........
llll•tollll Ad.,-·
. . , _ o f -: Ohio Valtty
W-n 11111111 to IIVF1r1t tint Hpollt Do11J T - . 121 Tlllnl
Ave., o.•r Ia.
... • ......
DOiftfiiUI Ia 'lene.
-~~~,........
lnd
,..

· Stop In ancl S..

'i

_

::r;..":"::"",:.~
......, .o. ... m.w-wv
11&amp;70• ... 1.-..m-at:l ....

r.

-., ""' 1 braloon.

AddlunPIIIe, 4 ,.._.._Rt.7,

CHIYSUI-PLYMOUIH
DODGE
3" S. Third, •••••p•rt

ww. 1101 • iiu.

Cent•.
Tit~
lo-.
lhe~
oogo•n
.
.
,......
,.U
..~
:..=":.::0.~~: ~

PAT HILL

EVENINGS
1-12·10 tilt

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD -

to;-

cotl within tlw - . LOM ond

AT

992-2269

lllW LiliA ROAD - Very
neat and ypry nice!! 3 bed·

CRISI hiYe ..........

~~8~8~2~-2~1~8i&amp;~~~~~~~~~-~ll ~a~n~
=,! "'"""·

Factory Autherl111d ·
S.rricl Coat• f• Moat

Hefp Wanted

....._ .... ,.,.........-. --Ctlrll.

209 s..th 4th St.
'"lOW

11

':AY:i::ON:::-·-:AII:-:::::•:::-~-:iCIIII~IIerllyn=
~

older-

aooc1

Rat•
T.L.C.
27 YrL Elfl.
Rllflren-

Employment Servtces

.........
"""""'JTM

tlftll

Middleport, Ohio
1·1S.tlc

'LniOOftdl.

11117.

~,....

EUM HOME

PIT HILL FOlD

BILL SLACK

hwasher. $39.900.00.

lOWE
POWEIWASH
SEIYICE

CHES1R, OliO

-

Celt 114-

-

001.0
CREDil'
CA110
VIAIIIIII........t goa,._ 110
-ll'ltY
dopoalt
1 ~to!•... blllt
411.110 ....

~:::;;;;:::~ · 4

~

~ .......

C1ll N- To Maka

•fiREWOOD

elednc and fireplace. Dis-

4i·--,·Fc'=- ' ,._.. .,._
. m -~---·
"""'· -...

!"l.
_..,.. :m.J:r•

---lneboth-

OPENINI SOON

also ocitl Mil ond rod
out rllliaton. Wa also
repoir Gels Tris.

•l.ot&gt;'Renl'l•

~~
........ - ....iiOiil
GAIIIIHOIJI
Celt Larry UVI!y IMwt.ee. · p£ .tr'li 'aha fWIId ~-~~-~O!:_J-~.:.__:..___

ment: ....... tram

Poulin' i Hill Bttw11n
Rutland ond Rt. 554

'-ttr

•Mobil a Hci'in..
Rttnllla

Announcements

Flllra- _ , . . . . .

TANNING

Wt atn repair riild re·
core rodloton 11!111
Clll'tl. We Clift

•Mobile Home

367-0511

ond
~ I441-lltl.

SER~ICE

~rp

3 bedrooms. large lot.O!her
features. PRICE REDUCED
12.50000

woodburner for cheap heat.
$43.900 00 .

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARI

•-s

CIIHol S..

985-4422

home is ready for immediate
ocwpaney. five rooms w~h

·MATTHEW C. VAN
VRANKEN. ET AL.
CASE NO. 88 CL 214
In ,...-nca to an Order
of Sole cllractld to ma In the
above entitled action. I will
otter for ula at public aui:·
tlon. at the front do.o r ol the
Courthou• in Pom•oy.
Ohio, In the tbove narnld

.,... ..

'

.

t1,000.00. The IIIIMCII of
D- llef-ce: Volume the purdl•e price ohlil Ill
306. • PIIJI 729. Mllgo dueendpayabletotheSh•·
Iff of Mlip County. Ohio,
County O..d Racordo.
Thla property It locltld at within thirty 1301 dayo from
128 Uricoln HHt, Po,_oy, tht dete of conllrmetlon of
ule. Tho pun:h•or ilholl be
Ohio.
Prq~
a~pnoioed ... roq!'lrlll to pay lnterllt on
124.000.00 and cannot Ill tht unpaid balance ... tht
rate of 1 0% ~ annum from
oold for 1111 lloan two-llolrdo
the date ofllletotht dote of
of the appralald volut.
· TERMI OF SALE: The paymMt of balance unl••
aucce.otul
pun:h•er. • . uld bllonce ohell be plld In
eight Ill dayo from the dote
- n u hit bid It 1cqeptad
ilhoH Ill required to dllfiOiit of the Ale.
Jem• M. 8oullby
on lila day of 1111. In - h or
by certified check. payable
Sheriff of ""'1111 County
Dougl• M. Cowlel
to the Sheriff of Mtlgo
Anomey for Plaintiff
County. Ohio, 10% of the
Ill 9, 18, 23. 30: 1111 B. 13
amount of ouch ac...,ted
8lC
bid. but In no -nt lllo than
Deed Racordi.

This neat

FIXED RATE 7.75"

D0Gsf00D · . -

Public Nollce

part basement.

vs

MOVING SALE

PUlE SWEET' SUGAR

MOVING!

(614) 667-3271
Grcml.

E. Mill ....

a. '3. 3tc

18, t980at 10:00a .m .. the
fOlloWing dllcrlb!ld r•l •·
..... oituatld In the county
""Melgo, and the State of
IIIIo. to wit:
~
- lhuatld In Burnllf!'
!JOn to the VIUag
Po·
-oy or tubdlvlllon of LDt
ft!lmblr Ont Hundred end
liJghtV·nlna (181) and baing
... of Lota Number Ninetltn
tt8••~d T-ty c2o1 front·

.

lOSE'S 21'1. CH-

OUT

DUMPTRUCK ·
Sand-Stone-Dirt

Public Notice

....

EAGU 'RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTD ·
SELLING

CLEARING.

73- Vtnl I 4 V\'0 ' 1 ·

Buy · .Sell
Trade

NO SUNDAY

DOZER
SITEWOII • IQADS

] r~I1S(JOII.1illlll

&amp;Auction

.SPOn CARDS

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949·2•60

6-5-'90-1110.

St!rvlt:e~.

reel..-. oltuete

rn the County Of Melgo Md
S - of Ohio. and in the VII·
lqe of Middleport. to wit :
The fpllowtrog rwl _ ..
lftillted .to. llll, ClllolllliY ,ot
Mllgo. swa of Ohio. end In
lire Vllllga of ·. Mldclepon.
bounded and d-'IIMd •
followa: 33 feet fronting on
hoond Street-of the Vlll~~p
of Mldcl-'• baing o fourth of Lot No. eo pur·
ch•ed by L. C. Davllo from
Jennie H~. Clllt'lla Gel·
ger and Ell8 Gliget, the
· - baing the IIOUIIIWIII
~:~- of Mid 1.01 No. eo.
-fourth beginning et
~,.nOiduw•t cor,_ of the
c.- kit running lllllilel
.With t h e - about •• t.t;
tlilnGI &amp;It 33 t.l:'"-ca
Wilt MCiut II fMt to S.

,.

1 1 0

J

.
23- Prote.onll lefYiOII

111- L.eten
837- lvHoiG

CHERYLLYNN POWELL
For ,.,.,ence IM Volume
' " 1'" et al
Defendant• ·
187,
paga til, M.e lgoCounty
,; In pu-ce of en ·Order ·
of S.le in the above entitled
Real Eltlle o.ne,.l
ICtlon. I will offer for ule et
public Miction, et the lkJor of
Ill~ Court Hou• in Po·
m•oy, In the abo.,. IIIRied
cOUnty. on Frldly. the Znd
~.Y of Ju!Y. 1110. 111 10:00
o'clock A.M.• 1111 folowlng

" SJfERIFF'I SALE OF 1
REAL ESTATE
' THE STATE-Of OHIO
,; MEIGS COUNTY
THE CENTRAL TRUST
'
COMPANYOF
.OUTHEASTERN OHIO.
N.A.

Colby Cheese ••• !!:~.99&lt;

..... s.., ilat It ........... 16

22-Moit-v to lolft

$42.000 00.

FLAVORITE

............. I ............ I.

-e·uttn•• Opportunity

PubliC Slle.

" FrH Eatlmat""

949-2168

16- 1 - • Fo•&lt;i ... ,

8

CALL

air. back deck on lar~~e lot.

GALLON

! . . . ., .......... . .

21

..

FREE ESTIMATES

13-L"'-todl
1~ - Hav 6 Grllin

11-W•nN To Do

112-N"'""""

..

.... CIItlr., ......... ..

tA-R-. TV • Cl ~ ....
17- Miacel..,.•u•

247-LOIIrt Folio

s-.

10C

I I Vl':,lll!.~

a..,...,,
12- Womtd to luy

1 1 - lcheo .. • !nltruction

31-R ..I &amp;l .. t l Wentld

tot.•lloa pi- of .betlln,.,g.
. _llfllti.-ty Aikk•o: 170

26 oz.

\tillllll"

Commercial

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

11-F.,m

14-lulin•t Trainiftt

l?a-Ao.ioGro¥1
'113-M•son

CCI'"' St.-; "*"!!' llk&gt;llll
IUD.'ld StrMt in a IGUihWiltlilrty -Iori alongSecoftJ s - 33 fMt to Cranz

2~:Soz.$329

~.1111

t,

1 2- ltt:u.tion WtnwR
13-lnt..,.na

111-cn• ..,
843- P..,IIInd

841-Recin•
742- Ruta.M

NEW -REPAIR

11- For Slle « Trede

•

Strvtlf"

17- Mu.ullnatntm-"tl
11- frunt • v.,. . bl,.

Oef ·R,culfc ·Fact

' ·

.....
..

MORTON' SALT

f ll!iilliyllll'lll

,._ ••...,•• 8uild••IJI

REAL ESTATE
; The SUite of Ohio. ·
, - Melgo County .
•..
88-CV-298
:cHEMICAL MORTGAGE
• COMPANY, Plelnllff

'

LOSTA POP

••• • A.uctton
t ...:.WeMed 1o luy

11-...1 for Ill•

----

_ _ _ , _ . . .. H.

TWIIIUp llol. 'ZT olt ..,_ 131.

Rlllideiltlal &amp;

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ROOFING

11-hiOiftiSuplllta

117-Cootvilo

..:•
.
...

'

IODIZm

.....

a... t~~•d in •dvancel

•til-Loon

Po-.

:· , Pubic Nollce
'
~ SHERIFF'S SALE OF

Wieners~ •••••.••••••••~••

ASSORTED FUYOIS·

54-Mile. M.,ah.,.,..

• VICinity

lef ....r.at._
Service

217 L S.C. ' - • Y
POIUIOY, 0.0
l/&amp;/'90/ tln

Howord L Writ....

13-Am.....,

1 - Pu~ic

~

Classified pa[{es· cot'er the
fnlll'lrvintu telephone exchanges ...

~

...

....

TRUBSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tile
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 91113
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

7-Y•d

The Daily Sent6MII•·

DAY IIOO~E I'UILICATION
-11 :00.A.M . IATU~OAV
- 2:00P.M . MONDAY
- Z:OO P.M . TUIIIOAY
- 2:00 ...M. WfDN!SOAY
- 2:00P.M . THUIIIOAY
- 2 :00P .M. ,~IDAY

,

••.

-

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Amateur Garden Club will
meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
home or Clara · Conroy for a
picnic.

I 1- HowMhol_. Goo•
12-a_..,._

3-Annouc:emtn.l s
4 - GivtiWIY

11--WMHtll

.•' .'
.

Leg Quarters .....'!-•• 49&lt; Lunch Meats •.••• ~.. ·
Ground Turkey ••'!-•• 99&lt;
COINKING.
. $
99
Boneless Ham •••.•~. 1

·--

1 - Cird of Thenkt

.2 - h&lt;l Me"'ory

~leporl

Heatiftt, Coolillg,

KEN'S IPPUINCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915 ·3561
aa-- ,,.. Poat Office

or les. 949•2160
hy fll Night

•

FRESH PORK BUTT

CHESTER - The Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church (Texas
Community) will be having bible
school through Friday from
9:30-11:30a.m . dally. Thedlrec·
tor Is Julia Will and the theme Is
"Island In the Son." There ara
classes tor all ages and the public
IS Invited to attend.

POMEROY - The Meigs
COunty Saloll No. 710 Eight and
Forty will have Its picnic and
Installation of offiCers Thursday
at 6 p.m. at the home .of Marge
Fetty.
·

t*eft-.niM

'.

ll..

'

Ha,pP,. Acil ,

•

Pick Up.

NO SUNDAY CAUS

'.

POMEROY -Rev. Chris
Meenach and the Sunsblne Gang
will conduct bible school at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
through Friday from 6: 30-8:30
p.m. nllhtly. The public Is
Invited ·to attend.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. with a potluck. Star
Gran~ will visit.

ot Th'e nka

Iring It In Or We

PH. 949-2101

tme~tt•

1-Lost and Found

wltl .... ..._,_ tft , ... ~ - Pt_.,.,. " ...... ,end ....
IM)WI Deity lril)lurie. NaciMAIOWr 11.0110 hom•..

.,.

T-Bone Steak •••••~. 4 .
BUCKn BEEF
. 'k' •.•..•••
.·. $269
Cubed St.ea

Chicken barberue

2:00p.m.

. c._,.,...I•-• .....,inYordllll•
..... .... clllllliod llit!Nv. --Cit' ...........1
o...
.,Card

..'

The 1990 Bill Hubbard Memor·
lal Little League Tournament,
sponsored by the Syracu~e Volunteer Fire Department, will
begin July 5 at the ball field. ·'
Deadline for entry Is June "·
Drawing will be June 27 at the
. fire station at 7 p.m. ~entry fee
·of $20 and a 15 .player roster, .
Including uniform numbers,
should be sent to the Syracuse
Fire Department, P.O. Box 706,
Syracuse. 45779.

POMEROY - There will be a
chicken dinner on Thurday from
5-6: 30p.m. at the senior citizens
center. The cost of the meal Is
$2.50 for oven baked chicken,
mashed potatoes and gravy,
green be11ns, cole slaw, biscuit,
and beverage, with dessert at an
extra cost. A gospel. program
featuring Jan and Cathy will
begin at 7 p.m. and the public Is
Invited to attend.

.-d •" .•.,.,....

•

Memorial tourney
slated in Syracuse

"· RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will have bible ·
sc boo! through Friday from 6-8.
p.m. The theme Is • 'Friend
Dimension." There will be
classes for all ages and the pubic
Is Invited to attend.

a.,

•a• tU ,..,. a
'A

•

tailonoillltlo;'Ofrcwuftorlirll
dirf. !Chod&lt;
:

ad rune in ~1 - C.n tMfoN
tlw 1flw Dubil•'-" 10 .,.. . IOfHIItioft ,
IMfort firat

. &gt;

There will be a Fathers Day
celebration on Sunday 2-4 p.m. at
Overbrook Center with mock·
tails bar and bars d'oevres.
There will be music by Rambllli
Country 2·3 p.m. and a sports
video, 3•4 p.m.

WEDNI!:IIDAY
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will
have vacation Bible School
through Friday from 6-8 p.m.
Classes for pre-ltbool to teena.
The public Is Invited to attend.

--·

,

au·• ms

·~~-=!. ',:.=.~.

.20
. . 30
,42
.10
.01 / clly

:!,.loo..... I . MI lditoovnt for • • -'11 in ..., ... ce.

..•.

.

·

btoll8nupa..-awillk&lt;Jh.,....

111M• •refo•

Mei... Gellit or MMort oowMttit mull •• pr•·

•

LONGACRE

16.00
••.00
113.00
11.30/ day

11 •.
16

Monthly

noch.,,..

Fathers Day
celebration

C01Tlf9unity
calendar

1.&amp;.oo

1&amp;

10

o- 16 w-

Rata

Pomeroy,

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

0¥.111 IEPAII

CUSTOM IUIT

- Ofwe..,.y lftd FDUN . . yfttl., 1 I worcll w il! bt

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN:, JUNE 10 THRU SAT., JUNE 1

.

3
6

•:

298 SECOND ST.
- POMEROl;..QH.

Wordl
11
11

D•v•
1

, I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

,.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RATES

· TO PLACE AN A~ CALl 992·2156
MONDAY thFJI fRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

•

I AM·lO·fM

Skating slated

There wlll be a chicken bar·
becue at the Syracu~e Fire
Station on Sunday from 11 a.m.
Dinner Includes a baH chicken,
slaw and roll, baked beans, and
desserts at an .e xtra ·cost. Co&amp;t of
the dinner Is 13.50

Business · Service

Classifie

The Eas ter n Atllletlc Boosters
are sponsor ing a. chicken bar·
·becue dinner with homemade Ice
cream on J11ne 23 at 11:30 a.m.
There will also be a car show,
ba ll games, yard sale, bake sale,
and games. The evening will
Include a teen dance at 8:30p.m .
On June 24 there will be a draft
horse pull at noon.
All of these a ctivities will take
place at E astern High 'School.

There wUI be skating at the
Rutland Civic Center on Sunday
trom 1: 30-3; 30. p.m. AdmiSSion Is
$1 tor children and $2 for adillts.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 13

Ohio

12- The Deity Sanlintl

-llpOrt
•
Pclnfelvy,

II:P!Niw: d ....._ Ttawip.
tioftlll11M1'•1 ......

�'
Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

11 · Help Wanted

Wednesday, June 13, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

44

Apanment
for Rent.

5I

Houllhold

IITJ' 'N' CAlli.YLEe lty Larry Wrtpt

Wedna1ay, June 13,
BORN LOSER

73 V.MI4WD'I

Goocll

1114 . . _

&amp;•:s :..:-:

lion, .... -

1Nr
,.,. '-""
T.Y., ...,_
rMh

.·

1990

Television
Viewing

P"

Qlef,yt(.GW) ~~oor.

VIA
I '111,- Cl.

_..,... .,uoo ...... ...
tor. Coli ........ Dip, ..

~'DA~-~~

11t . . . . . . .. . . .

•

RlE ...

- - ...., • ., VIA ~.oo.~n :·
Conu•-. LaMed. 111 Rr II •
......... M.GOO 1101... .
t11,000. lit JIIZG X or I'M-~ ,

....
'::~~:~' s~~.{}lA-~t.~s· ••••

The Daily Sentinei-Page-15·

Pom«oy-Midcleport, Ohio

-

WED., JUNE 13
EVEN INO

_ _ _ __.;._;;; 141to4 loy _CLAY R. POI.LIIfl

•

1:00 (J) lleldcMIIa And
McCormick Q
.
.•

()) • •
• (JJ I!J)
8Ncwa
(I) tnlkla The PQA Tour
(!) Degraaal Hlah Q
(!) RMdlng RalilbOw Q
.I!]) Andy Glffftth
@ World today
·
OHe-Man
6:05 Cll leverly HltlbiiMea

•IIJ

•ALL
DOIN&amp; IS SITTING
ON '(OUR 8LAHKET.. IF '(00
TR'I' TO PULL IT AWAV,I'LL
SUE 'fOU FOR ANIMAL CRUELTV !

KEEP TI-lE BLANKET;,
I'M 601N6 INTO TJ.IE
KITCJ.IEN, AHP MAKE MVSELF
A CIIOCOLATE SUNDAE ...

NOW. THAT'S
ANIMAL CRUELW!

·

8

(2:301

8 (}) PM Magazine

e e

@ Monaytlne
0 Miami VIce A judge tries.
· to persuade his all-star son
to throw a basketball game.
Stereo.
Mulie Row VIdeo
Abbott And Coatello
7:05 Cll Jefferson•
7:30 Ill]) Family Feud
(!) Home Run Derby Henry
Aaron vs Ken Boyer (T)
fl Ill Entermtn.mant Tonight
CJ (JJ Mama•a Family
I!Jl IDI!J 18 JaopanJyl Q
. . I!]) M'A'S'H
11J Croutlre
G Night Court
7:35 Cll SantonJ And Son
8:00 It()) 8 Unaolvacl
Myabrlla ProtHea an
·
. Oklahoma boy'e search lor
his grandfather. (R) Stereo.

a
a

11

---.......__

~ · /fff.,

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(I .. .. ~' I fl(~~~~
r
"I~

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0

D

~~J, IT)' ~tMOTfL'{ PDIS'il/.f
~ ~/ TtfAT ~TH'J u/tAVITY
;
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., I

THI~fc Tt1f~f1
~-d,_ ~ A MUCH $1Mpt..f~
...._... .,, J
f}(pLA,..,ATICf-4,
l:

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I

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~ Major Leap Baaaltall

Magazine
(J) Growing Palna
Mike and Kate fall lor eacn
other whUe rehearsing a love
scene. CR) Stereo. Q
(!) (I) Survival Spaelala .
Some ot the 8,800 different
les of b!rda are sh~n.

filii

' - lj

e

r.

e!IJ Jaka And Tha
. F a - Jake and McCabe
lind !hemsel.,.. differing on a
robbery caee. (R) Stereo. Q
Ill I!]) MOWE: Leaa Th1n
Z'an~ (A) (2:00)
@PrlmaNIWI
0 MUlder, She Wrote
Witness For The Defense
Con-Uon With Dinah
G MOYIE: Legend (PG)

a

(2:00)

1 (AIJ'T
H£1-P FE£L!IJG ...

15

SChoolll

Clata Charlie uses deaths to
discuss the different ty_Ees qf
moumlng. (A) Stereo. Q

a .on&amp;tage '
8 Singer And Sofia

,.

Instruction

9:00 e
&lt;

Booldloo:.:r.ngl-lng,

Hoe

~IIIIUI,

II

Alrl"" ,,...., NurMO Ald; T,...
tor Tnltor trolntng, doni- otudy.-IYIIIable It
PIU Frnent

••llllnoo.

.

8:05 Cll Claah Of The Championa
XI
.
8:30 (JJ Major Lugue Baaaltall
filii G (J) Head Of The

"WAf IIJ A IU2D
RJLL OF PKK RXKETL

~IMES

I

s;:

i

•
I

. . _ ..

cal C!lllce 2307
mden Avo,
Pa,..burg, wv , ..oo ••• 8_411

8

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP
, ' MY t:W:)' MY DP-D 15

TAL.L. AIJD ~Al-P
8RAVE. .. ~

())

Reggie believes he is\ the son
ot boxer Floyd Panarson. 1:;1

•
•Ooo!lle
8Cil gives
Doogla
·
M.D.
upadale

to go fishing with his dad. (R)
Stereo. 1:;1
c!J (I) American Playhouae
A doctor discovers that the
mineral springs are
· poisoned. (2:001 1:1
till e .0 Clrcua 01 The

StalaQ

'AND HANDBOME, AND

MoMS IN A q&lt;XlD Moo::&gt;...

HE' 15TH&amp; SMAR:T'E5T
DID IN THE. 'M:IRL.D. II

L.!SlEN -n:1 HER LAUEiHI~,

OUT IHER~ IN

TH~

KITCHEN.

.

1!J1 Lany King LIWI
0 MOYIE: Pride And
Exberna Prejudice (2:00)
Stereo. ·
Naahvllle Now
9:30 (]) To Ba Announced
II (})
Dear John All the
guys surprise Louise by
~sing as her husband . (A)

a

a

i5 e

R~
..
(}) a Quantum La8jl

YOU .OUGHT TO GIT RID OF
THIS LEAKY OL' TUB, SNUFFY!!

. NOT NOW!!

·-·

Rooting, •ldlng, c1rpentry, roof

porionco. t..wloi1-H41-9717.
Wanlod To Buy: Uood Mobile
Hom••. 614-446-0175.

.......... •mt.

8 Crook ' Chllee
10:311 C1J MOVIE: The Cowboys
(PGJ (2!30)
11 :00 IJiiScaracrow I Mra. King

84 . Electrical 1
Rltrlgel'llllon

,

-=:lp.............. .
....... . . _
...
I....,_

Will do hou• cleaning, 304..Qa..
3359.

Will
pour .drive
waya,
patlollalabt, all typn concme
work and fwed lat•.
wllke.
614-1112·2127.

Ill.Sill;
II,
1M~ ••
~-­
nuta. au,,

.... a.

.

....... I

In rr
.,_:111
A

Ill~-.

...
---Alii

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I ' Jl,

...,v.o.c. t1100

~--.
010. .,, •11n

Financial

lor lion.

--mllltYII,..Gollt

-·-104471-4211.
113

Bualness
OpponunHy

LlvMtock

. ---=-==-=-INOilCEI

~

.... ldlnllal
Gr rwpolra.
Eloctrtclone. ..........

.........ot· oommwa'-1- ··
Aeel•nn.r
Uonado Melt ...... ~ liiiiOirlo
eat .... .... ""' Solly. .,.. wtrtng, , _ - ...........

-

1177 Food 1 tan IIUOIL 11'14-1111-

1344.

ua •.,.cf

ASTRO-GRAPH

electtlclarL Rldlnaur

Eloctrtco1,104~71-f7X •

85

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

General ~ling

- ' a Wolor-.... 1000.or
Weill, I I I Dfll'bll nl... quick

-ry. -

,4011.

t - - t..--1,000

or
·~ dollvoly. Col-

Wootw

Houll!llo

m-. volume

dli- . 2,111111 to 4,111111 . _ . . ,

............. -.-Col

=

.104-17Httt .

Upholatery

C.ko ond cand¥ oupply ohop
lnvontory. 114-11124033.

•ee.

Rt' N Al!u! lull, 14-11
·rllliitlle.IINIHOII
'IWTa ........ , . , - .

po-.

"Walt till the guys back home hear I've
lilted 1000 pounds!"

,~,_

...... ...

iiW4Hiii ................

lo
do to malce the relationship work. ·Mall '
$2 to Matchmaker, P.O. Box 91428,
Clevalend. OH 44101-3428.
CANCER (~une 21-.lllly 221 Try not to
be too set about doing things your WB/V
today, because sOmeone with wllorn
you'R lnvolwd might have better Ideas.
We can alwaya - n ~hlng or value
dealing today, It might be neceaaary for
you to malcea tew,small conc:eulona In
order to ttweeten the pot. Keep your tocus on the big picture 111d let go of the
lntlgnlfle8nt. ·
·
VIIGO (Alii. 21 lepl. 221 This Is not a
good day to try to seek cOI)'Irnerclal fa·
vcn l l ' o m - with Whom you'll be
lnvotwd IOCially. II you're going to conduc:l bullnwe. do II In the proper

• ..
7 """· · -

.RIRWotora.moo. ......... .-.

rlll&amp;nlble

er can l*p you to understand what

• from otherl.
LEO (oiUIJ :11-Aug. 221 In a buSiness

IDOO.LPoc!lo,llii-l

.........

OHIO VALLEY PUIILISHINQ CO.
rocom- IIIII 1f0U do llullo
nno with poopll JOU ..._, ond
NOT to oond rnonoJ through tho
mall uN:II rou halve kt¥Mfl"pted
tha oltorlng.

·'

. ..

tWnc:Moy ........ 110 .........

.

How To lloko
110 In 1:10
dl)'l aourantood. Far F- m.
lormotlon
Wrtta: ~
Enttrpol- P.O. lo• 1004, Lincooter, OH 43110.

ii I!]) flennr Hilt Show

Mil.-., ,;l

llloall I II J :!t, Tondorn Comi8Wo181 end
wMir, Olb I ..,'110; will lll!lrt"'o .,_ -

Will bobyok In my hDnll. 114-

21

.

10:30 ~ Struggle For Democracy

~

72 Tnlckl fol' Bale

&amp; chimney rapt~lr, atucco, window I door Npalr. 40 yNra II·

446·1046.

··~

- -·
(·
1 1Cllovp.
--111.
-

Suppllel

~j

GNewe

83 Exc:avatlng
•
CICIVI-.H1'
.IZID
'
i
in;.;;..,;;;'
1
;;;1nG:'
"
"a.";•;i;to;;:r,-;gui;;"-;ond;d
:
fntm tiDO. ,.._ II•:•~••
· - · F-771-N31.

Sam leaps into the life ot a
blind concert pianist In 1964.

G ()) Equal Juatlca
Peter defends a teenager
charged with an arson
related death . Q
(!) Nawawlltch
·Ill I!]) Naw Twilight Zone
0 Evening Newa

Corlor'a Plumbing
ondHoottna
Founh ond.Piile
OoiHpallo, Ohio
111 4113111

Building

DCil llmw- Pltlca

A family fishing !rip reveals
. the source of a local bully's
' . anger. Stereo. Q
10:00 (]) 700 ClUb With Pat

BARNEY

·

Succeaa could come to you In lite year
(lap!. :D-Oat. 21) The more you
ahead through an exlrerii8IY unuauat
cllaln ot evanta, so be IUI'a to tully ax- ttlk a~t what you Inland to do t~ay,
• piore
opportunity 11181- your the lall time you'H hew to parlorm the
Iaale . .._a thla a work ftral and talk tat·
way, ragardlelll of l l t a Qlllfll Cllltr 21-.ltlne 20) In order to ~• - an ~n.,artant objeCtive ICCIRPIO COot. :M-New. 221 Social Intoday, !hare muat be • _.lng ot ~COUld be a btl unusual tomlndll of all the prlnclpala CXH ICIIt ted. A day, 10 be an Jlllllld. II yotl're not, you
un- might u!lkllantlonally l~r some extra
lack of harmony will be
producttva. Trying to patch up alliokan ex,.._ lor • trlwtcl.
It's.
rornenca? The Astto-Or.p. Mlllchmalc· IAGinAIIIUS (Miw.
. 21 Dea. 111
.

-v

tllll....,.

best not 10 lei others make decisions
for you today, especially Ill hey could dl·
rectly affect your financial poslllon. Be
prudent and use your own judgment.
CAPRICORN (Dea. :12-Jan. 111 This Is a
good day lo experiment with new Ideas
or procedures you feel could help light·
en both your mental and physlca) bur·
dens. Nothing ventured, nothing
gained.
AQUARIUS (Jan. . . . . . 111 Even
though you will be adequateiy aolute In
business mailers today, , don't lower
your guard, because you mlgbl heve to
deal with a perton wllo 11 jual a trifle
'sharper.
PIICEI (Feb. 20-MM:h 20) Be aura
·. you allow the aame tOieriM8 and tor:
1bezrznce wllh family inembera todfiiV
, that you will ehow with friends and acquaint...-. Remember blood Is
thicker tht~~t watw.
ARIES (lllaroll 11-Aplll 111 Thera's a
poulblllty you might be preuured a bit
. from all lldM loday, how-. don't
waffle. Your raaou"*""- will came

~~and~you-~~

storms.

·TAURUI (Ap!l....., 20) II you get ,
· InvOlved In 10ma type of game of
i:h.,_ today, kMP the llakea 11 mintmala pollibla. You could gat ruffled 11
the wln-lttn't you.

i (}) • • •

I ..,Erl
.1 ·l.,,

PRtNI NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQU... RES

A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS

V

10 GET ANSWER

NORTH

+Q8 s
.K 7
tQB S
+AK1073

BRIDGE

Not a hand
for Willy

In the world of slam bidding, a
pair's high·card total is not as impor·
tant as a good trump-suit fit plus key
controls. Thus in today's deal South
held a minimum hand, but when a
good fit was established and when
North's four-heart cue-bid showed a
key: card in that side·suit, declarer
jumped to five spades as an invitation.
North accepted.
This was not a hand to be played by
Willy Nilly. Willy would ruff the opening lead and play Q-A of spades. Then
he would realize that he might haft
heart losers. So he would play K·A and
ruff a heart. East would overruff; Ia!·
er West would take a heart trick and
the slam would be set. More astute declarers should realize the likelihood ol
heart losers, and perhaps tbe necessity
of using more than one trump in dummy. So they would ruff the opening
lead, and immediately play K·A and
ruff a .heart. ~t would of coune
overru!f, but what nen? Whatever
East might lead back, declarer would
be able to ruff atW another heart with
the queen of spades, and tbe slam
would make.

1-Q.H

EAST ,
+J 10 7

WEST
+3
"Q953
t .A J 7 6
+Q98 6

a
+JS

•to

tKI09431

SOUTII
+AK9642
.AJ6H

....
+42

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: South
Eut
Paa

W..t
Nort•
Pau . z+
Pas
3+
Pal&amp;
••
POD
6+

Pus
Paa
All paiS

Opening lead: • A ·

even

In fact, declarer can
succeed
by playlnc the ace of spades bef!lre CO'
ing after hearts, if he lJ careful to ruff
the first heart with the spade ~·
He can then return to bis hiiDd ud ruff
oae more heart with dummy'a remaia=
lng small trwnp. East can overru!f,
but that ~ be all for the defenae, '

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
. ACROSS
44 Snare
1 Alimentary 45 Bearded,
as grain
6 Spire
DOWN
ornament
1 Spy In
9 Bullring
· Canaan
10 Debark
2 Mountain
12 "Deathtrap"
crest
author
3 No way
13 Aquatic
4 Black
animal
cuckoo
17 Emmel
15 Summer
5 llght
20 Pace
(Fr.)
source
23 Wine
18 Color
8 N.C.
24 Daclaim
18 -Marie
college 25 Hellion
Saint
7 Caress 28 Craftsman
19 "Murphy
8 Meantime 27 Choral
Brown"
11 Create
composi·
slar
14 Moroccan
lion
21 Tease
city
29 For shame!
22 Skill
231tallan
. cily
24 Blemish
27 Heavenly

Anawer
32 Fruit of
the oak
33 Menu
34 Harris,
e.g.
38 Lack
39 Business
concern •
(Fr.) .
41 Tony-

body
28 Jaunty
· 29 Remote.
30 Table •
scrap
31 Uncut
35 Tell's
canton
36 Moisten
37 Crow's cry
38 Opera by
Puccini
40 Worship
42 Picnic
spoiler
43 Type
of cake

"'
.

DAILYCRYPTOQVOII!S-Here'lllow lo worlllt:

131 Converutlon With Olneh
G ContadJ Tonight

8/13

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

(JJ I!J)

.I!]) Areenlo Hall
IIJ Monayllna
0 Miami VIce During a drug ·
bull, Crockett Is gunned
down and hOven near death.
Sterao. ,

'

'

eCIJ 8New•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lencth and ronnauon olthe words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

11:30•()) IB Tonight Show

CIIYPTOQUOn

Stwao.

(I)~

1-U

!I:'AiiFONtn
I-~~~~-~
Court
.
-=~C81Late
Night

XPCPO

VInnie riske hla lila lor
an Old trtend to tree hla

oanttelence. (R)

I

.SCIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
'
Quaker - Knave- Cable- Ocular- NO BELL
One comic to another: "What did they give the fellow
who invented the door knocker?" Second comic : "I
know! The No BELL prize!"

(!) SportaCenter
fl
(J) Currant AHalr
(!) ID MacNeil Lehrar
NewsHOur
7?a ei!J 8 WIIHI Of

.a;r:~t Court Q

'

I 1· I I

UTERUN
~ .1. I . IS
Q 'Comp lele lhe chuckle quoted
.
.I
•I
•
•
•
•
by filling in th e missmg words
1--1.-1--1-...JI-..1..-.J you develop from step No. 3 below.

7:00 ()) MOVIE: The Joker Ia Wild

'

KOLTEC

OVerheard in club house: "I
know why they call this game
L-.....L.-...J.....J-.L.-.J •
goij - it's because all the other
.-~--------,~ four letter words are ·····!"

1:35 C1J Andy Griffith

' J•

I
I
I

I ..,ArG_,...U
. . . .

I!Jl eiDCBSNeWaQ
IDI!ll Tluae'a Company
8 Top Card

FRANK AND ERNEST

.,

low to form four simple

~""'1T'zI I

ae 8(JJABC-aQ
(!) BodY Ela.;trtc

cooni!i!.'

Reqrrahge J.tters of fh.
0 four
oc:romblod words

NURWG

6:30. ()) 8 NBC Nightly - ·
~SpomLook
(1)3-2·1 Contact Q

.

'

Ql Oft ......

GHII~IIuaa

IXZVU

VP

·E T 0 S P 0

12:00 ()) MOYIE: The llg WIIMI

Y.DG

GTSPZVVX.I

sox

D

JVCP

vp

EDVUPL

IN
DZ

UVWPG

ADOLPX

UPAVG

(2:00)

I]) !11~1!1-11!111!" Tonlgltl

•q:?~ntT111
P.l.

•o "".....,.

IDi ,..• .,.....
0 Crime IMoly Stereo .

·

.

P.
UDAPG
Y.......,., Cat,ll!laltel INDULGE VOURSEI,F
IN PLEASURES ONLV IN 50 FAR AS THEY ARE .
NECESSARY FOR THE. PRESERVATION OF
HEALTH. - SPINOlA
.,

.. .

�· Page 16-The Daily Senti Hll

Ohio

:,BIG BEND.•••••••• ~ Your Localy Owned
·

··

ALL

Priclll ~~s...rmarkets

Low

0

OhiQ

Today is

egetcale

Daily Number
.555
Pick-4
9533
Super Lotto
7-9-16-3240-43
Kicker 324864

Flag Day;
see story

10c

below

UCI

fiii.RAIS SS.OO

••

GOU
GROUND BEEF

Commission -to review
grant request proposal

5

•

3 LIS. 0111011

LB.

·.·

AUIOUI

Hot
Dogs

WHOU lliiNP ns

.GOLDEII DEUGNT .

·99&lt; Turkey
89&lt;
Breast
. : . ~ $399
120Z.PIG.

u.ltO.,._•

SIJCED Fl&amp;

~y

CATSUP
32 OZ. IlL

ooanos

TORTiu.A CHIPS

89&lt;

$199

LET'SKEEPITCLEAN! -Thebaanersareup
and Kenny Wiggins, lhe coordinator of the Ohio
River Sweep In Melp County, Is ready for a day
whl~h Is sure to make a diUerence In the quality of

the Ohio River. More than at Metp Coundana
will he gathering up Utter and debrlll8aturday as .
they participate In a six -state efforUo clean up the
river \lank.
·

More than .250 expected .to
:take part in '90 .·'river ·sweep'
· SIOIIlY

YEGOAILES
c .

~-~89C

.-sr

FAI

DIAPERS
S2~

llliiGINT

$799·,___ _ _--.

42

LIBBY'S PEACHES

• BLEND COFFEE

CHEESE SINGLES

CAl

PEANUT BOnER
JAR

,
.
•

I

\

·

'

; ''

j

-

-

-

-

\"'I \I\\"" I IIIIPI \\II I 111 I'O\

PACDI'S. PIIR IPPII 01

CHERRY PIE FILUNG
220L
Clfl

•

1/111/80

one Caupon Pw FMIIIy wtth

·

~

NOR1HEIN BATH US SUE

r==-=-.

•I
....!'l11.,..
I

1

c..,_ Pw ftllllr w1t11 '11M &amp;Mil _. ,.,...,
I
------------~------------------J
.
.• .,. 1

-

Wl1h Coupon.

FREE!

- Good
tllru.

:I ·; \\I ' I I II I 'I I\

99

oz.

GET·ONE

1hru 8/18/90___ .:,.
I i , I .,

•

BUY ONE 12 OZ. PIG.

With Coupon

29 01.

~

COUNIJ LitE

99
• CIUMY • C. .OIY

oz.

S1!9

• FRUIT COCKTAIL

. 18

humid. mp near 90. Cbanee
of rain 50 percent.

•

a1

,

Low lonl~:ht near 78. Chaace
of rain 50 percent. Friday,

.

•

e

NOT USS IIIAII 18'¥..

Lott~ry

I \ ' I ' I 1 \ ' I ; &gt;&lt; &gt;! 'i \ \ ll I 1 &gt;I 1'1
. ....

~·

t \

I

· ~·.-·

&amp; SANBOIN .C!OFFEE ·

g·g
- ~--

... c....
with CeuJIDII Mil AdlllllMI

---··-·

.,
•
-- ··-·
-

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
At Reedsville, David J{oblentz
SenUnel News staff
will organize his group at the
entrance to the Belleville Locks
More than 250 Meigs Countlans
will be participating In the 1990. and Dam and then go to the river
Ohio River Sweep. a six-state
bank. Keith Wood will have '
volunteer riverbank clean-up
another_ l;lrO!IP In . the Long_
projei:t'sciiedtiteil for Sai~~J;i:l!lllr ~:.. , Bottom-Reedsville W~ and
"'l"'l'ffl!' ~tlijei'!t"-l~' befog'aamlnl~- those volunteers will meet at
tered by the Ohio River Valley
Forked Run State Park and then
W11ter Sa~llatlon Commission, · -move out to assigned area~.
ihe water pollution control c.omVIctor Brown wUI meet his
mission for the Ohio River
volunteer group at the yard
Valley. It Is financed through
beside the Racine Fire Station,
Ashland Oil with major contribu- while the stage area on the upper
t_lons ioi the Ohio part coming
parking lot will be the pll!ce for
from Monsanto aild Proctor &amp;
the Pomeroy volunteers to conGamble.
gregate. Wiggins will have
L'O-ca:Jiy··Kenny· Wljtglns, procharge of the Pomeroy group.
gram manager for the Meigs
In Middleport, Roy Miller will
County Litter Prevention and
be the coordinator and his
workers are to meet at .the Dave
Recycling Control Program, Is
coordinating the clean-up efforts
Diles Park on the river front.
along the' coul)ty's 57 mlle.s . of
Wiggins reports that volunrlver front.
leers should wear old clothes and
.He concedes that not every
heavy shoes or boots If they have
moe of the .river front will be them. Light welghtplastlcgloves
Cleaned because of jnaccesslbil" will be given · to each of the '"
·tty and mud due to the recent
partiCipants along with trash
bags In which to put litter._The
high waters, but Is convinced
that the volunteers will make a group leaders and adult advtsors
difference In the beauty of the are being asked to- take along
communities through which the coolers of water or other beverrlver passes.
ages. Drinking cups will be
All ages will be participating. provided.
Wiggins said, In expressing his
While most of the litter col·
dellght at the high number of lected Saturday Is expected to be
volunteers from all age groups trash. Wiggins says anything
representing a wide variety of that can be recycled, will be.
public and civic organizations Each of the participating comfrom across _the county.
·munltles will be responsible for
Activity will get underway at
having the trash taken . to the
8:30 a.m. when . the volunteers
landfill. according to the
will meet In several sections of coordinator.
the county with advisory
Wiggins reports that Howard ·
members of the Ljtter Control Pullins of the Racine Locks and
Dams and some emplOyees of the
Board who will serve as leaders
In the clean-up effort . From the
Corps of Engineers will be
gathering points the volunteers
bringing In a boat to the bank
will fan out 1~ a designated
above Antiquity and will be
riverbank area and work until
"sweeping" that section for
trash.
·
noon.

Also participating In the local
1
h M
c
project wll be 1 e e 1gs ounty
Emergency Medical Service.
Bob Byer, director, says that
emergency units In the are11 of
eac() slte will be alerted In the..

evg~~~k~:r~~:~n~~~;~
will
be given to participants and p12p!a
~~~~~~~be~U

each of the sites foUowlng the
pop have been
donated by Dominos and Pizza
Hut, Krogers , the Pepsi Cola Co.
and Powell's Super Vatu, all
locaL Employees of Bank One,
Pomeroy, will be doing the
serving.
I
He encouraged those who live
by the river. have a camp site,
boat dock or ramp, to join In the
effort ·to make the banks · of the
Ohio River litter free. ·
Wiggins pointed out that rain
or shine the Ohio River Sweep
will take place Saturday.

"S;;~· "and

Defense takes
stand in trial
WINFIELD, W.Va. CUPI) The defense was to take over
Thursday· In the trial of a
GalUpoll~. Ohio, man charged In
the slaying of an off-duty Putnam
County deputy.
Defense attorney Joe Thomas
Is expected to argue that his
client, Robert Gray, shot moonlighting Deputy John Janey In
self-defense. Janey was shot
.t hree. times Aug. 17 While watch·
tng the home of Raymond Huck,
who already has pleaded guilty to
second-degree murder.
Prosecutors allege Gray and
another man were hired by Huck
to torch his horne In a scheme to
collect Insurance money. Janey
was assigned to watch "tile
residence by an hlsurance coin·
pany Investigator w.ho testtfled
earlier In the trial that Huck had
flied a series of claims that
summer.
Prosecutors allege Janey had
surprised Gray while he was
preparing to set the home on fire
and that Gray had shot tile
off-duty deputy while fleeing the
scene.
.
Prosecutors ended their side of
the case wednesday. State poUce
forensl~:~~ exj)ert Brent Myers
told the Putnam County circuit
court jury that the blood on the
T·shlrt Gray was weartna at the
time of his arrest belonged to
Janey.
'
. When Gray was to brOIIIbl to
the Putnam County Jall bls bead
was cut and his face scratched.
Thomas contends that Gray was
beaten by Janey with a heavy
police-Issue nashltght.
·
rests on the ltgbt revealed no
blood stains .

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stall
.
Lee Wedemeyer, Superintendent of Carleton School-Meigs
Industries, and David Locke, the
school's business manager, presented a proposal for a $40,000
transportatlon grant at Wednesday's weekly meeting of the
Meigs co·unty Commissioners.
. The grant would allow the
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities to
utilize vehicles from other public
organizations, such ·as GalllaMeigs. Community Action
Agency and the Senior Citizens
for tile purpose of transporting
Its clients to places of employment. Wedemeyer cited exampies of clients who worked In
Athens ·and Gallla Counties as
typical of. those who would
benefit from this program.
Wedemeyer·went on to explain
that the board of commiSsioners
would act only as "grantees" for .
the funds, since the grant re, quires that the money go to a
governmental agency from the
state leveL
Wedemeyer noted that the
. a "pilot progran t was on IY
gram" and that he saw no
Indication that this program
ld be
te d d b eyon d a
wou
ex n e
per lrid Of one ye ar · It Was also
..
·~ , • • •
- . ·
• •

revea(ed that he had held only face value of the contract was
"preliminary discussions" with (!hanged to $15,000.
The second contract that
those organizations likely to be
Swisher recommended be reInvolved In the program .
The largest portion of the grant newed was the At-risk Pregwould go to salaries, with $16,000 nancy Transportation Contract,
going to a transportation dlrec- a 12-month program . Swisher
tor's salary and $9,100 being paid .. explained that the providerto a vehicle operator who would driven grant •·assures that a
be on the job six weeks Into the mother who has potential risk
project. The total cost of opera- has the means to get to a doctor
tlon of the program for the one ·for pre-natal care" . To date, only
year Is being placed at $53,600, $231 of the race value of$3,000has
with the $13,600 difference being been spent. The commissioners
voted unanimously to renew the
absorbed by MRDD.
The board of commissioners contract.
Mary Hobstetter, Commission
decided to withhold approval on
the proposal pending review of Clerk, announced that the commissioners have received a
the grant.
Michael Swisher, Director of $49.710 grant from the Ohio
the Meigs County Department of Department of Development.
Human Services recommended Hobstetter Indicated that $47,343
to the Commissioners that two. would be loaned to Jim Hill
contracts with Gallla-Melgs Associates to purchase Pleaser's
Community Action Agency be Restaurant In Pomeroy. Thf!
renewed when they expire on grant would be a part 'of the
June 30, wlth some minor Meigs County Revolving Loan
Program.
.
changes to be made.
Bid openings were conducted
The Enhanced Medicaid
Transportation Contract. wlth a for the county's ·purchase of
face value of $8.000. currently asphalt concrete. Bids were
received from United Aspliall
has $1,250 remaining. The commiSsioners voted to renew the . and Richards and Sons, both of
contract, changing the date of Shelly Corporation, and both In
expiration to June 30, 1991, the amount of $20.50 per ton. The
Instead of the previous nine commissioners voted to accept
month status. In addition, the
Continued on page 10
·
·

Une-mp
l'"' ']'o"vnl'
e'n
"' •.r"tl compH'e
: nsati•on
J .-"'' .·
'
.
.

.

I0 bbymg
• .re.onn' b•JJ
ed
I s pass
.

~

·
By LEE LEQNARD
event, was to reconvene at 9: 30 They watned that If there Is a
UPI Statehouse Reporter
a.m. Thursday to finish a lengthy
recession, the fund Is lndangerof
COLUMBUS - Major lobby - calendar of bills.
Immediate Insolvency.
lng reform and unemplOyment
But House Speaker Vernal
The solution, agreed upon by a
compensation bills were sent to Riffe Jr ., D-Wheelersburg, sent
labor-managementcoalltlon,lsa
Gov. Richard Celeste by the Ohio hiS troops home for the rest of the
combination of limited benefits
General Assembly Wednesday, week . He ~ay call them back ·forjoblessworkersandagradual
but dawdling lawmakers failed - · tater this month when he obIncrease In employer contrlbuto complete their business for serves his 65th birthday with a
!Ions starting In 1992.
·
summer adjournment.
huge bash In Columbus attended
About a half-dozen ,other bills by friends . a~d Statehouse
were sent to the governor for his . lobbyists.
signature.
The work of the leglslatorswas ·
Senators spent more than two Interrupted by federal drug Cll\r
hours In partisan debate over a William Bennett, who addressed
campaign financing reform bill a joint session of the General
which was passed on a party-line Assembly and urged passage of
19-14 vote and promptly rejected stronger drug-fighting leglslaby the House.
lion In Ohio.
By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
Like a comprehensive drugEarlier, the Senate passed,
United Preas lnlemattonal
lighting bill. the campaign fl. 30-3, a btu ens.urlng the solvency
President Bush led an earlynanchi'g measure, now tailored to of the state s unemployment
morning flag-raising ceremony
the specifications of majority compensation trust fund, and the
at the VIetnam Veterans MemorSenate Republicans, wlll be the House quickly concurred In SeIal Thursday to mark Flag Day,
subject of Inter-party negotia- nate amendments.
which this year Is awash In a
!Ions this s~mmer.
Sponsors said the fund to help_ conflict of emotions over Old
The Senate, which quit at the jobless workers would go bank- · Glory.
dinner ·hour ' to accommodate a rupt by the year 2000 even In the · Ever since 1916, Americans •
Republican caucus lund-raising · best of economic circumstances.
have used June 14 to celebrate
the birth of the flag, which was
. originally approved by the Con. tinental Congress on that date In

Flag Day
is obseroed
by Americans

1m.

But the focus of Flag Day 1990
was not solely on tradltlona(
events designed to honor Olil:
Glory.
.
:·
Instead, the spotlight also fell '
on the raging national debate
over whether desecrating the
flag Is a legal form of free speech · ·
and whether Congress and the .
states should take the major step
of amending the Constttutlon to.
protect the flag.
Bush, who has led the drive for
· the amendment, used the day to.
quietly and solemnly push his
cause.
,
Accompanied by an entourage .
of Secret Service, but without .
first lady Barbara Bush, the
' president arrived at the VIetnam .
memorial adjacent to the Lincoln
Memorial at about 6:35 a .m.

EDT.

COMING TO LANCASTER
Tile tina 1eentu'7 of the
newiJ-ereated Cablllet Level Deparlmellt If Veterul Milan,
Btlwlll'd Derwlnlkl, (left), and Bepl'l!lelltatlve Clanllee MIDer
wiD be condnetiBr u • - foram IB Lalloulier oa luae II.
Collll
nu Miller lllld Ole public 11111H, wlllcll wiD foeu• on
- - o f veteran• ud lllelr dependeata, ''wlllrm u utdelll,
IJnt.lland opportwdt7 to ralo val~able IMicM oa·ttiDe!J lll•d.''
Secre&amp;arJ· Derwllllld Ill expeded to coftiDiellt 011 llealtb care fOI'
,veter&amp;M. etlueatlllaal PJ'OII'IIIM ud tile curreal budptary
conceru lacina hla arency. The -lion bepaa u 1 p.m.

The president carried a folded
American flag, which he handed .
to two uniformed Milrtnes, wblle,
two National Park Service ,
rangers lowered the fla&amp; already .
tlylq atop tbe tlaiJIOie at the
front of the memorial.
Once that tlaa was lowered, lt .
was handed to two other Marines
wbo folded It Into tile tradiUonal •
trlaqle as the other Marines
attached Bush's flag to tha :
flagpole.
•

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