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                  <text>· 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
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Kicker 324864

Flag Day;
see story

10c

below

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GROUND BEEF

Commission -to review
grant request proposal

5

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89&lt;

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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
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DIAPERS
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CHEESE SINGLES

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

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

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

.

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.
•

�Thursday. June 14. 1990
r

Giants .continue comeback with 6-0 win·.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

. ~lb

Bm~ !'"T"L-1'--ror"T"III&amp;Ic::lo~

qjv

.

ROBERT L. WINGEri
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General ~nqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asallltaa&amp; Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press loternatlonal,loland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatloo.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
. words long. All letters are subject to editing and must he signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!' ties.

Doctor touts
suicide device

and Dale ,VanAtta

the Fourth of July' • have aroused Montgomery looking like t be bad
public sympathy tor the Vietnam guy. Mont(IOmery's supporters
vets and their post-war needs. argue that he has done plenty for
And Congress now hal! agrowing the vets. But by controlling his
number of VIetnam vets In Its c.ommlltee with an Iron fist, he
ranks.
has forCed the vets t~&gt; work hard
while Congress and the 'White for recognition ot Agent Or an~
House Brl' generally more sym- as a carcinogen.
.
pathetic, Montgomery Is a hardLast July , more than !10
liner, and Montgomery matters mem hers of Congress wrote to
the most because he Is chairman Rep. Douglas Applegate, D.Qhlo,
of the Veterans Affairs asking hlni to hold a hearing on
Committee.
benefits for Agent Orange vlcThe Issue of Agent Orange has ttms. Applegate chairs a com·
done more to allepate Montgo- pensatlon subcommltteeofMontmery from the VIetnam vets than gomery's Veterans Affairs
any other Issue. He believes Committee. Applegate may be
there Is no conclusive proof that the chairman of the subcommlt·
Agent Orange .causes cancer. . tee, butMont(IOmery'controlsthe
And he has fought for years subcommittee staff.
·
ag aln~t the efforts of veterans to
Applegate never got the letter
win compensation: ·
asldng for
hearing unill Oc·
Derwlnski'.s gesture leaves toller. And when It finally arrived
on his desk. It was attached to a

a

·roTAL

!Berry
s
World.
.

·~; HE HAS B'S TROUB\.ES

.::AT HOME. H\S EMPlRE

GORBACKEV.~.
GORBACHEV?!
I .

I'M T~t.K\NG
TRUMP!
I

..
•
•

require many private firms to
grant unpaid leaves of ab&gt;ence to
parents of newbor·iJS,
.
Whatever one thinks of these
hils (and I personally sympa·
thlze with the growing need tor
parental leave), they are no
more likely to help famllles stay
together than the empty rhetoric
of tlie Reagan era.
Sweden Is the bellwether here.
All or our current debates over
·family policy were aired In
Sweden half of century ago, with
the cl!amplons of state Intervention triumphant.
The Social Democrats. heavily
lntluenced by Gunnar and Alva
Myrdal·. sought to relieve economic burdens on young tam!·
lies, and so· promoted state-run
day care, child allowances, mandated parental leave (eventually
with pay) and much more.
Clothing and houslog costs, re-

A thought for the day; Author Jeny Kosinski observed, "You don't
die In the United States, you underachieve."

'

'

LAS VEGAS, Nev.. (UPI) GeQpge Foreman, •o·somethlng
and . fat, can see his goal of
fighting for uie heavyweight
championship again coming Into
focus.
Foreman, who claims to be 41
although the record book says 42,
Is a 15·2 favorite to defeat Adllson
Rodrigues Saturday night. Ro·
drlgues will be Foreman's first
ranked opponent on his threeyear, 21-bout comeback.
There already Is talk of Fore·
man flghtlilg Fra~cesco Daml·
ani for the lightly regarded
World BQxtng Organization title
Sept. 8 and meeting Mike Tyson

..
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ft."

I

Wilson was attEmpting to become the first Giant pitcher to
throw a no-hitter since John
Montefusco did so In 1976.
Wilson struck out nine and did
not walk a batter, facing just two
over the minimum. He ran his
record to 2·0 and posted the fli'st
shutout and complete gameofhls
career.
Matt Williams provided the
support by driving In four runs
and extending his hitting streak
to io games.

San Diego's .Ed Whitson, 5-4,
went eight Innings, giving up six
hits and six runs (two earned) .
"It was one of the better games
you're going to see," Whitson
said. ''1t was one of those nights
where everything he threw was
right there. You can't win when
the other guy's perfect. He's
sneaky quick · and he had full
command of all of his pitches.
.. Wilson, ·. who threw up during
the national anthem before his
first start against Houston June 1
after being recalled from the
minors, held on to his lunch
against the Padres.
"I was kind of nervous (In the
ninth)," he said. "I was just
thinking about getdng this nohitter and going home. But I
started choking the ball. (Pagliarulo) hit a fastball down and ln."
Elsewhere In the National ·
League, New York swept Chi-

after t)l~t. Tyson ftghts Henry laughingstock with .every light.
Tillman Saturday night on the This will be his first appearance
other half of an HBO double- on HBO, the premier boxing
header at Ca~ars Palace, and . cable network. He will make $1
will appear on the sept. 8 card.
mUUon against Rodrigues, bring·
"I feel I' m closer now," lng his CO!Iteback earnings to
Foreman said Wednesday. "Alii over $3 million.
need Is the opportunity. Buster
That's not bad money for a guy
Douglas, people don't even say, who spent 10 years of retirement
'Can you whip. hlni?' They from boxing as a minister with
wonder, 'When are you going to almost no Income.
get the chance?'
" I'd been freeloading," Fore"The challenge was greater man said. "I hadn't bef!l earning
when people said there was no any money. My wife told bini I
way I could whip Mike Tyson. had to get out of the house If 1
The challenge now Is getting didn't start bringing hOme some
myself up. But I am liP·"
money.
Foreman beco.rnes 1less of a

cago 15-10 and 9-6, Cincinnati&gt;'
pounded Atlanta 13·4, Montreal
edged Philadelphia 4·3 In 10
Innings, Pittsburgh downed St. _
Louis 6-5 and Houston topped Los
Angeles 5-1.

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPS 115-HI)

A Dtv!ot.. ol Modllmodla, lac.

Published ev&lt;'ry alternooo, Monday
thrwgh Friday, 1ll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubCompany~uHlmed!a,

lllhlng

cond class pqstage paid at
Ohio.

• •.V

and complete newspapers over
toose fiber optic lines. They will
be able to soop, bank and
communicate across town or
around the world electronically.
Interactive television sets will
combine high-fidelity audio,
high-definition video, text and
graphics. Home facslnille rna·
chine!! will offer hlgJi.quallty
transmissions at two seconds per
page.
·That equlpment ·wm be linked
with computers and telephones
In the home; office and family
cars. Chlldren and adults unable
to go to school or work because of
a minor Uliless wlll be able to lap
Into a rich array of customized
audio-video material that will
allow them to complete required
tasks at borne.
Fire and burglar alarm systems· as well as temperat)Jre
controls tor Individual rooms In
the home also wlll be Integrated
Into the system. Rather than take
tlnie off trom work to admit
delivery or service personnel to
thi! hou8e, homeowners will be
able to program room locks to
allow access only to designated
areas.
US West, the telephone com·

Robert Walters

.•

pany Installing fiber optics at
Desert Hills, notes that the
transmissions could be at rates
up to 23,000glgablts per secondfast enough to lranamlt all otthe
knowledge recorded since the
beginning of tlnie In about :II
seconds.
Although fiber optics already
are used to carry long distance :
telephone calls and have been "
Installed In !be business districts
of virtually all major U.S. cities,
residential usage Is only In the
experimental stage.
· Regional telepb&gt;ne companiES ;
have made pUot lnslallatlons In ·,
21 communitiES In California. '
Florida, Texas, llilnols,
York, Massachusetts, New Jer. '
sey, Kansas, Tennessee, Pen· ·
nsylvanla. Minnesota, North Cil- ·
rollna, South Carolina and •
Georgia.
Fiber optic links to the nation's
90 million homes wlll cost
billion. Moreover, numerous pol- '
Icy disputes must be resolved
before the technology becomES '
universal. Nevertheless, It ~
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creatlo~. pre-school training,
special aid tor single women with
children, you name It: One by pliny ·should have a generous . j
one: every traditional economic leave policy. But the lesson from :
function ot the family was Sweden Is that thestateshould be
socialized, leavlngdad, mom and very careful In deciding how to
kids to prosper (ln theory) as a provide relief from the economic •
private circle of love and burdens ofmodernchUd-rearlng. •
Intimacy.
Even the best·lald plana have ;
It didn't work that way. Once unintended consequenCEB.
families lost their economic roles
Basically, government has two ;
- or;' to put It more precisely, options. It can put mOre money
once responslblllty for other directly· Into parents' hands •
family mem hers was severed through tax exemptions, credits, :
train lo\oe- the Institution found child allowanCEB and other devJ.
Itself exposed. And It quite cm, leaving parental coolcea and •
simply withered away:
responsibility Intact (and hence •
;rndlvlduals are all equal but'all additional reasons tor parents 10 : ;
equally depen~t on the state. . stick together). Or aovernment •
Volu nteerlsm has vanished. As can ltmlt cholcea ~ lulllldtzlng •
the family lost Its ability to some and penaliZing othersl..:
defend Itself from state Intru- which Is what happens, for
sion. It also lost Its capacity to example, when . the state chan: ,
muster layalty among Its own .nell direct fundlngtotbedaycare •
members.
L•
Industry.
This Is not to say that benefits
Government In Sweden chose
like parental leaves of absence the second course and now lives •
I!J'ea bad thing. especially If they wlth the legacy. It II hard to - •
are among li menu of optlona believe many Americana would ;&gt;
from which an employee may wts)l to repeat that unfol'f,linate
select. In my view, every com· experience.

Vincent Carroll ;
i

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'owned by Joan Kroc since 1984.
Approval of the .reported $75
million sale requires a majority
vote of American League owners
and a three-quarters vote by NL
oWoers.
The· NL has announced It will
add two franchises to match the
AL total of 14 teams. Douglas
Danforth, chief executive ontcer
of the Pittsburgh Pirates and
chairman of the NL Expansion
Committee, emerged. from Wed·
nesday's two-hour meeting hint·
lng at · some of the details of
Thursday's announcement on a
tlmeta ble. . · 1

Pom~oy,

Member: United Prer.llnlernaUonal,
Inland DaUy Press AA«X:"Iation and the
Ohio Kewtpa_j)er: Association. National

NL to ·aimounce expansion plans today
CLEVELAND ,(Ul'l) - The
Natlonal League Thursday will
announce Its timetable for.e xpan·
slon. but will not declare the
names of baseball's two newest
franchises until 1991. The two
teams would begin play no
sooner than 1993.
Major league ow,n ers Wednesday convened a two-day meeting
by approving the sale of the San
Diego Padres. A formal unanimous vote will come Thursday. The
Padres were bought by an
lnveslnient group of 15 led by
television executive Tom
Werner. The club had been

1no.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 157111, Ph. 992-,I!!Ci. Se-

WHERE'S THE BAIL!- Redlshorlll&amp;op Barry Larkin, looks
everywhere bu&amp; up for this elllllve ··baseball In the first luning.
Larkin had tbe ball pl.p bul of bla hand. Reds w~n 13-4 over the
Braves. (UPI)

The l~son of Swedish family policy
· For the better part of a decade,
Republican politicians celebrated the comeback of "family
values," a comeback (it was
said\ that twice helped boost
Ronald Reagan Into the White
House. And yet, through that
entire · period, the American
family continued to disintegrate,
oblivious to the political hypoc·
rlsy that had declared victory In
Its name. ·
Now It Is a new decade, tlniefor
another set of opportunists to
hijack the family for a political
cause. And the opportunists have
. dutlf\llly gathered, pushing a
package of legislative proposals
they Insist wUI shore up the
family and allow l.t to thrive.
1\vo of the bills are likely to
reach President Bush's desk In
the next few weeks. One would·
pump .$2 billion Into chl!d·care
programs,
and the other
.
.. would

• .

The Giants adhered to baseball
tradition by not saying a word
about the no-hitter. Not so the
San Diego fans. They were busy
reminding Wilson.
"No one was saying anything
In the dueout, but the fans sure
were," Wilson said. ''They were
saying, 'Hey, Trev, you got a
JIOohltter going. Don't think about

Foreman . closing ·in on title shoi

~ALL

Today in history

I

draft ·response from the staff.
saying that It was too late In the
congresslonlll session to schedule a hearing.
Montgomery apparently Is
sniart enqugh to kJIOW Whell to
give ln. !le saw the popularity of
Derwinski's decision on Agent
Orange. and he did not dispute
the decision. He now says the
Issue should be l¢t to the VA, not
Congress.
That's a new tune lor M:ontgo.
mery to be singing. He has
closely guarded Congress's control over the VA.
Montgomery's backers say t~
problem between hlni and the
Vietnam vets Is simply a slight
generation gap al\d that the
younger vets distrust him l)ecause of his hawldsh stance on:
.the war.

-

Glass fiber
tunes·in the future
.

'

By TOM WITHERS
1.1PI Sporta Writer
Trevor Wilson gave his dad an
early Father's Day gift Wednes·
day night.
The 24-year-old San Francisco
left-bander, making his second
start of the season, held the San
Diego Padres without a hit for
eight Innings before yielding a
leadoff nlnth·h,mlng single. to
Mike Pagliarulo. He then tin·
!shed with a one-hitter to give the
Giants a 6-0 victory.
Wilson's father, Paul, drove
·down from his home In Ontario,
Calif., to watch his son pitch.
"That · was for my father, "
Wilson said. "He drove here, but
I don't think he was expecting
this. I was In a rhythm pretty
much all night. The key was.
getting the off-speed stuff and
breaking ball over to keep them
off stride." ·

Jack Anderson

•

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief CorrespondeD&amp;
WASHINGTON - Or. Jack Kevorkian, Inventor of the death
machine Janet Adkins used to commit suicide, tatuously proclaims,
"My ultimate aim Is to make euthanasia a positive experience."
The retired pathologist warbles the looney lyrics of his
execu tloner' s song ori television talk shows and to any reporter
willing to llste.n, obviously e!IJoylng his notoriety.
Kevorkian's .Infamy Is based on his facilitation of Adkins' suicide
With his Rube Goldberg apparatus on a cot In the back of his rusly old
van.
The 54-year-old Oregon woman killed herself precipitately by lethal
Injection In a Michigan campground after being told she had
Alzhelnier's disease. ,
Medical experts noted that Adkins' symptons were mUd enough for
her to defeat her son at tennis shortly before her untimely death.
Adkins died alone, exceptfor the·presence of the man who Inserted
ali Intravenous tube Into her arm and watched her press a button to
release chemicals that killed her. Kevorkian said Adkins thanked
,him profusely just before she died.
• It was a death sadly lacking In dignity for a courageous woman who
l~ved life passionately. A neighbor said Adkins, a wife and mother of
t~ee sons, had "an absolute zestfor lUe:"
'·
Adkins' family and friends Insisted her decision to seek
Kevorkian's help In conimlting suicide was a rational one bfsed on
her personal needs as she saw them.
·
When doctors In her hometown of Portland told her a year ago she .
had Alzhelnier's disease, · Adkins began planning the suicide she
carried out a week ago on the outskirts of Detroit.
Kevorkian's assistance of her suicide has escalated the so-called
right-to-die debate.
Most right-to-die cases Involve euthanasia In which life-sustaining
medical treatment Is withdrawn. Courts have differed on whether.
ctear-mlnded people may refuse such treatment.
·Society rightly ddebates the ethics of euthanasia. But Kevorkian's
p'ubllclty·seekllig antics supply heat rather than light to the emotional
·41spu te. The $upreme Court soon will hand down a decision In Its first
rlght-to-dl~ case.
: Meantime, Michigan authorities must decide whether to prosecute
kevorklan, who takes no offense at being called "Dr. Frankens teln."
: "It's a complbnent," Insists the man who has had olher clashes
'Over ethical questions. "Dr. Frankenstein was a dedicated and
. SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. {NEA) director at the Indianapolis·
'competent resean;her."
Desert Hills, situated In the most based Hudson Institute, · des·
Kevorkian advocates executing death row prisoners by lethal
distant northeastern reaches of · crlbes the contempoi'BfY practl·
Injection so their organs can be used for transplants.
the Phoenix metropolitan area, ces tiber optic transmiSsion wUI
Irked by the four~hour delay before Adkins' body was removed
Initially appears to differ little supplant:
from his van, Kevorkian commented, "You could have sliced her
from countless upscale housing
"Today, we use half a dozen
liver In half and saved two babies and her bone marrow could have
developments elsewhere Iii the routes for sending and receiving
been taken, her heart, two kidneys, two lungs, a pancreas. Think of
country.
Information Into our jlomes and
tile people that could have been saved."
The "exceptional amenities" offices. TelephOne calls come In
iAdkins' Unitarian minister, the ~ev. Alan Deale, acknowledged he
offered In the "elegant homes .. on copper wire. :relevlsloncomes
knew about and supported her decision to commit suicide. He told the
(priced at $225.000 to $270,000 In through coaxial cable, antenna
Iletrolt News he did not feel it was his job to talk her out of suicide.
apiece) Include cathedral ceU· or satellite dis h.
; "I mainly listened," Deale said, almost topping Kevorkian's · lngs, wet bars; tlrepl.aces, three"Hand-written letters come In
fatuity . "I felt sad, as In 'Holy mackeral! ,tm not going to see this
car garages and "private master the maU slot. News · comes
· . person again."'
suites with sitting rooms."
wrapped In a plastic bag on the
Not even mentioned In the front step. Photos are sent to the
development's promotional liter· store with a shopping list and
· ature, however, Is Its most come back a day. or so later." ·
distinguishing feature: The aptly
All of that data - and much
nam~ Desert Hllls, on the edge
By United Press International
more- can be carried through a
of the Sonoran Desert, wnt be one single ~hln strand of ultrapure
Today Is Thursday, June 14, the 165th day of 1990 with 200 to follow .
of the first communities In the glass fiber by pulses oflaser light
Today Is Flag Day .
·
nation to enjay the benEtlts of moving at extraordloarUy high
\
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
fiber
optic data transmission
The mprnlng stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
speeds.
capability. The country's tel.,
~ Today, three thick cables, each
communications experts unlver·
almost
3'h Inches thick, are
. .
I .
sally des crtbe tl her optics as an
required to carry S,OOO,telephone
epochal technical advance that
conversations. In the future, a
wUI dramatically change the
pair of glass fibers, each the
way
we
live
In
the
21st
century.
thickness
of a human hair, will
,,
Dr. George A. Keyworth II, a
'
perform the same task.
former White House science
Desert Hills homeowners will
adviser who Is now research
be able to receive all of their maU

lS C.RUtJ\BL.lMG.
DO YOU Tt\\NK
tiE'LL
SURVlVE?
.

1

Page 2-The Dally Sadlnoal ·
.Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio
Thursday. June 14. 1980

Raises ire of Vietnam vets
WASHINGTON - VIetnam
veterans say a hawkish congressman of World War II vintage who
controls the House Veterans
Affairs Committee patronizes
tbeyqunger vets, and then gets·tn
the way when they need help.
Rep. G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery , D·Miss .• Is fast replacing
the Veterans Affairs Department
· as the thing the vets most love to
hate.
·
Montgomery served In World
War II and Korea and was a
staunch supporter of thP U.S.
Involvement In Vietnam. Some
veterans of that unpopular war
now say Montgomery lords ov~r
them like a stern parent.
Congress has grown more
amenable to VIetnam Veterans,
In part becau8e It Is the polltl·
cally prudent thlrigtodo. Movies
such as "Platoon" and "Born on

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy MidtiiJ)Oit. Ohio

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel'

Poma'Oy-Middleport. Ohio

•'

By United Press loteraatlonal
It's the last thing the last-place
Yankees needed: Roger Clemens
in a groove:
The Boston rlght·hander Wednesday night became the major
leagues' flrst ll·game winner,
carrying the Red Sox to a 4·1
victory over the Yankees In New
York.
"Momentum comes your way
when you are doing things right,"
h.e said. "Every one goes at me
harder since I won the Cy Young.
I'm used to it."
Clemens, 11-2, pitched six-hit
ball over eight Innings In posting
his seventh straight victory. He
walked none and strl!ck out eight
before giving way to Jeff Rear·
don, who picked up his ninth
save. John Marzano provided the
offensive support with four hits.

uwe won, 'that's what counts, "
Clemens said.
fastball had
· pretty
Marzano,
my
four hits

and stayed relaxed calllng the
In oiher AL g11mes, O~tkhlnd
While Sox ll, Marlaers 2
game. He helped a lot. We went edged Texas 3-2, Chicago
At Seattle, Jack McDowell
with the flow."
poull&lt;led Seattle 11·2, Milwaukee hurled a four-hitter and the
Tim Leary, 3-8, went 8 2-3
beat Baltimore· 7-2, Detroit Chicago White Sox pounded out a
Innings and lost for the fourth
nipped Cleveland 5-4, Toronto season-high 16 hits. McDowell, ·
consecutive time. He gave up dumped Minnesota 10-1 ·and 3-3, struck out seven and walked
nine hits, walking one and Kansas City defeated California two en route to his first complete
striking out six. Leary has 11-4.
game since 1988. Seattle starter
received but 10 runs In his eight
In theNL,Itwas: NewYorkl5,
E'r!k Hanson, 6·5, allowed slx
losses.
Chicago·tO In the first gam~; New
run~ on seven hits ln3 ~-31nnlngs.
Brewers1, Orioles t
" Leary pitched a great game, " York 9, Chlcagci 6 In the second;
At Baltimore, bave' Parker
Yankees Manager Stump Merrill Clnclimatl 13,- Atlanta 4; Mont·
and Greg Brock belted two-run·
said. "We just don't get any runs real 4, Phlhldelphla ~ 3; Pitts·
home runs and Bill Spiers added
for him. He gave a quality effort, . burgh 6, St. Louts 5; aouston 5,
an RBI double to pmver Mllwaubut ran Into a guy who pitched a Los Angeles 1; and San F'ran·
Uttle better. '' ·
kee.- Winner Mark Knudson, 4·3,
clsco 6, San Diego 0.
Athletics~. Raorers 2
.. rephlced ace Teddy Hlguera -and
Boston moved ahead 2-11n the
At Oakland, Calif. - · Walt
went 6 2-3 Innings. Higuera
fifth. Carlos Quintana singled,
aggravated a groin lnjur.y ·and
advanced to second on 1\n Infield Weiss looped a run· scoring single
wlll be out two weeks. Dave
out and to third on a single by with two out In the lith Inning.
Johnson, 5·4, absorbed the loss.
Marzano. Wade Boggs then Todd Bums, 2-0, en(ered with one
Titers $, llldlans 4
drove Quintana home, beating out In the lOth and picked up the
At Detroit, Lloyd Moseby dellthe relay at first ·after his win. Loser Brad Arnsberg, H,
vered a one-out single In the
grounder to second baseman relieved Texas starter Charlie
Steve Sax forced Marzano. The Hough In the ninth. Hough eighth Inning, scoring pinch·
runner Kenny Wlllhlms from
Red Sox added two Insurance a)lowed four hits over eight
runs In the ninth.
Innings.
third. Cecil Fielder, who hit his
23rd home run earlier In ihe
game, singled up the middle to
start the eighth against Rudy
S.eanez, 1-l. Winner Mike Henne. ·
· man, 3-4, pltobed 1 2·3 Innings of
scoreless relief.
Blue Jays 10, Twins 1
At Minneapolis, John Cerutti, 1
3-6, scattered· seven hits over
seven Innings and Junior Felix,
Glenallen Hlll and Fred McGriff
homered to give Toronto Its sixth
victory In seven games. Loser
David West, 2.-4, allowed five bits
In 7 2·3 Innings,
Royalsll, Aagels 4 ·
At Anaheim, Calif, - Wlllle

nm.s

Wll8on drove In three
k!ld
stole the 800tb \~Me of hhl career,
helplne KaniU IIIIIP an eiebt·
game lbllne streak. Luts Aquino,
2-11, wbo entered In the second

leaps aci'OIIs home plate beattor the tar of New
•Yori(Yankees' calcher Mike Nokes In the ninth
•

,.

lnnllle after Mark Gublcza
strained · his ribs, · earned the
victory . Jim Abbott, 3-5, was .
tagged for six runs In 5 2-3
Innings.

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Final 5 Da,s- ~ale -Ends Monda,, June 18th, 1:00 p.m.
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Here's just a sample: List Price-Sale Price
Chevrolet350(#219-7) $146.60 $7-3.30
Ford 302 (#1616-7)
$168.76 $85.92

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Parts , . , Spte/11
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bialnc all'ankee Sladlum Wednesday. Marzaao
scored on a hit by Jody Reed lo rl(hl field to Jesse
Barfield lo Mitre Nokes. The Red Sox won 4-l.

'

•4.0 Uter Engne

Loaded
With

•

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'

LONDON (UP!)
John
McEnroe raiDed from a set down
to defeat Ramesh Krishnan Wed·
nesday, leading a parade of five
Amerlc ans to advance In the
$500,000 Stelhl Artois grass-court
tournament.
McEnroe, the No. 4 seed,
defeated l&lt;fishnan 4-6, 6-4, 6·2 to
qualify fo~ the third round, Also
moving on were compa_tnots
Pete Sampra, David Wheaton,
Da'vld Pate and· Scott Davis.
This · marked the first time
since '1984 that McEnroe, a
seven-time winner of · Grand
Slam events, was appearing. at
this Wimbledon tuneup.

'

...•.
.

Father's Day

advances

; MARZANO SCORES- Boslon's John Marzano

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

'

·McEnroe

•

. Pomeloy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday,' June 14, 1990

Clemens records lith win as Boston downs Yanks,- 4-1
.

·.

Thursday, June 14, 1990

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�Thursday. June 14, 1990

Action begins today in 90th U. S..Open:·
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
MEDINAH, Ill. - Th~ U.S.
Open began shortly after dawn
this morning with Curtis Strange
dominating the scene like no
player has since Jack Nicklaus
was the automatic favorite wbenever he stepPed to the first tee.
•'You know I will be wor!gng u
hard as I can out there to win, '
StrangesaldoftheUnltedStates
Golf Association's 90th · Open
Champlons!llp. •The odds are
- against me. The odds are that .I
will go home ·sunday night
Without the trophy. And I! that
happens, It will be ail empty
feeling."
Strange comes Into the tournament as the first person In 39
years to have won America's
oldest proresstonal event two
straight years. Only one man the relatively obscure Willie
Anderson - ever has won three
straight.
.
Anderson; one of the multitude
o! Scotsmen who helpe9 pioneer
the game In this country, won the
U.S. Open In 1903-0«.0S. He died
·. live years after hlslastOpen title
. at the age of 32.
i;ltrange will not only be trying
to equal Anderson's feat of three
In a row, he will be trying to win
his first tournament of any kind
since his Open victory last year
In Rochester, N.Y.
"It's tough to try to peak
physically and mentally for just

DEFENDING CRAMP
SWING - Two-time defending
U.S. Open champion Cllrtls Strange watches the ball sail off the
18th tee during pracllce'roWid at Medinah C.C. Straage will try for
his third straight win when play starts Wednesday. (UPI)

one week, for four days,"
Strange said. "But that's what
rve tried to do. As you can
Imagine, there Is no one here who
wants to win this tournament
more than I do."
!lrltt Tuttle, a 29-year-old grad·
uate of little Campbell College In
North Carolina, hit the first shot
of the tournament at 7 a.m. and
was followed by 155otherplayers
- Including the famous and
not-so-famous - who will try· to
conquer one of the toughe~t
golfing tests they will ever see.
The 7,195-yard Medjnab Cou,il·
try Club's No. 3 course Is the
longest ever to hold the tournament. With thick woods plncl)ing
the fairways and with the typical
gnarly rough .apd slick greens,
even-par 288 could be a good
enough score to win.
The field ~II include 26
winnersofmajorchamplonsblps
and 11 winners ot this tournament. Nicklaus, ~resh from the
most overwhelming performance !n the history of the PGA

Senior Tour during a triumph in the first two legs of the Grand
Michigan last week, _wiJI play In · Slam; and Payne Stewart, who In
the U.S. Open for a record 34th the last two months has won two
time while almost a third of the tournaments and finished secon~
entrants will be playing In the twice.
·
event for the first time.
"And you have to consider' ·
One of those first timers will be Wayne Levi," Strange said. "My
U.S. Amateur champion Chris gosh, the guy bas· won two
Patton, who will be paired with tournaments In the last three ·
Strange and Mark Calcavecchla weekS. That may have worn him '
fonhe.opening two rounds. They out a little, but he has been .
have a 9:02a.m:· CDT tee time playing great golf." .
•
Thursday for a round the weath·
The winner tills week will have :
erman said could ~ Interrupted to play great golf because o! the :
by an Isolated thunderstorm.
troublesome conditions that can .
Other than the tltreat of rain, be found on each of the 18 holes at :
the forecasts called for muggy Medjnah.
.
weather and btgh temperatures
And with windy conditions, .
near 90.
·
• things will be even tougher.
:
With Strange dominating the
•'I like this course because · ·
pre-tournament •conversation, there Is no pretentiousness about
many of the more likely winners It," said Nopnan, who has won
have been generallY overlooked. on)y one major title but has lost ·.
The list of favorites Include playoffs In three otheu. ·
Greg No,rman, leading the PGA
"You can see where to play. ;·
Tour In money winnings this year BuUf the wind blows, the greens
with $799,437; Masters champion will get even· faster and firmer .
Nick Faldo, seeking to become and It will be even harder than I~ ·.
the first player In 18 vear• to win , is now.
.

. Sports briefs ·
Baseball
American League President
· Dr. Bobby Brown upheld ·the
three-game suspension of BOston
Red Sox Manager Joe Morgan,
who was to begin serving his
penalty Wednesday night in New
York against the Yankees. Mor·
gan's ·suspension resulted from
inOammatory remarks made
after the Boston-Cleveland game
june 3, which . ended in a
benches-clearing brawl. ... The
. 1990 amateur draft, held June 4·6
In New York, went a record 101
rounds, and totaled (487players.
The Houston Astros toppeP, the
list, selecting 100 players .... The
Cleveland Indians signed David
Bell, tl\e 17-year-old son of Buddy
Bell and gr;~ndson of Gus Bell,
both major-leaguers. David Bell,
17, a third baseman, reported to
the Indians' minicamp at Cleveland Stadium, where his father is
one of the instructors.
His
grandfather drove . him the 240·
mlle trip from Cincinnati to
Cleveland.
GoH
The United Shites Golf Association announced in Medinah, Ill. ;
that . the two U.S. Opens com·
memorating the-centennial of the
USGA will be played tu Pittsburgh In 1994 and Long Island In
1995.

-HOMEUtt

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Thursdav. June 14, 1990

Pomeroy- Middi!IPC)rt, Ohio

-

Qhio fishing report'

Lopez early favorite in LPGA event

Nightcrawlers -b est for Wolf
RUn I ake ch8nnel catfish
By Ualled Pre.. Jalernatloaal

ch~ken

The weekly fishing report,
from the Ohio Division of
Wildlife:

. So•dteast
· _,Wolf Run L"ake - Anglers ,will
want to use minnows, spinner. baits and rooster tails this time of
year when fishing for rainbow
trout. Chaimel ·catflal\ are being
taken on nlghtcrawlers fished
along the bottom of this Noble
Coun)y la)ce, ·located just north of
Caldwell off I -77. Largemouth
bass up to 25 Inches also are
available and prefer artificial
baits fished in s)lallow water.
Ohio · River . - ~ upper
reaches of the Ohio River north of
I-70 offers good opportunities to
catch largemouth and spotted
bass. Anglers here are casting ,
small crankbalts, splnnerbalts
.nd artif.lclal worms for largl!)nou th bliss l!Jid smaller live bal t
tfor spotted bass. .
•
·
Southwest
; Lake Loramie- Brushy shore..Jine areas are· producing crap- '
:Pies up to 13 Inches for anglers ·,
;11shing minnows beneath a
obobber. Brown bullheadl avera&amp;·
lng nine to 12 Inches are bflng
,tl\ken on dougbballs, stlnkbalts
and nightcrawlers fished In the .
-llpper end of· the lake. -Larval
baits and small worms are .
~elplng anglers to j:atch blue.g!Us
. 11roun(! brushy shoreline and
'vegetated areas. ·
·
'
·; Cowan 'Lake- NlghtcraWiers
lis)led along the bottom lakewlde
:are producing good catches of
.bullheads and channel catfish:
'Largemouth bass ,up to five
pounds are being caught on
. artificial baits fished In shallow
water. Crappies up t!J 1~ Inches
are being taken on minnows
. fished In deep water up to 15 feet.
•
Central· '
~ Rush Creek Lake - muegllls
fVeraglng six Inches are b~lng
laken from shoreline areas on
higbtcra,w lers !lshed beneath a
' !l&lt;&gt;bber. Channel catfish one to
ihree poup'as also are being taken
On . ~tc.rawlers aild Chicken
livers . ~kewlde. Largemouth
ilass seem-to !avor artifclal bait! .
fished In shallow water in timber
(loaded ar.eas.
.Hoover Reservoir -:- SfiU!.ll j lgs
ti-Pped with minnows ar.e catchl~g crappies alon&amp; sh_Qrellne
areas north of the second bridge.
Channel catfish averaging two to
four pounds are ,being taken on
c:iUt .. baits, nightcrawlers and
.
'

~eigs

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

livers during early and
!all evening hours. An occasional walleye and saugeye can
be caughl by trolling or drifting a
l)ightcrawler harness near the
dam.
,
NC1r1hwest
.
Bresler Reservoir - Bluegllls
seven to n'lne Inch!!&amp; are being
taken on larvel ba.lts and crickets
!!shed along shoreline areas
containing vegetation and submerged brushplles. SmallmQuth
bass up to five Pl&gt;!lnds are hitting
jigs and small crankbalts fished
In the same areas. Walleye
averagto&amp; _16 to -22 Inches are

a~~Snce or huSband Ray Knight,
a broken hip suffered by her
mother; arid an inconsistent
schedule due to tbe schoollng of
her oldest daughter during her
slump._
·
The Classic, which has been
expanded to 72 holes this year,
will be held at the Sands Country
Ch.lb. The short, par-70 layout

SOMERS POINT, N:J. (UPI)
-Nancy Lopez is overdue which
could mean trouble for the rest of
the field at this week's LPGA
Atlantic City Classic.
Lopez, who has 42 career
victories In her 13-year career,
being taken on a nlghtcraw ler hasn' t won since capturing the
Nippon Travei·MSB Class~c last
harness fished In deep water and
September.
The nine-month
by trolling weight-forward
drought
Is
the
longest of her
spinners tipped with a
career, excluding the 1986season
nightcrawler. · ·
Lake Lecomte - Bluegllls in whiCh became a mother for the
averaging seven to nine Inches first time and played only four
are being taken on larval baits events.
Jan Stephenson thinks Lopez Is
and crickets. White bass are
ready:
showing . favor with Jigs and
"Definitely Lopez is fired up,"
small spinners fished aloqg the
·
said
Steph~nson . "It's been a .
shoreline. Some wlillefe, largewhile
. since she's won. When
mout)l bass and smallmOII!h bass
she's
are being caught _b y anglers"' beat. " hungry , s he's tough · to
· drifting small jigs and spinners
Lopez will look to get back on
tipped with a niglitcrawler.
. the winning track In the $300.000
Classic, which she won last year.
"I don't• feel I'm out here to
finish in the top 10 every week. I
'.
want to win," Lopez said. "I
Mven't beep playing as welt as I
like. There have been a lot of
N~ York 'll, Cllleqol,tnd 11111e
Clnela..UII3, Allan._ 4
things· that have distracted me.··
M011lrtoal -1, PhUadelphla 3, 10 IRnlnp
Lopez has had to deal with her
PtU!Ibu r,th II, Sl. LoW 5
own
physical problems; the
Houato• S, lAs Allselea I

features the toughest finiShing
hole on the tour and sma ll greens
that require a sharp short game.
Many of tile tour's top-ranked
players, Including the tour's .
top-money winner Pat Bradley, :
Patty Sheehan and Betsy King,
are skipping this week 's
tournament.

BARGAIN MTIN£ES SATURMY I SUNDAY
All SEATS $2, 75
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESD~Y
All SEATS $2 .75

SPRINii VAllEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

. :

·~

.

·:.

Scoreboard ...
Majo~ .

'

.
'
·~ Ualted'Pres ~t, ln1erndlo•l

AMmiCAN LEAGUE
East
Tum
W L Pet.
TGN•a _, ....................lt 27 .fil'f
Bo•'-a .........................311! II .liZ
llalUmore ....................!l Sf ...1!
Mllw. .kee ...................IS II All
Det~ ........................!8 ss ....
Clnelaad .............. ......111 ll ;.fK
New Yol'k .............. ,.....tO 31 .U7
West
Oaklluwl ..................... .31 II .1'1't
Chic:aao .......... ............ M eo 11G

GB

I, su DleJO o
Thuradq Garne~i
Su Francl~o {Aiavers G-O ) at San
Dlep (H•nl.l-5) , 4:05p.m.
Atlanta. (Lelbnutdt HI) at Ctncln•U
(MahiH 1·1), 6:115 p.m.
New York (Cone HI at PIUeburrh

SaD

-

Y!
4

4

•
I

II%

(Patieuon H), 'I':SS p.m.

Chleqo (Beside I·:Sl at PhUadelphla
I Frteman •1 ) , 7: 3a p.m .
Moncreal (Gardner U) al St. Loui s
I Sm ith 1-S), 8:31 p.m.
Frt.day Games
Chlcaco at Phlla.elphla, nlpt '
New Yon~ Pllllhl'l" nlrtd
Ho\Hilon at Clnclm.tt ,' nlsJat
Montreal at !JI, Lollis, niJbi,
,
SIUI Diep at Lo, .bpta, nlsht
Atlanta 'at san F~l~eo. nl1ht

-

2
MJ. . .ota . ................. .se t8 .:m t
Calllorala ................... .31 Ill .118. 1 %
8taitle ..... :..... :............ .lt u ..•• I!
Tex.u .... .J., ................. M h ·•• It

Kaa• Cit)' ................ .%3 Ill .,.7 16
Wedllesdq Results 1
.. Oakland a, Teiu 2, lllnnlnp
' • . ChlcAP- 11, SeattJe Z
·
. Bo&amp;IGart, New York I

f

Mllwaa~e - 7;

Baltimore 2
Deti'OI 5, Clenland 4

'Sports C~t.l end ar
S..kelball
.

Ttturscl Q

Torellll;o 10, Mlane~~ota 1
• kanAB CJiy 11, California"'
Thul'alll~ Games

NBA., F1nals
GameS, Deholt at Portland, I p.m.

·

Boxin&amp;:
Liu .\'eps, Nn . - c-Mie'-el Carb.-,!ILI
va. Fer ..... o M:arU.u, 1t llshl

Bosloa '(JUfeller 1·1) at New York

•. (Caryl~!),1:• plm.
.MIIwullee tBollo 4-t) at &amp;animo.,.
(MIIadd S.S), 7::U p.m.
Clevdud !Valdes 2·~) a1 ·Detroit

nYwetsHs.

N.,. -

Socc~r

Wortd Cu p
Yu~:ollla\'la ""'· Colombia Mol Bolopa
(D), IIM..m .
Cameroon n .. Ron-.• Ia at Bart (B 1, II

Friday f-anws
Toi'oa&amp;e at New Yorkonlpt
llealoa at BalUm.~. nlpi
Mllwaullf eat Clevelaatd, nl rht
Calltorala at Detrott , nl111t
Oakland at Chk:qo, nlcht
Mln~tHota.at Kanaaa City, nl rht
Texa.s at Seilt&amp;le, niP*

--

NATIONAL LEAGUE '

East

'

a.m.

•

•

~8

p.m.

•
.

.ItT 1%
.Itt 1

tl .HI 1%
IS .4. It

ID ... 17 le % ,

Wtst

Cl•l-'1 .................... . . . . . -

11
1%
I~

~ Ro~on ............. T ...... .211 34 . . US

11 %,'
:f,Uan~, : ........ r.... , ...... ,.23 3-1 (.4tl 13
WedltKd-,y Rt'ilultt~
New ~ork ~:1, Olk!ISIO IO,IBIIAm~
~.

~

·Mal&lt;e and Take Telephone
cans Where'ler You Go!
Handheld Cellular Phone

,

•

Transactions
'

s.. 01 .................... .11 n .s•
S .. Pranc::IBCO .............38 Sf .stl
Los -'Dpla ................ .Z8 3! .411

,

Italy n. U.nltedStatH at Rome (A.)1.J

~::.. ...... :.... ......... .$~ ~ •::; ~8

Molltreai ... \ .... ............ .S&lt;I
New York ............. ,..... .%1
PhlladdpWa ....... ...... .. .!ll
-CIIileqe ....... ..... : ......... .ll
St. Lo .. a ..................... .t~

GoU

Chiclllo- U.S. Open
Sorntra Pol.t,
1300,0. LPGA
Allutlc cu, Cluale.

, (T-na ,._.), 7:SI p.m.
.
-OMII.MI (81Martl-1) at Clllcap (Kill&amp;
S.l ). 1: .. p.irr.
'hnato .(SUeb 8-ll at Mla..e.o~&amp;
(AilderiiOD t-1), 8:011 p.m.
Ter.aa (leffceat H) at Su&amp;tle (Swan I·
t), tO: II p.m.

r •

Frucl~eo

.......

B..eball
.
American Leape ....:. tJpiM!Id three-

~- J

S499*

lame ••peMiob of Bcleton M~aer Joe
loaton- Sl pddraftee pltchena,an
MaJO•y aad Brian Youaaa .. clleWs
Waller McKeel and 'nmodty T .::keU.
Fatdtlll
Detroit - NIU"I"N!d Ron ••c'- plaYer
per1011.el dlredtr.

R11f.819.00

'
Hockey
St. LoU - Slped left wlrip Tony
ReJ• lliJd Andy · Ryrnsh and delenwman Dan,IJI'oob.
USA Hocby - Named Baaron Pit·
ienaer executive _dl~ ctor.

Low AI 120 P~r MOnth ..

Fila Ellslly In ·
Your BrietCII..Ju.t Wa" Wide,
''Weigh• 28 Ounces
1 'llllk tor 'Over an
Hil11r Per Charge

1

Legion · · routs Marietta

,,

..

Kevin Taylor picking up the win
In relief. They combined to give
up 10 runs on eight hits, nine .
walks and nine strike outs.
In ·the nightcap, Kuhn pitch a
two hitter ln picking up the 7-1
win for the Jackson County team.
Scott McDonald had a double and
Wes Young a single for the Meigs
hits.
Tim Bissell was the loser for
Meigs as h~ and Terry .McGuire
combined to give up six hit~. four
walks and two strike-outs. ' -~ "'
¥eigs ·is now 5-5 on the.. year .
and 2-1 In the league. Meigs will .
tr;~vel to Pickerington on S~tur·
day for a double header with the
first game counting in the league
standings.

I

HALF'PRICE!

.Wen.d~t¥ sport.-Transacuons

'

By DAVE HAitRIS
Andy Baer led the W~Y with
The Meigs American Legion three singles, Terry 'Reuter
team exploded for seven runs In added two singles while Jason
tlte sixth Inning to break open a Hager, Matt Flnlaw, Jeremy
&amp;lose- game enroute to a 10·2 'Rupe, ·Tim Mayes, Wes Young,
victory over Mafletta in action and Tim Bissell each single.
Wednesl)ay evening.
. Terry McGuire went the first
. Meigs jumped out to a 2·0-lead •: ·· five Innings, giving up three
1,!1 the third Inning with Matt
runs, four hits, walking five an.d
~lnlaw leading off with a single.
striking out four. Wright picked
Flnlaw stole second and after a · up the save pitching the final two
'\'l'es Young single moved him to Innings,,
·
·
third scored on a wild pitch. Ed
Split With Wellston , · ·.
Crooks sJngl~ to drive In 'Young
Iii action Saturday l'Migs split ..
who had. advanced to second on a double header with Wellston.
Ole wild pitch to give the locals a
Meigs w'ln: the first game which
~-0 lead.
counts In the league standings
• In the big sixth Inning, Meigs outscoring Wellston 16·10.
!lent 12 players to the plate with
Tim Bissell had quite an ·
t_he big blow coming off the bat of afternoon at the plate with a
G:rooks who launched a two-run
home run and three singles, Andy
llome run deep over the . le!t Baer added three singles, Terry
c;enter {feld fence:· Terry Reuter McGuire added a double and a
single, Jason Hager added two
and Young added to the Meigs hit
parade in the sixth with a double · doubles, Terry Reuter a double
~acb . Jason Wright, Kevin. Tay- . arid a single, Matt Flnalw and
lqr, and Eric Hec(S added singles.
Key in Taylor two singles each ..
)\felgs scored again In the elghtil · · Baer was the starter with
Inning when Wright singled and
~ine around to score on an error
.&lt;tn :the Marlett;l center !Ieider.
•.Marietta scored single runs In
the fifth and the ninth Inning ·to
~i!lfoe out the scoring.
•.Terry McGuire was the starter
.apit the winner. for Meigs as he
wept the first three Innings. He
was followed to the hill by Andy
B11er and Jeremy Phalln as each
pitcher'. pitched three Innings.
T.lJe trio combined !O give lip
~J_gl!t hlts,strlke out eight and
walk two. Crooks led the way at
tll6plate with a hOme run and two
sJ\liles, Young added two singles
1\Dd a double, Kevin Tay:lor and
J•son ,Wright added two singles.
Terry Reuter added a double and
Matt Flnlaw ·and Eric Heck
~dded a single.
: In action last week Meigs split
a;. 4ouble' head~r with Pal'Jiers·
blil'g. Parkersburg won the first
game with a 6·2 win while Meigs'
toOk the night cap with a 6·5 win.
·In game one Jason Wrilht led
M~gs with three singles. Wes
Young and Kevin Taylor ad~e!l a
do@Je each, .while £ric ''Heck,
'r~~ry Reuter. Matt FlniaW, and
'l)rry McGuire added a single.
Y9ung was the losing pltcJler
diisplte only giving up onle four
bJts, Young· walked six, and
struck out two.
, In the night cap Meigs scored
foUr runs in the sixth toiM!I'come
a 3-1 Parkersburg l~d and held
oJt.tor a 6-5 win.

'.'

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7911

�Thursdey, June 14, 1990

•.'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Circle

I

By The Bend

.

;;RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will have bible
sChool through Friday from ~8
p.~. The theme Is "Friend
Dimension." There will be
clJisses for all ages and the pubic
~Invited to attend.
.
~

~

:YOMEROY -Rev. Chris
Meenach and the Sunshine Gang
w.lU conduct bible school at the
Pgmeroy Church oftheNazarene
through Friday from 6:30-8: 30
p;)n. nightly . The public ts
!~[&gt;'!ted to attend.
I

·cHESTER -The Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church (Texas
Communlly) will be having bible
s~hool through Ftlday from
9~30-ll : JO· a.m . dally. Thedlrec·
tli·is Julia Will and the theme Is
"(!;land In the Son.' ' There :ire
cl!isses for all ages and the public
Js.Jnvlted to attend.
TUJ:&gt;PERS PLAINS - The
TUppers Plains .VFW Post 9053
wiJl ~eel Thursday at 8 p.m. All
lll!mbers are urged to attend.
~

:fOMEROY - There will be a
clllcken dinner on Thurday from
5~6:30p.m. at thesentorcltizens
center. The cost of the meal is
$2:50 for oven baked chicken,
ow-shed potatoes and gravy,
gPeen beans, cole slaw, biscuit,
a&amp;l beverage, with dessert at an
e'W'a cost. ·A gospel program
fe11tur)ng . Jan ·and Cathy will

~icholson
•.

seiecred
fPr seminar
_).

begin at 7. p.m . and the public Is
lnvlt.ed to attend.

band will be the Happy HoUow
Boys. The public Is Invited to
attend.

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

HENDERSON - Tlie Gallla
.Twirlers Square Dance Club will
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m. at t11e Henderson Commun·
POMEROY -The ,Meigs . tty Building In Henderson, W.Va.
. County Salon No.~710 Eight and The caller will be Bill Busb and
Forty will have Its picnic and the dance Is open to all square
installation of officers Thursday dancers.
at 6 p.m. at the home of Marge
REEDSVILLE - The Payne
Fetty.
Family, Elyria, will perform
CHESTER - Shade River Saturday evening at 7:30 p.rn. at .
Lodge will meet Thursday at 8. . the Fellowship Church of the
N~ene, two miles south· of
p.m. at the lodge hall.
Reedsville on Route 124. John
·
POMEROY . - The Pomeroy Douglas, pastor, Invites the
Group of A.A: and AI Anon will public.
meet Thursday at the. Sacred
REEDSVILLE -There will be
Heart Catholic Church at 7 p.m.
a work session at Riverview
Calll-800-333-5051.
Elementilry to paint the play·
ground
equJpment on Saturday
FRIDAY
beginning
at 9 a.m. Rain date Is
MIDDLEPORT - The Evan·
June
Anyone
may help and
geUne Chapter No. 172 Order of
lf
possible.
bring
brushes
the Eastern Star, MJddleport,
will have a grand visitation by
LONG ,BOTTOM - The New
Worthy Grand Matron Mary
Generation
Singers, Evans,
Porter and a reception honoring
W.Va
.•
wllll?e
singing at the Mt.
the Grand Organist of the Grand
·
Olive
Community
Church In
Chapter of Ohio Beatrice Kuhn
·
Long
Bottom
on
Saturday
at 7
. on Fr,lday at 7: 30 p.m. Officers
·l&gt;.ni. ,Pastor Lawrence Bush
are to wear chapter dresses.
Invites the public.
·
BASHAN - The Bashan La·
RACINE -"' The annuai family
dies Auxiliary Is sponsoring an
reunion of Oval and Sarah Rousb
Ice cream social at the firehouse
be held Satun:Jay at
In Bas han on Friday beginning at. Diddle
5. p.m. Ten flavors · will · be noon at Star Mill Park. There will
be a covered dish dinner and all
available along with sandwiches,
pie and drinks. There also will be family and frte.nds are Invited.
live entertainment.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 77R will 11old Its regular
(:HESHIRE -The GaiUa
potluck supper and fun night on
Meigs Community Action
Agency will have a free clothing ' Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
grange ball located on County
day on Friday (rom 9 a.m: io noon
Road 1 near Salem Center.
at the old high school building ih
Cheshire.
. ·
· ·
'
SUNDAY
SATURbAY .
CARPENTER - There will be:
RUTLAND -There will be a . a Fathers Day homecoming on
Sunday at the Mt. Union Baptist
square dance at the Rutland
American Legion on Saturday
Church on County Road 14 two
mUes south of Carpenter.· There ··
from 8 p.m. to midnight. The

:za.

~ mber

Nicholson, ~Jieville,
been selected to attend the
100o National Young Leaders
. C:hnference-Colleglate
Slmlnar. ·
..
·:'Miss Nicholson' was selected
fpC demonstrating academic
ac!hlevement, leadership, and
cltiienshlp.
•:The theme of the conference
~s "The Leaders of Today
J\l€etlng the Leaders of
'PO morrow."
: :&gt;he also has the opportunity to
p)M"ticipate in the Activism in the ·
Nj:neties Forum: at which scho·
IM-s Interacted with Individuals
a:~ tvely Involved in the grass·
r®ts lobbying process.
; '!'he seminar was sponsored by
the "congressional Youth Council,
.; ~on profit. non· partisan educa·
Ilona! organization committed to
~ognlzing outstanding youth
&amp;lid providing them . with a
. ikands on" civics learning exper.~nce in the nation's capital.
::1-11ss Nicholson graduated
from Belleville East High School
irf.1988. She will be a junior at .
Southern IIUnols University Car·
~ndale In the Fall. She is the·
~ughter of Chief Master Ser·
geant !Retired), USAF Pearl E.
(jgickl and Jean Nicholson, Bel·
l ~ ille, Ill. and the granddaugh:·
tl!r of Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson,
G)lfton, W.Va.

MIDDLEPoRT - Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Gilmore, Mlddlepilrt,
will renew their wedding vows In
observance of their 40th annlver·
sary on Sunday at 2:30p.m. at the
Old Amertc8!1 Legion Hall on
Fourth Street in Middleport. The
event will be hosted by the
couple's children and refresh·
ments wil~,be served. The couple
requests that girts be ommltted.
.. . '
· RUTLAND - Tbere will be .
slultlng
the Rutland Civic
Center Qn Sunday from
1:30-3:30 p.m. Admission Is $1
for children, and $2 for adults.

s~V£20°/o
hous.t
fJ'Ne
SHOE--PLACE

.

'

N. 2ND AVE.

.

and dWJCe, The group waa one of sever!ll biiJ!ds
who ente.r lalned for Heritage Days ~tlvltleiJ on
Saturday for Pomeroy's sesquJceiltennlal.

ENTERTAINMENT - Peter Shaw and Hot
Point
Band perfomied on

.

"The Bulletin 8DII'd"
YOU (AN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
·fOR .AS LOW AS SS.OO PER INCH.·
;·

.Budweiser

.PASS meeting
h~ld recently
The Parents Advocacy for
Special Students which has been
active In Jackson County for
·sometime will become. a trl·
county agency.tn July, according
to plans announced at a meeting
of the grdup held Mond'ay night In
Jackson.
;
The other counties · •to be
Included will be , Meigs and
Gallia.
·
· ·
Mrs. Carolyn Riggs and Mrs.
Pat Moore of Meigs County we~
welcomed as new members at a
recent meeting where the topic of
discussion was dyslexia.· Plans
were ai)Jlounced for Dale Stoll of
the organization SEPAN to be at
the Juile 21 meeting or the group.
Letters were signed by !be
meml!ers'· stating the concern
which the members have about
their children's education. These
letters · will be sent to the
Superintendent of Jackson City
Schools, Ed ~ape! of the Ohio
Departn\ent .of Education, Jack
Coyan of the Special Education
Department of JacksOII City
Schools and the Ohio Legislature. .

'

.r

'

EXAMPLE: 111' SS.OO PER DAY
112 Sl.O.OO PER DAY
113 .515.00 PER DAY

.presents

COUNTRY STAR

.LEE GREENWOOD
Former Country Music Male Vocalist
OfThe Year And Gra~y Winner
. SattU"day, June 16th, 7:00p.m.
Jackson Co. Fairgrounds
Cottageville, W.Va.
Tickets:
$10 in advance
$12 at gate

.~:[Festival
·
.
..,·

'· .

Seating~ ·

Advance Tickets On Salt At:
PEOPLE'S BANK In Point Pleasant,
Mason a!'ld New Haven and
FRUTH'S PHARMACY, .Poirt Pleasant.
Listen to WYPC for more details.
can 372·2421 or 273-9372 for addltonallnlonnatlon.

Bob'·• Market 8 lraanll•sali
~naal·4:aatomar lpp~aclatlon Sale

.

. :

•

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

..

ALL MEN'S

20°/o

·'

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

TYLER CIRCLE

Renee Young was induct~ Into ~
the Ohio University Chapter of
Alpha Lamda Delta Honor So· clety lh ceremonies held at Baker
Center In May.
Alpha Lamba Delta recognizes
freshman • students who have
maintained at least a 3.5 grade
point average during their fresh·man year of college.
Miss Young Is a 1989 graduate
of Meigs High School. She Is the
daughter of Diane Young, Pome. .
roy, and Ron Young, Paducah:
Ky.

Tennis lessons are being of:
fered at the Gen. Hartinger Park
by the Middleport Recreation
Department, Roger Williams,
, director, announced today.
J Sign-up periOd will be from 2 to
3 p.m. June 12·15 at Middleport
combo !lllewn a,!i C.J. and The Country Gentle·
Village Hall, or residents may
men, ctehillted mu~~eum and car show patrons
call
Williams at 992-6782.
with. l~ly vocal and tilstrumental selections
Randy
Welton will be the
Sunday afternoon. ·
. Instructor and the cost for group
&lt;lessons, given In groups of rour,ls
$10 for six one-hour sessons.
Individual lessons are $10 an .
·
hour.

ENTERTAINING - Doq Circle on lbe fiddle,
Howard WriiAI oa Jhe leu pilar, AI Windon on
the drwns, and C. J. Cr- 011 the upright bass1 ~he

•eLUDING DIXTR, HUSH PUPPIES, NilE,
REEBOI, BRITISH KNIGHTS, BROOKS, .
'
CONVERSE AND AVIA

MIDDLEPORT - Overbrook
Center will have a Fathers Day
celebration on Sunday from 2-4
p.m. There will be a mocktalls
bar and refreshments. Ramblln
Country will provide music from
2-3 p.m. and a sports video from
3-4p.m.

..

WRANGLER
JEANS

Tennis lessons ·

NOW THRU SATURDAY ON
ALL ·MEN'S FOOTWEAR

ai-

will

Shop
Middleport
Department
Store,
Your Father's
Day Gift
Headquarters

Page

SALE

will be special stnglngand Pastor
Joe N. Sayre Invite~ the public.

•.(

!Tis

·

FATHER'S DAY

Community calendar
THURSDAY
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will
have vacation Bible School
through Friday from 6-8 ·p.m.
Classes for pre-school to teens.
'J!Ie public Is Invited to attend.

1990

Thursdliy,

Young inducted

birt~day

Tyler Circle. son · of Jeff and
sOnia Circle of Long Bottom
celebrated his tlrst birthday
recently at hi~ home.
A teddy bear theme was
carried out with pizza, cake, and
homemade ice cream.
Attending were his parents,·
sister, Nikki, brother, Jeffrey,
Grover and Elsie White, Wood·
row and VIrginia Fortney, Lula
Circle, Sheila, Klrt, Danlelle,
Tiffany Spencer. Serena Robin·
son. Ralph and Wilma Ballard.
Sending gifts were Harold and
Becky Circle, Synthla Vjnce, and
Joshua Robinson. ·

The Daily
Sentinel
June14.
a
··

The Daily

'

OFF

•

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

.

,.

:

.

1982 ENGLAND
· MOBILE HOME

..... '211

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

000-0000

•

.

l

Cancer benefit s~t

'

ALL HANGING BASKETS

Y~ur Choi~e......~ .................................$7.49

.

• •.

.•

-

.

OTHER PLANTS REDUCED ACCORDINGLY

.'

~

Effid While QuantiHes Last!

.

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

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

. NO MAnER WHAT .THE REAS()N MAY BE•••
"YARD SALE", "AUTO FOR :SALE't,·"PUBLIC
NoncE", "MEETINGS" oR "JUST 10 SAY
SOMETHING SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
SENftNEL BULLEnN BOARD.
,· STOP ~N TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADVERIISEMENl
... PLACED IN THE BULLETIN BOARD.
• I

•

· Linda Fields\ Bonnie Dailey, Minnie Rizer,
Orenda Cunningham, Harriet Friend; back, Joan
Sl~art. 4nna Coz~p"l, Janice. Fetty, a!ld Jackie
Fields. Olber nursing assistants at Veterans
Memorial earning tile award are. Carla Not·
tlngbam, Marie Young, Robin Haning, Anita
Harless, Kathy Elias, Jill Lewis, Terry Lauder·
mUt, Pam · Gilland, Sandra Peyton, ·P at Dent,
Virginia Riffle, Marty Meadows and Lols Deem.

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

. 000-0000

FRESH PEACHES, _
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
. WATERMELON~
000-0000

~ · RECOONm~N - Natlonat Nursing Aislsiants
. '"' Day was · obeervf1d · Thul'lld"' · at .Veterans
.. Mem~ Jlo.,.tal·.wttb·lllea held Ia tile hC~spltal
cafeteria• During the observance, the liunlng
as!IIS4811111 were JIIMellled special cerdfll:iltennd
· pliul ill recognllion o~ their l!avlng,passed written
aild clinical state requlremen~&amp;. In the ,p~oto,
Margaret Holm, left Assistant Admlllllsll'a&amp;Or at
VMH, prese!Jis one groop of nursing.·assj.tants
with tbelr awards. The lfi'OUP lncludeti front; I tor,
'
.
,.

R"AIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGALE LANE .

1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

' ..

·_t:;

3-FAMILY YARD SALE

FOR SALE

.

·'

SUGGESTED GIFT ITEMS··
I

•Arrow Shirts
:(olorlil or white
Long or Short Sleeve

Alfred news notes
Memorial weekend visitors· ot
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Robinson
were their daughter and son-In·
law, Lee Alln and Kirk Flck,
Evansvllle,lnd., and Mrs. Robin·
son's bro~er(alld family, Randy
and Janet l_{oebler, Randy, 111. ;·
and Leah, Gfor'! City.
.
Mr. and Mrs. {..ester Keaton
and Eva Kelly, local; Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Kelton, Bobby, Mat·
t~'!'. and Kevin, Chester, at·
tended the Kelly reu~Jion held
~ll\IY ln .S pencer, W.Va.
Gue11b o1 'Nina Robinson and
Cllll'• Fplltod .durtna Memorial
weekend ..._Norma Jean and
Gerald Swer.tZ, Reno; and Hobart and ~IJIS $Wiirtz, William·
•..-~w.v~

:;

.~- ;··

.fit..

·

.

eN~kties

Fresh,
l Juicy
,Sollllh Carollnl Trlt Ripened

'

. . eArrow or ·Robert
' ' Bruce Knit Shirts

PEACHES

Short Sleeve

, .

•HaN Runners
•K. V. Pole Beans
•Blue Lake Snap

69¢

• ...vi· Denims
•Sweaters
•Suits
•Jackets
•Men's,Dress Hats

•Dnu Pants
by Hubbard I Levi

.•Sport Coah &amp;·
-llazen
•;Jockey ' Ha•s
Straw • Felt
Underwear
•Leather hits
· •Interwoven Socks
·'
•· •Short Sleeve Sport Shirts
by Arr•w and Levi

'

...

·BAHR CLOTHIERS··
•IDLEPOn

o..-.

Fresh GREEN

9:30·5:00 ·MONDAY-SA1UIDAY
·•

.'

"Pnclucell'rhlel

Jll&amp;ctlvi 1'hnl
Sunday, Juue 17,1990
1/4 . . lltllll " '
n lrtdgl

Pcl••=r

It

MIIDII,WV
...... (304J 77H72I

.ma

..Plant l'rlcel
In Effect
~ SuppUu Lilt

worn

11t11AW1111
{MIIIIIMIC-IIIrtl
a

PJIII,OH
Jllllllll

,...,711

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

·and wear•••

..

Pomaroy-Midclepon. Ohio

The Daily Sad:al Pagt 11

ThUI'Idly. June 14, 1990 .

Commission: . .continued from page 1

One player claims jackpot prize ,

...

.·.·
•'

Classifie

t~ bids and recommended that . alleviate a serious water probCLEVEI,.AND (UPI~ ~ One tickets sold had tbe first five ': ·
the asph~Jlt be obtained from the lem there.
player won Wednesday 's Super numbers for $5,000 each; 60 had . •
location closest to the workslte
The annual report oftbe county·
Lotto jackpot prize .worth S6 the first four for $1,000; 591 had •
Involved.
engineer was presented to the
mUIIon for having all six the tlrst three for $100 and 5,978 ,: ·
By BOIJ HOEFLICH
Iron your shirts. Now this Is done
Phll Roberts, Meigs County commissioners by Roberts. The
numbers. That winner will get had the first two for $10.
·:
As December Is the month to be while looking down and wearing
Engineer, reported that the report outlines the projects that
Saturday's Super Lotto jackpot , •
$229,800 each year for the next 20
merry. so June is wash and wear a hurt facial expression. Yep,
county dust control program was Roberts' office. expects to comyears.
wlll be $3 million.
month.
completed for another year, and plete during the yetr. ·
chances are you 'II drum up a
The winning numbers were 7,
If you doubt It,
good deal of sympathy, but .made a request for three funds
Commissioner Rich Jones an9, 16, 32, 40, and 43.
Seeks divorce
"
Gentlemen,
transfers, which were gran ted.
probably no volunteers to hand~e
nounced that he had received
Out of the $3,648,951 wortb of
'
take home a cou.the chore for you.
Roberts also talked about notification from U.S. RepresenIn . Meigs County Common . ;
tickets S!lld, 108 had five· of the ·
ple of
After all, it I• 1990 and Ironing
reclamation work on Goose tative Clarence E. Miller that a
numbers for $1,000 each and Pleas Court, James Bailey, ;-·
shirts that have
Is OUT! Buy at your own risk,
Creek Road, near Snowville. Public Issues Forum would be
another 5,364 had tO!u'orthem for Pomeroy, has tiled for divorce' •:.
to be Ironed.
but don't say I didn't tell you so.
Roberts Indicated that plans held at Laucaster High School on
$75.
·
· .
against Cella El~en Bailey,
You'll prgbably
were being made to Install four
June 21 at 7 p.J1!.. for all U.S.
The Kicker portion of the game Pomer11y.
. ·.
•
find that" you not
have
On behalf of Drew Webster
foot by 10-foot box culvert on the Veterans. The notice Indicated
produc~·then.um~r324684; anc!; · Tli~ore R: van Cooney, '(
broken a rule of the house, which Post 39, American Legion, Elza · west end of the road, and to raise
that U.S. Secretary of Veteran's .one player has that number, good • Pomeroy has file&lt;!.. divorce pro- i·•
Is "If it has to be ironed, don' t buy Gilmore extends thanks to evethe road approlllmateiy. three Affairs Edward Derwlnskl woUld
for $100,000.
'
'
.. ceed!ngs agalllst Sharon L. Van. ,
It!", but you may be facing a ryone who helped with the fund
feet on the east end to the level of .also be in attendance at the
Nine Of tile $658,8i~ worth.'df Cooney, Pome~oy.
"j
stone wall.
raiser which benefitted the Stahl Route 681 In an.attempt to · forum.
. Of course, If this happens, you American Legion baseball procan react with a couj:M of snide gram. A shotgun Involved In the
I
ednesd~y
.
.'
.
'·'
·,..,
questions like: "Whl\tsa matter, fund raiser went to ElleriRought
One was fined aild seven others
trespassing; and $63, anel costs, ,
,.
Is the iron broken?" or "Have we of Pomeroy. ·
Eleven runs were made cbunt· was taken to Holzer Medical
·
R u tl and forfeited bonds · on ·puco safety
disorderly conduct; RoDand ·Lan- •·
misplaced the ironing board?''
ywlde on Wednesday by units of Ce nter . At 8: 55. p.m.,
dacre, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, ·~·
If you're really feeling your
the Meigs County · Emergency wenttoMelgsMineNo.2forJohn violations In the court of PomeI know I promised I would get
Llenellyn, who wa,s transported roY'Jifayor' Richard !leyler. ·
discharging a firearm "In the
cheerlos, you address the prob- you to the church on time- so to
Medical Services.
lem by telling
about your speak- but a week early? Now,
Filled was Larry Riffle; Gallivillage limits; SOn"ja -S. Clonch, ".
At 12: 01 a.m., .Pomeroy squad to O'Bleness Memorial. Hospital.
Middleport squad·was called to .PoUs;·s&amp;e, and costs , mechanical
Middleport, ·$63 and eosts, 'f ailure •
grandmother who Ironed shirts that 's ridiculous.
'
was dlspatchzd to the Meigs
to control her ve~lcle, $63 a,n d •.
Well, It Isn't the church, but I
tor her husband and seven sons.
County .Sheriff's office for Tim Depot Street at 9: 32 . a.m. for . problem. Forfeiting bonds were
That wlll be a mlstake"because did tell you about Jean and Bob
Davidson who was treated but Reva Marshall. Marshall was · Mlchl!el ·P ost, Columbus, $66, no costs, no operator. s license, and ·:
you're gonna . learri In a hurry Gilmore, · Middleport business
not transported. At 2:29a.m.( the transported to Veterans Memor· medical certificate and .$56 rup· $263, and costs, leavlpgthe sctene • ·
that grandmother didn't work people, renewing their vows at
,. · ; '
Tuppers Plains . unit was dis- !al Hospital, and at 10:06 a .m ., ning . with a flat itre; Bennett - of.an accident. · · . .
Forfeiting bonds were -J,Isa •,
outside the home and that was the old American Legion Hall on
patched to East State Route 681 Pomeroy unit was called to Watson;·BJ;anchland, W. Va.,$66,
probably because she was so Fourth St. In Middleport.
tire · problem; Aaron Hackney. Hill, Cottagevllle/ W .. \ta., '$43, •
for NQra G. Martin, who was Harrl§onville for Candy Arlx and
I
busy Ironing shirts.
.
transported
her
to
Holzer
MedlBelpre,.$66,
driving under age 21, running a stop sign;", Jerry :
taken ·to Veterans Memorial
thought that ceremony - with
cal
Center.
· However, If you encounter this the Rey. Roy McCarty officiating
-'
and
$66,
no
medical examiner's Swartz; Middleport, $54, speed- • : :
Hospital. At 4:16 a .m ., PauHne
cel'tiflcate In the vehicle; John E. lng; Jes·s ie McClure, New :·
1990 no Iron attitude, be not - was going to happen last
Rose of Bas han Road was transRUfie, Syracuse, $4i, no emer- Haven, W. Va, $43, lmprojler'
dismayed. This Is America and Sunday. However, It Is this
ported to Veterans Merporial
you have alternatives.
gency
eqUipment on the vehicle;
backing of a motor yehlcle.
Hospital
by
the
Racine
squad.
upcoming Sunday, June 17 The easiest, of course, Is to eat Fathers' Day, at 2:30 p.m., and
Jack
Provence,
Long
Bottom,
Life Flight landed at Veterans
-~~
a bit of crow and take the shirts you're all invited. The Gllmores'
$66, no, medical certificate; and
Memorial Hospital to transport Daii). stack. prices
back to the store, exchanging children · are staging the event
Ronald Jeffers, Pomf!roy, $41, no
Russell)3ro.,.-n to Grant Hospital
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
thf11n for a couple of wash and and the couple · has requested . at 2:47p.m., and a(3: &lt;MI p.m., the Bryee·and Mark Smith
· valid PUCG tax decal displayed.
wear jobbles. Secondly, If crow gifts be omitted.
Others fined II) the coUFt ,were
unit from Syracuse was disof Blunt, Ellis a. Loewl
lsn'i appealing, you can take up
Rita K. Hayman, Pomeroji, $63
patched to Rustle HillS for .Uice
the art of learning to Iron. Now,
I understand Bill Matlack Is
Loomis, who was iaken to ·Veteand costs, expired v~hlcle regl~­
Am E ectric Po~er: ....... ...... 30
wwtch this alternative. · ·I under- doing fine at his home on Route 7
rans Memorial Hospital. ·
tratlon; Joseph A. Rittle, Racine,
AT~ ........... .......', ... ,........... 43
stand It does take a knack and the near Pomeroy. .
At 4:53 p.ll\. , Pomeroy was AshJ¥td Oil .................. : .....36\2 no seat. belt; $20 f~oitiy; J;W
. bert. ·
new shlrtles just won't look good · Bill _recently suffered a heart
63andCQsts, ·
called to Amerlcare for Mary Bob ~an~'.......... .... :; .......... l2% L. Riffle. Pc;~nier
with the brown iron patterns all attack and was · flown from
PlckeJIS. .Pl.c kens was trans- Channing Shoppes .............. 103,4 disorderly &lt;'oqct.:-. I ·$63 : and
over them.
Veterans Memorial to a Colum·
ported to Veterans Memorial City Hold~ Co .................. 14\2 costs, driving undei'viusped'ston,
Hosplt'!-1 At 5: 13 p.m., the squad Federal Mogul .................... 21% and $375 al!.d CO!;.ts, DUii Dwayne
Last, but not least, of course, . bus hospltalfor specialized treat·
you can wear those new duds ment. Bill's such a laid back · - from Mfddteport was called to Goodyear T&amp;R . ;.................34"' Qualls, ~meroy, $213 .an"d 'c st.
Pearl Street for Craig Fife, who Heck's ................................. 3\2
unironed. Why not? Alter all, the iqdlvldual blessed with a good
•Ia)
· l
crinkled look is ln. Youmayhave sense of humor. Me thinks they ' was taken to Veterans Memorial · Key eenturion ..................... 13
-~
a problem with that though since threw away the pattern when" Hospllal.
La"nds' End ......................... 16"' ·
The Rutland unit was dis·
your fashioned statements of the they made Blll.
Limited Inc ........................ 49~
Vet~rans Memertal . ,
patched to Meigs Mine No. 2 at Mul!lmedla Inc ............ .... .... 81
past may not ha·ve lricluded
-------Admissions "'- Loretta Atkins
8:17 p.m. for Glenn .Moore who Rax ftestaurants .............. .... 2%
crinkled". If anyone does have
Just think you not only have to
Pomeroy; Pauline Rose, ~a: ·
the courage to make a comment worry about wash and wear, but
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ... ..... 20\!, cine; Alice Loomis, Syracuse;
about your wrinkled look 11 It's that time of the year when
Shoney's· Inc ..... .&lt;........ ...... ... 14% Mary Pickens, Pomerqy~ Angel
prdyides a great opportunity to you can't hide those extra pounds
Star Bank·............. :............. 21~ · Brown, Hartford, W.Va.
whip up a considerable amount of under the loose winter clothing. ..
Wendy's Inti ...,_.............. ,..... 7%
Dlsc;harges .:.. Ora Sinclair,
sympathy tor yourself ·by reluc- Well, maybe no onewlll notice If
South Central -Ohio
Worthlilgton Ind ..... ,........... 24~ . Russell Brown.
'· '
tan tty relating that no one wlll , , we keep smlllng.
· Partly cloudy Thursday night,
with a chance of showers and
Pomt't'm·
thunde(storms, and a low near
70. Ghait.ce of rain is 50 percent.
..
Partly cloudy and .continued
tto..n:
Funeral services will be at 1
warm ani! humid Friday; with a '
U am to Mid. Sun.-Thu!'!i
p.m . on Saturday at White
chance of ShQWerJ Or thunder:
II am .0 I am Fri. lil Sat.
Orville Oliver /Jay) Johnson Funeral Home In Coolv!lle with
storms. High \VIII be near 90;
·
· ·
~
·
Jr ., 42; of Marietta, Okla. , died the Evangelist Phlllp Sturm
Chance of rain is 50 percent. ~ .
~
·-1
last Saturday at the .Love County officiating. Friends may call at
E~dedffore~MJ . ·'
Pick-up
~\1 ~H-~F'67P
Health. Center In !'vlarletta, Okla. White Funer.al Home Friday •. Satn..rav~oqh Monday . , ' 1
1
·
·
1
He was born on Nov.IO,l947, In from 1-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
,
Contil;;;d
"warm
and
htimld;
1
''
·
Burial wlll be In the Reedsville
1
Clnclnnap, son of Orville JohnthroughtheP,eriOI!,,wlt~achance . 1
~
Cemetery.
·
·
1
son of VInton and LHI!an Williof •show.er$ . ahd ~hun!Jersl0l1Jls. .
I
,.,
ams of Cincinnati, both of whom
Highs
Will
be
In
the
80s
or
near
90
I
tam..
.•
larlio
Ori~
Sc,tt
'
t
Alice Loomis
survivf
'
.
:
eadl day, with oVerl)ight lows In
I;.
·I O...lnq's Dduxe pizzund foul' ''I
Mr. Johnso~ who attended
the60so~ _near70 . . •·
1
1 colia'sloronlyS9.99! • .
1
Rutland High School for one . ··.Allee Loomis, 70, of Syracuse,
'
I
I
"
I
Ohio,
fonnerly
of
POint
Pleasant,
year, served the Vietnam War
before settling In Love County. died Wednesday, June 13, 1990, at
where he lived for the past 16 Vet;eran 's Memorial Hospital in
..
Pomeroy, Ohio.
··
·'
years. ·
Born July 20, 1919, in Belpre,
The annual Meigs High School
Ottier survivors include his
Ohao,
she
was
a
daugh1er
of
the
late
Alumni
Association reunion will
wife, Linda I Evans), Johnson; a ·
Charles
William
and
Alma
Mae
·
be
held
June 23 at Meigs High
son, Timothy Jay Forrest John··
"'1990 Dom~r~o' l Piua . lftt Out._...,, c•~ lttt 1t.fl •H 00 O.W-w ••• lirNIH ,.~•~•
.
School.
(Fulton)
Swan.
•
·
••f• CIIJ""'"0- V.. oolet ~·'?'I'Mif'llfl-t.oM.,., . . . . N• •ddllioMiwfteo'e • .-llc:eble ~AfiT
son, iwo daughters, Kelly Ann ·
T.IME AND CARUA OrP'QIIITUNITIEI NOW A\IAILAilEI
All
Meigs
High
School
graduand Marianna Johnson, both of
ates are Invited to attend the
A former employee of the FranMarjetta, Okla.; three brothers,
.
dl'lner
and dance. Reservations.
cis
Aorist
in
Pomeroy
and
Wesley Johnson of Cincinnati,
arc:
required
for the. dinner but
Buffingtpn
Greenhouse
in
Point
Roger Wuuams of Ohio (town
·not
the
dance
.wblch
Wlil be held
unknown); seven sisters, Karen Pleasant. she was a member of the
from
9
p.m
.
.
to
1
a
.m. in the
Gallipolis
Church
of
God.
Thomas and Jennifer WH!lams,
gymnasium
.
.
The
cost
Is $25
Also preceding her in death was
both of C!nclnnail, Orvillette,
' '
aucouple
for
·
the
dinner
and
\
Linda, Mary, Raylene and Toni a daughter.
dance,
$15
for
singles.
and
$5
fol'
Johnson, all of Vinton; his
anyone attending the dance.
stepmother. Velma Johnson of
Survivors include her husband,
Checks
· or· money orders for
Vinton; and his stepfather, Carl; a son, Charles Loomis of
rese~ations are to be sent to the
Dwane Williams of Cincinnati.
·Given, W.Va.; two sisters. Velll
Meigs Alumni Wssociallon, P. 0.
SerVices were held on Monday Hayman of Pomeroy, . Donna
Box 25, Middleport, 45760.
.
at Eastside Jlaptlst Church In Jfayman of: Haitford; · a brothe(.
For
more
Information,
gradit,
')
Mariet,ta, Ok)~:.; with. the· Rev.
(;lyde Swan; nine grandchildren
ates
may
call"Rhonda
f:!oove~.­
Keith·. Miller- officiating, Pal- and nine-great-grandchildren. '
lbearers wer,e Rick· Bates, Lee · Service will. be held Saturday, . 9920-6889; -James Birchfield,
.,
Brown. -Gavin Evans. Dale Red- June 16, 2 p.m.• at the Crow-Rus- 992-2646, or Lisa Roush, 992-3486.
ding, Kelvin Schoonover and
sell Funeral Horne with the Rev.
Tommy Wilson. Burial was at
OLD TOWII CAIIPGIOIND
Paul Voss officiating. Burial will be
Green~lle Cemetery in Green·
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
6Out S.4 .. M, "· """"'
vllle, ·Okla .
(AilPIN$, !loy, . . . . . . . hlr
Friends may call at the funeral
Arrangemepts ' were handled
home on Friday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
-·~~'
by Anderson-Kennedy Funeral
p.m.'
.
aa•••~a~
,,., IteMs I c.•••uinndJ to
Home In Marietta, Okla.
.......... 615-7153

Wash

Pomeroy mayor's

Squads make II runs W

court ·'

· • The Area's

Nu~ber

~

..

A 11110U II Lr: fill' fl Is

.

:~~~~~~r:,..pontilolt
~- to. lfror• after firtl d~ . fChtc:tc

•98¥ ad runt in Pill*) · Cell ll&gt;tfora 2 :00p.m .

d•

•tt• P&amp;lblrCM:ion to m•• corr~tc:tion.

.

•Adl tHI must bt Nid In 1dv1nct1 .,.
Card of Tt'l.,ka
In MlmOfilm

t1e11py Aclt ,
YWG Sol•
Bw~ln••

8-Puttlic lila&amp; .tu.u:tian
9-W.-t11d IO luy

Card ~d 111111 naticHt

witt el1o IIIP.., in the Pl . ,., ...'"' Ragilter 1nd the Gallfo
pol.. Deily Tri~na. r. .ching ovtr 11,000 homn· ·
~

I

COPY·DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
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exchan~es.·..

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458-Laon

885-Lttln·
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Large ,

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5999
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Plan reunion

'

,

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INDS
AUCUST
15,1990.

)

....
•

•AnER SHAVE
•CRYSTAL COLLECnBLE CARS
•PLUS MUCH
MORE·

Jimex
Watches
NOW

~ 3.0°/o

33-F~rm•

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APPUUCE
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."1·5335 • 915-3561 '

Friday 9-1, Set. 9·1
AlltMafr-....... drytr
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.... rtf.. ,...... llbl•.
bllllt«::!aws. 11...1Clb111111.
...... lllld •
llle. ,.., ·CMQ~aJn. hospi111 bid. misc. tao -GUS
toilltlltioll.
Z •las IIIII' Of flvt foi81L
Rasldenct of £1•• EJplt. Raio
datos lith &amp; !ttl !lOt

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217 .. lee~ P I ey
POIIIIOY, OliO
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•

992-5042

StopiC•p-

109 South 4th St.

Frw Eltlnrates
tiS-4473
667-6179

Publlc$ele
&amp;Auction

11-31·1 mo.

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NEW•- IEPAII
Gutter~~

"Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE

C"NTROL

HeatlnJ, Cooling,
lefrlga~;atlon

Senlee
Relidentlal a.

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949-2161

. SHRUB &amp; TIEE
TIIM and
REMOVAL
."LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

Commen:lal .

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INSULATION

BISSELL
SliiNG CO.'
....... Mt
"Fne l11izn. ."

PH. 949-2101
or

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back .folding .money

......
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1614) 991-7143

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YardSale

.GaUipOIII

COUNTRY
•Mo~oiiw:

Roll

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Air Nne
!IMerwtloniTlckota
· AlkforKen.

Types of
Travel''

....._ Colle .... Ill

Nf1on Color, -

1-12-'..1111

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

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PARTS ...:,r,ERVli;E
For Milt 2 ....t 4-oyolo

NO SUNDAY WlS

=::-:=-::::::::--=--:::::=
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1531 Wilt 11111.,

. ,_

QMaa -~IIM4Io

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DAVE'S SIIALL
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Prlctt"
Pil. 949·2101
... R... 949•2160
Day or Night

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"At lunn

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MOVING!

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OUT

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'

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MOVING SALE
JUNE 11• 18

.• l
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Publcs.le

•Ga~

"IOW-OMIIa.''

3 Announcemem

j

___ ............

8

..........

Ml••srul, Qh, ••.

'

l
'

_ , lla'!IIJ ..,.._ .__IIIII M
...., _ . - IlL "' ...... IlL 1
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- - . - ..... Qw b '
Npolfa, OH
•

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

Good Rot•
T.L.C.
27 YrL Exp.
R.-081

.

l

........ lor

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for fhnt

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!l

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BISSRL &amp; BURKE
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t

•

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Chi.... lif thl . Dlv181on fli
Red..,..n h...., mill•
public riotloe of hlllntenrlon
to IUbmll the Tenth Annuel

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.K.and J CONSTRUCTION

St:IVII.I'S

•2-Mobila H~n for Rent
43 - flrm• for Rent

. PROJECT
A8 • rilqulnod br S.ctloM
11113.10 ..d 1113.37 Iii

8

......... 114 .......... ...

79-CimPtrl • Motor Homft

LAIIID RECLAMATIOI\t .

Fect.et Office of

,.~

' •FILL DIRT.. ...
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

3&amp; - Lou • Aeneoa .
38-Aeei'Eitlt• W_..tad

ABANDONED MINED"

thl Olllb

.. .....
..1111--.,.,.,---

40C

OFF ·

PRESCRIPTION
'SHOP
27.1 NOm SECOND
I!IDDIIPOIT, 0110
..

71-Boett • MotOfl tor Slle
78-Auto P•t• • Ace• tor Mil
77-Auto Repeir
.~

32-Mo~ll Homft for S.te

~

•QR:AVEL
•LIMESTONE

,._

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
# 1 Copper SOC per lb.;
Aluminum C1n1. 36¢ per lb.

:LEGAL NOTICE

REMEMBER FATHER'S DAY IS"
SUNDAY, JUNE 1'7,1990! ·

WE HAVE A.,_ICE ·SELECTION OF CjiFT
ITEMS. SURE TO PLEASE.. .. ANY DA:o ;·

OFFER

Jt .... Hom• for Salt

FOUNTAIN IOUARE
'
COURT
• BUILDING H-2
COWMBUS, OHI043224

.. -·

.

73-Vont • 4 V'(D "t
74-Motarcycl•

DIVISION OF
. RECLAMATION 1881

...-

•FATHER'S DAY
'
CARDS
•COLOGNES

Heal FstatP.

71-Autoa for Sale
72- Truekl for Sal a

'STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL li EIOUACES ·

.

'.

~~:~~~~ TO SERVE YOU-•.

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Announccrnenh

PQMEROY.
7 • S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt.IO. S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 e.m.-7 p.m. 7 Daya
ALBANY: 10 e.m.-6 p.m. 8 Deya. Cloeed Sunday

•,

-~-....---~ Public NOtice

CM~I&amp;,

RECYCLING .

•u-..

.
.

Goldie Boring, 88, of Route I,
Reedsville, died Wednesday evening at Camden Clark Memor·
.
lal Hospital In Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Born In Reedsville, she was the
daughter of the late Scott and
Mary Grim Barber. She was a
member of the · Reedsville
Church of Christ.
She Is survived by her husband, Tona H. Boring; five sons,
Herbert Bobby Boring of Akron,
Max Boring, Columbus, Paul
Boring of Akron, Asa Boring of
Little Hocking and Carl Barber
of Peru, Ind.
She Is also survived by four
daughters, Beatrice Bailey of
Sun.berry, Ohio, Iris Randolph,
North Canton, 1\Uce Dlll, Ches·
ter, Dolly Walton, Arcadia, Flor·
Ida; one· brother Early Barber,
Belpre, ' one sister, Maudle Wilcoxen, Belpre, 22 grandchildren, ..
32 great-grandchildren and 3.
great -great -grandchildren.
She was precedef,l In death by
her parents, one· brother, one
sister. one grandchild· and on~•·
gre;~t ·grandchlld.
'
.

'' ''

21.- lulin•t OpP.ortunhy
22-Montrt to Loen
23-Profeltional Servica

R. L
TIUCIING

915-4422

A.Great Combination"Q,.ality and l111011able Prices"
. WE GO THE Extll
992·6810
POMIIOY OHIO

..

, Goldie Boring

5-16-'90·1 mo.

"'"'···

41- Sp.ca tor Rent

::____________
I S -99 :._,______:___:

.. ,.

Mlddlep011.

Mldcllaport

47-Wintld to Rtnt
41-Equipment for Aent
oii .... For L•••

J~-:~::::"=?E~i:J

I

992-21

992-6421

6 LIVI~:\IIICK

1'1-Help Wante11.. '.
'

PAT IILL fOlD

Call

FMI!I S!liliJIII'S

•&amp;-Furniat•ed ..oom1

I

Pizza

In

Sr·rv1u:s

44-Ap~rtment

Orvihe Johnson Jr.

I

59-for Sill or Trade

41-Houlft for A..-.t

667-Coolv~l•

. 992-212·4 .

1

57-Mulictllnstrum.,ts
58-fruits • Yetlllabl•

Transpor I rliron

•

•
relephooe

11-Pett to. Salt

[ I'IIJli'YIIIIIIll

DAY IEFORE PUBLICATION
-11:00 A.M. SATURDAY
- "z :OO P.M . MOiijDAY
- 2&lt;00 P.M TUESDAY
- ~:00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M . THURSDAY
- z ,oo P.M FRIDAY

Classified p~es cot-er the
JOI.J!tJu:m·.ij.

11-BulldiftQ Supltll•

7- V•d Sate fp•d in 1dv1ncel

•A classifi.S edlfertilemWit pieced i,n The Deily Sentinel I•.. ·

c..,t -:- dMaified displty.

41 - Gi•..w-v
I - Happy Ad1
I - Lo11 end Found

ov1r. . .t ... Woahe
repair Gal , ....

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 glragas, 3 baths, rented
13-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm buildIng, pond, over 40 acrea fenced pasture
land and rented mobile home.

12-lponlntl 53-Antiqutt
14-Milc. Mereh.,diM

3-Annoucem~ntl

news. ··

i - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - - - - - - - - Only!

'-tw cor-. Wo Cllll

...ww ....

FOR SALE
On,• Of Rc1cine•1 Nicest Jlome1

11-MouMhold Goodl

2 - ln M•morv

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PAT HIU

Mr :ri.IJ.IIIilrs l~

1- C.,d ofTh.,ks

•••.,• it double price of 1d cott.

Weather

-·--·. .·:. -Area·deaths----

1 Marketplace

•• Cllll , . . . iild

A1

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SEIWICE

DALUS SAYlE
CiiiYSUI....TIIOm
DODGE
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~locks

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&amp; VIcinity
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lorlh.a.L

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�11

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanttd

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M'~-"
PomeroyltVeport. Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

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2 O.K.
t1 Integrity 3 Silly
11 Vetch
4 Gillespie's
12 Astonished music
· 13 List ·
5 Bullock
15 Sly
6 Calaboose
11 Andress
7 Craftsman
film
8 Malee a . 23 Suggestion 30 Operatic
110'Nelit
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play ·
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31 Unique
11 Clergyman 10 American 25 The Santa 32 Jargon
121 Pulpit
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36 Adoles·
topic
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was one
cent
22 Fate
17 Peppery 26 Sprlngllke 38 A Gabor
23 American 20 Ipswich, 27 Tolerate 40 Large
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·I

�'·

ThUrsday, June 14, 1990

Porneroy-Midcltport. Ohio

Page 14-The Daily Sentinel

..

•,

·,

...

'

Ohio Lottery

Pistons
repeat asNBA champs

!
'

Daily Number

423
Pick-4

\ngets

Low tonight In mid 8115.
Saturday, high Ia upper 8h.
Ch&amp;DCe of rain 30 pen:ent•

9426

. Page 4

•

'

•

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Vol.40, No.280
Copyrig~led 1 990

..
Z Sections. 14 Pog.. 25 Ce~to
A Multimedia Inc. NeWIPIPet'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 15, 1990

Meigs County ·Board approves salary hikes
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Sentinel Newa staff
Salary ihcreases of $60() a year
for certified staff and 4.2 percent
for non-certified personnel were
' approved this week by the Meigs
County Board of Educ!itlon.
The board after review of
salary schedules adopted a
$17,300 base salary schedule for
certified staff. That amount is
$fiOO over the minimum of$16,700
set by the Department of Educalion. :That over-minimum figure
for . base salary has been main·
ta!JI!!d by the boa~d for several

\

years, according to John Riebel,
S~ .. superintendent of schools.
Other salaries of certified-em·
ployees are indexed for educa·
tion and experience which means
that salaries are Increased on a
percentage basis to be In line
with the Increase given on the
base salary schedule.
The increase Involves only
certified staff employed by of the
Meigs County Board and not
certlf!ed 'staff In the three school
districts which set their own
salary schedule, Riebel pointed
out. The county has 16 staff

I
I

NEW CHURCH BtJILDING- This building on

N.rtb Seco"" Ave., Middleport, which-for many
• ~~IH""•il!"''iltT'lli 'A"Iol'llf'e fiiCDJty 'b} Royal

members who are certified, he
said.
·
· A.s for non-certified personnel,
the board approved a 4.2 percent
salary Increase.
The resignation of John Foster
as Meigs County's work study
coordinator was accepted with
regret at the meeting. It was
noted that Foster Is moving from
the area.
·
The 11 .month position for
which applications are now being
taken requires a ·minimum of
three years teaching experience
dealing with handicapped stu·

..

'

.'

.

,.

Renovation of the former church to quadruple )ts present
Royal Crown Bottling Co. on attendance, Rev. P anglo said.
North Second Ave. In Middleport The new structure will include a
large sanctuary, classrooms for
by tile Rejoicing Life Church is
expected to be completed in July , children five years of age -and
according to the ReY , Michael under and adults , a cry room ,
and restroom facilities.
Panglo, pastor.
·
The new brick exterior design
Tile newly renovated faclllty
will be used in conjunction with features 12. archways which the
the present quarters which are minister said )le feels Is Imporlocated across the. street. While tant because the church Is
the building which has 14,000 anxious for the community to see
square feet was purchased 18 · more -than a "storefront inlnis·
months ago, work on the struc- try." He also said the new facade
ture did not begin un ttl February. breaks the image of the Royal
Crown building.
Rev . Panglo notzd that the
The renovation being completed is only the first phase of quarter s now occupied by the
the overall work planned. The congregation will continue to be
facility will provide space for the used for the Christian SchooL

t o\aroon

All
~o.$\•

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sPBCVl- .1.,zgg
f\eta' .,

ct.
ot ~·~aa
'MFG- . . .

. '\12

spBClAL

f\etail $899

.

gift

·for purchase' of decorations ·

..crs el'f

tl1"!c \1t"
J\1...-

.

INGELS FURNiTURE .&amp;. JEWELRY
MI»DlEPOIT
Ouantllies limited to in-stoctc merchandise only and are subject to prior 1e
All weights are lOIII weiGhts and are approximate.

.·

sa .
j

•••, 9·7
SA1UIDAY 9·5
9·5

•o•.n

992-2635

-

,. .
'

land Run, Pipe Creek · and
Glencoe.
' 'I talked to one fellow who got
out of his car because It washed
away," Graham said. ''He got on .
a tree and It washed away . He
was able to get on another tree
and waited for about two hours
before being rescued.
''He was stili worried about his
$50carandlhadtoexplalntohlm
that we were busy trying to find
people this morning, not $50 cars.
He said he was concerned about
the fishing pole he left on the
front seat."
A woman and a teenage girl
were struck and· Injured by
lightning In a beach shelter near
Columbus and the Ohio Emer·
gency -Management Agency said
atl~tl209untleslneasternand .central Oh!Q were hard · hit by
flooding. . .
Helicopters from the Ohio
Highway Patrol and from Pitts·
··

burgh and Charleston, W.Va.,
were searching for more victims
Friday morning. Gov. Richard
Celeste was to visit the area later
as part of a hellcopte't tour of the
flooded counties .
In Madison County, west of
Columbus, lightning struck a
beach shelter at Madison Lake,
Injuring rwo. Virginia Summer,
62, of Columbus was In serious
condition -at Doctor's North Hospita! In Columbus and Nettie
Chaflns, 16, also of Columbu~.
was In fair condition at the same
hospital.
More than 3 Inches of rain fell
lnLickingCounty,eastofColum'bus, where . several hundred
people were evacuated In floods
earlier this month. Columbus
was. -lilt ..~ ,2, lncbes of rain,
flooding st,reets and khocklng out
power. to about 35,000 customers
of the Columbus Southern Power
Co.
·

Meigs County .
Grand Jury is
tn sesswn

IG, m
' m·' un·
. 'urn .wage

bills_aet Senate's 0 K
e

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) The Ohio Senate voted unanlm·
ously. Thursday to establish a
state Inspector general's office,
but only after a highly-charged
political debate reaching into
this Yelir'.s campatans for governor and attorney pneral.
·
Senators headecl home until ai
least later this month after
sending to Gov. Richard Celeste
a bill raising the state minimum
wage, adopting a revised version
of a House-passed "lifeline"
telephone blli, an\1 overriding
Celeste's veto of a school discipline bill.
The inspector general's prop. osal, like the telephone measure,
was returned to tile House for
~ncurrence in · amendments . .
The House Is expected to reconvene later this month, and will
probably ratify the inspector
general's office.
Ohio already lias an Inspector
general, whom Celeste appointed
under executive order to Investigate corruption In the admlnls. tratimi. The five-person office
will expire when Celeste leaves

The Meigs County Grand Jury
IS In session today. and It ·1s
anticipated that charges against
Jason E. Riggs and Douglas
Illes with "poor children' : were Harris will be presented.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - . is expected to reconvene later
Riggs, 18, and Harris, 26, were
eliminated from the lifeline plan.
this month .
· Despite complaints It jgnores too
arrested
on June 3 In connection
Citing
cost
concerns,
Sen.
of
being
He
accused
Finan
many people · Who need a telewith
the
death
of VIctor Will, 82,
Richard
Finan,
R-Cinclnnati,
"mean-splrlted"ln trimming the
phone, tile Ohio Senate Thursday
of
Canal
Winchester.
Will was
bilL
approved a "lifeline" bill offer- clipped the ellglblllty criteria,
struck
by
·a
pickup
truck In
But Finan sa1d It Is a "realls·
Ing cheap phone service for the cut out ail phone frills, ellml·
Chester
foUowlng
his
high
school
tic" pian covering about 400,000
nated a 20-cent surcharge on
elderly and disabled on low
reuf110n
there,
and
his
body
was
regular phone customers, and
Ohioans, mainly those over 65,
Incomes.
.
found
the
following
day
over
an
blind or otherwise disabled and
stlpulat~ that the users wlll pay
The bill passed. 28·5, and was
embankment
on
West
Shade
who already receive Incomereturned to the House, where It · for too many calls.
Road, nearly seven miles from
Sen. Jeffrey Johnson, D· · related government assistance.
had been approved last April In
the scene of the acclden t.
much different form . Tile House Cleveland, complained that lamThe pickup truck was found,
I
He said It will cost ~5 million a
anq burned, on a
abandoned
year, by the most conservative
township
road
neaf Mhens later
estimates.
WINFIELD. W.Va. (UPI) The bill r!!Q Ulres the telephOne the same day.
ca,se of an Ohio man charged
The
Riggs
was
charged
in
.
Meigs
company, through the Public
.
I
n
the
gl!n s.Jaylng of an off-duty
County
Court
with
aggravated
Utilities Commission of Ohio, to
Putnam
County deputy is to go to
offer the no-trills, touch-tone vehicular homoclde, abuse of a
Joan Wolfe, co-manager of roy for $7.
the
jilry
Monday, after Robert
service. to those eligible, lnclud· corpse and tampering with eviBank One In Pomeroy, presented
Anyone having suggestions for
Gray
testified
he changed his
dence.
Meigs
County
Court
'
a check on behalf of the bank in other ornament scenes Is encour- lng special service for those who Judge Patrick H. O'Brien bound
mind
about
torching
a home and
cannot hear or speak.
the amount of $500 to .the aged to contact Mrs. Wolfe at the
was
fleeing
when
he
was atRiggs over to tile grand jury
Pomeroy Merchants Association bank. All proceeds from the sale
tacked
from
behind.
The service would be offered at foUowlng Riggs' waiver of a
Thursday for the purchase of of the ornaments will go toward
Gray, 32, of Gallipolis. Ohio, Is
the measured or message rate, preliminary hearing. Meigs
Christmas decorations for the purchasing Christmas
accused
of shootillll Deputy John
which places a ceiling on the County Prosecuting Attorney
village.
ornaments.
Janey
three
times on Aug.' 17
number or monthly calls. A user SteYen L. Story Indicated on
The donated money, raised
Other matters discussed at the could switch to unlimited calls, Thursday that he expected grand
after the moonlighting officer
through the · sale of Pomeroy meeting Included the Ohio Unl·
caught him trying to set fire to
but could not return to lifeline jury Indictments on those
landmark Christmas ornaments, v,e rslty Coinmunlverslty Band
the home or Raymond Huck iii an
charges In addition to a new
status for one year.
will be use~ toward the pure has- Concert or June 28. The concert
Fraudulently obtaining theser· charge ot arson, a third degree -alleged tnaurance scam.
. tng of .Chrlstmas banners for the has become a yearly eveni
Huck al.,eady has · pleaded
vice would draw a maximum felO!IY. Riggs remains In the
village. Durl1111 the meeting; sponsored by Bank One. · Also
gulity ,to second-degree murder. ·
custody of the Meigs County Jail.
30-day
jail
sentence
.
and
maxi·
Mrs. Wolfe selected ·. those during this time the merchants
Gray aald from Witness stand
Harris was charlfd With tammurti $2liO nne.
banners.
will sponsor "Art In the Park."
Finan said tbat after the House pering with evidence, and was , Thursday he ilad,doused portions
The ornaments will be sold In a The show Is open to anyone who
also bound over to Common 1of the house with gaaollne but
passed the more generous bill
series and the first ornament would like to show their art and
funded by a 20-centsurcharpon . Pleas Court for further proceed· : changed his mind about setting
shows a scene of the Meigs · any art form will be accepted.
the fire and was fieeing the araa
replar phone customers, his lngs after walvlllll his rllht to a
County Courthouse, which was
More Information on "Art In
when Janey caught him.
office was "deluged" with calls preliminary hearln&amp; a week a10.
• .des lifted and drawn by Joe the Park" may be obtained by
'1Juat didn't do II," Gray told
from Irate conatltuenta who did Harris was relealed on bond
'Clark. These ornaments may lie contacting Annie Chapman at
the Putnam County Circuit Coul't
not want to provide phones for from the Middleport Jail earlier
purchased' at Bank One In Pome- 992-2815.
. Jury. "(It was&gt; achanaeofheart._
this week. ·
welfare recipients.
·.··

M~r.fbants receive .$500

.

~;~~~~~ed

their banks by about
Sunday services will be held
''Numerous trailers were
there also for the youth and toppled. Numerous houses (were
children, six through 18, as well knocked) off their foundations .
as fellowships. Marty and Cindy Numerous cars and trucks are in
Diehl are the youth leaders and the creeks." •
will continue their work In the
Graham said a makeshift
cf!lldren' s department, willie morgue has been put up In
P'ete and Brenda Barnhart will · Shadyside, a village of about
be conducting the ~unday school 4,300 across the Ohio River from
and youth worship services.
Wheeling, W.Va. The flooding
The Rev . Mr. Pangia said that
creeks Inundated numerous hill
with both sanctuaries the church comrnunltles,,lncludtng Cumber·
will be able to seat about 600
people. Present attendance, · lie
notes, averages 240.
The church has a television
ministry and has recently completed plans for a camp meeting
•
•
to be held at the Syracuse park,
July 22-25.

Senate adopts· 'lifeliDe' proposal
.

\ roonds

pro~&lt;Tam .

It was noted and approved by
the board that Southe}'n Local
School District will provide a
classroom next year for the
county-wide handicapped class
for students with severe behavior
problems. The class was held
during the 1989-90 year at the
Rutland sc hool.
A kindergarten through 12th
grade social studies course was
approved by the board. Also
approved by the board was the
1990-91 budget and approprla·
tlons and the school calendar .

Ohio Voluntary Education CooperativE!; the Southeasdtern OhioSpecial Education Regtonal Resource Center, the Trl-County
Career Development Program,
the Educational Media Resource
Center, and the Coalition of
Rural and Appalachian Schools.
Supt. Riebel was appointed the
authorizing representative of all
the organizations.
Appropriation modifications
for the seat belt program, pupil
competency and the ABE

At least fi~e killed ·bY flash
floods in Shadyside Thursday

SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UPI) -At
least five people were kflled and
as many as 60 more are missing
as a result of a flash flood that
Inundated a trailer park and
several hlll towns near the Ohio
River.
Capt. Todd Graham of the
.Belmont County Sherlfr's De·
partment said the thunderstorm
hltshortlyafter8p.m.ThursdaYI)
sending area creeks rampaging
over their banks.
"We have approximately five
deaths at this point, and about 60
missing, although reports are
stili unconfirmed at this point,"
he said.
·
. "There was one local bar on
Weegle Road where the walls
· Crown Bottling Co. waa pnrcbaMtl by Rejoicing
collapsed, and traPPed people
U fe -Cbun:b. Renoviii lOll Is expeeled to be :J. lnslde, Tiierewas-a-mobllehome
Mlif'p~led'neirmenUI: """"- .. -.. · • "' r • ·
sitting next to the bar that
washed down tile creek with
people In it."
''We had a torre11tlal downpour
that started about 8 p.m . and
progressively got worse, " Bruce
Fink, a Shadyside pollee officer,
said. · ''We had three creeks that

Church renovation project
to ·be completed next month
-·.

dents or a special · education
cePtlflcate Including something
at.the high school level. The job
Involves assisting handicapped
students with job placement.
The board voted to approve the
continued oper ation of the safety
belt educational center on two
Saturdays ·a month and contracted with Eric Chambers to
operate the center.
Membership and participation
In several organizations were
approved Including the Council
of Government -Southeastern

.
office next January.
The bill, offered by the governor and sponsored by Rep.
W!Uiam Healy, D-Canton, per·
petuates the office in state law.
The Inspector general will be
appolnted ·by the governor, subJect to Senate confirmation. The
new bill gives the Inspector
general the power to subpoena.
witnesses In his Investigations.
Majority Republicans shot
down a proposed amendment by
Sen . Richard Pfeiffer , D·
Columbus, to allow the inspector
general to Investigate the other
elected statewide officials and
the House and Senate, with their
perm Iss!on.
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
said those agencies already have
their own Investigative
mechaniSms .
·
.
Pfeifer Is the Republican nom!:
nee lor attorney general, and his'
opponent, Sen. Lee Fisher, D·
Shaker Heights, chastised him
and other Republicans for refus·
!ng to allow the Inspector general
to investigate corruption in the
Senate.

Gray case scheduled
to go to jury Monday
Gut feelln&amp;. "
He said he was' leavlllll the
home when he heard a gunshOt.
He said he hit the ground.
.. '
"All of a sudden there was
someone on top of me, hitting me
with something," Gray said. '1
be&amp;ied the person to quit hitting
me with something."
He said Janey did not Identify
himself as a deputy.
"I thOught this person waa
going to kill me," Gray saki. ·:.
He testified that he shot Janey
In self defense. Prosecutors
contend Gray spotted Janey
peertnc at him through a window
at Huck's home and Gray Oed to.
escape being caught.
The defense rested Ita side
Thursday . Putnam Cln:ultJud&amp;e
Clarence Watt told prOMCutora
and delellse attorney Joe Thomaa tn eome toanagteemnt for
rules for closllll lflllillmta.
which are to be given Mon4ay.
~

;'

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