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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. June 18. 1990

L&gt;cal news briefs---t Cooler weather headed for Ohio today
Middleport police probe wreck
An accident on Fruth Pharmacy parking lot early S11turday
arterrioon was Investigated by Middleport Pollee.
According to the pollee, Erma H. Turnbull, Mason, W. Va.,
was backing from a parking place when the rear of her car
struck the left side of a southbound car driven by Yvonne R.
Sisson, Reedsville.
There was moderate damage to left door of the SissOn car but
none to the Turnbull vehicle. No citations were Issued.

But some people Involved In
the talks told the Times more
than one casino Is at stake,
asserting that Trump could even·
tually lose conlfol of much of his
real estate and gambling empire
lf the banks fall to agree on a new
loan package.
The talks among the banks
considering new loans to Trump
deteriorated on Saturday, With
the blg New York banks q ulbbllng over the proposed terms for
the developer, the newspaper
said.
Last week. the banks - Clt·
!corp, B~.nkers }:rust New York

additional fioodlng and the storm
quickly dissipated. .'l'he National
Weather Service said there was a
slight chance of severe thunderstorms Monday afternoon In the
southeast counties ~
Humidity levels were t,o fall by
afternoon as drier air makes Its
way Into the state. After after·
p~n highs In the 81)s, lows

Microbes.feast on .oilspill

Monday night are to. drop to
between 60 al!d 65.
High pressure will begin to
Influence the Buckeye State
Monday night. Skies · Will be
mostly clear butnorthwestwlnds
off lake erie may cause a few
scattered clouds to' prevail tn the
northeast.

Jury...

Tuesday Will see highs Ill the
80s In the southern counties and
In 'the 70a In the north. Looking
ahead through the end of the
week, there · Is a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
Wednesday, but It Will be gener·
ally f~ Tl!ursday and Friday.
Highs will be In the upper 70s to
low 80s and lows ln the upper 50s
to low 60&amp;.•
Heat and humidity were . to
combine to pusb ·the livestock
safety Index Into the danger .
catefrOI'Y across much of the
state Monday. Heat stress levels
should diminish Tuesday With
not as hot temperatures and
· lower humidity.
With thunderstOrms less numerous over the western coun·
ties M'onday, fieldwork should
have a chance to progress.
Tillage activities may ·have a ·
better chance to progress over '
the east Tuesday with. drier
·
•
conditions..
Opportunltl~s IJ!ay Improve for .
-curliig bay the . n.e xt lew days, •
especially over the northern and .
central counties. Drier, cooler ·
air should push Into the state :
after Monday. Afternoon should '
be 40 percent to 50 percent over..
the entire state Tuesday.
The early morning weather :
map showed a low pressure '
syst~tm northeast of Lake Super· .
lor with a cold front trailing south ··
'through eastern Michigan and ·
western Ohio to northern Arkan- .
sas. High pressure was over the :
.central Plains. The cold front
was to move through Ohio by :
early afteriiOI!n. High pressure -:
will move east -and settle overthe ·
Ohio Valley Monday night and :
Tuesday.
·

Continued from page 1
of questioning aimed at eliminatColisi Guard Chief Petty Of· Ing those With preconceptions
GALVESTON, Texas (UPI)Experimental microbes ap- fleer TOI!d Nel50n sale! there baaed on pre-trial publicity, the
peared to be degrading oil were no reports of all Within 5 FBI-pollee sting operation that
spewed Into the Gulf of Mexico by mUes of the 853-foot Norwegian led to the mayor's ~ arre5t or
the tanker Mega Borg, aiding tanker anchored 57 miles off the Barry's status In the city.
Corp. , Chase Manh&amp;ttan , and
cleanup efforts as globs of light Texas coast.
Jury selection began June 4
Manufacturers Hanover - ap·
Officials conducting an Inspec- with a poolof250potentlaljurors.
crude floated toward shore, state
peared to have agreed on the new
officials said.
tion Sunday afternoon "found" When the process lagged behind
loan package, the Times said.
Tbe reSearch vessel Gyre more than 500,000 gallons or on In schedule, Jackson ordered the
Two New Jersey banks, First
steamed toward the slick Mon- two of the ship's "slop tanks," first phase of jury selection to
Fidelity Bankcorp and Mldlantlc
day for two days of controlled which catch the runoff of the end· Friday and told defense
Banks Inc., are also Involved In
experiments with the oil-eating main cargo tanks, Coast Guard · la_w yers and prosecutors to make
the discussions, but sources told
bacteria, ·said Quentin Keith, a Petty Officer 3rd Class Dave their final choices for the panel
the Times Cltlbank and Bankers
spokesman for Texas Land Com· Oney said Sunday night. . The on Monday.
Trust were the two banks that
tanks were previously believed
missioner. carry Ml)uro.
Detense attorneys had 10 "pe'have begun to demand changes
ResearchePs were expected to to have been empty.
remptory strikes' ~ - which alII) the terms.
Earlier estimates were that as lows· them to eXcl!se a prospecdeploy two ,bj)orils; one contain'
' 'Where the problems lie at the · lng the microbes to scientifically much as 4.6. million gallons of tive juror without giving a reason
moment ls that at least some of determine their effectiveness In light Angolan crude- had spllled. - and prosecu1ors had six. Once
the six banks are not willing to go · fighting the ou, he said. The field · Officials said only 12.000 to 40,000 peremptory strikes were exalong with the Trump agreement
test follows a slmUarexperlment gallons were believed still In the hausted, the ·jury was
as It ls constituted," a banj&lt;er
last Friday In which the ml· water because most of the oil empaneled.
told the newspaper.
crobes · were dumped Into an burned away
evaporated and
"Everything Is changing and
dispersed on Its own.
un!narked area or the gulf.
everyone Is looking to shore up
011 stopped leaking Sunday
Officials planned to use the
Continued from page 1
their own collateral and to put In from the crippled tanker Mega Texas A&amp;M research vessel to
as· little money aa they can.
Borg, which dumped an esti- deploy two 15-foot booms In a the typically tranquil Pipe Creek
Unless the six big blinks are In
mated 3.9 mUllon gallons of light cleanup effort early Monday, and Weegee Creek Into torrents
agreement, the other little banks
crude Into the gulf after the ship said Blanton Moore, chief of of destruction arter thunder·
and the foreigners are not likely
caught fire June 8. ·
agency operations for the Texas storms dumped 5.51nches of rain
to go along With anything," the
general land office.
In 3 ¥.! hours.
banker sald.
The affected areas hav~t been
Cltlbllnk and Bankers Trust
cordoned off .to keep the curious
appear to have the most to lose
out and to allow dog teams from
because they have loaned Trump
Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland and
the most money, the Times said.
West VIrginia to work efficiently.
Cltlbank has more than $300
NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 1 All EDT 6-tl-iO
mlllion outstanding to the develWASHINGTON (UP!) - The
In a related case, the Supreme
oper, some of lt secured by him
Supreme Court tefuSed Monday Court also declined to review a
personally and Bankers Trust Is
to step lnto.a bitter dispute over ruling that found Stone was
owed more than $100 m Ullon,
song royalties Involving the son entl tied to receive her propor·
most of . It, secured only by
and IUegltlmate daughter of the tlonate share of any proceeds of
Trump's personal guarantee; late country-western singer the estate of the late country
Hank Williams.
bankers told the Tlmes.
music star, Including Income,
The high court declined to hear Interest and copyright royalties.
arguments In the case brought by
That case was also brought by
WIUiams' !egltim.a te son, Hank Hank Williams Jr. after a lower
Jr., who was seeklngtobejudged court said Stone was only entitledthe sole heir to royalties of more to her share ofthe estate from the
than 100 songs his father wrote.
date she gave notice other clatm,
The U.S. Court of Appeals for Aug. 5, 1985.
At 1: 23 p.m., Middleport squad
The htgh· court rejected both
was called for Scott Chapman. the 2nd Circuit In Montgomery,
Ala., last year ruled that Willi· cases without comment.
He was taken to Veterans Mem·
ams was the sole heir to his
Stone, 37, was born out of
orlal. At 4:40 p.m., Tuppers
father'.s royalties. It also said wedlock to -Williams and Nash·
Plains squad was dispatched to
Cathy Stone, Williams' lllegltl· vllle secretary Bobble Jell five
Forked Run State Park for David
mate daughter, was not entitled days after the 29-year-old must- .
Slater. who was transported to
to any royalties.
clan died on Jan. 1. 1953. Stone
Jackson General Hospital. At
Stone· successfully sought a was adopted by Williams'
8: 15 p.q1.. Mary Kennedy, Page
WEATHER MAP - Dry coadldons Will be over the West Coaat
rehearing, however,' and the mother. Lillian Stone. After her
Street, Middleport, was trans'
aa
a low pressure will domlna&amp;e the .West-central U. S. Hot ·
court ruled she was the natural death flve years later, Cathy
ported by· Middleport squad to
conditions
will continue over tile Southwest. A frontal botiudary
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 9:07 daughter of Williams .and may Stone was adopted by a couple In
over
the
Northeast
will bring thundeniiii'DIII and rahillliowers over
have certain rights to royalties Mobile, Ala.
p.m., Middleport squad was
the
Eastern
portion
oi the U. S. Tile norlllern U.S. Will see a slight
under federal copyrla:ht
callell · to Page Street fog Flor·
-- .... . !~ws .
drying period. (UPI)
ence Freeman. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy unit was called altO: 53
p.m. to Mechanic Street for
Dally stock prices
CLEVELAND, fUPI) - An were 133 tickets; worth $1,000·
Brenda Hawley, who WllS trans(As of 10:30 a.m.)
CLEVELAND
(UP))
SaturOhio
Lottery spokesman said each, with five of the numbers
ported·to Holzer MediCal Center.
Bryce and Muk Smith
day's
Winning
Ohlo
Lottery
Sunday
no tickets were sold and 4,804, worth $75 apiece, with
On Sunday, Mllidleport unit
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
numbers:
bearing
all s·lx numbers In four.
was c ailed to· Overbrook Center
PICK-3
Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing
In Saturday's accompanying
at 12: 10 p.m. for Clero Baker who
Am Electric Power ............. 29%
005.
$3
million
jackpot.
Kicker
game, one ticket was sold
for
a
was transported to Veterans
AT&amp;T ................. ..... .. ..... .... 42%
PICK-3
ticket
sales
totaled
That
means
the
top
prize
·
for
bearing
all six aumbers In exact
Memorial Hospital. At 9:24p.m.,
Ashland 011 ........................36V.,
$1,4~,035.50,
wltb
a
payoff
due
of
drawing
will
be
at
order.
The
correct combination
Wednesday's
Pomeroy squad was called to
Bob Evans ..... ........... ...... .. ... 13
$1,019,127.
'
$6
million.
'
tor
the
$100,~
top prize was .
least
Cave Street tot Kenneth White.
Charming Shoppes .............. 10~
·
PJCK·4
Saturdl,ly's
winning
numbers
022626.
He ·was taken to Veterans
City Holding Co ............ .. .... 14V.,
6029.
were 7, 14,18, 20,31 and 34. There
There were three five-of-six
Memorial.
Federal Mogul... ................. ~0%
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled Goodyear 'r&amp;R .............. '.!'... 34~
,
·
··
· Kicker tickets worth $5,000 each,
$284,682, with a payoff due of Heck's ........ .:.: .-.................... 3')1
' 43 four-of-six tickets worth $1,000
$97,900.
.
apiece, 545 three-of-six tickets
Key Centurion ..... .. .............12%
S.per Lotto,
worth $10(1 each and 5,313 two-ofLands'
End
......
.....
....
....
......
16~
A dlssol.utlon has been granted
7, 14, 18, 20, 31, 34. .J
six
tickets worth $10 apiece.
Limited Inc ........................ 47l's
In the Meigs Co.unty Common
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled Multimedia Inc ...... .... .. .. ..... 79V.,
Pleas Court to Edward A. Bell
$3,119,261.
Rax Restaurants ............. ..... 2%
Dreama D. Bell.
and
Kicker ·
charges at a later date.
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
..
..
..
........
..
23¥.
022626.
All six were Indicted In the
Shoney's Inc ....................... 14¥.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
Aprll19, 1989, rampage through a
Star Bank . ....... .. ..... ...... .. .. .. 213.4
moonlit Central Park. During the $598,940.
Wendy's Inti ................... ..... 6%
Plan,reulilon .
two-hour ~·wilding,' : a crime
Worthington lnd . .... .. .... .. .. .. 24¥.
A reunion of the descendants of
.spree In, which they randomly
A marriage license has been
the
late Albert and Eliza Hlll Will .
assaulted.victims, they allegedly
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Sunday at the Star Mill
be
held
beat two : male joggers and
Court to Ronald Allen Shreffler,
Park,
Racine.
There Will be a
gang-raped 'the woman jogger.
43, Columbus, to Laura Ann
South Central Ohio
at
noon. All i'ela·
basket
lunch
In an effort toplckan Impartial
Leach, 35, Pomeroy.
Partly cloudy Monday night,
Veterans Memorial
and
friends
of the family
lives
jjlry. hundreds of poten tlal jurors
Veterans Memortal Hospital
with a low between 60 and 65.
Saturday admiSsions- Cheryl Admissions
~e
Invited
to
attend.
were called to court for possible
Mostly sunny Tuesday, with Ferguson, Langsville; Henry
duty. The trial could begin June
highs In the mid 80s.
Price, Tuppers Plains; Charles
25 and last two months. Some
ExteJ!Cied Forecast
Frazier, Vlddleport; Florence
•
jurors were excused because
Wednesday, throagh Friday
Freeman,
Middleport.
they 'could not spend the time
A. chan~e of showers and
Saturday discharges - Loaway from work or because they
thunderstorms Wednesday, with retta Atkins, Brian Christman. ·
had already formed opinions
fair weather Thursday and FriWhat sets us apart
Sunday admissions - Ernie
about the case, defense lawyers
day. Highs will range from the Brinker, Racine.
is the
and
said.
upper 70s to the lower 80s each,
Sunday discharges - Henry
with overnight lows In the upper Price, William · Hart, Cheryl
50s or lower 60s.
single
Ferguson.

Trump having trouble
obtaining new loans
NEW YORK (UP)) - Donald
Trump's attempt to secure $60
mllllon ln new loans became
mired over the weekend ln
disputes among the. real estate
mogul's largest bankers, The
New · York Times reported
Monday.
Trump, whose real estate
holdings and Atlantic City gambUng empire are threate!led by a
cash squeeze, failed to pay about
$73 million owed to banks and
bondholders on Friday.
The developer, who ls now In
technical default on two bond
Issues, could lose control of his
Trump's Castle Hotel and Casino
ln Atlantic City, If the payments
are not made before a 10-day
grace period expires next week.

By Ualted Press International
A cold front was racing east·
wards across Ohio Monday
morning, bringing spotty show·
ers, and It was expected to bring
some welcome cool temperatures by Mond&amp;y night.
A brief thunderstorm hit flood·
r11vaged Belmont County shortly
before 7:30a.m., but there was no

or

Death toll...

Court toms aside dispute
over Williams' song royalties

Squads have 13 runs
in county over weekend
The Meigs County Emergency
·Medical Services office reports
13 runs by Its units across the
county over the weekend.
At 12:51 a.m. on Saturday,
Rutland unit responded to a call
from Cheryl Ferguson, Langs·
ville. Ferguson was transported
to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
AI 9: 21 a:m., the Syracuse squad
was ·called t() Bricktown Road for
Martha AndersOn wbo was .also
transported to Veterans Menior.lal Hospital.
Syracuse was called at 10:15
a.m. to -an auto accident In
Minersville. Reesa Salyers was
transported to Veterans Memor·
tal Hospital. Tuppers Plains
squad was called to County Road
41 at 11:01 a.m. for Elva Pullins,
who was taken to St. Joseph
Hospital. At11:44 a.m.,Pomeroy
squad was dispa~ched to Pomeroy Pike for Cheryl DeWitt, who
was taken to eterans Memorial
HospitaL Syracuse squad wws
called at 11: 49 a.m. to transport
Aaron Drummer, Syracuse, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Lottery numbers

Stocks

Super Lott(l jackpot up to $6 million

Granted dissolution

Prospective panelists to
be questioned by lawyers
NEW YORK iUPil - Potential jurors In the trial of · three
youths accused of gang-raping a
Central Park jogger have filled
out questionnaires testing their
views on subjects ranging from
race relations to running.
But on Mon~ay. prospective
panelists were expected to be
questioned Individually by prosecutors and defense lawyers
·attempting to seat an impartial
jury to hear the highly publicized
case.
Three youths indicted In the
attack on 'the 29-year·old Invest·
ment banker are on trial for rape
and attempted murder. Three
others will be tried on the same

Meigs··

Ucense issued

Weather

Hospital news

OUR
CARING STAFF
MAKES THE

Area deaths--George Perry
George A. Perry, 83, Dexter.
died early Sunday morning at
Scenic Hills Nursing Center In
Galllpolts.
Born ln Athens, he was the son
of the late Charles and M.lnnle
Houk .Perry.
Mr. Perry attended Ohio Unl·
verslty and was a teacher In
Dexter for five years. He also
worked for tile U.S. Government
as a s urv~or during WWII and
was employed by the Meigs
County Highway Department for
over 25 years, retiring In 1879. He
served 40 years on the Western
Local School Board (Rutland)
and the Meigs County School
Board and served as the president on both.
He Is survived by three sons,
Bill Perry of Holland, Ohio, Jack

announcements

Perry of Reynoldsburg and
George Perry ot Bryan. Also
surviving are seven grandchildren, slx great-grandchildren and
one sister, Mrs. Dorothy Bolin,
Dexter.
·
Besides his parents, he pre·
ceded In death by his first Wife.
Mildred · Halliday Perry, his
second Wife, Pauline Burgher
Perry and one sister, Margaret
Neal.
Services Will be Tuesday at 2
p.m. at Blgony-Jordan Funeral
Home with 1tev. Artllur Crabtree
offlclatln1. luHal wlll w In
Salem Ceilll!r cemetery. Ceiling
hours will be 6-9 p.m. today.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the Columbus
Area Chapter of the Alzheimer's
Association, 2323 West Fifth
Avenue, Suite 2100, Columbus,
Ohio 43204.

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS

I

I

104

. . . . . . . _...

·-

-lwl

....

DIFFERENCE'

Do you qualify for·
assistance to buy or
rehabilitate
... ·---·......
-a--home?
.........._
Contact Jean Jratt~ll
Hea•l•l lt••l!!!!!_:_

caring
dedication of evel)'
member of

our staff.

You're inVited to stop
in anytime to observe
these exceptional
people at work, ask
questions of
them and our
residents, and
discover for
' younelf the
very best in
nlll'linQ

-.. ...

1371. . Str•t
Middleport Ylllage OHices
........ (614) 992-6712

446-7112

-·

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

Ohio Lottery

Irwin wins

U.S. Open

Daily Number

tournament

677
Pick-4
1683

Low tonlpt ID mid ....
Chance of rata 30 percent.
Wedaesday, hlsh aeu · 88.
Chance ol rain 80 percent.

Page 3

•

•

at

1 Section, 1 0 Pagn 26 Centa
A Muhimedle Inc. Newopope&lt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 19. 1990

'Work America' plan
.int.r oduced to council
.

.

.

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Roger Reeb, president of Work
America, Inc. presented a plan to
Implement that program In the •
Pomeroy area at Monday 's regu·
tar meeting·of Pomeroy VIllage
.Council.
Work America Is a project
whlc}l provides work to young
people In low and 'moderate
Income households . Described
by Reeb as a "pilot program,"
Work America would require an
lnitla.l budget of $35.000 for
staffing, headquarters and the
like.
The program, which Is now In
place in Springfield, Is targeted
at giving Its participants. who
would be between the ages of
BEATING mE HEAT- Though summer Isn't
the pool but uld the tree-swing Is his favorite
seven
and 13. a "meaningful
place to swim. Some of the jumps and dives
ofllclally here, It's not too early to start beating
experience
of what 'work' Is"
the heal. Several area youths have found thai the
perfonned by the boys -med pretty ~ary, but
and
provides
.lawn care and
tree-swing near the Middleport Marina provide!~
Josh Blair, 15, of Cheshire, made lhe high dives
general
maintenance
service to
tbe perfect setdng for escaping the heal . Dave
look ea!iy,
the
community.
Mitchell, 14, of Middleport, occasionally swl!r)s a,t
.
In his presentation, Reeb
stated that the program was
"community oriented with envlr·
onmental Issues as the main
thrust of the work". Reeb ex ~
He refused to be specific, but- were entering the state.
WJIEELING, W.Va. (UPI) plalned that the accountant,
Kollliash thanked the adminis- Insurance agent and equipment
Authorities In three states joined said authorities were still attempting to make arrests In tration of the two Wheeling
With federal law enforcement
providers would all be of local
Columbus,
Ohio, and the western housing projects for aiding ln the . orlgln If the program were to be
officials Monday to arrest 22
Investigation., Among the 22
Pennsylvania area.
people for cocaine violations at
put In place In the Pomeroy area.
arrested
were four juveniles who
The
federal
drug
enforcement
two Wheeling public housing
"We'll do all we can for the kids
task force worked closely with will face state charges, Kollbash
projects.
In this area", Reeb stated.
·
the nl;'w Wheeling Pollee Depart- said.
"We think we have identified
· In other action, council acted
Jqdlcted
earlier
for !!lstrlbu·
ment
drug
llnlt-·
ln
making
the
, about three major distribution . . .
on two resolutions ·Involving dty
'
arrests, Kolibash saiJ!, In the tton ot cocaine by a grand I ury
grj)tipf who orlgfnate' from OUt·
vehicles. One resolution was for
yearlong lnvestfgatloJtto track meeting In Elkins and arrested
side the area," said U.S. Allor·
the purchase of a 1975panel truck
down where cocaine and "crack" Moriday were:
ney William Kollbash.
from John Anderson and the
,·
second was to make monthly
payments on a new GMC pick-up
truck recently purchased by the
village. The payments Will be
was headed iowards Ohio Tues· front that left Tuesday morning
By United Press International
made to Farmers Bank and
day morning. following a cold temperatures about 20 degrees
Another hlp:h pressure system
Savings Company. Both resolu:
cooler than they were 24 hours
tlons were approved unan lmearlier.
ously.
At mid-morning, It was cloudy
Councilman Larry Wehrung
over nearly all the state, · with
reported several sewer problems
some very light showers falllng . In the village. The matters were
In the Cleveland area . Highs
referred to the village adminisTuesday
were to range from
A blll whlcli will allow regional sewer and water dlstrl.c ts to be
trator for Investigation.
around 70 ln the north to around
notified · of Impending Ohio Department of Transporatlon
Council member Tom. Werry
80 In the south.
·
equlpment sales, has been passed by the Ohio Legislature, Rep.
stated that there was a need for
Clouds will Increase over the
Mary Abel, ID-Athensl announced today.
"Children Playing" signs on
state
Tuesday night . Rain will
This, according to Rep. Abel, makes 'It possible for districts ~o
Mechanic Street, Condor Street
develop a·head of an approaching
purchase the available used equipment. To get on that agency s
and Mulberry Avenue.
warm Iron t and spread Into the
mailing list, officials should write to the Ohio Department ol
Betty Baronlck, council
western portions of the state member, reported on the recent
Transporatlon advising of the Interest of the agency .
after mldnlght. Some thunder· tour of villages treets and proper·
• •'Regional water and sewer districts are facing tight budgets
storms may also accompany the ties by members of counciL
and by pur&lt;:haslng used equipment they will be able to save
precipitation.
money, said Rep. Abel. The bill was originally Introduced by Jo
Baronlck reported that road
Temperatures wlll fall rapidly
Lynn Butler. former representative, ln response to a request
after sunset but once the clouds
from a water district in th&lt;;&lt; Athens area.
move, the mercury will begin to
Rep . Abel realizing that this would affect districts ln Meigs .
rlse. Lows wlll range from the
Galli a and Athens Gountles. was able totes tlfy l)e!Ore the Senate
committee and then make sure that the bill got to the floor of the ·
mid -50s In the east to 60 to 70 In
the west.
Senate for a vote before recess.
· Skies will be fair Thursday and
Friday, but thunderstorms are
possible Saturday. Highs will be
A total of $3,850 has been contributed to the Pomeroy
WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPil-A
In the upper 70s to low 80s and
· Sesquicentennial Committee for !he brochure, entertainment at ' lows ln the 60s through the Putnam County jury was to
the recent celebration, and special projects, Mary Powell,
resume deliberations Tuesday
period.
chairman. announced today .
The livestock safety Index was
Into a murder trial of Ohio man
to rise into the alert category alleged to have deliberately shot
Seven of the contrlbu Uons were $100 or more, according to
Mrs. PowelL Included In the large contribution group were the
during the afternoon bouts both and killed an off-duty deputy
Tuesday and Wednesday .
Racine Home National Bank, Holzer Clinic, Inc .. National Gas
during an altercation last
and 011 Corp.. Raven-Hocking Coal Corp., Bank One. Farmers
Fieldwork was possible Tues- summer.
·
Bank, and the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
day In some areas before rain
Robert Gray, or Gallipolis,
developed by late Tuesday night. Ohio, was on trial for the
Rainfall amounts Tuesday night first-degree murder of Putnam
were t0 be about one-quarter Inch County Sheriff's Deputy John
Plans are being completed for the Meigs High School Alumni
In the west, while Wednesday's Janey .. The killing Is alleged to
reunion t.o be held Saturday at Meigs Hlgh School.
have occurred last Aug. 17 when
rainfall Is expected to range from
Reservations are required for the dinner and may be made
a half-Inch to 1 Inch over the Janey, acting as an Insurance.
with Rhonda Hoover. 992-6889. James Birchfield. 992-2646, or
Investigator, · Witnessed Gray
entire state Wednesday.
Lisa Roush, 992-3486. The dance wlll be held from 9 tO 1 p.m. The
Wind speeds ofl0to20mphwlll preparing to torch a home owned
dinner-dance is $25 a couple or $15 for singles, while the charge
spraying conditions Wednesday.
by Raymond HUck.
for attending the dance only is $5 a person.
During closing arguments
No ex tended period of dry
Checks are to be made out to the Meigs Alumni Association
weather Is 'expected this week for
Monday, Putn'am County Prosecand malted to P .O. Box 25. Middleport. Ohio 45760.
utor O.C. Spaulding said Gray
curing hay. Dry weather Thursday and Friday Is forecast to be opened !Ire on the pollee officer
after being discovered pouring
followed by possible thunder·
storms this weekend. In the gasoline In Huck's house.
A baskeiball tournament wlll he held at the General
Huck. who Spaulding claims
meantime, afternoon humidities
Hartinger Park courts on July 21 and July 22 under sponsorship
may remain above 50 percent · hired Gray to torch his home,
of the Middleport Recreation Department.
pt.eaded guilty earlier this year to
Wednesday across the state.
Teams are needed for the event. A team trophy and Individual
second-degree murder .
The six- to 10-day outlook for
trophies will be awarded to lhi' first and second place finishers
Defense attorney -'oe Thomas,
Sunday-through Thursday of next
In the tournament. There wlll be a $50 entry fee. Officials will be
reminding jurors of Gray's tes·
week lll(llcates below-normal
provided. Entry Information and registration may be obtained ··
temwatures, which ' may slow tlmony, argued his client acted
by contacting Roger Williams, recreation director at 992·6782 ..
In self-defense when he shot
growth of corn and beans.
Deadline for applications Is July ·9.
Rainfall Is forecast 10 ' average Jan~. Thomas contended that
above normal, poor for haying Gray, not ·knowing that the
murder victim was a law enoperations.
The latest weather map . forcement officer, prompted the
Groundbreaklng ceremonies for McDonald's have been
showed a weak area of high shooting by beating Gray on the
.announced for Thursday at 10 a.m. at the site, according to
pressure over the Mldwes t. A low bead and shoulders during the
Roscoe Mills, who Is In charge of project. The fast food
pressure system was over east· altercation.
restaurant will be located on property previously occupied by
ern Colorado with a warm front
If convicted, Gray could race a
the old Pomeroy Frleght Station.
life
prison term without chance
Continued on page 10
of parole.

·Drug sweep nets 22 ·arrests

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Cooler temperatures arrive in Ohio
Local news briefs-__,

Bill approved by legislators

Jury resumes

$3,850 received in contributions

Plan alumni reunion "

. Department to sponsor tournament

Grou.ndbreaking set Thursday

deliberations
in Gray trial

Drainage problems Within the
work needs to be done on Old
Chester Road. Maln Street,
vlllage include Spring and PleaFisher Street , Old State Garage
sant Ridge, 11 Fisher St .. Locust
Street , and Logan · Monument,
area , Mulberry Heights. Mul·
according to Baronlck.
berry Avenue, Prospect Hill.
Union Terrace, Wehe Terrace.
Properties with bad buildings
Vale Street. Monkey Run, Hill
are located at 130 Kerr St., 216
Street , Liberty Lane, and Coal
R~J!:k St., 110 Pleasant Ridge,
Street . Baronlck stated that
Condor Street, 18 Breezy
these roads, In particular, are In
Heights, off Union Avenue, Ospoor to very bad condition. Other
borne Street, 15 Oak St. and
several other ·properties In the
roads ln the village seem to be In
fairly good condition, Baronlck
Monkey Run area. Another prob'
stated.
, . lel'(l In Monkey Run Is the White
property which has a large
Slips, slides, and wwlls needing
amount of junk and too many
repair Include Rock.Street. Lindogs, according to Baronlck.
coin Hill. Legion Terrace, and
Locust Street, according to
Property owners In the village
are encouraged to maintain their
Baronlck.
Properties having weed and
property and failure to do so can
yard control problems, as stated
result In the lusuance of a citation
by Baronlck. Include Old Chester
under the terms of a village
ordlnancepassedsometlmeago.
Road, the Intersection at Routes
124 and 33, MGM property, 427 ·.
In final matters, Bruce Reed,
Spring Street, John Hunnell's
council member, stated that the
official groundbreaklng ceremproperty on Spring Avenue In the
ony for McDonald's will be held
'Fisher and Wolfe Drive area,
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the slte.
property across from McClure's
Present' were Mayor Richard
Restaurant. property under the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge . and
Seyler, Betty Baronlck, Brian
Shank, Bruce Reed, Larry Web·
property on Main Street across
from Helen Norris' property.
rung, and Thomas Werry, cqunCouncil stated that If vacant
ell members, Brenda Morris,
village clerk, and John ADderproperty Is In need of upkeep that
the owner or realtor should be son, village administrator.
responsible.
.

Forecasters .defend
actiotis befote storm
SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UPI) Weather forecasters are defend·
tng their actions In' the hours
before deadly rains hit eastern
Ohio, causing floods that killed 21
people and left 13 missing In the
state's worst weather disaster In
21 years.
The National Weather Service
Issued no flash llood warning
before last week's deluge that
sent a wall of water up to 20 feet
high crashing through the valley,
tossing cars and flattening
homes.
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration,
parent agency .of the NWS, has
begun a routine Investigation
Into the forecasts Issued that
night. "The policy is whenever
five people or more die, they
have a review board check the
areas of responsibility to see If
there was anything we missed or
If there are weaknesses," said
Ed Heath, meteorologist In
charge of the Akron-Canton
bureau.
·
"As far as I'm ·concerned
nothing broke down," Heath
. said, adding It was Impossible to
predict based on weather radar
that 5.5 Inches of rain would fall
In Shadyside In 3 V.. hours last
Thursday night.
The body of the 21st vlctlm of
the storm was discovered Mon·
day morning. Searchers found
the body of Kerr! Jo Polivka, 12,
In the Ohio River near Wegee
Creek, said Charles Vogt, In spec·
tor for the Belmont County
coroner:s office.

. Polivka had been babysitting
9-year-old Amber Colvin when
the raging floodwaters destroyed
the Colvin home. Amber held on
to a Jog and pullf;!d hersel! out of
the Ohio River.
Fire ChlefMark Badia said the
number of missing dropped Mon·
day from16 to 13.
Intermittent rain overnight
hampered the search effort, and
a brief thunderstorm Monday .
raised fears of more flooding but
the storm ended quickly With
onlY minor damage.
Last week's flooding was the
worst weather disaster to hit
Ohio Since 1969, when 40 people
died as severe thunderstorms
swept off Lake Erie while rest- ,
dents enjoyed Fourth of July
fes tlvltles.
Tom Alllson, 38, who lost just
about everything except his dog
and the dothes he was wearing
when he fled his house, said a
warning would have · been
meaningless.
He would have "probably
(done) nothing, . because who
would think of a fiood on that
creek? When they say flood In·
this area, you think of the Ohio
.~ttver."
·
At this point, Allison said he's
more concerned about rebuilding
his life. All that's been found of
his most prized possesion, his
truck, has been one tire.
"It's like being 16 again and
starting all over," said Allison,
wearing clothes donated at a
crisis center In Shadyside.

Riggs pleads innocent;
trial scheduled -Aug. 9
Jason E . Riggs entered a plea l'eCOVef~ Ul~ lUUUW lftM uay UV~l'
of Innocent In Meigs County an embankment on West Shade
Common Pleas Court on Monday · Road. The . pickup truck was
afternoon to three charges relat· found In Athens County, where It
lng to the June 2 death of a Canal had been burned acd abandoned.
Riggs, who Is represented by
Winchester man.
attorney Herman Carson,
Athens
Riggs, accused ln the death or
entered
his plea after waiving his
VIctor Will, 82, was · Indicted
to
the reading of the
rtgbt
Friday by the Meigs County
lndlt:tment
against him, and the
Grand Jury on counts .of aggra·
·
advisement
of possible pepaltles
vated vehicular homicide and
to
the
charges.
'
tampering with evidence, both
MeigS
County
Common
Pleas
·
third degree felonies, and gross
Judge
Fred
W.
Crow,
III
set
the
abuse of a corpse, a fourth degree
matter to jury trial on Aug. 9, and
felony.
The victim, VIctor Will, died continued the bond as It was
after being struck by a pickup previouslY ordered In the Meigs
truck In Chester. Eyewitnesses County Court.
According to a court spokes·
at the scene reported that Will's
body rolled over the hood and cab man, Riggs remains In the·
of the truck and Into the truck cualody of the Meigs County
bed. The body was carried from Sberlrt, and Is being housed In the ·
'
the scene of the accident and was Middleport Jail.

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Commentary
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON .tREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publisher
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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Muqer

PAT WHITEIIEAD
AI!Sist&amp;Dt Puhllsher/ControUer
A MEMBER of The United Press lnternatlonal,lnlalld Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. "IJ!ey should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
Ushed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
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Doubt arises about plant safety
WASHINGTON .- Behind the
walls of the nation's weapons
plants, crime, security lapses
and contamination are almost
daily occurrences. The places
where one Y;Ol,lld expect the most
caution are, Iii reality, accidents
waiting to happen.
Despite the efforts ot Energy
Secretary James Watkins to
clean up the weapons plants and
labs, they continue to be plagued
by mismanagement and mis·
takes. For years we have reported on the security breaches
and safety problems at the
plants.
·
Watkins, like his predecessors,
has tried to keep those under
wraps. But he was recentlv

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forced to go public with them. He
gets dally briefing reports on all
the mishaps at the nuclear
plants. In March, a Department
of Energy staffer accidentally
faxed one daily report to tile offices of various state governors.
Once DOE Officials found out
about the blunder, they begged
the governors to destroy the memos. Not a chance. The states'
governors must live with the
messes the federal government
creates at weapons plants, and
they weren't about to pass up an
opportunity to. criticize DOE tor
its management ot thOse plants.
The briefing teport, with its al·
most casual! litany of the daily

I IAJN'f W.l LY
·uNDERSTAND
E&lt;:CJt+JMc
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Backstairs at
the White House
By IJEI.EN THOMAS
UPI White Rouse Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush thoroughly enjoyed his 66th
birthday celebration, saying he felt like "a colt." ·
He also was amused when some reporters put on pointed birthday
cone-shaPed party hats to commemorate the occasion during a brief
picture-taking In the Cabinet Room.
"Killjoy," he smUi.ngly chided.one wo!Ylan reporter who refused to
' don the party headgear.
.
But Bush retaliated by .permittlng only those wearing the funny
hats to ask questions.
Never ask Barbara Bush whether she agrees with her husband on
controversial Issues of the day. She always does, at least in public.
But she is discreet enough to keep any dissenting opinions. to
herself. So reporters are really not sure. They suspect that on
occasion she might have a different view, but somewhere along the
' way to the political forum she has found out that it's better to give a
stock answer: ''I agree with my husband."
' The only time she publicly disagreed with him and then quickly
. retracted her position was when she told an Interviewer she was
against the sale of semiautomatic guns in this country tollowlng the
schoolyard massacre in Stockton, Caii!. ·
· .. But she retreated when she learned that the president favored the
banning ot foreign made semiautomatic weapt\ns bu !decided ag;linst
any prohibition against those mar~ufactured in the United States .
When she does not quite agree, sJle hedges, saying she would rather
discuss the worthy humanitarian causes she Is involved ln.
The first lady made speeches at six commencement ceremonies
!rom high schools to the most prominent of her addresses - her
heralded remarks at Wellesley College in M_assachusetts where she
made a joint appearance with Ralsa Gorbacbev.
. Since national literacy is her prim;~ry project in the White House,
' her appearances, believed to be a record for a first lady, were fitting.
Mrs. Bush has more activities during the summer months, but she
Will take the month of August for lamUy reunions and vacationing at
K:ennebunkport, Maine.
· But the next major event will take place in Houston, where tile first
lady will be hostess to five.other spouses of foreign leaders who will be
attending the Economic Summit meeting July 9-11.
The Bushes' adopted home, Houston, Is revving up for' the
unprecedented event in their town. Some of the activities Will be
Texas-style with a rOdeo on the schedule as a pre-Economic Summit
event for the leaders who come to town early.
. President Bush's travel schedule for the rest of the year Is heavy
With a number of foreign trips on the itinerary.
,
. • In addition to a two-day London trip in July to meet with NATO
· leaders, he is going to visit Latin America in September, a trlp
:expected to stretch nearly two weeks, stopping over in several
. ·countries In a new swing to herald the spread of democracy
. throughout the Western Hemisphere.
• · There is also the possibility ot a trip to Europe in November to
: attend the meeting of the Conference on European Security and
;.Cooperation, and perhaps a visit to the remnants of the Berlin Wall.
: In December, Bush will travel to Mexico City to meet with Mexican
_:leaders and to push negotiations for a new free trade agreement with
the bordering nation.
• Next year, the word is that Bush has Australia on his agenda, a t'rlp
: which would include other nations in the Pacific.
He also will be campaigning non-stop during the month of October
: ill support of Republican candidates, a chore he relishes. Getting out
:or Washington is Bush's cup of tea. And besides, he views pOlitiCking
:tor fellow members of the party, particulllriy in hopes of enhancing
·the GOP on Capitol Hill, as an important part of his presidency.
• Bush has already done his share in the fund-raising department and
- the Republican treasury is not exactly hurting.
: The trips around the country also wlli give the country of Bush's
• own ·re-election campaign. Although he has not formally announced
: that he Is running, there aren't many Washington pundits who would
bet otherwise.
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"Hold onll've got • CtJII on the other line. "

MEDJNAH, 111. (UP!) ,_ The
.last- man Invited to the parly
walked off with the silverware
Monday and in 50 dolor re-wrote ·
the record book of the u.s Open.
Hale Irwin not only won in the
first sudden death playoff In the
tournament's 90oyear history he
became onJy·the tilth three-time
winner of the event. And atage45
he is the oldest of the u.s. Open
champions.
FC!r the second day in a row,
Irwin showed that being behind
late in the day doesn't mean he is
going to be a loser when the day is
over.
He made a 40-foot putt an
Sunday at the final hole to win his
way into an 18-hole playoff with
Mike Donald and then after both
players bad shot 74 in ;..gulation,
Irwin holed a 10-foot birdie on the
first hole of sudden death for the
title.
"There were times , . said
Irwin,. "when 1 found it 'dltticult
to believe it could happen. But 1
just kept trying·and kept tryi 11g. I
guess it was my turn. •
"I actlialiy dreamed a few ·

Tu81dey, June 19. 199_0

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Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
goings on at tbe weapons plants,
quickly leaked out. Watkins
knew when· he was cornered, so
he agreed to make tl)e dally reports public.
.
0\lr associate Scott Sleek revii!Wed several mo11ths worth of
memos listing the gaffes at DOE
plants. They show that crime, se·
curity violations and contamination occur With regularity.
On AprU 5, 1990 a worker at the
Savannah River plant in South
Carolina was contaminated as he
beiped a co-worker out of a pi astit suit. On the same day, two emwere contaminated at
Rocky Fiats plant In Colo-

rado during the removal of their
protective suits. And, on · the
same day, contamination was
found on a work!!r's cloth~s at the
Oak Ridge plant in Tennessee.
OnAprli 13, three radlatloo in·
cidents were'l'ecorded at a DOE
lab In Richland, Wash. Workers
were exposed in a chemistry lab.
Tainted paint was used In
another lab, and an employee
was found to have railloactlve
material on his hand when he left
work.
Accidents at the plant aren't limited to radioactive materials.
Earlier this spring ·P CB on was
spilled at the Oak Ridge plant.
· PCBs cause cancer, apd PCB
spills have been cause to evacuate neighborhoods and fndustrial
sites. Asbestos was found at a
steam plant at Oak Ridge also.
Some accidents can be excused, but there is no excuse for
the crimes that take place at nuclear weapons plants . The
DOE's sloppy security checks
have not weeded out dangerous
people. Crimes, such as drug
deals and drug use and theft of
classified documents are frequent occurences at nuclear
weapons plants .
~---~""t We h~jve exposed serious flaws
I("
tn the DOE security clearance
WI~II.rr
system, and the publication of
the dally briefing reports proves
11 ~-'~'l
1rn f.
our point. People lli,hO want jobs
~U
at sensitive and dangerous nuclear weapons plants are supposed to go through a lengthy
clearance process, but many slip
through because of lax scrutiny.
Secretary Watkins deserves
some credit for going public with
the dally incident reports. But
that Is where the credit ends, untO Watkins shows that he can
stop the mishaps.

1HIS· f\N
I

weeks ago I would win the Open. I
don't remember anything spe·
clflc about the dream except that
winning was an ordeal -just like
it turned out to be."
Because of his two prior
victories in .tbe Open- in 1974 at
Winged Foot and 1979 at Inver:
ness - Irwin was awarded a
special exemption from qualify·
log for this tournament · by the
USGA. .
The invitation came in the mall
just as Irwin was preparing to till
out his . application to enter the·
qualifying competition prior to
the tournament.
Now, with a , new 10-year
exemption for his win, Irwin Will
have ·an invitation to play in the
Open until he is 55.
"I guess since I am so old,"
Irwin said, putting special emphasls on tHe word old, "I feel
blessed. You wonder if you will
ever have this sort of opportunity
again. And when I got that
opportunity, it looked for a while
that it would only be an
opportunity.
"I dug myself Into a prettr .

good hole."
Irwin dug a hole for himself .
becaull!l of an erratic, 2-over 38
on the front 'line that left him one
shot behind at the turn. Bur over
the next two hours his experience
paid off and. brought htm a
$220,000 first-prize check. Donald's second-place finish was
w~~th $110,000.
I thought along about the 11th
hole · Hale looked pretty frustr11ted," Donald said. "But he
has been in these situations
before and it paid off for him
today.
.
"And I guess I let him off the
hook, too. But I never knew
before if I could contend in a
major championship. Now I
know I can."
Neither player produced memorabie golf during the 18 noles
prior to sudden deatli, chiefly
because of the blustery winds
which turned the Medinah Country Club .course into the kind of
terror .expected of it before the
tournament began.
The 74s Donald and .Irwin .shot
were the highest winninjl18-hoie

ROME !UP!) - Playing with
one eye on !heir opponent and
another on the volatlie situation
at ·iiome, Romania beat the odds
and qualified for the second
round of the World Cup finals
Monday by tying defending
champion Argentina 1·1.
The Romanian players , some
of whom took up arms In the
Decembe r revolution againsl the
depo~ed Ceausescu regime. rejoiced in Na pies aft!'f the draw, as
did groups of fans in th e stand s
who waved Romanian flags wilh
their centers cu t out.
"We thank everyone at home
who stuck with us, " Romanian
captain and goalkeeper Siivlu
Lung said. "We were with them
always. This is a happy and
em:otional time for · us . We hope
this brings great joy Ia the people .
at home.··
Romanian s have been dis·
traught since fighting broke out
in Bucharest between govern·
ment and anti-government for ces. The unrest began last
Wednesday, the day before Romania lost a World Cup match to
Cameropn.
On Saturday. Coach Ienei

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Be_n_W,_at_te_nb_er_g
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QUEBEC CITY - If what ai·
most just happened in Canada national suicide -had gone on in
Moldavia, or Israel, or South
Africa - it would have been at
the top of the news.
But because Canada is, well;
Canada -nice, near, neighborly
and D01!·Violent :... Americans ig·
nore it. We shouldn't. Recent
events in Canada can shape not
only Canada's destiny, but
America's. Ours for the better,
and perhaps theirs too.
After wrangling, the premiers
ot Canadian provinces compromised about the "Meech
Lake Accord," amendments designed to get Quebec to ratify the
Canadian constitution. The process had a price: bitterness, and
a stipulation that French speaking Quebec is a "distinct
society."
.
The a(!reement, assuming it is
finally consummated, does not
change the reality behind the
tempest: French-speaking Quebeckers are indeed a distinct sociely. Francophonia is often
their defining, and passionate,

dimension. A majority seem to
care more about the cultural and
linguistic survival of Quebec
than about the political and geographical survival of Canada.
Demographic imperatives
suggest that the feeling will
grow. Quebec has lower fertility
than the rest of Canada. It draws
proportionately fewer immi·
grants. It has difficulty keeping,
and Frenchlfylng, the immigrants· it gets.
Thus, Quebeckers ate becoming a diminishing fraction of Can·
ada, a small French island in a
large North American ocean of
English. Accordingly, the !ormula for retaining Francophone
culture is elemental: Use It or
lose it.
Separation could shatter Can·
a,d a. Quebec has almost a quarter ot the population. If It leaves,
the country splits. It would. be as
It a tier of Mid-western U.S.
states seceded, leaving America
in two unconnected parts.
In Canada, one unconnected
part would be the four Eastern

maritime provinces. If Quebec
goes, it's said that the maritimes
wUI apply for U.S. statehood. If
that happens, the people in Brit·
ish Coluila, Canada's Pacific
proviDe
malso likely look for
a new a angement.
Some observers say the marl·
times are so poor that America
won't want ihem. Silly. God isn't
making any more real estate.
Texas was poor only yesterday.
And British Columbia? It's no.t
poor. and it would connect
Alaska with the Lower 48 states.
The rest of Canada, landlocked,
might see that the original Canada was finished.
Of course, English Canada
doesn't like such thinking. They
don't want to be "taken over." ,
What's in it for them?
There are three non·-Spanish
cultures in North America: English, French -Canadian and
American. Two ot them seem
happy about who they are. The
English Canadians are less so.
They often define themselves as
"not American." (Cali a national
psychiatrist. These folks need a

big couch.)
But ail three peoples also have
an identity as North Americans.
It's a remarkable place. When
the New World opened up in 1492,
mankind started over again, and
did a good job here, In a different
way.
A new consolidated nation
would be the most ·powerful, in·
fluentlal country in history, rich
in land, resources, people,
wealth and culture. Talk about
Identity.
Will English Canadians go
along? Not now. Pride is at
stake. What could we do? Eureka! Let them take us over.
Change the U.S. Constitution and
call the new place "Canada." De·
tails to come .
It, In time, the language gap
proves surmountable, Mexico
might join; we could the!! call the
whole shebang "Mexico." After ·
that comes Puerto Rico and then
·Queb~. And one day, far in the
future, we can gather together
under our real name, "North
America."

Legislators have ·busy .week ___se_n:.._Ja_nL_on-"'-g
The halls of the General A:S·
sembly were a busy place this
past week as we wrapped up l!C·
tion on several Important bills
and heard an address by ·the na·
lion 's drug czar.
Unfortunately, two key items,
campaign reform and drugs,
didn't progress as much as _I
would have liked. The week, however, was not without its
accomplishments.
One key reform 'bm approved
was H.B . 538, which will tighten
current laws on lobbyist registration. One of the biggest problems
with present law is that there is
no provision for ll'hat constitutes
a late filing by lobbyists, and
there is no penalty tor a Ia te fll.
ing. H.B. 538 would help remedy
this by, among other things, requiring lobbyists to file an annual statement listing ail
contributions made by the lobbyist, a list of gifts of more than $25
and all honoraria and transportation and lodging expenses paid to
public ottlclals.
Senate-passed legislation on
campaign spending re!orm was
more of a disappointment. H.B.
539, as it pa~sed the House, would
have limited contributions to
$2,500 !or each campaign for
statewide office, and $1,500 tor
state legislative candidates Including state Senate candidates. ·
The bill that passed the Senate,
however, didn't contain either
'contribution or spending limits,
two key parts of any campaign
reform.
An amendment I offered wo11ld ,
have made a significant reform

by imposing voluntary spending
bill, H.B. 697, was passed and
tant legtslatton overhauling the
limits on statewide campaigns
sent to the governor allowing state's unemployment system,
county ·commissioners to work H.B. 826, won approval in both
and on races for state senator
and state representative. This .. with county boards of mental re- the House and Senate.
amendment was defeated on a
tardation and developmental disPlease feel free to call or write
party-line vote, despite winning
abilities to develop a linked me, State Sen. Jan Michael
deposit program to help pay for Long, If you have any comments
praise from several of my colleagues as the amendment that
new residential care facllltles. or questions about these, or any
Another bill approved, H. B . .837, other proposals. My number Is
was the key to significant cam·
palgn reform.
would allow victims o! drunken
(614) 466-8156, and my address Is
My amendment would limited
driving to collect from a victims the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio
spending on racea !or governor
compensation fund. Also, lmpor- 43215.
'
and other statewide candidates,
such as attorney general and se·
cretary of state, and also set realIstic limits tor Ohio Senate and
House races. State Senate candl·
By United Press lnlernatloaal
dates would be limited to spend·
Today is Tuesday, June 19, the 170th day of 1990w1th 195 to follow.
lng $50,000 in the primary and
The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
$90,000 In the general .election,
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
and candidates for state repreThe evening star is Jupiter.
sentative would be limited to
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
$20,000 in the primary and$35,000
in the general election. I am pre- James VI of Scotland, later James I o! England, in 1566; French
philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal in 1623; the Duchess o!
pared to live with these limits, as
Windsor, born Bessie Wallis Warfield, in 1896; bandleader Guy
are many of my colleat~~~es. Just
Lombardo In 1902; baseball player Lou Gehrig in 1903; actresses
hours before the defeat of my
Nancy Marchand In 1928 (age 62) and Gena Rowlands in 1936 (age
amendment, a bUI containing the
same provisions passed the 54); and actor Malcolm McDowell in 1943 (age
... 47) .
House, 86-10.
On this date in history:
,
I'm also hopeful ' that we can
In 325 A.D., the early Christian church opened the general council of
work out a compro1111se on drug
Nicaea, which ~ttled on rules tor computing the date of Easter .
legislation. I agree with drug
In 1787, the United States Constitutional Convention voted to strike
czar William J . Bennett's statedown the Articles of Confederation 'and form a new government.
ment that we in Ohio have done
In 1846, two amateur baseball teams played under new rules at
well in launching an anti-drug ef'
Hoboken,
N.J., p1anting the first seeds of organjzed baseball. The
fort by buUdlng new prison, em,
New
York
Nine beat the Knickerbockers 23·1.
·
. pbaslzing treatment, stiffening
In
1953,
convicted
spies
Julius
and
Ethel
Rosenberg
were
executed.
penalties and adopting reforms
1987,
the
Supreme
Court
struck
down
the
1981
Louisiana
law that
In
to aiiow judges to order parents
required
schools
to
teach
the
creationist
theory
of
human
origin
to become Involved In their unespoused
by
fundamentaliSt
Christians.
derage children's treatment
programs.
A ~bought for the day: French Philosopher Blaise Pascal said,
Several other accomplish·
"Things are always at their best In their beginning." '
menta occurred this past week. A

Today in history

.

•

playoff ! core, in the Open since
1927, when Tommy Armour shot
a 76 at the Oakmont Country Club
to beat · Harry Cooper by three
shots.
Despite the lack of sensational
play. however, the drama was
first rate.
Donald ·began and ended the
front nine with birdies, but In
between ne three-putted once
and missed three greens. He
scrambled his way to a l-over 37.
which gave hill) a one-shot lead
over Irwin at the turn.
.
Donald missed a chance to go
two shots In front when he
three-putted for a bogey at the
par-4 11th after Irwin had bogeyed the hole.
But a bogey by Irwin at the 12th
after a poor drive gave Donald a
two-shot cushion and birdies by
both players al the par-5 14th
kept the margin at two.
The day began to turn around
at the long, par-4 16th, where
Irwin faced a second shot of 207
yards uphill and against the
wind.

"II was_the most solid shot I hit
all week," Irwin said. The bail
finished five feet away from the
hOle and the resuliing birdie
brought Irwin within a shot.
That one shot disappeared
when Donald bogeyed the final
hole, hooking his drive into the
trees , gouging it out into a bunker
in front of the green. blasting to
within 15 feet and barely missing
the putt that would have won the
tournament.
During the first 50 years of the
Open, If &lt;t playoff ended In a tie
the players returned the next day
for another 18 holes. But since
thatruiewaschanged-creating
a sudden-death playoff in the
event of a tie after 18 holes there had been no playoff
deadlocks.
So after 18 grueling holes
Monday, Donald and Irwin
stepped back to the first tee to
make history by being the first
players to settle the Open crown
in sudden death.
Both players drove perfectly .
but Donald's second.shot was hit

a fraction thin and did not readt
the ridge in the middle of the

green which would have sent the
ball scooting toward the hole. He
finished 30 feet away.
,
Irwin hit his second shot high in
the air and it came to rest what he
esdmated was 10 feet away ~
although most of those who s~w
the putt felt it was a llttieshorte~.
Donald's birdie putt never had
a chance and Irwin's nevet
looked anything but perfect
Belore the ball reached the cup,
Irwin was walking toward the
lioie to retrieve what turned out
to be the winning putt.
"I actually don't remember
hitting It," Irwin said. " But l
remember it going ln."
:
It was Irwin's first victory of
any kind in five years and the
18th of his career. And by
winning his third Open 16 years
after his first , he put himself
second in that department b~
hind Jack Nicklaus - whose
fourth Open crown in 1980 came
18 years after his fir st:
·

Romania remains alive in Cup play

If

Can lhe·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.Irwin edges Donald in.sudden,·death to capture U.S. Open -.

Page-2-The Daily s.ntinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

Bmj!ill

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Tue~day, .,lune 19, 1890

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.......
&lt;l ,, ,....,...

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t-... ,. ,: .
IRWIN CELEBRATES VICfORY - Hiale
Irwin steps between his and Mike Donald's golf
bap Monday, flsl in lhe air In celebration of his

· ·

VI}

•

U.S. Open golf Win, on the first boll of sudden
death following an 18·hole playoff round, which
saw lrwfa .and Donald tied. (UPI)

·Paterno to visit MSU next month
·, k)t

July 2 hl the Lansing Center.
EAST LANSING, ,Mich: (UPI)
"We want to make something
·- A summit , meeting between
Michigan State University foot - out of it. We were the h:ist school
bail coach ~rge Per~s and -into the Big Ten, we want to be
the first to welcome Joe Paterno
Pennsylvania State University
football coach Joe Paterno is in," said Perles, who is also to
expected ultimately to benefit assume the duties of athletic
.. ·· dir~tor that day.
Special Olympics.
About 500 tickets at $25 apiece
MSU officials announced Moll: day that Paterno is to visit MSU will be available lor the recep- .
next month to work on football tlon. said · Jim Epolito. vice
scheduitng for when Penn State president for governmental and
joins the Big Ten roster in 1995. community affairs at 'Blue Cross
He and Perles are also to host a . artd Blue Shield of Michiga'll.
Special
fund raiser Blue Cross and Blue Shield and
. Olympics
.
Little Caesar's Pizza ·are major

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1411-"')

A Dlvlllon of Multimedia, Inc.
Pub!tsbed every arternooo, Monday
through Friday, 111 COurt St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by th~ Ohio Valley PutJ..
Iishlng Company / Multimedia, Inc.,

Pomerov. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-21!6. Second cl8ss postage paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

co-sponsors of Special Olympics.
"We're very glad Coach Paterno Is coming to Michigan State
and glad he Is willing to give of
his time for the reception."

Pacers raise
ticket prices

Epolito said. "(Perles and Paterno) will be available at the
recrption. meeting people and
walking around ."
In addition to Paterno's
speech. former MSU football star
Tim Cunningham is slated to
play the saxophone. The net
proceeds from the event will go to
Area Eight Special Olympics,
which organizes Olympic-style
competitions for about 1,200
mentally retarded aihietes in
Ingham alld Eaton counties.
"This charity reception with
Joe · Paterno is just another
Indication of how much George
Perles cares about our organization arid our kids," said Joe
Shebuski, AreaEight director for
Special Olympics.
Perles also wtli spearhead
another benefit lor Area Eight
Special Olympics..· later this
summer with the Third Annual
George Perles Little Caesars'
Charity Golf Classic on Aug. 13 at
the Lansing Country Club: Last
year's outing netted $40,000.
Money from the two events are
to help pay for uniforms, equip·
, ment. tournament entry fees and
tr!lvei expenses for the Special
Olympics program. ·

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)- The
Member: United Pr~S Intematlonal.
. Indiana Pacers announced MonInland DaUy Press Association and the
Ohio lCewspaper Association. National
day that prices for 76 percent of
Advertlslne Representative, Branham
the seats at Market Square
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Arena Will increase for the
New York, New York 10017 .
1990·91 NBA season. 15 percent
POSThiASTER: send adcnas cban(II!O
will
decrease and '9 percent will
lo The Dally S..ttnel, lll Court St.,
Pomeroy,Qtolo 457119.
stay the same.
Seats in the first three to five
IIUJIIICIIIPriON BATII8 .
courtside rows and in the east
a,car-orMai•BooiiO
. One Week ...................................suo
floor level will increase from $18
one Month ............... ............ .. ....16.10
to $35. Seats below the walkway
Onr Year ...... .... . ,., .............. ..... $12.80 ,.
wllr go from $18 to $25 and seats
· SINGLI£ COPY
'
PIIICII: ,
above the walkway between the
ST. CHARLES, Mo. ( UPI) Dally ........................... :....... :15 C.ntt
baselines to Row NN will in· Don McCune, who won six titles
subscribers not detlrtng to pay tMcarcrease from $14 to $20. Seats and )vas named Bowler of the
rler may remit in advance direct to
above•that, which sold for $9 and Year in 1973 when he discovered
The Dally Seattnel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
$1,2 last se.&amp;son, will cost $15 next how to softep bowling balls · In ·
, basis. Credit wUI be atven Cll'l'lfl' ea~h
week.
season.
· order to knock over more pins,
').'he lower level corner seats · knocked down the most pins
' Np subscriptions by moll permitted Ia
where home curler •rvtce lJ
will Increase from S18 to $20 and Monday as he took the lead after
· avaDable.
$14 to $15. Some corner seats two rounds In the $75,000 St.
..............lo.
above the walkway Will go from Charles AMF Bobcat Senior
Melplloalll7
$12
to $10 or $9 toS10. Seats in the Open at · Webers St. Charles
·uw..u .................................. JJ.Ut
upper ends will remain at S&amp;.
Lanes.
·
:II W..U ......................... ........ . $3'/.H '
52WHI!I ............ , ........ ............. fll.311
The Increase Is the first in
McCune, from Hipland, Ind,
-MelpCoulr
three seasons and the second averapd 225.83 ud finllhed tbe
13 W..U ............................. , .... tJQ.IO
:II Wetb ....... :.... ~..................... $10.30 •• since Melvin and Herb limon openlna 12 games of qualifying
DWitb .................................. m.to
bought the team sevenyl!arsqo. With a score of 2,710.

McCune leads
PBA Senior Open

at••

.

Emeric sheltered his players
from the media to avoid further
distractions. The same day. 35
Romanians applied for political
assylum in Rome.
Romania, which defeated the
Soviet Union 2-0 in its first mat ch.
took the field Monday at San
Paolo Stadium in Naples knowing II needed at leas t a tie to
qualify for the second round.
Argentina broke ahead l-0 in
the 61st .minute when defender
Pedro Monzon headed In a Diego
Maradona corner. but Gavriia
Balint scored a header six
minutes later to push the Romanians past the flrst round for the
first time since 1938.
"This is an hisluric day,"
Emeric said. ' 'Now I just hope,
the political problems are
solved."
Romania next plays the
second-place team in Group F,
eilher England, Egypl, Hoiland
or Ireland.
·
Despite the draw. Argenttna · ·
qualified for the second round as
a third-place team. Had Argentina held on to win. it would have ·
captured Group B and remained
in Naples for the second round .

Thompson reported to
be leaving for ·Nuggets
Thompson told USA Today
WASHINGTON (UPI) - GeorMonday, "I would say I'll be
getown basketball coach John
coaching at Georgetown next
' Thompson is almost certain to
accept the Denver Nuggets' offer · year. That's what I believe will
happen. (But) we are exploring
to become their new generiil
our options . I think I owe it to
manager, according to a tel"myself to listen anytime somevised report.
body proposes something tome."
Washington-based WJLA TV
Thompson, 48, has been at
said Monday that Thompson's
Georgetown
for 18 years, compildeparture afler 18 years at
ing
a
423·142
record and winning
Georgetown was "90 percent
the
1984
NCAA
championship. He
I ikely."
also
coached
the 1988 Olympic
Thompson has reportedly been
team
to
a
bronze
medal.
offered a $700,000-a-year con"I'm
not
looking
to leave,"
tract for either four or five years
Thompson
,
told
.
USA
Today. ' 'I
and an opportunity to eventually
had
great
respect
have
always
own almos t four percent of the
and
admiration
for
the
Denver
team.
people, and I have even more
The station said Thompson is
now. We are having discussions
attempting to work out details of
but they are no more than
the Nuggets' contract before
discussions."
announcing his lntentiorl to leave
The Nuggets also interviewed
the northwe s t Washington
Philadelphia 76ers gen former
school.
era
l
manager
John Nash, but
WJLA said Thompson was
Nash
was
named
Washington
pushing for long-time assistant
GM
at
a
late-afternoon
Bullets
Craig Esherick to succeed him at
news conference Monday .
Georgetown. The station also
said longtime aide Mary Fenlon
wpuld be going with Thompson to
the Nuggets.
Thompson's agent, pavld
Falk, told WTIG TV that "no
final decisions have been made. I
feel the presumption is he wlli
stay."
USA Today reported Monday
that Nuggets co-owners Bob
Wussier, Bertram Lee and Peter
Bynoe met with Thompson In
Washington over the weekend.
Wh e n reached Monday,
Thompson had no comment.
Georgetown spokesman Bill Sha·
piand said Monday that Thompson was not yet prepared to
release any statement concerning the Nuggets' job.

Argentina must await to e
completion of lhe first round
before knowing Its fate , but the
road to repeating won 't be easy.
The defending champions will
draw either Brazil or Wesl
,
Germany .
"This is not the 1986 team, "
ArgE'ntlne Coach Carlos Bllardo
sa id. "This team had only foqr
months to prepare.'·
Cameroon. the surprise team
of the World Cup. clinched first
place In Group B despite losing_to
the Soviet Union 4-0 in Bari. The
Africans will play their secondround match in Naples against
one of the four lhird -place teams
to advance.
The victory saved face for a
Soviet team that finished second
al the European championships ,
and won the 1988 Olympic gold
medal.
.
" Tod ay my side and I lost ,a nd
my heart and my mind were
where they should be," said
Valery Nepomniachi, Cameroon's Soviet-born coach.
.
Tuesday features four
matches. including the final U.S.
appearance in the tournament.
The Americans play Austria in
Florence, whlie Italy meets
Czechoslovakia in Rome in the
final Group A matches. In Group
D, West Germany faces Colombia In Mllan and Yugoslavia
takes on the United Arab Emi·
rates In Bologna.
The United States wraps up Its
·first World Cup appearance In 40
years against an Austrian team
that has hopes of qualifying fQr
the second round . Austria. which
has lost 1-0 to Italy and Czechoslovakia. must win by at leas I two
goals to be In Ihe running as -a
third-place team .

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC
ALL BIA.NDS

$395

Salle Day Service
AI Parts Extra

FRIDAY
.

JUNE 22nd

4 to 7 P.M.
INCLUDES: CLEANING. OILING,
ADJUSTING, GREASING.

UIOU lilY

a

DIOPPID OPP IN ADVANCE

992-6491
716 North .
Second
Ml. .oport,
Ollie

�•

'

Tueeday, June 19, 1990

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wilson's three-hitter gives
Giants 2-1 win over Padres
••

••

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BY DAVE ENGELDRUM
UPI Sports Writer
SAN FRANGISCO (UPI) - ·
For Trevor Wilson and his
teammates It has been both the
best and worst of seasons.
While Wilson sperit the springtime In Phoenix, San Francisco's
AAA affiliate, the Giants were
mired near the bottom of the
National League West.
But all that has changed.
Wilson scattered three hits In
six and one-third Innings MOnday
night and Matt Williams homered to lift tbe Giants to a 2·1
victory over the San Diego
Padres, keeping the Giants' June
revival rolling.
Wilson, 3-0, who one-hit San
Diego last Wednesday, struck out
three and walked four.
"Trevor pitched a real good
game ... , " manager Roger Craig
said. "He's an altogether different pitcher than the one we saw
this spring. "

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Barnes after being called out on a close play on
first base Moaday. (UPI)

•••
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N- York at MllwMiker

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1•.:'-:

OVERRUNS SECOND - New York Yaakees
~: • baserunner Delon Sanders looks on as second
•
base umpire D•rwood Merrill (center) cal.. him
out after Sanders overran tbe bag Ol\ a steail
attempt during e.lghth Inning action of the

Brewe. .Yaakees game Moaday. The Brewers
Bill Spiers (right) took the thr- from catcher
B.J. !!urhofl to apply the lag. The Brewers won
4-2. (UPI)

"

,~~~ Tigers

close in 'on .500 mark
~}with 7-2 win over Aithletics
.
;; ,.j , ..

~~

~·
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1
·' · ~·

By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
:·~~:. The Detroit Tigers dropped 103
games In the lost season of 1989,
; ·; but this year they're harboring
• • dreams of mediocrity, and In the
. AL East that can be a dangerous
, vision.
. After a decisive 7-2 victory
over the world champion Oak·.
.land Athletics Monday, tbe Tigers were two games short of
b~eaking even on the season and
only six games behind the AL
East-leading Toronto Blue Jays.
"The first step is getting back
to .500," said shortstop Alan
Trammell. who belted a threerun, first-Inning home run to
·.!Point Detroit toward Its fifth win

the Oakland lett fielder 's 902nd
career stolen base and the other
his lOth horner of the season, but
held the rest of the Athletics at
bay to square his record at 5-5.
Edwin Nunez finished up for
his second save.
"Some of my teammates all
came to the same conclusion,"
Robinson said. "I wasn't' followIng thro11gh on my pitches. I think
It made a big difference.
"I kept the ball down more, and
when I was successful in the past
I kept the ball down. I really feel
good now. This was a very
positive outing, something I can
build on. "
Alter first -inning singles by
Lou Whitaker ·and Ed Romero,
: .._ln slx games. .
Trammell lined a 1-2 pitch from
;i: "I don' t think anybody's ever Curt Young, 3-2, over the left field
:!"'on a division playing under · fence for his fifth hOme run.
..-.500,'' said Trammell.
·
'"We had too many bases on
"We're getting a feel for
balls," Oakland manager Tony
J?,hlngs . We're 65 or 66 games into
LaRussa said. "We were not
.~.~he season. Of course, If lot of It
aggressive enough on the mound
-.nas to do with Cecil (Fielder,
and that leads to problems. We
:~major league horne run and RBI
were behind In the count too
:&lt;,l eader).
much.
~~; "You see a guy doing what he's
' 'One of the best players In
. • doing every day for six weeks, it
baseball hit a three-run horne run
:=rubs off. It's got to have a certain
in the first Inning. That got us
,:effect on the other guys. We're
behind. We tried to get back In
;::better In the field and our rellef
the game but we just couldn't."
:•)&gt;It c h ing ha s just been
John Shelby hit a two-run
·w uts tandlng.
homer, and Lloyd Moseby and
•' · "We' ve been playing very well
Mike Heath added RBI singles to
~·or late. I kn9w how quick things
account for theotherTigersruns.
can turn, though. The next month
ElsewheJe In the American
~, _I s going to be very irnporiant for
League Monday, Baltimore
• us to stay where we're at. We've
bopped Boston 7-2; Texas
: got a couple of long road trips
• coming up."
mauled Minnesota 7-1; Milwaukee nailed New York 4-2; Califorl
Jeff Robinson pitched six and
1 tWO· thlrd innings of six-hit ball nia clubbed Chicago 4-1; and
• for the Tigers.
Kansas City slugged Seattle 6-2.
; . • Robinson gave up two runs to
Orioles 7, Red Sox 2 - At
Baltimore, Randy Milligan hit a
~ • Rickey Henderson, one set up by

&lt;;

S

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f•

Sports briefs

f

The U.S. Junior Olympic Box,. ing Championships will be held
,• June 20-23 at Marquette, Mich.
, ·; More than 180 boxers, represent: ; ing 14 regional teams, are
. • expected to attend the tourna: ; ment, which features 17 weight
~; categories and three-round bouts
&gt;, , of two minutes each. -·
~
College
! • The University of Illinois
• . complied with an NCAA dead·
: "line, submitting a response list to
: allegations of recruiting viola· · · ·lions by the school's basketball
~-

program. The NCAA had sent a
lettter of Inquiry to the university
In February, listing allegations
that high school prospects were
offered money and cars to attend
U of I. The NCAA Infractions
Committee is scheduled to meet
in Colorado Springs, Colo. , Aug.
11-14 and University officials
have said they hope to make
· ·minols' case at that time. IIUnols
could be forced to suspend Its
·basketball program for at least a
year If found guilty of major
violations.
·
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two-run single to highlight a
flve' run second Inning against
Roger Clemens, 11-3, and snap a
five-game losing streak. Dave ·
,Johnson, 6-4, scattered nine hits
for his second complete game.
Clemens was tagged for seven
hits a lid three earned runs In one
and two-thirds Innings. Ellis
Burks had three bits for Boston,
Including his ninth home run .
Rangers 7, Twins 1 - At
Arlington, Texas, Charlie Hough
p!tched a 4-hltter, Gary Pettis
homered and newcomer Scott
·coolbaugh highlighted a fiv~run
second Inning with an RBI single.
Hough, 7-4, registered his third
complete game, giving up four
hits, strlklng out six and walking
three. Dave West, 2-5, lasted only
one and one-third Innings, allowIng f!ve runs and six hits.
Brewers 4, Yankees 2 - At
Milwaukee, Mark Knudson scattered seven hits over seven and
two-third Innings to help the
Brewers stop a three-game losIng streak. Knudson, 5-3, allowed
two runs, one earned: and Chuck
Crlm worked out of a basesloaded. jam In the ninth for his
fifth save. New York starter Tim
Leary, 3-9, took the loss, yielding
four runs and 10 hits In his fifth
complete game. The Yankees
have scored just eight runs In
eight of Leary's losses.
Angels 4, White Sox 1 - At
Chicago, Jim Abbott won , his
second game since May 18 and
Lance Parrish ·hit a two-run
horner and an RBI single to hand
the White Sox their fourth
straight defeat. Abbott, 4-5, gave
up seven hits, struck out six to tie
a season-high and walked one
over eight Innings. Brian Harvey
p!tcbed ' the ninth, posting his
ninth save. Jack McDowell, 3-4,
took the loss, gMRl up five bits
over six Innings. Parrish, who h!t
a grand slam Sunday, now bas
six horne runs and 14 RBI this
month , compared to one hOmer
and four RBI In June 1989.
Royals 8, Marlnen 2 - At
Kansas City, Mo., Bo Jackson hit
a three-run home run and Mark
Gublcza bea.t Seat tie tor the
seventh consecutive time. Gublcza, 4-6, gave up five hits,
walked four and struck out nine
In Improving to 12-3 lifetime
against the Mariners. Erjk Hanson, 6-6, took the loss,

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Oaklan• at O.t roll
Baltllllor.atCievt'IMJd. nl1hl
Bestoa at TorOIIto, niP.
CaJIIoml• llf t'tlW.•orn .. , ..,.
S.atll• at KaniiUCUy, nl&amp;bf:
MlnaeAota at T!UII, al.hi:

Anna .Pickett and Nellie Sargeant received their 40 year pins.
Stella Atkins presen.ted Mrs .
Pickett's pin and BettY Bishop
presented Mrs .. Sargeant's .
The charter was draped for
Bernice Wlnn. after . which the

KiTE FLYING - Members of Sallaburyu Cub Scout Pack 246
recently pardclpated In a fishing derby and kite flying contest at
the farm of Dr. James and. Jeanie Witberell•

A fishing derby and kite flying
'contest was held recently by
members of the Salisbury Cub
Scout Pack 246 held at a farm
owned by Dr. James and Jeanie
Witherell.
'
Fishing prize for the Jargest
fish was won by Tim Peav ley
with a 10 and one half Inch bass.
Second place was taken by Ryan
Ramsburg with a ten Inch ba&amp;s
and third place went to Shaun
Harris with a nine and one half
Inch blue gill.

.

·: . a four and one half Inch bass.

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O.Shl.t.h rum 15-dl!l' to

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dl!lllblfd

NN" ' ' ork (NL) - .\niiiMIIICf'd Clleher
Barry LyoM will he wnllll'nlkWMt&gt;r of
th"" Amerlt.n .b!!Oeladoa tAAAol f•r
r""hahiM&amp;atlon IUIIIipmul; ~ ptkhfor
Julo Mar...,. 18'ndewaler• recalled
,Kcher .Jeff lniP.
Sp Fran~- f'lacN pllchl'l" Aller

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MOIIdQ Rnullll
M••rrll S. Chkqo I
Saa Fruclsco 2, SM Die~ 1

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Pll&amp;llbul"'l:b !'' Pbiladelpl\la. ppd. rain

Ret~IChet

to

bu11inotss insurance pack·
age, . that is. It's SERIES
ONE, a broad-coverage.
competitively-priced
plan
for retail stores. offices.
churches, apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a pro·
posal and quotation.

Plans lor the 50th anniversary
of the Middleport Amateur Gardeners Club were discussed at
the group's recent picnic meet' Ing held at the home of Clara
Conroy In Chester. .
Je;tn Moore asked the blessing
and roll call and the meeting was
.~ · o~ned.by Marge Fetty with Kate
• Swanson giving the collect. The
. . treasurer's report aJso was
given.
Rose Reynolds presented pl~­
tures· of cornhusk dolls with two
of the dolls being made of crepe
• paper and dating back 50 years or
j
• more .
A reading on children was
I

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·••••nc•d

Zl-d~t~ dlu'*lll;
Phoenix pll:tblnll..-.achLari'J' Rardf will
lfo~pon.rlly Join par•fti elllh.
Sealllt - Traded odffller D•aell
Coif'!! &amp;o O.ti'CIII ler a.dl.tdtr Tracy
lonea.
St.. Lolli"- Slpelll caicher .Jim EIU•.
'hxu - Plac~ Ullrd bMemU Steve
Buechele on IH..V dt•bklll U•l; ulled
up lhlrd bMetnaft Seolt CnlbUih from
Ollahoma Cllyol&amp;lle Amertc• A.uocl•
lktniAM ).
TGroMo Clalmd on walwon
lallelller-outflelder ·Ken WIIUamt~ ol

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214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

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given by' Iva Powell and Mrs .
Moore spoke on perennial
flowers.
Mrs. Conroy had the flower
arrangement and Gladys CumIngs presented a flower plant to
each present.
The traveling prize was won by
Marge .Fetty.
Rose Reynolds celebrated her
birthday and her picture was
taken as the group sang' 'Happy
Blrtllday" to her.
Homemade Ice cream was
served to those named and Daisy
Blakeslee, Elizabeth Lohse, Elizabeth Burkett, Jen Cheshire.
and Katherine Hysell.

POMEROY - The Red Cross
Bloodmobile will .be at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
on Wednesday from 1-5 p.m.
Blood Is urgently needed any

Square dance
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Dance Club Will have a round and
square dance on Friday from 8-11
p.in. with ·music by the Happy
Hollow Boys of Athens. Admission Is $2 aod those attending
should bring snacks for the snack
table.

Bukdb.U

Albany iCBAI- Nanwd~ralcl Ollwr
man&amp;KK •ncl dlrtdor of hallll""lblll oprnllora.
Frle(WBL) -SIIfwdi«&lt;nMiall•k'b
altd Kull• Mulznifolua ol Scn'lri L .. 'o'lu
~·Mral

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Pr-escription .Shop

We're Expanding
1 ou Better!!

rve

On Monday, June 2 S, we w·ill be in our new
store. We would like to thank you for your
past patronage and look forward to serving
you in our new location,
253 NORTH SECOND AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
We will continue to offer our many
services plus we invite you to stop
and open your own personal
charge account.

Watch For
Our Grand
Ooenin 11
I

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Soon!!
NEW STORE HOURS
STARTING JUNE 25
Monday thru Friday 9 A.M.-8 P.M.
Saturday 9 A.M. - 3 P.M.

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,STOP IN AND LET US
· HELP YOU TODAY

:PRESCRIPTION SHOP
MIDDLIPOft, OHIO
992-6669

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio Child
Conservation League will have a
potluck picnic Thursday at 6 p.m . .
at the roadside park on Route 33.
Members brtng UPC seals from ·
Scott Products.
RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek Conservancy Dis trlct will
hold a special meeting Thursday
at 9 a .m. at the office.
POMEROY -The Democratic
Central and Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7: ;lO
p.m. at the Carpenters Hall In
Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The Special
Education Parent Advocacy Network will meet Thursday at .3: 30
p.m. at the Melgq Health Department. The public is InVIted. A
discussion. on starting a parents'
group for kids special needs will
be held .

By United Press lnternatloul
2 LIVE TROUBLE: Pollee vice squads aren't the only ones
with a legal bone to pick with the rappers of 2 Live Crew. A
Nashville music publishing house has flied suit, accusing the
group of rna'kl,ng an unauthorized recording of Roy Orblson' s
" Oh, Pretty Woman. " The firm of Acuff-Rose says It refused
permission for a 2 Live Crew recording of the song, but that a
derivative version appeared anyway on "As Clean As They
Want To Be." That's the sanitized version of the controversla!
album "As Nasty As They Want To Be." Acuff-Rose attorney
Eddie Wayland said 2 Live Crew's latest legal entanglement Is
" not !I bout talking dirty. It's about copyright Infringement."
Delendan ts In the copyright Infringement Sill I are Luther "lAke
Skyywalker" Campbell and Christopher "FI'MII Kid Jee''
Wongwon. the band members arrested In Florida on obsceplty
cbarges earUer this month, as well as members Mark "Bro&amp;ber
Marquis" Ross and David "Mr. Mlxx" llobbs. "Oh, Pretty
Woman" was a major hit for Orblson, co-written by the late
singer and William Dees In 1964..The 2 Ll~e Crew album credits
Acuff;J!ose and the composers.
' AR'I'S AND CRAFTS: Fallen evl!ngellst Jim Bakker Is
becoming something of an . artist. Bakker, serving a 45-ye_a r
prlson term, has been making pottery behind bars. For Father's
Day, he sent his 83-year-old lather, Raleigh Bakker, .a vase
bearing a painting of Bakker's childhood home In Muskegon,
Mich. The PTL founder, convicted last year of 24 countsolfraud
stemming from the way he raised money at PTL, began taking
ceramics classes shortly before Christmas. His first creation
was a ceramic mug containing ceramic hot chocolate and
ceramic whipped cream. He gave that to w.lfe Tammy Faye,
who has a ceramic food collection In her kitchen In Orlando, Fla.
· EXHIBIT A: Watergate conspirator Chuck Colton, who
should know about such things, laments what he calls il.
·'general breakdown lri character'' ln business, politics and the
church. Colson. told ·a group of · evangellc;il Chr.istians In
Minnesota over the weekend that he sees " a loss of duty and
honor and trust, which 1 think Js'epl(lemlc. " Colson, once special
counsel to Richard Nixon, now heads an evangelical Christian
ministry to prison inmates. " Government has become such a
big moneyed business, a person has to do anything to surVIve,"
Colsori said. ·'But that 's not an excuse. Power corrupts. I know.
I was there. I am Exhibit A."
GLIMPSES: Maggie Kuhn, founder of the Gray Panthers
senior. citizens movement, and Maya Un, designer of the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial In Washington, will be Inducted
Into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame Tuesday. Kuhn Is a native
of Cleveland; Lin Is from Athens . ... Trying to think of a word to
describe Grace Jones? Does uninhibited come to mind? The
New York Dally News reports that Jones was spotted dancing
the flamenco on a table the other night at Pamplona's, a Spanish
restaurant In the Big Apple where the food comes complete)VIth
a strolling guitarist.

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New bottle
for those
hate-to-wait
ketchup lovers
PLAINVILLE, Conn. tUPI)Kenneth LeBlanc has come up
with a new ketchup bottle for
those who hate to walt for their
favorite cpndlment.
The bell-shaped bottle uses
gravity and two caps to keep the
ketchup flowing, but LeBlanc
says the big food companies have
shown little Interest In the bottle
he says he' 'designed by common
sense."
"Americans mind the walt,"
OUT FOR A RIDE - Three members of the French CHJ
said the carpenter, undaunted
CycU•"'·
a group from GalHpolls, cycled over 50 mUes oa MoadBJ ,
part-tln\e Inventor and lifelong
mornlnc
Ia Meigs Counly, by way of Tuppen Plallll, Reed8vllle,
tinkerer. "I don't know why (food ·
Porlian\1,
Racine, Long Boltom, Cheater and baelk to Tuppen
companies) don't make a bottle
Plains.
The
. cyclls" are preparlnc lor the GaiUpolll River
that works."
Recreation
Ride.
Pictured, are Suii8D and Bill Davll aad !!&amp;eve ·
Plastic squeeze bottles have
Elberfeld
as
they
stopped
for luach In Portlaad.
not eliminated the problems of
slow-pouring or clogged bottles
that have plall\led ketchup lovers
since Henry J. Heinz first marketed bottled tomato ketchup In
1876, LeBlanc said.
His 16-ounce bottle uses a. bell
Complied by:
.shape and two caps to eliminate
Emmogeae Holstein Congo
the walt. Gravity pulls the
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
ketchup to the bottom of the
bottle. where It will flow from the
bottom cap, LeBlanc said.
Salisbury Township Trustees,
When the bottle Is nearly
right of way, to Robert Scarempty, Its bell-shape allows the
berry and Cathy Scarberry,
user to grip Its neck and shake It
Salisbury. ·
In a hammer-like motion, send·
Ohio Bell TelephOne Co., easelng the last of the ketchup to the ment, to William L. Will and
bottom opening.
Juanita H. Will, Meigs .
The top opening allOws users to
Mildred Gaul and Jacob Gaul,
refill the bottle easily, or clean II, easement, to Ohio Bell Telesaid LeBlanc, 40, who received a
phone Co., Chester.
patent In May 1989 and still hopes
George Allred Wolfe and Faye
to cash In big on his Invention In a
Wolfe, easement, to Ohio Bell
U.S. market worth $500 million.
Telephone Co., Chester.
He had the Idea for his bottle In
VIrgil K. Windon and Kathryn
1986 while watching his daugh- H. Windon, easement, to Ohio
ter, Christine, then 8, struagle to Bell Telephone Co., Chester.
·
shake ketchup from a traditions!
bottle. He said heapent$3,800and
four years developing his design.
Heinz U.S.A., which controls 52
percent of the U.S. market,
Ho.n:
however, has told LeBlanc It Is
II am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
not Interested In his bottle.
II am 10 I am Fri. &amp;r 511.
Along with the Coca-Cola bottle, the traditional glass Heinz
ketchup bottle, last redesigned In
Pick-up
19f4, 11 one of the most recogn~ bottles In America.

transfers

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FREE DEUVERY SERVICE

anyone age 17 through 70 may
donate. The women of the Trinity
Church, Friendly Circle, will
furnish and serve the canteen.

eople in the news

Property

:-

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, 271 NOITI SECOND

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WEDNESDAY
RUTLANP - The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
hold Its monthly meeting on
Wednesday at 9a.m. at the office.

r

Clalme• on walnn ·

ratl; trulll~ftd~~el'Oadh.-.tM.nDellno

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Asbury
"Most Fish Caught" trophies United Methodist Church, Syra- ·
went to Ryan Ramsburg, 13 fish. · cuse will have vacation bible
school thrOugh Friday from 9
and Danny Custer, 10 fish .
Homemade kite races were a.m. to noon. Classes for ages two
won by Ryan Ramsburg, Billy , through . junior high. Public
Invited.
Soulsby, and Evan Struble.
The 45 participants were given
POMEROY - The Carleton
fishing tackle .and bobbins for
attendance gifts . Roasted hot- Church on Kingsbury Road will
dogs, potato salad and chips were have vacation bible school
served as well as homemade through Friday from 9:;!0a.m. to
vanilla and chocolate Ice cream. noon. Mrs. Belinda Dean Is
Organizers for the events were director. All children welcome.
Adelle White, Jeanie Witherell
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
and Bill Young, cubmaster.
The events closed with a Sesquicentennial Committee will
recitation of the cub scout meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. for a
picnic. Call Mary Powell at
promise and oath.
992-5005 for mor Information.

r·. Amatuer Gardeners
plan anniversary

O'Ne,. from Phwnk ol tile Pad ftc Cout
mowed plkher Rltk

Pel. oo·
.813 .5. =1,1

saa FTancbco .............15 JO

Moatnal -

Matt Milhoan captured the

.

Z .Smallest fish trophy by catching

worthy matron read a P&lt;&gt;em and
a moment of sUent prayer was
observed.
Dorsll Thomas was Initiated In
the order and Charles King
presented a bible to him.
It was voted to give honorable
membership to worthy grand
matron and grandpatron Sally
and John Matusky' .
The birthdays of Ruby Diehl
and Stella Atkins were noted.
Charles King gave the blessing ·
before the group was served
refreshments by that committee,
Marsha Dennison, Gladys Nl·
cholson, Margaret -Parsons and
Betnlce Nelson.
·A get well card· was signed for
Bernice Nelson who was unable
to attend.

Community ·calendar

Salisbury cubs have flying contrJst

lnQeldu Oak&gt; Snum from O.n.er of lh•
Amerltan Aaauclallon (A.AA).

Lf'qw (.\A.A.);

Chw:luatl ................ .'...st to .111 -

Lo. Mlf'ltt I,

Past matrons and patrons,
those having held grand appointments, 60-year member Ruby
Diehl, and honored mason Dan
Arnold were recognized at the
recent meeting of the Harrlsonvplle Order of the Eastern
Star.
Golda and Bob · Reed, worthy
matron and patron, conducted
the meeting In which Kathy
Johnson, vice president of District 25, also was recognized.

SMiby from Toledt of i•e aaerrattoral
Lupe (A.AAI.
Milwaukee - Placd lnflei.Wr Paul
Molhr on IJ.«I-.y ~lubledll•t; reude~

purcta.d roMNet of plkher Rand)'

Euo

Sa111He~ ....................SI
Loa t\n~let~ .................SI
Ho•on ....... .......... ~ .. ...!l

Harrisonville OES meets

'AIMOCiatl•ll (A.A.\),
Detroit - fttorllled utfleWier Jot.

Hamm~lrr

N..\TIONAL ,LEA.GUE

Tum
WL
PlilAhul'l(h .... ............. ,.3(1 %1
M••real .................... .37 til
New Yorlr. ......... .... .. .....Sl H
Phl.. delplda ........ ....... .3:t SO
St. LoU ......................t7 31
Chkqo .:................. ,...n H

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M•ntA h'IJII'i NMiniUe O( lite Amfl'leu

outfielder Rolando BoOII'tillll of Clncln-

The Daily Sentin-el
Tu•day. June 19, 1990
Page &amp;

Clacl_.l - Called up olllllekler Hal

BaiUmol'f' (MIIacld 34) at Cln•laad
(Farft!IJ 3-4) , 7:35p.m.
· Ollklaad _(StN"art WI at Drholt
(Tanana 54), 7:35p.m.
CallfomU (McCuldll 4-3) at Chlcap
(Perez 1-1), 8:15p.m.
New York (Cary H) at Mllwaull""""
!Bello HJ , 8: 1111.m.
Mla~~r•oca (..\n*rao• Z·IJ a1 Ted&amp;
cJeffCNt U t. 8: U p.m .
Seattk' (Swaal-ttalKaniUCIIy( Farr
1-3), K:U p.m.

,._,...,

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·Well

ao.tva (IUPcltt'l' (l-3t at Toronlo
(Cer.UI WJ, 7!SS p.m.

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Tonlllo ..... ................. .21 n
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By The Bend

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A.MEIUCAN LEAGUE
Eul

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Scoreboard ...
Majon
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CARTER UPSET - The Padres' Joe Carter
shOws displeasure to lint base umpire Ron

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And the Giants are an altofor his eighth save.
getherdlflerentballclubthan the
Williams clubbed his 14th
home run
he year with one out
one that finished the month of
May 10 games below .500 at19-29 . · In the seveth Inning to make It 2-0.
"I don't think I've ever been ~ Wlljlams, who leads the National
Involved. with a club (hat's gone
Leaguewith56RBI,extendedhls
as badasyoucango,"Cralgsald.
hitting streak to a career-high 15
"The players wllllook back on It
games . .
and say, hey :We saw the worst of
The Giants led 1-0 In the first on
It and the best of It- and they are
an RBI double by Rick Leach. .
reaping the benefits now.
ilynn ended the Glapts shutout
San Francisco has now won
bid In the eighth with his fourth
nine stralghla!ld 16 of their last
homer of the year.
17. Wilson has refiected the
Elsewhere In the National
League: Montreal dumped ChiGiants' resurtectlon, winning
three· straight since recently
cago 5-1, San Francisco nipped
belngcalled up from the minors.
San Diego 2-1, · Pittsburgh at
"He just has so much natural
Pblladelphla was postROned due
stuff, " Giants catcher Ter-ry
to rain as was St. Louis at New
York.
.
Kennedy said of Wilson. "He's
more relaxed out there. He's a lot
Expos 5, Cubs 1- At Montreal,
calmer than he used to be."
Dennis Martinez, 5-4, tossed a
Ed Whitson, 5-5, gave up just
complete· game four-hitter ~nd
four hits in seven Innings In
Tom Foley drove .In three runs
taking the loss.
with a two-run triple al)d an RBI
Jeff Brantley allowed two hits
double. Mike ~ar.key, 5-3, suiover two and one-third innings' fered the loss . ~ontreal's Spike
Owen tied the all-time National
League record for consecutive
games without· an error for
shortstops. Owen has played ln60
straight games, 245 chances,
without a miscue, tying Kevin
CI.rl . . .l , .......... Mllllal*r 1·
Elster of the New York Mets lor
I) M A.Uuta (A.VHJ'.I ull...,........l·
the record.
•
1), I, 1: . J.rit.
Clllup IBMidt. 1-IJ II Melllh'elll
Dodgers
5,
Astroa
2 - At Los
IG..,._r 1-1), 7: U •. m.
Angeles, Kal Daniels collected
PIUIINIItl ~walk HI .a Plllla.W,.a
(DfJes•W), '1:11p.m.
three hits, Including a two-run
st. t.o•• (Twdor Jot) a1 New Vorl
double, to leil,d Los Angeles. Tim
!Co• WJ , 1:15 p.m.
Jlowion CScoH U) at l...o• Aaplea
Belcher, . 5·4, 'gained the win
( V.Jen:u•la 4.aJ. IO:SS p.m.
despite giving up nine hits and
Su Dlep (H.. ntJ-4) I&amp;_SanFraltdlcO
(lur11Pti1'-1),11:3S • .m. ·
·
two runs over &amp;eVen and oneH'~.-etd_, Gamel'
;
nt:IIMirJtl&amp;t Pldla*IJIIIII.
third Innings. Jay Howell pitched
st. 1.01111 at Nnr York
the
ninth for his third save. The
SlUt DI~IIO at S• FnadiCO
Olleqo II Mo•r.al, •lpt
loss went to Bill Gulllcksol!, .4-5.
Allaldlt ai Cl.:l..tl. nlpt
Kirk Gibson was forced to leave
Ho,..ta at Los ADIII!I•. nlp.l
the game In the first Inning with a
Mollla,y Sport" Traa•c.tlo•
strained
right groin muscle.
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APPRECIATION AWARDS- Members.of the
Nursing A118l~tant Advisory Committee recently
received awards of appreciation for tbelr support
. of this new vocational program offered 'at Meigs
HIgh School. The class Is ()pen to any 1\felgs
County student during their senior year of high
school. Pictured In front, are Mingle Blake,

lnsll'llctor, Carol Kanawafsky, RN. aad LaBue
Hill, R.N. (Amerlcare PomeroyNanln1Center);
Rhonda Oatley, R.N. and Kevin Ruffl111 (Veterans Memorial Hospital); and Sally Gloeekaer,
R.N. (Overbrook Center). Back, Greg Kaylor
(Continuity of Care).

Stars gather for Harrison memorial
NEW YORK !UP!) - Elegantly Ill tired ladles In wide hats
and Impeccably dressed gentlemen crushed together with laris
In the Church of the Transflgura· tion Monday to honor the memory of actor Rex Harrison.
"Let the angels beware,"
warned his son, ·Noel Harrison,
"there . Is an unreconstructed
man among you who hates the
sanctimontus."
·
He recalled that only a few
days 1Je1ore his (ather died_ of
pancreatic cancer on June 2, he
said, "I've got .a new philosophy
of life, don't cower, charge." .
Harrison's outbursts against

"overbearing directors (and)
leading ladles," were gleefully
. recalled bY more than one of the
five speakers at tbe serVIce.
Among the crowd In the sln\ple, red brick church off Fifth
Avenue were old Harrison
friends Douglas Fairbanks Jr.,
Cliff Robertson, Claudette Col·
bert and Kitty CarUsle Hart,
whose late husband, Mosa Hart,
directed Harrison ln "My Fair
Lady."
Harrison's famous role as
Professor Henry Higgins In the
musical was fondly
remembered.
''Who else but Rex Harrison

could make a cardigan sweater
seem like the height of chic?"
said writer Brendan Gill.

992•2124

------------------------Only!,
~~~F~I

20°/o OFF STOREWIDE
t,
lOW 'IIIR JULY

1ttt.

WE MUST MAD lOOM POl .W
FAlL
AIIIVIIG.

RACINE DIPAITMINT $1011
311 S'IIIIT

· •••·••

ua-.

MAIT!ItCARD - VIlA - GOLDEN IUCICEVE

0110

Large
Pepperoni
Pizza

. 59.

1599. ~~~~~~

--------~---J

:
I

�'¥

-,

.

•

•

June 19, 1990

Ohio

Opening staements in
Barry trial heard ·
lly KATHLEEN MeHUGH

.t

M

liMe.,...

I

MO\'ED - II "
o!R' ef lh •IPI vlctlma

I .....

rs remeve llle _., ef
a - wu evl•eatiJ'

aac_,

.....

......... ear w• tcpwnn•• IIJ' GMAC ... wnl oa a . . . . . ..
.,..e. Tile lllU 111ft turaetl Ole .I n n lllmeelf aad commll&amp;ecl
.'

.

.l Questions raised ·.on hoW Jtlan got gun
·~

BJ MICiu.EL MOLIN&amp; · ,
Hit Is one of thE' Mint thlDp
: JACKSONVILLE, Fla. fUPI)
I'vueenlnmy20someoddyeara
• - Autllorltles were lavailptlag 0( pollee work, "l&amp;cMillan iald Gt
how a convicted felon obtained tile at lack, noting that- of !be
the licensed revoW,r be cii!Tied deed waa a pollee officer' I Wife.
while spraying a loaa eUice with
II wu ._ natlea'a wortt.lliUS
gunfire, klllla&amp; E'ight pecjlk ud fatat sllciotllll stace Sept. 14,
: Injuring at least fiW bdlre 'wileD Joseph T. W~ar. 4&gt;7, a
• tUI'Illng the gun oa bllllllll.
pnasman pn dlubiJ{ty tor me•
James Edward PoiC)I. 42, Ia) Ulnen, fat411Y lllot eJr1it
. whose car bad l»en JJ.'Cent!y plople.and wounded 12 olb«s at
_repossessed aiJd wllo ~aded. 1 ·'PriDtiiJII plant . In ,J.oulsvllle,
· gUilty to aarilvated usault iii 1(y:, !ben Jellied ·hb'lulilt. .lt
' 1971, was carrytnc a .J8.callber -~bed •the . worst alalfe:.,handgun reptered tn ·llla ~~ ldtha• • muaa¢re·~ Jl'lorlda1
; durin&amp; the massacre Monday, - wlla'ellht peoplew.e""lc~lpa
• a~ Ia YiolaUIII ot •.•. te ~macbtife llleilp Aapat

i

••ill

~
' · ~ IJw. · : .
'

. •··

·

•

'

'_ ' •. ·· i;, ·

'

ltJ..}....... · '
.1f!i.Ik f llit II( a.
, Mc.MfJh• •ld .-Jer;t
ota.G ~=="
dnaa a1M1 tNi • ""ttl t» .·~ Corp.~
Oiaval Co1111tJ $1

Lilh;..._

. ;~i!enil'llllllap of a llfOStltute . Oftlce ueat doWDICI!"'II Jacnon·
;,...d her pimp. ,
ville about 11 · a.m. EDT uc1
; Authorities were trying Io
· determine bow Pough, who
• • served fiVe
on probation
' after
auUJy to a felony
assault,

~n shO!O!Jng c11stomers wit&amp; a
.30·call~ ·

semi-automatic c~·
blne, McMillan said.
·
"He didn' t say anything,'' the
· ~bmU said. "He just ~alked,tn
• ami started -illdi$Crlmlnately
ihootlng."
•
·l'allch.
also
' carrying the !i·
1
·' ••!IIH revolver, ~lli1!Jiecl

'illrouab theotflce~ •1ot
'.1Jie'l&amp;employees hltliilldletll!llks

.

· and took aim alllf tlrlld at
workers before shodtl111 himself
In the hlllld. McMillan aald.
~en people, includlngPotllh,
died at the scene and wven more
w«e taken to hospitals, where
two more died later; •McMIIIan
said.
McMillan, ·s aid GMAC repos.,UR&lt;I 'Pough's· car Jfllr. 24 ; ~nd

.

"we suspect tills. may hav"
trlaeered his Irrational behav·
lor." Polllfl drove to the GMAC
office MOIIIIay In a dltferent car,
In Wlllcb laveaU,aton found a
!lmm machine pistol.
GMAC employee Rich Lan&amp;lll
said Povah '!shot at a couple of
ouatomers on his way to tbe
CIMII!Ift, alld tllen sarted plcklni
u !iff.... At first, back where we
Mire, the notsee of II sounded like
acopymachlneorsomf.l hlnghad
blown up."
,
•
• · Nlta ·KI ... li county employee
111 . IIHI'b!l · Oclll&amp;, said she re~ a pllone call from a
_. tile GMAC oUice about
' ta HIM tilt sllootlaa started. ' 11
'al4111e .,._and dl\11!-'i
IWC4tll&amp;il weracolipleQlllmes ...
and she says, 'Help! Help! Help!
.:. We're being robbed. Please
help,"' she said.
"About that time I could hear
.some gunshots in the back·
ground," King said. " ... (The
ca.ller) was under )ler desk .... I
heard at' least 8· or 10, I guess,
people screaming and carrying
, 011. The &amp;lrl was 110 UJ!set, ' she
kept beilbli for help."
,
Poutrll wu suspected of shoot·
IJII tOdNtll a prastltule, Doretta
Elaine Drake, 30, and her pimp,
Louis '- carl Ba~n •. 39, near his
home e11r1Y Saturday because he
believed he-had been cheated Ina
' •n d8l, McMillan said. Both
had been shot with a .30-callber
title, and the killer's description
matched Pouah's.
P!,lup's erlmlnal record In·
cflldecl a 1971 ' frllllly plea to

airliDer hijack~ ·' s un enders
.

two
Tuesday
plaM to
and

comment.
· The Tupolev 134 aircraft with
55 passengers and live crew
;. :a board was on its way from the
• · Latvian capital of Rlpa to Mur·
. mansk on the northern Sovl~t
r Kola peninsula when it wao
. "' commandeered , the National
• Aviation Authority said.
·' Airport authorities at Stock·
.' holm's Arlanda lntern~tlonal
:,•.Airpoq said shortly ,a fter the
,. plane was bljacked that plans
had been made there 10 receive
'
, ,. the airliner. ,
..• But 15 minutes later, at 10: 15
· a.rh., Helsinki alrport•announeed
~ ; the aircraft had !aDded In FID·
.· · land. The htjacker surrendered
an hour later • .
Westergard 'laid the plane had
•
: ~&gt;een lntercePtell ~ two Finnish
air force flghterawllen 11 eater,&lt;~
: Finnish alrspaCII!. a. would aot
~ ·COoflrm that tile two fflhter$ had
, : forced the plane to land at
• ,IJelslnkl bu~ said. "The captain

f

may have tnckl'd the hijacker or
hijackers into thinking they were
on their way to Swedfn.
"When thPy landed, the hi·
jacker was mixed up and tho111ht
be was In Sweaen," Westergard
said.
•
It was not immediately !lppar·
ent what means the hijacker bad
UJed to force the planetoleavelts
course.
Finnish au tho rilles would not
confirm reports that the hijacker
had an explosive device, al·
though Finnish pol ice techni·
clans continued to search the
aircraft four hours after It
' landed .
Westergard said thE' hijacker
had ri!IJues ted poUiicalaa)ltum Ill
Finland.
"We do not even know if wP
eould give political asylum ~
cause of accords with the Soviet
Union and thE' fact that the
aircraft was hijacked," he said.
The last time a Soviet airliner
was hijacked to Helsinki, In 1978,
Finland rpfused the hijackers
' political asylum and . returned
them for trial' in lb!&gt;SovletUnlon.
Unlike Swl!dfll, . ~Jaiill lias
never afforded ~ c:lttlzens
political asylum.
_
A Finnish pollee spoliesm811
said agreements would probably
preclude any ~viet l!IJacker
r~celvlng asylum lrt Finland.
''In 1974 Finland and the Soviet
Union signed a strict agri'E'·m ent
on hijacking stipulating that the
Soviet Union can Tequlre the
.hlj~eker to be returned to !be
SOviet Union," said Chfeflna~
for Perttl Vlrolalnen.
·
TWo w~ks ago, a 17-year-old
Soviet boy hl~cked a Soviet
airliner with 1~past~eJ~«ers and
crew on ita way . from the
~lorusslan capital Minai! to
Murmansk, forcing It to land In
Sweden.
No 0111! was !Juri In tile lricideat

I

and tht- young man; who said he
hijacked the plane following a
conflict with his parents; remains in custody In Sweden.
· Monday , a pUot hijacked a
slnale-eJIIIne Soviet plane trom
Izmallln the southwest Ukraine
and flew tbe 12·seater Aeroflot
craft to Turkey.
The pilot, Valery Yu.,vic, 29,
who landed. the 'plane on a Black
Sea beach l'n northwestern Tu'r·
key, has asked for political
asvlum.
·

. .
agaravatl!d assault for shooting

I

a friend who lnsulied Pough',s
&amp;lrltrlend, ~cMIUan said. .'The
Judae expunged the conviction
after Pough finished a five-year
probation period.
Pougb also was arres led In 1966
for assault with the Intent to
murder, but It was unclear
whether he was convicted of the
charge, said Weintraub.
Two women and a man from
the GMAC massacre were taken
to University Medical ·. Center.
where qni! of th" wonnen, Denise
Hlibflll, a ~lfe of a Jacksonville
poUc" offlcer; died about a half
bour alter the shooting, spokes·
man Vlnc.e Scolari ·said. The,
other woman was In fair condl·
t lou and tbe man was In serious
condition.
Program.
-· The 1990 County Savings Bonds
Three other Injured were iaken campaign Is off to a successful
Bonds Issued since January l,
to Baptist Hospital In crlcltal start according to Theodore T.
1990, are eligible to earn lnter!'s't
condition, spokeswoman Cindy 'Reed, Jr., volunteer chairman of tax ·frel' If their proceeds are
Hamilton said.
the Meigs County campaign and
used towards pa y m ~ni. OJ\f'E'rtai~
prPsldent of The Farmers Bank post·secondary educational eX';
and Savings Company.
penses, and if the owners meet
·
. ·.
•
• For the flrstfour:months otthe certain .Income·. and other
CLEVELAND (UP)) -:- Mon· ' 1990 campaign '( Octob!'r . 1989 res trlctlons.
day's winning Ohio Lottery . thr~ugh January 19901 county
SPries EE Bonds pay variable;
numbers:
bond sales were $48,974, of which market -based Interest with a
PICR.S
·$21,150 \\'ere sold In January , the guaranteed minimum rat!' if held
rn.
·start of the Education Savings· five years or longer. The current
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled Bolld Program.
semiannual market -based rate
$1,200,433.00, with a payoff due of
Final results show that Meigs of 7.01 perrPnl in effeclfrom May
$272,605.50. '
County residents purchased 1 through October 31, 19901
PICK-4
$288,357 wortll of savings bonds reflects the market activity
1683.
' . during the last campaign year during the preceding six montlls~
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
(October 1988 through Sep· ThE' new rate is 85 percent of th4.
$237,217.00. with a payoff due of. tember 1989) . . ,
average market yield on five$135,600.00.
The cafT!paign encourages year treasury marketable secur~
'
area· residents ,to buy U.S. · )ties between November 1, 198~
Savings Bonds through 1•/le pay· and April 30, 1990, 8.25 percent : ~
roll savings plans offered by
· 'l'he mar~et·ba sed rate pro;;
Soulh Central Ohio
employers or through appllca· gra m for U.S .. Savings Bonds has
Increasing cloudiness Tuedsay ··lions initiated by local financial been in effect since November 1,
1982, and has been responsible. ·
night , with a chance of rain Institutions.
.
•
toward morning, and a low · · Nationally, sales rose six per ~ for a marked turnaround in the
between·65 and 70. Chance of rain - cent to $7.72 billion during fiscal sa)e, of bonds during .the pasi
decade. Since 1982, when sales of
is 30 percent. Occasional showers
year 1989 (October 1988 and a chance of thunderstorms September 1989), the most since $3.1 billion marked the lowes.!
Wedn~y. with highs near 80.
1987. Sales. of U.S. Savings Bonds ebb for the program since It was
Chance ot rain Is 80 percent.
·• totaled $707 mllliQ.n during May, established In 1941, the bond
ICxtettftd Foreeut
.
.1990, the most for'the month since program has seen sales lncrea~e '
Thal'ltday tllreugh Satfl!'d.:y
the $849 million sold in May 1986, 150 percent, to $7.7 billion In 1989.
Fair .TIIusrday and Friday, and bringing the total value of During the same period, the
with a cllance of showers and ,outstanding bonds to $121.28 .value of bonds ·held by Ameri· thunderstorms on Saturday: ·. llllllon - the . most in the Bond cans ha's Increased by 78 percent
Highs will range from the upper ., Program's history.
from $68 billion ; In November
70s to the lower 80s each day, with
"The phenomenal success of 1982lto $121 billion today . .
overnight lows In the 60s.
the county campaign Is a tribu te
Further information on thp
to the hard work of our volun·
Education Savings ·Bond Proteers In payroll savings com pan· gram can be obtained by writing
les, the media and the banking the U.S. Savings Bonds Dlvlsltm,
community," Reed said.
Public Affairs Office, 1111 20th
County
chalrpeople nation· Strpet, NW, Washington, rl.C.
"Fortunately, no one. was In· ·" wide are anticipating Savings 20226; or by asking your banker
Jured," Riley lllld. ''The kldJ all Bonds sales to continue with lor publication SBD-1964, "U.S.
·aot out on th,lr own. By tile time greater success In 1990, thanks to Savings Bonds : Now Tax-Free
the truckl arrived, everyone was ''.·the new.E!lucatlon Savings Bond for Education."
out on the street."
All the finis were out by 1 a .m.
Tuesday, although campus au·
thorltles ordered the fraternities
to appoint students to stay up all
night and guard the _houses, said
Teresa Loser, Dean of Fraternity
and Sorority Affairs a! Rutaers.
The first fire was repo~ed at
• 10: 38 p.m. at a private nome
occupied by fraternity members.
In one troilnd floor room, 'there •
were 'three separate fires,
promptln&amp; firefighters to suspect
arson, Riley said.

Savings Bollds campaign offi
~o successful start in Meigs· · .

Lottery numbers

The

··May housing starts fall la4 percent
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con.'
structlon of new housing tell1.4
percent In May to the lowes tlevel
since the 19~ recession, the
government said Tuesday.
Analysts, who expected a
much poorer showing, blamed
the fourtll consecutive monthly
decline in· housing starts on
unusuallY heavy rains ·that
drenched many parts of tile
United States.
''.Starts continuE' to dance to tile
tune of . lhts year's eccentric
"Weather," said analysts at Fuji
Securities in Chicago. ''They
were boosted by unseasonably ·
balmy conditions In January and
February."
'May's 1.4 percent decline - to
an annual .rate of 1,207,000 units
- follows a plunge of 6.4 percent
in AprU, according to the
monthly report compUed by the
department's Census, Bureau ..
A government spokesman said
the' overall rate was the lowest
since 1,173,000 housing starts In
October 1982.
Construction of single family \
homes sUpped by 1 percent last
month to an annual ra.t eof 896,000
units In the worst showing since
862,000 units In December 1982,
the Commerce Department said.
In the South, where flood
waters raged, total housing ·
starts managed to Increase by 3.2
per~nt In May .

"Precipitation was most heavy
In the South, which routinely
accounts for 40 percent of the
nation's housing market a~tlv·
lty," the Fuji analysts said.
In the overbuut Nort!teast,
housing starts were also up- by
1.6 percent.
But housing starts plunged by 8
percent last month In the Mldw·
est, which also suffered heavy

t;:=======:rfi::::::::;;:;;;t
FOIEYEI liON•
DOZER

rain after showing signs of
renewed ·strength, while housing
construction was off •by 3.3
percent In the West.
In.the apartment ~tor, starts '
on new buildings with two, three
or lour units plunged 33.3 percent
In May while work on new
structures with five or more units .
advanced3.8percent, the depart·
ment said

·

SITEWORII • RPADS
ClEARING

Cell N- To Meke
Appointment

NEWLAND
, .
·
ENTERPRISES

AI 1'1

Vl'l

9'9·279'
SP.ECIAL

30 ....
t-. •
sums-130

.~~ci. ~ ~.

Accused drug operator
is fonner police officer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -A
.Perry County man charged with
operating a soplllstlcated marl·
Juana operation Is a former
Nortlt Olmsted pollee offlcer; a
sheriff's deputy testified
Monday.
Melvin Baker, 43, Junction
City, Is charged with possession
with intent to distribute more .
tllan 1,000 marijuana plants, and
manufacturing more than 1,000
plants, assistant U.S. Attorney
Brad Barbin sa:ld.
,
~
He appeared Monday before ·
U.S. Magistrate Mark Abel, who
order~d him held without bond.
Baker faces a minimum sent·
ence or 10 years In prison on each
-.
count.
Last Thursday, Perry County
deputies confiscated 8,056 ·marl·

o,-,...

•

lANNlNG
SOJ&gt;II

·· , .

Juana plants during a raid on
three ,farms owne&lt;) by Baker,
Deputy Dennis Carley testified
Monday.
·
The ·p lants were worth $8
million , Barbin said . . ·

~!ACIIME, OHIO

TV-

SALES AND SERYKE

Factory Authorit.-1
Strwia Cent• For Molt

..... and . . .,.
F

During the raid, deputies also
seized two loaded pistols from
Baker's bedroom, a loaded pistol
In his car trunk and ·10'' rlfles and
shotguns from a gun cabinet,
Carley said.
•
Officers also found In the bouse
a sprlng-)oade&lt;! dPvl~e that fires
. 6-lnch )mlfe blades, he said.
·.
; Carley also tes.tlfied Baker had
threatened his estranged Wife,. '
Laura, one of his two·sons, and a
former farmhand to frignten
them into · silence about the
marijuana operation.

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

1

t:)ja- TRAVEL
PURSUIT
Airline
Rasel'\llltion/Ticlurtl
Alk for Kanda

Buy ~ Sell

·

•

10

,

•Sentinel i• not r.. pon1iblt far error11ft1r fin'l d.,. . ICheck
for error• firtt da&lt;w ad run• in paper). C1t1 befote 2 :00p .m
d• thllt' public.tion lO mtke correction.
•Adl thlt mut'l bt ~d in advance art

1- Card of Th1nk1
2-ln Memory ·
5-Htppy Ad1

H•PPY' Ads

In Memoriam

Yard Sal•

9-Wanttcf to luv

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAP'EA
SUNOAV PAPER

-

2 :00PM FRIDAY

14-Efusin•• Train ing
15 - School• &amp; InStruct ion
16-·Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr

~

446-Gallipoli•

992- Middleport
Pom..-ov
915- Ch"1er

675 - Pt. Plllttnl

367-Ch•hire
311 - Yinton

24&amp;- Aio Gr•nde
256-Guyan Oisl
643- Arabi• Otsl
379 - W..nut

773- Mnon
937 - Burteto

48 -E quipment for Rent

..,Cft

3. TlrM 1nd Tubel
4. Ftro Eodln"lilhol ;,..
opet:tlon • fiiPolrl
In ordlr to bo conoldlr..t,
Ill

--.~

bidl ..... bo ••

celv..t In tho Tr-urlll'o Of·

Public Notice

· 81 - · t4omelmprovem ...t~
82 - Piumbing &amp; Huting

83'- EJIC..-ItiniJ

84 - Eieelricll &amp; Refrloernion
86 - Gener•l Hluling
·I
86-Mobile Home Rep•ir
· 87-Upholsterv

PubliC Notice

RACINE -VineSirnt-1
floor frame house. Needs
some l!ork but has· a nice
50'x190' level lot with all
uti~ties on 'site. $12,500.00.

us .. ness
servJces
•. -

FLATWOODS ROAD -Nice
3 bedroom,'! bath modular
4.
home sitting on 1.11 acres.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ca,rpet and ~inyl . fl ooring
Bido will be received at
wtth heat pump and central
Middleport
Vitlogo Hall. Ohio
237 ~~;:::===;.:===:;11 air. $39,900.00.
!loco
St., Middleport,
46760. untH 3 P.M. JulY 9,
MIDDLEPORT-" A home to
19&amp;:0 fo• tho following de' ·
MIDDLEPORT
be proudof!Thisneat3bed·
ICribed
rHI
ooloto:
·
VCI
CLINIC
room
ranch with modern
Tho north 36 feet. more or
l•o. of tho w.t holt .of Lot
MAiNRNANU &amp; REPAIR
kitchen. large family room,
No. t34 in Phillips Jon•
1361 P.Woltst., Mldol..,t
and enclosed rear porch on
Thild ~""to , the Vllloge
, • .,.,,,..lloi..,.Tiwiltlo..l
a large lOt l!ould be your
of Mldclopor1. Meigo County,
, (6 141 99
. 2•7143 .
pride and joy because of all
'Ohio, being 35 !MI. more or
the
comfort it offers!!
1ooo. on Thtrd st-. •nd •·
SPRII8 SPEeiAL
$36,900.00.

flo. 320 Etot Mol~ SttHI, P .
0. Box 272. Pom•oy. Ohio,
on or botono12:00 o'ctod&lt;

noon on TuMdoy, July 24,

1980.

Tho Boord of Eclucalion
reiONel tho right to ICCopl
or relm eny •d en bldl. ·
.Jene Frv. Tr-urer
M.lflll LDCIII School D!otrlct
320 EHI Mm Stroot
P.O. B011 272
Pom•ov. Ohio 411789
(8)12; 19, 28; (71 3 &lt;ltc

~'e":;': -:.,~ rn=::~

cent• lne ohold lot No. 134
.;n NidV~t 111 e. Being tho limo
pooperty dMcribed in Volume
132. Pogo 77, Meigo County
DHd Rooordl.
Dood Roforonce: Volume
203, Pogo 47.9,
Mti(!8

BULLETIN. BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEA.DLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFO'kE
.
PUBLICATION ·

County Deed Recorda.

Tho vMiogo .rniMII tho
right to reject •nv 01 ott bidl

end to w.tve any informau.
tioo In bidding.

fr..t Hoffm•n. Moyor
Villogo of Mlddt..,ort
(Ill 22, 29, (8) 5, 12, t9,
2e

'
•

. •

CLEAN, LUIE &amp;, TEST

S18 16

OPEN: MON.·FRI .
10
P.M.
Or By

·11

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUI.T

'~A~~~.:.~~.

~ oviRRDWINII?

, ... 949-2101

CI.IAII lfWilll •
CI.ASSIID ADS l \.'

or los; 949•2160
Day or Night

GM Dealership in Southeast, Ohio
~nd Resume To Daily Sentinel,
Box 7295, Pomeroy, Ohio

SALES
RfPRESENTAnYES
·H rou.are looking
for a carw, nat ·
just a IN apply at
Jim Colllt ChtYI'Oiot.
Cal fOr
appolntiiiOIIt

•

.

992-6614
' '

,,

• COUNTIY

. '•o•u

HOME
PAll
•Molalla , . _- .
·1!0 '

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FRI;E ESTIMATES

CHRYSUR-PLYMOUTH
DODGE
'·
399 S. Third, Middlepert . ·

::=:::::;:~~~~­
Til-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU.H;

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt . 50 l!o S.R . 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a,m.·7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·S p.m.o60ays, Closed Sunday
PAVING AS OF TODAY. MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb.;
Aluminum Cans, 35¢ per lb .
Radiators, 40¢ per lb.
SCRAP. BATIERIES.•
ALTERNATORS. ETC .

949-2168

114

6·5·'9tl-l mo.

..CROWAYE '
OV,EN IEPllli
Bring It In Or We
Plclc Up.

KEN'S lPPUlNCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 er 915-3561
Acron Fr8111 Plllt Offkt
217 E.

S.C.,_.,

J-1]. '90· · ·

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GREG BAILEY

ALL MAlliS

EAGLE RIDGE .
SMALL ENGINE
. CEliTER

SELLING
OUT

MOVING!

HOUIS: •.f 9·7
Sat.
Closed Sun.

•-s

9. .·2969

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

A Great Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO THE EXnA MILE .....
992-6810

....... Llttl•••'

•LOtoRtiiJII*"

• t92-7479

EUM HOME

IMm &amp;low• For
Senior Cltlz- and
Good R•tn
T.l.C .
27Yra. hp.
·Referencea

992-50U
209 South 41h St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW IIKOME HOllE"

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
oNow H0111as
•Garages
•Complete
RemolleH"tt
Stop&amp; Compare

frft Etiimatas
915-4473
667-6179
5-j1.1 mo.

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

Paulin's Hill BetWHn
Rutland and Rt. 554

OPEN MON.· SAT. 10 to 5
STIAWROWEIS: Dwtrf
&amp; Tall; PAMPAS GRASS:
PM* &amp; Whiter fUSCHIA,
·uuns, HEllS and

co.

2531 W•st llaln,

FREE ESTIMATES
Take lhe pain out of
painting.
Let us do it far you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENUS

P-roy, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 end 4-cycle
enginH
StOCk P•rt• for Homo! He,
Weedeeter. Tecumallh,

Srlgflll • Strotton.

(614) 985-4180

PH. 992-3922

SER~ICE

VIC'S ·
BODY SJIOP

We can repair and rt·

992·6603

can rad10ton and
heater corn. Wt can
also acid boil anll rod
aut radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO
l / 1/1 mo.

PAT HILL FORD

,

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

3 Announcement•

I. L·

Announcement s

·TRUCKING

CONTESTANTS
NATIONAL TV

CHESTD, OHIO

GAllE SHOWS

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT . . .
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422
1-1

SHIUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•uGHT HAULING

-

AIWI alngl• Mek ...Ill)' .. ..., ·~
pooplo
tor
olgnfflconl • • ·
relatlorwhtpe
wrl1: ... .... ""'
Hoert-rch, 'P.O. lox t043, a.~ : ~TI
llpolla, OH 45831.
... .. """': ,..-.."-'

Whool, Joopordy"

7 ~·

,

.....

. ,• " ,

Jokor/Wid' • • ....,...

Ntwlywed, eto. ,..., . aiiOWii - .- .•
111o. It Y'?U qualify, WI PlY to LA : "': :'
!-J, II·Sit., tor htlr'IIIW, 471&lt;
"
~ : .. l 1
HU3, or 471--ll2Bt.

CREDIT
CARD- ' ' " •
Viaa!Maatercard gul,.nleed, no· - ·-....
PC urtty deposit. 1-100-113-1100,~ .,......, ;
til. eo. bUll $41.50 fM.
: : : :
GOLD
CREOfT
CARD' " ~
Vla/M..tercard QUII'II,.eed ~.. .., ...
oocurlty dopooit 1·1J011o~OG
' •
til. co. blllt 49.50 ....
... : : ':

GOLD

Surt·og ..• mollter Wllnttd. A ..
loving couple un1bla lO hiYII : : :;
child wiN poy 310,000 Ill • .olt
· ...
e1pt111.. to a women 10 e~~rrv • ·
huobond'o child. sn.o" to en.l'· • ·•
undor 13G lbo. Biondo. All.
ooptiN otrictly conlldonllol. C,.t
oonoct: 415-30.1022.

•FIREWOOD

4

3823.
2 doge, 1 hulky, 1 " ' - clog•
Soo .t Dk:k- llttoy Run

614-742-2772

BILL SLACK
992-2269
~ EVENI·NGS

·ROWE
POWEIWASH
SERVICE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN .
' INSULATION

MOlE.
5 29, I mo.

581 S. Follrth Avt.

MkklleaMt; Ohio

REStD~NTIAL

end
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou- • Mobile Homoo
· T,.n•pan V•hld• ·
Ferm Equipment ·
H...., Equ~. Etc.
FREE EStiMATES
24 HR. SERVICE

614-992·6242
Wl-~1

...

11-12·10

QII'S lJlftllNCI
SIIYICI

Giveaway
2 bunk bod .... 304-ttllRd., Pomoroy, OH.

z tame r~bbllt to alv..•r to
gooct home. t14-1U~m.
1 wook aid doll&lt; t1t!! tlttor
trolnod tom.Io kltton, 304-tU·
3104.
.
'

FIM klltono to good homo. 114441-4Ht.

Holt BNgll puppiH, 5 - k l
old, 304ot7fl.3t22 . .

BISSELL
SIDING
._. CO.

wtolll, 1 - n , wh••· ond llgorlhtor ldlnod. In
SyracuM. 114-112-2011.
1

"Free Eetlmat""

Klttono: 2

.... ....

PH. 949·2101
er IlL 949-2160
Ill), SUNDAY

HUMPHIR'S
CUMATE
CONTIOL

............ Office

J.U....Ifol

&amp;

AIIJIOUMCIIII
NEW LOCATION
DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR '

IIITEIIOI EXTEiiOI

::::::::;;:;:;:;:;;;:::~ l't=:~ - --

992·5315. tl$-3561
•'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5·31·1

OVl'll!-·l'lt .,

•MOIIIIe HonW
Rentele

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

OUR SALES VOLUME HAS
BEEII GOOD AND WE STILL
HAVE BUYERS LOOKING
FOR •EIGSCOUNTY PROP·
UTY. It YOU WAIT TO
SELL CALL CLElAND
REAlTY TOOAYIII

1990 Ohio Houeing
IIIIUe Now Avalleble.
FIXED RATE 7.76%
ht yr., 8.211% ,
thiough 30th yr. Cell
Cleland Realty todey.
Wo will help you find
a qualified home .
from our ex~lng
•
Inventory.

Help wanted

"HELP.WAmJ"

POMEROY - COIIMER·
p
CIALBUILDING- ossible
office space orapartmentor•
2nd floor. Call for more in·
formation.
HENRY E. CLELAND
. 992·6191
Jean Trussell ... 992·266C
Mu Hupp ........ 949-2257
Jo Hill ......... ~: .915-4466
Office............. . 992·2259

NO SUNDAY

FULLTIME SALESPERSON AND
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
WANTED

'

POMEROY - Older 2 story
home, gorgeous woodwork,
fireplace, nice kitchen cabi·
nets. 3 bedrooms, equipped
· kitchen, central air, garage
and storage. $39,900.00.

Ser v11:e s

42- Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Ferms far Rent
44 - Apartmen1 tor Aent

•9 ·- l=or hue

.....,e ....o-.

79 - CJmpers 6 Motor Homn

41-Housetior f'enc

47-Wanted to Rent

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

' 78 - Cimping Equipment

36-: A. .I htate Wente~

45 - Furnilhtd Roams
46 .,- S1nce for Rent

Tht ·Bo•d ot EduCIIIo~ of
t11e Meioo 1.oco1 School
trk:t ..... to
-.~
bidl for the following:
1. FIHtln.,,.,..
2. Gtlollno end 011 Pro-

75-Boets &amp; Matofl for 5•1•
76-Auto Parts &amp; Ace• tori•
77 -- Auto Aep1ir

·882 - New Htven
895 - Letart

9'9- A•dnt
742 - Aulland
117- Coolville

Public Notice

74 ..... Motorcycllll:

31 - Homn for Sale
32 - Moblle Homes for Sale
33- Farms for Sale
34-BUsin•i Buildings
35 - Lots S. Acreage

&amp;71 - Appl• Grove

143- Ponllnd
247-Letarl falls

72 - Trucks for Sale
73 - Vant &amp; 4 V(D ' s

Ar.al FstoiP

468-Leon

MIDDrEPORT ~Central air
would be nice this summer
and hav1ng a 5 room home
in excellent condition will let
you sit back m cool comfort.
Rear deck with gas grill,
equ ipped kitchen, storage
b~ilding. G?od location.

71 ~ Autot for S.te

23 - PrOfwttontl Sltfvtcts

exchan,e.~ ...
M.. on Co .. WV
A'rea Code 304 ·

liVI~Stut: k

Tronsporlolinn

21-Busin•• Opportunity
22 - Monw to Loan ·

Meigs County
Aria Code 614

StlpidtP.s

18 - W.,ted To Co

fihBihhijil

Gtlltt County
ANa Code 614

.992·2259
SHADE - Nice country
building lots are hard to find
but we have 8 beautiful lots
just !!ailing for you!! Small·
est is .94 acre and largest is
1.54 acre. Elec. on each site
and T.P.C. water taps avaita·
ble. Secluded, beautiful
views. 10 mins. from Pam·
eroy, and 15 mins: to
Athens. NO
TRAILERS.
STARTING AT$6,500.00.

65 - Seid &amp; Fenili.rtr

11-Miscelleneou 1

qassified pa~es corer rhe
foUt:Ju:in!l .telephone

E.M&lt;oio.....
PO,MEROY, 0.

61 -F•rm !qulpment
&amp;2 - Wanted to Suy
63 - Livestodc
64 - Hav &amp; Grain

13 - lnsur~nci

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

!'.

1 1 ~ Help Wanted i
1 2 - Situation wanted

2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

-

For 111

S~rVIC~S

- 11 ,00A .M . SATURDAY
'
- 2,oo P.M . MONDAY
-

PAT HILL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

POMEIOY,

fmpl11yment

OAV BEFOFIE PUBLICATION

WEDNESDAY PAPER

.05 / doy

51 -Houuhold Goodt
12 - II'Ortlng Ooodl
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchtndiu
55;- Building SuppliM
66-Peu for Sll11
57- Mutictt lnltrum'"ts
. 58-Fruits &amp; Vtg .. tbl•
59-For Sale or Ttlde

3-Annoucemtnu ·
. 4 - GivUWI'/

Card of Tk.,.ks

TUESDAY PAPER

81 .30/doy

Real Estate General

Alllllllllll: I! Ill 1:11 t S

6-losl 1nd Found
7--Yard Sal a {paid in aduancll
8-Public Sele &amp; Auction

COPY DEADLINE NiONOAY PAPER .

.30
.&lt;12
.110

.13.00

15 .

16

!·Zl·'9t).looo.pd.

. 20

89.00

AT

Rat .. ••• for can•cutflle runs. broken up d.,, will bech•rgMI

•A clastftied tdventsem•'tt pltc.clln The Dtily Senttntl (e• · ·
cept -: cl•lified disJM-r. 8utinMI Card and leg II not1c•sl
wiH lito tppt., In tht Pt . Pl•••nt Register and the Gallipolis Dtily Trib&amp;..nt. retChing aver 18,000 homa.

r

'

.

.... localieli:
161 North Second
Midtlhpart, Olio 45760

'tnr ear.h riiW t,• •par.tte ads.

'"Racllive t .BO discount for ads ~id in advance ..
.
*Free ada-.. Giveawey end Found ed1 und• 15 wordl will be
run.3 dl¥111 no ch•ge.
;

•PriC8 of ed for ell capittl t•11er1 i1 daubtepric• of •d colt.
•7 point lint type only u•d.
:

1&lt;1.00
16.0'0

16
15 •, ,•'

Monthly

*Ads outlide Meigl. Gillie or M11on countl• must be preplid.

' '

367-0588
Over 16 Worde

R•te

16

3
6

, .8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSm SUNDAY
POliCIES

Words

6·6·1 mo.

' Stop In and See
DALLAS SAYRE

PlUMIING &amp; IIU IlliG I

Howarll L. WriteHI

SIDEUNES
SPORT CARDS

RATES
Days

lfter I

Grant A. N~~~~~:

5-16·'90·1 mo.

Trade

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-1156

Calll.el4-992·7104

992-6421

TypaaofTravel" ..u .t .... .

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

t6141 667-3271

I'ltONE

con"fton~

'.

Sand-Stone-Dirt

Your Phone
Bill• Here

(614) 742-202'7

Classif:ie

DUMP TRUCK .

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
1f81mllly room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm build·
lng, pond, over 40 acres fenced paBture
land and rented mobile home.

We C.,.-y Fi8hing luppll•

"Your

Weather

Five frat fires hit Rutgers
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J
fUPII - Separate susplclou~
fires eru)ited within minutes of
·hch other In five bulldln'gs
occupied by Rutgers University
fraternities, fire officials said
Tuesday .
No one was ) hjun&gt;d, but 21
students were left homeless by
the blazes, all of which were
reportl!(l betwl'en 10: 30 p.m. and
11 p.m. Monday, said Deputy
~Ire Ch lef James Rll~.
.
"These were .very suspicious
fire'S, " Riley uld. "They W'ere
pracblly slmultaaeous. We
don't have any Idea who 111 them
yet, but'the Investigation Is under
way.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Mayor Marlon Barry's fate on 14
drug alllj perjury counts wlll be
· decided by a jury made up
.largely of black women who have
beenaftectedbysubstilnceabuse
but who are not sure If race
pla)'ell a role In his case.
After two weeks of sometime~
tedious qui!Stlonlng, u.S. District
Judee Thomas Penfield Jackson
sellted 12 Jurors and six alter·
nates In about an hour Monday,
clearing the way for opening
statements in the case to beg)n
Tuesday .
. Th'e panel members wlll b~
sequestered throughout the trial,
which is expected to last about a
montll . The jurors, two-thirds of
whom are black women, wE're
senrto a hotel Monday after jury
selection was completed.
The panel Includes 15 women
and three men; five of the jurors
are white and 13 are black: More
than half of the jurors s~ld thpy
jl'een directly affected by
Illegal drugs or alcoholism: and
16 of the 18 said they had no
opinion whether racial factors
played a role in the case against
Barry.
It will not · be revealed until
delibera tions bPgin which 12 are
members of the ]ury and which
six are alternates.
Members of the jury panel
Include a history teacher, two
federal employees and t.wo em·
· ployees of ,Howard ·University
Hospital.
·
' Three jurors · work: or have
worked, for the District . of
Columbia govPrmnerit: - )Vhlch
Barry has headed for 12 years.
Barry, speaking at a city
employees' ceremony later Moriday, said the jury ahd Judge
Jackson have his future in their
hands.
,
"I hope that you understand
how appreclarl~e I am for your
prayers, for your support,"
Barry said. "In terms of my owri
· situation, that is. in the hands of
Judge Jackson and 'the jury. ...
· That, .. I think, Is going to · be
.alright. ''
'
'
.

Barry Is facing perjury and
drug charges dating back to 1984.
Though he has admitted smok·
Jng crack cPCalne during an
FBI·pollce sting operation on
Jan. 18, Barry has said he did not
believe a jury In Washington.
would convict him..
.
The three-term mayor Is one of
the nation's most prominent
black politicians, and many of his
supporters claim · the federal
case against him Is a n effort by
thewhlteestablishmenttounder·
cut black leaders. '
One panelist, Marsena Hall,
who works for the D.C. Public
Schools, said fn quPstlonlng last
week that she thought the mayor
was lnnocPnt, but said' she could
find him guilty if the prosecution
proved its case. She said s he did
not want to sit on the jury.
·
Margaret Batson, 70, mad!' the
panel though she Initially said
.' ~hE' th(lught all politicians ar~
"not honest." Under questioning
· she . said ~he could . 'SeparatE'
. Barry the man from Barry the
politician. She also prefprred to
not sit on the panel.
Johnnie Hardeman, whom the
prosecution sought to disqualify
after she hesitated when asked If
she co uld convict Barry, also sits
on the panel.
One woman. Harriedell Jones,
made the panel despite her
objection to the government's
use of a $li ng operations to arrest
Barry.
.
'
The 'first witness in the· tria)
, was scheduled to be convlcte&lt;j
dr'ug dealer Charles L~wis, an
ol!l friendofthemayor'sw howa ~
expectl'd to tes tify he smoked
crack with Barry in 1988..
,
The government's most dam·
aging !'Vidence against Barry Is
expected to be a videotape of the
undPrcover operation that led Iq
his arrest. The videotapE' , al·
legedly shows the mayor smok·
ing. crack cocainE' at the Vlsia
International Hotel in downtown
Washington. He was la ier In·
dieted on 14 drug and perjury
counts.
·
'
I

lf•r ' IJ,, ...... 19, 1990

lleaflnt,Coollng, .
lafrllacatlon

s.fw'ko

RNidemtel•
Commercial

. CALl · ·

Kinono. 7-old. 3loftlolo,2
Mripod.

bloc~

whh whito loot

=•-~1f7li 'lat"t-·

to

PI

Klttent: JuM WNned, mutt hive
~~- 114 441 4471 or

am.n •-•'- puppy: port~
port poodlo IO lifve - · 4, t/Z

moe. old. IU 4'k 33• .

6

Lost

e. Found
•

LDST: • - a ton-~~-.,
mo. old, mlucl ttrM4 .......-.
1411.

t.aot: -

"""""' ....... '

Ponwi&lt;Dr····-·111'1

..--.-

VfL old, - ' " ' . . . . . ·
Aru.

�Page-8~The

Yard SaJe .

7

Tuuclay. June 19, 1990.

Pomeeoy-Mic6cll . . . . Ohio
42 Mobile Homea
torRent

LAFF·A-DAY

GallipoliS
a VIcinity

m

·Hoc llhold

-The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

·Tuesday, June 19, 1990

'N' CAU.\'LE~ II)' Llrr)' WriPt,

Television

a

75 Boats Motors
· for Bale ·

Goode

· View~ng

.. llolllng - · trall•···tlllui
JoiWtiOn l'ftOCOI',
.....
~qrtllf ......

I'IIW

ALL Yord - - le Paid In
Adftnoo. DIADUHI: 2:00 p.m.
the day --the od .. to ..... .
Sunday odltlan - 2:00 p.m.
Frtdly. - W edlfon • 2:00

•

,. ft. lloltlng - . 21 ~­
olotl- -or. ~
1ft . ., ...... 1'14 441 :1112. ~

p.m. - y .

C.rpott - : 22nd, 2lnl. T ot IH ~lin*. a_ladllng1 slr COftoo
dltloner, ....,, rNcic&amp;swe,
drape.,
1 I Midi, . . . . .
mloc. 1221 Collogo at.

Sy,.._,OH,

. .. ._..,.

~. 2

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

114 411

·=·. . .

t : f~ be• rtddrr·
bolt. lluiUcnwo:dblllii tap. 170'
._,...., tlnlt. Exa1' nt .oOftll..
lion. 11+1'12-:lllll.
.'

led:wm Illite, ~ raMI
oulto, 2 ONI i t tolllo, I
Iampo, •111'!1
tv.
an U.l.
Soo • : 1• liijolt

HOW WOULD 't'OU LIKE IT
IF YOU WERE PUT HERE ON
EARTH JUST .TO BE EATEN?

..... _,_, .....
111-::,-

below to form four llmpl. wordt.

I 6VES5 I WOULDN'T
LIKE IT... ·

llll

• ®NBA TadaJ
(l) Secotld Voyege 01 Tile
Mimi C.T. learnl lbout
Mayan hlet'Dglyplllcl from
Tarry's daugh...-.
I!) RMdlng R-1;1

Q·

1

MAKES ME 6LAD 1 WASN T
60RN A CARROT

.I!]) AndY Oltfllth
tDI World todar

"IIJ Ho-Man

6:30 .121 a NBC NlghUy Newl
(liSportaLook
IIQII elll ABC Newl Q
(l) l!lodJ l!loclltc
' I!) 3-2-1 Cantact Q
llll •1121 CIS NeW1 Q
•I!]) Tbree'o Compllny
QIITopCanl
1D Hangln' In
7:00
Scarecrow • Mra. King

I• t j Rt15 I

I
. I' .I. •I'

BE L A F

The man retumed to lhe
music store to purd'lase a
!,· mute for his violin. "I lhought
_~...--.1.---J. .. you couldn'l afford lhis," lhe
,.-~~~~~....., clerk said. "I can'l", he sighed,
WH E C E S l"my -------- chipped in.·

II
Il---ri,:-TI...;:..r:l9:-'i-l..;....lrl e
1--...,;;.....;,,.=....r-;...;.,.-f

. ...J.L-.J.L-.J.L-.J.
l .--L.--L
,

•

® SportiCentar

(l) I!) !o'lacN.aletlrer

NawiHour

Gill Current AHalr
• llll •1121 a WIIMI 01
.I!]) Night Court

QJMonaytlrMI

11J Miami VIce CrockeH and
Tubbs pose il8 arma buyers
and run aloul olthe I.R.A.
Stereo.
121 Muolc Row VIdeo
ID Allbott And Coatallo
7:30 8121 Family Feud
(!) Major Loague BaHball
IIQIII!ntertafnnnt Tonight
. 811l Mama•• Family

•BOGGS. 114~4&amp;-7750.

'·Cato'o

Aur:tlon Sorvlce, BUI'IIIo, WV. u-ood Ohio ond
'Woot Vlralnlo. 30 ,..,.. · n'pettance. 'For your ale cad UL
Qolct.n Cillo 304-nT--2271 or

vp
TffAT tv~
SINC, THfY PuT TtfAT
tfUIILt TfL£$(;Opt IN

,J11j»r CHto 3Q4..e:JJ.2121,

Wanted to Buy

•
'Junk cera wfth

:motorJ:.

or wflhaul

Alchllrd

0104'QH10

j

.'

,.,.,.

Quilts
Antlq• or new. El[cellant oond(..
tlon
Prompt poymont. 114-

•H2

:'4J.·.

Employment Servtces

R~TOOWN

t111.20 por -11.
4 oholra 17.10 por
llllfl! C11t1 M eu. ft,
~$12.1fP.01'-..11
ou:.
"II: .......
'tto.IO .. por
CllmlliOII

"POSTAL J(lBS" Slort l11.4t.tlr.
llluo bonolllo. For oum ond oppllcollen
coli 7
' doyo, eom to 10pm, 1·211-324-·

dlnotto -

,_ion,

.

VI'Ro F\111111tn. At, 1A 4
Millo oR AI. 7-Conllnoly.Opon 1

. _ II all 111,

~-=· tor--·-·---~.-

........ lnt
WI
._Hlo Onindo,
!fl. oto. OH Colt 11+
n- 71411.
war£ llou on - · ~
ton,
245o8121.
'
1f!l Plrinouth .Bolarl, NOO.

AICC

.

rad ·.....
- -.
'""!'ft.

•

-

.IIOOOBO.t1UIIIIIIL •
~--- ~~ Good

AICC l o - ~. lloodv 10 ~ . ;;;";"rid•,.lui

::=oil...,..~..... ~~:::.'#'·- ~"' ~l:=:r.•!:;

wtth odIn

'"'":kllottohon Flir-

""'"11+441-

15
Aro

you 55+ lin

County,

In Y..,

JTPA -

-

proarom eon · - In Rndlna
omployrnMI
.
tot !GEDE
Roo!V 1'.0. Box 271,
25570 ot call 1-304lor llro. ctorto.

WV
12 ...

Schools &amp;

2br,

I~~Jtruc:tlon

Be Mt&amp;MIIIOCJ'Acoounllng,

__$ __ _

..........

18

cupllfonll groupo Tn 1ho lobor
force. Enroll now tor lummlr
Torm In IIMI Adult Food
llono~
ond Coloring
,.,_..... Tho AduR Eduootloii
Clnler-fri.CGJunty
\' b : Jtlt ...

so-. w. ,.,. a
11111.

EARN IIONEY RMdlng lloolcol

$30,000/Yf.

Income potlllllol.
Now hrr~nt. 11) · ExLY-48U.

Eaoy World Excoltont Poyl Moomblo
AtIICM.e41.atl03,
- · Call
tor lnlonnotlon.
Eal.313.

EXCELLENT WAGES lw ...,_
limo u_,bly, Eaoy at
holM. No experience nMCIMI.
ACT NOW. C.ll 1-81H22-MI:Z.
Eat. 12+1, lnotudlnt .... and

Wanted to Po

Ctoonlna. flor mora lnforo.
rnlllon MiliA 211 ..., - tor

.......

33 Fanns for Sale
IG ..,. flir!!l, hM goo. ,.._,._
114 , . _ IMyilno lloliiiO homo
on Hpolt' Run Rood. 814-112-

Ml11 Pauta'l Day care Cenltr.

s.•, eftordlbla,

chlkll*e. ,...F
8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2 -10.
htore, after achool. Drop-In•
welcome. 114-441-1~.

FNih Ph.vmocy of Wolloton
- k t on oxportoncod ond
llonogor. Exportenco noodod In

_,.,lono. Including

ordering, lnwntory control,
ptl'llonrlll
manage~,
~c:hedulng,

l'nlfChlndising.L .. I
ldvertillna. Send rwum• A~P
to: Frvlh, Tno., P. 0. loa 217, Pt.
Pl ....nl, WV 25550, Attn: Julie
Clrpenlw. No phone c.l.., no
I'IIIUtnN eccepled 81 the ltCn.

EOE. 11/FIHIB.
Full.flmo or port-limo RNS ond

Will do bobr shllna In my homo
IVIFydar IXcepl llundayl, 12
yn experience, 304-175-4475.

drln
Wlys,
poll-abo, oil typoo oonoroto

Wll

work and fMd Iota. lldl Wllka.

114,J112-2127.

-

DMitri

pocluiao. ShiH 11exlblllly

oval~

obll. Conloct Opol GN-, RN,
DON, Lakin Hoopllol, 304-1713230Lokl 18, lion · Fri. 1:00 Pll·
4:00 Pill.
HELP
WANTED:
Full·tlmo
Roclptlonlot - tronocrlbor •

llko to dO bobyofttlng In

my home. Mon-Fr1. O.r• only.
114-MNIII.

Financtal

LPNS to - k with gorlotrlo
resident~~ In en ICF tacMity.
Sal.,. commeneurate wHh n•
EJCtenafw

pour

cordlna to oxporteMo. Silbmh
work tHitory, ratw•'1cw, typing
opood ond ony oxportonco Wort&lt;·
lng whh comP'f'_. to: P.O..Box
11011, Golllpollo, OH 451.31.
lmmodl. . oponlna lot ..,..umo
nursing ualet1nta. Must be
tlsxlble and wRUng to work ~II
stllfta. Tr1inlng avallaa,e. Apply
In per.on. Amerk:tlre Pomeroy

.1404.· Ono · · · -

,_homo
Aoybtn Roild. .Povod
-rldlono.
on

D.

raq-.

Cliorloch,

!rollort, .,....

$30,000/yr ''W:~nflol.
now hiring (t)
Ext,
Y·101H.
.
IIANACIIR TRAINEE, CSR
POSITION AVAILABLE. 8111•

'""'
w- • Dryor &amp;hop: Bor-.
vloo oR mokn r. -11. Wotk

Professional
Services

gourontood. 114-U7o0224.

Real Estate

--kCOnturyllmHtd.VI,

~-"!'

20 to IG - I n Lolorlorooond born available, -

4a.--·lug-

--_.til
-

HouaehQid
Good a

5I

!!'%:'; ....
4x4

·-.
i5'x7,
Ford,
lito

...... 1111 wardto4 Alit -llbo!!I".IIM".

Real Eatate
wanted

=•

a bdrm, 1-10 -

: ; o~»ed,

,000.1'111

111.

1171tn... trdor, :,~$
,

t..ned, roll OUI

Q)l

Servtces

cS........ I!-

-hoo

up, bunk IMido _,....

1-

81

•

Homl ·

I~

,..,..;l::..:.m:::;p~rov~em;;.;;e~nt:.;;s~:::l·:
All
ef ,.,...;,.,y, brtak, :
block and •ona Fr.• • ,

"!'"

tlmatM. Phone 304-m.l550.

MMJ'5 At-J
I:VIL GE.I-JIUS

$

1

, a

BASEMENT
WATERPAOORNO
Uncondllfonol lllotl- guoronIM. , _ , rolaroncoo tumlahodi
...,.... _ Colt 1· .
IM-231-, · dar or "'""· ,

a-nt

~

The Night GIHeaple
ln\llllllgatH file murder of a

• .doCtor. (R~ Stareo. D
II all ew RolalliM

llni

Roseanne likes a II8COnd

~=~·~jd--.-IN-p'jj':"'~tr,"';;j;...;. ,.; ; ; : :
- · oarponlly,- lOIIi. '
llllrnoloo., 8!4471o2fto, •* toi:
=------

:ll:::"ch=..
··AOft'o TV Somco, opoalotldntl
In Zonlth olio oorvlcl"'i mcOi
01t.r brlnda. HoUM ceflll, allo

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP.......,...,..------~--~---,
.MYMOMWA-5
WASHIN&lt;:f
HAIR THIS

IM

MORNINe ...

. 'l

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

wollo - p l l t o d -

....at2

.

.

.

11·111 elll llllriY-"Inil

g:':'J:rv:~,=~~=:

A'power struggle 11,1 OM
causes Mlchllel to reminisce.
(R~ Stareo. 0

Joclloon, OH ~121.

CIOVIIISEIZED
-trom ..........
-Dtldll

~-

Dlvfa

S.W.VIC

OJ a:~ Creek Ad. P1rt1, 1up,1

. p0oo, pickup, and
-.
·( a-,o.
-1 ) - - Ext. ' +tt-42114.

--~'

Servlol,,'

doll..,.114-'

I:

I!JI E-mtl Hawl

WHAT ARE YOU
OOIN' OUT HERE,
OL' BOSSY?

wtt~

ondHootlnt
Fow1hondPTno
Oollfli I llo, Ohio
114 141 ,3181

...

. liD Crook I Chilli
iDNaw•
11:00 III karecrow • Mrs. King
. 8121 IIQII 81))

•

f!iobY .,.._ PI a

-·--~­
-

z bedroom ........,.. HUD

11112ou.ft.UIWiahtfiHI.er,$54l

.1o111n Doora Tniolor, wtth4_t
qui-nt; .1111 DoiHn ~:

2120.· ~':·:~~~~~~~~·:~~:J
" .
,
~~.,~~~~~a~n~.;;~;;;;;;j!1~~:

:::;:::;::::;;;~----1 ·83

-r.

11J -ml Vlca Castillo helps

his ex-wHe and her husbend
alude a local crime boll.
..
Stareo.
Clll Church 111re1t S1atlon
11:30 e121 111 Tonight Show

'

bod - - 'INilchtna. ·
ao• ~
-1:00
-.
.·-· lr-. ,,.. loti~:
....... ....... =*:~::·::;ns.tl3;:.;:=11::.·_ _.....,__ _

·••• tarrtle: Plcll 104! own,

~

·~·

-

_...,

11W4f1o

1111

Chooy"~4ir4. · tont

M.OOO mt111 an onglna. No lUll.

Stereo.

1!=-:..QQ

'

.Electrical &amp;

bod. , 84

• I!JIIporta Tonight

I (DNewe

....nl... . ........Ill
or.trfnt,
..........
I' JnMd- I -rtriDIIn...J11111inow
-rtoal, ltl4.a711-1lll.

holM tn p a:••ro,:. 114-IG-2211
oR••
p.m.
'

85 General Hauling

42 MoblleliOmea
for Rent

Po-'o Wotor Houlnt. ot
2000 gol. - . l l i i - •

-___
w.a.,

1

u a tabll

.,....,, -

1111-.

caulcll

1 tloyo, - -

I I&amp;AWoo•--.olo-

1 - , . .Ito. ,.........1.000 ot
~ tlollwry. Col-

......_

lllllftl~ll ....... - - .. .

- · I,GIO to 4,000 OIMIDPlllfllhiiJ

~---Col
Upholltery

.....,.. Uph I I•~·

' .
:r;::

:'.\...:-=:.::.=...

.D I B - I i r ,IIM•

a

I

your Astro-Graph . predictions lor the 'day you might have to make a decision
On .....
year - d by mailing $1.25 to Astro- on an Issue !hat has alt.-nail.,.. of
iD Hill 8treel lllull
Graph, cto lhls n-aper. P.O. Box ,equal value. Thlo could cause you to be
12:00 (II MOYIE; Norwooci(G)
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be Indecisive rather lhan active.
(2:00)
sure to state your zodiac: sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~ · 11) II you
CANCER (June 21-.lutr 22) H'a beat not ~xpeet otherl to rotlow your ld- and
II~ Tonight
BERNICE
to prematurely dlscuoo your Intentione . suggettlon• today, you mull 111'81111\ow
QI)M...-.P.I.
BEDEOSOL
for furthering your personal ambHiona , them hoW - they work. Seeing II be.I!]) Areanlo Hall
'
today wllh others, ,_, thoae you hope , lleYtng, 10 be prep~~red to tosch lnateed
0 Nlaetlght
\ will participate with you In 110r11e • of tall.
• Gl 'WIIaguJ' CIS Lola
manner.
. AQUAIIIUB(Jen, :.Felt. 11) Try to set
Night TIM! bocll88 or two
. . , . . . .,. dr-aged frnrn
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LEO (oiUiy 23-Aut. 22) People wllh • . aome time- today for In enjoyable'
,,
· whom you pal around lod8y will have a : activity. A r«reatlonal break c:oulct
the IMr. (R) Q
strong influence on your oullook and 11~ .. ..... 11 a marwloua r...... from ..,_
11)1 Crimi llatY The sc. Louis
Illude. Try to spend time with lrleftdto! liOn build up.
Book Of lllull Stereo.
who are upbeat and progreoolva.
· 1PISC.S(l'elt. 211-MarGlt 20) Mora thlll
Nn,__ Now Counlry
music' I holtalt 1tara are •
VIRGO (Aug. 21-lepl. 22) Much I*·(
maner of Importance can be comlellturecf live.
, sone1 18118facllon will be gained today. Pitted 10 your ullafactlon today H you ,
from deYalopmenta where you ._ youri ~ ac:hedula your l(lend1 In proper ae12:30 eCil a Lola Night W1lh
•
, lntellact and riiOUrcafulneM to elthor ~ quMI!II. Prioritize your llot.
'
Dnld~.....,
June20,1110
'overcome challengal or clrcu,_t l .-1 (!llanlh t1·Aprll11) You'reiPI
~..a ColwiCICIIon
I ob81aclea.
' to be very Clbeervant today and !hire
Condltlonoln general look ralher Inter-. ~ (lepl. 21-0ot. a) Ulllally n·•l ·lln't much thlt lllfllely tO-IP8 your
eating lor you In lhe year ahead . Youf neil • good policy lo otr.r uriiOIIclted i alllntlon. YOU'I arMP tile 11111101 Olt
(2:3111
, lhould be able to do wall In both Indo- I edviCI! to others, but todey one of your , · ldaal quickly and be equally M -a- to . 1IGO (D l!w
..
.,p•wwnft (PI 2 Of 2)
J)l!ldent and collactiV!I v..tures. Ge! friend a might be In dire ~ of y&lt;)ur l· 1mp1rt any knOwtldf! you gain.
buay.
.
hal~ 1Uf1118111oM. 8patlk up.
TAUIIUI(Aifrll . . . . pIll You mlgltt
; : ; Aller llotn
GEIIINI(IIIJ 11..,._ 20) You'll be II IC~ (q.L II Nn. 22) ln a ,part.l 1),beallletoclevlln lpln·ollallltlatlma ·
.IJ)Gerll..
your ball today In situations where you nerlhlp arrangementtoclay,lel your co-l ,from one of your pt 111nt ....,_ .of
Tile..,.
. . , to IUfllllt two endMvorl slmuHo- lhort do tile leg work While you do the! Mrfllnae. H wll ~ lnllllglna,.auaty. You will underltMCI- rela· ,brain work. Your ch.._ tor auco••~ live twl81athat are within your acope 01
tlonlllllp, but othlrl might not. Oenllnt, ; ' ••&amp;;;terllyoum~ttteellort. oapebllltlee.
11J . .
'l'ocllr
~ . (-.a D1a 11) T~.
. • - .
.
, treet~toablrlfldallgllla,ndfo!JJ IA
0 llllalnllr llrmnta
.
.

••

.

••

lo...----""""----------------l

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Shield
1 Closed
division
5 Part
39 Frl$11dly or
· of N.E.
MacMurray
9Mets
DOWN
pitcher,
1 Hurry off
David 2 Wayne
10 Mime
Western
Marceau
(1953)
12 Wave (Fr.) 3 CIA operative Yeatent.y•a Answer
13 Turkish
4 Ess
follower
11 Fish spear 25 Game
capital
14 Verse form 5 Palnler
15 Tim&amp;'
points
15 Ascot,
Edouard
in office
27 Part of
for one
6 Refuge
18 Steak
the act
16- Tin Tin 7 Hawthorne
order
28 Bob of
master·
21 'The · 'Hogan's
17 Swift
stream
piece
Animal"
Heroes"
19 Resin
8 Sequential 22 Feverish 29 Loathed
20 Worry
10 Part
23 Soggy
34 'Indy 500"
21 Dlslrlbute.
of New
earth
stop
22 Mold
·
England 24 Lasso loop35 Brownie
23 Chess
term
24 Glacier
snow
25 Window
piece
26 Brit. honor b-+--+--flll
(abbr.)
27 Owl's cry
30Hockey
great
31 British
. miler
32 Singing
word
33 Silly
smile
35 State

(Fr.l
36 -May
37 Unasplrate

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'D- Here'a hn to worl! It:

I I,=~~PQ)
L M2.VJJ.-·

1

..

·\

,,

u•

eoi.'Wiiiil.

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

the thne L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Silll!le letters, ,
apoatraphea, the lenlth and formation of the words are all
hints. Each daJ the code letters are different.
for

a

a

~

NORTH
o..-.M
.KJ 10·74
.6 2
.K54
.1076

East should have risked bidding ·
four hearts over North's jump to three WEST
EAST
spades. West would then have bid five . • 6 ;
-..AI0987~3
.hearts rather than let South play four ; • Q J 4
.QJI07
spades. Unable to aet to dummy to • 8 6 2
.AK
take
a
heart
finesse,
East
would
have
•
•
Q
9
~43
1
the good fortune to bring down the sin1
SOUTH
gleton heart king and probably score :
.AQ9832
up an overtrick. AU of this is immate.K
rial, since .South was allowed to play .
• "9 3
four spades. Holding the spade ccm.JB2
tract to down one required some good·:
Vulnerable: Both
luck plus the right judgment to take
Dealer: North
·
advantage of it.
East won the opening lead with the' Soolll!
West Norlll Eut
ace of hearts. cubed the A·K of clubs
Pass
Pass 3t
and then got off lead with the queen of 1 •
Pus
All pus
diamonds. Declarer won the king in t •
dummy, cashed two tru~nps ending in
Opening lead: • Q
dummy, and ruffed a heart. He th&lt;:n
played ace and nine of diamonds. East
had unblocked the 10 of diamonds under declater's ace in the hope tbat
West held the nine.spot, but no such than let the opponents play four
luck. East had no choice but to win the spades. But I understand West's pai).
third diamond. Now whatever he re- Queen-jack-queen and balanced dlstriturned allowed declarer to s~ bis bulion with only three trumps are too
losing cltib while ruffiDgl~ dummy. much junk to compete wll.h when qne
No doubt lf West bad raised to two is vulnerable. But West could b.ardly
hearts over the one-spade overcall, keep from bidding one more if East
.
East would have bid five l!earts rather bid four hearts all by himself.

..

JOIIe

~- •"

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

By James Jacoby

' Ql) Night Court

"

12.11111 o.lt.o. -1114
t14-1172.

a

I!JI.._,Mne

· ExcavaUng

-··~·

Ql)

NIWI
(D MOVIE: 133 Squadron
(2:00)

Plumbing"
. Heating
~--CO~rt~l(~o~~=u~mblng;
. ~~~,,

Cobl- . . . . . .,.

814 4411311. · ~ 40 ~
Ploft'!roft "Wtogo .. • . . _ - ,

DON'T YOU KNOW
A.FEMALE'S PLACE 15
IN TH' BARN?

•I

up. Klnt 1310. 4 -

10:30 ® Major League BaMbal

'

I

82

E

job at the Lobo Lounge. (R)
Stereo. D
1111 • aJ NBA Ballcetballl;l
1!J1 Lorry King Llvel
11J Budwalaar Preaan..:
Tuaed8J Night Flghlll
Clll NalhVIIII Now
9:30 II all Dill Coach Luther's
bl'lf escapes whKe In
Hayden's care. (R~ Slereo. Q
10:00 (II 700 Club With Pit
Robertaon
1 8121 a ·Midnight Cllllr
Jack helps In a fight to keep
· drugs out ol lhe
. neighborhood. (.R~ Stereo. Q

driUa·.;

Rofory or collie tool

_
on Staga

11:00 11121 1211n Tile HHt Of

Woo- .

1n0111111 12111 ond up to 1311a.
boby $110 11oft- or
box...,.,.,. luii0&lt;1wtn m~rrn

Bod ... _

Trbuble In Eden
121 Church Straal StaHon
1:10 (D MajOr League BaMball
· 1:30 IIQII II Ill Tile Wonder
. Ya1re l(evln, Wlnnle·and Paul
· erid up In a grim rom1nt1c
-predicament. (R) Stereo. 1;1
·· .I!]) MljOr laaiJUI
· BaiMball

6-\9

,.

-

2121

Ste..a. D
Patn..Nawa
IIJ .MIIfllar, She Wrote

11,100.

FNd ll'lllb, :104:'771·1111.

.

FN~S&amp;
Vegetablea

41 Houaea for Rent

io•"•ii

or~1-.

=. . .

..chlll!ren-Siegmun~ and

Siegllnde-Wotan tiopes to
restore file Ring to file
Rhlnemaidens.(4:30~ Stereo.
'llll •liZ Raecue: 811 A
teenager hid from prowlers
and dialed 911 for help. (R~

Roofing ond Siding, Tn~r
,.,... iiolntod. Fnoo Qtlmmo. .

· lmportod 10 go. dill.

oolocllon of ....._ oultoo.
.............., hlldh . . . hd
onduptolll.•doyo-·
e11h Wfth 1pproved CNdll. I mi.
ou1 lulovlll Ad. ODon I A.M. to IUCTIIOW)C. ltl4-m-f.iii
I P.M. lion, thru Sot. Coli IMt4t 1!22
::..=~-:.ITUwlniiiM

.·

gold

hBif-mortal

·

:ID4-1714UI Ohio 114-411 2414.

Lampo $28 to $125. Dl..,,..

.... -

.,

·

I!) Malropolltan Opere
· Preaantl Through his

'I

15 ft. c.\oohmon C.mpor, 11olx, 1011 -olnod lnolcll
,. .. ad1l1d. new brllc. Mel
11""!111-. tJ1!_110. SOl 1111 31110.

- ·he's
Tile
' 11a
Boas? ew
Tony thinks
responsible for a -.nls ·
•. ~rtner's death: (R) Stereo.

ffi

HO~Y MACI&lt;ERELI HE...
HE BURROWED RIGHT
INlO TH'GROUNPJ

Ca!"pera &amp;
Motor Homes

$!Oland up lo 1411. Woocltoble
.,.. chtlro 1215 lo 1715. Doolui
1141 up to 13711.
1400 a

lll.ondSN.a....-

11o VA
noe over

.

,

oomo olll)llonco i'lpolro. WV

- · arond ploriD; ..... - - .•
borrol - . . . ..... '"" ..... 11121 · - · luot ..... .
~.111\11MII.
2!51-1111.
'

...... -

, LAYNE'S FURNITURE
mllto oouth Clolllpollo Loc.., Solu ond - up
180 and
pua,lc wat•, no MMrlctione, hiS to IIIII. Tobinprlcod
10
1121.
Hldl
1ll1d1
$310
$o
aome wtth ft.v . front. ., JIM.
- . Roell.,.. 1225 to t3711.
571-2331.

36

i7ii.

Ow- Guolltr -... -

r.1erchwndtse

175-7711.

tor

- - · riWilr-'IIMII.
·
Doclgo Ooft E. 4dr, II lllld,
47.000 - . 12,100. 814-3'1t'

......l'

plolod 1100.104tct1071.

W.nt •• purahoot1t-13 .. _of
land within I nilllo of Clolllpol ...
II
. . ....,
bo zoned
have
a wlter,40not-bl·
In
flood olaln.Coll Bruoo Lucluo, 1·
800-222-1137.

EXP Feld 111BGG. 'Good

_,... _... _

COnn 808 trumllll 24 -

L04 an Crook. llg Foot
Porto.
City
··
"' .,..
polntmont
only.FlnoiiCing

-

...... -·ion.

Musical
lnatruments

no

tor

23

hM an lm-

_,.,

Fumllhod. Aol. ond ctopooli.
;IIM.at:l-2111.

387511

Rockoprlngo
Rood
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raglotor 30W75-1847.

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'CALL - IIOOQS AUCTION SER·
·VICE. AUCTIONEER: DAVID

I'

Parole- Vodlcs :_Judge -Circus -ARRIVED
· My train schedule was from 1984 so I asked for a ne,w
·one. ·1 guess you could use a new one,· the agent sat(j.
"all those trains have finally ARRIVED."

11 Qll lnalde Edition

,Rick PM- Auc:llon ~
now be cldng suctions. U•
peMnce rullile the tlfrw.nc&amp;
'Liconood Ohio Kentuclly, -

you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCltAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

Dl21 PM Mtlgazlne
PubliC S81e
&amp; Auction

Complete "'• chudcle quoled
by Hlling in the miDing -d•

PRINT NUMBftED
LETTERS
•

.,. UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V ANSWER
•

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TUES .. JUNE 19 •

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·
MANCE IS WOR11I A WHOLE WORlD OF PROMISE.
. -WILliAM D. HOWEU.S

�Page

--Area deaths---------

EMS squads have
five Monday nms

1941; . three sons Luther H.
(Luke) Davidson. Jr., Ashland;
The MeigS County Emergency
Charlas (Chuck) Davidson, Nice- Medical Services office reports
Herman G. Burt, 94, of 614 ville, Fla.; Donald (Don) David· five runs on Monday across the
Thomas St., Belpre, died Sunday son, West Palm Beach, Fla.; five county.
·
afternoon at the Worthington grandchildren, Timothy, Rod·
At 5: 3D a.m., Syracuse squad
Manor Care Center, Parkers· ney, Keith, Eric and Patricia was called to College Road for
burg, W.Va.
Davidson, and two great· Helen Hams. She was trans·
Born March 14, 1896 at Bar· grandsons.
. ported to Veterans Memorial
tlett, he was the son of the late
Also surviving are a halt- Hospital. At 6:17 a.m., Rutland
Howard E. and Leota Goddard brother, Thomas Davidson, was called to Mine No.2 for Mark
Burt, the eldest of live chlldren.
Gooding, Idaho; three halt·
Richmond. He was taken to
He attended Belpre public sisters, Nancy Lehman and Joan Veterans Memorial. At 3:35
schools.
Bush, Logan; and Shirley Bush,
p.m., Syrac~se unit was dis·
He was a 60-year member of Lake Panasoffee, Fla. Besides
patched tQ the Country Mobile
the Belpre Masonic Lodge 609, F.
his parents, he was preceded In
Home Park on State Route 33 for
and A.M. , and was employed at death by a )lrother, · Marlon Beula Cook, who was taken to
the Parkersburg Rig and Reel, Davidson.
0' Bleness Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Foundry Works, PomeFriends may call Wednesday
Middleport was called to Beech
roy, retiring from there In 1960. evening from 6 to 9 p.m . at the
Street at 11:41 am. tor Della
After his retirement from the Bellville-Snyder Funeral tlome,
Roseberry. She was taken to
Pomeroy firm, he worked as . 181 Mill Run Road, Bellville,
Veterans Memorial At 11:43
· head of utlllty collections for the where funeral services will be p.m., Rutland was. called to
· City of Belpre working there until held Thursday morning at 11 Langsville tor Cheryl Ferguson,
1965.
a.m. with · Pastor N. Thomas who refused treatment.
He Is survived by one son,
Kelley officiating.
Marvin B. Burt, of Pomeroy, four
Burial will be In Bellville
grandchildren, four great·
Cemetery with full military
grandchildren, one•brother, Cllf·
honors. Memorial contrlbu lions Macrame class
ford B!lrt of Dallas, Texas, one
to the JeffersOn · Township·
A series of macrame chair
sister, Mrs. Wells &lt;Evelyn) Heer·
Bellville Rescue Squad may be · classes will be offered by the
mans , Parkersburg, W.Va.
left at the funeral home.
Middleport Arts Council begin·
He was preceded In death by
nlng July 5 at 7 p.m. The classes
ADen Compton
his wife or 63 years, Ruby Rector
will continue on July 12, 19, and
.,
Burt. In 1985, and two sisters,
26.
.
Lucile Eberhart, and Lura
Allen Compton, 89, died Sun·
The Instructor will be Twlla
Oliver.
day at Miami Valley Hospital In Childs who will teach how to
Services will be held at the
Dayton.
weave a seat and back onto a
Surviving are his . wife Do- lawn chair frame.
Spencer Funeral Home Wednes·
day at 2 p.m. with the Rev .. rothy; his son, John &lt;Penny)
Each student must furnish a
Roland Wildman officiating.
Compton of Middleport; his clean aluminum lawn chair with
Burial will be In the Odd Fellows
grandson, M. Sgt. Michael Comp- all webbing removed. All other
Cemetery at Parkersburg.
ton of Fort Gordon, Ga. and two material . will be furnished and
great-grandchildren.
Friends may call at the funeral
the cost of the classes Is $25.
Services will be held on Wed·
home on Tuedsay, 2 t? 4 and 7 to 9
To register can·Sue Baker at
n¢sday .I!J 2 p.m. at the chapel at 992·7733 or Margie Blake at
p.m.
New Carnsle Memorial Garden 992-7117.
Luther Davidson, Sr. ·~
with Rev. Thomas Bowman Weekend revival
officiating. ·
There will be a weekend
Luther tl. (Luke) Davidson.
revival
Friday, Saturday and
Sr. , 68, of 1260 State Route 97,
Sut14ay
at
7 p.m. nightly at the
BeUvllle, a former area resident,
Faith Tabernacle Church on
. died Monday afternoon In Mans·
Veterans Memorial
Bailey Run Road. Denver Rol·
field General Hospital following
Admission - tlelen Harris, llns, Cltllllcothe, will speak.
an extended Illness.
Syracuse.
Pastor Emmett Rawson Invites
tle was born July 13, 1921, In
Discharges - tlazel Stewart, the public.
Athens County to the late Frank
Pauline Rose, Charles Frazier, MeeU111 cancelled
and Lucy Blackford , Davidson,
Georgia Wehrung, Edward
The Pomeroy Sesqulcen ten·
and had lived most of his llfe~lme
Capehart.
' ·
not meet this
In Ashland and Richland
Counties.
.
tle was a World War II veteran,
having served In .Europe' and
North Africa. Davidson ·had
retired as a truck driver for Doff
Truckllnes with 20 years service.
tle was a member of Irvin Hi'skey
Post 535, American Legion, Bel·
lvllle, and the Veterans Foreign
Wars Post 5101 at Lexington, and
was a life charter member of
William Naylor Amvets Post of
Bellville. He was also.a member
of the Teamsters RetireeS Club.
Mr. Davidson Is survived by
his wife. Marvel Welker David·
son, whom he married Aug. 2,

Herman Burt

KENNETH RICHARDSON

Kenneth Richardson
· Kenneth Merle Richardson, 74,
Mlddieport, died Monday after·
·noon at Pleasant Valley Hospital
In Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Born In Sablet, Mo. , Feb. 3,
1916. he was the son of the late
Eugene and Iva Cora Shipp
Richardson. Pe 'was a technical
~ervicc superviuor with Western
l:Jnton Telegraph Co. and was
also an au tomoblle salesman.
His last place of employment was
Nelson Motors.
A .World Warllveteran, he was
'the recipient of the Silver Star.
Re was a charter member of the
~lddlei&gt;ori VFW, and a member
qt the Iowa Moose Lodge, the
Heath United Methodist Church,
l'&lt;llddleport, and tl)e Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club, and
was a past president of the
National Bluegrass Music Association.
. He Is survived by his wife,
Annabel Shockey Richardson,
Middleport, a daughter, Shirley
(Bill) Quickel, Middleport, three
grandchildren, Jim, Jason and
Jenny Carpenter. a brother,
Allan P. Richardson, Eldora,
Iowa; a sister, Pauline Ewing,
~rdallls , Oregon, and a sisterIn-law, Cella Schumann, Newton,
Iowa.
'
He was preceded In death by
his parents', a sister, Lucille
Reece, and an Infant brother,
Raymond Richardson.
- Funeral services Will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
Rawllngs·Coats·Fisher Funeral
Home. Burial will be In the Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home Wednes·
day 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the American Cancer
Society.

•

Tuut11y. June 19, 1990

Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Cooler
...
Continued from page 1
extending east Into Nebraska
then southeast through Missouri.
Tbe high was to drift over the
Ohio Valley Tuesday while the
warm front moves northeast Into
the lower Ohio Valley Tues(lay
nllht.

Property transfel'8
Robert s. MarCinko and Mary
Maxine Marcinko, easement, to
Ohio Bell Telephone Co., Orange.
Blanche J . Smart and Carolyn
L. Smart, parcels, to Blanche J.
Smart and Carolyn L. Smart,
Columbia.
·
Mildred G. Deeter, dec'd, cert.
of trans, to Donald S. ~ter,
Olive.
James E . Wingrove, tracts, to
Norman L. Merlnar and Emllee
L. Merlnar, Orange.
'Elberfeld Realty Co., pt. lots,
to Eileen Agnes Welker. Pomeroy VIllage.

----Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Jim

Cobb'S

evening (Tuesday) . . The .group
will meet next Tuesday. June 26,
at the Grace Episcopal Church at
6: 30 p.m. for a potluck. All who
assisted with sesquicentennial
activities may attend.
Racine Letlon to meet
The regular meeting of Racine
American Legion Post 602 will be
held Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting.
AA to meet
The Pomeroy group of A.A.
and AlAnon will meet Thursday
at 7. p.m. at Qacred Heart
Catholic Church. For more lnformatlo~ call1·80().333·5051. ·

Driver cited by
Pomeroy police

Becky Large, Welshtown
Road, Pomeroy, was cited for
going the wrong way on a
one-way street and for DUI
following an accident on Osborn
Street In Pomeroy Monday.
According to Pomeroy ponce, .
the car driven by Large sides·
wiped the car of Cary Betzlng,
Pomeroy, as he traveled down
Osborn, causing moderate damage to the left rear tender. The '
Large car had light damage to
the lett front fender:
Sunday evelllng Pomeroy pollee lnvestlgatted an accident on
West Main · St. In front of
Andersons where Utere were no
InJuries nor damages.
Jackie Lyons, Jr., Racine, had
stopped In a line of traffic and his
vehicle was struck In the rear by
a car driven by Mary Kay Price, ·
Union Ave., Pomeroy. Price was
cited for not maintaining assured
clear distance.

Stocks

I

Dally stock prices
(AI of 10:80 Lm.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blot, Ellll .to 1 - '

•

Am Electric Power ........... 2~B~
AT&amp;T .................................42~
Ashland 011 .............. ..........36~
Bob Evans ...... , .................. .. 13 ·
Charming Shoppes .... ..........10%.
City Holding CO .................. 14~•
Federal Mogul .................... 19'!4
Goodyear T&amp;R .......-. ..........34~;,
Heck's ...................... ...... ..... 3~~
Key Centurion ........ ............12~ ;,
Lands' End ......................... i6~~
Umlted Inc ........................48~ ·
In the Meigs County Court of Multimedia Inc ................... 78~ ·
Common Pleas, a complaint has Rax Restaurants .................. 2\4'
been flied by Bank One, Athens, Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 23~
N.A. versus Mohammed Said Shoney's Inc .......................14%
Satty, of· Lo11an, et al.
Star Bank ...........................21 '!4
In other Common Pleas Court Wendy's InU ........................ 6%
News, a petition for dlssolution.o.f , Worthtnaton lnd .:....... , .......24~
marriage has been filed by A:.na
(Channlll&amp; Sboppea Is ex dlvlL. Miller and NoeiJ. Miller, both
de~Kf today')
of

Complaint fded

RED TAG

SALE SPECIALS!

Ohio Lottery

Braves,
Reds split .
doubleheader

. Daily Number

432
Pick·4

4268

Mottly lUDDY Thursday. Hlp
near 85.

..

~

.

a1
Vol.40 , No.283

PROFESSIONAL
CLEANING KIT
with

LIMITED QUANTITY

•Powerful Motor
•Automatic Height
Adjustment
•Tools Included

BARBOURSVILLE, W.Va .
family gathered at the Beulah said tem~ratures can surpass
(UPI) - State Wage and Hour Ann Baptist Church In Ona, then 130-degrees oh the line during the
Division chief Shelby Le11ry said
went to White Chapel Memorial summer. ·.R ider died after work·
Gardens In Barlioursville where , ing his first shift In the air·
the death , of a Ravenswood
Aluminum worker from a jteart Rider · was placed In a family conditioned cab of a crane.
Though the union at the plant,
attack while working a double
memorial.
shift In extreme beat Is evidence
A crane operator 17 years at the United Steelworkers union,
of a need to reform overtime
Ravenswood Aluminum, be was contends Rider's death could
laws.
- · a decorated veteran of the have been prevented If he had not
James Rider, 38, of Ona, died
Vietnam War. tle received the been forced to work the over·
Saturday while working a second
bronze star and a service medal time, medical and company
shift at Ravenswood Aluminum.
forhlstenurelntheFirstCalvary officials say there appears to be
no link between his death and the
The funeral for the decorated
Unit. .
The potllne Is an aluminum ·beat·on the potllne.
VIetnam War veteran was h.eld
Leary said forced overtime is
Tuesday.
·
·
smelting process and workers
Unlori · officials, friends and

becoming an Increasing problem
In West VIrginia. She said the
practice is not Illegal and that It
Is prevalent In the coal and
manufacturing Industries.
"I get callS every day, ca,lllng
Into the Department of Labor
asking what we can do about
forced overtime," Leary said. "I
tell them there's no law. There's
nothing we can do to help them. I
wish there was. "
Rider's death has become ·a
controversial part of a struggle
between union leaders and Ra·

officials to force employees with
less seniority to .work double
shifts on the company's three .
potllnes.
tompany officials said R,lder :
had complained of stomach pains
near the end of his first shift
Saturday morning, but said a
company doctor diagnosed he
was well enough to work and sent
him to the potllne.
Several hours later, Boyle said :
Rider complained of chest pains
and numbness In his arms. ·
Wlthln·hours, Rider was dead.

· venswood management officials.
Monday, company o.fflcials
closed a potllne and laid off
between and 70 and 90 people
after an excessive · number of
absences from work.
Company chairman Emmett
Boyle said the company undergoes a labor shortage every
summer because of employees'
taking vacation time, personal
leave and 30-year retirements.
But this summer, Boyle said
employees began refusing over·
time hours, which left company

Campers to ~ove into new
dormitory later this week
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News staff
Youngsters staying at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly
summer camp will soon be
staying in a new dormitory. .
Officials expect to move Into
the new structure sometime
tOday or Thursday. .
The new dorm Is nestled In the
woods behind the current
· summer camp and boasts four
dormitory wings, a large lobby
with a fireplace, four restrooms
· and a small kitchen. The 50-by10-foot building Is covered with
natural-colored wood siding.
Camp Director Robert Purtell .

play kickball. At night , the
children put on small plays,
puppet shows or participate In
talent shows.
Purtell , said he tries to get
missionaries in to talk to · the
children. The cu.r rent visiting
missionary Is from India.
·
Most of the faculty, with the
exception of cooking staff and
student Interns, work on a
volunteer basts.
The Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly summer camp Is affll.
lated with the Church of Christ
and Christian Churches and Is
located on the site of the former
Bedford Elementary School.

building was done by volunteers.
Purtell said more children are
staying at the camp now than at
any other time during his 12
yeats as camp director.
Children stay at the camp for a
week, then more children are
brought in. This week Is junior
high week and 49 kids are there.
Purtell expects about 270 child·
rl!n will attend the camp this
summer.
.Youngsters staying at the
camp have a wide range of
activities to keep them busy from
7 a.m. to 11 p.m. They attend
classes in drama , puppets and
newspaper. They ean swim or
· '..-.Jr"'

_,_.~

..._ , "~""

to torch Huc~'s bou~e on Cow
Creek.
"I'm pieased he's· been convicted of first-degree murder,
and as prosecutor I've got to be
pleased with that," said Prosecu·
tor O.C. Spaulding.
In closing remarks Mond&lt;\Y,
defense attorney Joe Thomas
cited Gray's testimony In which
the Ohio man said he acted In
'self-defense and didn't know
Janey was a law enforcement
officer.
Grey was tried under West
Vlrglnla's · ·felony murder law,
which applies to anyone killing a
person during attempted arsoli,
rape, robbery or burglary.
The jury deliberated about 7 ¥.!
hours in convicting Gray.

Ohio braces
for more rain

Local news briefs - Mini-golf applications available

By United Press International
Flood-battered Ohio braced for
another possible bout of severe
weather Wednesday, With a flood
watch ln. effect for the entire
state.
.
The National Weather Servlc~
advised residents In fiood-prone
areas to monitor ' the weather
closely because of a potential for
up to 3 Inches of rain In parts of
Ohio, producing urban and small
stream flooding. ·
One to two inches of rain was
expected to be common across
the state as a large area of
showers and thunderstorms
spread east.
,
The sltowers and • thunderstorms were expected to reach
much of central and southern
Ohio by midday, with the rain
heavy at times early In the
morning across southern Ohio .
Most of northern Ohio was
expected to stay dry until a
second area · of showers and
thunderstorms entered the state
later Wednesday. ·
The weather service said occa·
slonal showers and thunder·
·s tortns would persist Into early In
the night over the state, with the
precipitation ending· overntgl)t
and skies gradually clearing.
Officials cautioned that rest·
dents In low-lying areas should
be prepared to move to a safe
place If flooding was observed or
a warning was Issued, avoid
driving through water of an
unknown depth, and listen to
radio and television for weather
updates. .
The rain was being . produced
Continued on page 12

Applications to participate irt the Park 'n' Putt mini-golf
tournament for t.he benefit of the Meigs unit of the Amer)can
· · Cancer Society may be picked up at the Cancer Society office on
Second Sr. In Pomeroy, or at the miniature golf course at Gen.
Hartinger Park either before or on the day of the event. ·
The tournament will be held on June 29 ar 10 a.m and Is open ro
everyone over 10. The admission is $3 for three rounds. There
will be prizes for some holes-in-one as well as trophjes .

"THE BOSS" ESP
UPRIGHT

$119 95
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Steer, heifer show June 30 .

Steel Beater

••••

·An open steer and heifer show will be held Saturday, June 30
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Showmanship classes will begin a t 11 a.m with ungrbomed
animals. There will also be a showmanship class for 4·H and
FFA members only, 9 to 14 and 15 to 19 years1of age.
The cl\eck In time IS 6 JO9 p.m bn Friday and 8 to 10 a.m. on
Saturday. Helfer classes start at 1 p.m followed by the steer
classes. The prizes will lnciude $100 for tbe grand champion
steer, $75 for the reserve champion steer, $50 for the grand
. champion heifer and $25 for the reserve champion heifer.
The entry fee Is $10 an animaL There will be food available on
the fairgrounds. Marcia Guess Is chairman.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. June 20. 1990 ·

Copyrighted 1990 ·

WINFIELD, W.Va. (UP!l may have been tainted by that
' Defe!Jse lawyers for an Ohio man prior to selection of (his jury,"
found .gUilty of flrst·degree said defense lawyer Chuck
murder In the shooting of an Rlffee.
off·duty sl)erlff's deputy during
Huck owned the house staked
an altercation at a suspected out by Putnam County deputy
arson scene plan to appeal sheriff John Janey last Aug. 17
because of a possibly "tainted" for a possible arson attempt.
jury.
Gary allegedly was hired by
Robert Gray of Ga!Upolls, Huck to set fire to the bouse so
Ohio, co4ld become eligible for . tluck .could collect Insurance on
parole after 10 years In prison
it. Huck has pleade9 guilty to
since the jury recommended second-degree murder 'in the
mercy.
.
case.
; Lawyers have until June 29 to
During Gray's week·l9ng trial
' file motlo'lls for a new trial. A
in Putnam County Circuit Court,
' sentencing date will be set ar the prosecutors argued he gunned
; same time. ·
down Janey while committing
"This Is the same jury that another felony. The killing ocheard Raymond Huck enter a
curred when Janey, acting as an
second-degree murder plea , and
insurance investigator at the
our objection is that the panel
time. witnessed Gray preparing

308 EAST MAIN

•

•

.~ay f.iund gi.ilty; wilt appeai

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I'OM£ROY;·outo

Meigs, Athens and VInton .County farmers who .suffered ·
property damage or severe prOduction loss due to •severe
storms, flooding and tornadoes from May 28,1990, to the present
may be elllible for emergency loan assistance under the
Emergency beclaratlon, from the Farmers Home Administration, the rural credit service of the United States Department of
Agriculture, said David Urwin. County supervisor for FmHA
for Athens, Meigs and Vinton Counties.
The emergency loans are· used to enable eligible farmers to
return to normal operations after sustaining loss from natural
disasters.
·
·
Applicants will not be eUglble for EM loans to cover damages
and losses to any crops planted which were not Insured, bu.t
could have been Insured with FCIC crop Insurance or
Continued on page 12

-·

M

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

j

____
•

,

-

-- -·- ---

NEW DORMITORY - Ohio Valley Chris dan
Assembly campers p011e In front ' of · their new
dormitory. Pictured are (left to right) Tessa

Downs, II, Glouster; Sarap Lemal, 12, Coal Rua;
Mary Ellen Murray, 14, Athens; JeiiSica Hlll'l'll,
14, Lowell; and .Ultra Sbnons, 12 Gl0111ter.

More than BOO homes damged
in Shadyside flood disaster
SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UP)) · Authorities estimated Tuesday
that 841 homes In four eastern
Ohio counties were either des troyed or damaged In the flash
floods that killed at least 21last
week.

As federal and state disaster still missing from the Thursday
officials began assessing the · night disaster.
massive cost of the cleanup and
The,Federal Emergency Man·
recovery, about l,OOOemetgency agement Agency and Its state
workers pressed their search on COI!IIterj)a~t said 339 homes were
the Ohio River and Isolated damaged In Belmont County mountain creeks for 13 people where all the fatalities occurred
- with 87 destroyed and 48
suffering maJor damage.
More homes were damaged 454 - In Jefferson County to the
In the Meigs County Jail with 30 north, bu I only 18 suffered major
damage. Harrison .Gounty redays credit glvzn for time
served. Lemley was fined $200 ported damage to 51 homes and
Monroe County said five homes
and placed on probation for a
were
damaged.
periOd of three years. He was
The
bodies of 21 victims have
also ordered to complete the
been
uncovered
and those sIll I.
GED program and particlpat~ In
ml,sslng
are
feared
dead. ·
th.e Cotrtmunlty Corrections Pro. "They're going to continue on
gram until the time that he Is
ConUnued on page 12

Lalo.,e pleads innocent
By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
Jesse Lalone, 21,entered a plea
of Innocent Tuesday morriing at
his arraignment hearing In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Lalone Is charged with receivIng stolen property and was
Indicted during Friday's session
of the grand jury. As named In
the Indictment, receiving stolen
property Is a fourth degree
felony, punishable by a maxi·
mum penalty of 18 months In jail
and a fine of $2,500.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Fred W. Crow, Ill found
Lalone to be Indigent and ap·
pointed Meigs County Public
Defender Charles H. Knight to be
Lalone's attorney. Judge Crow
set bond at $20,000. The property
In question, consisting of a
microwave oven, television, fan,
coffee maker and food Items, was
stolen from the Racine Park
Board and VIllage Council .
Both Knight and Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story reported early today that
Lalone was expected to enter Into
a plea agreement later In the
week.
A judgment entry has been
filed In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas In the case of
State of Ohio versus Earl B.
Woodruff. · Woodruff entered a
plea of guilty to charges or
breaking and entzrlng on May 4.
The sentencing hearing In the
case has been set for June 27.
Bond has been selforWoodruftat
$1,000.
Sentencing has been com·
pleted In the case of State of Ohio
versus Kendall M. Lemley. Lem·
ley, charged with escape In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, was sentenced to 30 days

·-·· ---,.- -·- ~

-~-- - "'·

.....

----

......-

.....-----:---

ONE THAT Dm~Nof
Klein of Pomeny prOudiJ dlsplaya 811
HYe• PD•d
sbovelllelld clldlsh be CIIUiht wltla a yelloW Jll· Be CUIId tile IIIII
Ia a pond near Uae Pomeroy Elemealary Scbool.

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