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Page DB Sunday Tlme~ntlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

/

Aprll7,1891

Ohio ~ottery

Career
Day activities

Pick 3:039 .
' Pick 4: 8169

are held

'

Cards : 5H, K·C
5-D; 4-S
Super Lotto

20.21~27·2~39·45

'

' 248595

StOCk market. ••__;;Co;.;;;ntul.:;.;:.u::;;;ed:.!..:fro..::.::m::..:D~-1--­ Galia Cattlemen's...

Meigs County Agent's Corner·
I
(

ANGELA FORSYTHE, Sardinia, Obio, won Grand Champion Preview Heifer honors during the 1991 Gallia Cattlemen's .
Association Show at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.

. TAVIS SHANE or Fostoria, Ohio captured Reserve Champion
Preview Heifer Honors during the first annual GaUia Cattlemen's
Association show.
.

they were some pretty poor num-

. Philip Morri.s was second, off Cattlemen's Association Preview
1/4 to 67 3/4. American Express, Open Steer Show was sponsored
Zagorski added, "People were which faces intensified competition
the local cattlemen group with
looking for the Fed to case before in the credit card market, was third, by
the
financial cooperation from the
noon. When the Fed didn't react, off 1/l to 28 3/8.
following
local businesses: chamthe traders and programs moved
IBM Corp., which has again pion Farms; HollyBrook Farms;
in" and the market dropped
entemt the body competitive lapShe thinks the Federal Reserve top computer market, was fourth, Ohio Valley Bank; Citizens
Springtime is a good time to WalCh
By John C. Rice
. National Bank; Ohio Valley Visifor swarming termites, Term.ites Board, which manages the nation's down 1 1/4 to 112 5/8.
County Ext. Agent,
tors Center; Gene Johnson Chevrotake an estimate $2.5 billion bite money .supply; is waiting for the
Agriculture
Citicorp was fifth, up 1 1/l to 16 let; Ohio Valley ·Foodland; Norris
out of U.S. pocketbooks every inflation numbers - the producer l/8 . ·The bank holding company Northup Dodge; Star Bank; GalPOMEROY
Chemicals year. Last year termites were found price index and consumer price will
offer holders of irs Visa and .
Recalled ., Altention! Benlate in 600;000 homes.
tndex - which will both be Mastercards the)owest prices for lipolis Stockyards Company; PJ'f
50DF, Benlate 1991DF, and Tersan
Signs of termite infestation s released next week. "If inflation is many products bought with its
1991DF, manufacrured by DuPont, include swarming of winged adults lower, the Fed could ease'' the cards.
.
have been recalled, It is not to be · in the spring (March , April, May, money supply, she said.
.
AT&amp;T, which Is p~sing its bid
sold or used.
·
Gene Seagle, ~hnical research for NCR Corp., was also active
June), or .autumn months (Septern- .
All dealers and =stributors are· ber, October), mud tubes over the director for Grunial &amp; Co. in New falling 1/4 to 34.
'
to stop sale of these p ucrs. Any· surface of foundation walls, mud ' York, said, ~ 'The market wa~
On
the
American
Stack
one in ~sian of th products protrud ing from cracks between marking time, waiting to see if
·sbould rettirn them to the point o( boards, and hollow sounds from · (Fed Chairman Alan) Mr. Exchange, the Amex Market Value
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UP!) index fell 1. 70 to close Friday at Gardeners feel flattered when a
purchase for a full crediL
infested wood when tapped with a Greenspan would lower the dis- 363.41, up 4.21 for the week.
hummingbird visits their flowers.
These products may contain the screwdriver or lcnife. Adult winged count rate or the ·Federal funds rate, Advances
led declines 448-383
The trick to attracting the tiny
herbicide attazine. The spraying of "swarmers" are coal black to pale but the Fed has already given die
among
the
1,002
issues
traded
for
birds
is planting nectar-rich flowers
benlate or tersan could result in 'yellow-brown in color, about ?De-. market some goodies.''
the week.
that
are
tubular or trumpet-shaped
plant injury. However, the l~vel ?f fourth to three-eighth of an mch
The Fed lowered the discount
Amex
volume
totaled
in
shades
of red or orange.
and
atrazine that may be contamed m long, with four wings about equal rate - the rate at which member
70,893,976,
compared
with.
benlate and tersan poses no human in size and easily detached. TheY. instituti()ns can borrow from the 56,399,745 traded a week earlier Some· common plants that lu·re
health or food safety problems.
are sometimes found around win- Fed - in February and December. and 80,654,380 tradlid in the same hummingbirds include bee balm,
DaiJ)' Producers and Refunds ... dows in large numbers.
nicotinia, petunia, salvia and trum"
"These haven't been factQred into week a year ago.
pet creeper.
Dairy producers should be able to.
the
market
yet,"
Seagle
said.
Fonunately, termites feed slowCorp., which invested
"Hummingbird gardens don 't
get a refund of the 5 cents per hun- ly 'and there is no need to panic.
Federal f1111ds are the overnight in· Amdahl
the Unix software system, led . take a great deal of planning,'' says
dredweight chect-off. Contact your Usually, termite control is ajob for reserves banks lend each other. The
the Amex actives, rising 1/4 to 15 Jeanne Youger·C()ma!y of the
ASCS office for form 1026.' The the licensed, certified, commercial Fed buys or sells government secu- 7/8.
.
'
Home Horticulture Center at Ohio
qualifications are I) you don't pest control operator since the rities to malce the Fed funds rate go
The
National
Association
of State University . "They can be
i nclude milk production, 2) you homeowner seldom has the train- upordown.
.
Dealers composite index, small and easily managed with
have a farm plan filed with Soil ing, experience or equipment to
Additionally, a stronger dollar Securities
which
set
a record Thursday, species planted according to their
Conservation Service, and 3) you perform the job effectively.
should aaract foreign investors into advanced 13.50
to end the week at · growing habits."
fall within the guidelines on highly
Deal only with a licensed, reli-' the U.S. financial markets, he said. 495.80.
The following steps to planting ·
erodible land.
·
On the trading floor this week,
. able pest control firm having an
· The ASCS doe8 not have com- established place of business and a Pepsico was the most active issue, . - - - - - - - - - - - - a hummingbird garden are 3!1apted
plete details on this yet but you good professional reputation.
dropping 1 to 33 1/4. Pepsico hit its
Uranus, discovered by Sir William from the book "Theme Gardens,"
should check on it. This could · Minimum Wage Changed ... high of 35 during Wednesday's Herschel on Mareh 13, 1781, lies at a by Barbara Damrosch:
mean $400-$1,000 for some pro- The Federal and state minimum tniiling but fell on what apPeare&lt;t to distance of 1.8 billion miles from the
- Plant a mix of annuals,
ducers.
·
wage has increased to $4.25 per be disappointing earnings expecta- sun, taking 84 years to ·make its cir· perennials, shrubs and vines to proLook Out for Termites , . hour as of April!! 1991 .
cuit around our star.
duce blooms that attract the birds
tions.

Spring is a good time
to watch,for termites

bers.' '

scrubbers,
AEP advised

Farms; McGinness-Stanley Agency; Larry Miller, BP; Wiseman
Agency; Toler and Toler; Evans.
Catde Company; Bob Evans Hid·
den Valley Ranch; Brown's Mar- .
ket; Bob Evans Restaurants; John- .
son's Mobile Homes; River City
Farm Supply; Alan Bosier D.V.M. ;
The SteakhOuse; Carter's Plumbing
and Heating; L &amp; 1 Grocery; and
.Southern Hills Real Estate.

Hummingbird ·gardens
said easy to grow
from spring until late summer. It
may take more than one growing
season for newly· planted shrubs,
vines and perennials to produce
abundant flowers.
- Design the garden so :slier
!Jiants form the backdrops for
shorter ones and creeping ,Plants
receive room to grow.
~ Arrange plants .so that some
flowers bloom in each section of
the garden throughout the growing
season.
,.,
- Choose a sunny location. It
prod~ces the most flowers .
- Provide strucrures, such as a.
trellis or fence , for vines to climb

delltl Ia b1S Art l8Dd Art 3 c~ completed the exhibit as a part
or their project requirements. Pictured with Mr. Slavin (and the
heads) are students respllnslhle ror the exhibit, which can be seen
in the fr011t or the build mg. . .
.
.
~

Those starting a hummingbird
garden will need to rei y on annuals,
Youger-Comaty says. Annuals provide a variety of flower colors
immediately and throughout the .
~rowing season. Annuals also fill .
m around permruient plants thai lire
slow to grow.

Nontoxic pest controls offer alternatives
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) more and more requests for nonAn Ohio State University pest-con- chemical controls."
trol specialist says homeowners
He lists the following methods
need not depend on pesticides to control pests:
alone to control indoor pests.
- Carpenter ants. Eliminate
BiD Lyon says some infestations high humidity, poor ventilation and
. can be prevented with non-chemi- moisture problems in the home,
cal substitutes.
·
especially in basements and crawl
"These alternatives result from spaces.
increUed concein from the possi- Indian meal moths and flour
blo effects or·pesticides on people weevils. Avoid long-term shelf
and the environment," Lyon says. storage of large amounts of grain
"Our Extension Service handles products, sach as cereals,. cake

mixes, flour and bird seed. Either
buy grain products in small quanti.
ties; store them in screw-top-lid
conUiine~ made of metal, glass or
plastk; or keep the ire!lls in a frcez"
cr. ·
- Crickets. Keep 11\wns well·
mowed and weed-free near homes,
especially in late summer when
· ket num .....
L--a peale• Trun
· JNuu
.L-·bs
cnc
around a homes perimeter, keeping
. the siding
branc hes from touc hmg
or foondation. Crickets are sll'Ongly

attracted to night lighl~ so use ycllow porch lights designed not to :
attract insects. Repair holes and
seal cracks on the outside of the
home.
-Fleas. Keep pets and pet-frequented areas clean. Thoroughly
vacuum rooms regularly. To pinpoint "hot spots" and help you
dec'de
1 whether to app1y pesuc1'des,
use a goose-necked light over a nnn
·
.-·
of soapy water to collect
adult fleas

'

overnight. Or, wear white socks the evening, close up the hole.
and walk through areas you suspect However, don't seal the opening
are infested. Fleas will jump onLQ between April and June. This may·:
the socks, which mQkes them easier trap young bars inside. Wait until ·
to see.
bats have raised their young or
-. Bats. Repair all outside · completely left the home to close
cracks and holes. If bats have taken . their access.
up residence in an attic or other
S ·
part of the home, seal all holes .at
- qutrrels. Use live traps to
Re.,.;r
the roost but the largest one, which catch invaders.
.
..- all holes in
should be left open for several the attic, m screens, along caves
Trim
days. Then, afrer bats have left for and around
h the foundation.
· .
thtree branfc es provtdmg access to
eroo ,

.

turned out for the first anuual Easter eu haul
Community Association.

•

symptoms to nutrient deficiencies among all transplant produters. So
in the plants, Namet!J says.
· ·opportunities exist for home-garWhtle most ofthiS year's garden den transelants to become infected.
transplants won't.be Infected with This is shll a minor concern in gar·
the ~uus., gardeners can e~sur.e they den transplants, but it's something
don t brtng home the dtsease by people must be aware or to prevent
choosmg only healthy transplants it from bect;Jming a major probat the garden center, he says.
!em."
· "Most home-garden Ul!Dsplanrs
The key to keeping the disease
are grown m greenhouses m north- out of the ~arden is avoiding transem states," Nameth says. "!OO':e's plants With virus symptoms,
\tttle chance gardeners Will fmd Nameth says. Symptoms include
plants shipped from the South, stunted and ·bushy growth bronze
which are most likely to be infect- leaf color and blackened stems:
ed.
•
.
Leaves of infected pepper plants
"But th~ di~ attacks many ofren contain ring spots.
crops and 1~ Shll not well-known
In the South, the virus mainly

Yogurt snack could open up new milk market
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPij - A
yogurt snack being developed by
food scientists at Ohio State University could open a whole new
market for milk products. .
"We're ialking about a dried
version o~ fruit-flavored yog,urt,"
says Davtd J. Dzurec, Jr. "This
product will be shelf-stable and
make a healthy snack."
Dzurec introduced a prototype
of ~~ he calls a "semisoft, partially dehydrated, fruit-flavored
yogurt food" at the National Confcduc:e on Farm Income Enhancemall sponsored by Ohio State in
~He's pleased with initial results,
but aay1 additional research is
needed before the yogurt roll-up
can be commercially produced.
Dzuaec's process takes yogurt, a
fermenred milk produc~ and dries
it 10 a moisture level that doesn •t
allow harmful microorganisms to
arow. The dried yogurt is then
roBed ind shaped for ~kaging hence the nickname ' yogwt roll- '
ups.''
The dried yogurt could also be
· sold u filling . (or bru,ld'ut bars,

.

'

confections and desserts.
The closest thing currently on
the marltet to Dzurec's ~fried yogwt
is either the dried fruit roll-ups or
yosurt-covered fruit markered by
several companies. Neither product
has ·the same nu,tritional and marketing qualities as the dried, fruitflavpred yogurt, he says.
"Yogurt is already viewed as a
healthful food.' That's one reason
why its market has taken off so
much in the last several years,"
Dzurec says. "What we' re doing is
taking those healihy qualities,
adding the convenience of no
refrigeration and !he fun 'taste of

About I 00 gallons of milk would
be needed to malce 400 pounds of
the product. And because milk supply is strong, the new product
wouldn't be competing With traditioital dairy goods.
The fact that lche yogurt roll-ups
are shelf stable would also help the
marketing process, Dzurec says.
Manufacturing could take place
when and where milk is in ready
supply and ihe final product
shi~ped to domestic or foreign populatton centers.

a_ble bacteria In the human digeshve system.
Dzurec1s prototype is a basic
dried yogurt product with ·an
acceptable texture and flavor. The
flavor was enhanced by adding
sugar and fruit flavorings. He's
stored the product up to four
months under refrigeration with no
decrease in quality.
,
But
before
dned
fruit
yogun
is
1
teady for the market, Dzurec neeifS
to answer a few more questions.
He says additional tesis must
confirm that the product will not
Like cheese, the yogurt roll-up harbor microorganisms that cause
is a c:onc:entraled form of milk. But food poisoning. Shelf life also
natural fruit.
unlike ~. the only lhina talcen needs ~ teating.
.
"This product can be an allema- out of the mllk for disposal is .
Dzurec wants to experiment .
live to snacks that ate less healthf'" water. Nutritious solid nutrients, with several different ways elf dryand be ''fun' enough that lhe picki- such u calcium, c:arbohydrallls ~ ing and pacbging the product. And
est kid will stiU enjoy iL In a way, protei~( lftl retained.
different flavors also need testing
it's amazing nobody else has devel· Other favorable characteristics by consumer taste panels.
oped such an idea. But liuit drying of yogui111'C1 ~ retained, Dzurec
"I'm confident that the product
and yogun production lftl two dif- !lays.
.
is basically rcadJ for consideraPeople with lactose intolerance tion." he says. "What's lefl is the
ferent manufacturing processes.
Food processors doni nor111ally can digest the ~ ·product even final tuneup In terms of flavor and
think of them together."
thous6 they can t stomach other markelina and more thorou&amp;h safeYogurt roll-ups would be a JI!IC· milk Jm!ucli. And yoaun products ty testing to make sure we haven't
tical answer to the dairy indllllly's may also contain antibacterial missed any potential health· consearch for new l'lilk m.arkets. ptupMies tlul help control undesir- .cems in the processing plans."
. '( f

attacks •to)la.cco and peanuts. But in
the Midwest, tomatoes and their ,
relatives - peppers, potatoes and
petunias -are most susceptible.
Other common garden plants hit by
tomato spoiled wilt vuus include
impatiens, chrysanthemums and
begonias.
· ~'If you stick a transplant with
the virus in the ground, the plant
will tum brown and die," Nameth
says. "The plimt will also serve as
a source of infection to other
plants. It's just best to just look
over transplants at the garden ccnter and choose the healthieSL"
It's unlikely the virus will travel
· between plants without the presence of thrips, even if the plants are
in close contact or touching,
Nameth says.
" While I would avoid suspect
transplants, I wouldn't hesitate t.O
pick other plants in a flat if they
look health)','' he says.
"If you ~re still concerned about'
the transplants, consider asking the
store. where they came from." .

Last year, six fields of commer- •
cia! tomatoes were tested by Ohio
State researchers. Five of the·r~elds
were Infected with 'tomato spotted
wilt virus at rares of 2 percent to 6
percent. Nameth estimates thai the
overall rate of infection for processing tomatoes was lower last
year than in 1989,
"We think southern growers
were more aware of the disease and '':
shipped us a lot fewer su'spect .. 'i i
transplants," he says. "Growers
also controUed thrip~ much better.
If the trends continue, we can go a
long way in preventing the disease
from spreading."

.

EGGS FOR EVERYONE • No ciae watt away empty hallded
from the ea bunt SUDd'J. Tbe Iuter Bunuy (lreuda Johnson)
was there to see to tbaL Here two yeilr old William Landers orPomeroy sets hll eglrom tile butllly. .
· ·

Twenty-four·bour time is widely '
used in scientific Wttk throughout the.
world, In the United States, it is used;:

,also in operations of the Armed ·
Forces. In Europe, it is frequently ;
used by the transportation net'I\'Orksin preference to the 12·hour, a.m. and ~
p.m. system. Wlth the 24-hour system,~
the day begins at midnight and Is des-;
ignated 0000 through 23~9.
'
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Growing.~ . _c_o_nt_in_u_ed_rr_om_ o_-1_ _ :.__,.:.-- - -::
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By Charlene Hoeflich
Sentinel Jl!ews Stall
Sunday's weather was
perfect for an egg hunt. . '
It was warm and sunny and the
mud in Middleport's Hartinger
. Park where the hunt was held had
dried up-well almost. The mud
was the reason the hunt had been
postponed from Easter Sunday.
Hundreds of excited youn~sters
gathered in the park for the Middleport Community ~iation's .fust
annual ~ter egg hunt.
· ·
After the sound of the siren.at 2
p.m. the more than 1,200 colorful
plastic eggs hid in the grass and
around the playground .equipment
were quickly found and swooped
up by; .the boys and girls in a grand
•

LOOK WHAT I GOT! r Tlaree year old Cbll'lull Stauley,
'diUibler or Cindy Stanley, Middleport, round two eus rqr Iter
basket at Suday'• eu h•t apd at Hardapr l'lrll Ia Middle- .
port. ODe I.'ODtalned a dollar biD, aaodter a lift w dflcale.

CAP£ CANAVERAL, Fla.
Two Atlantis astronauts
who saved ll $617 million astronomy satellite during an emergency
spacewalk Sunday ventured back
into the shuttle's open cargo bay
Monday tO complete testing of
space station construction equipmenL
.Wearing $2 million spacesuits,..
veteran shuUie flier Jerry Ross and
crewmate Jay Apt floated out of
Atlantis's airlock about 11 a.m.
EDT for their second ,spacewalk in
as many days, a scheduled six-hour
exercise to test ways of moving
people and equipment about in
weiahlleasness.
.
With commander Steven Nagel,
co-pilot Kenneth Cameron and
robot arm operator Linda Godwin
looting on from Atlantis's flight
dec:t, Ross llld Apt quickly got to
work, breaking out tools and
preparing to set up a 48-foot'monol'ail uact along one side of the
shuttle'• wao bay.
They then.planned to ride along

..
- - - r~•

rush to fill their baskets and bags.
Each of the eggs contained a
dollar bill. and some also included
a merchandise or food certificate.
All of the money and certificates
were donated by Middleport and
Pomeroy merchants.
Finding the golden egg which
was worth $50 was Chuckie Shamblin of Middlepon. Carl Buckley,
'!lisa of Middleport, found the silver
egg worth $25. A third prize of $20
went 10 Rhonda Hoover who correctly ldentified the bunny of the
day-, Brenda Johnson. .
. Middleport firemen were on the
scene to assist with the community
activity . They roped off sections
for the various age groups, hid the
eggs, and helped with kid conU'OL
·.•

Atlantis astronauts
begin 2nd spacewalk
(UPij -

.

cut js flower arrangements. They blooms per plant. Try and get t!le •
blossom in June and again in plants in pots which makes it much ;
September and grow to three to ea sier to plant. The c ontainer ~
four feet high.
·
should be removed and the plant·
Casa Blanca a beautiful white, _.set shallow so the top of the ball or'
Oiveden Beauty a bright Blue and soil is at the soil level after the •
Sapphire a dark blue and Bellajon- plant is set. Once the plant is set,
na are plants to consider the plant· waier it thoroughly. If the weather .
ing. These plants also, flower on turns dry, water often so the toots
stems three to four feet tall.
never get dry. If possible water'
The Pacific hybrid delphinium during the day, so the leaves will ~
should be considered in every become dry before night' Fertilize ~
perennialglll'den.
with a 10-10-10 mixture monthly,
P)anrs ~hould be purchased as during summer months. .
.~
soon as they become available in
Before f~eezing in fall, mulch
early spring. This assures one gel· the plants with saw dust. Never use:
ling the desired type and best quali- Maple leaves, because they decay
ty pblnt needed. Also, this assured fast and create molds that cause 110.·
the sooner the plants area planted . roots to decay. If leaves of any kind\
they will become established. This are used be sure and remove them ~
ensures earlier flowering and more in early Mlirch.
.;

or the Middleport

More than 1,200 take
part in Easter egg hunt

Gardners have a·new reason t.o practice safe gardening at center .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) the tomato spotted wilt virus sp~ead
Gardeners have a new· reason to . to this year's ~ection of garden
practice safe selec1ion ·at tile garl!en transplants, says an Ohio State Unicenter. It's the. tomato spotted wilt versity researcher studymg the disvirus - a disease that stunts and ease.
kills more than 100 types of vegBut Steve Nameth thinks tests
of recently collected plant and
etable and flower crops.
The tomato spotted wilt virus insect samples from several Ohio
became a ~lern in the Midwest greenhouses will show a small
in farmers tomato fields in 1989, presence of t!le virus in facilities
costing producers portions of their that handled Southern transplants.
crop's value. The virus arrived via Test results will be available in !are
infetted transplants of commercial spring. ·
tomatoes shipped from the South.
The tomato spotted wilt virus
· Tiny insects called thrips spread has appeared in garden transplants
in previous years with researchers
the virus.
,
So far, little evil:lence.exists that wrongly attributing the ,virus'

COLUMBUS, Ohio : American
Electric Power Co. is getting plenty
of advice concerning its .decision
on whether to install scrubbers or
switch to low-sulfur coal at the
GavinpowerplintnearGallipolis.
·Most of the advice: Install
,
bbers.
scruThe
decision has statewide, significance because 14 other coalbunting plants, producin' 63 percent of Ohio's electricny, soon
must also decide how to meet
requirements of the federal Clean
Air Act, starting in 1995.
The j(lbs of about 1,200 Ohio
miners may be at stake in the initial
decision, although AEP warns its
M · C ty m· e that ~ovides
e'$s oun
Gavm's
coal maymclose or other
reasons; even if SCI'Ubbers are chosen.··
·
. .Under either option, electricity
rates likely will increase as the uti!:
ities pass cenain compliance costs
to customers.
Manufacturers use half of OhiogCilelllted elecaici!}', which ineans
prices of their products prob~bly
'wlll lncreaae,lhe said.
AEP
earlier this year it
was leaning toward a switch to
Wyoming coal, whicb it described
u the iruJsl cost-dTtcicnt option. It
projected the cost of operating
Gavin at about $170 million a year
with acrubbers; $115 million with
out-of:sW.e coal.
But last week, Ohi.o Consumers'
Counsel William Spratley took
· OXQO(I1ioD wiiJl wllat lie termed 11
· Oatiecf'f,ll~ that did not allow
fully for. emisaions Credits that can
be earned with scrubbers.
·He asked the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to convene a

indlca::l'

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1 SIIOllan, 1G 1'8g• 21-ta .
A Mulllmedll Inc. tlssu 1p _rp~! ,

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continuedrromo-t

on:

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.e
SHANN.\ WARRINGTON, Findlay,,won Reserve Champion
Preview SteeV' honors during the recent cattlemen's association
sllow at,the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.

Low tOnight lo 60s. Chance Ot
raia 70 percent. H11h Tuesday
n1111r 80.
·

Kicker

Page.4

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the track on small electrical,
mechanical and manual carts that
may be used during assembly of
NASA 's space Sllltion Freedom to .
move people and equipment from
one pmnt to another.
Later, both astronauts were
scheduled to take. turns .riding on
the end of Atialltis's 50-foot robot
arm to gather data abOut the performance of the fragile space crane.
The shuttle tilers planned to reenter Adantis's airlock around 4:35
p.m. to close out the 15th space
walk in nine missions.
Ross and Apt puUed off the fllSI
U.S. spacewalk m more than five
years Sunday when lhey.tloattd out
mto Atlantis's open payload bay in ·
an emergency bid to free a stuck
antenna boom tllat derailed the
launch of the giant Oamma Ray
Observatory sarellite. .
.
' Not knowing what 10 expect,
Ross reached over and shook: the
boom, which imme&lt;!ialel).' swung
free to the delight of mission con·
·trollers in Houston

hearing on the issue. The PUCO :
.cannot dictate AEP's decision, but;
can reject or modify J?~S to recov-:
er costs. The commtss1on has not.
responded to Spradey's requesL :
But Ashley. Brown, a PUCO.
member, testified before House:
committee that importing
coal Crom:
the west is risky because ofh
t e.
potential for future ·cost increases.:
He said the best utilities could do is•
break even on out-of-stale coal but:
they can .m.alce money on prudent:
equipment investments.
•
Gov. 'George Voinovich all buC
endorsed scrubbers, promising to:.
preserve ml ners' jobs and·keep.
electricity rates as low as possible;
But the governor said, "y./e want io
hear what they (AEP officials'"'
want to do, and we will try to belp:
them."
'
'
..
Several hundred coal miner•
from southeast Ohio demonslratect
at ·the Statehouse for scrubbers last;
week. They were encouraj~ed by.
Rep. Jerry Krupinskt, D·:
Steubenville, and other members of.
.a special House committee that:
likely will recommend legislatlorr
to help utilities install clean coat
technology.
:
AEP said the Meigs mine maybe doomed because of high produc.'
tion costs. The company said:
Meigs produces 50 percent coa•
from m1!1ing a mix~ure ~f nJC!c and:
coal while other mtnes m Ohio set:
. cl~r to 70 ~nt ~·
·
The sea~ 1tsel,f IS not a very
f!ood om;. II s a ~~Jh-cQst opera;;
h~; that s'bulcally the PI'Oblem,
S!lld ~d ·~oney, AEP el~U·
tt~e vtce prestden~. The Metgs
m10e produces ·6 mtlllon tons of
coal a year.

a

Voinovich wants more
input into edu~ation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Oov. Gccqe Voinovich announced
last week that he in~ds to play
more of a role in educating the
youth of the Ohio.
.. He coul,d be finding out .this
week if he will get that added
authority when the House Educa·
tion ·Committee sits down Tuesday
for hearings on a bill that will grpnt
the governor power to appo101
members to the state Board of Education. The committee will tlso
hear a mcasure·that to eliminate the
whole board.
.
·The 21-member state board of
education is independently elected
from e8ch congressional district in
the state. This same board appoints
the state su~nlllndent of schools.
Voinovtch has argued
recently
.
'

that he has no control over the
future of pilblk eilucitlon in Ohio.
Now that current state auperintendent Franklin Waller has decided to
step down, the governor sees this
as a perfect opponunity to change
. the make-up of me board. '
House Bill 72, sponsored by
Rep. Joseph Koziura, D-Lorain,
would reduce the number of sp«s
on the board to nine, with each
being appointed by the ~ovcmor.
House Joint Resoluuon 2, IJIOII·.
sored by Rep. Wayne Jones, D~
Cuyahoga Falls, wants· to eliminitc
the entire board and replace it with
a single ~tor of education also ·
named by the governor. Thia measure is an amendment to the Stale
constitution, and if approved by lhe
legislature, would need to be ratified by Ohio voters.

--Local briefs--_,
Middleport man hurt in wreck
A ~ddlepon man was inj~ in a motorcycle wreck Stm,daY at
8:20 a.m. in Salisbury Township on S.R. 124, about half a mile east
of milepost 16, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State ·
Highway Patrol.
.
Troy R. Qualls, 21, of 30420 McElhenney Hill, was taken by the
Patrol to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he was treated and
released for bruises an4 scrapes.
Qualls, riding 1980 Honda 400, was heading east when he lost
control in a right-hand curve and overturned.
·
He was charged with DWI, cited for not wearing a helmet and
having plates belonging to another vehicle on the motorcycle. ·

a

Co'stanzo.-to speak to PTO ·

John Costanzo, the Meigs County School Board's Elemen~~ry
Supervisor, will be the guest speaker at !he Riverview Elementary
School's regular PTO meeting on Monday nighL Costanzo will discuss Ohio's statewide resting and diploma system. ·•
·
.
The meeting will get underway at 7 p,m., and a movie and
babysitting will be provided for children in attendance.

Lester transported to prison

Bobby Joe Lester has been transponed to Orient Correcti~al
facility to begin serving a sentence recently tmposed by the Me1gs
County Common Pleas Coun.
Accordins to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Lester
was sentenced on charges of receiving stolen property and gJand
theft.
·,

Movies announced
'I'hll movie for S.wn!ay at the Meigs Couqty Public Library will
be "TM HoruuJ Who Tholighl Ht Was a Raccoon". lt will be
shown at the Pomeroy Libnlry at2 p.m. on Saturda'- and at the Middlq!Ofl branch on Monday ll 7 p.m. All local chtldren are inviteil
to attend the free movie.
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Monday," April 8, 1891

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Commentary
.

111 c.n street

W ASHlNGTON - Fedem
inveltipkft lie QM!!inq lllcptiaos
lfii Food llld Dn1c Ac!minia.
tration officials are -using their
Inside infum«joo IIJout oew drug
· · IJliiiUVIIIIID pll)' die .a mwta
Tbineen FI&gt;A officials bave
• , been pqwcaed ID 1eSiiry bcfmi a
' fedenl lfUid jury ill Baltimon:.
The sulltn I II -.a from an DDgo~jOinl im utiprioo by lbe Secu·
riues Uld Exchange Commission
and Health and Human SerVices
Jnspec:10r · General Richard
Kusseaow.
FDA offn:ials, ini:Iudjng some
at high levels ill abc agency, an:
suspected of !iSing confidential

PomfftJ, Olllo
DEVO'ftlD TO ftiE IN'l'Bitl!lml OF TilE IIEIG8-JIA80N
AIDA
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ROBERT L WJNGBTT

CILULENE -BOEJI'LICII

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FDA official~ - come under fire :again

The Daily Sentinel
~

O.eniMa. .,..

PAT WBR'EIIEAD
............ Pl!lllllller/ CoNroller

A MEMBER of Tile United Pre!slnternattoll&amp;l, lnland DaUy Pres
. Asaoctat loll and tile American Newspaper Publlsbers Association.

.

.

LEIJ ERS OF OPINION are'l!'eleome. They should be Jell than300
: words lon1. AU letters are subJect to edllfDI and lflUSt be s.t ped with
: D&amp;JIIe, address and telepbone number." No unslped !etten wtU bepllJ&gt;.
Us bed. Letters abould be Ia IQOd tall!!, a~dresslag_tssues, not penonall-

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.~t;les:·~--------~------------------.=-~----~ ·

·congress ret=urnsfo ·a~a~ \.
WASHINGTON (UPij - With the Persian Gulf War no longer a dis·
. traction for Congress, the lawmakers now must focus on .a t'amiliar and
difficult doolestic agenda
The biJdsct, bank rd'orm, gun control, traile, and e~ policy are just
some of the issues lhat confront Congress as the members rei)Jm.Tuesday
from a two-week spring break. ·
·
: The Gulf War will continue to receive some attention, but Congress
basically has paid abc bill for the war, as well as providing a benefits
packagr. for the military pmonnel who (ought iL
•
, The House Armed Services Committee will begin its post-mortem
Tuesday wilh lbe first of a series of l!earings focusing on how the U.S.
8fSM8I of weapons, high'-tech and low, ptrlormed in the war against Iraq. ·
: For abe most part, abe congressional agenda will focus on familiar
cjomestic mailers lbat abe administration and the last Congress were
unable 10 re10Ive.
.
, The c:oming months likely will test whether President Bush's high
Slallding in public opinion polls will translate into more clout as be deals
with Congress. Even witbout the war boost, however, Bush was able _to
r;un !IP an impressive string of 16 vetoes that Congress c:ould not overturn.
, In his March 6 victory address to a joint session of Congress, Bush
Called on the lawmakers to CIIICI his uansponation and anti-crime packages in 100 days, the same time it lOOk to defeat Iiaq. But lhal deadline is,
viewed by most congressional leaders as merely symbolic and lbere are
serious disagreements to be worked out with both bills.
· The Gulf War c:ause4 renewed attention 10 U.S. dependence of(oreign
oil, and several Jli"''(ISAIS for a new energy strategy have been offered by
· members of eongr&amp;s ·f!lld ·abe administtalion. As in the past, how~et.
lbere are major differences on the need for new dil drilling, the role of
nuclear power, and energy CODStZVatioo. ' '
The deblle over gun c:onaol heats op .this week when a House Judiciary subc:oriunittee is expec:red to approve a bill to ~ a scv~-day waiting period for abe purc:bue of handguns. The bill ped momentum
rec:ellly when f~ Plaideilt Ronald Reagan, a formci opponent of gun
control, declared bis I!JPPM for the measure.
•
The full House is expected to pass !be bill, but it faces an uncatain fate
in the Senate where Democratic leader George Mitchell of Maine has.
~objections 10 tbe measure.
.
·
,. The adminislration and many in Congress are pushing for rd'onn of lbe
nation's troubled banking sy~. but it is illleenain if lhal can be accom. plishcd this year.
.
. ·
Some lawmakers argue abe first priority is to strengthen the bank
deposit insurance system, w"ich has been threatened with insolvency.
Others say that should be done as pan of a comprehensive bl,nk reform
pac:klgc that also would stteamline bank regulation and allow banks 10
· ~ their operlllions. 11le House Banking Cornmiuce will hold a bear·
ing on the mauer Thursday.
~ Hoose and Senalc Budget Committees face an Apri115 deadline 10
come up with the~ versions of !be 1992 budget resolution. The House
. panel is scheduled to get right to work on that Tuesday, with House action
possible next week.
Some view the procedure as irrelevant because of last year's ,pacl with
the .sministration on· a five-year budget plan that sets stringent curbs on
federal spending. 1be budgeteers are working ''in a straiti¥ket," one

·

With or without a formall!udget resolution the appropriations committees wiD begin ~~ out the actual spending bills for the vllrious
depar1meiiiS and agencies of the federal govmunen!When the Senate takes up the budget JeSOiution it may also have 10
deal with the controYersialllRIDOSal by Sen. Daniel Moynihan; D-N. Y., to
c:ut Social Security taxei. the idCI has wide support, but mlmy in
Congress are fearful of a new round of accusations about " tampering"
with lbe politcally sacrosanct Social Security system.
, Democrats are preparing for new battles with Bush over civil rights
and p~rental and medical leave. Bush vetoed both bills last year and the
Demoaats have reintroduced them this year with the expectation they
will again pass and be sent to the While House for another confrontation.
The rights bill, intended to protect women and minorities from
employment discrimination, is expecled to reach the House floor in the
ni:xt few weeks.
•
' Bush hll asked Congress 10 go along with a "fast-track" procedure
liw allows him 10 negotiate new trade nUes,wilb other n•tions, bul some
Ilwmllkm an: wcrricd lbOUl a proposed free uade pact with Mexico and
Its effect cin U.S. jobs. A more comprehensive lljlrel'niCDt with European
and other trading panners c:ould be endangered if the Mexican trade issue
sidetracks the "fast-track" authorization.
·

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PubliC Nollee

PubliC Nollee

•
: AOVERTIIIEMENT FOR
liDS
•
~olp County Council on
;Aging, Inc.
Mllge Colunty Sonlor

722
Pomo&lt;oy; Ohio 46719
Burgeu a Nlplo. Umltld
4424 Emerson A - •
p ........, . wv 21104
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CGplot thiCONTRACT
=y~lox722
DOCUMENT , . , be ob·
,_
41719
....... It IM Ofll01
Bur·
j~=• eted _.... bid for •1111 a Nlplo.
Umllll
8tlon of thl Mllp lac•lad ~ 4424 Erner•n
CountY Ienior CM._t Cen· Avenue, Pnonbura . . wv
;:..;- .,. - - by the 21104 upon ....,....nt of
County Caunri on
UII.OO.
Wll
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thl
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a, ordor of lht E-tive
County ..,lor Cll · Dl:wh:r ;.:••• County ·
Mut 1 ry Council on
ng.
flelalits, P.O. loa 722. l'v· f'·nor
~· Ohio 417U untl ~MOINator
p.m. (locllt-1 Aprtl 13! 27; 1412. 1. 14 4tc
113. , ••, """ It oold
..... pul:lloly CPII ... .r PUbliC Nota
,.... olo:;il.
•

of

t':':" Cent•.

j · ThiWOIIIaouaMbythl
CONTWACT DOCUMENTI

==1M I, ':lb.............

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wll .

~UNTY

!MEi'e.,S
SENIOR
• Cm21!NI CENTER
.
• Temp clUte Controt. A•
j;elr, ...bolt, or::l llt:,ce·
Sorvlcl of ... . lor
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• Till CONTRACT DOCU·
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=.nc. of

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1M Eaeci liww

NOTICE TO
· CONI'IIACToRS
ITATI! OF OHIO
Dfi'ARTMINT OF
TRAiirSPOIITATION
co~um~~u

•. 0111::

M..... 21.1H1
(:orltroct SIIH ~ Copy
• No. 11-·
UNIT I'RICI CONTRACT
IRZ· I302C11
...... prapDIIII wll lie
. . . . . . . . thl ofll:oe 11:1
Dl:- oftllwOI:Io~-

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1M •

I don't know how else to
describe the new report by the
Food Research and Actioo Center
except 10 sar it is both stunnin.J
and horrifymg. The non-proftt
nutrition advocacy organization,
funded in ~by C0111111C1tia1 food .
supplieD 1i11e Kraft Gcuen1 Foods
Inc., found lbal ODe out of eight
American children suffen from
hunJicr at Ieist ~of CK:h month.
'fbc firsa thought tbat ran
through my mind was that some of ·
abe children I come ' illto contact .
wilb every day might 1101 actually
be as I have piclllrcd them • poor,
but II least having tbeir basic: needs
met
My second thOught had to occur
to people all across abe nation as
they read about the n:port in their
newspapers: "Slill7 We still have
lhal many children hungry in this
country? Wilb abe capability of
feeding abe world, wilb food surpluses rotting in wan:houses and
massive' govemmenlal food pro-

Miilri"Y Neigl:to · P.O . ....

T-,.,A,rtJ0,1H1 , 1or
lo..,auazwnla IR: ......
County. Ohio. • llctlon

What. a difference a month
makes! As March began, Americans were still enjoying the rush
that followed Gen. Schwarzkopf's
stunningly successful libelation of
Kuwait. Qur boys (and girls) would
be borne soon, and meanwhile
Qeorac Bush's popnlarity was skyhigh.
.
A month laler, tbe Middle East
has !UOJed into a royal mess. "Surgic:al" mili..-y strikes have been
replaced by tnsolublc political
problems, and over everything
hangs the dark, greasy pall of the
smoke from !be rues of 9 Kuwaitl

MEG· 143-14.74,
Stote
Rauta
143 In Colum•la
T-.lllp,
. . .........tt . . . . . . . .
a WlumlniYI • • I I .... ... lllll'to '

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No. -·141·1

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tor en
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forclll cone- •pod pie - i l l l l l l a - - 1 ....

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ttllta::
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fwt«O.t Mil.
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tn IIJI!G M to tNIIsstllallust
...._

grams, children in America still
have 10 grow up wilb tbe memory
of hunger burned into"lbcir consciousncsses?"
The whys are preuy simple:
Housing and utilily costs tal up so
much of a poor (amily's iilcome
that there's noa enc:fh left for
food, and federal r.
programs
designed 111 climinalc hunger are
ncidier fully financed 'nor fully
used.
·
The facrprs that Jell. u 10 Ibis
point lie much more compleJt .00
we'll have to unravel them before
we make any lastinf c:hanae. 111ey
have to do with IOClety'J Uilure 10
adequately bclp poor people
become.productive, IIIIC-supponins
workers and with a welflft ..,....
tus lhal aids poor people rigba up 10
the point of bearing children md
then fades away once the kids an:

::r:. to

Njl:lt

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_ y for_ the
. Plac:ing .tlrst, individuall
C
·men were ·Mark hoe ( scn1or,
Chillicolbe) in the l500 meter run
at4l~. wbilt Aaron Griffin (fresb·
man, Wellston) was IDpl in tbc 400
meter dish at 50:4 seconds and in
the 200 meter w1th 22.2 seconds.
Blaise Reader (sophomore,·W~Iy) placed fmt in abc bl~h Jump
with a diseanCe of 6 feet. inches.

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Darrell Marcwn (senior. Hamilton)
slammed the ball out of abe field
and sparked four RBis. ~~· '
who was. two for ·three, earlier 10
~l:'ponet:;~orint!odoa:l~ti:.:f ·
.
RB1Is. W "ght (sophomore Carason n
'

more, Ohio) was first m abe 1500
meter run at 4:46.'7, the BOO meter
run, 2:24.2; and tbe 3000 me_ler
run, 11:01.6. s~.
(se~.
sunbury ) was f ust m th~ tr1pie
jump at 32 feet1.. 7-1/2 ·~che~ .
~·was also~ in lbe ~vebn·
wtlb ,83 ·feel, 8 mc:hes ~d m the
1~1_11, Jump, 14 fect.4·If2 ~he8,., .
. , ··In other· events . Deb~IC (Jray
(sopho~orc. McCoJIIICisville) was_
fourlh m the 5000 , meter run,
21.57.5, w~ilc M¥1Y ·~aynard
(senior, Racme) was ·.lbud m the
shot pu_t, 27 feet, 7 mches, and
• urlh tbe 100 ter dash 13 8
.o
m
me .
• ·
seconds.
The men's team will !f1Vel10
Canton on Saturday, Apnl 13 for
the ~d.Qhio ConferenCe Champi·
onsh1ps at Walsb. .C.QUcg~._'[ll()..
women arc scheduled to com~
.in the Dogwood J Relays m
Knoxville, Tenn.. on Friday.
,

~: ~h~!~WJ:'i=~j

0111!· -·~

........... .......... ............. 1.115

ooe v- .......,......................... -.•
·l l!loL&amp;oon

pitched for the home 1e1111.
·
Now 1·9, the Rio ladies return
to action Tueadly wilh a home twin
bill apins1 Walah.

~- three
and McConnell was one or
•
also wilb a home run. ·
Taking the win from abe pitch·
ing mound was Chad Carroll
(sophomore, Chillicothe), who
im--' his season slalc to)·l.
Y"v·-

~~:~i~:f~C:; :

.&amp;..

·
ah d
Redmcn cres~ ca o:!~~
hits .-Kitwo errors. Gary .,...,_.,
(acnior, Gallipolis) ~plone: two
wilb' a double 10 comffcete
top
performances in the 0 ettse.
· Andy Bulach (sophomore,
Hamilton) went 10 3-3 Wllb the win
as ·me pitCher. Central State was
hi _ .. had
held to 6ve
twoenors.
Leading the hitting was Hebbler.
whose one hit out of three at-bats
spurred two of the Marauders' .
runj~ Saturday' 5 first game with
Cedarville, the Redmen again .
exploded "for 12 hils a,s Ted
Thompson . (freshman, New
Lebanon) was credited with three
RBis from his three for four performance. The Redmen held their
' errors 10 one, while Cedarville was
allowed three hits by Marcum,
whose record wentto.4•2· The Yel·
low JackeiS also had three errors.
· James Lewis (junior, Cincinnati)
and Bob Young (senior, Utica)
wen: each two for lbree. to complete the top hitting for Rio
Grande. Cedarville's Ashcrafl was
one for two while Allison lOOk the
Iossfromthepitcher' smound.
The day's action ended as Brad
Roser (freshman, Delaware) held
Cedarville to five hits and the Red·
men went ahead on eight hits on
two for three performances by
Lewis and Herb Sharfenaker
(senior, Columbus). Clemens was
one for, two for the visitors, who
comm·iued one error. Roser
imJlrllved his first season piiChing
rec:Ord 10 3-1 and the Redmen also
had one error.

IS.....

, Rio Grande hosts Urbana in .a
conference doubleheader at 1 p.m.
Tuesday and fQces TiFfin on the
Dragons' field Sa~(.' April 13,
~foralp.mtwmbi ·
We ha!~ two v_ery important~es
With l!rbana 8J!d
be~·.and good' .:.'::.w~"'fn ~~
diS:C~~ the c~';nce," Oglesby said. wvictories over ~ awo.
teams will IISSille us a berth m the
playoffs, but I'm not cotinlin' my
~:hickens IDltilabey're hatched.

conu::Es

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N o attblcrlpt- bJIDIU

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PeDJUlns 4, Devils 3

B DAVE RAFFO
S rts Writer

Ope ·

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rJ:: Monday will fe1-

tore 51 ~ lloger a~. 44year-old Nolan Ryan llld Plesident

.• .!.-.

·-··-·-.,. '··"' "{, ~·

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ofthepfayoffs.

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levied by AL president Bobby m~ Kirk Gibson.
Brown because of tbe Bos10n
In lhc NL. abe Mets have two
Bruins 6• Whalen 3
pitcher's outburst during abe 1990 new outfielders, Vince Coleman
At Hartford, Conn., Gany Gal•
pla~ffs.
•
and Hubic Brooks, in a lineup re- ley, Dave Christian and Bob
"gned
d ff !be 1
Sweeney scored goals during a
f th m· d period 10
. Iemens will Sllrt at Toron10 des1
to try an o set
oss 3 16
against Dave Stieb in one of five of free qent slugger Danyl Straw-. ; s~ ~(I If
Galle
AL openers. In abe oCher AL clay' berry. Pliiladelphq.'s most impor· power
·
enac;;~
Y
games, the New .York Yankees tant newcomer is former Met sec• snapped a 2·2 tie at =4 With 1
send Tim Leary against Detroit's ood baseman Wally ~an.
blast fromh theh dleftcircle. ~g Jan! •
Frank Tanana at Tiger Stadium.
11le umpires were scheduled to' ney , w o a two assistS, a so
Jack McDowell will start for the meet in Clucago Monday to discuss scofeil a goal along with Ray
'Chicago White Sox 81 Baltimore slralegy and perhaps 10 decide on :~:J::,C
~~e!C:~Isf~a!':·
against Jeff Ballanl and Cleveland setting up picket !iDes. This would from Mark Hunter, Pat Verbeek
starts Tom Swindell in Kansas City be the rust strike of major league
amo;nst B-u Sa.....,·-.
umpires since the, 1984 playoffs.
and Terry Yake.
,....
·~
.,...._...
....;._ _ _.;,._.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
On Monday night, Mark Knudson pitches for Milwautee against
Ryan and the Texas Rangers. Bush
will throw out the first ball at
Arlington Sladiwn.
.
Rangen owner Gecqe w. Bush .
h~ been trying to enco~ bis
In order awoid waiting in Une"and tho drive
father
_ to throw out the first tch at
to Polllll'oy on llldfon Day, you must rogfdor
a Texas home oPc:ner for e past
three rt.Jears. First Lady Barbara , ....y chaniJOI In your registration btforo April
;:!'s .:; :;.~orw~ra~:":'o~
1991 at 9:00 , ...
pitch with her husband Mooday.
You may register, chango your rogistration at
Ryan enters the season with
5,308 strikeouts, six no-hiners and
our office at 108 Mlch~Mic Strut, Pomeroy,
302 victories.
Ohio. Daily 1:30 till 4:30.
Houston is the visiting 1ea111 for
the Reds' traditional hQme opener.
AT OUI PDIUIIIT IIAfiCH LOCATIOJi,
The Astros will send Mike Scott
PoiiDOY NIUC u•AIY ·
against Cincinnati's Tom Brown·
ing in the rii'SI of lbree Monday NL
OPEN MONDAY T1llU -AY '"". 9:0C» a.m. til 9:00 p.m.
games.
·
SATURDAY ...........;••••,............... 9:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
The Reds, w.ho swept. Oakland
SUNDAY ................................... ~ 1 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
in the World Series, rmished t!leir
exhibition season at 13-17·1 with
Sunday's 4-3 loss to lhc Cleveland
Indians in t~e Ohio Cup game at
APIIL lth 19911HI IOAID oma WILL ALSO IE OPDI .
Columbus.
FIOM 9:00 A.M. nLL 9100 P.M.
' ' It's tough to repeat,'' said
Reds first base coach Tony Perez, a
member of the Cincinnati's Big
Red Machine of the mid-1970s.
"People believe -because they win '
one year, you can repeat easy .
That's not the way it ;s.
·
WE HAVE IT AT COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
"To repeat, you have to play
With Our Last New 1990 Single Wide; 14x80
better because the other teams will
play better against you. Lasl year,
noa even the people in Cincinnati
thought we would go all the way.
"That's wbat made it
for ',
·:.,
,•.. ,.
us last year. This year, .it will be
different. If we want to win it
. again, we've got .to oiJIY bc.t ter
baseball thaD last year.'~
The Philadelphia Phillies and
FEATURES: upgredl doori upgrCide 01r,_. 6 pld, c1thedr1l ;
Kevin MulhoUand visit abe New
eelllng, IP111Ylld • tutuiCid ceiling• thJOUghout 15 cu. ft. 2
door rllfrlger~tor. upgr1d1 lnlulltlon, 100 emp Hf'Yiel, 30
gallon wlter helter, utrl window In h•A-y, option•lllnen · ·
. f'H'Nii VAl if' f.INf ~A
cloa.a
In bethiOom plu1 muall. much more.
·
-~ l h •l' ,.,

.

Tb':

ATTENTION:

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
to

a,

:oo

*'* * * ** * * * * *

_l:.ooking For A Bargain?

easx

-

. "ONLY TAX

a TITLE DOWN" ('1012)

PER MONTH

SALE PRICE

-~197-74 •

'· •16, 700°0 .

---

.. , .71 "'" ..... llltllloo\OW--

(JOC) 675-1244
•

•

. "Maybe it's better we got our ·
butts kicked,' ' Beaupre said.
"We'l~~ much more deter~

"WE HAVE HEARINI AIDS"

.........
. ..... . .................. ......
u.w........ ., ................... ,............ .

&gt;

•

to control a bouncing puck in froni
York Mets and' Dwigbl Gooden in of his own netlnd Recchi skatect
the ocher NL da)' game, and Mon.: up a n- = it between New Jer·
treai sends Demis Martinez against sey
tender &lt;:luis Terreri's legi
Pittsburgh, which starts DOQ&amp;' for ~~~ g~c wmner. New Je~t
Drabek at home Monday night.
. had lied II 3-3 on _Doug Brown s.
Clemens will be facing a reQ!Od. shorthanded goal wtlb S:l4left.
eled Blue Jays' lineup. which •
Sabres 5, Cana~ns 4
.
includes new acquisitions Joe
At Buffalo_. N.Y., ¥ikC ~sey
Carter and Devon White in the out~ scored early Ill the lbrrd penod to
fieldandRobertoJ\Iomaratsecond lift the Sabres in a back·and·fonl!:
base. Boston's most prominent new. game. Raffi$ey's goal came at 2:38
plarerisDHJackCJark. .
ofabc)hiJd when Rob Ray c~
Other AL_playm making debuts abe puck from the corner. Ramsey
with new teams include Detroit shot it by abe stick side.of Montteal
rlihl fielder Rob Deer and catJ:heP. goaltend~r Patrick Roy. ~ren(
Mickey Teuleton, White Sox out., ~ Gilchrist tied it for abe~~fielder Tim Raines ud DH Cory 17:58 of the second period wtth hiS
Snyder, Baltimon: first baseman secondgoalofthegamcandf~

"110 -

diNEUL ALLERGIST

0111111 ..... o-IJ
II W..........,.................. ,.. ,.........

I
(

,

Price lncludllllloclll. up to 20 ft. tMt...., fll~ •ell utMy OOIIMC1ion,
118 dowN. ful \llrivllldnlnt llld one 1M of otePt !Mtll 4x4 decll.

01, NOSE &amp; THROAT

.
........... o-IJ
u-...
......................
........ ...... ..
-..........
..........................
.........................................,.
.

"'

IUASANT YAUIY HOSPRAL

permitted.lo

- - - ·....... --r.....
evallabla.
.. .1

•

uu""

:~~:os:sd,~~~:r~:ef~p=~ biesbrouckFeb.
ho!~~=er~~J~~to~~
6,1988.
:

•

_ A.~· ~A-E, ~.D.,. Inc.

Sulllc:"lben not detlriDJtopty lbo&lt;U·
rllr .!fiiY remit In illlvuce dlrocl lp
. 'J'¥DallySeiltWloool;lorU.JIIcll"

1,.

,

•

E5

. .CIII
Dally ..... ...... .. .... .......1:.. .. ..... 25 CeDis

.........

le in the whole St'J'ies,"

dover Md.
play. You killlbat (rmt penalty)
. Also Sunday .niJht ·Pi~urJh off, it's really key and you give
edged lbe N J
Devi114 310 e~one a boost.':
· . ew,_efSC!Y, ""
- -"
.

1

Cooke_

•*'

. , CUrlor or ..... ooe w.-.........................
. . .......a .eo

_ _.. ......

i:;Our~~
- ~periodty::Uhabl:~:: ~~~!~;a~

George Bush makinlect~ir ~
and t1ie Cincinnati
beginlllng
rmoal~eal~~ew;r' ~:~ f~~~~efo~~! defense of their rlfSt world champih
· h b
h .
onship in 14 years
three-run o_mcr tat : ; :
It ivil1 IIOlinclWle~major
fo'f ~Is.~~~~ for~ league umpires, who will m~s the
~b!se~d was crediled with two ' eight Monday openers bamng,a _
a
last-minute settlemenl Tiley wtll
runs.
be replacc!l by amlteur wnpires.
the~ew~~:':!.hlt'am or- , · BJJt lbt= playcr.s, many newly,
manc:e and no Crrors, while enttal richer, will be on harid. Clemens,
had who signed a four-year, $21.521
~tate man~ nine hits ~d
. million contract in the offseason,

~ Lake Eric mounted a 14"run credited 10 Angie Joseph (freshauack in Saturday's doubleheader man.- Groveport), Renea Lundy
with the University of Rio Grande (sophomore, Jackson), Beth Floyd
softball team to hand abe Redwom- (freshman, Midland); Alice Caudill
eti losses of 6-2 and 8-3 at Stanley (freshman, Hamden) and Robin
Stull (sophomore, Hillsdale).
L. Evani r~eld.
Lake Erie's Storm adVimecd on Joseph also pitched fur Rio Gru,de.
In the·second game, Rio Grande
six hits in lb~ opener, while Rio
served
up six hilS but wasp~
Grande countered with five hits
with
five
errors as Debbie Dtxon
and limited its errors to one. The
(junior,
Wellston)
accounted for
visltont,allo committed one error.
·
the
·bulk
-of
the
hitting
with"three.
The· Red women 1\itting was
The Stonn answered wilb eight hilS
and had a Single error on its way 10
the win. Joseph also took the loss
The Daily Sentinel
fertheho$1S.
(tJIP!IIIIHI)
The Rio ladies fell Friday, 3-1
A .,.,..._ e1 MeM• '?' lac.
and 13-6, in anoth&lt;ir home double. ,.
header with Mount v,ernon
Published every afttrDOCII. Moncllly
tbrouiib' Friday; 111 Court St.• Po·
Nazarene in what was the, Redmeroy. Olllo, by .... Ohio VaUey Pubwomen's frrst Mid-Ohio ConrerUahJni Compaay/Mu)tbnedlo, lo&lt;..
ence game of !be seasoo.
Pometoy. Olllo em. Ph. 112-n!ll. seeond claJJ pmtqe pald •• ,Potqeroy,
Rio Grande betted six hits in the
Olllo.
,
r~.
three qf them provided
l.
. by F10y4, and had one error, \Vh~e·
Membrr: UntCid ....,, IDtorullCDOI,
liM'
Inland DaUy Preu AIIOOI1t""'
the Lady Cooiglrs IJC)Itcd seven hits
Olllo Ntwa~oolalloL !'lttlonal
and
also limited the cnors to one.
Mverlla'-11
· tatlve,llnaham
NOWJJIIOpF'
II, 733 Tlllrd AYIDIIO,
JOiephpiJChedagainforthehosla. ·
New Yorll, N.,. Yorl1l0017. ·
In .the nighll:lp; tile R~women .
'
belted
in nine hilS, tbree by Lundy. •
POIIJ'MABI'ER: adJII-. .......
and had line enon 10 MOunt Ver=.::-"'~=- iU OMa1 St.,
~NilATII

.

24 playoff pmes.

.rwe

but were hltUng

,
Reade~ was also second in tbe
triple juml;' with a distance of 43
feel, 7-112 mc:hes.·
AI~ finisbi';'g for the !"e~' s
team we~ TraVIS Rambo Oumor,
Coiumbi~). second in sho! pthut,
49 feet, 2 inches, and second m e
discus, 1~1 ~eel, 10 inc_hes; Tim
MllfJ!hY (jul)tOr, Zanesville), second m abe 11~ hurdle~, 1~. 1 seconds, secol)d m abc hllh JU!"P· 6
feeMi inc:~. 'and second m abc
490.!D_termediate.~ea. SS.6 sec~.
cin&lt;lf;_~ ~ -Mich!g~ (freshc
man, Kc~~ fourlb 'J,Dthe 800
meterdash,2:(\U.S.,
..

.

l

unbelie

teaci.

_lift the Ran.~ a 6-() VICtory at
the Cap tal
N y ort leads

.

Bernie Nicholls ·scored two
goals and abe Rangen killed all
five Wasbiugton power plays.
Richter made eight saves while

Richter's f'ust shutout lfter 68
·
regular-season games .and nine :
playoff CODlCSCS came .C. Wash·
iuglon's Don Beaupl") blanked tbc
RaniiCII in tbc second game.
the had chances
pia doesand that' s
wbal power Y
.-gener·
ate chances," said Capitals forward
Mike Ridley, who had five shots on
goal, "They made the dcfen~,ive ,

l'llrick
~ 2-~ inln ~ ~~- "'""·
- - ...., _._WI.......
sion, Bllffaio shldcd Montreal S-4
10 CUI ita delic:it to 2-1 and Boston
_clippejl
_ .Hartford 6-3 to take a 2-l
takeDiVlSlOII
'

!hem

\

Re.dwomenfiall to Lake Erie,
Mou nt Vernon over weekend

,.

(

'J

Reds--to-begin defense . _ mn:s•..:~yoff•!,
~
~~:\!W.~rs.
of world title today zn R:C\.~~=-o~ci'~~
Rio
at~letes place first ~~~~~.;~~~{~ onener a:oainst Astros ·~{;~~~~~J:
,ID
· quad rangu Iar meet .
r .
o·
.
U{.:

s:~.s.

I

ON THE ROPES

N Y. R a_.ngeTS., .p l·uSburoh, B 0 Sr,O
-1n,
b
B u.iffia·t0 wzn
• . Ct.
J\ THL
. . . p la'"0iff c0 nt estS
.,

:.-.~;~:= · ~~m~::·!~~r:
. . ~~~:;~~:;Iay~
the Mid-Ohio Colifercoce, where _very I~ m spots and ~ ~~ so

and Oberlin fourth wilh 2.
. "We may not have the bodies,
but I think wc:ve proven we have
the talent if we can come away
· b fi
from a ·meet 'like this wlt ust
place in some of the events," WilIcy saidi ·, . .
, .. The mect.-bekl aa owu·~.Selby
· Stadium,. was ~pl*' ~ abe.
1600,(1.:mHc)•COIIIpclill01' for
boah teams. The Redmcn plac~
fml with a dme Of 3:24.4, while
the ~edwomen finished third at

l

..

Jd'

~f:.C~e~~bl!!f:ca!l~iirf~ . Re~'!ih:;:&lt;s:,~o~g;~~~t~)ti: ;::~~'!~E :::':::eon~~~};tfi: ~!:s~a:~da~H~t:!~

cur.

'

•

.-

, ·
,.
Despite the diminished numbers
.,
of alhletes, abe Univenity _.of Rio
Grande men's and women s track
~s displayed the tal~nt Coach
. Bob Willey had sensed m the preseason by placing in a quadranguJar meet Saturday at Oh10 WeshiyanUlli~inDelaware.
Tbe ~en's le~J!D place.d third
· overall wtlb 43 pom~. behind sec·
ond-place Watsb, which~ S9,
a~d OWU, wb!~h woo abc meet
: w11b 63. Oberlin Collca_o. *~
. -fourth with 18: Thc.:Red,,...omen·
~wct-c_'seC:on"d iri their CCIDlpeli~on
wilb30points~OWU's.J••dyBish-,_

William A. Rusher

abe Middle East. The n:gion has
been 1 diplomatic snake pia ever
since abe collapse of tbc OUoman
Empire in abc First World War.
Jut hl&gt;w terrible, 111yway, lie abe
various problems lbaa afnic:t it
todlly'l Noa half so Nil as thole we
fKcd when Saddam Hussein invad•

mena

·
Willi. leas than a month left in '. With viccaies of 12-~ and 6-3 behind Ohio Dominican, the Rio
the regular se8son, abc University 'pver Ccotral Stile Sunday a~. men an: 2-0.
of Rio Grande baieball team 3-2 against Cedarvillc Saaurday,
"I'm v_ery pleased with be!g

. ·

edKuwaiL
If George Bush had not acted
then • and fast • Saddam could . IrJ some equivalent thug? Allemahave wall1ed Slraight through Saudi uvely, what if the Kurds and/or the ·
Arabia and the Gulf emirales witb- Shiites improbably succeed, 111d
out even wrinkling his khakis. And we face \hal dreaded consequence, ,.
!hen, with control of most of the oil "the Lebanonization of Iraq"? (If it
in the Middle East in his pocket, he · was good enough for Lebanon, it's ·
could have dictated terms to the good enough for Iraq.)
West, inciiJIIinl the United States.
What I'm saying IS thai the situ•
So what if he is still in Bag"- ation in the Middle East is indeed a ·
dad? His teeth have beeil pulled, mess, but none of !he legion's
and it would be generous to esti- rent problems threaten • as Saddlm
mlle his shelf life at six months. · Hussein's actions in August 1990
But what, even, if Iraq hangs most certainly did - the vital intertogether, under him or (more lilce- ests of the Uniled Stales.

•,

bw·

lhe,Redmm·wac.sec:ondlastweelc

r

Berry's World

.:. .

Brad Powell will be upper c~men who will give tbe 1991 seuon
a try .
Sophomore participants are
Scou Baker, Chad ·Savoy, Jm:my ·
Buc.kley, MaU Michael and Billy :
the rants.
Baker, while mshmen include Wes
Senior Aaron Wilson, juniors Arbaugh, Tyson Rose, Pat NcwMik.e Newlud, Wes Holter and -land, Randy Kaylor, Todd
Marcinko and Jared Ridenour.

u sopbomores were seniors Jenocl
Ba~Wr. Paul Erwin, Mickey Bauer
and Chrili Adams.
The heart of a gn:at team is in
place plus a host of unlimited
young talent is coming up through

c:ific woatnesses. however, said, 1811 f:61his pme. Tbia IC8!1Y makes
MMy inexperience as a bueball ourjobmucheasier."
coech could be a weakne$1. I hope
Returning Icucrmen include
Ibis does not hurt the efforts our senior Oulfielden Mau Finlaw and
kidlwilllllllke." .
Mart Murphy,J.- Hager, senior
Eichinger's coaching talents. catcber; jumon Jeff Durst. Mlb
willauidc abe team in the riJht Smitb, .00 Tim Bissell, all pitcbln
direction~ He wu·lhe last BHS and iafielders; and juniorl Rod
beslre«&lt;WW
10 win a section· N e - -" K..._ P~••ngb
' at c:rowa and was lhe longtime
N;;t'
~ yarliiit:r.:tion
EHS ~e mentor. This will ~ a
bi&amp; piUI for him llld his leiDI this
diiii'(]Cid season ·
.
• .• .
~said. ''We have good
~ hilting, experienced defense,
fair speed, and are very deep at . .
least awo in every position."
.. "''m sure we wiU tty to make·it
as difficult as we can for other
By DAVE RAFFO
teams 10 beat us. we hope !0 field a
. UPI Sportl Writer
reserve team and have a good ·
Mite Ricllcet credired abc New
group of sophomores and fresh- . Yorlt 1\aagers penalty-killers for
men.
.
their Game 3 playoff vic"'"' !YVer
'"
•
lhat
kids
I m very •ortunale
our
. the Washingtoo Capitals. .,...,.
havehadexccne.ttcoacheslitevery
Andtherewasnobecta"penalty
level of competition who·have killer Sunday night than Ilicbter
taught
the proper fundamen- himself.
.
Richter stopped 37 shots,

ning a pair of weekend double-

Sarah·Overstreet

nne lllllighlening ~ 0111 in

. .RRYWIIAY.
DIIIE~II 01'
TIIAIIIIPC) ATiON
1411. 11. 2tc

...
( -""'~·--·-

.

oil wells. '
What kind of jlolitical outcome
do we want in Iraa1 • and, in any
case, can we get it'? Saddam Hussein is still alive and well in Baghdad, far crying out loud. The Kurds
rose against him in the north, and
the Shiites in abe south; but he ·
seems to have suppressed both
rebellicns. Bua we an: warned lbal
if we help the Kurds and Shiites,
anci Saddain falls; we will simply
have accomplisbed "abe Leban~ ­
ization of Iraq. • ·
And what about Kuwait? The
emir finally got around to going
home, but his reception has been
di$tinctly cool. At least some
Kuwaitis apparently want more
democtacy. Meanwhile abe IiUle
country is in ruins, and the government ICCIDS sluggish about improving things.
For thai maner. whallbout Iran
and Syria? Iran 1s abeady fishing in
Iraq' 1 troubled waters, and Syria
must be sorely, tempted ,to do so.
Should we warn lbcm off, or let
evenJS Ulke their course?
Finally, there are Still olher
players 1n abc Middle "Eastern
g1me: Israel, determined not to
yield lo pressure for some illadvised settlement; Jordln, trying
to inch ita way bllck Ill aa:epcability; Turkey, fearful of Kurdish
ambitims Jbat tbrealDD ita own borders; Saudi Arabia and abc Gulf
emiralel; Egypt; 1be PLO. -·
No wolilfer Prcsidellt BuJh
decided,10 go fiJhing in lbe Florida
Keysl
'
•
Bua perbaps Jbat- eucdy the

t:::J

wu
le~crman Jeff Dursl,
who
.410 ovcrall. Tim Blssell wu honorable mention Ill·
SVAC.
After an eight-year n:ign ud
seven straight winning IIOUODS,
Sc:oa Wolfe lllepped down as COIICh
and I\rmis EM!~ has ISSIIIIIed
con'tro•· of ... ~ EHS program.
jk is llii;., by
EHS stars
Eddie ColliDund Brenl Bisaell.
. Eichinger COID"l""led tJ:lat ~iJcel have gone areaa despite IimiaedOUidoordme.
"My oudc:iok for abe season isthai we will take one game at a
time and 1llaY • weU as we possibly can. r hive IWCDty seven good
athletes. The competitioo during ·
practice is always 11 a bleb level of
play. I think Ibis will hoiP ·make us
a Jood team. I have two really
good assistants who have a lot of
·
· ·m- baseba 11 · Th ey
expencnc:e
w1
llave been really good for o.ur
kids."
·
BichinJ!el' did not note any spe-' ·

.

is extremely simple: Make sure .
lhesc childrm eat This is a unifyingiisucifeverlherewereooe.
After writillg a newspaper column for 10 years, I have fought we believe we have proven a need
with ~ over many so-called for them, we will .fund them .
"liberal" issues, but never over We've proven we have a need to
whether we should feed hungry give more food to poor people
cbildren. I've mea bani-nosed con- whose children an: going hungry,
flllMiives who would fight me till · so we should fund iL , ,
•
we both d10pped DY« other issues,
, When I was a television con-bu' not this one. ~Y of them sumer reporter and administered a
were hungry kids themSjllves. They
volunteer-scarfed hotlinc, I found -'
pew up during abc Depression or there are more volunteers looking
mpoor fam.ilies before we had pro- for meaningful work·than·we have
grams designed 10 help theni. They meaninfful work to give lbem.
would never wish a moment of Marty o these ~1Hn!retired
wblllbey went through on another executives a_!!« skilled former
child.
employees who could e~sily
What are we going to do? l
administer and operate a school's
think Congress is going to have to
breakfast or summer lunch proapprove more money for federal . gram.
.
food program~. 11 least in the short
We have the food, aru1 we have
here.
run, and p~ovide incentives to
the manpower to end child hungt7
However we come 10 terms wilb developers to build affordable lowin this country. We can no longer
these problems is further in down income housing. We don't have
say we did -nothing be!cause we just
the road. What we have 10 do now money for more missiles, but since
didn't know.

S

By SCO'IT.WOLFE 1
Sentlnel CClieaOIIdellt
With seven returiilDg 1eaennen
ant;! a new COICh the EasBn Bagies
of first year mentor. Dennis
Eichinger are. JootinJ forwaniiD a
Jood diamond- in 1991. 1
Eastern bas already defc-aed
dc•cndt'nlg SVAC cham~io:
S~ Vallcy 5-.3 on tbc v ·
home field and defeated Sou •
'\VCifa1l 21·5 10 get a good IIBrt on
the reaa of t11e fielcun ibc league.
Last yclr Eastern wu 14-5
overall lind third in abc league at
104, - g twice to Symmes v.,alIcy and Oak Hill.
'
Oradualed from last )'ear's cluband leaving a void of exnmence in
the line-up an: all-cliairiC:tplaye)rs
Jeff Horner and Shaun Savoy .
Savoy
was a
versatile
shorts~ust .._. _ _ ,_, .... ,pt.tch,.._,_.,.,.....,.
.er and omer'
the anc:bor of abc
,
outfieldinc:enter.
Savoy batted .361 and Horner
.383. Homer was also all SVAO 111
.

·Central State,·Cedarville fall -vic tim ·~~~~~:~m:h~~~
to RG,· baseball team goes to 15-8 ~:~'Th~~~.J;~a~:

•

f~!!*..::.~~n:::.::
atone' dep 111e d, "'Uuse chinp .-e

....... lftd tplclllwdoiil
. . . flllntheDept br•nt
ef ,_.... ILIIu:: .-4 die of..
. . of ... Dlllrlct Depiuty

of-::=":"'*' C.:o. D•••·
TNIIIPD11ilcn=.......
Till Dlrwtor 1I

-. .., ·-..

,

U.S. "in-terests intact in Mideast mess

Public NotiCe

w. Ohio, _.10:00A.
M., 0111::
n- - I ' 41-

·-

If the insider ttading allegations
sland ujl, there willlikcly be drastic
ac:tial by Congress to remedy what
would then be seen as chronic
problems in the FDA. There is
already l8lk of distributing some of
the FDA's duties to odler agencies
and possibly reqtoving the agency·
from the umbrella of abc Health
and Human Services Department

·American·ch~Idren still go hungry

Public.Nollee

,....

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Alta

1l1e Deily sentinel-Page 3

•

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nine take flight in '91 season under new .leadership : "'
2

But even circumstantial evidence will be a selback for abe
FDA. The qency's credibility Was
critically wounded by abe generic
dftll sc:aMal lbal was exposed in
1988. FDA c:bemists were found meals from drug company execupilty of rigging the generic drug lives.
·
IJliXOVal JI!O.CCSS in eschange for
Most of Jbc doc:wnelllcd cases
o~en1u Oi&amp;hll. expensive meals,
in the generic drua scandal
VCRJ, cub and odler gifts.
iiJvolved Dickie and dime Jifts. But
Convictions from lbaa probe using iuidet lnfomwrion ID make a
bave been rolling oua of the U.S. killinJ in the stock nwka could
Allmley's Office in B•ltilllOR for get lucrative.
uc:u.
more lban a year. Most recently,
Phannaceuticalstock analysts
In addition. to abc 13 ~ the former chief of abc FDA's are hun!t'J 10 know if llld when a
for FDA nfficiais, we have
gmcric: dlup division was c:onvict- company s new product will be
Jbat IRIIher five 1\'Cie issued 111 pri- ed of lying 10 federal investigala'S approved by the FDA. These ....
YIIe individulls.
.
.wheu he denied having ai:cepted Iysts are hunary to know if and
.
when a company's new product
·
·
.... will be approved by the FDA .
C'-oGeT
T""'
.-1,., ••r:oru '1· The~
analysts crowd the FDA ~s
I'UI\
nc ~ nu n
public hearings when: drag appliTtfe QcJN{ THaT GdVS fioT' · cations a,re reviewed.-Aild long
,.-:~
before cellular phones were c:om:-::;:.:;:•1:.=.\Q·
mon, drug stock expt'liS were carrying them in briefcases 10 FDA
hearings so they c:ould parlay infor. mation into money irutanlly.
In the three months David
Kessler has been commissiOner of
the FDA, he has vowed 10 bee(up
the agency's enforcement divison
and regain its credibility. He has ·
stOpped news leaks of the current
investigation. If abc allegations tum
out 10 be 1100. ~ler wants them
deal I with quickly and cleanly ..
10 lbeir

linaDcfalldvlntage. .
Our associate Jim Lynch has
lelmcd Jbat the confidential illforlllllion -y bave been llhlled, for a
price, witb a California bn*enge
house. S.ucb inful marion is as JOOd
as gold. KnowinJ euCtly when a
new druJ will be apProved for
commeicial sale m•hs for quick
and easy money, The IIOCt of drva
campania _,. wliea they receive
approval for "'lrQkduoup• prod-

..

of ....
w, ..........
nnzdlill\ ........._ .. ..,
,......,,,.,,anata..c. aasaaet _ ....... ..,.
_
.. llllwMtaUllll II,

...... County CouMI on

!:c~::" ..,lor Cit·

•

-of- ---··-Nin_..,:u ....o....,..
bah--·
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Tho,.•

lku&amp; lllPIOYil informatiOn

a ...ec::o...•

,~~

with domestic agenda

mC:mber suggesred.'

Easter~

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
PomerQy-Middteport, Ohio
Monday, April 8, 1991

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PomerOy-Middleport, Ohio

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Monday, April&amp;, 1991

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,By The Bend
-..,...

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cer
BIG BEND

WIIPO

IADIO
REMOTE
. 11-2

: Mr. and Mrs. ·Bill Foley
atlnounce the birth of a son, Joseph
Domingo on March 8. -The baby
. weighed six pounds and ll ounces
aJ)d WliS 19 inches long.
: Faye Cotterill has returf!ed ·
hpme from Dade City, Fla. after·
SJ!Cnding three weeks there to help
care for her 92-year old father.
Nbah Birchfield.
· Mrs. Marilyn Alkire Wilt, Lanc~ter, spent several days visiting
her mother, Mildred Phillips, her
sister, Shirley Stanley arid family
add brother, Roger Alkire, and
f~ily.
.
', Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Tbwnsend, Westerville, and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Stanley and dliughtllf, Emily, of Athens, spent a
recent Saturday at _the hO!lle of Mr.
ahd Mrs. Duarie Stanley. ·
·; Amanda and Michele Finley,
Gplumbus, SpeD! their Easter Vacll·
tion with their grandparents, Mr.
alld Mrs. Don Cotterill.

Join A Day of
Fun and Prizes

W•k'1
Mciltr for

Mort

ODLAN

PLUS

•3RD ANNUIL DIAPER DERIY
•PIE IN THE FACE
I""' Reed, Jerry Wright aild

. _,...,
••f .

Alfred cotrununity news

CHESTER PRIDE PROGRAM - Pictured
are stucleuts from Cbester Elementary who lulve
earned the most poillts ID the Cbester Pride Program. Tbe llludeats are giv~ points for belpillg
otber studeots and teaeben arouud lehooL Pic- .
lured rtom left are, rront row, Ciilda CIUI'onl,

mort•

I•

OF SALES
.DONATED TO
FIGHT
ANCEl
o/o

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![

TOPS meets

I

: Julia Hysell was the best loser
and Shirle1_ Wolfe, Brynda Faulk
aDd Pearl Knapp the runners-up at
d)e recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
N1&gt; . .570 held at the Carpenter's
Hall in Pomeroy. ,
· The fruit basket was wol) by .
sandra Deal and the surprise gift
Ylas won by Wanda Faulk.
• The winner of the Easter egg
cq.teSt by I~ pounds were Janiee Curry and'Ola SL Clair.
·
: A rededication ceremony was
cdnducted by leader Peggy Vining.
T.OPS and KOPS members lit a
Cflldle to symbolize their rededication.
.
:. A white elephant sale will be
h~d at the next meeting on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Carpenter's
~I in Pomeroy.
•
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Y.a
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r·~ \

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WIN RAFFLES: (With $1.00 Donation to Fight Cancer)
eSl

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F

oooo Foodland Shopping Spree_

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

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FOODLAND

~

20/
/0

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fODDLA- 1

•Part ·of Thousands of Dollars ·in Free :
Groceries and Prizes•..
•Join t~e Savings Plus Fun, 'tlq)Nns and
.;

#'

,---------------------------------~I

MILK

.

1 LOIIFAT- ,

. ~" . 1
~~od Onlyvy 1

..)Jrf.A
. ··w·
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PLASTIC GALLO"

1D

Limit one per family wlth' coupon and •1 0 .00 additional purchaoe.

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·---'!..oci_!l!~ly.:!."!~!~a.!·.!'!d··~!!!L~!-1.!~.;..----------l

Exd

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Whittington entertains
for Easter holiday
I

ASHLEY N. LIFE

.Birth announced

used. He allo aplaiDed the process of wrltillg a
story, told bow a paper Is printed aud described
tbe dilrereut methods or delivery - eltber by maD
or local carrier.

• CAREER DAY • Dally Seutlnel News
• Reporter Brlu J. Reed recently participated In
: Salisbury Elementary Sebool's career ediiCatiOD
. ' program. Reed uplaiDed tbe process or taklnll
, notes for a story and dilrereot cameras that are

Larry and Janet Life are
announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Ashley Nicole,
on March 10 at Pleasant VaUey
Hospital ill Point ~1, W.Va.
She weighed eight pounds flfteea Ounces and wu 23 and a half
inches long.
Maternalllflllldparents are Flip
and tc.en Werry.- Chesta". Mattr. nal great grindmothm are Helen
Stewart, Mason, W.Va., and
· Eleanor Werry, PO!lleroy.
Paternal grandparents arc Paul
and Patty Life, Rccdsville. Paternal
great-grandmother is Edna Life,
Reedsville. . ,
•

•

Peopl~

in the news

SEX AND DRUGS: Kitty Kelley's new biography of Nancy Reagan maltes some shoclting claims about lhc former first lady in regard
to sex, Sinatta and marijuana. The New Ytd: Times obtained a copy of
• the book, which hacj been closely guanled by iiS publisher before going
: on sale Monday, and said it reveals Nancy started an affair with Fraok
: Sinatra while Ronal~ Reagao was governor of California. Even afttr
• Reagan became president, Smatra came for four-hour lunches during
; which Nancy's staff was under strict orders not to inttrrupt, Kelley
; says. Furthermore, Nancy, whose "just say no to drugs" campaign
was the cornerstone of her tenure as first lady, and Reagan smoked
marijuana provided by department store owner Alfred Bloomln&amp;dale
•.at a dinner party in the late 1960s, according to the book. Kelley says ·
: Nancy was notorious for recycling gifts given to lhc Reagans, such as a
: Christmas wreatb from l!_arbara Bush that she ordered to be sent to a
. • friend in California. Once the Reagans' grandson, Cameroa, son of
: Miclulel Reagan, left his teddy bear at the White House but got it back
:-in the mail several months lattr with a card that said, "Happy birthday
•:10 our grandson. Love, Grandma and Grandpa."
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FORMER CIDLD ACTOR OUT ON BAIL: Adam Rlcb, who
:·played young Nicholas Bradford on ~e television series "Eifht Is
: Enough," is free on $5,000 afr« being charged witb ~Raking m10 a
• phlrmacy in Los Angeles. Authorities ·say someone brOke out a win: dow in an auempt to get into the Park West Pharmacy in the pre-dawn
:.houri Saturday. No drugs were taken but Rich; 22, was stopped by
•:deputies in West HoUywood who said he was speeding, ·had run a red
•light llld nearly struck several pedestrians, They noticed he was cut
,tnd injured ..d charged him with burglary. Rich, who was put on five
··years probation after ple"'i"' guilty to dnulken driving in November,
: Was the youngest member of lhc cast of ''Eight Is Enough,'' which ran
;'from 1917 unliii98JIIId he reprised his role in two reunion shows.

•

I

HEINER'S
OLD FASHIONED

BREAD

20 oz.
LOAF

BA cQ.N

KAHN'S
BUY ONE 1 LB. PKG.
GET ONE

1

DOWNING CHilDS
MUWN MUSSER

•

111 S.llld

Commuaily Caleadar Items . School Class of 1961 will hold an
apJjear two dl,a belon aa event , organizational meeting for its 301h
aDd tbe day of that eveat. Items class reunion on Tuesday ·It 7 p.m.
must be received weD In .. \'IDee at Soulbem lligb. School. AU loCal
to assure publlcatloa lu lbe cal- class members 1ft urged to aaend.
endar.
RACINE - Racine Lodge No.
MONDAY
461 F and AM wiD meet Tuesday
CHESHIRE - Women Alive at 7: 3Q p.m. AU lilasons are inviled
wiD meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the to attend.
Ky.ger Creelt Clubhouse. There will
RACINE - The River Valley
be a devotional spealter and Btfky
Pasquale w1ll demonstrate sweat- HerbaliJu will meet Tuesday at 7
sl)irt decoi"ating. Refreshments will p.m. at the home of Connie Hill
be served.
. PORTLAND • The Freedom
BEDFORD - }Iedford ToWnship Gospel Miuion Chun:h will hsve
Trustees will·meet Monday at 7 revival T~y tluough Saturday
p.m. at the town hall.
at 7 p.m. nighdy witb Rev. Junior
Conger from s-:-:?ville, W.Va.
CHESTER - The Chester PTO Paslm' R.G. Wi!W Sr. inviltl the
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. atlbe iliJblic.
' school. AU parents and teachen R
urged 10 aaend.
HARRISONVJLLB - The ·Harrisonville Senior Citizeus will hold
POMEROY - The Disabled a blood JIRISlft clinic • the town
American Veterans and Ladies . house on TUCIIIay from 10 a.m. to
Auxiliary wiD meet Monday at 7 · noon. Medlbers wm•ve a poduclt
p.m. at the ball at 124 Buuemut dinner llld meetiq follow1ng the
Ave. in Pomeroy. Refreshments clinic. All members are urged to
will be served.
auend.

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child.

Community calendar INSURANCE
.st.. ,....,.,

.· TURNABOUT: Hollywood is full of tittle ironies,,lite ·'Entertainment Tonilltt" hOst Jolul Tesb, having dinner with J1111es Woods's
TUESDAY
POMEROY -the.Ohio Eta Phi
~-wife. Woods has been dating Tesh's estranged wife, J•lle, and
,recently was quoted as saying Tesh hsd mistreated her during their · Chapter, Beta Sigma Plti Sorority
eight-year marriage. Now and Tesh has become friendly with Sarah
will meet l'uolday at 7 p.m. • the
Meip
County Public Library In
:Qwen, who WM briefly married to Woods. "Sarah called~ and •
·said, 'I thinlt we hive ~g in common," Tesh told ··- mi&amp;i:Pomaoy. Fair a for the pranium
zine. "We ~ phone friends." Tesh says both he IIIII
are
book must be turned in at that time
JCCinl other people 10 he toot the precaulion of talting along ltis busias well as reicrvations for
Founder's Day. Officers will be
neu III8II8IJCI' IIJd hiJ lltOmey when he had diimer with her nx:endy at
.elected.
. .
SJ1810 "10 people wouldn't F.t the wrons idea." ae said he and Owen
:JI(tcd about "the weather."
·
RACINE • The Racine High
.t

' -

On Easter Sunday, Leslie and
Yvonne Wllittjngton entenained
several gues15 fpr dinner.
,
.Atlellding were Tina Whittington, Erma Hersman, .Rich..-d and
Teresa Coole, Preston, Brieyan,
Nathaniel, Natasba, Charles, Joe
and Monna Andreoni, Chirles
Smith, Michael and Sherry Davis
and Emily, Leroy WhiUington and
Ryan, Roger 111d Loletta Adkins,
Misty, Jere"y ·and Amy Litde,
Shsuna Tackett,o;BiDy, Kasey and
Jolmny DuceiL
Visitin1ln the evening were
Lisa Klein, Usa, Todd and Travis,
Terri Klein, Ronnie Smith and Ann
Hatfield.
'
.In the afternoon an Easier egg
hunt was held for the children and
prizes of money were given to each

YOUIINDIPEJIDEIT
AGEm SEIV•G.

EGS COUNTY
SliCE 1A61 '

BUTTONS

AND

BOWS ,:

220 E. Meln St. In Pomeroy
Seturdly, April 13.
11 :00 a.m. til 4:00 p.m.
Partralta Dellvll'ed:
Tue8CIIy, April 30, ·
10:00 a.m. til 11:00 a.m.
SAlBiCIDI

SltMthi"' f,l•s -Atw•ys &amp;11ki"1 At

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT
RI'. 33 .
.
MASON, WV
NEXT TO FASr 4 U AND MASON MOTEL .

Bomestyle Lunch Specials
_Monday-Friday, 11 am-3 pm

.....,

OeetiOnly

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April10
CII!Kir
ley

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Monday.cr.mecl Chicken on.Biseufts
TueSday· Fish lnd Chips
Wednesday -lleatlolf Dinner
Tllunclly ·Choice of any styli Hamburger wnh SoUp &amp; Fries
Friday· Spaghllll Dlriw with Slllcl and Garlic Bltld

. POMEROY - The ·Pomeroy
FJame Fellowship wiD meet Theaclay • 7 p.m. at the lllllior citizens
CCIII« in Puneroy. HencbeJ FIICCmyer, NitrO, W. Va;, will be thespeaker. Tho public ia invited to
attend
RUTLAND - The Rutland Village Couucil will meet 1'ueaday at
7 p.m. in council chambers.

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�Page 6 . The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepon, ol110

Monday, April 8, 1991

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Monclay. April 8, 1991

.
·-1

SUPPORT THE
MEIGS
COUNTY.
A ERI.CAN CANCER ·SOCIETY

'

•

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'!!~E:~M=o~l"'~-·:Ool:lia or M•on

ATI N L
. .,•
AN E ·R D -A-Y
,,
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7
WARNING SIGNALS

must be prt·

· Alii

M
ch•o•.
••7run- 3 dl¥1
for aH Cipittl l.tter1
IIIIo typo only . .d.

14.00 .

3

II
15
15
15

...00
18.00

10 .
Monlhly

.

·
·
.
•a.ntintl il not ,..PGMiWI for II'FOf'tlfttJ first·dlft'. (Chtdc
fw .,.,. ftrtt 41• ad run• in pap~r) . Call beio',. 2 :00p.m.
• • aft• publiCition t'O mike COHe'C1ion.

..

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co"' DEADLINE

MONOAV PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
. W!DNEIOAY ~APER
THURSDAY PAPER
lUNDAY PAPER

'

11 .30/ doy . .011/dey

Chllit County

1. Change In bowel or

Meigs,Coumy

Aru Codo 114,

..._G•IIIpolis

9112-MiddiiPOrt

f III)JII&lt;yllll'lll
:) fl r 1o,J f I I' ,

311-Yirnon

bladder habits.
2:Asae that does nol

241-RIO·Orondt

211-Guyon Diot

.43-At'ebltOIIt.
371-WIInat

l)eol.

F \ill 'IIIPiilil'',
/; II VI' !111 k

11 - Help Wll'lted
Wontod

458-loon

88&amp; - Ct"t•ter

671- Ap.Wa Grovt
773- MIIan

247-ltton Foils

112-Ntw Havtn
Ill- Letart
'
937- Buffllo

843- Portllnd
••e - Aecin• ·

742- Rutland
117-Cootvill•

, BEllm'S MOIU HOME

... t49·2101
... ..... t49·216G

· HIA11NG &amp;' COOLING

e 1-•erm lcau61tm.,t
12- Wanted to luy

4·1·'90-1

13- LivHiodl

._.......

ece.pllte

Stop &amp; c.....,,
Fr•llflrllatt~

915·U7S
667·6179

Le: hill 0. s.tfenll Sdlnllltl. elf lt. 141 · ·

mo.

IELLEI'S CUSTOM BENDING

FOIIYEIIIONII
PROM
TANNitG ·'
.

. Wt Htm Chltlged 01r l.tcatiofl Tci
1'/J Miles Ellf 011 lt. 241 through
· Chest•, Oh.

SPECIAL ·

ht SO Higll School

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cultom Bent Exh1.-t

SlutleRtl

Syet8ma
•Complete Une of Exhl!uat Supplies .
•Handle ilnd Install Monroe Shock•
Come ud See Ue For A Free lupeetlon

Call 949-2126
Filr Appt• .

. . . Etl&amp;lma&amp;e

FOIIYU IIONII '

PH. 614·915·3949 IODin DUD

47269 St. lt. 241

.

IISNAIID., lAC. .

OIL 45743

leng

Tnw.pnrl .illllll
21 - luMt•• Opportunity

72- Trucks fot 1•1•

73- VMI 6 4 \10 '1
7•-Molorcycl•
7&amp;- lnts • Motors fo' l.ae
71 - Auto P•t• • Ac:c•IDf'i•
77--AutG "ep•ir

31 -11om• for Solo ·

.

32- Mobile Hom• tor Sele
33- Fermt for S•l•

71- CarnplngiEqulpment

, 3•-Bulin..s 8~ding1

Heward L Wdtesal

c......_ ....r

REMOVAL

NEW. UIED PAFITS
POR AU MAICII •
MODELl

•LIGHT HAULING

NEW- REPAIR

Spnltl... It!

71 - Autot for ....

22- Montv to Loan
23 - Pro-~UI lletwtces

. SHIUI &amp; TREE
TIIM and

WNAUY'S
AUTO PAITS

:I&amp; -tots • Ac'•lll•
31- R..I Estlte Wanttd

ROOFING

01 lOU liD

· Downapoute
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

992-2269

1·100·141·0070

If
dean up your,
yar oli WHb!ldf .... wt
· bu_y_ 011 weillonds. ,

Til-COUNTY
RECYWNG

FREE ESTIMATES

.USED RAILROAD nES

01110

OPEN7 DAYS ,
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

J"

Gutters

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992·7013
or 992·5553 ·

·

79-Cimp••• Motor Hom•

Til-COUNTY
IECYCUNG

locololl Off ... IJ1111o .. '
llot Com. of
&lt;'
II. 7 I It, jU
'

949-2161

1· 12·10.tfn

THANK YOU

a

~

GS COUNTY, OHIO
FOR HELPING US
FIGHT CANCER.

BIG KIDS &amp; BABIES
PROGRAM .

In

TUESDAY, APRIL 9~6:30 P.M.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
. DOCTORS CONFERENCE ROOM
675-4340, Ext 304

-

TlfNI~

"HOW YOU LIVE· MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE"
-

...

992-2121

[l]

POMEIOY, OHIO .

108 . . . . .y

SMITH -NBSON·MOTORS, INC.
992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

500 EAST MAIN

INGELS FURNITURE

255 MI.L .

ADOLPH'S

. MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

POMIIOY, OHIO

'

CROWS FAMILY RESTAURANT

K&amp;C JEWELERS
992-3715

POMaOY, OHIO

992-6472

716 NOITH SICOND

POMEROY, OHIO

SUGAR RUN MILLS
·180 MUL.IRY

POMEROY, OHIO

•

bu'Bank~. . .

·

Farmers Bank

l SOvings .Comoo·w
1
..,

•

•

, . . . . ,• •

·DOWrt•G·CHILDSdiUlLIN-MUSSD .
INSUUIO AGENCY
ttt-1342

· POIIDOY, OHIO.

· 111 EAST· SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Overbrook Center.
SU PAGE SIIDT

MIDDLEPOIT I OliO

.. V~lley~~::g~er Co. ·
SSS PAB STIDT

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

50 IIVEIVIEW

- - -diNd. ....

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

.

WARNER HEATING
&amp;
'
:
COOLING
985-4222 .
011 HILL lOAD

.·TWIN CITY
MACHINE AND WELDING
17 COLI STIHT

992-3761

POMEIOJ, OHIO

•.

SWISHER LOHSE :PHARMACY
I

991-2955

112 EAST MAIN

~THE

. GRAVELY

s VII!IITE
.. g M

•

f·

-··

:.:::•=---

CHESTER, OHIO

'

POMROY I OHIO

- GI~VELY TIAOOR
SALES AID SERVICE

.... ' -

OOfiYIIYed by
A - R. lnytllrond L.oNne
lnytllr IIi lerlhl TlfNII by

deed reaorded October 1 1.
1132. In (leld 11oM No.
138, ,... 441. Deed ....
-di,.MIIgo County, Ohio . .
The'illoWclllarl-treat
hel ..... ltwred the PafCal
No. 14·00318.000 by ·th•
Molgo Cruoty , , . _ . ,
Office.
Percol No. 3: The follow·
111u1ted
In .....
hllollury
lnt - · T-ohlp, endllllna Let No.
20 ·In ~·· Iurvey,
Townohlp No. 2 In fl-•
, 3, loctlon 1. Dhlo eo....
peny'l Purchl• - ..... lot
llelngiO- by 100 fHt
lftd bllng pert of the ,...
dlcroed by 1111 Coull
of Common 1'1111 In ..,,. for
llld Molgo Counly II Ita
. N-blr Mrm A.O. 11tl7
to ........_ D-In IIUitfar
diJ"'ao ....nll John D8nnll

"fill;"'-

. . ' H2-297S
210 co1101
· " ••.,,, 0110
1

. '

PubliC NotiCe

'-An-·

992~6128

Fo1c

,as PWIIS. 0110
.

HO.NEST •.. .

·•.r. '

Mem~

991-.6 472

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

271 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES &amp; TEES

"

FRUTH PHARMACY

992-6669

.

212 EAST MAIN

992-5432
221 WESTII All

1
·

MIDDLEPOITI OHIO .

NORTH SECOND

'992-2115

CHESTER, OHIO

PRESCRIPTION SHOP'

992-5627

915-3301

.

VALLEY

POMEROY, OHIO

HERITAGE HOUSE/LOCKER .219

BAUM LUMBER ·COMPANY
1 WIST MAIN

214 EAST MAIN

992-2556
"END OF THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE"

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
992-2104
115 EAST IWIOIIAL Dl.

D~IRY

•

992-6687 .

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

992-2635
106 NOITH SECOND

BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE

992-3345

BULLETIN SOARD
I SPACE AVAILABLE I
-· APS.OO . PER DAY. I-·--

....

olonguld Etlt line of lug.or
Clanifieda
Run ltr., to the Southwell
Work!
cor- of Hid I.Dt 401. being
I point IV_, with the Iouth
liM of llld l.o1400 utlnded
thoough to luger Run
Public Notice
s-; thlnoe MIW!y •
o121r.ec olonat.he
Notlco of
lOUth line of Mid Lat 408,
Drewlng Jurora
81dldl-of21r.et
Office of Commlaol-•• of ol0ft8 the lOuth line of .. rd
:JurOI-o. Molgo County. Ohio. l.o1 408. lnd the ooulh line
Moroll 21, 1181
of Aid l.o1 400 ut8ndld, to
To AH Who It Moy Concerro: the ...... of 1111 nnlng.
On 'Mondly. tho 11th dly
R-onco~:Volume
of AprH, 1111. et 1:30 211. Plfl 411; Volume
D'clociiA. M., ettlleofflceot · 241, Plfl 41; 8nd Volume
tho
Cornrnl-noro
of 284. ' Pogo 271. Molgo
:Juron Of MoCao County. County Dlld R-rdt:
-Ohio, Jur... wUf be publicly
PARCEL NO. 2: lltuolll In
d r - for the Mey 1181 1hl Vllllge of P11moroy,
Term of the Common PI- County of Mtlgo. and ltote
Coull of 111d County.
of Ohio:
Wo._ lreclford,
lelng the Iouth holf of l.o1
.
I. 0. MaCoy· No. 4081n
Comml-nera of Juron otlon. ftooptlng 1 0 off
(41 8, 1tc
the lOuth . . . whloh ..
delcrlbld In Porcol No. 1
tbova.
·
PubliC NotiCe
Rllf11onco R - : Volu277. Plfl 717; ..,d Volurae
NOTICE OF SALE
284. Pogo 271. Moln
County Dlld R-rdl.
, By virtue of on Onler of
D!!D IIEI'!R!NCE: Yo·
.... 1-ed out of the
301. .... 77 Mol11
Cammrtn l'llle Court of lume
Mellll County, Ohio, In tile C~ty•= ...:::. 1ft1
CMIH of City Loin Flnenc;ill olllte 11 ldontlflal In the
lervle11, lne.. Plelntlff. racordl of 111e Mlleo county
ogelnot1homullley.etol.. Auditor by P1fCII Noa.:
Oilfaldlnto. upon 1 IUd'g· 11-06310 ind 11·DJ!:'· ·
CIM No. 11-CV-10 In
. .~~
- • - _._ M IP·
~ for
prollaf It: 121.100.00 .
I
Court. wit u•Torma of lole: C.oh.
. Hie. at the fnlnt door of the . IIMI -not·be oold
COUft HouM In PorMniy. for llll lllln -·thlrdl of
Melp County, Ohlo.. on_tho theoppefluld volue.
14th dly of Ml\'. 1881, II
Jl_. M. 8Gulaby,
1D:OO ·o'oloall A.M, tho Sherlfi of Mtlgo
following 18ndo. -menta County, Ohio
IIICI penonel pttpllt~. to- (&lt;l)1 I 11 31
wit:
1.:::::...:..:.·.:;·:...:.::..:
·
PARCEL NO . 1:
PubliC Notice
. . _ . In the Vlllqe ol 1----...;._ __
" - • • · County of Mila•
IN THE
..... ._of Ohio:
COMMON PLEAI
hlng LDt No. &lt;l8 "(ohould
COURT 01'
be· Lol No. 4011" ond. thl
MEIGI COUNTY, OHIO
lOuth IIn C10)fNtoft.otNo.
408 In Po- Anneu- G.rfll M. Colllno.
tlon. 11 r1aardrd in the Molgo County T,_our•
Plolntlff
Ruaullr'o Offloe of Malr.
vs.
County, Ohio, In Vol. •
R_,. of of Molgs Merylv81o.
C-cy, Ohio, et Pege 1 I c........
thereof, I pert of the Villl(ll Mlddllpoll, Ohlo -41710
Drtll1nd8nt
of Pomwoy, Mellll C-"#.
c... No. IIO·DLT.02
Ohio• . . _ dwiehom the
01' IAL!
Boutl1 I I of uld Let •-NOTICE
. . ludtl- hel
. , . dll 1hd • folloWo.
. . . . , ••aln.-.lr1g et tho liMn ,.....,.... ..•h•t .,.
llln porOolo of _, property
Boulh ofWill
of Let lor ta111, •••--••nte.
400
....- _.....,_
· IV
. M11nl . . . . . northerly ahauaa. P••ltllw. llalci-.
11 followo:
...... the-lneoflotl .,d Porool No. 1: The follow400 ancl 40J. e - - of ing N i l - oltuetld In the
In e • - l y
............ 1 ............. County of Melp. In the
. ..... the ..... ..... of ..... ltlfe , of Ohio. end In 1111
Lot 401 te . . IHt line ol Tawroohlpoflet.... IIY.encl
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . In bolla JJJ Mil d11 lad ••
.II ooutllel-ly diNCtlon folia uu1: leglnnlnt .. •atae

-

THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP

et

......... _,.·-In

.T his Page Sponsored By ·These ·Many Fine Community Businesses!

EWING FUNERAL HOME

oonveyal

T-by-recooded
Oct. 11,1gJZ,InDiallooll
No. 137, 1'1111 311 Of the
....... of 0... In ....
Rua..-·a Offtae, Mel•
County, Ohio.
The Jllow . . . ,. .d treot'
.......n l-ed 1111 ........
No. 14·00387.000 by the
Mll(ll County TIMIU-'1
Oflloe.
,...... No. 2: The....,_
the
Townoh::J' of 8ollobury.
County
Melp ond ltete
of Ohio, of 8ectloq,l, To2, R1~ge 13 ond ihocrlbed
11 tOIIoWo: lelngobout Ten
H..,dredlh1 (1011001 of ..,
ocro on the Eooteoty olde Of
I.Dt No: 20 ol llldfold'1
Iurvey. lllng 1111 ume
pr-'f 11 oonveyiCI to
Mo-t Tar:rell by Robert
Dylle 81d Floronca A. Au•
1011, Owl- of D.A. Ru .... l
by dlted April 1 1dl,
1•14 and reaardad in Vol.
111. Poge 204 of the
R - 1 of DIWII of Melp
County, Ohio.
,...... No. 2 bllngthe reel
-eyed by E. R.
IJIIffy, II II.. 10 Ierche
Terr.. b y - NOOrded
Ootoblt' 11. 1112 In DMcl
11oM No. 137, Poge 317
Dal!d R ecordo ; Melgo
County, Ohio, ond furtMr

THIS l"xl"
~

of the '

8nd line (mldcle)
of lection I, T - 2, fl8nge
13 of ·the Ohio ComP8nY'I
PunohiM.Ihtncl N - 221
fNt, t'-ce Eaot 100 tMt.
IIMna. Iouth 221 feet.
.......,. Welt 100 fNt to -t he
.,._ of beglnnlna. lxoept
filly- off of the to.i\hof -!bed lnd • ·
-.t oliO II'WWIIy·flve
fHt
off;.,.,ofirJIOthe..i Nortll lnd of Mid
~
trect. llllngl lttlp
•bout 100 fHt
....."!•.•na blcll

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

•

88-15M· Aov. 8/II!·No. 7257

.....,.....

CAIPEN1EI SEIYKE

•

"•

,,

·=~

" "'" _....

IOid .... _...,.... by J ...... lnd ..... 10 Levi
Toney.by-dlllldJune
27th. A: , D. 1114, end
.-nlld In Vol. 111 . P 284. Molgo c....ty. Ohio,
DIOid R-rd.
Perool Nl!. :llilllng the ,...

"""*

M. louWby, lhM'Ifl
of Melgl County. Ohio, will
1111 ....... .... prOperty ~·
public oucllan. for cuh, 10
1M hlghatt bldcllrthe...,..
of tile -wing emounta:
t) A fair merkel voluo of

. . . . . _.......,1.1111.
In DIOid .... No. 11.7. ~...

...... .,ah,... lllliLPilly to

111 lold by tile undlrela Mil
10 lltllfytlle t o l l l - ' at
...... Judg-1 And .....
lhlt llld ........ 'be IOid

taalttatr; ,

1

Now, ........ public

notlalo II horel1y .._, thlt I,

45760

Office 614-991-2116
.... 614·992-5692
DOlliE S.
IIOCCP

•OuoiCtyWook
•FI'H Eltimete1
·~ He1 Flllt Dry
flme
•HCgh Cllou on
Floor FCnloh

.

--------t

11,1 10 . 00
14· 003 87. o 00 12,030.00
'
for i1 lOIII of 18,210.~0 ..
II The tatllomount of the
llncllna lftlorecl by tile Coull.
Including 111 texM, •••••·
a h - . _... ....
ondln-peyobllaobll·
qUint "' the dlllvery 10 the
county pro-tin; rmornoy
of tha dtllnq- lend II•
illrllflclto or molter 1111 of
11111-t - • prior
10 the entry of the ...rlrrna·
lion of 1111. baing theoum of
13,111 .72.
JomH M. louloby
lhlllff of Malge County
(&lt;l)1 ••• 11, 3tc

1 . Cerci of Thllnlca

lSD APPUAIIICIS
tt MY WAIUIIYY

wm--s•oo
•
....,....

IIYIS-S6t •
.,..IUTOIS-$100 .,

UNIIU--IIt&lt;.-$12~

Ilk• to NY
th1nka 10 the Middl•
c would

of the

Senior CCt·

Czen1 lteff, H1rrllan·
louom
CLull1.. Fllenda end
Nelghbor1 for their
-da.
phone
CICCI, !etteN end glfta.
duolng
confine-

ville, . Long

flo-..
mv

• IIIW1S.Ow..II. I, ....... OIC.

NEW GIIIPS-.......... S4
ll'llllen Clubs IIIICIIred

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYKE

liOPHIIS • PI.AiiUES
WIGES

991-5315 .. 915-3561
Acroa -FI'W11 1'111 Offlco

JOHJI TIAfOID
Scout C.. lid.. a....

I'OMEIOY, OliO

10/J0/1t If

:.6:=::Lo=:at:;&amp;=:Fou=:nd:=::::;
~
1100 UWAID
Forl.ott ~~
Wltlld 11. . . . . .11 In·
fw 11811orh Nine ' II

4/SII 1110.

Eatate General

.

•R emodeling and
Home Repeln
•Roofing
•Siding

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

•Painting
110 JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
· CONSTiumON
992·6648 or
691-686....,.

,.,,

...

THE
GROOM
ROOM
COfl!lllttl Grooming
For All lneds
EMiliE MERINAR
Owner

a· Operatllr

614-992-6120

SYRACUSE -ITS A DOG NO lOIIGUI! It has been reduced

so tow that now it is a real jeweL Nice level lot and close Co
grade school. AI this price you can fi1 It up or tear 1C down.

...,_,_n

••-QM.

or - 304-!IW411 ...,., .IIUIIj
Culo,
.•
I Timothy L.oiollhiVI- 11!11
ol otllo .,.. will no ..._ to
IIIP 2JWIIH any dlla ott.r
lhln mr _,,

=

RI.DUCE: lum olllll wlolll
Title OML Ao.r·-

......

Pnlth-,..,_01·

4

.

G!VMWIY

...::An-

2 ' W loiDWh 0 1 -.
...llhlr!ll, 1 llihlho, 1. - - ·I
..,__ OoOd - - :\104 ...
2

•-

I

:

01a1

-

With

To

f

Cfil~.

3 monlhe Old puppltJ, 4 flmltl

m••"" - . ao4 •1
=.;::;~R~ ;t. ~

1 .....,
3121.

-.

- • P."'\

:f:Aa•,0:. '"' Illuming I !·
v- ,..,. -

l1ol1

c..

houni 1oo(IOOIIhomo,IIIHM

. 1104.

Loat &amp;FOI.IId .

FOUND- Didlr ahlhulhCII1
fla4711.
•
clog, · - - .... 111LOIT• · IItlo

•R1placemsnt
Wlndo-

•Raoflng

•lnouletlon

~I.,...,.,

::........ -=.:!" •r;::=:
Rot- ..... -

- · ...

IIIWAAD,IN.....

'I

Loltl4koyllft ..,....... _

~!.~a:::J·•
1~

992·2772 or
742-2251 ·

1131 lryen
MCddCIIfJOrt

OlllY $9,900.00

POIEIOY - This home is jusl w1iCing for you. 81-level in
llOOd cond~IQll 2 car ••rage, 3-4 bedrooms, equipped
krtchen, centr1l heat1nd A/C. Has rts own basketball court.
3\! mes of beautiful land thai can bull yours. Close to town
in a very destrable area.
$&amp;9,900.00.

MI(IOWAVI
. OY~I£111

FiVE-POII1S - BeautKul brick home wllh full basemen!.,
How often have you s.id "That's what I want''? WE HAVE IT.
This home h1s been well taken care of. Three bedrooms, 2
' boths and gorgeous yard.
$69,500.00.

..N'S APPUAIICE

DOOER - Have you ever been in a BARN STYlE HOME?
Now's your th•ce. S~s on three secluded acres, but only 35
minuCes to Athens1 30 minules to Pomeroy or Gallipolis. It's
lwo story with a 01sement and loads ol wood deckine to
watch the appfoach of summer. Only 2 years' old.

$56,00.00'

DEXTER - I \1 sl.iry older home in town. Has mce french
dOOfS and fOlds of poCenlial. 3 bedrooms and bath. Bay win·
dow in living room. .
$11,500.00 ,

JO HILL ..., .... :................... ............ lel-4411
OFFICI ....................... ................... 112·22,1

lriRI • .. Or We
Pldlllp.

•n•a

991-SJJS er
915-JJ6f
. . . . . . . _ .... Offlq

...,....

117Ls..Nit.

Slf/10/t111

BISSELL
BUILDERS .

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

"AI IUIIA ..h lfric."

I'H. 94t-210 1
....... t49·fl60
Doy or Nipt
NO SUNDAY WLS

:PwllcStlt

8

. . . . .......
. ,au.···aa
..
a Auction

-........
--........
-···=.. I..t\!t. . . ..::·· -..a....

.-.

I-,
,

ful tft ...

PLUG IN .. .
to Great · [ll](Jj)

Buyt.. .
Shop .
Cl_.lledo

lillj

!:J
'

~ .

. _ ......... of .... ~
'llw I I Ator11 t1, II"!..~

~

. l, '

,•

-loll ... Trip a - , A8rl
•• Clnolnnoll,•1:10
ao.

L-P..
ome-ro_:':.:.'.J;!Ji:!!::!!!J.III

HENRY E. CLELAND .......... ........... 112·11 11
JEA,N TRUIII!U ....... .... .. ............. 141·2110

915·3911

•

AM,._on....,no• lllt4

Jgumsa

SALEM m.- Appx. 60 acres of vacant land wilh 2Btllllble
tnd baiiiiCe In limber.
.
$24,000.00

Contact Gregary
. . .,,...., 915-4211
or Nllll lleotrlght

,.,

-~ llflll!l

14, -

•VInyl Siding

I

-w

3 Announcementa :
-llorlllilpl.
. Con
Wrllo: _ . . . . . , P.D.
1041, Odlpollt, OH _ , ,

INSULATI.ON

$44.000.00

....

.614·992·2321

J&amp;L

IUTLAIID - One story ranch sllling on ·6 acres. Soonds
nice? LIC us show you what Chis praperty has lo offer, H1s
carport and pr1p plus utra storaae buikllnJ.
•

lllllfl; iiW. • ., • •

Annou ncemrnt s

WaSoy-.tWoDo .
. We Do Whet

THE
C!»UNIIY ClUI

RACIIIE -Vacant lot wrth crty sewer,eleclric, waler and gas
milable. Great lor home or trailer. No messing wrth se(ICic
tanks or driling wells.
·
·
$10,000.00

ment the -Ptlllt few
months. Thenb to eCC.
Edith Rlllll'

Cultom Drapea

.,••

'

Goc,F USSOffS-..S10 "·
" 6 ....55

•

r-n:•IJ -

36\'eoni:l:porlon..,

Stle

natns-SitS ., .- 11010 0¥1115-Srt • .

.I

,... """ "'Y shy,
ft!ll· II t1111p1rJd.
Wtlgh alltut 7D ...
n ..... ald. W..illtJ
bladl nyllllllllr with
...... 01111 ado

Levi

IIDDUPOII, OliO

",~·~ 0 3 . . . 0 0 0 -

110, . DIOid fl_..., Mlip
County, (IIIIo. ·
T h e - -.... .... IIIUICI 1lle ... .....
No. ·1 4·00111.000 by the
MICgl County T-~
OflloeWid;
.
w.-, aoahjudg

_...,.... by

215 N. Sic... Strllt

........

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

-

•RNtonale ReiN

14-oo3u.ooo -

Toney to lerlhl T...... by

Ohle

11-14-'90 lin

•M1UROOICAB

nil .c the t - of c1rt
and the pleae, on
Ffldly. tha 10th dey of Mey,
1110. for rori ernount thll
oquolo etleoot:
A) A folr nwllll voluo of

N1z1rtne,

P~~n~n~y,

1-PIIIDIIII •
CAINTCUA•IS

of tile dlllnquent ll1ncl ...
cortlflcete or 1111 of
.............. - · 8nd prior
to tile entry of the...rl.......
lion of-· bllngthe1um of

port Chu!Ch

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

, 3·8·'81· 1 mo. pd.

oounty pran a etlng momey

-

Ptlootlntl
(FIIEE EITIMATEil

IER_,.CES

9 AM·7PM-7 .... 1WIIIi

213··· S.C•d
lllddleport
H1nd Tufting

-Rootliog

16141 915-4110

14·00311.00 - '11 00.00
14 · 003iii.OOO 11.110.00
14·00317.000 12,030.00
.
k1r 1 totll of 11,21D.OO.
II The lOIII omount of 1111
flnolnglntoral bythiCouft.
lnoludlna • texM. - •
-nto. a h - . penllt'-o.
81d ......It ,..,............
_ . to the dlllvery to 1M

- - rulvu arftlolent
lllol, 1t lhlll be altaid for
oile
...,... the •
.,d• oondltlono
of tiletermo
filii

pcilntlng.
ltl me clo h for you.
VIIY IEASOHAIII

-1-lor.Ex-

HA~

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

'3,111 .72.
Thlo 1111 ohell be on ,thl
21th dly of Aprl, 1II 1 II
10:00 1.m. H 81Y pacol ·

-Conoretewoftl

WlfOI PIKES

614·992-5114

UPHOLSTDY

- - ond Plumlllng

fakt tht pain out of

·ferrouem..,.e.

,, Mlill•f•"

_g_ ....

· -Room • 'ldUWI

FREE !ITIMATiEI

filly (101 feet -

.........ium. Ndl8tort, 118ft·
• •· 81Mrftlt0f1 MMI .at non,

YOUNG'S .

.,

PubliC Notice

for •lumlnum.

. . . . . . br&amp;llo ..... IN . . . ..

·. LINDA'S
PAINTING

O·et Raeufte fast

•

,_,,,Olio
c•

4·5·91-1 ""'·

3. Unusual bleeding or
i

$10

10 SESSIONS -

Paying

discharge. ·
4:Thickening 01 lump In
breast Of elsewhere.
5.1ndlgestlon. dltfk;ulty
: In S)'IOIIowlng.
6. Obvious change In wart
or rhole.
7. Nagging cough Of
. hoarseness.
.
.

.

64- Hev • Grein
86- S•IId &amp; F•nii!Mr

A"' Code 304
871- Pt. Pl•••nt

"I'I'M E•Ctnet....

SPEEDY VAC .
Quality·
Sweeper
Repair
698-6591

a - Public Sal a &amp; Auction
9-Wtnt:ed to iur

. Meson co., wv

Pom•ov

317-CII•""'•

Mo!'tll!lll'l't'

11 - Happy Ads

following telephon-e exchanges ...
tiUCodol14

... ..

MOll£ !Ia. FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
•
F..NACE PAm

NO SUNIAY

1 - Loat end Found
· 7- V.-d SaltiPtid in advance!

Classified paJ(es.corer the

l

.110

• - Gtve.,ey

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
. ,- 1 1o00 A.M. SATUAOAY
- 2 o00 P.M . MONDAY '
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 o00 P.M , THUR$DAY
, - 2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

FRIDA'( PAPER

.20
. 10

.42

.,3,00

1 - C..d of,.,.,,..
2 - ln Memory
3 ...... Annauc:aments

•A cl•tifi«f ...,•'1iMm.,t piKtd in Tht DallY Sentinetl••·
tepl "":' ciMiifi.t dia.-1.,. Busin•• C.rd and legel nofic.. l
will tleo ..,, . . In the Pt. Pl,..tnt Ae_v•t•' •nd the ~alii·
poHI Dilly Tribune. NKhing ewer 18,000 hom., ,

"

"

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

,. ~

!-..;;;;

il double pt"ice of:ad cOtt

•Adl '"- mult be Plid in advance"'
C.rd of Th.nld
Happy Ads
tn Mtmori-.n
Yerd SliM '.

'

..... •'•~:; :n.::~~= ~d:_s. ~o...., ~pd~·swill bech•t..t

ftO

..,~ _of eel

D.,.r 11 Wardl

II

6

1 .10 ditooum for atU p1id In advanc•

•

AP IL 1 , 1

coum1ti

· Wofdl .

1

edl- OWt.way Md Found edt und• 15 .;.ordt will bt .

•

..

THAT CAN SAVE
YOUR LIFE ••• IF
YOU SEE YOUR
DOCTORI ·

....

.

D1ys

IISSIU &amp; IRII
CONSTIUcnOII

SffM//

II $SELL
SIDING CO.
._

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD &lt;AU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

,,

•VINYL 81DING
"ALUMINUM ICDING
•ILOWNIN
.
CNIULATION

'

.

I ..

Business Services ·

Classifie

.

"

'l'h8 Deily Sentlnei-Paga 7

OhiO

I

.

.

�Page

a

- ...u..o:.;;·

The Dally sentinel

-~

VI1IU

- -

-

Monday, Apr118,1991

FitenyotJ Hakt
with aWd·ftd

HouuttOid

II

BORN

Gw:IIHII

=·
'
~: =~:r.~
-

Television
Viewing

'

P::~~rm.mJ
. ~AprU.

1-..]

9 . wanltld to auy

...

1ht Daily Sentinel PIQI · t -

Ohio
Nf( 0''100 T~K Ll~
A~IIO!f,-~

Isn't .. ?

M

MQN.. APRIL 8
C 1 1~·· '\ " ..t."11·•~o. ft Yo011t1,

ra

Mill

M·

I PI I 1'1 I
R E p p 0. R
2

!VINING

Em ployment St•· •: rrs

'
"
"'
=
l
I CAN'T STAND m

ANOTHER D·MINUS ..
Help Wanted
12,1100 CREDIT CAIIDI

ouarantoocloome.,,•r=-1
Aioo _q•.. n~y tar ~

YISAIIIC onil- 800-27WOOO Ext. -

· I·

·

hOO.IOoy "" ~,.. phono
ordonlthcMne.PWpiOeoi)OU
t o -. Forlnlo. , _ _..,.
EXT 1822.

MA'f'6E 'f'ou:Re
WA'f', SiR ..

0

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..... ___......
---33 Farme

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mANK AND ERN.EST

=· .•Cit.,.... ·-

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....
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SUppllea

·-

............ , 45

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.....
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Oollp
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_
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--........

Fumllhld

se

Roams

011 Col -

you'flE Ht,EP. ·Fff'O/ZT ro ·
WOflK /'VIONI&gt;Ay • .

PLAYGROUND
EQUIPMENT

Building

- ... ar--.
....,

co.

.

oN THE

p... for Slle

.

~

M • Hay • Grain

..

tt.oo bolo, '*

Hoy tar Bolo. aov.r I 11mollw.
Round Bolle In 11\t l'leld. 114-

:MNHI

=.;:7 old.
-Poppl • .,.._

Hot I.. I for FieRI

=
............

MCo ' t o c l - - .
Ceo1oor U
IIIII

Squire bolle: hoy, ltrow lfld

m....""'·

tjood - - . -

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-Dr.

79

MotorHom81
pool, oool, lllr,

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1147.

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Dodgo Ao.n.
-.....,;1110:
~

In liquid PICKIEIIB FUAMTUAE

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olonloho lid. Pt. "'-"'·
.1307-1'11-1410.

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~

L..II&lt;E "THE' TIME: HER

~LieE ITJ'R~f!o',Q(

OUR ML.ie&gt;IC ~ER EA'IS
eHE FeSLS VEf:tY' ~
VJHEN I eiNet ...

Hb.le&gt;~D ::51 SPf'eO

UNHAPPV MliMORIEe
FORHeR •• . .

ON THEIR 0\.T. ·

,/~I

,r,.,..,._/,--..._

',

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1lan maaamon.. 412 IIIah ,.

Pll' engine. loW mlug• DNIN
WI?. Qon, . . bo!1&amp;Y
....... lull bolh, ..;n~,:-l'ullj .•
illf ........ I idi?::l:.i fat ' '
.. lnll. ..... Wll '" .. hotp :·
gllltnnltd .... - · · ·

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AN' WHIN
MIGH'I'

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AFTER l GIT

, MY WASiiiN'

THAT BE?

liN ,..,. tiHiw~:do
..... .. lo ti,IOI.
Jl.

DONE

Not ......... Hand

l'ooil _'llompa lllilo, ., a.IUQO. i1M4i-1211.

-

Mile - · · Doy Colo Conlw.
Solo,
I LM. • 1:10 p.m. A§l! 2 •10.
- . o7tor Dlup ~ ..
Ell FRI. fM 441 1214

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Bopllo 1'11'* .............. IICI.IIolllo

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114 .......

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a oiioo1t.. .,., JiB, 81,000. oo ·~ CNOio Ad. ..-. ,..:

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BERNICE ·
BEDE OSOL

anct ..... , . .....

Pkmblng6

H..ana
C.r11r"a ..........
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a • • 0111o

114 .......

• ....,. Mil, Ollie. ttt w1
.

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•--~~~··--••••••

Aprllt, 1P1

·You could be more fortunate than uaufli
In the year ahead - · opec:lallrlend,
lhlpa are concamed. There might be

two pall In particular wllh whOM you'll

.u.• ,......,
":rhll flgln? ThBt'l I10W lllloltllll I wl ,ou
&amp;J.IInl..."
Mmld l8lt wear ..... allllllltl ...

- .. _.. .
·•

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SOV'tll

.KQ7U

•••Ku

+KQU

...

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

Soli!~

""'
Pua

1•
3•

Pua
Pua

Pua

Eoot
1•

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Dbl.

Nw,.

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Opening lead: • Q

'

' '1.· ·

.. ..

·

lmpoverltlhld

•

h... enviable ratattonlhlps.
21-Aprll ttl In Involvementa with friendS today, try to,keep ev·
orytlltng an 1 purely SOCial bulL II any
one or you tnvoiwod In another'o lln8nclal or commeo;clal alllllra.

•.
u.::.._: _ _--..:....__':.-':""...:.-_;__ _ _-i ..

-~--:_. ~.: . _. ____ .._-:..,_ ~-·.: .:.-. :... ...,:.:. __ ,::__·--~... ··~.~.:;f_·

shortcuts, you ::a~beCome regretful.
LIINIA (lepl.
?. II) Partnershlpe
to look lor romance and rou'll lind II.
The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly . In tun actM?Iel, euch u ,oportl or
, ....lo whtcn ligna are romantically
games, shou7d out well tOlley.
However, 'a l l - lor puraty mat.ta7
perlect lor you. Mall $2to Matchmaker,
clo lhll -~. P.O: Box 91428, purpoMS may not give you much to
c.,_ about.'
CleveiiiKI. OH 44101-3428.
TAUIIUIIAIN'II ....., 211) Fortunate· acOIIPIO IOct. at ••·Ill y,.., mottly, you IIIOUid be r,.OUrGiolul and abWI vatlan wll be onhencocl today - ~ thara
70 IUCCJI~ tn 8Chlevlng your obiftc:tl- Is pramiR ol· lypa ol twoft?. It
tOCII), _ , though you might not have doan't ha.. IO be lor yourN$1, but
rathar lor 1'-ICW whOm you prolllda•
II Dn 11) If
lite
WP1 (.., 21.....,..
of others.
211) Something IACIITTAIIIUI
tvPe9fopyou're Involved In loclay may not be
out to ,... oatlllllcllorl of aw
a true 11011. Alto be run Ill' oam. cooocema!l. Adjul?mtn?l Clift be mode,
but they 11111 won't produce optimum
tt) You
condiUonl.
·
CANCIIII.IIIM t?..,illy 12) Joint ven· lhOuld be quite ~ICI~.. today In hantum COUld produce your gruteot dling iM?ttrl of a bulll.a nat-; lui,
ben81111 today, but tilly may Ollso cauoe you might not be aqullly 81 compe1ant
peripharai' problama. NeverthttDllloel- · what you gain will ov.ahadow
ate yourttlllrom kldlvl~ 0111 . , _ 118wllat you loee.
LIO l.lulr 21-AII$.121 II you ha;.e a crll· h...cor COUld rellaCI ~ an YIM Imleal deo:lllan to maka lOIIey, lry to do II • age ?Olley. Keep 10 frllndl . . _
. whal ,....,. bright and lreoll. When you IIIJKIWdl .,. contjlltaiJ?a 70 YIMI·
begin to lira, you could think leta · P?ICII (Ptb. • " Ill . , TIIIN .,.

.

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'

DAILY CRYFI'OQUOlEs- Hat's how to work It 418
~

'

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLQW

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'

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.

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I

....-

'

One letter stands for'another. In this sample AIs u~ .......
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln11le letters, ·•::J
•
apostrophes, the lenath and formation or the words are
all hints. F.lch day the code letters are different.

tutt~a?lon

•• &lt;

_,ng

CRYPTOQUOTES

4-8

~-

'

Bulllllll

... -.... ··-.'

AI071

35 lnlurJata
37 Layer
380ne ol
Santa's
learn
39-theUne
(obeyed)
40 Clrcu1
barkers
41 No ifa, - ;

410 ..... Hoa,

-

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+
.....

+uu

• 1016'3

pasla

........ Ulllirl. . . . . .

,
_ _~-­
Wllo wll do jo$11.

.QJ

34llkegood

J:O---... . .

10
..

EAST
.10
.AKI087S

WEST

29 Marth
plant
33.Gama
......_, place

"-"'· 11,711; 100
!I.!;..
I!.'- iilo
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l'anl ·
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- •• Hoa
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Oaolor Wttf flniMo. -

=I l=m

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olllctll

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Ye_aterdlly'e AniWif'
12Gatsnug
Hr's cry
14 Towhead . 5101agt
15Summer
&amp;Aller16 Chore
27 Meatur·
tng lids .
ence
21 Gibert &amp;
quaff
Sulhlan
21 Shelor .
book
17-MolniB
· 18 Refusals
creation
lox .
7Yesvor•
8
Notorious
Z2
Engigad
30 Coalition
19 hllmo.
. box
31 HorH
20Road
In van·
opener
32 Range
curve
dett..
groups
21 Vaccine
9 MotorZ3 Laye11
cycle
24 Slur
36 "Caught
type
25 Auctionyou I"
22Whlsky
addition
container
25 Trunk tire
26Sunup
site
27 Caviar
28Diamond

Clmpe,..

........
.Homo,
- _ Col
lloni!io

---··--

..

CROSSWORD

13 "-II rott"

11ft. -~• ..., . . . . ;

lnltl\lllltllll

-·----haot-.

.

At the other table, South realiaed It ..
was right to lead a dU.mond. East '£Gil ,,
with the' ace and foreed declarer. witli,
a heart, but South cubed his two dill·
mond winnen, discarding a heart and ..
a club from the dummy. Then he lad 1:.
club. Eut won and played a heart, bllt ·
declarer ruffed In dummy and cuhell ·
two club tricks.
·
..

vehicle

11S-11?34or~JI.al47.Coli- '

1m Ponlloa, l?dr. - . AC,
· CN'::it$111'
- -.or111
good-IO!IL
--

-

-

napkins ·
l=~ent
11 El
n1 •Moll

110tlllnl· OIWildlllcih.
. - _ AC, P,710. 117 7711711• .'
1111 11a1go · n a. 111n1 11o1or ':

11 Fann Equipment

'

20 I. Pa ?a l I ..... lilt :

Musical

.
=:=.

LAtJGUAC?£ !..IKE A
. DIPLOMAT.. .

= .-. liP---

~·.·out-.-· .

··-

U._p?no _ _ _

.

orbula
ACROSS
' 1.· Daybreak DOWN
1 NIIWimll1
· 5Soma
.Brinkley
Scanctlna·
2-B.
vians
Toklu
· 10Hand
3llta10ma
lotion

SPEAK A FCREIGW

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H~'S A A.AC£ "'~HAT ·
'TU'(HtS c.,QJ H::l.U 1Ci

=. .

....

Autos for Bile

71

'

Wlnlld: .... oi'IDDCIIte 1-cup
otud oorvloo. Cal
1111.

,,

ID A.li.. Milne's "WiMle-the-Pooh."
Pooh points out that •on Mondays,
when the i un iJ hot,• he has great dilfi·
· culty in deeidinC "what iJ which and
which is what." Two declarers on todeal from a · knockout team
~:~~~'e:t. placed In a similar pred
But one of them had taken
the precauUon of applying suit-block
to his brain.
If
with to test yourself, cover ·
lhe
t- Welt cards In the diagram
and decide bow·
wOuld play in four
leading the heart
queen and continuing ·with the heart
jack.
Both declarers ruffed the second
and drew trumps In three rounds.
came the key question - which
minor to pia, first.
One South led a club 10 the queen.
East '£Gil with th~ ace and tapped declarer with another heart, South ruff·
lng with his final spade. South cashed
the club king, led to the club jack, and
when elulil broke 4-2, called for the di•
amimd jack. However, East won· with
the ace, cashed.a heart trick and led a
fifth bear.t. De!:larer had to ruff in
dummy and eoac:ede a club trick to
West - two down. If the elubl hid
been ~3. declarer wlll'ld.still have fili·
isbed one down. --{

{v':s.

For IMN: 11102 ·llle. I $210. 114411 1116. . .

~

. . ..
..

••Hz
+J

J:

$Wif'ICI. JHIFT7

,....:.-r-.

~ls:re. Bolo.

NORTH

•u u

By Pltllllp Alder

WHIII'81ETALD111CTOAII

.....

I

BRIDGE

=
..

lollllorlor
,
. ..,Iiiii
.......
Wi

GET "-NSWER

sn1o1• •• VIND.

..... -

.

ICRAM-IITS AN1W1U
, ·S
Jaunty - Madam - Known - Hyphen ~ MY MONt;(
• You lost a lol ol money tryi!'lll to find oil," one tycoon
said to another. ·v..;theotherly(:c?Onreplled, "It could ·
be worse. h could have been MY MONEY!"
.

111111 Wlaldlia -loom lliol

a ..........

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

•

.

'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

·

..

'

by lllliftg "' tho lftltoilljl _ .
you dO¥Oiop train 11up No. 3 bolow.

IN THESE SQUARES

.... -. --~ .. lloia.-

old

. . . . - - -----.dryers lind clolllli ..,.,. Nil
W i M 0 N N lthiougha....._,.
J--,lri-&amp;+1..:;:.,.::1:..,:;~~~7~ 0 Complor. tho chuckle QUOial

·

...-a 1101111: ,., . . _ 811141- ... ~

...
~

good

1 1 1
lady.
Is_ .__._._._..JJ
L--'-·
• WieR lhllre were no .111 ctrtQ

laughed at ·your
ideas . .. cverybody but the

AVON • All . , _ Col lllrllyn
WMVM' 304 11341141.

• •

.I canurtiWied
recall lhll
·1 days:
lhll o1i1

"Everyb&lt;~dy

Jawyt•rs."

..•.-

.r' . . .,;;.K. .:;.O. .:;R:. ,: B~E:;. . . r~ I

TO THE •' D·MINUS
HALL OF FAME"!

ON '&lt;OUR

s

I...,.::(~j~. .;.1~. ;.i~I J
h-i

11

•

... _"_ -·..:

U,.____

complicattonl may • ' •·

~~----.

-~

K~

where

:.r:-u:::~-=\,

WIGO lAIII· IJ.Iepl. 12) AI long u

lnd-11111 you..., ..........
.,, o1 a bar111a111 ...-til •qtap

able. Howe-, II you anem_p t various

the lndlvlclum who may help bring 711111
about.

clelrly.

.

you cro ?hlng8 tn an orderly fu?llon letday, YIM and , _ should be ·dallr·

••

ment tOlley.

..

FQUTLHYLHVN

YC

YJT L

H

STE

H F,

n ·v s T

.·•
E

VKHER,

QEZQTFVHYEMDWT. - 8, WTIRN
. ·\ .
Yesterday;• Cryptoquote: WITHOUT WOMAN,
~ THE BEGINNING OF OUR LIFE WOUlD BE HEI.r. LF,SS, THE MIDDLE WITHOUT PLEASURE, TfiE F.NI&gt;
. VOID OF CONSOLATION. - , VICTOI\DEJOUY

a. a n to aallnolllla ~ge .

'

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•

-

...... .
.

s

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r

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Page

10-The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. ...._

Monday, AprilS, 1991

Ohio Lottery

·~·HS junior

class dinner
play ,Saturday

.

'

Pick 3: 050
Pick 4: 0839
Cards : J.H, 3-C
J·D; J ·S
Low toDI1bt In SOs. Cbance ·or
raiD 50 percent. Partly cloudy,
Higb Wedaesday in ~s.

Page6
I

•

•.

l

at

I

•

I

PRACTICE FOR SHOW • Rehearul lor
tbe aauual raahlou abow, sponsored b7 tbe
Pumeroy Mercllall AIIIIOCiatlou, wu beld SDD·
. da7 alleruooa al Pomeroy Elemealary. Tbe
" 'how, "Pl!mero7: Heartlaud of America, FaSb·
., lou aDd M~ Revue," will be beld Friday at
., 7:30 p.m. at the scbool. Pictured are members or

Weather
~
South Cen!ral Ohio
; · Showers and thunderstorm s
likely Monday·night, with a low in
ihe low 60s. Chance of rain is 70
• percent. Showers and thunder. s10rms likely Tuesday, with highs
near 80. Chance or rain is 60 per- .
cent.
• · Obio extended forecast
Wedaesday througb Friday
· • A chance of showers Wednesday, with fair w·eather Thursday
liild Friday. Highs will be range
from the 50s 10 the lower 60s each
day. Overnight lows will range
from 45 to 55 early Wednesday,
and from 35 to 45 Thursday and
Friday mornings.

Pomero7 Cub Seoul Pack 2491111d Saacl7 Butch·
er, a member or C•oeaover Baud. 1'11e7 wiD open
the sbow wllb a presenlallou of lbe color's ud
"God Bless lbe U.S.A." Tlc:kets, $4 each, are lltiU
available from tbe Pomeroy mercbauls or at the
door tbe algbt or lbe show.
·

THE B.GWINNERS ·Taking bome lbe
Jll'aad prizes from tile Rrsl uaual Easter fill
bunt of tbe Middleport C0111mllllity Allocialillll
were Irma the left, Carl Buckle7, Middleport,
$15 lor lbe silver egJI, and Cbuckie Shamblia, ·

..

Meigs County EMS
responds to 17 calls

Middleport, $50 lor tbe golden egg, belnJI pre·
· senled cbecks by Mitcb Meadows, bunt cbalr·
man; Breads JohDSOD, tile mystery .bunny, aad
Rhoada Hoover, wbo wou tbe $20 lor guessing
tbe identity of the buDDy.

Cleanup dates
are announced

Stocks

Hospital news

Lottery numbers

i

Veterans'Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Ernest Wells, Middlepon; Victoria
Quillen. Racine; Leah Nease,
Racine; and John Loscar, Pomeroy.
SA TIJRDA Y DISCHARGE •
Clarence Potts.
.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Arthur Petrie, Middlepon; Allen
Dill, Sr .., Pomeroy; Ellen Wells,
Long Bottom; and Ralph Ours,
Chesler.
.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Pick·3
039.
Ticket sales: $!,525,838. Payoff:.$297,608.50.
Pick-4
8169.
Ticket sales: $291,!09.50. Payoff: $119,400.
·
" ·cards
5 of hearts.
King of clubs.
5 of diamonds.
4 of spades.

Super LotiO ticket sales totaled
$3,334,262 and the tolal prize pay·OUt was $377,784 .
There also was no winner of the
$100,000 grand prize ill the accompanying Kicker game, which produced the win.ning combination:
248595.
But fi.ve tickets listed the first
five numbeis In exact order, which
pays $5,000; 47 tickets had the first
four numbeis, which pays $1,000;
476 had the fltSI three, which pays
$100; and 4,899 had the first two,
which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$548,186 and the prize payout total
was $168,590.

NOW OPEN FOR THE
~ SPRINt SEASON
Co~lete

Unt of

Yege~lt

and Bedding
Planh, Blooming and
Follat~ Hanging Bailkets,

Fruit and Flowering ''"'•

The Hartinger are.a in lower
Middlepoq_ has been targeted for
revitalization by Middlepon ViJ.
!age Council.
· ·
. Monday night Jean Trussell, the
:village 's housing specialist, was
authorized to proceed with an
. application for $600,000 in funding
from the Ohio Department of
Qevelopment for the project ·

.Mayor Fred Hoffriuui noted that
the s~&amp;te has $16 million available
for housing rehabilitation and infra·
structure Improvement projects
from which Middlepon is hoping
10 secure the grant. The projects are
competitive. Last year's housing
rehabilitation project was not funded by the slate.
·
·
Trussell advi.sed that $600,000
is the maximum in funding for
which the village can apply. She
displayed dl'aps showin$ the desig·
nated target area whtch covers

G.rant and Ash and all the streets in
' between, along wilh a smaller seclion extending from Ash 10 South
Second.
The target area encompasses
· 311 household units on 23 streets,
· according 10 Tru$Sell, with 79 percent of the households being ill the
low to moderate income level. She
said that'the General Hartinger target area has lhe highest concentra·
tion of low to moderate income
households and the IP'eatest need
· for housing rehabilitation in the vi!~

Shrubs, Azaleas,

...,''"'·

SYIACUSE, 01110 .
992·5776

Doll 9-5; Sun. 1·5

Forethought¢ is fztneral plan·
ning... ,before the need arises.

'

. Scrubbers are favored to
save Ohio's cord industry

Forethought® funeral planning is the new
way to assure complete funeral arrangements
so your family won't have to ma~e all those
decisions.
It's not difficult to do. .even the nan1e
Forethought says that this is ~he sensible. , .
and responsible plan.

Birchfield Funeral Hotne
Main Street

-.

Rutland,

.

Ohio

742-2333
JAMES C. BIRCHFIELD - Owner-Operator
ForelboooCbl luneral

plu•lal Ia lu•ded lh..Ouch pollelea from

Forelhoulhl LUe 1-raace Compan~

·Wh1ml
The J1m.

. WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD
Pomeroy MaJOr Richard Seyler aigDed a procla·
m11io1 Monday aflei'I)OOI Ia observauce or the
Week or tbe YouaJI Cbild, sponsored by the
Soullleru Obio Association for tbe Education ol

d,,
thlt hot,
gou ,, fl# to be
...
~ool

YOUDI Cblldreu aDd other local organlZIItlou.
Pictured witb Mayor Seyler are, l·r, Kevia
Saoulrer, -Jamie EUis, Viusou Martin aad ·Nicki
WUsoa.
.

I

General Dynamics seen
.cutting back on defense
NEW YORK (UPI) -The head
of General Dynamics Corp., the
nation's No. 2· defense contractor
and operator of a tank plant in
Lima, Ohio, says he would like 10
get out i:i the defense business and
will be culling hack on weapons
research, Wall Street analysts said
Monday.
.
.
"I personally would like to be
out of defense,·: General Dynamics
Chai~an Willia!D Anders told
securtty analysts m a New York .

II gou

Anders Wednesday night, confirmed the general thrust of the
ctWrman's remarks if 1101 the specific quote cited by Nisbet.
"I think he S&amp;ld that. He did,"
said Peter Aseritis, an aerospace
industry analyst at First Bostqn
C01p.
----,_ Another analyst, who asked to

d if maktng
eacher
boous police callsfior hel,
Haas

·-· - -·Area deaths _ _
Leigh Wood.
Graveside services will be 3
p.m . Tuesday at Beech Grove .
·• · Eloise Bolin Man~in, 68,Jor· Cemetery with Perek Siump offiCi·
mcrtr of Pomeroy, dted Monday, aung.
_
·Apri 8, 1991 at Overmlok Center
There will be no calling hours.
In Middleport, following an
Arrangements are being handled
Olltel1ded iUncss.
by Fisber Funeral Home in Middle·
~· · She was born in Harrisonville port.
'.an SepL I, 1922, the daughter of
· the late Joseph Humphrey and
Myrtle Belle Romine Bolin. She
wa1 1 homemaker and a retail
cletk.
Surviving are lbree sons, James
F. "Buteh" Walker, Sanrord, Fla.,
Jeff (Bonnie) Mankin, New Haven,
W.Va., and Kenneth (Julie)
Manldll, Cinc:innlti; two daughters,
Mn. JIJIICI (Sharon) Loulcs, Long
Bouom llld Mn. Dooaid (Shelly}
Wood, Middleport; three sisters,
Bcmlce Brown or Mt. Vernon,
CJenrude RicJinlon of Akron, and
Beuy VIDIDI of PoiiiCroy; eight
ppllldllllllc:bllhlkhn; OliO pell·grandaou;
_. te¥1111 nietlellllll qephews.
•Silo n1 preceded iii death by
four Jillen, ihree bocxlm llld her
lt•t. d, PFC LeTnl Walker, and a
1peclal granddaughter, Cbelsie

Eloise Mankin

COLUMBUS , Ohio (UPI)He ho~~s one of thiee required
The chairman of the Ohio Con- labOr pos•uons on the board. Three
sumers' Counsel governing board .COI_Isumers and three flll'!n represenbelieves Ohio •a coal industry is tallvea also are on the nme-member
"doollled" ihlecule. utility com- ~ board,
. .
. , ·' .
panics choose to lilt)' out Of slllle ·, ., • AI&gt;P offtiaals are decJdtng
coal rather than install costly scrul): .whether 10 switch to low-sulfur
bers
coal mined in the ,western pan or
~:If they don't scrub, the Ohio the United State~ or tli mstall .
coal industry Is doomed" Harold' scrubb~rs at the Gavm plant.
Erdos said Mooday.
•
. Installing the scru~bers would
Consumers' Counsel William allow AEP to conllnue ;to bu~n
Spratley has said Tepeatedly he Ohio's high-sulfur coal at tts Gavm
believes American Eleetric Power plant
.
should inslall the scrubbers at its
Instalh~~ the scrub~rs would
Gavin plant in Gallia County to cost lhe unlity $170 million a year
· comply with the federal Clean Air while buyin~ ~estern coal would
Act
cost $115 mtlhon annually , AEP
ErdOs, a United Mine Workers off'teials said.
official,
fact thl!t
h~ is
chainnan said
of thethat
counsel
govemmg
board was not the determining fac·
IOl in the agency's backing of the

~-Local

year. .
"We must attack this problem
on all fronts," Miller said, adding
that most of the murder victims
have been young black people.
"We must stop these kiUings,"
he aclded . ''Children are dying
before they have the chance ot live.
Our entire community should lle
outraged at this needless loss of
life."

Police said Charles Allen, 14,
was shot in the back during a
neighborhood dispute.
They said Allen and two or
three friends had been involved in .

an llf&amp;UDient with a neigbbor and
latef went 10 his apartment, where
they' were confronted by Tommy
Clyburn. ·,
Police said Clyburn fired one
shot, which killed Allen at 11 :45
p.m. Saturday.
.
,
The boys mother, Tina· Allen ,
,.td one or her son's frien1'5 told'·
her that Clyburn threw oqe boy
down the steps of his apartment
buidling and then pulled a gun.
"AU the other guys ran, anct --·
(Charles) was the last one running. ·
He got shot in the back,' • Allen
said.
·

chamber to· hold
·
d
.
h
•
•
.
1ea ers 1p seminar

:u=~r~~sw!i~:~i~~~~;:

remain unidentified, said: "Paul's County.
"We have done a very thorough
interpretation I would say is gener•
and detailed analysis,'' Spratley
ally on the mark."
Jerry Cantwell of Wertheim said. "The entire bOard has been
Schroeder said, "I didn't recall that part of iL He (Erdos) has followed
exact quote."
·
11 more closely than the others, but
But he·said the clear implication he's only one member."
of Anders' remarks was that the
Erdos said he did not try 10 .die· tate the consumers' counsel posiCon tinued on page 10
lion.
0
·'r
"I don't have any problems
.1..
. 1
QCCUSe
0
s~ing my piece, " Erdos said.
..
·
·
' We're not looking just a1 coal. ...
There's ~ot to be a balance
.··
between mmers and consumers and
dential Securities Inc.
b
·
·
. 1'
manufacwrers."
. . The St. Louis·b~se.~ defens~ ,
ATHENS , Ohio (UPI) - A
FBI agenlS suspect
may be
Erdos is a staff representative
gtant, whose molto IS A Stron.~ physical education te,.cher at involved in similadalse calls that for the international UMW
Company for Strong Country.
Athens High School for 17 years occurred in the past two years in assigned to Ohio. He said he
had 1990 sales of $10.2 billion, 85 has been released on $100 000 Athens, Columbus, Cincinnati and believes there is no conflict
percent of which was ill c!efense.
bond after allegealy broadcasting a Kentucky. said Edwin Boldt, a between his position as chairman
General Dynamtcs builds the F- bogus repon of an officer in dis, spokesman with the FBI 's Cincin· of the consumer's counsel board
. 16 Air Force fighter aircraft, Navy tress.
nati field office.
and as a UMW official.
•
,,.
nuclear submarines and the Army's .
James. A. Haas, 39. was arrested
Boldt said the FBI monitored
M·l tank and Is a. memJ:~er of th_e by the FBI in Slerling, Va., where Haas's transmission Friday before
team expected soon to wm the Air he and his family were attending a arresting him. The Federal ComForce contract for development and ham radio operators conference.. He munications Commission pinpoint·
p~uclion. of tl!e new $75·$.100 · was charged with a redeml count of ed his location. ·
~•Ilion Atr Advanced Tacucal
furnishing a false statement.
Boldt. said that Haas radioed the ·
Ftghter.
. .
Haas was released in Alexan- poli.ce department in Prince
Othe.r analysts, present at. the dria Va. where he was taken after William County, VL, abOut 10:30
three-hour dinner and meeting with his ~st. '
.
.
p.m. and claimed 10 be an officer
involved in a high-speed chase.
A t.ape recording provided
soum! efrects of squealing tires,
sirens and gunshots as Haas talked
10 the dispiltcher.
Boldt said "he'd say he was
shot ... then lhe radio went dead."
The Athens Police Department· .
Charges of operating a.moiOr vehicle while under the influence
will investigate to see whether
or alcohol were.filed against D. Michael MuUen, Pomeroy, followthere is any connection 10 prank
ing an accident on Lincoln Hill Sunday cveuing.
calls · it has received, it said in a
..,. Accordin$ to Chief of Police Gemld Rought, MuUen was ltavelstalemenL
mg up the htU when he went over a sfi4ht embanlanent and bit an ·
· Columbus police in June
abutment near the intersection of Rivervtew Drive. Rought reponed
received a Didio call for help from
that Mullen said he went off the road in order to avoid a collision
. a man claimin$ to be an officer
with a car going around the curve on the wrong side. There was
under automauc gunfire attack.
light ilarnaae to the MIIUeo vehicle.
.
· Sirens were blaring in the back·

~::.t~r~~~t;:e::a,:~~~~n~~ ·

T.H AT'S BIG! ·Bob aad Allee Tbompsou or Pomeroy ' '
. ' uueartlled dlls 3 Vl poud pal'llllp hi tbelr Rock SpriDp prden
•,. Jas1 week. Allee, pictured bere with tbe pal'llllp, uys !lie aiiCI Bob
ma7 eat It, but rean peeUag tb~ tblag may be a da7·lon1 job.

available for use only on owner•
Trussell said that a two phase
occupied houses, not rental units, project is being prop&lt;ised, the ftrs f
although the village does plan 10 demolition of the old building, and
apply for a grant for rental propeny the second , a program for actual
revitalization at a later time.
site development and down payThe required P!lblic hearing on ments on construction for minorithe Hartinger project was held i~ ties and low income pers911s.
conjunction with the council meet· ·
She advised that a contact has
ing, as was a second public hearing . been made with the owner of the
on the Fifth Street project. That ·old bakery building about purchis·
project, according 'to Trussell, ing the empty structure. If the
. ipvolves a section ne~r thll old building is for sale, then the village · ·
'Betsy Ross Bakery building which will proceed with an application f9r
is suilable for eight housing sites.
Continued on page 10

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A Ohio.
stale legislalOr concerned about the
''Ohio must pass a stiff gun
capital .city's rapidly rising murder control law," Mtller said. " Guns
!"le _Plans 10 draft gun-control leg- are far too accessible to childre11
islation.
·.
·
and it is because parents are totally ·
Sen. Ray Miller, D-Columbus, . and pathetically irresponsible.
said his proposal would requit:e a
The shooting death of a.14-yearseven· day waiting period for the old boy during the weekend was
purchase of any type of gun in Columbus's 49th homicide of the

Before the need arises ...

Call us today to learn how you too ·can mak e your
arrangements . .. ~'before the need
arises.
".
.
.

!age.
.
The project, if funded will also
include curb and sidewalk infrastructure work on Beech and Pearl
Streets, Trussell pointed oul. She
IIOied that 10 comply with the Ohio
Department of Development a
rehabilitation specialist will have 10
be hired.
Deadline for filing the appllc:ation is April26.11 takes six 10 eight
wec:t for·final action_on the applica!ton, Trusse.ll satd. She also
poiDted out that the funds would he

··$en .. Miller of Columbus to i
draft gun-control legislation·

Hubbard's Gr1111house

· '

.

By Cbarleue Hoetlicb
SenliDel
News Staff
.

lhedo.ndrans oncl

0

1 Soollon, 10 Peg.. 25 cento
A Mu!Umodla Inc. No,..,_per

Tuesday, Aprll9,1991

Hartinger area .targeted.for ·revitalization
.

. No one claims super lotto prize

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The $4
million
jackpot in Ohio's Super
Meigs County Emergency Med- to Bucktown Road for Shirley Lotto drawing went unclaimed dur·
ical Services responded 10 17 calls Abels. She was taken 10 Veterans. in$ the weekend, boosting the top
for assista11ce between Saturday At 10:33 a.m ., Tuppers Plains pnze to $8 million for Wednes·
squad went to Texas Road for day'sgame.
afternoon and Monday morning.
At 3:02 p.m., Syracuse squad Allen DiU. DiU went 10 Holzer.
None of the tickets sold for the
At 2:15p.m. on Monday, Syra· weekend
went to Nease Road for Leah
drawing matched all six
Nease, who was taken 10 Veterans cuse squad went 10 tbe fire depart· of the winnin~ numbers, a lottery
Memorial Hospilal. At4:16 p.m. , ment and tranSJ)Oned Paul Flowers spokesman S81d Sunday. The winMiddleport was dispatched to to Veterans. At 3:37 p.m., Racine · ning numbers were: 20, 21. 27, 29,
Beech Street for Elmer Blair. Blair squad went to DeWiu's Run for 39and45.
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Cen- Hannah Van Meter, and transP,Mf
However, 48 players picked five
ter. Middleport squad went to ed h~r 10 Vetetans. At 3:32 p.m., of the numbeis 10 win $1,910 each,
Overbrook Center at 4:47p.m., and Syracuse squad went to the fire and 3,144 players selected four· of
took Ada Newell 10 Veterans. At department fc. Jeff Gilliland, •nd the numbers 10 win $91 apiece.
5:04 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 transported him 10 Veterans. At
Hamilton Street for David Darst, 5:!6 p.m., Chester ftre department
.
who was transponed to Pleasant went 10 10 Old Forest Road for an
. Beverly Roush of Pomeroy ts a Valley Hospital. At 11:05 p.)D., auto fire. At 8:40 p.m., Pomeroy
diughter of the late Helen D. John- ... Pomeroy squad went 10 State Route squad was sent to Wright Street for
'
SQn Eblin, 75, who died on April4
143 and took Norma Snyd~r to Pearlie Jewell. Jewell was taken to Sutton Cemetery
The Sutton Township Trustees
Jl her home on Wolf Pen Road, O'Bieness Memorial Hospilal. At Veterans .. At 10:33 p.m. Rutland
request
that all old flowers be
:Pomeroy . Her name was uninten· .7:34a.m. on Sunday, Middleport unit was dispatched to Star Hall
removed
from cemeteries in Sutton
ti.?n~lly omitted froJ!I a listing_ of
squad responded to &amp;ace Street for Road for Walter ·Garnes, who
Township
before mowing begins
~ umvors m the obttuary whtch
Arthur Petry. Petr}' was taken to refused treatment.
on
Wednesday.
On Mopday at 3:48 a.m., Rut@peared Friday in The Daily Sen·
Veterans. At 8:29 p.m., Middleport
· · .
tinel. Funeral services for Mrs. squad went 10 State Route 124 for land squad went to Meigs Mine 2 Chester Cemetery
Chester
Township
will
be clean~blin were held Saturday at 1 p.m.
Troy Qualls, who refused ireat· . for David Reeves. He was treated
ing
I
cemetery
grounds
after
al the Ewing Funeral Home. She
ment.
On Sunday at but not transported. At 6:21 a.m.,
was buried in Miles Cemetery.
!0:13a.m., Racine squad was sent Syracuse sqUid went 10 Mile Hill Wednesday and those wanting to
Road for Twila Clark who was save flowers and other items should
'
· treated but not transpOftCd. At 9:18 remove lhem by Wednesday. The
a.m., Rutland squad was SCIIt to trustees request that in the future
Rutland Elementary School.for flowers that can·be .hung on the
Anthony Pary. He was uansported monument be purchased so that
mowing may be done more effi10 Ve1enms.
ciently.
Olive Cemetery
The Olive Township Trustees .
Am Ele Power ......................29 1/4
will begin cleaning the cemeteries .
Ashland Oil .......... .......... .... 30 5/8
after Wednesday. Anyone wishing
AT&amp;t ................................... 34 1/4
10 keep flowers should have them
Bob Evans ........:................... 19 1/2
removed by that dale.
Charming Shop.....................J4 3/1!
Sa!Bbury Cemetery
City Holding ........................ .14 1!2
Salisbury Township will be
Federal Mogul ......................15 518
cleaning.cemetery grounds after
Goodyear·T&amp;R .....................22 3/4
April I 5 and those wanting 10 save
Key Centurion ............................ 13
flowers and other items should
Lands' End ...........................22 1/2
remove them by that date·. The ·
Limited Inc.........·•.......•• ~ ..•..~••:....27
trustees request !hat in the future ·
Multimedia Inc .....................73 1/2
flowers that can be hung on the
Rax Resraurarlt •.•••.•..•..•••......•....... )
monument be purchased so 'ihat
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/4
mowing may be done for efficientShoney's lnc .........................16 518
ly.
Star Bank ..............................211/4
Wendy Inl'l. ........................ 10 1/8
WonhingtOn Ind...................24 7/8

'

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio;

Name omitted

t

•

Overbrook Center in Middlepon
will be the site of "Leadership .
2000: A Search for Excellence in
the Public Seetor", a leadership
seminar for Meigs County community and buainess leaders.
The seminar begins on Wednesday at 3 p.m:, and will last unlil 7
p.m., with dinner beJ!It included. in
theSIOcostoftheprogram.
Described as "a comprehensive '
personal development program for
existing and emerpng leaders in
local communities, the seminar is
a joint effon of the Meigs County
Cooperative Exlension Ageney and
theChamberofCommerce.
· The tirogram wiD include. information regarding effective sliltegies for rural leaden, leadership
styles and siriUs and techniques 10
motivate co-workers and con-

•

·
stituents in ~e local community.
· Cooperallve Extension Agent
Cindy Oliveri will kick off the pro.
§ram with a presentation called
The Nme Forces Reshaping
America", followed by "The Power
of Public Leadership" and "The .
~CI!," Factor" Dealing· with Diverstty , both from David Boothe.
In the evening, the seminar's
keynote speaker. Sam Crawford
wi_ll address the group with "A
Bnghter Future for Rural Alnerica:
Critical Success Factors".
According to Meigs Countv
Chamber Director Elizabeth
Schaad, re¥isltation forms and feci ·
are still being accepted, and should
be turned iniO Schaad at the chambet office, located in the Carnegie
Building at 200 East Second Street. ·

briefs--·--

Man charged after accident

TUXEDOS ••••••••-'•• Starting At $2995
RECEIVE $$QOO

Off ALL REGULARLY PRICED

PROM FORMAL WEAR

FABRIC.
SHOP
.110 WISY MAIN
POIDOY, OHIO
992·2214
•

j

'

Representative to visit Pomeroy

On Wednesday a representative fro111 Congressman Clarence
Miller's office wiU conduCt an open door session from II a.m 10 I
p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse. Pomeroy. Anyone with qlles·' lions concerning the Fedeml government is invited 10 stop by 10 discuss them with the representative.
·
Conli11ued ou P•le 10
\til

~.in atte~pl to identify the
caller, tbe diapalrher lllOk an on-«ir
roll call over each of lbe depart·
. . . DINNER
• neae
of
ment's four radio fieQuencics.
tbe Ea1tera Niall
Ctau or 199Z are
The caller would not identify
him~elf.
.
amoaa lb011e pertor.~a In tbe Jaalor Clul'
dluiJer tbealel' prtHIIIailoa of "Sklaued Alive''
No char1es have ' been filed
againat Haas ,In Franklin County. ~· ou Satarda7. Tile pla7 lieldlll at 8 p.m. aDd lk:k·

••IMrl

.

.(~

ail lie Jllll.t! •• at tM .
4oor lor $3.511. Pktut ed, left 10 rlpt, are Jeff
Dunt, Elbabelb La-. Jolla Holilll(lel', Jaale .
Brauaoa. Tile pl17 11 uader lbe dlrecliDil or
Nallc7 Mor1l 1e7.

ttl lor tile pla7 alolle

~ ~~

•

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